Check out my latest post on Live in Limbo: An extremely enthusiastic review of the Scott Pilgrim Series. Please feel free to comment with feedback or suggestions on any of my writing. What do you like about it? What do you hate about it? Let me know! Honest feedback (positive or negative) is always appreciated.
Author Archive: miaherrera
From City to City…
Hello everyone! After a long hiatus, I’m back from an extended three-week vacation around Florida, the Cayman Islands and Mexico. The break was a great opportunity for me to learn how to slow down and take it easy.
Prior to my vacation, I’d been feeling a bit discouraged about my writing. After fast-tracking through elementary school and university, I was faced with my career choice (writing) – something I couldn’t rush. The results seemed few and far between and I was mainly afraid of not being good enough or making a career-crippling wrong move early on. During my vacation, I realized that (as many mentors have tried to teach me before) in order to write one must first live to have things to write about. Furthermore, I realized that everything must come in its own time. Mistakes will be made and rejections will be had, but that’s all part of the process.
Although I’m currently having a two-day stop over here in Markham, I’ll be departing for Halifax this Sunday morning to attend the Writers and Exile retreat at the Tatamagouche Centre. Though I haven’t even attended the seminar yet, all of the people I’ve corresponded with thus far from Tatamagouche have been extremely encouraging and helpful.
I can’t wait to attend! I expect the retreat to be, not only a great experience, but just the kind of experience I need to further place my writing into perspective.
Random Thought #2
Sometimes, even if a certain story may be of no value to anyone else, it may still be a story that you have to write out.
Random Thought #1
While rejection always sucks, there’s something unbelievably liberating in looking back on a rejected piece and knowing, with added wisdom and hindsight, where its strengths and weakness lie and how you can improve it.
RHIFF Friday Lunch n Learn
Tomorrow I’ll be volunteering for ReelHeART International Film Festival’s Friday Lunch n Learn session from 9:30am to 2pm. As with today’s event, the actual event begins at 11:15am and includes a Subway lunch. Tomorrow’s discussion, however, costs $12 at the door and involves a workshop discussion by top industry professionals about how to get your film out there and seen. Like today’s Lunch n Learn, tomorrow’s event will be held at Innis College Town Hall (2 Sussex St).
If you’re interested in the film industry at all, would like to see how Film Fests work, or are just a big film buff in general, ReelHeART will be a great experience for you. Films of all genres and Lunch n Learns of all varieties have been running all week, but there’s still a chance to catch some of the action. The festival itself will end on Saturday night.
RHIFF Thursday Lunch n Learn
Tomorrow I’ll be volunteering for ReelHeART International Film Festival’s Thursday Lunch n Learn session from 9:30am to 2pm. Volunteer work involves setting up, ushering attendees in and out, and cleaning up afterwards. The actual event begins at 11:15am and involves a Subway lunch and a feature length live script read of The Sleep Clinic by Ramona Baillie. Each year ReelHeART hosts a Screenplay competition and they select the top three winners. The Sleep Clinic is one of the three winning pieces.
Although I’m not ecstatic about waking up at 7am (have to factor in the commute from Markham!) and working early in the morning, it’ll be great to see hear one of the winning screenplays. I hope to submit my screenplay for consideration for next year’s call.
Anyways, ranting and writing aside, if you have some extra time on your hands tomorrow and you’re near Innis College Town Hall (2 Sussex St), feel free to come around. It’s a “Pay What You Can” event and there’s free lunch involved!
Hope to see some familiar faces there!
LiL and Website Work
Check out my latest Live in Limbo article titled “Books for Dads: Bookstore Chains’ Holiday Reads“. I’m a bit hesitant about this article because I was unable to spend much time with it. Its due date arose between family visits, relatives’ birthdays, graduating ceremonies, and fundraising events. As a result, I was unable to really get a feel of the article before submitting it. I know that if I really want to make a living as a writer, I’d have to quickly learn how to write timely articles on a deadline. Because of this, I’m even more glad that I’m part of LiL; it familiarizes me with this aspect of writing. I hope to gradually improve with practice.
On another note, I spent a good few hours transferring my website to a different host (WordPress instead of Blogger). I find WordPress enables me to create different Pages within one Blog site that users can easily navigate through. With Blogger, I had to create completely different blogs and link them together through an HTML sidebar to create the feel of different Blog sections. Please feel free to give me feedback on the website’s change. Suggestions are greatly welcome, as I’ve just recently received my domain name and am still at the very beginning stages of my website construction and career.
