Report on MILFORD 2000 |
by Dayle A. Dermatis
And on the sixth day, Milford created mornings.
When I awoke at 8 a.m. and decided to stay awake, the first thing I did was look out the window to see if there were a pod in the yard. For I, a hapless Night Person needing 9 hours of sleep for normality, was actually up early and choosing to start my day.
Is Milford exhausting? Yes. Is it exhilarating? Absolutely.
I came to Milford looking to get some of my work critiqued, to get back into a network of critiquers, and to get re-energised about the solitary and often lonely process of writing.
I left Milford re-energised, with my work critiqued, and with a network of friends across Britain who just happened to also be writers.
I wasn't sure what to expect. I'd been in critique groups before, some more helpful than others, some more intense than others. Although I didn't expect anyone to get mean, I'd had my share of hard-hitting commentary in the past, and hoped my skin was thick enough for this.
I needn't have worried. What impressed me most about Milford was that although we got into some down-and-dirty, nit-picking comments, everything was said with such encouragement that no-one (I hope) could have felt offended or discouraged. For myself, at the end of each afternoon I was fired up to write, and managed to do so nearly every evening.
Another thing I didn't expect was the variety of done-ness to the various pieces. I had brought fairly polished work, but others brought rougher works-in-progress, wanting to ensure they were headed in the right direction before they continued writing.
We sat in a room with tall windows that looked out to the lawn. During the afternoon, the sun would cast pathways on the carpet, occasionally broken when a bird flew by. One night, in my journal, I wrote: “Every so often, a swoop of dark movement: a bird winging by. They're large, dark, on an unspoken mission. I imagine they're snatching the loose thread of our creativity and taking it on flight with them.”
By some miracle, despite the excellent critique that every piece received, we finished early every single day. This allowed time for walks down to the sea (or at least down to the cliffs), naps, reading the next days' stories, or socialising. (As mentioned, a few of us also got some writing done, but this seemed to cause some others to growl threateningly, so all names have been removed to protect the prolific.)
Dinner. Now there was an interesting experience. Every night, someone would come up with a completely inappropriate topic for dinner-time conversation, which the surrounding folks would gleefully take up. The Plague, for instance, or deadly and poisonous animals in Australia (which led to a morning-after breakfast conversation that included, to the resident arachnophobic, “Dayle, would you eat a spider?”). (Answer: “Yes, if it were properly cooked and had no legs so that it didn't look like a spider.”)
After dinner was socialising time. The hotel left a book out at the bar where we could record the number and kind of drinks we had, so we were free to take what we wanted and the proprietors were free to escape. Some nights we simply chatted. One night we played
Mafia, which was the closest anyone came to
blows... but in a friendly, if somewhat paranoid, sort of way. We also discussed
markets — focusing on the specific stories people had brought for critique —
and had a Milford business meeting, during which we discussed the membership list and finances.
But I knew that the friendships, as well as my enthusiasm and re-energised creativity, would be with me for a long time to come.
“I'm Just a Simple Road-Mender”
— David Redd“Two Bees, a Couple of Flies, and a Weird Thing”
— Liz Williams“Presumably Gills are not Very Beddable”
— Deirdre Counihan“I Have a Loud Trouser Problem”
— Liz Williams“I Want a Happy Ending for the Rats. Remember, I Know Where You Live”
— Karen Traviss“Do Siamese Twin Bank Robbers Wear Tights?”
— Liz Counihan