Sid Stebel Blogs: Ray Bradbury & SBWC Beginnings

Many years ago, 1948 to be exact, while a disaffected English Lit major at USC,  I became more than a little depressed when I was invited to join an off campus student writers’ group who called themselves THE BARDS. The Bards wanted to publish a literary quarterly. They asked me to be the magazine’s editor. (Though I was a WWII vet with enough combat experience to know that to survive one must NEVER UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES WHATEVER VOLUNTEER!),  I found myself unable to turn down a job that came with such an imposing title, and with $60 in my pocket monthly (from the GI Bill) never minded  that there was no salary.)

During the organizational meeting, a fellow Bard suggested we needed a ‘name’ writer to bring attention to our magazine. Be great if anyone actually knew one, I responded.  We know Ray Bradbury, another Bard answered. Who’s he? I asked…and indeed unless you were a Sci-Fi fan (I wasn’t, Crime & Punishment was my bible) you’d not likely guess that this jolly fellow would eventually become the now internationally celebrated author of such classics as The Martian Chronicles, The Illustrated Man, & Fahrenheit 451.  We went to Bradbury’s tiny house set alongside a Venice canal (his only connection to the outside world was a pay phone in a booth under a street light), and he graciously agreed to give us a story. It fell to me to re-type Ray’s manuscript into a printer-ready format  – and I have always felt that a smidge of Ray’s vast talent came up through my fingertips and into my brain – my only explanation for why the many rejection slips I was receiving – heretofore anonymous – began taking on a friendlier tone. (The Bard’s COPY Magazine, meanwhile, was launched, and received a front page illustrated review in the Sunday NY Times Book Review.) Ray and I became fast friends, and he asked, indeed demanded, to read my short stories and novel-in-progress – which, under his benign aegis, took on a more accessible (read: professional) tone.  In time Ray, too nearsighted to drive himself, asked me to chauffeur him to many of the book events at which he was the featured speaker.  One of those events was the Squaw Valley Writers Conference, where we met Barnaby Conrad, a legendary figure renowned for having been gored fighting a bull (research for his best-selling novel, MATADOR.)  Barny informed us he was thinking of starting a Writers Conference in Santa Barbara, and asked Ray to become his keynote speaker.  Ray agreed, then convinced Barny (based on his knowledge of my writings & my critical commentaries when at his behest I joined his own writing group) that I would be an asset to his Conference as a Fiction Workshop Leader.

Thus was born the very first SBWC, held at the nearby Cate School (one of whose alums is Monte Schulz.)  With Barnaby Conrad, Jack Leggett (a future Director of the Iowa MFA Writing Program), Nils Mortenson, one of Barnaby’s many writer friends, and myself as workshop leaders, and Ray Bradbury as the keynote (read: inspirational!) speaker, the Conference was judged a success – not least because of the organizational efforts of Mary Conrad, Barnaby’s indefatigable wife.

Since then, I have conducted a workshop at every Conference meeting since, save one  – and want to echo our Conference’s savior Monte’s thought that the most basic (and enduring) value of the Conference is its ‘vibe’…that is, the interaction of all those attending which, in creating an almost audible ‘buzz ‘ , provides the kind of turn-on no drink or drug can equal. Ask any writer who attended during those early formative years.

Barnaby never missed an opportunity to remind everyone that in addition to the auras of famous authors that we all basked in, it was the workshops which provided the most tangible benefits to those attending. Who would disagree?  In the give and take of workshops Reads & Critiques only those unwilling to open minds or hearts did not benefit from the discussion.

This also benefits – it may surprise some to hear - Workshop Leaders.  In the dedication page of my writing book, “Double Your Creative Power!”,  I thank those who attended my workshops for providing a kind of writing laboratory in which we,  writers all, struggled to discover those verities which could transform our own writings into works of substance and art.

This writing book might never have been written had I not received – at a Conference more than a decade ago -a very tangible gift from a woman who had attended every session of my workshop during the week. On the last day she handed me a sheaf of papers, telling me that they were the extensive notes she’d taken of everything I had said in response to questions about fiction that had been raised during our ongoing Read & Critiques. Reading those pages later I was stunned to discover that they formed the basic elements of the book about writing I’d always wanted to write “when I got around to it.”

If not a movable feast, I hope it at least proves to be a bountiful one.

Note:  This coming June at SBWC 2011 I’ll be conducting intensive morning Fiction workshops about “Finding Your Secret Story.” The writing tips on my website, “Reprising a few fundamentals,” are hard won insights resulting from the nearly five decades I’ve spent conducting workshops  - and which are explored in greater detail in my writing text, DOUBLE  YOUR CREATIVE POWER!, now being used in writing programs at USC and NYU.

For more information, please visit my website at: www.slstebel.com .

Write on!

Gayle Lynds on The Villain!

Last week Monte and I had the pleasure of attending the Screenwriters Association of Santa Barbara meeting at Borders in Goleta, where bestselling author Gayle Lynds spoke.

