workshops - The Writer`s Center
Transcripción
workshops - The Writer`s Center
THE WRITER'S CENTER p o h s k wor nt guide & eve ay Fall 2010 Ess / r i o m Me tion c fi n o N n e e r c S Stage & ing t i r w g Son Fiction re n e G d Mixe Poetry iters r W nt r e e g m n p u o Yo vel e D l a sion s e f dren l i o r h P C r fo e t i r W Adults How 2 tudy S t n e nd e luding c p n i e , s d t n In fall eve tionally n on o i t Interna , a s a m r n i o t f b u te to ras La i t r Plus in e T L a + , thors anem Cave C d Danish Au re. e o Acclaim n Poe, and m Alla Edgar Early Bird Workshop Discounts on Page 11 & the Writer's Center workshop event guide WORKSHOP SCHEDULE Fall 2010 Managing Editor Maureen A. Punte Contributing Editors Charles Jensen Kyle Semmel Contributing Writers Francisco Aragón Charles Jensen E. Ethelbert Miller Kyle Semmel Copy Editor Bernadette Geyer Illustrations Zachary Fernebok Contact Us p 301-654-8664 f 240-223-0458 www.writer.org [email protected] In the Workshop & Event Guide, The Writer’s Center’s triquarterly publication, you’ll find a list of all our upcoming workshops and literary events, not to mention the occasional interview and craft feature. Pick it up, pass it on. 11 12 12 13 13 15 17 18 19 19 20 22 22 23 Memoir/Essay Nonfiction Stage & Screen Songwriting Fiction Mixed Genre Poetry Adults Write for Children Younger Writers Professional Development How 2 Workshops for Military Veterans Independent Study McLean Workshops DEPARTMENTS 1 2 10 26 29 35 36 Welcome On Housekeeping How to Choose Your Workshop Events at The Writer's Center Workshop Leaders TWC Insider Thank You FEATURES 3 Out of Denmark 4 Cave Canem + Letras Latinas A Brief History 4 An Interview with R. Dwayne Betts 6 Celebrating Edgar Allan Poe 8 Price Matters 11 Early Bird Workshop Discount WELCOME The Writer’s Center cultivates the creation, publication, presentation, and dissemination of literary work. We are an independent literary organization with a global reach, rooted in a dynamic community of writers. As one of the premier centers of its kind in the country, we believe the craft of writing is open to people of all backgrounds and ages. Writing is interdisciplinary and unique among the arts for its ability to touch on all aspects of the human experience. It enriches our lives and opens doors to knowledge and understanding. The Writer’s Center is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization. Donations are tax deductible. A copy of our current financial statement is available upon request. Contact The Writer’s Center at 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, MD 20815. Documents and information submitted to the State of Maryland under the Maryland Charitable Solicitations Act are available from the Office of the Secretary of State for the cost of copying and postage. PARKING Metered parking is across the street from our building. The meters require $1.00 per hour and are routinely monitored. The meters are free on weekends. WEB SITE Our Web site is www.writer.org. It provides complete descriptions of workshops, workshop leader biographies, interactive workshops, event listings, resources, Writer’s Center publications, and books from our bookstore. Social networks You can now find us on • First Person Plural The Writer’s Center’s blog www.thewriterscenter.blogspot.com The Writer’s Center is Sponsored in part by: BOOKSTORE Poet lore DIRECTIONS The Writer’s Center is located at 4508 Walsh Street in Bethesda, Maryland, five blocks south of the Bethesda Metro stop. Walsh Street is located on the east side of Wisconsin Avenue. For more detailed directions, please visit www.writer.org. Director Charles Jensen Publications & Communications Caitlin Hill Maureen A. Punte Kyle Semmel Workshops & Events Sunil Freeman Business & Operations Janel Carpenter Zachary Fernebok Anne Lacy Jennifer Napolitano Laura Spencer Contact Us The Bookstore carries one of the most extensive collections of literary magazines in the mid-Atlantic states. It also has a large inventory of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction titles by local and nationally recognized authors. Established in 1889, Poet Lore is the oldest continuously published poetry journal in the United States. We publish it twice a year, and submissions are accepted yearround. Submission requirements are available online at www.poetlore.com. Writer’s Center Staff The Writer’s Center gratefully acknowledges assistance received from the Cultural Alliance of Greater Washington’s Business Volunteers for the Arts Program. This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. The Writer’s Center is supported in part by The Arts and Humanities Council of Montgomery County, and by a grant from the Maryland State Arts Council, an agency funded by the State of Maryland and the National Endowment for the Arts. p 301-654-8664 f 240-223-0458 www.writer.org [email protected] Board of Directors Mier Wolf Chair Sally Mott Freeman Vice Chair Les Hatley Treasurer Ken Ackerman Secretary Margot Backas Sandra Beasley Ellen R. Braaf Mark Cymrot Neal P. Gillen John Hill Ann McLaughlin E. Ethelbert Miller Joram Piatigorsky Bill Reynolds Rose Solari Linda Sullivan Dulcie Taylor Wilson W. Wyatt, Jr. Honorary Board Cicely Angleton Kate Blackwell Jim & Kate Lehrer Alice McDermott Ellen McLaughlin 1 ON HOUSEKEEPING Photo by Shyree Mezick One of my biggest disappointments in modern life is that we have yet to invent a self-cleaning house (or apartment, or car). I find that no matter what I do, my apartment simply messes itself more quickly than I can clean it. Just as all systems tend toward chaos, so it goes with my living space. Books end up stacked haphazardly by my bedside, tossed on the coffee table, teetering off the bookcase, and in tilting towers stacked on any empty flat surface. I’m a fervent recycler, but am reluctant to get the bag into the bin. I leave scattered notes and scribbles everywhere, and my writing desk looks like a ferret nests there, so mussed is the area around my keyboard and printer. The biggest disruption all this makes, of course, is in my own writing life, where sweeping floors, washing dishes, and doing laundry seem more insistent than sitting down to read or write. And yet, I find I’m most creative when I’m not surrounded by clutter. Perhaps there is something to the old “I had to do laundry” excuse for not writing… While writing time is necessary, housekeeping shouldn’t be ignored for long, even among writers. That said, I hope you’ll notice we’ve made some improvements around The Writer’s Center. Our new Web site recently launched to give you a better, more reliable online interface, as well as high tech learning environments. For us, the Web site provides an opportunity to enliven your browsing experience with video, podcasts, an integrated blog, and up-to-date information to help you find your way. Please let us know what you think of it. We’ve also added some new workshop packages for you. Based on your feedback, we’ve created “HOW 2,” a series of hands-on, skill-based workshops in response to our most frequent questions. Want to know how to find an agent? We’ve got that. Trying to sell a screenplay? We’ve got that too. These low-cost and low time-commitment workshops will spur you into action. We’re also starting an “independent study” program to replace our old mentoring program. This places you one-on-one with a seasoned writer who will give you feedback on your work. We’ve standardized the pricing and the duration to keep it simple for you. Look for more options in the next workshop session as we pilot these new offerings throughout the fall! Last, but not least, The Carousel has gotten another cover redesign and name change that we hope will help new people find us and get involved in our workshops and events. We’ll continue to bring you the interesting editorial content here, right alongside our extensive selection of top-notch workshops, three times a year. If you like what’s happening at The Writer’s Center, please tell your friends about us. Encourage them to take a workshop with you, or bring them with you to an event. When you’re finished reading this issue, leave it in your local coffee shop or pass it on to a neighbor. We are so glad to have you in our community of writers. I’m wishing you a fruitful season of writing—and keeping your clutter under control! All best, In August, the Jane Fox Reading Room—the one with the fireplace—will get a facelift thanks to the dedication and generosity of Mier Wolf, Sally Mott Freeman, Ann McLaughlin, Pat Burda, and the Donohoe Company. This rejuvenated event space—as well as the new carpeting in the upstairs workshop spaces—will brighten our Open Door Reading Series and make you feel more comfortable while you spend time with us. Charles Jensen was named as a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award, a prestigious prize given each year to GLBT authors, for his first collection of poems: The First Risk. 2 A few years ago, when I began translating Simon Fruelund’s fiction and Pia Tafdrup’s travel essays, I never would have dreamed that I’d help organize a joint reading together with another of my favorite authors, Naja Maria Aidt. Yet here I am. As a great admirer of Denmark and the Danish language, it has been my goal as a translator to bring Danish literature greater recognition here in the United States. Thanks to our partnership with George Mason University’s Fall for the Book Festival, The Writer’s Center will host these authors—three of the biggest names in contemporary Danish literature—on September 23rd. I encourage everyone reading this to come on out for what will be a very special evening reading. Look for my upcoming interviews with each of these authors on First Person Plural in September. Photo by Isak Hoffmeyer Pia Tafdrup has published more than 20 books, including the poetry collection Dronningeporten (Queen’s Gate), which won the 1999 Nordic Council Literature Prize, Scandinavia’s most prestigious literary award. She was named a Knight of the Order of Dannebrog in 2001 and won the 2006 Nordic Prize from the Swedish Academy. In 2007, she appeared alongside writers Don DeLillo, Nadine Gordimer, and Salman Rushdie at the PEN American Center’s 2007 World Photo by Camilla Hultén Fruelund Kyle Semmel Simon Fruelund is the author of two story collections, Mælk (Milk) and Planer for sommeren (Summer Plans), and two novels, Borgerligt tusmørke (Civil Twilight) and Verden og Varvara (The World and Varvara). For nine years he worked as an editor at Denmark’s largest publishing house, Gyldendal, but is now writing full time. In the U.S., his stories—translated by The Writer’s Center’s Kyle Semmel— have appeared or are forthcoming in Brooklyn Review, The Bitter Oleander, A River and Sound Review, Redivider, Absinthe, and The Portland Review. Two of these translations have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. Naja Maria Aidt won the Nordic Council Literature Prize in 2008 for her short story collection Bavian (Baboon). The collection also earned the 2006 Danish Kritikerprisen (Critics’ Prize). In addition to her fiction, she has published eight collections of poetry, beginning with Sålænge jeg er ung (As Long as I’m Young) in 1991; several plays and children’s books; and the screenplay for the 2005 movie Strings. Her story “Bulbjerg” was included in the anthology Best European Fiction 2010. Photo by Morten Holtum OUT OF D e n mark Voices Festival. Her latest collection of poetry in English is Tarkovsky’s Horses and Other Poems. Kyle Semmel has been selected to translate the next novel by Norwegian author Karin Fossum. It will be published by Harvill Secker in England next year, and in the U.S. by Harcourt. 3 Cave Canem Letras Latinas a brief history Francisco Aragón The reading at The Writer’s Center on September 17th featuring Latino and African American poets is the result of a relationship that began years ago. But even before I had the pleasure of befriending Cornelius Eady upon his arrival at Notre Dame, Cave Canem had already, in a way, been mentoring Letras Latinas: when it came time to launch the Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize in 2004, Cave Canem’s director at the time, Carolyn Micklem, had already provided crucial advice over the phone. In short, the Letras Latinas initiative that supports the publication of a first book by a Latino poet was modeled after the Cave Canem Prize. One of the beliefs Cornelius and I arrived at during our talks was that there seemed to be a lag time between the African American poetry community and the Latino poetry community in terms of visibility in mainstream venues. In other words, the relative success that African American poets were enjoying (due, in large part, to Cave Canem) was not the case with Latino poets. And so Cornelius and I discussed ways in which our two organizations might work together. When I approached Alison Meyers, Cave Canem’s current Executive Director, about joint programming in the D.C. area, we brainstormed local potential partners, including The Writer’s Center. I’d already spoken to Charles Jensen about possible collaborations with Letras Latinas so I knew he was receptive. When it came time to curate a reading, Letras Latinas proposed to fly in Paul Martínez Pompa and Brenda Cárdenas. Paul was the current winner of the Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize and I knew that Brenda’s new book, Boomerang, would soon be out. She and Paul are both dynamic performers of their work. My curatorial counterpart, Kyle Dargan, a former Cave Canem Prize winner himself and now poetry professor at American University, tapped local talent: Gregory Pardlo and Terri Cross Davis. Pardlo is the 2007 winner of the Cave Canem Prize and teaches at George Washington University, and Cross Davis coordinates the Poetry series at the Folger. I am not familiar with their work and that’s precisely the point: we want to create situations for increased awareness and appreciation between our respective poetry communities, and invite the public, including readers of The Workshop & Event Guide and the constituents of The Writer’s Center, to come out and discover what happens when leading emerging poets of two poetry constituencies share the stage. Ultimately, we’re in this for the long haul and don’t expect miracles overnight. These are small steps and part of the work that our two organizations believe in—creating community. ¶ Francisco Aragón is the director of Letras Latinas, the literary program of the Institute for Latino Studies (ILS) at the University of Notre Dame, and works out of the ILS office in Washington, D.C. An Interview with R. Dwayne Betts E. Ethelbert Miller: Looking at the success of an organization like Cave Canem, might one conclude that we have witnessed the birth of a new generation of African American writers? If so, what defines their aesthetics? Might one still apply the term "black aesthetic" at a time when our society is trying to move beyond issues of race? R. Dwayne Betts: Cave Canem (CC) is a bridge. It's not only about young black writers finding support for what they do as black poets, but also a place where Yusef Komunyakaa, Toi Derricote, Cornelius Eady, Sonia Sanchez, Elizabeth Alexander, Afaa Weaver, and many of their peers can watch how a group of poets they helped usher into the world (A. Van Jordan, Honoree Jeffers, Terrance Hayes, Major Jackson, Thomas Sayers Ellis, etc.) mentor the group of writers 4 that I'm a part of, who are only beginning to publish now. And what happens is we young writers begin to know the elders in African American literature and have access to them in a way that allows for the emergence of a generation. In 2006 I met Lucille Clifton. I met Afaa, I met Elizabeth. That doesn't happen without CC. I think about Ellison meeting Wright, about the need for mentorship and guidance. I can't know Sonia Sanchez without knowing you, and then I can't know you and Sanchez without knowing Hayden, without knowing Baraka. This is the mark of a new generation for me. An understanding of history. My son meeting Lucille Clifton, hearing her read. CC has helped a generation emerge by broadening the lines of communication among us. There have always been writers like you and Marita Golden who have made it a point to mentor young writers—CC has, in a way, allowed writers who may not have the commitment of a literary activist to still do some of that work. And yet, even as these lines that connect us are more apparent, I wouldn't say that we have an aesthetic that can be defined as broadly representing blackness. It's more of a shared interest, a shared approach to believing the multitudes of blackness should make their way into poetry. I don't think our society is moving beyond issues of race. Race isn't disappearing from American society, it's becoming even more complicated than before. Part of my excitement about the younger writers is that we're coming into our imagery works and metaphor works. I learned that in prison. I guess though, the most important writing skill I learned in prison was how to dig deeper into an idea, into one thought, and let that drive me for two, three, or five pages, for however long it takes to make the thought complete. EEM: How have concepts of time and space affected your thinking as a writer? RDB: I'm not sure if this is a conscious thing, but so much of prison is about time. Time and space. The dimensions of a cell, the marking off of days by the space between counts, between commissaries, between visits. In my memoir, I structured the book around travel. Each of the three sections I learned to write in prison. I knew how to build a sentence before I went in, but the idea of writing as a means of thought and articulation. I learned that in prison. How imagery works and metaphor works. I learned that in prison. own without any recognizable black political agenda—there isn't a Jim Crow politics, Civil Rights movement, or black power movement that undergirds what we do with our art, and as a consequence we all have to deal with blackness in a different way. We have to deal with our politics in a different way, more nuance, more complicated. is a movement deeper into prison. Many of my poems revolve around time. But I like to think of these things as frames for other issues. How does a focus on time, on the absence of space, allow me to say something about hurt, about relationships? That's what I'm after in my work, a way to allow time and space to open up room to discuss hurt, pain, etc. EEM: How do you balance family life with your writing career? RDB: I'm learning. My family is the center of my life. My wife, my son. My writing is the way I am in the world. It's more vocation than career, and it's demanding. The readings, the need for silence, the need for time to read. So much of art is connecting with community, and family is the central aspect of community—so I consider how my art affects my wife, my son. But it's difficult, the demands of a writing life are rigorous ones. Being a writer isn't like being a doctor, lawyer, teacher, or construction worker. It's almost like being a door-to-door salesman, a blues man who always has a bus, train or airplane ticket in hand—and that kind of traveling can do damage to the idea of family. So for me, it's always about finding a way to be present at home and in the world with my words. And I'm always working on mastering the honesty needed to keep it all balanced. EEM: Do you feel writing has given you the power to redefine yourself? If so, what secrets of your old self might you reveal in future books? RDB: Honestly, I came to writing around the same time I came to prison. Just 16 years old. I hadn't yet defined myself. That's what people don't often get. I defined myself within the walls of prisons. That's a dangerous thing, in that I firmly believe that if it weren't for writing and literature I would have defined myself in ways not conducive to being a father, a husband. However, it may benefit me as a writer, in that I don't have an old self to reveal in my work. Not having that allows me to feel freer to explore the world as it is and as I imagine it. ¶ EEM: What writing skills did you improve on while in prison? RDB: I learned to write in prison. I knew how to build a sentence before I went in, but the idea of writing as a means of thought and articulation. I learned that in prison. How Reginald Dwayne Betts is a Cave Canem fellow and recipient of the Holden Fellowship from M.F.A. program at Warren Wilson College. His memoir A Question of Freedom was published by Avery/Penguin. His debut poetry collection, Shahid Reads His Own Palm, is forthcoming from Alice James Books. E. Ethelbert Miller is a poet and literary activist, a board member of The Writer's Center, and editor of Poet Lore. Since 1974, he has been the director of the African American Resource Center at Howard University. His books include How We Sleep on the Nights We Don’t Make Love and The Fifth Inning. 