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Monday, December 19, 2011

The Challenge Pays Off: Damyanti Biswas Got a Book Out of It

       Here's an A to Z story from last year:  Damyanti Biswas took her posts from the Challenge and compiled them into a book.  For information on how to obtain A to Z Stories of Life and Death visit Damyanti at Daily (W)rite.   Here's what Damyanti had to say about the Blogging from A to Z April Challenge of 2011.



The A-Z Reflections Mega Post

The one thing I knew, however, was that it would be tough.
Tough for a blogger like me, that is. I’ve never really posted everyday despite the name and intention of the this blog , Daily (w)rite.
Before I started the challenge I didn’t know I would do all fiction, maybe fiction a day or two somewhere, but not All the posts!
But on an impulse I decided to ask for prompts for the challenge, based on which I would write flash pieces, and once I got the first few prompts and had written the first few pieces,  I knew it had to be fiction. Throughout. I was having way too much fun, and I love a good challenge.
Thanks to the comments that flooded/trickled in each day, I managed to hang in there and now have 24 flash pieces (I combined two letters, twice). It did take a bit of courage, to write a new piece and send it out into the world each day, but it also gave me a lot of confidence.
I know most of the comments were kind for the sake of kindness, but even I can’t deny that some of the commenters on some of the posts seem to have really liked the stories, and meant every word of what they said.
I hope to do a collection of these, in an e-book format, and Arlee Bird  and a few others think it might be a good idea. I’ll cull some of the stories, which did not work, to my mind, and replace them with others I’ve written before or will write afresh.
As to visiting other blogs, I have to admit I did not visit all the blogs that participated. I knew I couldn’t do it and go on with my normal life, which is a little crazy at the moment, with a new home and a host of other things.
So I visited all the the posts at #atozchallenge on Twitter, created a Twitter newspaper of links. I visited, or tried my very best to visit, everyone who visited and commented. I visited others from the links on the comments they left on blogs I was already visiting.   I must have visited at least 30 blogs each day.
For today I want to thank the organisers:
Arlee Bird (Tossing It Out) ,
Jeffrey Beesler’s (World of the Scribe),
Alex J. Cavanaugh (Alex J. Cavanaugh) ,
Jen Daiker ( Unedited),
Candace Ganger (The Misadventures in Candyland) ,
Karen J Gowen  (Coming Down the Mountain) ,
Stephen Tremp (Breakthrough Blogs )
The challenge increased the number of people who subscribe to my blog, the number of visits and commenters.
But the best thing it did was give me a shot in the arm, that I could produce fiction somewhat consistently, some of it  not half bad.
So, Thank You to all the organisers, and hope to take part in the A-Z again next year!

(Part 2)  A-Z challenge: Have I thanked you yet??

April has been the A-Z challenge month for me. I invested quite a bit of myself in it, and like I said in my yesterday’s Reflection post, I have the organizers to thank for giving my muse a huge boost.
But I also need  to thank some of the most consistent and kind commenters on my A-Z posts, without whom I would have fizzled out about halfway down the challenge. They provided extraordinary word-prompts for my flash pieces, and were unfailing in their generous support.
So, here goes, in no particular order:
Marian Allen : She sent me some lovely prompts, and made some super-awesome comments!
Petra Hefner : I loved her positive posts and her equally positive comments.
Nutschell: Another blogger whose posts made an impression on me, and who always left me exciting comments.
Nicole/MadlabPost :  Always patient and kind on twitter and on the blog. I’m so happy to have met a blog-friend like her.
Dafeenah: A genuine, emotional  writer, and a generous commenter.
Bornstoryteller: He wrote an entire story in the A-Z challenge. And I have seldom had a more encouraging and consistent commenter.
PencilGirl : Every blog should have a commenter like her, for the sheer number of smilies and the genuine warmth of feeling :)
Patricia : Her first A-Z post floored me, and we have been in touch on blog and twitter ever since.
Christina Majaski : She is a straightforward girl with an awesome blogging voice, which is why her admiring comments meant so much more.
Joy : I don’t know if Joy remembers, but we used to visit each other’s blog two years ago when this blog was new, and have now re-connected thru A-Z. She has been very very generous with both her prompts and comments.
Corinne O’Flynn : I found her via the #atozchallenge via twitter, and have loved interacting with her on the blog and twitter.
Claire Goverts : I used a great many of Claire’s prompts and can never thank her enough. She is ever so sweet on twitter too.
Anna Tan: She wrote fiction for the A-Z, and lovely to talk to, both on my blog and twitter.
Talli Roland: One firecracker of a woman, who is all fun and laughter, yet also a fount of support and kindness….a prolific commenter and a joy on twitter.
India Drummond: I don’t know how she coped with A-Z despite going on a blog tour and sundry other things in April, but she did. She even found time to comment on my posts.
Alex and Lee: I met them via A-Z, and remain in awe of how they took the time to stop by my blog. Often. Despite organizing the challenge. Amazing.
I’m sure I’m missing out others who I need to thank, but I’m racing this post close to midnight and hope to make up for my errors by next week….I’ll visit and personally thank as many people as I can.
A few non-A-Z bloggers who used to be my friends before and supported me through A-Z:
Gladys Hobson : When Gladys comments, it makes my day. She cheered me on through much of A-Z, and I love her for that.
Indigo: An amazing writer who edits as a profession, and one of my oldest blog-friends—one I’m proud to have. She read and commented on my A-Z posts when she wasn’t doing so well.
Bronxboy55: If you mean to read one new blog this year and stop, make it this one. Awesome writer, humanitarian, humorist. His comments made the difference between posting and not posting on A-Z a few times, just at the points I was about to give up.
Thanks to each and every one of the bloggers mentioned above, and to all the others who visited, and took the time to comment. I’m grateful.
As I said yesterday, I’m going to work on an e-book, a Kindle short  (if research confirms it is the best fit for such a small book) based on the flash pieces I did on the A-Z. I haven’t decided on a title yet, and need to edit, cull out and sort all the pieces  before I can call it a manuscript.
It would be an interesting experiment, because the manuscript would be very  short, and not very suitable for traditional publication.
We’ll see.
Hope to receive words of advice from any and all A-Zers who have followed my work through the challenge.
Signing off on my last official A-Z post, till next April! Happy blogging, everyone.
          Thank you Damyanti for being a part of the 2011 Challenge and congratulations on the book. We're looking forward to what you come up with in 2012.


