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Showing posts from March, 2008

3/30 Rhymes, Views & News Radio w/Qaadira Allen

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Rhymes, Views & News Talk Radio Featuring -- Qaadira Allen, today, March 30th at 5pm EST! Qaadira Allen is a mixed media artist, creative life coach and transformative art facilitator and student of spiritual law. She creates and facilitates workshops that feature art-making, affirmations, reflective journaling, energy work, meditation, visualization, music, and sacred ceremony. In 2006 Qaadira received the Art & Change Grant from The Leeway Foundation . She is the author of the forthcoming book “Soulful Change”. DuEwa will interview Qaadira Allen about her work as an artist and life coach and the practices she utilizes in her transformative healing workshops for women. Be sure to listen in today at 5pm EST on this empowering discussion!

Rhymes, Views & News Radio w/Dr. Brenda Greene (NBWC)

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Rhymes, Views & News Talk Radio Featuring -- Dr. Brenda M. Greene this Saturday, March 22, 2008! Dr. Greene is the Director of The Ninth National Black Writers Conference , which will take place March 28 - 30, 2008. DuEwa will interview Dr. Greene about this year's Conference and the many esteemed Black writers, authors and publishing professionals who will participate in the event. Be sure to tune in at 5pm EST tomorrow to listen in on the discussion and find out how you can register for the Conference!

It Pays to Workshop Your Writing

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Last Saturday, I took my first “real” writing workshop in a year. When I say this was a “real” workshop, meaning it wasn’t a talkfest where people just exchanged abstract ideas on writing or talked about their publishing credentials for the full class time, like some workshops I’ve taken in the past. For four hours, myself and ten other writers workshopped samples of projects we’re working on with a Senior Editor at a major publishing house. The experience was both exciting and scary, as I let go of “my baby”, a project I’ve been working on for some months now, and shared an excerpt of it with complete strangers. This workshop was filled with women writers of all ages, mostly professional women, from New York, Georgia, Texas and other areas. We all read our work, gave copies of our work to the other participants and braced ourselves for the critique. Our instructor gave us some insider tips to the publishing industry and what it takes for an editor to acquire your work. I found t