• Skip to content

Rashid Darden

Old Gold Soul Press

Main navigation

  • Home
  • About Rashid Darden
    • Speaking Engagements
  • Old Gold Soul Press
    • Potomac University Series
      • Lazarus
      • Covenant
      • Epiphany
    • Men of Beta
      • Yours in the Bond
    • Dark Nation
      • Birth of a Dark Nation
      • Children of Fury
    • Dark Nation Stories
      • Pascal: A Dark Nation Story
      • Thunder Rolls: A Dark Nation Story
    • A Peculiar Legacy
    • The Life and Death of Savion Cortez
    • Time
  • Ministry
    • Restorative Quaker Design
    • Faith
  • Projects
    • Nalia
    • BlackOrgs.net
    • Joining Society
      • High School Fraternities and Sororities in DC
    • David Bowie Syllabus
  • Diary
  • Contact

Diary

How do you just start a story?

February 23, 2013 by Rashid

“I am an aspiring novelist. Right now, I keep a journal of my day to day thoughts and inspirational quotes. I’ve always said that I wanted to write novels one day, but I don’t know where you begin. How do you just start a story?” –Rico

I think keeping a journal is an excellent start.  Keeping a journal gives you practice for descriptive narrative.  It helps you refine your abilities to observe and recall events.  Be sure to push yourself further and practice recalling everything that happened to you in a day:  where you went, what you wore, how you felt, what you ate, what it tasted like, how places smell, what things reminded you of other things.  Pick one day out of the week to make your ultra-descriptive journal entry so that you don’t overwhelm yourself every day that you write.

But obviously, keeping a journal alone won’t result in a novel.  Novels will have dialogue, and I will get to dialogue writing in a future entry.  What I will focus on today is how to just start writing.

In your daily adventures, observe people and situations that you find interesting.  Then ask a “what if” question based on your writing interests.  For my upcoming novel Birth of a Dark Nation, I merely asked myself “What if vampires came from Africa rather than Europe?”  From that single question came many others:

  • How did African vampires get to America?
  • Are there white vampires?
  • If so, how did they come to be?
  • What makes my vampires different from traditional vampires, aside from race?

And so on and so forth.  Now, you might not be writing in a paranormal genre, in which case the questions might be simpler.  In the case of Covenant, the central question was “What would happen if the star basketball player was dating a fraternity man?”  And from those questions arose more, some from me, some from people who read the rough draft:

  • What if one of them was already in a relationship?
  • Who is the girl?
  • What if there’s an ex?
  • Who is he?
  • Does the public know?
  • What are their parents like?

Your questions should start you down a path of either/or scenarios, sort of like the “Find your own adventure” books from back in the day.  You might already know how you want the novel to turn out, and that’s fine.  The toughest part may be getting to the end.

Take your time and make an outline of the story.  Be patient with yourself.  Give yourself time to figure out the beginning, middle, and end.  but never forget your central question.  Answer it in your novel, or at least write the kind of novel in which everyone who reads it walks away pondering the same question:  “What if…?”

Filed Under: Diary, Writing

Reflecting on Malcolm X

February 21, 2013 by Rashid

Malcolm X

48 years ago today, our shining black prince was taken from us.

He will always be royalty to me.

Filed Under: Culture, Diary Tagged With: Assassination, Malcolm X

Delta Sigma Theta Centennial – From the Outside Looking In

January 14, 2013 by Rashid

My fraternity enjoyed its Centennial Celebration in 2006.  While the celebration had some bumps in its execution, it was by and large a decent event.  We got some good swag (medallion, pin, leather convention bag), some great literature (Centennial Book of Essays and Letters), a huge photo op in a stadium, a concert…. you know, all the stuff that makes for a nice five-day long celebration.

Since that time, I’ve eagerly awaited the Centennials of the remaining black Greek letter organizations of the so-called “Divine Nine.”  None have disappointed me yet.  In 2008, the AKAs set world records with the largest sit-down dinner ever.  I attended a Howard University sponsored-event during the AKA Centennial in which they raised an AKA flag over the campus.  And of course there were fireworks, wax statues, and over 20,000 women all dressed in white.