Convocation, Writing, Film Fest Going
A lot has been going on and I just haven’t had the time to update. My apologies in advance for the long, long post.
Yesterday I attended my convocation ceremony and have officially graduated! The ceremony was early in the morning and, even if it was a nice day, I was extremely hot in the toga. I couldn’t help feeling sleepy, but I think the fact of graduating finally hit me when everyone began to clap for the final person to pass through and shake the Chancellor/Vice President’s hand. Only then was I suddenly struck with a wave of intense relief… I’m done!
I was unaware of this going into graduation, but apparently my grades ended me off on footing for an Honours Bachelor of Arts “with Distinction”. I guess that’s a good thing because only a handful of Trin students graduated without it. Nevertheless, it was a really nice surprise.
As I was walking up to the stage and shaking the Vice President’s hand, she congratulated me and asked me what I’m planning on doing now that I’ve finished my degree. I told her I’m going to write. She asked what I planned to write. I told her I’d like to write fiction – short stories or novels. So she congratulated me again and said she can’t wait to see my name in print. Neither can I!
In terms of writing, I recently registered for the Writers and Exile program at the Tatamagouche Centre. The program is a week-long intensive writing workshop focused on creative non-fiction, fiction, and culture’s role in these forms. The mentors for this retreat will be Shani Mootoo, author of Cereus Blooms at Night, Aaron Berhane from PEN Canada, and Gwen Davies, founder of Community of Writers. The only limitation I have with this program is its price ($620 for the program, accommodation, and food costs + approx. $450 in travel costs), but I received word that I’ve been approved for a $200 bursary from the Tatamagouche Centre and I applied for a scholarship there as well. I’m hoping all goes well. I used my published short story as part of my writing sample and received an awesome reference letter from Krishna. If everything goes through, I’ll be heading off to Nova Scotia for a week after I come back from my cruise this July!
In regards to scriptwriting, I’ve still been vigorously working on my script but am still in the plot revision stage. I’m not sure if I’m just really slow-going or if this is how long it takes to set the foundation down for a feature film. Although the last day of Krishna’s contract was June 15, I’ll be meeting with him tomorrow morning for our final go-over. Krishna has really been an awesome mentor – a little rough at times and blunt when things in our script have to go, but exactly what I needed – someone to tell me how things stand exactly as they are. After my time with Krishna is done, I’m taking a bit of a break from the screenwriting, only to return to my script with a vengeance later on to ready it for film fests and scriptwriting competitions.
On the side, my scripwriting friend, Maureen Holland, and I are volunteering for the ReelHeART International Film Festival. Founded in 2005, the ReelHeART Festival has grown to include the works of over a hundred different filmmakers from all around the world. The volunteer opportunity is a pretty awesome way to learn more about the industry, see new filmmaking faces, and view emergent films and screenplays for free! Maureen and I signed up for the Lunch n’ Learn morning shifts. Although the morning is a bit hectic, we get to see live reading performances of the winning screenplays selected for this year’s festival and meet with industry execs who discuss the art of screenwriting and the steps to discovery, distribution and filmmaking. Oh, we also get some free lunch – obviously the reason why I signed up for this shift. Haha, just kidding. But seriously, I signed up for this opportunity on a last minute whim upon request from Maureen, and have been wow-ed by the windows it’s opening up, providing excellent insight into the (still widely mysterious – to me at least-) film industry.
Last but definitely not least, as part of my graduation gift in celebration of yesterday’s event, my brother presented me with the following: https://miaherrera.com! Currently, the domain name redirects users to my blogspot, but soon I will have an up and running website of my own. I’ll update everyone when the website is in place. For now, feel free to continue following me here on blogspot or on my Twitter – a more informal place where I track what I’m doing, what I’m reading, what I’m seeing and what I’m listening to.
If you’ve made it thus far in my post, congratulations! I’ll be back soon!
LiL Article 1: Live Literature, Live Life
Find me on Live in Limbo
I’m pleased to announce that I will soon be starting a weekly “column” of sorts on LiveInLimbo.com – a new “synergetic effort of many multi-talented and multi-disciplinary young folks from various parts of Ontario”. The site has recently debuted online, through the efforts of my high school classmate and awesome web master, Sean Chin. My articles will be appearing online on a bi-weekly basis and will involve a mix of book and literary events reviews. Another exciting outcropping of this decision has been the possibility of upcoming author interviews for publication online. That means more opportunities of me talking one-on-one with published writers (my occupation of desire and choice)!