Advice.

Whuddup fools? I know I haven't posted on this blog for god knows how long, and who knows if anyone even reads it, but here's a cool tidbit I found on Steven Elliot's The Rumpus, which is a website ALL OF YOU SHOULD BE READING. Thanks to Elissa Bassist for compiling this list of pointers.***[Some of this is stolen. But I won’t tell you what because I want to impress you.]- First piece of writing advice: “Never take credit”–Stephen Elliott (pictured above)- Your writing should amuse you; if it doesn’t, there’s hardly any point to suffering this much or being this vulnerable or getting that addicted to [fill in the thing to which you got really addicted or hope to get addicted because it’ll give you “material”].- Writing is the opportunity to take the worst things that have happened to you and turn them into the most beautiful.- Do you want someone to tell you that your short story sucks and that you should be intellectually and environmentally safe by recycling it? TOO BAD. No one can tell you this. No one gets to tell you what’s trash/recyclable; you decide.- An MFA program will really help you if you have a high self-esteem problem.- If someone judges you through your writing, that someone is doing a bad job reading.- Write every day. If you can’t do that, do this: set an egg timer for 20 minutes; get a pencil and paper and have them touch; don’t lift your pen or pencil off the paper; write “I cannot write every day” on the piece of paper until you have something else to say; do this every day.- “The moment I stop being a reader is the moment I stop being a writer”–a famous writer said this to me once.- A conversation between two writers: Writer 1 says, “Blah blah blah,” and Writer 2 says, “Shut up and write.”- You can’t dismiss an experience because there have been worse experiences.- “No one who writes good fiction has an Internet connection”–poorly paraphrased advice from Jonathan Franzen.- If anyone has told you you shouldn’t write or that no one would read your writing if he/she had a choice or that you’re unloveable, please email me at elissa.bassist@gmail.com, and I will tell you that any person who craps on your dream is a tampon popsicle.***Write like a mother fucker.MC

WEBSITES 4 WRITERS

Welcome back erryone. I'm Christina, and I sincerely hope you all spent as much time in bed this break as I did. I'm new here, and so is the West 10th Twitter-- how exciting! You should follow us immediately, before we blow up. What we're hoping to do via "social media" (shudder) is create a little window that will at the very least introduce you guys to the nice literary community that exists over the internets. If you're like me, a lot of your IRL friends do not classify themselves as "writers"...and a few of them might not even read. You might have a little circle of book club friends, but look at you, are you really in a book club? It's true-- people like us, they doooo exist! And they've got smart and helpful things for you to read and think about. It helps when you know other people are struggling the same way you are.Since all I read this break was Columbine by Dave Cullen and one-half of In Cold Blood (sorry, on a kick here), I didn't want to start off my first blog with a sad touchy violent review. So instead, in !!!celebration!!! of all the tweets and retweets in our near future, I've put together a list of websites I as a reader/writer/kollege student have found to be the most helpful, the most entertaining, and/or the most fun. RESPOND! BE INTERACTIVE! by posting your favorite lit-themed websites. And do browse these-- I promise my taste is OK.Advice to Writers- Really, really, really fantastic collection to browse through when you feel like your work isn't %!#&ing working. Cheesy quotes=very rare.Electric Lit - This Brooklyn-based literary magazine's blog is surprisingly entertaining, not pretentious, and informative about readings and release parties that go on in the NY/BK area. Also, I like whoever tweets for them-- they're funny.The Millions- They're big on lists, which are always helpful/nice to read in the morning with yo coffee. Always new essays, features, and reviews to read, too.Book Bench-  The New Yorker book blog. Doing their thang.Book Forum- I've been introduced to a few new writers via articles from their website-- definitely something to check out.Thought Catalog- Nope. Not a literary site. Just a well-organized blog where people can share their funny/cute/gross thoughts about pop culture and ex-everythings. They're all short, and they're all good. Literally just spent an hour on here today.Don't forget to FOLLOW US ON TWITTER! And plz, go gentle into this spring semester. CD