Poynter Online Poynter Online
New UserLogin



SUBSCRIBE




UPCOMING SEMINARS

Online Writing: Words that Click
Jan. 27-30, 2008
Application deadline:
Dec. 17, 2007

Multiplatform Journalism
May 18-23, 2008
Application deadline:
April 7, 2008

NewsU: Writers at Work: A Process Approach
June 23/July 18, 2008
Application Deadline:
May 28, 2008



SERIES
BOOKS

"Reporting and Writing: Basics for the 21st Century"
Oxford University Press



"The Holly Wreath Man"
Andrews McMeel Publishing





ESSAYS

"My Cancer Time Bomb"
Salon.com

"Leave Me Alone, AARP"
Salon.com

"The Hardest Habit to Kick: A Confession"
National Public Radio

"The Only Honest Man"
River Teeth: A Journal of Nonfiction Narrative

"Reading the Paper"
The American Scholar



REPORTING

"Made in the Shade"
Creative Loafing

"Mass Appeal"
Catholic Digest

"The Liberation of Tam Minh Pham"
The Washington Post Magazine



FICTION

Holly Wreaths Across America
Online map of the newspapers in which "The Holly Wreath Man" has been published.

Mystery @ Elf Camp
with Katharine Fair

"The Needle"
A Novel in Progress

"Mad Looper"
MississippiReview.com






Chip on Your Shoulder
Sharing the writing life with Chip Scanlan.

Add/View All Chip on Your Shoulder Feedback
More Chip on Your Shoulder

A Blogger On Your Shoulder
In November of 2002, I started writing "Chip on Your Shoulder," a writing advice column for Poynter Online. By 2005, I had written a few hundred columns. For a number of reasons, I decided to take a break from the column and start a blog, "The Mechanic and the Muse: An Owner's Manual for Writers." (Credit for the name goes to my friend, Jacqui Banaszynski.)

Over the years, I have attempted to disabuse myself of the myth that writing requires more inspiration than perspiration. Instead, it means showing up for work every day, ready to get under the hood of your paragraphs, sentences and words. And so, I blogged, frequently.

I realized, as time passed, that many of my blog posts could easily have been columns.

Now, it's time to unite my split online personalities. From this point on, "Chip on Your Shoulder" will take center stage again. This time as a blog.

I'll post three times a week -- Monday, Wednesday and Friday -- and use the blog as a vehicle to share the journey that is the writing life, mine and yours.

Here's the first step along that path.

Two weekends ago, I spent a great couple of days at the National Writers Workshop in Hartford, Conn., with 600-plus writers.

If you were there, and didn't get a copy of my handouts, they are here and here.

At the speakers dinner, hosted by The Hartford Courant Saturday night, I got to talking with Michael Kodas and his wife Carolyn Moreau; Carolyn reminded me of my wife, Kathy, when she proudly told me that Michael had a book coming out about a crime wave -- or, perhaps, a crime slope -- on Mount Everest.

That was the first I'd heard of this. Before the dinner broke up, I asked Michael to tell me more about the project, and to answer three of my favorite questions for writers. Here's what I got from him in an e-mail:

Michael Kodas, from The Hartford Courant, here. "High Crimes," my book looking at how the big money on Mount Everest and in other adventures in the developing world is drawing crime, started as newspaper series, which I wrote and shot while a member of the Connecticut Everest Expedition in 2004. Carolyn Moreau, my wife, wrote a blog and sent video back for the paper's Web site, and to a local television station. She was also an amazing help with the reporting.

The story that concluded the project, and led to my book contract, appeared in Northeast magazine.

I got the contract with Hyperion in the summer of 2005 and took a 16-month leave of absence to write the book, which included spending another two months on Everest, both on the Nepalese and the Tibetan sides of the mountain. I also traveled to Spain, France, Bolivia and Argentina for research. Hyperion accepted the manuscript earlier this month. The book is scheduled for publication this winter.

Here are the answers to your questions.

1.) What surprised me? I thought, when I got the contract, that a book is so big, I was just going to empty my notebooks and refer to every document I found. About 75 notebooks, a hundred hours of taped interviews, and six file cabinets of documents later, I realized I would edit just as tightly as I did for newspaper stories. I can honestly say that all of my research, notes, cyber-stalking, and document hunting really enriched me and definitely helped me write with more authority. Nonetheless, the vast majority of my notes and documents still ended up on the cutting room floor.

2.) What did I learn? Books can benefit a lot from multimedia. My photos and audio recordings, my wife's videos and blogs, all informed the book, and will be really valuable to help promote it, and get its message out. We'll be putting out a Web site with a lot of supporting material, lots of photos that aren't in the book, video, interviews and the like. The Web site won't only help promote the book, but also will provide a lot of new content for people that read it and want more, or who don't want to read the book but would like to know a little about the subject. Multimedia material is also valuable for broadcast outlets that might want to feature the book or profile the author, or even for a documentary to accompany the book. I've always reported a lot with a camera, on top of taking photos for publication. Now I'm doing much more, as well as recording natural sound, recording interviews, videotaping interviews and events, etc.

3.) What do I want to learn next? How to put down the reporting. Like a lot of newspaper people, I pride myself on staying on top of my subject, reading all the latest material that comes out every day, tracking down new sources and keeping an eye on trends. I strove, with my book, to get every new fact I learned into the book. But with books, you have to put down the reporting at some point and resign yourself to the fact that, however quickly your publishing house gets your book out, the most current information in it will still be months, or years, old. That's something I had trouble getting used to, but will be better at next time.
Posted at 8:11:37 PM

E-mail this item | Add/View Feedback (1) | QuickLink this item: A121946


Chip on Your Shoulder Archive
View items published between:   and   
(MM/DD/YYYY) (MM/DD/YYYY)

MAIN | Back to Top



Search Poynter Online
Search Poynter Online

Coming Saturday: The New Poynter Online
Coming Saturday: The New Poynter Online
New On Poynter
Premature Death Report
Al's Thursday Meeting

Hospital Death Rates
Al's Thursday Meeting

Madrid Plane Crash
Page One Today

Fun Video on NFL Rules
Al's Wednesday Meeting

Internet in Your Car
Al's Wednesday Meeting

How Audiences Change
By Amy Gahran

Lower Drinking Age?
Al's Wednesday Meeting

More Men of AAJA
By Jill Geisler

Hurricane Resources
By David Shedden

Paralympics Stories
By Susan LoTempio


  Site Map | Advertise | Search | Contact | FAQ | Our Guidelines QuickLink  
  Copyright © 1995-2008 The Poynter Institute
  801 Third Street South | St. Petersburg, FL 33701 | Phone (888) 769-6837
  Site developed & hosted by DataGlyphics, Inc.



Poynter Career Center
Thursday: Switch to Web-Based Video News?
Friendships for Work, Support