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Sunday, December 18, 2011

A-Z Reflections from K C Woolf

                Contemporary fantasy writer K.C. Woolf has her blog at The Woman Condition and that's where you'll find today's Reflections post.  And a nicely done post it is. We hope that K.C. will be able to find time to return to the Blogging from A to Z April Challenge in 2012.  She did some great things last year.



Z is for Zzzzz ...

Wow, I've made it. This is the last day of the A to Z blogging challenge. 26 mad days of posting every day, visiting tons of other blogs, commenting and connecting.

What a ride it has been. I've met a bunch of people, who feel like they've become friends. I've discovered a number of blogs that inform me, entertain me, make me think or put a smile on my face.

My blog has grown and become more lively, with a lot more visitors dropping by and adding to the party. It feels like it's got more of a soul now, and will continue to thrive.

Over the course of 1 month, I've gone from a wonderful 10 followers (I owe you all at least one of those legendary caipirinhas!), to an even more fabulous 72.

And what I like most, is that those 72 followers all have a face to me, an identity of their own - even those I've never met in person. I've read pieces of their writing, I've exchanged ideas and information, and I feel like I know them a little bit - enough to want to learn more.

The Web is a huge place, where it's easy to feel tiny, insignificant or intimidated. What initiatives like the A to Z challenge do, is to fence off a piece of that vast universe and define the borders of a (temporary) playground.

All of a sudden the blogosphere doesn't seem so big any more. Even though there were over a thousand participants, the challenge we all had in common made it more manageable and accessible.

At first, you see just names and profile pictures, but soon, those names start looking familiar and turn into people. Then they become individuals you respect and appreciate.

With some, I feel I've connected on a more personal level, because we think alike or because we're complementary and can teach each other a lot; because we're all writers or because we share a love for particular books or genres; because we've been through similar experiences, or because we're drawn to the same people.

Whatever the future brings, I'm happy and grateful for this experience.

I would like to express my special thanks to Lee (Arlee Bird), word and idea juggler extraordinaire, for coming up with the A to Z challenge, and to science fiction guru Alex J. Cavanaugh, whose tweets informed me about the challenge in the first place.

And now it's time to relax, take a weekend off, catch up on some sleep, and then I'll be back with a whole list of topics, dealing with writing, life, love and my quest for authentic and worthwhile experiences.


See you around!


Funky fact: at a given point I had 666 unread messages in Google Reader, ànd 66 followers. I'm sure it was a sign, but of what?

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Image 2: 'web' by Brenda Anderson. Available under a creative commons license. © 2005, Brenda Anderson.
Image 3: 'Friends' by Leon Rice-Whetton. Available under a creative commons license. © 2010, Leon Rice-Whetton.
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       Congratulations on a job well done.   We'll look for many stories like this in 2012.



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