Then came the Kappas and Ques in 2011.  While I did not travel to Indianapolis to see the Kappas, I saw many photos of the great time they had with their pilgrimage to Indiana University and the world’s largest cake.  And as for the Ques, well of course I was in the mix.  I went down to their host hotel just to stand in the middle of it all and I wasn’t disappointed.  They brotherhood was high, their souvenir journals were hard cover, and their spouses were chatty.

So far, I think each Centennial has reflected the personalities of the organizations.  Delta Sigma Theta was no different.  They did it big for 2013 and this is only the beginning.  Delta Days in the Nation’s Capital and Women’s Suffrage March Re-Enactment are coming up in March, and the 51st National Convention is coming in July.

Below, you will find a collection of photos and videos I was able to collect from the weekend of official and unofficial events as documented through social media.  Even if you weren’t in the thick of things, you certainly couldn’t escape Delta Sigma Theta Founders Day Weekend 2013 or even the weeks leading up to it.

First, the Deltas had a float in the 2013 Rose Parade in Pasadena, California.  KTLA’s Gayle Anderson had a lively interview with the volunteers who helped make the float possible.

And here is HGTV’s coverage of the Delta float:

And here is the NBC coverage. I got a kick out of “Sami Brady” and Al Roker announcing the float:


Later that evening, Delta had a star-studded Hollywood Gala.  The Federal City Alumnae Chapter has an album of those pictures on their facebook page, but I couldn’t resist sharing this photo of my fraternity brother Tim Reid and his Delta wife Daphne Maxwell-Reid.

Photo by Federal City Alumnae Chapter
Photo by Federal City Alumnae Chapter

 

A few days later, Deltas descended on New York City to participate in the various morning shows.  I don’t normally even turn on the television that early, but I was glad I did.   Here’s Al Roker again.  (He’s an honorary Sigma, by the way.)

The next day was the first official day of the weekend celebration. It was Howard University Day, and the Deltas not only convened on the campus to celebrate, but to give and to serve. The “Deltas for Howard” group donated a total of $50,000 for the university and 22 distinct service projects were conducted all over the city. The concept of a new stained glass window in Rankin Chapel was revealed to the members, and Centennial Chair Gwendolyn Boyd said it would be the first stained glass window in the chapel to depict faces of African American women. Howard University Day concluded with the singing of the Sweetheart Song around the Fortitude Statue in “The Valley.”

Local media was on top of things, as Delta Allison Seymour interviewed Gwendolyn Boyd for Fox 5.

Other events took place in DC as chapters had mini-reunions and the national organization sponsored a sisterhood luncheon and an awards dinner.  But, as they used to say, “The nighttime is for sisterhood.”  The Valley was once again ablaze as thousands of Deltas descended upon Fortitude to ring in the new Delta year.


Needless to say, it was bananas out there.

The next day, the official activities included a marathon Ecumenical Service and a Founders Day Dinner which included pre-recorded greetings from Barack Obama as well as surprise musical guest Eric Benet.

Elsewhere in the news:

On Sunday morning, Delta Melissa Harris-Perry closed her show with a tribute to the sorority, in which she revealed she had been chapter president.

The Washington Post reported on the Centennial.

And the Detroit Free Press gave a shout out to Alpha Chapter President Erin Keith.

If you want to see the Centennial Founders Day activities from the point of view of the members that lived it, just type in #dst100 on Twitter, Tumblr, or Instagram.  It seems as though social media is advancing exponentially with each passing Divine Nine Centennial, and I’m grateful for it.

And now I leave you with Deltas on the Metro:

Filed Under: Diary, Fraternalism Tagged With: Centennial, Delta Sigma Theta, Sorority

Number One in African American Gay Romance. And Two. And Five.

December 31, 2012 by Rashid

Great news, readers!

As 2012 comes to a close, I am really humbled that so many of you voted for me to appear on the GoodReads African American Gay Romance list!  Epiphany has been voted number one, Covenant has been voted number two, and Lazarus has been voted number five!

12-31-12-Listopia

Listopia uses a formula that somehow multiplies number of votes with rankings and reviews….hell, I don’t know how it works, but I am glad that it puts the power in the hands of the readers!  Self-published authors rarely get that courtesy.

By the end of the day, this list could change and another worthy author could be on top.  But I’m just glad that right now, at this moment in time, my readers thought enough of my work – and of the epic love story of Adrian Collins and Isaiah Aiken – to vote for it and share it with the world.  Thank you for giving my books this shine.  Adrian and Isaiah appreciate it!