5 ctober, with its falling leaves, chilled breezes, and crisp evenings, is the perfect month to read and celebrate the legacy of Edgar Allan Poe. Few writers in America’s literary history are so closely connected to the macabre and the melancholy than the author of the classic stories “The Cask of Amontillado” and “The Fall of the House of Usher” and the mournful poems “Annabel Lee” and “The Raven.” The Writer’s Center, in partnership with Pyramid Atlantic and the National Endowment for the Arts’s Big Read series, invites you to gather with us this fall as we pay tribute to this writer who left an indelible imprint on our canon over the course of his brief life. Charles Jensen Our Poe events kick off on October 28 at The Writer’s Center when Poe’s mother, Eliza Poe, steps through time to grace us with her presence and lively eyewitness testimony of her son’s life. As she hosts a reading of some of his notable works, she’ll let our audience know exactly what impact she personally had on his famous literary career. As time travel among dead persons requires a considerable amount of energy and experience, we’re sure you’ll understand this is a one-night only, oncein-a-lifetime opportunity. The fun continues as we host “Poe-Palooza.” Seven poets from our region will read one of their favorite poems by Poe, then share one of their own that has some kind of connection to Poe’s piece. Our spectacular readers for this event will be Smartish Pace editors Clare Banks and Stephen Reichert, Busboys and Poets Poet-in-Residence Holly Bass, Lambda Literary Award finalist Reginald Harris, widely-admired performer Alan King, poetry coach Deanna Nikaido, and The Writer’s Center’s own poet/editor Rose Solari. The Big Read initiative encourages everyone in a community to read and discuss one book or author, usually for a month. The Writer’s Center is thrilled to work with Pyramid Atlantic on their Edgar Allan Poe project and look forward to seeing you there! 6 Illustration by Zachary Fernebok NEW WEB SITE THE WRITER’S CENTER’S www.writer.org Sign up for events and workshops without getting error messages Discover new workshops and events based on your interest and past participation with us Easy access with log-in and log-out features Your giving history will identify overall giving and individual gifts, and will be easily accessed for you Listed below are just a few of the immediate benefits of our technology upgrade project for our community. Turn to page 18 to read about our expanded membership program. CUTTING-EDGE ONLINE WORKSHOPS A blog for regular “lectures” and notes from your workshop leader “Threaded” discussion allowing you to respond to other workshop participants’ posts A private, unsearchable area for uploading documents with your stories, poems, and essays Participate at 3 p.m. or 3 a.m.—in your business suit or your pajamas—whatever suits your lifestyle! MEMBER BENEFITS Stay in touch with workshop friends by opting-in to an online member directory Send Writer’s Center-themed e-cards to your friends and family Easily retrieve your own passwords Renew and manage your membership online— and receive automated updates Connect with friends from The Writer’s Center using a private Facebook-like social networking area Get a personal “[email protected]” email address BENEFITS TO ALL PARTICIPANTS Make donations online quickly and easily Easily navigate around the site Choose to receive a print version of our Workshop & Event Guide or to conserve paper by reading it online Read our blog, First Person Plural, directly from writer.org NEW DATABASE TECHNOLOGY WILL ENSURE Your workshop and event attendance history are safely and privately maintained Consistent record review by staff to ensure the most accurate data is saved in our system Better service, more knowledgeable assistance, and more access for you! 7 Price Matters Charles Jensen Over the past two years, we’ve worked to better The Writer’s Center in as many ways as possible. That’s why, while researching various membership models and membership benefits, we also took a look at our workshop pricing structure. We wanted to ensure we still provided the highest quality workshops at fair prices, and that we afforded writers many different ways of getting involved with us. I surveyed 20 organizations across the country which offer multi-session writing workshops, in cities as varied as Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago, Minneapolis, Denver, Sleepy Hollow, and Austin. Some of these organizations function as stand-alone independent nonprofits like The Writer’s Center, while others are nestled within larger institutions like universities or community organizations such as the YMCA. In every instance, I priced a six-week workshop, calculating the hourly workshop rate and then calculating it out to match our own average workshop session length of two and a half hours. If the organization had a member rate, I used that for the purposes of calculation. If no six-week workshop was available, I determined the “hourly” workshop rate from a longer or shorter workshop and calculated the cost of a six-week equivalent. Then I put those figures into a cost of living adjustment calculator to determine the equivalent value for someone living in Washington, D.C. When I sorted the results, The Writer’s Center, at $240 for members, came in having the third-lowest rates of the surveyed organizations. Two additional organizations were within $20 of our fees in D.C. dollars. The average variance was around $200—meaning The Writer’s Center’s community pays far less in workshop fees than those at our peer organizations nationwide. 8 Workshop fees are an essential part of what keeps The Writer’s Center flourishing. All of your workshop fees go right back into the organization, compensating our stellar corps of workshop leaders, helping defray the cost to market and promote the workshops, supporting our free public All of your workshop fees go right back into the organization, compensating our stellar corps of workshop leaders, helping defray the cost to market and promote the workshops… event program, and paying the staff’s salaries and benefits. We actively fundraise to support the rest of our costs and we are grateful to the large number of our workshop participants and leaders who are also our donors. Our recent success in grant writing—funding from the Gwendolyn & Morris Cafritz Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts—helps us round out our income. Thank you to everyone who supports The Writer’s Center by registering for a workshop—it is for you that we exist, and because of you that we succeed. ¶ The Writer’s Center was awarded a $20,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Part of the NEA’s “Access to Artistic Excellence,” the grant will allow The Writer’s Center to give free workshops to veterans—following on the heels of our successful Operation Homecoming workshop last year. It is the first NEA grant The Writer’s Center has received since 2003. Other initiatives the grant will help support: Emerging Writer Fellowships; BookTalk; the Open Door Reading Series; and the Undiscovered Voices Fellowship program. LITERARY JOURNAL DISCOUNT PROGRAM 40% off 1 -and 2 -year subscriptions FOR PREMIUM MEMBERS o f T h e Wr i t e r ’s C e n t e r Some of the most compelling literary work today is emerging in literary journals. To promote the best of new literature, we’ve partnered with the following leading journals to offer drastic discounts on 1-and 2-year subscriptions: Hayden’s Ferry Review Copper Nickel Potomac Review New England Review New Letters Poet Lore Subtropics 1 Year 2 issues/$8.40 2 issues/$13 2 issues/$12 4 issues/$18 4 issues/$13.20 2 issues/$6 2 issues/$15.60 2 Years 4 issues/$15 4 issues/$20.40 8 issues/$21.60 4 issues/$10.80 4 issues/$29.40 YES, I WOULD LIKE TO SUBSCRIBE TO Hayden’s Ferry Review Copper Nickel Potomac Review New England Review New Letters Poet Lore Subtropics 1 Year 2 Year PLEASE SEND MY NEXT ISSUE TO Name Address City State Zip E-mail PAYMENT METHOD Check (enclosed) Total Due Credit Card (complete section below) $ Card Number Want to advertise in the Workshop & Events Guide To find out how, contact Maureen A. Punte, Managing Editor [email protected] Expiration Date Signature Please mail this form and payment method to: The Writer’s Center Attn: Kyle Semmel 4508 Walsh Street Bethesda, MD 20815 www.writer.org HOW TO CHOOSE YOUR WORKSHOP WHO SHOULD TAKE WRITING WORKSHOPS? Everyone should—from people who want to try out writing or would like help getting started, to those more experienced writers who want to learn more and get better. Learning to write is an on-going process that involves perfecting and using many skills at once, and even published writers benefit from editors and readers who help them refine their work. WHAT CAN YOU EXPECT FROM A WORKSHOP? • Guidance and encouragement from a published, working writer • Instruction on technical aspects such as structure, diction, and form • Kind, honest, and constructive feedback directed at the work but never critical of the author • Peer readers/editors who act as ‘spotters’ for sections of your writing that need attention and who become your community of working colleagues, even after your workshop is completed • Tips on how to keep writing and integrate this “habit of being” into your life • Tactics for getting published when ready EXPECTATIONS OF WORKSHOP PARTICIPANTS • Attend every workshop session you possibly can • Share your own work • Comment on and share your ideas about your peers’ work • Complete workshop leader prompts or reading assignments • Complete the workshop response form at the end of the course If you’ve never been in a writing workshop before, regardless of the skill level you think you have in writing, we strongly encourage you to start with a beginner-level workshop. Here you’ll learn more about the environment of the workshop—how to give and receive helpful feedback, how to address problems with the work without criticizing the author, and how to incorporate multiple (and sometimes conflicting) ideas into your revision work. WORKSHOP REGISTRATION You can register for workshops at The Writer’s Center in person, through the mail, online at www.writer.org, or at 301-654-8664. refund policy If you cancel a workshop in writing 48 hours before the first workshop session, you receive a full refund, minus a $25 registration fee. To get a partial refund once workshops have begun, you must cancel in writing or e-mail your notice to [email protected] no later than 48 hours before the second meeting of the workshop. To keep workshop prices low, we cannot make exceptions to these procedures. Refund checks will be written three weeks after the beginning of workshops. ONLINE WORKSHOPS Our Internet workshops are for those whose schedules or distance from our physical venue make participation in a conventional workshop impossible. Internet workshops have their own unique virtues: the ability to comment on discussion boards from any location and at any time; the archiving of everyone’s comments for future consultation; and the fact that your manuscript is read in the workshops precisely as your published piece would be read in the world, namely, by people you cannot see. For more information, write us at [email protected]. 10 BEGINNER LEVEL These workshops will help you discover what creative writing really entails, such as • Getting your ideas on the page; • Figuring out which genre you should be working in and what shape your material should take; • Learning the elements of poetry, playwriting, fiction, memoir, etc.; • Identifying your writing strengths and areas of opportunity; • Gaining beginning mastery of the basic tools of all writing, like concise, accurate language, and how to tailor their particular use in your work. INTERMEDIATE LEVEL These workshops will build on skills you developed in the beginning level, designed for writers who have • Taken a beginner-level workshop; • Achieved some grace in using the tools of language and form; • Have projects in progress that they want to develop further. In addition, you may read and discuss some published works. ADVANCED LEVEL Participants should have manuscripts that have been critiqued in workshops on the intermediate level and have been revised substantially. Advanced courses • Focus on the revision and completion of a specific work; • Run at a faster pace with higher expectations of participation; • Will reward the persistent writer with deep insight and feedback into their work. MASTER LEVEL Master classes are designed for writers who have taken several advanced workshops and have reworked their manuscript into what they believe is final form. Master classes are unique opportunities to work in smaller groups with distinguished writers on a specific project or manuscript. Workshop leaders select participants from the pool of applicants—selection is competitive. Of course, art is not a science. The Writer’s Center recognizes that individual writers of all experience levels need to find their own place in our programs. If you’d like advice on which courses will be right for you, please call and speak with a member of our staff. WORKSHOPS Early Bird Workshop Discount This fall, we’re giving ALL early registrants an added incentive to register early: Early Bird discounts. Take advantage of these drastic reductions in fees until August 31, 2010. See just how much you can save in the chart below, then keep turning the pages to find the workshop (s) that are right for you! Discount off for both members and non-members. Prices below reflect discounted rates. JULY AUGUST Sessions Original Member Price Original Member Nonmember Price Price Nonmember Savings Price Member Price Nonmember Savings Price 7–8 $315 $360 $220 $265 $95 $270 $315 $45 5–6 $220 $260 $155 $195 $65 $185 $225 $35 4 $160 $195 $100 $135 $60 $130 $165 $30 2 $85 $125 $50 $90 $35 $70 $110 $15 1 online $40 $75/65 $30 $65/55 $10** $35 $60/70 $5** $220 $260 $155 $195 $65 $185 $225 $35 **Depends on length of one-session workshop. Restrictions: Cannot be combined with other offers. Cannot be applied to workshops for which you’ve previously registered. Cannot be applied to summer workshops. Valid until August 31, 2010. The Early Bird Workshop Discount does not apply to McLean workshops. Workshop prices may vary depending on number of workshop sessions. MEMOIR/essay FROM PRIVATE DIARIES TO PUBLIC WRITING Workshop Leader: Randon Noble YOU SHOULD BE WRITING Workshop Leader: Patricia Elam This workshop is for people who want to write (whether memoir or fiction) but are scared or lazy or tired or…the list goes on. It’s also for people who are writing quite well but want to write more or better or differently or just keep writing. Why take a memoir class if you really want to write fiction? Because, as author Gloria Wade Gayles says, “You almost can’t write fiction until you write that nonfiction first.” Expect to complete writing exercises, read literature excerpts, and produce at least one personal essay and a revision. 8 Wednesdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 10:30 A.M.–1:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/15–11/3 All Levels THE WRITER’S TOOLBOX Workshop Leader: Sara Taber This workshop is for students who want to hone their skills in the elements of writing that make for fine literary nonfiction. We will examine published work by essayists, diarists, travel writers, and journalists. Then students will practice aspects of the writer’s craft, focusing on important building blocks such as: concrete detail and use of the senses; figurative language; characterization, dialogue, and plot; voice; scene, summary, and musing; and sense of time and place. 