|
![]() The Colorado Springs Fiction Writer's Group has decided to add this section due to so many questions about how this organization came into being. Pardon the love story overtone, but that actually is how everything came into being.
Hank & Hollie joined a friend's critique group and found rules governing creativity to be too strict. They searched another, and a third. After the fifth group both were disheartened with either the Puff - "I love whatever it is you turn in - it'll be the next best seller" or the Literary - "You write like a combination of James Joyce and Amanda Quick." Most members of the first type of group seemed afraid to express their opinions for fear that when their turn came to be critiqued people would take their pound of flesh as revenge. The second offered commentary on the general flavor of the work, but little-to-nothing for practical commentary on the work itself. They each had a spiral notebook filled with comments about what was working in each individual group (and even more on what wasn't). A few friends, including long term writing verteran John Irwin, met with Hank & Hollie for coffee at the, now closed, Media Play. This meeting turned into a discussion on writing and to the idea of forming a group of their own. In January of 1996 the "Fiction Writer's Group" officially opened to the public. With no advertising, no website and only word of mouth the membership grew from 4 to 13 in a single year. The main rules were simple - "everyone reads the submissions, everyone critiques, submit only if you want." While the group grew, there was an ongoing problem with people actually reading the submissions. What promised to be a group for writiers serious about learning more was quickly spiraling into just another social group. Hank & Hollie studied their notes, returned to visiting writing groups around the front range and even as far away as one in Kansas. All of the groups they found with more than six members suffered the same problem, and often the problem was fatal to the group. In January of 2000 the answer came not from a writing group, but from Hank's father, a business analyst and accountant for the city of Colorado Springs. He said, "people love free things. Your group is free. People love you. If you want the group to be taken seriously, you need do something to get dedication and loyalty from the members. Charge them." That suggestion spawned charging dues and offering priveleges to the membership. Then came the problem of what to do with the money?
Critiquing each others work branched out into high school writing competitions, teaching creative writing at the local teen inmate facility even instructing elementary students on the need to feed their imagination with reading and writing rather than constantly watching television or playing video games. Lectures followed and members were asked to sit on author panels and take part in literary functions. Over the years one group grew into two, then two into three. In mid 2008 the CSFWG witnessed its first "hive off" from the group as a whole. The group had done so well a new group had sprung, taking with it some of the rules created, and focusing in a whole new direction. This is what the CSFWG was designed for - for writers to grow together and branch out to others.
|