Karen consults and edits for published and yet-to-be published
writers of fiction, nonfiction, and book proposals. She writes in a number of
genres and conducts writing workshops in various venues, including on cruise
ships.
If you missed her previous blogs regarding Teaching through the
Islands, you might enjoy reading them before this installment, as she first
shared her preparations in
anticipation of teaching classes while on board her latest cruise, discussed some of the downsides to teaching on
a cruise, introduced us
to new tablemates and the
private beach on Moorea,
how she was bit in Bora Bora, and then she described her first class
while teaching en route to Fiji. Most recently she shared: Second Lecture enRoute to Fiji: A Great Storyto Tell, Fiji but the Wrong Port !
(I won’t mention it, but I will), and On the Way to New Caledonia .
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Karen
Albright Lin:
Tahiti,
Moorea and Bora Bora had roaming feral mutts,
each seemingly related to the other with a hodgepodge of genes, eaters of
sidewalk scraps, more like dingoes than dogs, survivors.
One of the
generic mutts rubbed against a bar patron, nobody’s fool. Snacks dropped. I watched it all, felt it all, through
writer’s eyes. Over this trip I filled a
spiral notebook. I also kept maps and
the daily reports on where we were and what was offered on the ship.
I closed my
eyes against the warm sun and thought back to the American Samoan lecture we
attended. Jill, the destination speaker,
was author of children’s and middle grade books about Australian history. We speakers get discounted access to the
internet, and Jill admitted to us that she’d gone online the night before to
collect her information and put together her presentation about American Samoa .
Her talk was
entitled WHERE BOYS WILL BE GIRLS. Her
lecture paid excessive attention to the fact that transgender or transvestite
men are well-accepted in American Samoan Society. They dance in dresses alongside women. They are great wives because they are also
strong.
The amount
of time Jill spent on this subject told me she either thought it would grab the
crowd and keep it in her clutches, that it was the most interesting thing she
discovered in her research, or that she was shocked by or obsessed with
it. A lesson to me as a speaker – be
aware of how you distribute your time on specific areas of your topic. Too much on one point can either bore your
attendees or make them wonder about your preoccupation. As when writing fiction, trust your
audience. Assume they get it the first
time, don’t over explain.
Attention
back on my beer and bill: Tisa tried to charge
me a second time for the first cocktail as if I’d be unable to figure it out
after that huge beer. I pointed out her
mistake. It was on her face, trick
exposed. She tucked tail between legs. Her deception left me with a bitter taste in
my mouth, bitterer than the local hops.
Wen surfaced and paid a 5$ fee for snorkeling—a fee not disclosed up
front.
But it was
made worth it by the blue starfish Wen had pulled out long enough to
photograph. We caught another
cobbled-together bus back to port, leaving a remarkable tree sculpture, the
various dog breeds, and bitter hops behind us.
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Thank you,
Karen! Please join us on September 24, 2014 for "I
Love Sydney! Goodbye to the Islands ," her
final installment in this series.
3 comments:
A post like this makes me want to head for the islands and sip exotic drinks on the beach. Thanks, Karen.
Arrrgh, that irritates me, when I see such deceit! Even after having spent so much time with you! And people wonder why the world is in the state it's in...look in the mirror. We all create the world in which we live.
But good for you on gleaning some good from that encounter! Great writing fodder! Create a distasteful character like She-who-I-can't-even-call-by-her-name, now!
Thanks for sharing!
Patricia.. go! And check carefully about the time of year/weather. Frank.... you are so right! Yes, how someone could sit there so long.. hint I should write her story, then try to take me for a chump. Such people exists. They live off the tourists and know darn well they can simply say goodbye and count their money. But hey, what counts is my own conscience and the fact that I don't do those things to other people.
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