8 Tuesdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/21–11/9 All Levels If you keep a diary or journal, you already have many stories that you’ve told the blank page. But how can you transform this private writing into a more public piece of work? In this session we will browse through old journals and do a series of writing exercises that will lead to the first draft of a short memoir or familiar essay. Bring whatever diary or diaries you are interested in revisiting and a notebook or laptop. 1 Sunday Fee: $85 ($50 Members) 1:00–5:00 P.M. Bethesda 11/7 All Levels WRITING THE SPIRITUAL JOURNEY Workshop Leader: Randon Noble Moses crossed the desert. Jesus prayed in the garden. The Buddha sat under a tree. Dante lost his way in the dark woods only to find himself traveling through the afterlife. In this class we will draw upon images of the spiritual journey in literature to help us write our own spiritual journeys. This class will include both exercises to get us started and workshops to critique finished drafts. People of all faiths (including none!) are welcome. 8 Thursdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 2:00–4:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/23–11/18 All Levels No meeting October 21 LIFE STORIES AND LEGACY WRITING Workshop Leader: Pat McNees The goal in this workshop is to capture your legacy in short personal 11 WORKSHOPS writing (especially stories) for those who will survive you. Knowing that you are writing not for publication but to set the record straight (in your own mind, if nothing else) may liberate you, allowing you to frankly explore your life choices and experiences, achievements and mistakes, beliefs and convictions. 6 Wednesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:15–9:45 P.M. Bethesda 9/8–10/20 All Levels No meeting October 6 Do you click on the mommy blogs or flip through the magazines in the pediatrician’s waiting room and think I can do this? If so, this is the class that will help you get started. Turn your parenting experiences into magazine articles, essays, and blog posts, and learn about the markets and how to get published in this market. 10/13–11/10 All Levels CREATING GREAT ARTICLES FOR WEB AND PRINT Workshop Leader: Lee Fleming Turning an idea into a saleable article for Web or print depends on understanding and using the techniques that support success. This class will explore the elements that all stories need in order to catch an editor’s attention. In-class discussion and exercises will guide students in choosing story angles, writing winning query e-mails and letters, interviewing, organizing material, and refining personal styles. The goal: To get your great ideas onto the Web or into print. 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/13–10/25 All Levels No meeting October 11 TELLING THE STORY: FACT BASED NARRATIVE Workshop Leader: David Stewart Fact-based writing—memoir, travel writing, political reporting, nature writing, or historical narrative—succeeds by telling stories that engage readers’ emotions and take them to another time and place. We will examine the storytelling techniques for engaging readers, including character and structure, with special attention to pacing the story and balancing scene and summary. Each participant will bring a 15–40 page piece, or segment of a longer work, for review in a workshop format. 6 Mondays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/20–11/8 All Levels No meeting October 11 WRITING BRILLIANTLY ABOUT SCIENCE Workshop Leader: David A. Taylor Clear writing about science is valuable and compelling. This workshop explores how generalists can weave scientific thought into their writing with wit, and how technical experts can make their work engaging for 12 9/14–10/19 All Levels This new workshop focuses on nonfiction works, primarily book-length, in history and biography. We will discuss how to structure a story, avoid tangents, enhance theme, shape a “narrative arc,” evoke times, places, and personalities, make best use of available sources, and sustain a narrative over the long haul, as well as understanding publishing. The goal is tangible progress toward a publishing-quality product and a viable work plan. Participants are invited to present a one-page synopsis or outline and/or a sample chapter (not more than 39 double-spaced pages) for discussion and critique. 7 Tuesdays Fee: $315 ($275 Members) NONFICTION 6 Mondays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda Workshop Leader: Ken Ackerman Workshop Leader: Beth Kanter 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 6 Tuesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) NARRATIVE HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY: WORKS IN PROGRESS MOMS AND DADS WRITE 5 Wednesdays Fee: $230 ($190 Members) general audiences. We look at examples of narrative from leading writers: Michael Pollan, Rebecca Skloot, Anne Fadiman, Steve Olson, and more. We will generate fresh ideas, write proposals, conduct interviews, learn how to revise, and manage a portfolio. Plus have fun. 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/14–10/26 All Levels TRAVEL WRITING TAUGHT BY A TRAVEL EDITOR Workshop Leader: Joyce Winslow Joyce Winslow, former Travel Editor of Redbook and Mademoiselle magazines, approaches travel writing as a literary art form that meets the ten major criteria for magazine or newspaper publication. You’ll learn how to: structure a themed article; avoid pitfalls that scream amateur; evoke sensory description; gain, check, and include the right travel information; and weave in interviews that deliver surprises to delight the reader. We’ll practice the travel query letter that sells, and learn what editors look for that makes or breaks a sale. 4 Tuesdays Fee: $160 ($120 Members) 1:00–3:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/12–11/2 All Levels STAGE & SCREEN DIALOGUE: A PRACTICAL APPROACH Workshop Leaders: Richard Washer and Hope Lambert This workshop, designed for writers of all genres, will focus on the functions of dialogue in playwriting. We will use writing prompts to get us started writing scenes and we will learn and apply some basic acting strategies (how do actors approach their scripts, what questions do they ask, how do they move from dialogue on the page to a character onstage?) and look at the playwrights use of dialogue to define action, character and relationships, etc. This workshop will be co-led by Richard Washer and Hope Lambert (a Washington D.C. actress whose credits include Charter Theater, Arena Stage, Washington Shakespeare Company, and others). 8 Saturdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/25–11/13 All Levels WORKSHOPS HOW TO PRODUCE YOUR OWN PLAY WRITING THE ROMANTIC COMEDY SCRIPT Workshop Leader: Martin Blank Workshop Leader: Lyn Vaus Want to put on your own play? Or learn to be more effective with a theater producing your work? With developments like the Capital Fringe Festival and other outlets in the D.C. area, there are more opportunities than ever to get your plays in front of an audience. How to Produce Your Own Play will focus step by step on exactly how to produce your play with a budget as low as a few hundred dollars, to as large as several thousand. By putting on the producer's hat even for just a one day workshop, you'll discover how to make your play more attractive to other theaters, or easier to produce yourself. Next to horror, the ever-popular romantic comedy is Hollywood's most cost-effective genre. That's why a well written romantic comedy script is always in demand. Workshop participants will get an overview of rom-com genre conventions, highlights, and specifications, while also visiting or revisiting the basics of three-act structure, character development, and script formatting (if necessary). Participants will workshop their ideas with the aim of beginning or continuing a romantic-comedy script. We will read each other’s work and develop your script following proven industry techniques. 1 Saturday Fee: $125 ($85 Members) 8 Thursdays Fee: $430 ($375 Members) 11:00 A.M.–5:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/25 All Levels Workshop Leader: Jeffrey Rubin If you’re a beginner/intermediate screenwriter in a hurry to get to the next level, this intensive one-day workshop is for you. Every step in the screenwriting process is covered: Getting/Perfecting the Idea, Creating/ Developing the Characters, Building the Story Structure, Writing Scenes and Dialogue, Selling Your Script, and more. Participants will be encouraged to discuss their own script ideas and/or works-in-progress. There will be a one-hour lunch break. 10:00 A.M.–4:00 P.M. 9/11 Bethesda Beginner and Intermediate FEATURE FILM SCREENWRITING Workshop Leader: Jonathan Eig The primary purpose of this workshop is to allow participants to write or rewrite a feature film. You should arrive with one or more ideas. Workshop time will be divided between lecture/discussions and scene readings of your work. Participants should be aware of the basics of visual storytelling and standard formatting. Although we will discuss marketing the script, our main concern will be writing a script that is good enough to sell. 8 Mondays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/20–11/15 Intermediate and Advanced No meeting October 11 THE ART AND CRAFT OF SCREENWRITING This intensive one-day workshop will guide the beginning or intermediate screenwriter through the entire screenwriting process: idea, story, plot, structure, character development, scene construction, and dialogue. In short, the necessary tools to begin writing a feature-length screenplay. Participants should arrive with a short synopsis (no more than a page) of their screenplay idea. 10:00 A.M.–4:00 P.M. McLean Community Center 9/25 All Levels One-Hour Lunch Break 1 Saturday Fee: $125 ($85 Members) 10:00 A.M.–4:00 P.M. Glen Echo Park 10/23 All Levels 10:00 A.M.–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 11/20 All Levels One-Hour Lunch Break 1 Saturday Fee: $125 ($85 Members) One-Hour Lunch Break Songwriting SONGWRITING FOR BEGINNERS Workshop Leader: Cathy Fink This is a workshop for beginners and songwriters who want to know more about the elements of a great song, song structures, skills, and practice techniques for writing songs. 6 Tuesdays Fee: $235 7:30–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/7–10/12 All Levels This workshop is $200 for Members of The Writer’s Center, Songwriters Association of Washington, or Washington Area Music Association. If you are a member of these organizations, please call The Writer's Center at 301-654-8664. SONGWRITING 2: DIGGING DEEPER Workshop Leader: Cathy Fink This workshop is designed either for those who took the fall songwriting class or experienced songwriters looking to dig deeper into their writing. A portion of each session will be spent reading/hearing each other’s songs and critiquing them for an eye on where they work and what needs improvement. We will explore writing to various grooves and work with writing “assignments” that give inspiration to spend more time writing. Instruments welcome. 6 Tuesdays Fee: $235 Workshop Leader: Khris Baxter 1 Saturday Fee: $125 ($85 Members) 9/23–11/18 All Levels No meeting November 11 FAST TRACK SCREENWRITING WORKSHOP 1 Saturday Fee: $125 ($85 Members) 7:00–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 7:30–9:30 P.M. Bethesda Start Date 10/26 Intermediate and Advanced This workshop is $200 for Members of The Writer’s Center, Songwriters Association of Washington, or Washington Area Music Association. If you are a member of these organizations, please call The Writer's Center at 301-654-8664. Fiction THE SHORT STORY Workshop Leader: Dana Cann This workshop is for short story writers at any level. The focus is on par- Check out page 11 for Early Bird Workshop Discounts 13 WORKSHOPS ticipants’ work. Each writer will submit his or her work for constructive critique. In addition, we’ll examine short story elements and techniques, using the latest Best American Short Stories anthology as our guide. We’ll review short story markets and strategies for submitting work. Any participant with a complete story is encouraged to bring 15 copies to the first session. 6 Tuesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:30-10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/7–10/12 All Levels WRITING SHORT STORIES Workshop Leader: John Morris Are you ready to put your work in front of a group of readers who are also aspiring writers? If you have a story draft, or are looking for inspiration to complete a story, this workshop is ideal for you. The goal is for each participant to finish a successful draft. The workshop leader will provide detailed written comments on all manuscripts. The workshop’s emphasis is on encouragement, hard work, and practical suggestions. 8 Mondays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 7:30-10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/13–11/8 All Levels A NOVEL LUNCH Workshop Leader: Susan Coll All levels are welcome at this workshop—it’s nice to have a mix of those working at an advanced level and those just getting started. The only requirement is a serious desire to work on a novel or on linked stories. We will read a contemporary novel (to be decided at the first meeting) which we will deconstruct over the course of the workshop, using it as a text of sorts to foster discussion on technique. While there will be occasional exercises, this workshop will be mostly oriented toward constructive group discussion of submitted work. Bring lunch! 6 Wednesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) Workshop Leader: Brenda Clough We will read manuscripts and discuss them in a workshop format, with a focus on the science fiction/fantasy genre expectations. Plan to bring eight copies of a manuscript to the first class, either a complete short story or the first chapter of a longer work. 10/13–11/17 All Levels RETHINKING YOUR NOVEL Workshop Leader: Ann McLaughlin This workshop will deal primarily with manuscripts by participants, beginning with Chapter One. Each participant will have at least two chances to present parts of her or his novel and have it discussed. We will also discuss one published novel. 8 Saturdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) WRITING SCIENCE FICTION 11:30 A.M.–2:00 P.M. Bethesda 10:00 A.M.–12:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/25–11/13 All Levels CREATIVE FICTION Workshop Leader: Robert Bausch No meeting October 6 This workshop is an intensive exploration of the elements of writing fiction, the uses of the imagination, and the demands of literary genres, including the short story and the novel. The workshop will focus on techniques for character development, plot, conflict, dialogue, beginnings, endings and resolutions, the writing process, and basic storytelling. ONLINE SHORT FICTION WORKSHOP 8 Saturdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) Workshop Leader: Dave Housley No meeting September 18 6 Wednesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:30-10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/15–10/27 All Levels An online workshop for intermediate or advanced short-fiction writers. Students will workshop two stories, and will write several shorter pieces written to prompts. We’ll read a variety of fiction from literary magazines or collections and will discuss aspects of fiction writing, such as voice or dialogue, as well as flash fiction and experimental writing. Ideally, students will leave this course with a better understanding of the current fiction landscape and will hone and expand their writing skills. 8 Online Sessions Fee: $260 ($220 Members) Internet 10/2–11/20 Intermediate and Advanced INTRODUCTION TO THE NOVEL 10:00 A.M.–12:30 P.M. 8/21–10/16 Bethesda Intermediate and Advanced ADVANCED FICTION: BEGINNINGS AND ENDINGS Workshop Leader: Sarah Blake This is designed for the advanced student who has a short story or a chapter of a novel to workshop. We will focus particularly on the beginnings and endings and the arc the work draws (or doesn’t draw) between the two. We will use master readings to frame our discussion of student work. I am interested in reading Munro, Chekhov, McEwan, and others. 6 Tuesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:00-9:30 P.M. Bethesda Workshop Leader: T. Greenwood THE EXTREME NOVELIST You have always wanted to write a novel but didn’t know where to start. This workshop will help you understand the process of writing a novel so you can get started putting pen to paper. We will focus on everything from generating ideas to developing characters to establishing point of view. We will touch on many elements of fiction (dialogue, scene, etc.), but the emphasis will be on discovering the writing process that works best for you. Workshop Leader: Kathryn Johnson 8 Online Sessions Fee: $260 ($220 Members) Internet 9/11–10/30 Beginner This fall 15 brave writers will take on a unique challenge and attempt to complete a full rough draft (or revision) of a novel in just eight weeks! Students meet as a group with professional writing coach Kathryn Johnson one evening a week and commit to an aggressive writing schedule. Kathryn coaches, prods, cajoles, and guides students, helping brainstorm plots and breathe life into characters, while offering practical marketing tips. 8 Wednesdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) No meeting November 24 14 9/21–10/26 Advanced 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 10/13–12/8 Intermediate and Advanced WORKSHOPS Mixed Genre WRITING ABOUT AND BEYOND ART Workshop Leader: BRASH GETTING STARTED CREATIVE WRITING Workshop Leader: Elizabeth Rees If you have always wanted to write but haven’t known how to begin, this is the workshop for you. Participants will explore journals, short stories, poems, and memoirs. Exercises done in and outside of the workshop will focus on transforming a creative idea into actual words on a page. Goals: loosening up, generating new material, and enjoying the excitement of writing. 