Most interesting were Gayle’s thoughts on the Villain! Here’s what she had to say:

-Equally important to the hero is the villain. Your hero must have a worthy opponent. It creates marvelous friction. Sparks!

-Don’t make fun of your villain. It makes him less credible. If the author doesn’t believe in him, why should the reader?

-The villain perceives himself as an admirable person; he deserves what he’s after.

-Often at the beginning of the book, the villain is active and the hero is reacting.

-Give the villain at least one good characteristic. Ex. Adolf Hitler is the most hated person in history. He’s a monster—an aberration! The reader cannot relate to monsters. But when you learn that Hitler loved animals, suddenly he is humanized. You have something in common with him, and that becomes more interesting.

Gayle promised me she would blog about having met her late husband, author Dennis Lynds, at the conference. Please comment and convince Gayle to write a blog!

Gayle’s latest book, The Book of Spies, is out now. More about her at: http://www.gaylelynds.com/

Marla Miller Blogs - SBWC 2011: Full Circle

The year was 1972. Literary luminary Barnaby Conrad and his wife Mary had this notion for a writer’s conference. Barny got on the phone to friends Ray Bradbury and Alex Haley while Mary searched the area looking for just the right location. Though he loved the idea of a writer’s conference, Haley told Barny his schedule wouldn’t permit one more engagement. When Barny called Ray Bradbury, he essentially said the same. That’s when Barny dropped Haley’s name into their conversation. It would be years before Barny admitted that he might have given his friend the impression that Alex Haley had agreed to attend when in fact he hadn’t. Whatever the reason, once Bradbury heard that Haley was attending, he promised Barny he’d be there, too. Barny hung up from Bradbury, redialed Haley and intimated Bradbury would attend. “Then so will I,” said Alex Haley. With a solid lineup of literary stars to attract students, Mary found the perfect home at the Cate School in Carpinteria. SBWC enjoyed several years on that hill until we outgrew the campus. Mary went looking again and found SBWC’s new home just down the road in Montecito. The blue tiled Miramar Hotel would host SBWC for the next 28 years. If walls could talk, the stories they’d tell. Ray Bradbury, always dressed for tennis, almost daily could be spotted strolling along the multicolored flower lined pathways with tennis bag in hand. Barny’s morning workshop was standing room only. The Conrad’s Monday night cocktail party was the invitation to snag. Santa Barbara notables Robert Mitchum, Sander Vanocer and Eva Marie Saint mingled with workshop leaders and the ‘chosen few’ students lucky enough to be invited. Jonathan Winters doing stand-up in the Conrad’s living room added to our good time.

Change is inevitable and over the years, SBWC has gone through some. When the Miramar sold, we lost our home and moved back up the hill, this time to Westmont College. Another change took place that resulted in one more move; back down the hill to the Fess Parker DoubleTree Hotel & Resort. Not long after that move, the conference hit hard times and went on hiatus. For a while we didn’t know if the ‘granddaddy’ of writers conferences would ever be revived. Enter Monte Schulz, son of Charles Schulz who was as much a fixture at SBWC as Ray Bradbury. Like so many writers, Monte found his ‘tribe’ at SBWC, first as a writer on the road to publication and then a published author teaching SBWC workshops.

My path, like that of many SBWC workshop leaders, parallels Monte’s. In 1989, I attended my first SBWC, nervous and intimidated but not for long. With the support of SBWC, I became a published author during these years. In 2003, Mary Conrad said YES to my Marketing the Muse proposal. I’ve been teaching MarketingtheMuse Workshops ever since.

SBWC is back to our roots. Though Alex Haley and Charles Schulz won’t be there in person, in spirit they sure will. Ray Bradbury will do what he’s done since conference #1, deliver the opening night keynote. If you’re a new SBWC writer, brace yourself for a transformative experience and to all SBWC veteran writers, welcome home.

Marla Miller’s MarketingtheMuse curriculum offers writers FREE quick query critiques, noted author interviews & more through her website, www.MarlaMiller.com.

Happy New Year

I thought about the best books I read in 2010. Two came to mind: Humboldt’s Gift by Saul Bellow, and Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald. They were so good I followed up with Bellow’s, A Theft, and Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby, which I hadn’t read since high school and discovered there was much to be appreciated on my second trip to West Egg. The scene in which Daisy and Gatsby are reunited over tea at Nick Carraway’s house is a gem! The lexicon of those great writers is something I’ve found to be very rare amongst writers today. I edited my novel this year using Fitzgerald as a thesaurus. Some examples of his interesting and beautiful language: “Mrs. Speer’s consciousness was still clogged with sleep…” “The hotel crouched amid tumult, chaos and darkness.” “Already he could feel her absence from these skies: on the beach he could only remember the sun-torn flesh of her shoulder; at Tarmes he crushed out her footprints as he crossed the garden…”

On my list for 2011 are The Adventures of Augie March and This Side of Paradise.

What did you read in 2010?

What are you looking forward to reading in 2011?