One thing that I've been doing a lot of lately: tracking down historical photos to add to clients' books. Including photos of the time period can add a historical connection to your personal stories, especially if you are short of photographs of actual times and events.
Read moreIndependence Day — Video from a Veteran
Here is something you can do while celebrating with your family: talk to a veteran about his or her experiences and thank them. Over the years we have had the opportunity to work with several veterans. They loved their country and were willing to sacrifice all in the cause of peace and freedom.
Read moreA Little Friday Wisdom: House and Home
Since we have gained such a wealth of wisdom from a decade of working with wonderful people, we have decided to continue posting some of these nuggets that have so inspired us.
This week's quote is from our client and friend, Daryl Hoole.
Read moreHow to Fix a Faded Photo
If you are strange like me, and cherish these little cardboard slivers of silver-infused history, you will of course want to display them in some form: in frames, in family history books, decoupage them on the side of a dresser (just saw this on Pinterest yesterday!) But displaying (and especially decoupage-ing) the originals can damage your photos. So scan and re-print we must, in order to let our favorites enjoy some open air and sunshine while their original alter-egos are forever safely banished to dark acid-free prisons.
What to do with those that are already faded? Here's a little Photoshop magic that is quick and easy and works a little better than just using the full-automatic "fix photo" tools.
Read moreA Little Friday Wisdom: Life Lessons from Our Clients
Since we have gained such a wealth of wisdom from a decade of working with wonderful people, we have decided to continue posting some of these nuggets that have so inspired us.
Read moreCreating Suspense in Your Memoir: Foreshadowing and Cliffhangers
You've already lived your story, and you know what happens in the end (at least up until the present moment). But when you are writing your story for others to read, it's easy to forget that they are reading it for the first time.
Your reader may already know the ending of the story, if he or she is close to you. Still, even readers familiar with your life don't have all the information you have: details along the way, how you felt about events, and what it was like to be you.
You can take advantage of your superior knowledge of your own life (and your authority as author) to create a more enjoyable experience for your reader. How? By creating suspense in your memoir. Using simple literary techniques that are used in fiction writing--foreshadowing and cliffhangers--you can keep your reader wondering, "What happens next?"
Foreshadowing
The foreshadow is a little clue, usually dropped at or near the beginning of a story, that lets the reader know that something is coming. It's used every day in fiction, film, and television, so often that you may not even notice it when it occurs.
A simple (and not-so-subtle) example from a memoir:
I would miss Jimmy, but I couldn't wait to have a room to myself when he left for the service and I told him so. My big brother chucked a pillow at me from across the room and said, "I'm not bringing you any presents, you ungrateful midget." Then he leaned back on his bed, elbows bent, head resting on his hands, and smiled up at the ceiling. I wish he would have looked over at me just then, because that moment is burned into my memory. It was the last time I would see my brother alive.
"Wait," the reader thinks, "what? How does Jimmy die? How will his brother deal with it? How will this affect his family?"
They want to keep reading to see what happens next. Curiously enough, this technique works even with your relatives who know that Jimmy died in the war. Even if they already know the ending, they are hungry for the rest of the story, your version of it.
Here's another example; a lovely passage from Memoir from Antproof Case by Mark Helprin (a novel that is written in the form of a memoir):
When I was seventeen, in my last year at Chateau Parfilage, she had already left and gone to study music in some grasshopper-free suburb of Berlin, a city that had been impoverished but had not yet gone mad. Little did I know then that I would someday fly over Berlin, businesslike and deathly afraid, numbed and sick, angry, determined, and ashamed, escorting bombers that dropped bombs that undoubtedly broke into smithereens the piano at which Miss Mayevska had studied in the years when I loved and touched her. How wonderful was the time when neither she nor I knew of the destruction that lay ahead, when she was just a girl, when she was alive, and I had not been broken.
This passage comes quite early in the book, before we know that the protagonist fought in the war, before he has told the story of being raised in an asylum in Switzerland, and even before we know who Miss Mayevska is. His musing about future events before he has explained them leaves us with a powerful desire to know what will happen in the subsequent pages.
The Cliffhanger
Popular novelist Dan Brown of The Davinci Code fame has turned the cliffhanger device into a bookselling formula, dropping a cliffhanger at the end of every chapter and thereby guaranteeing you will turn the page. Whether or not you are a fan of Dan Brown, you can use internal mini-cliffhangers in your own writing to develop suspense in your reader. Look at your manuscript and figure out where the natural breaks in the action occur (could be at the end of a chapter or section, but doesn't necessarily have to be). What can you hold back from the reader? Can you add a phrase or two that asks a question without giving anything away? (The internal question is always, "What will happen next?")
It doesn't have to be long. Most of us are familiar with this passage from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, at the end of Chapter 3:
One minute to go and he’d be eleven. Thirty seconds…twenty…ten…nine – maybe he’d wake Dudley up, just to annoy him – three…two…one… BOOM. The whole shack shivered and Harry sat bolt upright, staring at the door. Someone was outside, knocking to come in.