8 Saturdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/2–11/20 Beginners Workshop Leader: Laura Fargas 8 Tuesdays 1:30–4:00 P.M. Fee: $360 ($315 Members) Bethesda 9/21–11/9 Beginner STRENGTHENING YOUR PROSE Workshop Leader: Graham Dunstan If you’re new to prose writing and you have a story to tell, this writing class is meant for you. We will explore both short fiction and nonfiction with an emphasis on identifying the tools that can help you create more powerful prose. The class will write and critique short prose assignments and read contemporary examples of the best of short fiction and nonfiction. Join us if you are interested in creating your own voice in prose as we study some of the key elements of writing: conflict, pacing, character development, and style. 7 Thursdays Fee: $315 ($275 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/23–11/4 Beginners No meeting November 11 GENERATING STORIES with credible characters Workshop Leader: Solveig Eggerz Participants will generate stories in class about characters who face conflicts and act and speak. We’ll read aloud, then revise at home, so that each participant will finish the workshop with at least one story ready for further development. 3 Saturdays Fee: $150 ($110 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/11–10/2 Beginner No meeting September 18 Workshop Leader: Melanie Figg This class is open to both poetry and prose writers who want to read and write about the City. We will examine how the City is described, badgered, and adored in literature, and write our own portraits, rants, and prayers. Each class will begin with a discussion or close read of assigned poems and/or prose excerpts. We will discuss a range of topics such as description, narrative, imagery, and rhythm, and we will workshop each other’s work. No meeting October 11 6 Wednesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/22–10/27 All Levels INTRODUCTION TO MYTH ADAPTATION: FOR FICTION, POETRY, THEATRE, AND FILM Workshop Leader: Laura Shamas This workshop explores myth adaptation for fiction writers, poets, playwrights, and screenwriters. Utilize the power of myth and archetypes in your writing in ways which resonate with readers and audiences. The workshop begins with a discussion of myth and its meaning. Additional topics include a myth adaptation process, exercises, and a reference list for source materials and further exploration. No previous myth experience necessary. 1 Saturday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 1:00–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/25 All Levels THE ART OF LITERARY TRANSLATION: SPANISH-ENGLISH Workshop Leader: Yvette Neisser Moreno This workshop is an opportunity to try your hand—or hone your skills— at literary translation. We will look at the translations and writings of prominent Spanish translators such as Edith Grossman, Gregory Rabassa, and John Felstiner; do translation exercises; and “workshop” students’ translations. While the emphasis will be Spanish to English, students are also welcome to translate from English to Spanish. Prerequisite: sufficient knowledge of Spanish to be able to translate with a dictionary. 4 Wednesdays Fee: $160 ($120 Members) 7:00–9:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/27–11/17 All Levels MADMAN, ARCHITECT, CARPENTER, JUDGE: A WORKSHOP WITH A LITERARY AGENT Workshop Leader: Shannon O’Neill WRITING THE CITY 8 Mondays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) The class explores different techniques for using all forms of art as a means of inspiration for poetic explorations. We’ll use different stimulus (provided), take a few local field trips to public art near the class location, and try out approaches such as freewriting, rhyme generation, and lyrical/non-lyrical rhythmic experiments. Topics of discussion may include how to collaborate with specific artists, musicians, and other writers, where and how to present one’s work in non-traditional forums, and specific challenges of joint efforts (i.e., copyright issues). 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/20–11/15 All Levels Come explore your four artistic personalities. The Madman writes with carefree messy abandon. The Architect sets structural components in place. The Carpenter sharpens tone and meaning, honing in on the sentence level. The Judge delivers a verdict, and often sends us back to revisit a prior stage. In this workshop we will complete close reading exercises and workshop our own pieces of short fiction or nonfiction, putting all four of our craftspeople to work. 6 Wednesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/8–10/13 All Levels Check out page 11 for Early Bird Workshop Discounts 15 WORKSHOPS APPLYING STANDUP COMEDY TECHNIQUES Workshop Leader: Basil White If you can read this and you can laugh, you can write humor! Learn to apply the basic psychology of how your brain gets a joke to discover what’s “gettable” about your subject matter, real or fictional, for humor writing or other ironic purposes. This class also works as a fun introduction to the fundamentals of workshopping for those new to the expectations of creative workshops. Before class, read basilwhite.com/ comedyworkshop Saturday & Sunday Fee: $125 ($85 members) 1:00–5:00 p.m. Bethesda 9/11 & 9/12 All Levels GRAMMAR REFRESHER Workshop Leader: Susan O’Shaughnessy Should I use who or whom? How do I know if a modifier is dangling? When should I use a semicolon? These and other questions will be answered in this lively, hands-on workshop. We will review grammar definitions and practice avoiding the most common errors. We will explore how changes in language lead to new rules, producing confusion along the way. You will leave with a list of resources you can use on your own. Note that the course is recommended for native (or near-native) English speakers who need a quick refresher, rather than an extensive review. 2 Fridays Fee: $125 ($85 Members) 10:00 A.M.–1:00 P.M. Bethesda 11/12 & 11/19 Intermediate TRANSITIONS Workshop Leader: Mary Carpenter Free up personal experiences, discover voices, choose the best words, etc. In each session, we will write one piece using an assigned topic and read these pieces out loud so the others can listen and comment on what’s strongest, what’s most engaging, where they hear the clearest voice. In addition, participants may bring in work written or rewritten at home for us to read. The goal of the workshop is to create a greater awareness of what it takes to turn life into stories, of which aspects of each participant’s writing work the best, and to better understand how to work together to create a writing group. 6 Tuesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 12:00–2:30 P.M. Bethesda 10/12–11/16 All Levels LUNCHTIME WRITING RETREATS (FALL FOLIAGE EDITION!) Always meant to take time and enjoy the foliage? This workshop explores sites around Washington, D.C. where you can write effectively during your lunch hour. You’ll try out six one-hour retreats (outdoors when the weather cooperates; otherwise indoors) that will leave you feeling energized and ready to begin a new writing routine. Note: Specific destinations will be based on participants’ work and/or home locations. A syllabus with meeting locations will be emailed before the first session; we’ll also use the Internet to reflect on our experiences throughout. 16 12:00–1:00 P.M. Locations To Be Determined Workshop Leader: Pamela Ehrenberg Have you started to read this paragraph several times but keep getting interrupted? You've got a project or an idea half-started, but life is unwilling to slow down enough for you to write? This workshop is for you! We'll set goals specific to our own projects and cheer each other on by sharing feedback as well as strategies for sticking to our goals—during the workshop and beyond. Note: You do not have to be at your computer at a specific time to participate in this online workshop. 8 Online Sessions Fee: $260 ($220 Members) Internet 9/22–10/27 All Levels 9/21–11/9 All Levels ADVANCED NOVEL AND MEMOIR Workshop Leader: Barbara Esstman For the serious writer with a book-length project in progress and hopes of publication. We’ll cover the technical aspects, such as character and scene development, languge, and plot and discuss the psychological aspects that most people ignore—how to stay with your protagonist or narrator so that the emotional center of the book stays true and how to keep going through the long haul. We’ll also touch on rewriting and the directions for getting an agent when you finish. Each writer will submit up to 35 double-spaced pages, which can include a plot synopsis for long-range trouble-shooting. Previous workshops or permission of the instructor required. 6 Tuesdays Fee: $275 ($250 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 10/5–11/9 Advanced FLEX YOUR CREATIVE MUSCLES: A ONE-DAY WORKSHOP Workshop Leader: Leslie Pietrzyk Spend the afternoon doing a series of intensive, guided exercises designed to shake up your brain and get your creative subconscious working for you. You can come with a project already in mind and focus your work toward a deeper understanding of that—or you can come as a blank slate (that will quickly fill up!). Fiction writers and memoirists of all levels are welcome. Please bring lots of paper and pen/pencil or a computer with a fully charged battery. One Hour Lunch Break 1 Saturday Fee: $125 ($85 Members) Workshop Leader: Pamela Ehrenberg 6 Wednesdays (Plus Internet) Fee: $260 ($220 Members) Making Time to Write in an Impossibly Busy Life 10:00 A.M.–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 11/13 All Levels NINE RELIABLE RULES Workshop Leader: Peter Brown Improve every story, letter, and article you write with these practical composition techniques. Novelists and journalists have rules as reliable as Sir Isaac Newton’s, and mastery of them leads to literary discoveries. Rules are made to be contradicted! Rule 3, for example, is “Show, Don’t Tell.” We’ll discover how Jane Austen, genius of narrative discourse, contradicted the rule to marvelous effect! 1 Saturday Fee: $100 ($70 Members) 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. 10/9 Bethesda Beginner and Intermediate WORKSHOPS What We Talk about When We Don't Talk A WORLD BOLD AS LOVE Workshop Leader: David Y. Todd Workshop Leader: Reuben Jackson “How can I know what I think until I see what I say?” asked a famous male novelist. This workshop is designed to inspire men who are interested in writing about the male experience, whether confidentially or for the workshop, in fiction, memoir, or verse. The instructor, a former lawyer and college teacher, has co-led confidential male initiation rites in the woods for men of diverse backgrounds and, yes, has published creative writings of sex and comic violence. This workshop, open to new and seasoned writers, will use literary, musical, and other exercises to kindle or rekindle the keen sense of observation so crucial to poetry. In-session writing, weekly assignments and discussion are the backbone of the workshop. Shyness is lovingly discouraged. 2 Mondays Fee: $125 ($85 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda September 20 & 27 All Levels 8 Saturdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 10:00 A.M.–12:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/25–11/13 All Levels RISKY READING: FIRST POETRY BOOKS Workshop Leader: Deborah Ager In this course, we’ll read and discuss four first poetry books in order to hone our critical eye while discovering what contributes to creating a cohesive poetry collection. We’ll spend one class period discussing each book. Books: Amy Lemmon’s Saint Nobody, Aimee Nezhukumatathil’s Miracle Fruit, Jeannine Hall Gailey’s Becoming the Villainess, and Charles Jensen’s The First Risk. POETRY ELEMENTS OF POETRY Workshop Leader: Nan Fry What makes a poem a poem? We’ll explore some of poetry’s key elements such as imagery, metaphor, voice, and structure by reading and discussing poems from a variety of periods and cultures, including our own, both for inspiration and to see what works. We’ll also experiment with in-class exercises and out-of-class assignments to generate new work and to sharpen our powers of observation and imagination, two sources of poetry that we all have within us. 6 Tuesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 10:30 A.M.–1:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/12–11/16 All Levels THE HISTORICAL CONQUEST OF FORM Workshop Leader: David Keplinger In this eight week course, students will survey the historical implications of formal poetry from the Anglo-Saxon period through to the Modernist Period and the development of free verse. By writing the forms in a traditional workshop setting, a portion of every 2.5-hour session will be devoted to the cultural and historical implications of writing in, or departing from, accepted conventions in poetry writing as they apply to that era. 8 Thursdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/23–11/18 Intermediate and Advanced No meeting November 11 FLAVA IN YOUR EAR: HIP-HOP BASED WRITING AND DISCUSSION Workshop Leader: Reuben Jackson Utilizing texts from rappers such as Queen Latifah, Tupac Shakur, Craig Mack, and others, we will discuss and debate the craft and content of their work, and its relationship to what some would refer to as “traditional poetry.” Assignments will consist of original poems based upon themes suggested or explored by the aforementioned artists, literal variations (or imitations) of texts, as well as exercises focusing on frequently used technical (i.e., internal rhyme) aspects of the genre. 8 Saturdays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/25–11/13 All Levels 4 Thursdays Fee: $195 ($160 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 10/7–10/28 All Levels SOCIALLY CONSCIOUS POETRY Workshop Leader: David Salner Together, we will look at the roots of antiwar poetry in the twentieth century and today’s antiwar poems; discuss the irrepressible genius of such divergent poets as Robert Hayden, Tony Hoagland, Sharon Olds, and Allen Ginsberg; watch video clips of Lucille Clifton and Philip Levine and discuss their perspectives on poetry; address the environment. Time will be available to present your favorite poems for discussion. 6 Saturdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 10:00 A.M.–12:30 P.M. Bethesda 10/9–11/13 All Levels The “F” Word: Traditional Poetic Forms Workshop Leader: Charles Jensen Robert Frost once lamented that writing free verse was akin to “playing tennis with the net down.” This workshop puts the net back up and will give beginning and seasoned poets an opportunity to explore form. Through directed reading and discussion and weekly assignments, each in a new form, participants will develop an understanding of sonnets, sestinas, villanelles, pantoums, prose poems, haibun, and ghazals. From there, you’ll be encouraged to see where form takes you. 8 Mondays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 10/4–11/29 All Levels No meeting October 11 POETS TEACHING POETS II: Theory and Practice Workshop Leader: Sandra Beasley Good poets become great poets by embracing a theory of craft that pushes them to aim beyond clever word choices and line breaks. In this Check out page 11 for Early Bird Workshop Discounts 17 THE WRITER’S CENTER’S NEW MEMBER BENEFITS 18 COMMUNITY MEMBER Gives $50 annually t"DDFTTUPNFNCFSQSJDFPO XPSLTIPQT t30%EJTDPVOUPOCPPLTUPSFQVSDIBTFT JODMVEJOHTQFDJBMPSEFST t/FXQVCMJDBUJPOTMJTUFEJOi58$*OTJEFSw TFDUJPOPGThe Writer’s Center Workshop & Event GuideXIFOZPVOPUJGZVTPODF QFSUJUMF t8FFLMZFOFXTMFUUFSXJUIDPVQPOT TQFDJBMPQQPSUVOJUJFTBOEFWFOU SFNJOEFST t3FDJQSPDBMCFOFöUTXJUIQBSUOFS PSHBOJ[BUJPOTJODMVEJOH"*84"8 BOE$"(8 UBYEFEVDUJCMF PREMIUM MEMBER Gives $100 annually t"CPWFCFOFöUTQMVT t3FDPHOJUJPOJOUISFFJTTVFTPGThe Writer’s Center Workshop & Event Guide t$BOTFMMCPPLTJOUIF58$CPPLTUPSF PODPOTJHONFOU t%JTDPVOUTPOTFMFDUFEMJUFSBSZ NBHB[JOFTVCTDSJQUJPOT t%JTDPVOUPOTQBDFSFOUBMT t'SFFXSJUFSPSHFNBJMBEESFTT UBYEFEVDUJCMF CONTRIBUTING MEMBER Gives $250 annually t"CPWFCFOFöUTQMVT t'SFFBDDFTTUP5IF8SJUFST$FOUFS XSJUJOHBOENFFUJOHTQBDFTQFOEJOH BWBJMBCJMJUZ t'SFFCPPLCZPVSBOOVBMCJSUIEBZ SFBEJOHHVFTU UBYEFEVDUJCMF This new structure went into effect July 1, 2010 SUPPORTING MEMBER Gives $500 annually t"CPWFCFOFöUTQMVT t5XPGSFFHJGU$PNNVOJUZ.FNCFSTIJQT UPHJWFUPGSJFOET UBYEFEVDUJCMF SUSTAINING MEMBER Gives $1,000 annually t"CPWFCFOFöUTQMVT t2SFTFSWFETFBUTBU5IF8SJUFST$FOUFST "OOVBM#JSUIEBZ3FBEJOH&WFOU t*OWJUBUJPOGPSUXPUPBQSJWBUFSFDFQUJPO XJUIBWJTJUJOHBVUIPSBU5IF8SJUFST $FOUFS UBYEFEVDUJCMF SPONSORING MEMBER Gives $2,500 annually t"CPWFCFOFöUTQMVT t-JTUJOHPOUIFEPOPSXBMMBUUIF FOUSBODFUP5IF8SJUFST$FOUFS UBYEFEVDUJCMF PATRON MEMBER Gives $5,000 annually t"CPWFCFOFöUTQMVT t'SFFNVMUJTFTTJPOXPSLTIPQGPSZPV PSBGSJFOE UBYEFEVDUJCMF LAUREATE MEMBER Gives at least $10,000 annually t"CPWFCFOFöUTQMVT t0QQPSUVOJUZUPOBNFBOBOOVBMFWFOU PSBXBSE UBYEFEVDUJCMF NEED SPACE? RENT OURS The Allan B. Lefcowitz Theatre, Jane Fox Reading Room, and classrooms are available weekdays from 10:00 A.M.–6:00 P.M. when not occupied by The Writer’s Center workshops. Those rooms are also available on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evenings; and Saturday and Sunday afternoons, when workshops and events are not being held. Please contact The Writer’s Center with availability inquiries—[email protected] or 301.654.8664. Rent a Classroom: Quiet Personal Writing Small Writing Groups Rent the Jane Fox Reading Room: Events/Readings Business Meetings Staged Readings Receptions Walt Whitman Room Jane Fox Reading Room Allan B. Lefcowitz Theatre $25/hr Rehearsals no access to the public $25/hr Performances 2 hr minimum $50/hr Pre- and Post-Performance $25/hr The Writer’s Center Staff Time $20/hr Rehearsals no access to the public $50/hr Performances $80/hr Pre- and Post-Performance $50/hr The Writer’s Center Staff Time $20/hr Zora Neale Hurston Room $25/hr Classrooms $10/hr (members) $20/hr (non-members) Rent the Allan B. Lefcowitz Theatre: Film Screenings Intimate Concerts Theatre Productions Conferences Lighting, Sound, and/or Video are also available to rent WORKSHOPS workshop, a sequel to the one offered in Spring 2010, we’ll frame our discussions using engaging, inspiring essays from poets such as Mary Karr, Stephen Burt, and Denise Levertov. For the first meeting, bring 15 copies of two poems: a poem that you love, and a draft of your own. 6 Tuesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/14–10/19 Intermediate and Advanced THE MYSTERY OF LINE BREAKS Workshop Leader: Sue Ellen Thompson Many free verse poets write for years without really understanding how a line of poetry functions and where it should end. Should it be as long as a breath, or should it end wherever there is a comma, a period, or a break in the syntax? In this workshop, we will look at how modern poets have dealt with this issue and how their decisions can help us manage line breaks in our own poems. 