Episodes
Talent is important in creative writing, but resilience is critical. Writing is a lonely endeavor with much rejection. Even worse, our projects are often so long-term that they require the staying power of a marathon runner. So how do we develop that sort of endurance—that stubborn persistence? Tim Bascom will discuss tried-and-true habits from practicing writers who have refused to quit.
Published 07/26/18
Death has haunted the work of countless authors. And even if we’re not writing about death directly, it often overshadows our creations, as we deal with the loss of loved ones and the inevitability of our own mortality. These struggles can be paralyzing, or they can usher in new insights. Lori Erickson will talk about how wrestling with questions relating to loss, grieving, and mortality can provide rich inspiration for our writing.
Published 07/25/18
We often think about the tool of reflection in writing as a mode of thought or tone of voice we employ when we ruminate, meditate, contemplate, or explain—in short, when we provide what Phillip Gerard calls “finished thought.” But we might also think about reflection as a turning, as a sometimes distorting, but transformational power. In this talk, we’ll look briefly at four qualities of reflection that might encourage artistic transformation in our writing and try some short exercises that...
Published 07/23/18
Writers frequently confront taboos—cultural, religious, and sexual—in their work. These taboos are also reinforced by the publishing process. When is it OK to offend? When is it gratuitous? Are you being honest, or are you being a jerk? Who decides? In this Eleventh Hour presentation, Charles Holdefer will talk of recent trends and describe some of his own experiences in regard to these thorny questions.
Published 07/18/18
Giving a piece of writing a title is a proper and necessary act—otherwise we’d have, “Untitled,” by Homer, not to be confused with Leo Tolstoy’s great work, “Untitled.” Yet titling is not generally spoken of at any length or depth. Naming anything—a book, a boat, a racehorse, or a child—is at once a craft and an art. There are spectacular titles, serviceable titles, and failed titles; but beyond that there are types of titles we can look at. Usually there’s only one best title for something,...
Published 07/16/18
Much of my favorite work to read and to teach can be considered “resistant narratives”—work that responds to and rewrites the narratives we have received from a culture that often wishes to reduce and limit our very souls. To become an artist is to write oneself back into being. A book can be a place where the individual remakes the world. In this talk, we will consider writing as political resistance, a tool to counter the limitations of cultural, societal, and familial expectation....
Published 07/11/18
Beneath our writing is a deep sense of self that informs the way we organize experience and shape meaning. Autobiographical writing heightens our awareness of life's patterns and themes, concepts that in turn feed fiction, creative nonfiction, essay, and poetry. This discussion will draw on contemporary thinking in narrative psychology and narrative theory, as well as models from literature, in the framework of incorporating the story lens of life experience into our creative work.
Published 07/09/18
This lecture will consider the act of naming. How do we choose the names we give to the characters and figures in our stories and poems? How does a name give a character charge, or mark it, or erase it, or illuminate it? How can a name be used as a veil or a cape? An echo or a halo? What are the joys and pitfalls of using the names of the living and the dead inside acts of the imagination?
Published 07/03/18
The best essays, according to John D’Agata, Director of the University of Iowa’s Nonfiction Writing Program, are a “mind on a page.” According to Bernard Cooper, they magnify “some small aspect of what it means to be human.” But what does this mean, exactly? It means the best essayists harness a very particular and personal truth to speak to larger experience. Amy Butcher shares how a New York Times Sunday Review Op-Ed on the startling lack of diversity in our universal emoji set (while male...
Published 07/03/18
Readers and writers often refer to novels in a binary way. They think of them as being either commercial (popular) or literary (artful). It’s a false dichotomy that sets you up to feel defensive, no matter what you write. It fails to recognize the extreme (and exciting) diversity in contemporary writing. And it underestimates readers. Quality of writing and quality of story make magic when they are the right mix at the right time, but quality is as hard to pin down as beauty or talent....
Published 05/17/18
F. Scott Fitzgerald famously praised the ability to hold in mind two opposing ideas (without cracking up). He could have been talking about stories—they do it all the time. The opposition of ideas can be obvious, such as when good is battling evil, or Goofus is slacking, while Gallant does the chores. In this Eleventh Hour, we’ll take a whirlwind tour of some of the other, more subtle ways that stories hold the line between conflicting viewpoints, and talk as well about how such tensions...
Published 05/17/18
A novelist has it easy—his characters, sprung from imagination, don’t talk back when they are not happy with the way they’re depicted on the page. But what if your character is your ex-husband, your twin brother, your mother? Are familial loyalty and literary integrity necessarily at odds?
Published 05/17/18
We often think of writing as something we’ll really get to do later, when life slows down and we have more time to devote to it. Writing retreats, those programs or places that offer endless space to write and think, couldn’t be nicer. But we don’t have to wait for an official writing retreat to make a peaceful opening for writing in our daily lives. Not only that, we can use writing itself as a way to slow down and become more aware, so that our daily lives can become less hurried and...
Published 07/19/17
Same Content / Different Form: Jim Heynen
Published 07/18/17
Where Experience Starts: The Image: Juliet Patterson
Published 07/18/17
This lecture will consider what is at the heart of critique and discuss the relationship between the workshop and places of worship, confessional boxes, crying rooms, hospitals, wombs, therapist offices, museums, and trash cans. When the writer brings her stories and poems into workshop, should she disappear? Replace her body with the page? And why do we bring our poems and stories into workshop anyway? To air them out? To rescue and repair? To heal them from our loneliness? What are we after...
Published 07/17/17
In this Eleventh Hour, poet Michael Morse will discuss how a work of writing can inhabit its contemporary situation by addressing a distant practitioner or piece—as an inspiration, a model, or even a foil. We’ll look at and discuss some model poems and engage in an invigorating circuit of generative exercises suitable for writers of any genre.
Published 07/12/17
If sex scenes are so hard to write, as everyone seems to agree they are, why do writers keep bothering with them? In this session, Garth Greenwell will consider some of the things sex scenes can do in fiction, the uniquely powerful tools they offer for exploring the inner and exterior lives of characters. We’ll discuss passages from Flaubert, Lawrence, Acker, and Mary McCarthy.
Published 07/10/17
How to Write the Ten-Minute Play: Kelly Dwyer
Published 06/28/17
Nerve: Some Kinds of Courage Necessary for Writing: Lon Otto
Published 06/26/17
Work Smarter: Power Up Your Writing Routine, Amp Up Your Output: Lauren Haldeman
Published 06/20/17
The Art of Play: Jeffery Renard Allen
Published 06/19/17
Clarity and Depth: Writing between the Lines w/ Venise Berry
Published 07/26/16
Ghosts, Battlefields and Hallucinations: Creative Writing from Research w/ Lauren Haldeman
Published 07/25/16
Mysteries of Love and Grief: The Long Way from Impulse to Family Story w/ Sandra Scofield
Published 07/20/16