To vote for your favorite black gay romance novels, click here!

Filed Under: Diary, Writing Tagged With: Covenant, Epiphany, Goodreads, Lazarus, Listopia, Rashid Darden

Lazarus: Fantasy Casting

November 18, 2012 by Rashid

EVERY novelist…I mean, evvvvvery novelist does one of two things when writing their novels:

  1. Create a playlist which is the soundtrack to the novel.
  2. Imagine which actors would play their characters in the inevitable movie (or television) version.

I am no exception.  So let’s hop to it.

Tyler James Williams as Adrian.  When I finished the first draft of Lazarus, Tyler was ten years old.  When it was released, he was 13 and had the lead role in Everybody Hates Chris.  I’ve selected Tyler because I’ve always imagined Adrian to be a slim, brown-skinned dude who was handsome, but not necessarily confident.  Tyler has a lot of great, strong moments as an actor and I think he could pull off the nuances of Adrian’s character.

Honorable mention: Degrassi’s Jahmil French, who would also do very well as Peter, the Ace of the line.

The search for the perfect Nina is a lot harder.  I like a lot of young, black actresses for this role, but one that comes to mind also comes from the Degrassi family:

Shanice Banton as Nina.  The “Gal Friday” of the novel, Nina is sassy, sexy, and confident – the antithesis of the “awkward black girl” movement that seems to be afoot right now.  Shanice Banton (with a kinky hairstyle for the role) would bring everything to Nina.  If you haven’t caught her as the bitchy girl with a conscience on Degrassi, please do so!  I’m looking forward to seeing a lot from her in the future.

How about Evan Ross as Savion?  Granted, I am basing this casting decision purely on looks.  If Evan can pull of “scruffy artist” then I think we might have a winner.

Royce White as Isaiah?  I’m going to have to meditate on this one for a while, because not only should the “actor” look like how he’s described in the book, he’d also have to match Adrian Collins.  I’m not sure Royce and Tyler would look right… but then again, it’s possible that Adrian and Isaiah don’t look right together, either.

Viola Davis as Mrs. Collins and *spoiler alert*

Kristoff St. John as Mr. Collins.

Now, one of the quirks about the novels is that Adrian is supposed to be the spitting image of Mr. Collins.  I could get over that if Kristoff was the daddy for this movie/show.  I could so get into this family dynamic: the cold, aloof, stern mother raising the college kid by herself while the relatively wealthy businessman pops in and out of Adrian’s life.  I want the reader to feel for both parents in different ways and I think each actor could pull it off.  You want to hate Mrs. Collins because she’s so emotionally distant from Adrian, but you love her because you see and feel her vulnerability and her anger.  And Mr. Collins?  I want an actor that can make you forget that he’s left his son for the past ten years.  I want you to see what Mrs. Collins saw in him and why Adrian is able to ultimately forgive him.  I’ve seen Kristoff handle some meaty material on The Young and The Restless, and I think he can pull all these elements together.

There are a ton of other, smaller roles in all three novels that I’d love to see properly cast, like Aubrey Graham as Mohammed.  But those will be for another day.  Hope you had fun fantasy casting with me!

Filed Under: Culture, Diary, Writing

Happy Homecoming, Coolidge Colts!

November 2, 2012 by Rashid

One of the great joys of my life has been the pride I feel as an alumnus of Calvin Coolidge High School in Washington, DC. I am a legacy Colt – my mom graduated from Coolidge in 1967 and my uncle graduated in 1983. I graduated in 1997. If I ever have or adopt kids, of course I’d like for them to attend as well.

Coolidge means a lot to me. Certainly it’s not a consistent athletic powerhouse like other schools in DC have been known, nor is it a Banneker or School Without Walls, with their reputations for academic excellence.

It’s just a regular neighborhood high school in a quiet, northern section of DC that needed a school. It used to be all white, then it became mostly black, now it is a mix of African American, Latino, first generation African and Caribbean immigrants, and other growing populations.

We’ve never been perfect. But Coolidge has always been ours and we love it just the way it is. Our loyalty will e’er be strong.

Filed Under: Culture, Diary

  • « Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • …
  • Page 28
  • Page 29
  • Page 30
  • Page 31
  • Page 32
  • …
  • Page 34
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 · Author Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in