1 Sunday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 1:00–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/10 All Levels THE STORY IN VERSE Workshop Leader: Anne Harding Woodworth Have a story to tell but prose isn’t quite the medium that will make it work? Poetry may be the answer. The story in verse—whether it’s a novel, novella, short story, or autobiography—is an age-old art form that is alive and well today. In this part-workshop, part-discussion group for all levels of poets, fiction writers, and memoirists, we will investigate the story in verse, reading parts of Vikram Seth’s The Golden Gate and Brad Leithauser’s Darlington’s Fall, as well as looking at our own work. IDENTIFY AND STRENGTHEN YOUR POETIC VOICE Workshop Leader: Patricia Gray Poetic Voice is a mysterious thing. It often hides from its owner but, in a group, it can be glimpsed and appreciated. Working with poems by some of the all-time greats—Jane Kenyon, Galway Kinnell, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Sharon Olds—we will identify characteristics of poetic voice and move to poems by participants. Tips on strengthening your voice will be discussed. 6 Thursdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M Bethesda 10/7–11/18 Beginning and Intermediate No meeting November 11 GETTING YOUR POEMS into print Workshop Leader: Michele Wolf Whether you have yet to submit your first poem to a literary journal or are ready to offer a publisher a book-length manuscript, this intensive one-day workshop will give you advice on how to succeed. Learn about the hundreds of opportunities to place your work in literary journals and anthologies, plus how to publish chapbooks and books. Get pointers on the pros and cons of contests, the etiquette of poetry submission, how to develop your poetry network, and how to keep your morale high while facing rejection in a highly competitive field. Magazine handouts and an extensive question-and-answer period will be included. 1 Sunday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 2:00–5:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/17 All Levels APPROACHING POETRY Adults Write for Children Workshop Leader: Laura Fargas WRITING FOR YOUNGER CHILDREN 6 Tuesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/14–10/26 All Levels No meeting October 5 In this workshop, we will concentrate not only on creating but on revising. Revised versions of previously submitted poems will be explored as a way to distinguish the needs of the poet from the needs of the poem. There will be weekly writing assignments aimed at generating fresh poems. 6 Thursdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/7–11/18 All Levels No meeting November 11 WRITING ONE GOOD POEM No meeting October 11 20 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/30–11/18 All Levels No meeting November 11 For motivated journeymen or lazy masters. We will take as much time as needed for each to write one good poem. Sometimes that entails breaking off and writing a quick bad poem. We also may write jokes, postcards, obituaries, and shopping lists. (A good joke is better than a bad poem.) We will practice writing out of dead ends and blind alleys. Emphasis will be on timing (surprise!), diction, and images. We will look at poems by Heather McHugh, Thom Gunn, W.B. Yeats, and Elizabeth Bishop, among others. Please bring 15 copies of an original poem to the first meeting. 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda This workshop explores various forms of writing for younger children, including picture books, early readers, chapter books, magazine stories, and poems. Short lectures are followed by a review of participants’ work. Discussions of characterization, plot, rhythm, syntax, and publishing guide participants in honing and marketing child-appealing work. 7 Thursdays Fee: $315 ($275 Members) Workshop Leader: Sean Enright 8 Mondays Fee: $360 ($315 Members) Workshop Leader: Mary Quattlebaum 9/20–11/15 Intermediate WRITING FOR THE MIDDLE GRADE READER Workshop Leader: Judith Tabler Middle graders (children ages 8–12) can be a terrific audience for your creative skills. This age group devours both nonfiction and fiction. We will look at middle grade literature (classic and current), but most class time will be spent discussing participants’ writings. We will explore protagonists, plot, conflict, action, humor, dialogue, villains, secondary characters, good beginnings, strong middles, and great endings. Beginners welcome. Bring a favorite middle grade book or article to the first class. 6 Thursdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 10:30 A.M.–1:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/30–11/4 All Levels WORKSHOPS Professional Younger writers Development Workshops for ages 8–18 Adele’s Super Cool Picture Book Workshop Workshop Leader: Adele Steiner Let’s write a children’s picture book! Reading favorites like Runny Babbit, Tailypo, I Am Phoenix, The Polar Express, and Where the Wild Things Are we’ll explore voice, theme, story line, and authors’ use of language, art, and photography. We’ll also examine writing styles (stories, plays, narrative verse, and verse) to discover our preferences when we create our own children’s books. Time will be set aside for comments and revision of work. We’ll have a book launch/reading for family and friends during our last workshop. 6 Saturdays Fee: $240 10:00 A.M.–12:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/30–12/11 All Levels No meeting November 27 INVENTING POEMS Workshop Leader: Anne Sheldon Dreams, color, memory, and the natural world are a few of the geographies we’ll explore, by way of each child’s imagination. Writing will take place within the workshop, as well as brainstorming, editing, and the reading aloud of classic work and student work. The workshop will culminate with a student chapbook and a reading for family and friends. There is no required text for this workshop, but children should bring lined paper and sharpened pencils to each meeting. 6 Saturdays Fee: $240 1:00–3:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/11–10/23 All Levels No meeting September 18 WRITER’S WORKSHOP FOR 4TH AND 5TH GRADERS Workshop Leader: Susan Land This 5-week after-school writing workshop will give 4th–5th graders an opportunity to have fun creating dialogues and stories. Every meeting will begin with an engaging grammar lesson, from parts of speech to complex sentences. Then the class will write together, using our memories, senses, and imaginations. Each student will get to work on a special project to edit, illustrate, or perform. 10 Tuesdays & Thursdays Fee: $260 3:30–5:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/19–11/18 All Levels TEEN CREATIVE WRITING Did you know that The Writer’s Center can bring our professional development workshops, led by our trained workshop leaders, into your workplace? To learn how or to get a quote, call 301.654.8664. INTRODUCTION TO MARKETING PLATFORMS Workshop Leader: Angela Render Getting published is hard, especially for a first-time author. Publishers want you to come with a platform and this workshop will discuss what a platform is and when to start building it. It will also give a brief overview of the tools available to writers for building a platform on the web, and discuss Internet privacy and copyright. Participants will brainstorm what types of Internet media might be right for them to use. 1 Saturday Fee: $65 ($40 Members) 12:30–2:30 P.M. Bethesda INTRODUCTION TO BLOGGING Workshop Leader: Angela Render This class will go into more detail about blogging. It will cover several blogging software options, the basics on how to set up a blog, how to post and how to insert images. Participants will get a feel for what sort of content should be included in a post, how to organize their content, how to invite comments, and how to promote themselves on other people’s blogs. The class will brainstorm topic ideas for their own blogs. 1 Saturday Fee: $65 ($40 Members) 3:00–5:00 P.M. Bethesda Workshop Leader: Angela Render This class will focus on building a mailing list and finding avenues for free advertising. Advanced techniques for collecting prospect data will be discussed and participants will begin to design sales and marketing packages. 1 Saturday Fee: $65 ($40 Members) 12:30–2:30 P.M. Bethesda SOCIAL NETWORKING FOR WRITERS This workshop will help teen writers who want to improve their poetry, fiction, or nonfiction writing. The workshop will consist of fun and engaging interactive exercises. Participants will discuss writing basics and will work individually with the instructor and in workshop readings to improve their approach to writing fiction and nonfiction. Participants will also have the opportunity to read their poetry, essays, or short fiction to the class during our last workshop. This workshop works for the passionate young writer and for the student looking for inspiration and technique to get their creative writing juices flowing. Workshop Leader: Angela Render 1:00–3:30 P.M. Bethesda 10/2–11/6 All Levels 9/25 All Levels ADVANCED MARKETING Workshop Leader: Kenneth Carroll 6 Saturdays Fee: $260 9/25 All Levels 10/16 All Levels Does the world of Social Media make you want to head for a cave? Do you think the world’s all gone to Twitter, Facebook, and other social networks? Learn to navigate the social surf online and in person as you learn how to approach social networking online and off. 1 Saturday Fee: $65 ($40 Members) 3:00–5:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/16 All Levels Check out page 11 for Early Bird Workshop Discounts 21 WORKSHOPS BLOGGING TIPS AND TRICKS Workshop Leader: Angela Render An intermediate level workshop that is best suited for people who are already blogging and want to take their blogs to the next level. Students will learn techniques to improve their posts and their exposure. Basic graphics editing, search engine optimization (SEO), and ways to come up with sustainable topics to write about will be discussed. 1 Saturday Fee: $65 ($40 Members) 12:30–2:30 P.M. Bethesda 10/23 Intermediate WRITING FOR SOCIAL NETWORKING HOW 2 Beginning this fall, The Writer’s Center will offer concentrated one-day workshops called “How 2.” The purpose of these workshops is to provide valuable information on a variety of topics— from the nuts and bolts of revision to getting your work published—in a “mini-workshop” format. Workshop Leader: Angela Render Ghost blogging—writing for other people’s social networking campaigns— is a fast-growing opportunity for writers. Learn what it takes to write effectively for this medium. 1 Saturday Fee: $65 ($40 Members) 3:00–5:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/23 All Levels COPYRIGHT MADE EASY FOR WRITERS Workshop Leader: Barbara Berschler This workshop will cover U.S. copyright and registration; examine how the exclusive rights associated with copyright come into existence and how they can be exploited; discuss what is “a work made for hire”; and consider some issues that may be relevant in publishing agreements. Participants should come away from the class with a clearer understanding of their rights and responsibilities with respect to the intellectual property that they create or that is created by others and which they may wish to use in their works. 1 Saturday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 1:30–3:30 P.M. Bethesda 11/6 All Levels SPEECHWRITING Workshop Leader: James Alexander What’s tougher than getting up in front of a large audience and delivering a powerful, moving “stem-winder” speech? Writing the speech. In fact, very few writing assignments are tougher than speechwriting. It’s a life of multiple drafts and trying to capture something called “voice.” More than just poetic words, a speech is a story that builds a case and carries a message. Learn in a fun and interesting way about this very personal form of ghostwriting. 6 Wednesdays Fee: $260 ($220 Members) 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/22–10/27 All Levels Workshop Leader: Arthur Besner The process of preparing a report—whether it is an accomplishments, special issue, annual, or recurrent report—starts with a set of critical thinking skills to identify and analyze useful information and resources. It follows with identifying a theme that serves as the foundation for writing the report and techniques for categorizing and synthesizing information. The process leads to outlining, drafting, revising, and completing the final report. 22 10:30 A.M.–1:30 P.M. Bethesda Workshop Leader: Pamela Ehrenberg Work. Deadlines. Pressure. Family. Soccer. Childcare. Who on earth has time to write? This one-shot session includes specific decisions, actions, and strategies writers can use in balancing their work lives with their personal lives—and yes, actually writing. Our focus will be on goal-setting and maintaining a momentum. Participants should come to class with an idea for a specific writing project they wish they had time for. 1 Thursday Fee: $75 ($40 Member) 10/20 & 10/21 All Levels 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 11/4 All Levels HOW 2 CREATE AND MAINTAIN A WRITING GROUP Workshop Leader: Pamela Ehrenberg Your mom is flattered when you ask her to read your work, but you’re starting to think feedback from others might help too. Or maybe you’ve been part of a critique group before and wonder how to start one up again and keep it from fizzling. This one-shot workshop will send you home with ideas and an action plan for incorporating the feedback and community of a writing group into your writing life. 1 Sunday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 3:00–5:30 P.M. Bethesda 11/14 All Levels HOW 2 REVISE A POEM Workshop Leader: Sue Ellen Thompson All you have to do is to read the early drafts of a well-known poem to realize how crucial revision is. This workshop will focus on how to “distance” yourself from your poem so that you can identify its weaknesses. We will examine the strategies other poets have used to get “unstuck” while revising a poem, and then we will apply these lessons to our own poems. Poets at all levels should bring a poem that needs work! 1 Sunday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) WRITING THE REPORT Wednesday & Thursday Fee: $125 ($85 Members) HOW 2 MAKE TIME TO WRITE 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 11/21 All Levels HOW 2 TO REVISE Workshop Leader: James Mathews This workshop will concentrate on the most important step in writing good fiction: revision. Participants will learn how to ask tough, dispassionate questions about their work and to make focused reviews of their manuscripts in order to create polished, compelling fiction suitable for WORKSHOPS sending to agents and publishers. The approach will include identifying the overarching goal of the story and examining ways to eliminate excess material that conflicts with that goal. 1 Saturday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/2 All Levels HOW 2 GET YOUR NONFICTION ARTICLES INTO PRINT In this brief introduction to magazine and newspaper freelancing, learn how to get editors’ attention and persuade them to buy your articles. We’ll study the art of the query—your best sales tool—when to use it, when not to, and how to make yours the most likely to win an assignment. We’ll look at matching your ideas to available markets and at legal contracts (not necessarily your friend)—and have plenty of time for questions. 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/30 All Levels HOW 2 CONSTRUCT A SHORT STORY COLLECTION Workshop Leader: Kate Blackwell Story collections can range from a book of unlinked stories to one whose stories share the same location or characters, to a new contemporary form, the novel-in-stories. We will talk about how to choose the stories to include, how to revise them, and how to position them in the collection. Discussion will also touch on how stories jostle each other to create links or distances between them. 1 Saturday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda To get your work “out there,” we’ll look first at how to distinguish what you have to offer, then at who might want it. Then, we’ll work on some public relations tools likely to help reach your audience. These can include a goals chart, blurbs, pitch, press release, and other Web content. Expect to create at least the first steps of a personal PR plan. 1 Saturday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) Workshop Leader: Ellen Ryan 1 Saturday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) HOW 2 PROMOTE YOUR WORK Workshop Leader: David Y. Todd 10/2 All Levels Workshop Leader: Khris Baxter 10/16 All Levels HOW 2 WRITE AN EFFECTIVE COLLEGE APPLICATION ESSAY Workshop Leader: Elizabeth Huergo Are you excited about going to college, but a little nervous about facing the application essays? Do the questions seem repetitive and abstract? Do the length requirements seem impossible? This workshop will help you understand the essay questions and develop a strategy for responding to them. It will help you learn how to organize and draft a response that reveals who you are and the unique talents and experiences you offer. 1 Saturday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 8/21 All Levels HOW 2 MAKE A LIVING AS A COPY EDITOR Workshop Leader: Bernadette Geyer Whether you are drawn to the corporate world or a freelancer’s life, this workshop will cover what you need to know to pursue a career as a copy editor. You will learn how a copy editor differs from a proofreader, how to build experience now to make a career switch later, key tips every copy editor should know, and the steps you’ll need to take if you want to work on a freelance basis. 