Showing posts with label Charlie Hale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie Hale. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

“One of the great challenges of the writer is to produce a text that will …”


Donald M. Murray tells about reading a World War II story and interpreting it through his own experience as a paratrooper in that war.


His wife worked in the Pentagon during World War II and when she reads the same book, “she will read a different book,” says Murray in The Craft of Revision.


Murray continues, “When my daughters, who were … raised during the Vietnam era, read it, they will each read a still different text.”


In the same way, your memoir’s readers will interpret your stories through their own experiences and historical eras.


Murray says:


One of the great challenges of the writer is to produce a text that will cause readers to draw on their different experiences and still understand what we have to say.”


How can you write stories from your past that will resonate with readers growing up in a different epoch? Perhaps some of your readers have not yet been born!


“The first step,” Murray says, “is to recognize that our world may be different from the reader’s.”


In addition to recognizing readers will live in a different historical setting, he says, “We must recognize that our readers may not share our religion; our political party; [or] our economic perspective.…”


In writing a book about World War II, Murray says, “I must remember that my readers may not know what an M-1—our rifle—was, or a C-45—the two-engine troop-carrier plane from which we jumped. They may never have heard of the Maginot Line … or the SS …; may not even know of the Holocaust.…”


Imagine the year is 2040 and your great-grandson, age twenty-five, is reading your memoir.


Will he understand that when your house caught fire in 1962, you could not run outside with your phone to call the fire department because phones were attached to the wall with a cord? And that’s why you had to stay inside to call for help, and that’s why your pajamas caught fire? And that’s why your legs have scars?


If you came of age during the Vietnam era, especially if you or a loved one was drafted into the military, you’ll want readers to understand the political, social, and religious factors that divided and rocked our nation during those years. (You’ll probably need to explain what the draft was, too.)


Charlie Hale has compiled several brilliant pieces about both World War II and the war in Vietnam, including I Remember: Viet Nam, my friends, and Memorial Day.


Over at Diana Trautwein’s blog, she writes “It was the mid 1960’s and the escalating war in Vietnam brought deep soul-searching for many men of draft-able age. My husband had a unique up-bringing which led to an unusual choice, a choice which took him far away from the jungles of [Vietnam].… A saving grace in the draft process was to register as a 1-W—a ‘person opposed to bearing arms by reason of personal religious conviction.’ And that’s exactly what my husband had done.… He had registered as a conscientious objector (CO) … [and] that meant two years of service offered in lieu of joining the military. My husband wanted to do those two years somewhere far from home.…” (from An African Journal—Post One: Beneath the Surface)


If you want to witness a master craftsman make history come alive, take seven minutes at Charlie Hale’s blog for his video, The Images, Stories, and Songs of War. He uses black and white photos, songs of the era, and his concise narrative to capture both World War II and Vietnam—and their stark differences. It is a riveting piece.


Learn from Donald M. Murray, Charlie Hale, and Diana Trautwein. Capture the social, political, religious, and economic milieu of your life stories. Your history and your world are different from those of your readers but with a bit of effort, you can do what Murray says: “produce a text that will cause readers to draw on their different experiences and still understand what [you] have to say.” 




Saturday, February 18, 2012

Sobbing, wild-eyed, gasping leaps of faith

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Breaking news!

Today Charlie Hale posted a mini-excerpt from my “Where I’m From” over at his blog, along with pieces from a couple of other people.

First read Charlie’s post, Who Are You? Where Are You From? Then read today’s post, The Ancient Warrior, Hula Hoops and Yeats. (My piece is the Hula Hoop one.)

Have you been writing a “Where I’m From” piece? I hope so. (See my August 31 post, Where are You From.) Charlie’s posts will give you oodles of inspiration! 

OK, now on to today's original post:



What leaps of faith have you taken?


I’m talking about a heart-stopping, bawling, howling plunge into the unfamiliar—with God.


A breath-taking, blubbering dive into the untried, the unproven—with God.


I wince when I type the phrase, “taking a leap of faith,” because its overuse has stolen its intensity, its radicalness.


I’m talking about faith that calls you to hurdle yourself over the edge—blindfolded, shrieking—into the unknown, with God.


You have no guarantee things will work out.


You can only begin to imagine what surprises await you.


You wonder how you’ll hold up, or if you’ll even live through it.


You feel the last-moment doubts, the dread, the teeth-gritting, the labored breathing. 


The heart-racing, stomach-knotting, head-spinning terror.


The throbbing, queasy feeling of being out of control.


You know only three things:      


(1) God asked you to do something way beyond your abilities and comfort zones, something that scares you out of your wits and makes it hard to sleep at night.

(2)  Everything within you cries out, “I must do this. I cannot not do this.”

(3) God, who is trustworthy, will be with you every moment.


What screaming, wild-eyed, gasping leaps of faith have you taken?


What did God teach you through it? What did you learn about yourself? About God? In what ways did the experience strengthen your faith?


Write your stories!


Resources and links:
Where are you from,

Charlie Hale’s Who Are You? Where Are You From,

Charlie Hale’s The Ancient Warrior, Hula Hoops and Yeats,