Hi, I’m Aleesah Darlison. I’m a
multi-published, award-winning Australian children’s author.
In the last six and a half years, I’ve had
thirty-six books commercially published, including my eight book fantasy
adventure series, Unicorn Riders,
which has just been released in the US.
But… ten years ago, I knew nothing and no
one in the children’s publishing industry. I was as green as they come!
What was one of the best things I did to
get my career on track?
It was to create a children’s writers
critique group – well, two groups, to be precise.
So what happened, was that I knew I wanted
to be an author. I worked out that I would have to skill myself, teach myself,
how to write properly. As you probably already know, writing for children isn’t
as easy as people believe.
I went along to a number of writing
workshops that were being run by well-known children’s authors.
The first workshop was an introductory
course on writing for children with Dianne (Di) Bates. Di has won many awards
both for her writing and her services to children’s literature. It was Di who
encouraged the attendees at her workshop to connect and form a critique group.
I collected everyone’s contact details with the intention of doing just that.
At around the same time, I attended a
workshop that was run by Libby Gleeson. Libby is a much-loved Australian
children’s author. She’s won plenty of awards too and was also presented with a
Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in the Queen’s Birthday honours in 2007.
Huge kudos.
At Libby’s workshop, I met and networked
with more aspiring and emerging authors. We had much in common including our
need to continue our education as authors and our desire to be published.
I collected more contact details. Now all I
needed was a venue. That’s when I got in touch with the NSW Writers’ Centre
(another fabulous resource for authors in Australia!) and asked them if they
could provide a room for us to meet. They happily did so – and it was free of
charge and central to everyone. We were living in Sydney in the time, a huge
city, so a central venue was crucial.
From that point on for several years I coordinated
and chaired two separate critique groups. One group was for picture book
authors only. The other was a broader group of children’s author of all age
groups/genres.
There were about six to ten of us coming
every fortnight, although we had a much larger database of people. Not everyone
could attend every week.
We had a list of rules that we tried to
live by. No personal or confronting feedback, constructive feedback on
manuscripts only. Everyone has a turn. Try your best not to defend every
comment made or justify every word written – the author being critiqued really
needed to listen more than they spoke, otherwise the feedback ended up falling
on deaf ears.
So, why was it so crucial at the start of
my writing career to be part of a critique group? Some clear reasons, in a
nutshell included:
- Networking.
Taking the journey with other people at the same skill level as you and
developing those contacts as life-long friends.
- Having people who
understand where you’re coming from as an author and where you’re desperately
trying to get to.
- The chance to
read your work out aloud to other writers and gain crucial, constructive
feedback free of charge. Priceless.
- Attending a
regular critique group meeting means you have a deadline to work towards. You will finish that story because you want
to read it out.
- Having a forum to
share your work – on paper and also verbally as you read and perform it. One of
the main reasons I write is to share my stories and my ideas.
- Knowing you need
a new story or chapter to read at the critique group gets your ideas out onto
paper – you’re one step closer to becoming published.
- In a critique
group your writing will develop to a publishable standard under the guidance of
others.
- Reading your work
out at a critique group (or even having someone else do it for you) allows you
to see and hear the errors in your writing. Often you’re writing blind,
especially when you first start out, or you’re writing with the blinkers on.
You’re so in love with your own work – or so tired of editing your own story –
that you can see what’s wrong with it. Let others do it for you!
Of course you’re not going to agree with
every item of feedback you receive. There are matters and stories that are
close to your heart and you may consider that what you’ve written – and how
you’ve written it – is right and true and correct. You may consider that your
story is as precious as The Holy Grail. And yes, authors do get precious about
their work. We spend countless hours lovingly creating our stories, after all.
But writing is an incredibly objective
thing. Listening to other people’s opinions and taking on-board how they have
heard or read you work is crucial to the story’s development. It’s also crucial
to your development as an author. Once you’re published, don’t think that for
one moment the feedback is going to stop. You have to learn to have a thick
skin, but also to listen to people dissect your writing as they find their own
truth and meaning in it.
As time went by, the members of both my writers’
groups developed their skills. Those picture books, chapter books, novels and
short stories that we were reading out, well, many became published in magazine
and in book form.
Several of the people I started with in the
critique groups are now multi-published authors. We still walk the path
together and while we might not be critiquing each other’s work (many of us
have agents and editors who do that for us now) we still support each other.
I’m proud of the fact that authors rose
from my critique groups. A critique group, your
critique group, can help you rise too.
*****
Aleesah Darlison is an award-winning Australian children’s author. To
date, she has published thirty-six books for children including picture books,
chapter books, novels and series. Aleesah has won numerous awards for her
writing including the 2015 Environment Award for Children’s Literature
(Non-Fiction) and an Australian Society of Authors (ASA) mentorship.
Aleesah travels throughout Australia and internationally delivering
talks and workshops to children and adults at preschools, schools, libraries,
literary festivals and writers’ centres. Her 8-book fantasy adventure series, Unicorn Riders, has been released in
hardcover and paperback in the US. In 2016, Aleesah set up a business called
Greenleaf Press, which provides critical support services to authors,
illustrators and small businesses.
Twitter: @Aleesah and @Greenleaf_Press
*****
Give-away
Today's give-away is a hand-made mermaid charm bookmark (different from the one shown in the picture; pictured is a cat charm bookmark). Just comment on this post by September 30th to be entered to win.