1 Sunday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) HOW 2 START A SCREENPLAY 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/9 All Levels We will examine the fundamental components for crafting and writing the feature-length screenplay: story, structure, the dramatic scene, and dialogue. We’ll look at techniques for getting started and strategies for working toward completion of a first draft. As well, we’ll discuss how the screenplay is different from the novel, short story, and stage play. 1 Monday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 7:30–10:00 P.M. Bethesda 9/20 All Levels HOW 2 START OUT IN LITERARY TRANSLATION Workshop Leader: Yvette Neisser Moreno This workshop will provide a brief introduction to literary translation, including methods and theories, the creative element, and publishing. Specifically, by examining different translations of sample texts, we will discuss the myriad questions that a literary translator faces, such as word choice, sentence structure, tone, rhythm, and sound. We will also examine some of the major theories of translation and apply them through translation exercises. Finally, we will discuss the “business” side of literary translation: permissions and publishing. The workshop will be conducted entirely in English. 1 Saturday Fee: $75 ($40 Members) 1:30–4:00 P.M. Bethesda October 16 All Levels Check out page 11 for Early Bird Workshop Discounts 23 WORKSHOPS workshops for INDEPENDENT STUDY military veterans The Writer’s Center is pleased to announce that it has received a generous grant from The National Endowment for the Arts allowing us to offer four tuition-free workshops for veterans and active duty military. Two of these are being offered this fall, and there will be two additional workshops offered in 2011. Please contact The Writer’s Center for more details. WRITING FOR MILITARY VETERANS Workshop Leader: James Mathews Now more than ever, many military veterans turn to writing to explore, understand, and share their experiences. This writing workshop is for veterans (including active duty military) interested in portraying the human experience as seen through the unique cultural lens of military life. The workshop will focus primarily on the elements of fiction as a way of conveying this experience, but nonfiction writers are also welcome. 6 Wednesdays FREE for Military Veterans 7:00–9:30 P.M. Bethesda 9/15–10/20 All Levels WRITING FOR MILITARY VETERANS Workshop Leader: Jehanne Dubrow In this writing workshop, both for veterans and for active duty military, we will examine the ways that poetry and creative nonfiction can be used to describe the experience of war, recount memories of service, and explore the unique cultural landscape of military life. 4 Saturdays FREE for Military Veterans 1:00–4:00 P.M. Bethesda 10/16–11/6 All Levels Have you taken a number of workshops at The Writer’s Center, an M.F.A. program, or elsewhere? Are you interested in a writing mentor to give you focused guidance? If you answered yes to these questions, consider applying for one of our new independent study workshops, where you will work one-on-one with one of our workshop leaders.* In order to be eligible for an independent study, you will need to demonstrate a certain level of expertise in your chosen genre—as determined by the individual workshop leader. Independent studies are not meant to replace workshops, but rather to augment them by giving you one-on-one attention. If you are interested in one of the following independent studies, please contact The Writer’s Center at 301.654.8664 or by e-mailing [email protected] with “independent study” as the subject. All independent studies are 6 hours for $850. *Only the workshop leaders listed below are currently offering independent studies. Look for expanded independent study offerings this winter. Khris Baxter (Screenwriting) I work with screenwriters of all levels on premise, story, structure, scenes, and dialogue. In short, developing a screenplay from idea through the final draft. I also work with writers on developing a sound strategy for getting their work in front of producers, agents, and decision makers. Brenda Clough (Science Fiction) In an independent study workshop, I would read the student manuscript closely. We would discuss micro issues, like formatting and sentence structure, and macro issues, like plot, pacing, and character. My particular focus would be working within the science fiction genre, and shaping the work towards success in that arena. T. Greenwood (Novel)—ONLINE only I provide comprehensive editorial services for completed drafts of novels. Services include a thorough critical read of the manuscript followed by an analysis and evaluation of plot, characterization, point of view, prose, etc…as well as recommendations for revision. 24 WORKSHOPS Ann McLaughlin (Fiction) I would spend time initially discovering the student’s life experiences and ambitions for writing. I would assess his or her reading tastes and read his or her manuscript carefully, with a view to its possibilities and other writing ahead, as well as explaining my specific edits. Sue Ellen Thompson (Poetry) I prefer working with free verse poets who combine narrative and lyric elements, poets who enjoy writing in form, and poets who believe, as Stanley Kunitz did, in “an art so transparent that you can look through and see the world.” I will provide line-by-line feedback in person or via e-mail, focusing on form, syntax, diction, imagery, and line breaks. I can review manuscripts as a whole, groups of 3–5 poems, or individual poems on which the poet is “stuck.” SARAH VAP (POETRY)—online only I work with advanced students who wish to have my feedback on their poetry. I prefer to work with your chapbook or book-length manuscripts. Feedback may include line edits, discussion about the work as a manuscript, and conceptual discussions. McLean Workshops The Writer’s Center is pleased to join in partnership with the McLean Community Center (MCC), to offer workshops at their location at 1234 Ingleside Avenue, McLean, Virginia. The MCC is handling registrations for these workshops. The Writer's Center thanks Dorothy Hassan for facilitating this opportunity. Current Writer’s Center members who register for a workshop at the MCC will pay the full rate and receive the member discount as a refund 10 business days after the start of the workshop. For more information about the MCC, visit www.mcleancenter.org. ADULTS WRITING FOR CHILDREN AND TEAMS: FROM IDEA TO PRINTED PAGE Workshop Leader: Ellen Braaf Do you want to write for kids but don’t know where to begin? Do you have a stalled project in need of a jumpstart? Would you like feedback on a manuscript before you submit it to a publisher? In this hands-on workshop, we’ll look at a variety of published works—magazine pieces, picture books, easy readers, chapter books, middle-grade and young adult novels, book-length nonfiction—as well as participants’ works-inprogress to explore the writing process from idea to printed page. We’ll talk about what’s “hot” and what’s not in children’s publishing. In-class writing exercises and peer critiques will complement our discussions. If you have a manuscript ready for review, please bring eight copies to the first class. (Manuscript critiques are limited to ten double-spaced, single-sided pages, 12-point font.) 8 Tuesdays Fee: $549 ($459 Members) 7:30-10:00 P.M. McLean Community Center 9/21–11/9 All Levels WRITING YOUR NOVEL OR MEMOIR Workshop Leader: Barbara Esstman For writers with a book-length projects. Working from your own manuscripts, we’ll discuss character and scene development, tone, language, point of view, and plot. Also, how to focus the main idea and emotional center and to keep going to the end. We’ll also cover rewriting, getting an agent when you finish, and other essentials. Each writer will submit up to 25 double-spaced pages, which can include an optional plot synopsis. 6 Wednesdays Fee: $394 ($328 Members) 7:00–9:30 p.m. McLean Community Center 10/6–11/10 All Levels CREATIVE FICTION Workshop Leader: Robert Bausch This workshop is an intensive exploration of the elements of writing fiction, the uses of the imagination, and the demands of literary genres, including the short story and the novel. The workshop will focus on techniques for character development, plot, conflict, dialogue, beginnings, endings and resolutions, the writing process, and basic storytelling. 7 Saturdays Fee: $394 ($328 Members) 10:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. McLean Community Center 10/23–12/18 All Levels No meeting November 13, 27, or December 4 WRITING FROM LIFE Workshop Leader: Ellen Herbert While our lives are rich in stories we need to tell, how do we cull them from the complicated tangle of memory? This workshop will explore “true writing,” either creative nonfiction or fiction, using suggested weekly topics and employing literary techniques such as recreated dialogue, compression of time, back stories, and voice. 4 Wednesdays Fee: $244 ($203 Members) 10:30 A.M.–1:00 P.M. McLean Community Center 10/13–11/3 All Levels THE ART AND CRAFT OF SCREENWRITING Workshop Leader: Khris Baxter This intensive one-day workshop will guide the beginning or intermediate screenwriter through the entire screenwriting process: idea, story, plot, structure, character development, scene construction, and dialogue. In short, the necessary tools to begin writing a feature-length screenplay. Participants should arrive with a short synopsis (no more than a page) of their screenplay idea. 1 Saturday Fee: $138 ($115 Members) 10:00 A.M.–4:00 P.M. McLean Community Center 9/25 All Levels One-hour lunch break To find workshops listed exclusively online, visit the new and improved www.writer.org. Check out page 11 for Early Bird Workshop Discounts 25 EVENTS AT THE WRITER'S CENTER We host more than 50 events annually, including Sunday Open Door readings, Story/Stereo, and theatre productions at our historic black box theatre. If you would like more information about these events—including interviews, videos, audio—please visit our Web site www.writer.org or our blog, First Person Plural. SUN, NOV 21, 2:00 P.M. Visiting poet Ron Slate reads from The Great Wave. He is joined by Sandra Beasley, who reads from I Was the Jukebox. photo by matthew worden open door readings SUN, OCT 3, 2:00 P.M. The Writer’s Center presents an event with Kirsten Holmstedt, editor of The Girls Come Marching Home: Stories of Women Warriors Returning from the War in Iraq. SUN, OCT 17, 2:00 P.M. Publication reading for Washington Writers’ Publishing House winners. Poet Holly Karapetkova reads from Words We Might One Day Say, and Andrew Wingfield reads from Right of Way, a book of related short fiction. SUN, DEC 5, 2:00 P.M. Join editor Philip Clark and local authors who will read work from the recent anthology Persistent Voices: Poetry by Writers Lost to AIDS. Readers include Dan Vera, Philip Clark, Charles Jensen, and Kim Roberts. SUN, NOV 7, 2:00 P.M. Josh Weil reads from The New Valley. He is joined by Susan Coll, who reads from Beach Week, her most recent novel. SUN, DEC 12, 2:00 P.M. SUN, SEPT 19, 2:00 P.M. SUN, SEPT 26, 2:00 P.M. The Writer’s Center celebrates publication of The Delmarva Review with a reading featuring authors published in the latest issue. Readers include Sue Ellen Thompson, Anne Colwell, Amanda Newell, J. Wesley Clark, Margaret Adams, and Sunil Freeman 26 SUN, NOV 14, 2:00 P.M. The Writer’s Center presents a panel discussion on Creativity, Science, and the Brain. With Michael Salcman, former president of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons; Joram Piatigorsky, Chief of the NEI’s Laboratory of Molecular and Developmental Biology; and David A. Taylor, award-winning writer and documentary filmmaker. photo by Jean Korten Moser Poetry and Prose Open Mic. Sign-up for readers begins at 1:30. Novelist Israel Heller reads from Death In McMurdo, and Kathryn Johnson reads from The Gentleman Poet: A Novel of Love, Danger, and Shakespeare's The Tempest. SUN, DEC 19, 2:00 P.M. Poetry and Prose Open Mic. Sign-up for readers begins at 1:30. EVENTS AT THE WRITER'S CENTER Story/Stereo FRI, SEPT 3, 8:00 P.M. FRI, nov 5, 8:00 P.M. Fellows Aryn Kyle (Boys and Girls Like You and Me) and Allison Benis White (Self-Portrait with Crayon) will read. Musical guest to be announced. Fellows Doreen Baingana (Tropical Fish: Stories out of Entebbe) and Alison Pelegrin (Big Muddy River of Stars) will read. Musical guest to be announced. FRI, OCT 8, 8:00 P.M. See page 35 for more information about Story/Stereo. Fellows Jenny Browne (The Second Reason) and Debra Gwartney (Live Through This: A Mother's Memoir of Runaway Daughters) will read. Musical guest to be announced. special Events Open House SAT, SEPT 11, 12:00–3:00 P.M. Meet workshop leaders, staff members, and Board members, and learn about our fall workshops at our Open House. Cave Canem + Letras Latinas Reading FRI, SEPT 17, 7:30 P.M. The Writer’s Center hosts a reading featuring Cave Canem poets Gregory Pardlo and Terri Cross Davis and Letras Latinas writers Brenda Cárdenas and Paul Martinez Pompa. Read more about the event on page 4. Out of Denmark: An Evening of Danish Literature Thurs, Sept 23, 7:00 p.m. The Writer’s Center, in cooperation with the Danish Arts Council’s Committee for Literature and Fall For the Book, presents Danish writers Pia Tafdrup, Naja Marie Aidt, and Simon Fruelund. For more information, visit http://fallforthebook.org/?p=831 Read more about the event on page 3. An Evening with Warren St. John Reichert, Clare Banks, Holly Bass, and Alan King. Read more about the event on page 6. Join us for a talk and Q & A with author Warren St. John as part of the One Maryland One Book celebration of Outcasts United. This event is hosted in partnership with the Paul Peck Institute for the Humanities at Montgomery College and will be held at the Silver Spring/Takoma Park campus's Performing Arts Center in Silver Spring (7995 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, MD 20910). Writers published in Poet Lore, Barrelhouse, Smartish Pace, Big Lucks, and The Potomac Review will read at The Black Squirrel in Adams Morgan. Readers include Gregory Pardlo, Joe Hall, David Keplinger, and Doug Lang. Tues, Sept 28, 7:00–9:00 P.M. alan squire launch FRI, OCT 22, 7:30 P.M. Reading by authors recently published by Alan Squire Publishing. James J. Patterson reads from Bermuda Shorts, his collection of essays, and novelist Joanna Biggar reads from That Paris Year. An Evening with Eliza Poe SUN, OCT 28, 8:00 p.m. The Writer’s Center and Pyramid Atlantic present Eliza Poe, an Edgar Allan Poe event. POE-PALOOZA CELEBRATION SUN, OCT 31, 2:00 P.M. Area writers read from the work of Edgar Allan Poe. Readers include Deanna Nikaido, Reginald Harris, Rose Solari, Stephen Poetry Reading at the Black Squirrel FRI, NOV 12, 7:30 P.M. The Seafarer Nov 12–Dec 12 The Quotidian Theatre Company presents The Seafarer by Conor McPherson, directed by Jack Sbarbori. For more information, visit their Web site, www.quotidiantheatre.org. holiday BooK fair MON, NOV 29, 7:30 P.M. Got book? This new event features members, workshop leaders, and local small presses presenting their books to our community. Authors and small presses already scheduled include SFWP, Alan Orloff, Kathryn Erskine, and Amy Dawson Robertson If you would like to present and sell your book at the fair, please contact Kyle Semmel at [email protected]. The Art of Adaptation: Bringing A Wrinkle in Time to the Stage MON, DEC 13, 7:30 p.m. The Writer’s Center and Round House Theatre present a panel discussion. Panelists TBA. 27 EVENTS AT THE WRITER'S CENTER Leesburg First Friday Events 7:30 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. $6 for general admission $4 f or members of The Writer’s Center and residents of Leesburg Leesburg Town Hall In the Lower Level Meeting Room 25 West Market Street, Leesburg, VA Developing The Right Character For Your Story with brenda clough Sept 3 Fiction is all about the interaction between plot and character. Choosing the right character for your story is essential. The wrong protagonist can kill your book. Take Shakespeare’s Hamlet, drop him into the role of Luke Skywalker, and watch STAR WARS grind to a halt. A manuscript that is not working can sometimes be resurrected through character surgery. Brenda Clough will discuss how to tell if you’ve created just the right character for your story and how to modify characters in need of a page-lift. Demystifying the Mystery: Tips on Writing Crime Fiction with marcia talley Oct 1 Please join award-winning mystery author Marcia Talley as she gives us practical tips on how to ratchet up the tension in our novels, whether they are mysteries or not. length Narrative With David A. Taylor NOV 5 Often a book emerges from a process more like quilting than cutting from a single piece of cloth. Writers can draw on varied resources available locally—from manuscript collections at the Library of Congress to interviews and walking tours—to create rich narratives. Taylor will talk about this process and how the group portrait in his book Soul of a People: The WPA Writers' Project Uncovers Depression America came together, from first a Smithsonian article, through other pieces for Village Voice, Prairie Schooner, and The American Scholar, to a book and documentary film in 2009. The same process can inform fiction. Putting the Pieces Together: Weaving Stories and Articles into a Book- The Biggest Names The Hottest Discoveries 2010 Fairfax Prize Winner: Novelist Ann Patchett, Run 2010 Mason Award Winner: Humanitarian & Memoirist Greg Mortenson, Three Cups of Tea Novelists Garth Stein, The Art of Racing in the Rain, and Kathryn Stockett, The Help Poets Charles Bernstein, All the Whiskey in Heaven; Brenda Hillman, Practical Writer; and Jay Wright, Polynomials and Pollen Memoirists Jennifer Finney Boylan, She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders, and Lisa Tracy, Objects of Our Affection Biographer Joan Schenkar, The Talented Miss Highsmith, in conjunction with Round House Theatre’s The Talented Mr. Ripley And an evening of Danish literature at The Writer’s Center: Pia Tafdrup, Naja Marie Aidt, and Simon Fruelund www.fallforthebook.org for information and updates! 