Q:
Have you had anything published before?
A: Yes. I’ve
had poetry published in odds and ends of places. My biggest publishing
venture was when 50 copies of my book, "Ballad of the New Mexican" were
published two days after my twenty-first birthday.
Q: What is
your writing technique?
A: I don’t
have a standard writing technique. Whenever I feel I have something to
say, I just write it down. If I have a bad case of the blues, am under
a lot of pressure, or whatever, I can’t write. Those times, I don’t have
anything to say and no writing technique can get me through. As someone
once told me, "You will write when you have something to say." That’s always
explained me the best.
Q: What time
of day do you write?
A: Any time,
really, though I prefer to write at night. When I’m tired, words don’t
come so easily, but I find tht I’m particularly insightfuul as if my subconscious
mind were mingling a little with my conscious mind and bringing stuff up,
kind of like a cat and a hairball relationship.
Q: What kind
of stuff do you write?
A: There’s
a joke around my house that I’ve written everything except greeting cards.
That’s almost true. The three main things I write are poetry, short stories,
and songs. I find my songwriting so interesting because I’m pretty much
self-taught in everything musical and I’ve had a few college-level writing
workshops so far, so I’m not trained in music, but I am trained in everything
else.
Q: What do
you feel you’re best at writing?
A: Probably
songs, at least that’s the best way for me to touch people. There were
times in high school where I read poetry and got a long silence before
people applauded. I could tell that they were thinking about what they
just heard. That seems to be all I do with my poetry or short stories,
just make people think. However, when I played at the annual 4th
of July block party last year, I played one of my songs and actually made
someone cry. It wasn’t a particularly sad song, and I’m nothing special
as a singer/player, but it touched someone! None of my poems or short stories
(that I know of) ever made anyone cry. Songs are harder to write because
they have 2 dimensions; words and sound. Songwriters have to weave them
together. Plus, it’s a risky business. If one of the dimensions is mediocre,
chances are the whole song will end up mediocre, no matter how good the
other dimension is.
Q: What inspires
you to write?
A: I don’t
know. Various things, common things such as weirdly beautiful Albuquerque
sunsets, will catch my attention like they never have before.
Q: What’s
your favorite topic to write about and why?
A: I like
to write about friendship because I know the ups and downs of it. I’ve
had lots of great times with my closest friends. On the downside of that,
I’m in my early twenties and most of my closest friends are already dead,
including my best friend. That thought stuns and pains me. Through the
combination of both joy and sorrow, however, I’ve learned to appreciate
friendship and closeness. On a quick sidenote, I feel I could better write
"A Second Chance." The first time I wrote it, I used part past experience
and part imagination. My mom should’ve died this year, so I better understand
the anxiety and everything else that comes with that sort of event.
Q: How has
the show affected you or your writing?
A: I don’t
think there’s much I could say that hasn’t already been said about that
subject, so I won’t answer in detail. Let me just say this; I’m a very
sensitive person and this past semester, I took a big Music Appreciation
II test when I thought my mom was going to die and did an extremely good
job. Because of that, I fooled my grandmother into thinking I’m as tough
as nails! <laughing> "Tough as nails"? Doesn’t that sound like someone
we know? <laughing harder>
Q: What are
some of the differences you’ve found between writing short stories and
writing poetry?
A: There are
some fairly obvious differences such as length of the work, et cetera.
Poetry is easier to write because not only is it shorter, but it’s more
straightforward. It’s a collection of imagery and raw emotions with no
plot necessary. Just write it and get it over with. Plus, even if it’s
jibberish, to could still be considered a poem. Short stories have to be
set up. The writer has to establish a place, time, scene, and action (plot)
which the story revolves around. The short story writer definitely has
to write clearly and make herself or himself understood by the readers
otherwise the story won’t work. Moreover, because it’s a longer work, it
requires more thought, and if the story is about a particularly difficult
subject for the writer to deal with, it can become absolutely agonizing
in both the planning stages and the actual writing. For example, "Will
You Remember Me?" hit too close to home for me and I had to take several
breaks during the final scene or two because I came dangerously close to
making myself cry. <laughing> Short stories have become about the hardest
thing for me to write because I haven’t written any in such a long time.
"Will You Remember Me?" was the first short story I’ve tried to write in
about 3 years. It felt really awkward to me and I kind of had to give myself
a good kick to get started. I used the first half of the story to try to
get rid of the rust.
Q: Is there
any advice you could give to wannabe fanfic writers?
A: I’ve learned
so much from my writing workshops and my own mistakes that I can’t give
all the advice I’d like to. That, and even most textbooks I’ve seen don’t
cover everything, either. I do have one major piece of advice for every
kind of writer (fanfic, personal letters, etc.): GOOD GRAMMAR AND GOOD
SPELLING ARE ESSENTIAL!!!!!!!!!! If readers have to re-read sections of
a work to figure out what a writer is trying to say, the "spell" is broken
and the work is easily laid aside. That’s a great piece of advice, kiddoes!
That’s one few people will ever tell you or even think to tell you, so
consider yourselves lucky that I care! <smiling> Finally, if you want
to write, WRITE! You don’t have to share with anyone if you don’t want
to, and if you don’t try, you will never know your potential!
Albuquerque
Annie
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