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Public Speaking Like Susan

ToastmastersLast spring, I jumped on the chance to see young adult/adult author Susan Juby when she came to town. Not only was it exciting to have a writer of this caliber visit us—to give a talk to our town’s 20+ grade seven students—but it was exciting to meet an author who happens to have the same literary agent as me.

Sitting casually, Susan kept the pre-teen audience enthralled for 40-something minutes. She told stories: they laughed. She asked questions: they shot up their hands. Boys as well as girls. It was smooth, seemingly effortless, ostensibly a success.

Now me… My public speaking skills have had little practice. My speaking skills have had little practice. And yet, as an author, I know I’ll need to be able to follow in the footsteps of people like Susan.

Which is why last night, for the first time, I spoke publicly about my young adult novel. Okay, so it was only to three people in our local Toastmasters group. Okay, so it was for less than six minutes. Okay, so…

I nailed it! Or at least I impressed myself. While I had expected a wavering voice and a plethora of “um”s and a few forgotten moments, I instead felt eloquent and at ease. I even added unexpected embellishments.

Despite the tiny audience and short time, it was a start—and that’s where even the best begin.

Small-town pros: It was easy to join Toastmasters, as I already knew a couple of the members from Zumba class and was able to accost one of them on the street to get details. Plus I get to speak in every meeting; I hear in some larger chapters, there are simply too many people.

Small-town cons: Does speaking before the same handful of people, who you’re comfortable with, truly prepare you for speaking before a roomful of strangers? I suspect the answer is: not exactly, but it’s far better than nothing.

What do you think?

About the Author

Posted by Galadriel

Hi, I’m Galadriel: blogger, author, reader and resident of a quaint small town in the breathtaking West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.

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Down to Business

school zoneThe strike is over! Finally—three weeks late, thanks to a teachers strike—my kids are headed back to school. Finally, three weeks late, I get my Mondays to myself.

Which means a full day to write.

For Mondays are the day I don’t work my full-time job. And Mondays—finally—are the days the kids are in school.

Since mid-June I’ve been finding stolen time to write. I’ve got one young adult manuscript in the hands of an agent (see Beneath the Cardboard Moon) and am diving into a new one. It’s not even 9 a.m. and I have a whole day ahead of me to develop characters and play with plot and dive into research.

But am creating a blog instead.

Why? To extend my community.

You see, I live in a small town. A very small town. About 1,500 people. And about the same living in the hills and along the lakes around us. We have gorgeous scenery and friendly neighbours and breathing space and a smattering of services. But we also have challenges.

No writing festivals. No bookstore (except used—and I require new). The odd author visit to our too-cute library, but the next one cancelled due to lack of interest in her complementary writing workshop. One writers’ group that I’ve heard of, but am not a part of.

And so it’s mostly me, in my home, alone.

Thanks for reading this post. Please follow those to come: my musings on writing and reading and maximizing life within a small town.

Leave a reply.

About the Author

Posted by Galadriel

Hi, I’m Galadriel: blogger, author, reader and resident of a quaint small town in the breathtaking West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.