2010 FftB Poster Contest winner; design by Jenny Ness Decker WORKSHOP LEADERS Ken Ackerman, a writer and attorney in Washington, D.C., has written dozens of articles and has authored four published books: The Gold Ring: Jim Fisk, Jay Gould, and Black Friday 1869; Dark Horse: The Surprise Election and Political Murder of James A. Garfield; Boss Tweed: The Rise and Fall of the Corrupt Pol Who Conceived the Soul of Modern New York; and Young J. Edgar: Hoover, the Red Scare, and the Assault on Civil Liberties. For more details, visit his Web site at www.kennethackerman.com. Deborah Ager’s poems and reviews have appeared in, or are forthcoming from, New England Review, The Georgia Review, The Bloomsbury Review, Quarterly West, and elsewhere. She was a Tennessee Williams scholar in poetry at the Sewanee Writers’ Conference and has been awarded residencies at the MacDowell Colony and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. She is the founder of 32 Poems Magazine., James Alexander has been writing professionally for more than 30 years, including eight years in the Clinton Administration as a Cabinet-level speechwriter and as an outreach specialist. He worked several years on Capitol Hill as a press secretary and op-ed writer. As an op-ed ghostwriter, he has penned more than 50 op-eds for key government and political figures, publishing in such notable newspapers as The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. Robert Bausch is the author of six novels and one collection of short stories. He has taught at the University of Virginia, American University, The Johns Hopkins University, and George Mason University. His fourth novel, A Hole in the Earth, was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year and a Washington Post Favorite Book of the Year. He was awarded the Fellowship of Southern Writer’s Award for fiction for his fifth novel, The Gypsy Man. His most recent novel, Out of Season, was published in the fall of 2005. Khris Baxter is a screenwriter, producer, and script consultant. He teaches screenwriting at The Writer's Center, Gettysburg College, and at the lowresidency M.F.A. at Queens University of Charlotte, NC. His body of work includes many optioned screenplays and one produced film. He is a member of the Virginia Film Office where he is a judge for the annual Screenwriting Competition. He is also the founder of Baxter Baker & Associates (baxterbaker.com). Sandra Beasley is the author of I Was the Jukebox, winner of the Barnard Women Poets Prize. Her first collection, Theories of Falling, won the New Issues Poetry Prize. Her poetry has been featured on Poetry Daily and Verse Daily, and will be included in the Best American Poetry 2010. She is working on Don’t Kill the Birthday Girl: Tales from an Allergic Life, a memoir forthcoming from Crown in 2011. Barbara I. Berschler is a partner at Press, Potter & Dozier, LLC in Bethesda, Maryland. She has been in practice in the Washington, D.C. area since 1985. In 2003 she received the Brinks Hofer Gilson & Lione Award for Excellence in Intellectual Property Law from the American University Washington College of Law. She has been co-chair of the Intellectual Property Law Section of the District of Columbia Bar since 2006, chairman of the Section’s Legislation Committee since 2003, and a member of the Steering Committee since 2005. Arthur Besner has more than 30 years experience at the U.S. Department of Education, where, among other things, he wrote speeches—delivered by the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights and the Department Secretary—that were given to national education, civil rights, and legal organizations. He also designed and delivered an ongoing training course, “Writing Memoranda and Reports,” for Department employees. He teaches at Montgomery College. Kate Blackwell writes fiction and teaches writing in Washington, D.C., at The Writer's Center, and on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Her short stories have appeared in numerous literary journals, as well as in several anthologies. Her new collection, You Won’t Remember This, was published in 2007. Sarah Blake is the author of two novels, Grange House, and the New York Times Bestseller, The Postmistress (2010). Martin Blank has written ten plays that have been produced in the U.S. and abroad. He has directed dozens of readings and workshops to develop new plays in Washington, D.C., and New York City. He has also written, produced, or directed over 100 professional productions. He has served as Artistic Associate for the American Jewish Theatre and American Place Theatre, New York City, as well as Literary Manager, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, and Founding Artistic Director, Theater J. Ellen R. Braaf has published fiction, nonfiction, and humor for children and adults. Author of six science books for PowerKids Press, Ellen has been a columnist and feature writer for ASK magazine (Arts and Sciences for Kids) since it was launched by the Cricket Group and Smithsonian magazine in 2002. She serves as Mid-Atlantic Regional Advisor for the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators and as co-chair of Northern Virginia Writers. BRASH has published widely in journals such as The Greensboro Review, Kalliope, The Allegheny Review, Mediphors, and Red Wheelbarrow, and also has collaborated widely with artists, musicians, and other writers in performances, including Being Stephen Hawking at the Warehouse Theatre, and DiStillation, in collaboration with the artist Brian Reed. Peter Brown is the author of the awardwinning novel, Ruthie Black, which got raves from Midwest Book Reviews and Pleiades. View his TV interview at his Web site, www.pbrown.us. His novella, The Death Of Rhett Butler, can be read in its entirety at www.deathofrhett.blogspot.com. It was recently featured in The Writer's Center’s blog, First Person Plural. Dana Cann, M.A., has stories appearing in The Sun, The Gettysburg Review, Bethesda Magazine, Fifth Wednesday Journal, The Florida Review, and Blackbird, among other journals. He’s received a Pushcart nomination and fellowships from the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation. Mary Carpenter, M.A. in journalism with 25 years as a published journalist specializing in medical topics for TIME, International Herald Tribune, The Washington Post, and women’s magazines. Her children’s biography of Temple Grandin was published in 2003; she is working on another book for children about the dolphins lost at sea during Hurricane Katrina, and a literary memoir of her mother’s life. 29 WORKSHOP LEADERS Kenneth Carroll is a native Washingtonian. His poetry, short stories, essays, and plays have appeared in numerous publications including, Black American Literature Forum, The Lion Speaks: An Anthology for Hurricane Katrina, The Washington Post, Full Moon on K Street: Poems About Washington, D.C., and many others. His book of poetry, So What: For The White Dude Who Said This Ain’t Poetry, was published in 1997. He has had two plays produced, The Mask and Make My Funk The P-Funk. Anne Cassidy, M.S.J. (Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism), is a writer, editor, and author of Parents Who Think Too Much. Her essays and features have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Christian Science Monitor, Family Circle, Ladies' Home Journal, Parents, and many more magazines. She writes mini-essays almost daily on her new blog, walkerinthesuburbs. blogspot.com. Brenda W. Clough is the author of eight published novels, many short stories, and a number of nonfiction works. Her novels include How Like a God, The Doors of Death and Life, and Revise the World. She has been a finalist for both the Hugo and the Nebula awards. She has been teaching Science Fiction & Fantasy workshops at The Writer's Center for at least ten years. Susan Coll is the author of four novels, including Rockville Pike, Acceptance, and Beach Week. Jehanne Dubrow is the author of three poetry collections, most recently Stateside. Her work has appeared in Poetry, New England Review, The New Republic, Prairie Schooner, and Ploughshares. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and her M.F.A. from the University of Maryland. She is an assistant professor in literature and creative writing at Washington College, on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Graham Dunstan is a fiction and memoir writer who has won numerous awards for his writing including a Larry Neal Fiction Award for the District of Columbia, and fiction awards from Lullwater Review and Anchorage Daily News. He earned an M.F.A. in creative writing from the University of Alaska Anchorage, where he also taught composition. Graham has been 30 published in The Signal, The Phoenix, Lullwater Review, We Alaskans, Creative Loafing, Anchorage Weekly, and on PlanetOut. assassination, The Third Walking Gentleman, was a semifinalist in the National Playwright’s Contest at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre Center. Solveig Eggerz is the author of the awardwinning novel Seal Woman. She has published in The Northern Virginia Review, Open Windows: Selections from the Winners of Poetry in the Windows, 1995–2003, Palo Alto Review, Lincoln Review, Moment, Issues. Her short story, “The Midwife,” won first prize in the 2009 Golden Nib contest and is a chapter from her forthcoming novel, Curve of the Earth. She holds a Ph.D. from The Catholic University of America in Comparative Literature. Barbara Esstman M.F.A., is a National Endowment for the Arts, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Virginia Commission for the Arts fellow, and a Redbook fiction award winner, among other distinctions. Her two novels, The Other Anna and Night Ride Home, were published by Harcourt Brace and HarperCollins, and are in numerous foreign editions. Both books were adapted for television by Hallmark Productions. She co-edited an anthology, A More Perfect Union, published by St. Martin’s Press, and has taught extensively in universities. Pamela Ehrenberg is the author of two novels for young people, Tillmon County Fire (2009) and Ethan, Suspended (2007). A former junior high teacher and AmeriCorps alumna, she is currently a higher education consultant and mom to two small children. For an introvert, she can be found on a surprising number of social networking sites, including twitter.com/pamelaehrenberg, Facebook, and MySpace, as well as on her own Web site (www. pamelaehrenberg.com). Jonathan Eig has been teaching screenwriting workshops in the Washington, D.C., area for the past 20 years. He is a winner of the Austin Heart of Film Festival screenplay competition and a CINE Golden Eagle. He currently teaches screenwriting and film history at Montgomery College, Takoma Park, and leads a film series at the AFI Silver Theatre. Laura Fargas, J.D., M.F.A. (Iowa), Yaddo Fellow. After practicing law for 25 years, she is now on the faculty of Goddard College’s low-residency M.F.A. program. She has published two books of poetry and one novel, and her poems have appeared in such journals as The Paris Review, Poetry, and the Atlantic. Melanie Figg recently moved from the Twin Cities, where she taught creative writing at The Loft Literary Center and worked at Graywolf Press. She has won many awards and fellowships for her poetry, and been published in The Iowa Review, LIT, MARGIE, Colorado Review, and other journals. Her first manuscript, "Monarch," has been a finalist for the Walt Whitman Award, the Agnes Lynch Starrett Prize, the Tupelo Prize, and three other national competitions. Cathy Fink is a prolific songwriter with two GRAMMY Awards, 11 GRAMMY nominations, and 50 Patricia Elam is an award-winning writer and commentator who has been widely published in The Washington Post, Essence, The Crisis, and numerous journals and anthologies. She has also provided commentary for National Public Radio, CNN, and the BBC. Elam is the author of the critically acclaimed novel, Breathing Room, and currently teaches at Howard University. awards from the Washington Area Music Association in bluegrass, folk, and children’s music. She shares all her awards and recordings with Marcy Marxer. Cathy & Marcy maintain an active tour schedule as children’s/family performers and folk/roots/country/ swing artists. Cathy’s song “Names,” about the AIDS Memorial Quilt, was recorded by over 20 artists in several countries. www.cathymarcy.com Sean Enright has taught writing workshops at the University of Maryland and The Writer's Center. His poems have appeared in TriQuarterly, The Threepenny Review, Sewanee Review, and The Kenyon Review, among others. In 2001, he published a novel, Goof and Other Stories. In 2007, his play about the day of the Lincoln Lee Fleming has been writing, editing, and teaching both for more than two decades. Her articles have appeared in The Washington Post, City Paper, The Washingtonian, and other national newspapers and magazines. A former senior editor at Museum & Arts, and Garden Design magazines, and managing WORKSHOP LEADERS editor/editor-in-chief of Landscape Architecture, Fleming has received a number of fellowships and awards for journalism and fiction. Nan Fry, Ph.D. (Yale University), is the author of a book of poetry, Relearning the Dark. Her poems have appeared in numerous literary magazines, in the anthology Poetry in Motion from Coast to Coast, and in textbooks such as The Creative Process and Discovering Literature. She taught in the Maryland Poets-in-the-Schools Program and, for over twenty years, in the Academic Studies Department at the Corcoran College of Art + Design. Bernadette Geyer is a freelance writer and copy editor with more than 15 years of experience in business marketing and public relations. The former Director of Marketing for a trade association, Geyer now writes and edits business publications as well as manuscripts of creative writing. Her articles, book reviews, and poems have appeared in WRITER’S Journal, Freelance Writer’s Report, World Energy Review, The Montserrat Review, The Los Angeles Review, and elsewhere. Patricia Gray directs the Poetry and Literature Center at the Library of Congress. She designed and directs the Poetry at Noon reading series there and, for the past three years, she has served as a judge for the NEA’s “Poetry Out Loud” national semi-finals competition. She has received several D.C. Artist Fellowships, the most recent in 2006. She is the author of Rupture: Poems, and a limited edition chapbook, Rich with Desire. T. Greenwood is the author of five novels, including The Hungry Season and Two Rivers. She has received numerous grants for her writing including a National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship and a grant from the Maryland State Arts Council. She lives in San Diego, California, with her husband and their two daughters, where she teaches creative writing, studies photography, and continues to write. Her Web site is www.tgreenwood.com. Ellen Herbert’s personal narrative essays have been published in The Washington Post’s “Style” section, Sonora Review, The Rambler, Alimentum, and other journals. One of her personal essays, “Orphaned Alligators,” won the 2006 Flint Hills Review Creative Nonfiction Prize. Dave Housley’s collection of short fiction, Ryan Seacrest is Famous, was published in 2007 by Impetus Press. His work has appeared in Beloit Fiction Journal, The Collagist, Hobart, Nerve, Quarterly West, the anthology Best of the Web 2010, and some other places. He’s one of the editors at Barrelhouse. He keeps his virtual stuff at davehousley.com. Elizabeth Huergo received her M.A. and Ph.D. in English from Brown University in 1985 and 1989. She has taught English literature and composition at a number of institutions, including Rhode Island College and American University. She is also a novelist and short story writer. Reuben Jackson is a poet, radio commentator, and music critic living in Washington, D.C. He was curator of the Smithsonian Institution’s Duke Ellington Collection from 1989 until December 2009. His poems have been published in 28 anthologies, journals, and magazines like Gargoyle, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, and The Indiana Review, and he is the author of a volume of poetry entitled Fingering The Keys, which won the 1992 Columbia Book Award. His radio essays have aired on National Public Radio and WAMU FM. Charles Jensen is the author of four collections of poetry, most recently The First Risk, which was a finalist for the 2010 Lambda Literary Award. He serves as poetry editor for Lethe Press. Kathryn Johnson is author of over 40 published novels. She is a professional writer’s mentor who teaches the practical aspects of writing book-length fiction with the goal of getting published. Her most recent novel—The Gentleman Poet: A Novel of Love, Danger, and Shakespeare’s The Tempest—was published in September 2010. Beth Kanter is a freelance feature writer specializing in parenting and travel pieces. Her stories have appeared in a variety of publications including Wondertime, Parents, American Baby, Working Mother, Shape, Chicago Tribune, and Pages. She also writes the “Where to Stay” chapter for the popular Fodor’s Washington, D.C., guidebook series and recently updated a new Michelin guide. Beth has also worked as a writer for several non-profit organizations. Beth earned her M.S.J. from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. David Keplinger is Director of the M.F.A. in Creative Writing Program at American University. He is the author of three full-length collections of poems, The Prayers of Others, The Clearing, and The Rose Inside. He has also translated The World Cut Out with Crooked Scissors: The Selected Poetry of Carsten Rene Nielsen. Susan Land has taught for the Center for Talented Youth at The Johns Hopkins University Center, Passion for Learning, The Writer's Center, and for many schools. Susan has an M.A. from The Johns Hopkins University and was a Stegner Fellow at Stanford University. Her fiction has won three Maryland Council for the Arts awards, and her work has recently appeared in Potomac Review, The Florida Review, Bethesda Magazine, Enhanced Gravity: More Fiction by Washington Area Women, and "Like Whatever": The Insider’s Guide to Raising Teens. James Mathews is a graduate of The Johns Hopkins University Master of Arts in Writing program. He is the author of Last Known Position, a short story collection, and winner of the 2008 Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Short