Next is a great example of an internal cliffhanger from one of our clients' personal histories. In From Then Until Now, a man describes being robbed at gunpoint during a carjacking while traveling as a missionary in Guatemala:
Elder Black and I were in the back seat, but the robber still demanded our things....We lost everything that was in Dawnetta’s purse—passports, visas, plane tickets, and some other personal items. All the time this action was taking place we were going down the main highway at high speed. We went for about three miles, then they turned onto an old dirt road and went back into the jungle, driving through bushes and thick undergrowth for five or six more miles. When we turned off the main road I quietly put my head down and silently said one of the most sincere prayers of my life, asking the Lord to please preserve our lives.
Even though we know he must have made it out alive (after all, he wrote the book!), we are still on the edge of our seats, wondering how he will be delivered from this life-threatening situation.
Foreshadowing and cliffhangers often overlap. They can be short or long, subtle or somewhat obvious. But they are guaranteed to make your writing more interesting.
Look at your manuscript and determine what are the most dramatic events. Then look for places earlier in the narrative where you can drop "breadcrumbs" to lead your reader forward into the dark, unknown forest of your story.
Ten Tips to Improve Your Snapshots
Here at Pictures and Stories, we focus a lot on how to handle old photographs and use them in a personal or family history. But chances are you're going to include some new photos too. So we thought we'd you give a few basic tips to improve your snaps, whether you are using a fancy SLR or Instagram on your smartphone. Just a few simple changes can make all the difference between "nice" and "WOW." Just in time for your summer vacation!
Read moreFive Life Lessons We've Learned from Our Clients' Stories
Here at Pictures and Stories, being self-employed, we have no paid vacations, 401K, corporate health insurance, or stocked lunchroom. I have to buy my own diet Dr. Pepper. (Tom, who is superior to me in health and self-discipline, drinks water).
But our job is not without its perks. The best bennie we could ask for is to be inspired on a daily basis by your life stories. We have learned so much that has blessed our lives.
So here are a few lessons we've learned from some of our clients and their life stories. (We'll continue to share more from time to time.)
1. You're never too old to fall head over heels in love. One client (who wishes to remain anonymous but I have to say she's one of my very favorite clients ever) wrote her personal history at age 89. As we were going to print, she announced to us that she was about to be married -- for the fourth time. (She had lost three previous husbands -- all beloved -- to war or terminal illness). "I feel like a teenager," she gushed. And it's not just her, either. We've seen a number of our clients fall in love in their eighties and beyond, the sheer force of it undiminished by time.
2. You will never be less busy than you are now. At least, not if you are as lucky as Maggie Hicken, whose history we did when she was 104. While we were working on her book, Maggie admitted that she had a lot of photos she needed to go through and organize, but she was just too busy to get around to it. (She just recently passed away at age 107, in the midst of planning a party.)
3. The key to success is setting goals. In looking back at the lives of many of our clients who have been successful--in business, in community service, in family life--we have noticed that they all have something in common. Early in their lives, each had a vision, a goal of some sort, and worked diligently toward that vision. The nature of what we want when we are young often changes, and changes often. But the key to success seems to be to keep moving toward something we feel is important. Philanthropist and arts champion Beverley Taylor Sorenson said it simply: "Set up a plan for your life and work towards it."
4. Keep a good sense of humor. Our clients often come to feel like family to us. Arthur and Lila Mae Debenham, with whom we worked for three years on their book, Tender Mercies, still call us from time to time just to tell us a good joke. Or a bad one, which is just as good. Our client Louis Moore says, "Be able to laugh at yourself. There are times when you will need to be laughed at."
5. Our challenges make us who we are. Nobody comes out of life unscathed. Every single person has a story of adversity, of hardship, of the complete crap which life sometimes hands us. And those whose stories are the most compelling are those who have the courage to talk about their hard times, and more importantly how they dealt with them. What did you learn? How did you grow? How did it change you as a person? The answers to these questions have taught us the most about how to be human.
Link of the Week - Writing a Memoir with William Zinsser
Here's an excellent article by author William Zinsser, one of our favorite "writing coaches," courtesy of The American Scholar. In it, he describes the personal history his father wrote and what it meant to him.
Read moreYour Family History Book - Should You DIY or Hire a Designer?
You've collected a lot of family history information and now you want to put it in a lovely book to give to your family for Christmas. Or perhaps you've been working for months on writing a personal history. Now what? How do you get your stories and photos into physical form?
Read more
We are so excited to be back at RootsTech live this year! Come by and see the Pictures and Stories booth (#1609) and see some of the many new books we’ve helped our clients create. Alison is giving two in-person classes: The Seven Deadly Sins of Building a Digital Archive, and Making a Genealogy Story Book. Hope to see you there!