Fiction. His fiction has appeared in many literary journals. He is also the recipient of a number of fiction awards, including three Maryland State Arts Council grants (1999, 2006, and 2010). His Web site is www.jamesmathewsonline.com. Ann McLaughlin, Ph.D., has given workshops in the novel, the short story, and in journal writing at The Writer's Center for the past twenty-five years and is on the board. She has published six novels: Lightning in July, The Balancing Pole, Sunset at Rosalie, Maiden Voyage, The House on Q Street, and Leaving Bayberry House. She has had eleven fellowships at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, one at Yaddo, and one at Laverny, Switzerland. Pat McNees was an editor in book publishing and a freelance journalist (samples at www.patmcnees.com) before she began writing other people’s life stories and organizational histories and helping 31 WORKSHOP LEADERS others write their memoirs. She is president of the national Association of Personal Historians; editor of the anthologies My Words Are Gonna Linger: The Art of Personal History, Contemporary Latin American Short Stories, and Dying: A Book of Comfort; and author of several nonfiction books. Yvette Neisser Moreno is a poet and translator whose work has appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies, including International Poetry Review, Potomac Review, and The Virginia Quarterly Review. Her translation of Argentine Luis Alberto Ambroggio’s Difficult Beauty: Selected Poems was published by Cross-Cultural Communications in 2009; one of her translations was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Moreno works as a freelance writer and Spanish interpreter, and teaches writing at University of Maryland University College. John Morris has taught at The Writer's Center since 1995. He has published fiction and poetry in more than 80 literary magazines in the U.S. and Great Britain. His work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and reprinted in Twentieth Century Literary Criticism. A chapbook, The Musician, Approaching Sleep, appeared in 2006 from Dos Madres Press. His musical project, Mulberry Coach, a collaboration with singer and lyricist Katie Fisher, released its fifth CD in 2009. Randon Billings Noble earned her M.F.A. in creative writing from New York University in 2001 and taught a variety of writing classes at American University from 2001 to 2009. She has been a fellow at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and a resident at the Vermont Studio Center. Published in The New York Times, The Massachusetts Review, Passages North, and Emrys Journal, she is currently working on a collection of essays called The Summer before Marriage. Shannon O’Neill is an agent with the Sagalyn Literary Agency, which has represented journalists, academics, business writers, and novelists for over 20 years. Based in Bethesda, the Agency works primarily with the large New York houses and focuses on upmarket nonfiction, business books, and commercial fiction. Shannon has a Master’s degree in Writing from The Johns Hopkins University and graduated cum laude from Dartmouth College. She 32 is also an associate editor for the Potomac Review. Susan O’Shaughnessy has 25 years of experience in professional writing and training. She has taught writing courses at the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and Georgetown University. As an instructional designer, she has created classroom and e-learning courses for federal agencies and private companies. Leslie Pietrzyk, M.F.A., is the author of the novels Pears on a Willow Tree and A Year and a Day, which was selected for the Book-of-the-Month Club and the Borders “Original Voices” series. Her short fiction has appeared in many publications, including The Washingtonian, TriQuarterly, The Gettysburg Review, The Sun, The Iowa Review, New England Review, and Confrontation. She has received fellowships from the Bread Loaf and Sewanee Writers’ Conferences. Mary Quattlebaum, M.A., teacher, reviewer, is the author of fifteen award-winning children’s books, including Jackson Jones and the Puddle of Thorns and Sparks Fly High. Her work has appeared in anthologies and magazines such as Cricket, Spider, Ladybug, and Boys’ Life. Mary reviews children’s books for The Washington Post and Washington Parent, edits educational materials for museums and small publishers, and presents frequently at schools. Her Web site is www.maryquattlebaum.com. Elizabeth Rees, M.A., has taught at several leading colleges, including Harvard University, the U.S. Naval Academy, Howard University, and in The Johns Hopkins University’s graduate program. She works as a “poet-in-the-schools” for the MD State Arts Council. She has published over 250 poems in journals such as Partisan Review, The Kenyon Review, Agni, and North American Review, among others. She has four award-winning chapbooks, most recently, Tilting Gravity, winner of Codhill Press’ 2009 contest. Angela Render designed and maintained Web sites since 1994 and is the founder and owner of Thunderpaw Internet Presence Management, thunderpaw.com. Her published work includes: Forged By Lightning: A Novel of Hannibal and Scipio, Marketing for Writers: A Practical Workbook, a column for WRITERS' Journal, and ghost blogging. In addition to her classes at The Writer's Center, she teaches at-risk middle-school girls and she has been a guest speaker at numerous local conferences. Jeffrey Rubin, M.A., is a Virginia-based screenwriter/producer who has sold or optioned three screenplays, one of which was produced by Showtime. His screenplays have won top prizes at Worldfest Houston and the Vail Film Festival, among others, and he has been nominated for a Writer’s Guild of America Award. Ellen Ryan was managing editor of The Washingtonian for nearly 13 years. Since writing for The Cavalier Daily at the University of Virginia, she has been an editor in Washington for two decades. Her freelance articles have appeared in Good Housekeeping, Outside, AARP, The Washington Post, ForbesLife Executive Woman, and dozens more. Ryan is author of Innkeeping Unlimited: Practical, Low-Cost Ways to Improve Your B&B and Win Repeat Business. David Salner worked as an iron ore miner, furnace tender, machinist, and garment worker. A longtime activist in social struggles, he has an M.F.A. from The Iowa Writers' Workshop. His fifth collection, Working Here, will come off the presses in 2010, and his poems have appeared in The Iowa Review, North American Review, The Threepenny Review, Poetry Northwest, Poetry Daily, Prairie Schooner, and many other journals. He has received grants from the Maryland State Arts Council and the Puffin Foundation. Laura Shamas has published plays, essays, and nonfiction. Her essays about myth and modern life have appeared in Ecopsychology, Los Angeles Times, and Newsday. She has worked in film as a screenwriter and as a consultant. An award-winning writer and teacher, her Ph.D. is in Mythological Studies. She specializes in teaching myth and fairy tale adaptation. She currently teaches in the M.F.A. Screenwriting Program at Hollins University, Roanoke, Virginia. Anne Sheldon is a storyteller, a retired children’s librarian, and an adjunct at the University of Maryland, where she teaches storytelling in the iSchool. She’s the author of Hero-Surfing, Lancastrian Letters, and Adventures of the Faithful Counselor. Her poetry has appeared in such journals as Poet Lore, WORKSHOP LEADERS The Dark Horse, Weird Tales, and Spitball. She’s sold fiction to Black Gate, Paradox, and Aboriginal Science Fiction. Science Monitor. He has also written for the National Science Foundation, National Institute of Health, and the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. Adele Steiner B.A. & M.F.A. in English Literature and Creative Writing (Poetry) (University of Maryland); an instructor with Montgomery College and the Maryland State Arts Council; a veteran artist-in-residence at Georgetown Hospital; host of Café Muse; and author of Refracted Love, Freshwater Pearls, The Moon Lighting, and Look Ma, “Hands” on Poetry. Her work has appeared in WordWrights!, Maryland Poetry Review, Gargoyle, Lucid Stone, Smartish Pace, and So to Speak. Sue Ellen Thompson is the author of four books of poetry, most recently The Golden Hour (2006), and the editor of The Autumn House Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry. Twice nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, she taught at Middlebury College, Wesleyan University, State University of New York at Binghamton, and Central Connecticut State University before moving in 2007 to the Eastern Shore. She has received the Pablo Neruda Prize in Poetry and two Individual Artist’s Grants from the State of Connecticut. David Stewart is the author of The Washington Post bestseller and winner of the 2007 Washington Writing Prize, The Summer of 1787, and Impeached. His book on the Aaron Burr conspiracy is scheduled for release in 2011. Sara Mansfield Taber received a Bergeron Fellowship to teach writing in London, and was a William B. Sloane Fellow in Nonfiction at the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference. She is the author of Dusk on the Campo: A Journey in Patagonia; Of Many Lands: Journal of a Traveling Childhood; and Bread of Three Rivers: The Story of a French Loaf. Her short pieces have appeared in anthologies, such as Unrooted Childhoods, and in literary magazines and on public radio. Visit her Web site at www.sarataber.com. Judith Tabler writes fiction and nonfiction for magazines such as Appleseeds, Calliope, and Cobblestone, and is the author of several books, one of which was awarded best children’s book by the Dog Writers Association of America. She also wrote for the National Geographic Society education department. She holds an M.F.A. in creative writing for young people and teaches writing at a local university. She is a member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. David A. Taylor is an award-winning writer and filmmaker on science, history, and culture. He’s the author of Ginseng, the Divine Root, about the medicinal plant, and Soul of a People, about America in the 1930s. His articles appear in Smithsonian, The Washington Post, Outside, Wired, and The Christian David Y. Todd is a public relations consultant and writer. After working as a trial lawyer then as a journalist, he taught at universities before turning to public relations full time in 1998. He has directed publications and aided media relations for individuals, government, nonprofits, and universities, and has spoken and written for himself and others online and in the Boston Globe, The Christian Science Monitor, The Washington Post, The Yale Review, on local TV, and elsewhere. Find him on the Web at www.davidytodd.com. Sarah Vap is the author of Dummy Fire, which won the 2006 Saturnalia Poetry Prize, and American Spikenard, which won the 2006 Iowa Poetry Prize. She is editor of poetry for the online journal 42opus. Her third collection, Faulkner’s Rosary, is forthcoming from Saturnalia Books in 2010. She has taught writing and literature at Arizona State University, Phoenix College, and Olympic College. Lyn Vaus, a longtime screenwriter and industry professional, is best known for his award-winning Miramax romantic comedy Next Stop Wonderland. He began his career as a story editor for a production company in Hollywood where he oversaw the script for New Line’s hit science fiction film “The Lawnmower Man.” He has had numerous screenplays of his own optioned, and in some cases produced by, among others, Imax, Fineline, SenArt, and Miramax. at Charter Theater, where he has worked as a playwright, director, and dramaturge since the company started in 1998. His most recent play, “The Fetish,” was produced at The National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts in December 2008. His play “Quartet” was performed at the Hamner Theatre in Nelson County, Virginia, in April 2009. Basil White is a speechwriter, a published joke writer (Judy Brown’s Squeaky Clean Comedy, The Comedy Thesaurus, and Larry Getlen’s The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Jokes), public speaker, and business humor consultant. Basil helps people add humor to presentations, advertising, movie scripts, and user manuals. He also writes articles and online courses on creative technology writing, usability, and information design. www.basilwhite.com. Joyce Winslow is an award-winning short story writer. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker and Best American Short Stories. She has edited Pulitzer prize-winning authors in her capacity as fiction editor of a national magazine. Michele Wolf is the author of Conversations During Sleep, winner of the Anhinga Prize for Poetry, and The Keeper of Light, which received the Painted Bride Quarterly Poetry Chapbook Series award. Her poems have also appeared in Poetry, The Hudson Review, North American Review, Antioch Review, Boulevard, and numerous other literary journals and anthologies. She serves as a contributing editor for Poet Lore. Anne Harding Woodworth’s most recent book is Spare Parts: A Novella in Verse. She is the author of two other books of poetry, with another to appear in 2011. Her poetry, book reviews, and essays have appeared in U.S. and Canadian journals, such as TriQuarterly, Rain Taxi, Painted Bride Quarterly, Connecticut Review, The Antigonish Review, and Poet Lore, as well as at several sites online. She is on the Poetry Board at the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C. ¶ Richard Washer, M.F.A., playwright, director and educator, currently serves as Company Dramaturge 33 Friday, September 19, 8:00 P.M. Aryn Kyle fiction: Boys and Girls Like You and Me Allison Benis White poetry: Self-Portrait with Crayon WWW.STORYSTEREO.COM Aryn Kyle is the author of the novel The God of Animals and the short story collection Boys and Girls Like You and Me. Her work as appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, Ploughshares, Best American Short Stories 2007, Best New American Voices 2005, and elsewhere, and has been translated into fifteen languages. She is the recipient of a Rona Jaffe Award, an American Library Association Alex Award, and a National Magazine Award in fiction. She lives in New York City. Each year, following a nationwide application process, a special committee selects really great up-and-coming writers and invites them to The Writer’s Center. Story/Stereo’s musical curators Chad Clark (Beauty Pill) and Matt Byars (The Caribbean) invite the area’s best local bands to perform at Story/Stereo. Past acts include J. Robbins, Bluebrain, and Roofwalkers. Allison Benis White is the author of Self-Portrait with Crayon, winner of the Cleveland State University Poetry Center First Book Prize. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in the American Poetry Review, The Iowa Review, Ploughshares, and Pleiades. Her honors include the Indiana Review Poetry Prize, the Bernice Slote Award from Prairie Schooner, and a Writers Exchange Award from Poets & Writers. She recently completed a second manuscript, “Small Porcelain Head,” which received the James D. Phelan award for a work-in-progress from the San Francisco Foundation. She teaches at the University of California, Irvine. Emerging Writer Fellowship judges include volunteer representatives from The Writer’s Center’s Board of Directors, our corps of workshop leaders, and members of our community. If you would like to volunteer in our next round of awards, please e-mail Kyle Semmel by September 1 at [email protected]. Friday, October 8, 8:00 P.M. Jenny Browne poetry: The Second Reason Debra Gwartney nonfiction: Live Through This: A Mother’s Memoir of Runaway Daughters) Jenny Browne is the author of two collections, At Once and The Second Reason, both from the University of Tampa Press. Poems from her new manuscript, “Some Studies for the Monster,” have been recently published, or are forthcoming from AGNI, American Poetry Review, Bat City Review, Gulf Coast, and Measure. A former James Michener Fellow in Poetry at the University of Texas-Austin, she lives in downtown San Antonio and teaches at Trinity University. Aryn Kyle Debra Gwartney Allison Benis White Doreen Baingana Jenny Browne photos of Aryn Kyle by Miriam Berkley; photo of Jenny Browne by Scott Martin 2010 FALL EMERGING WRITER FELLOWS Alison Pelegrin The judges included representatives from The Writer’s Center’s Board of Directors, our corps of workshop leaders, and members of our community. Representing our membership were Takisha Adams, Shanti Chandrasekhar, Reb Livingston, and Rion A. Scott; Margot Backas represented our Board of Directors; our workshop leaders were represented by Peter Brown, David Y. Todd, and Cara Seitchek. Debra Gwartney is the author of Live Through This: A Mother's Memoir of Runaway Daughters, a finalist for the 2009 National Book Critics Circle Award and named a best book of the year by The Oregonian and Pacific Northwest Booksellers. She is co-editor, with her husband Barry Lopez, of Home Ground: Language for an American Landscape. She lives in western Oregon and teaches at Pacific University. Friday, November 5, 8:00 P.M. Doreen Baingana fiction: Tropical Fish: Stories out of Entebbe Alison Pelegrin poetry: Big Muddy River of Stars Doreen Baingana is the author of Tropical Fish: Stories out of Entebbe, which won an AWP Short Fiction Award and a Commonwealth Prize. She has also won the Washington Independent Writers Fiction Prize and was nominated twice for the Caine Prize for African Writing. Her stories and essays have appeared in journals such as Glimmer Train, Chelsea, African American Review, Callaloo, The Guardian, UK, Chimurenga, and Kwani. She has an M.F.A from the University of Maryland and has taught creative writing as a Writer-in-Residence at the University of Maryland, The Writer’s Center, the SLS/Kwani literary festivals in Kenya, and with FEMRITE in Uganda. The recipient of fellowships from the NEA and the Louisiana Division of the Arts, Alison Pelegrin is the author of two poetry collections, most recently Big Muddy River of Stars. Her work has appeared in Poetry, Ploughshares, Poetry Daily, and The Writer's Almanac. At present she teaches English at Southeastern Louisiana University. For a list of finalists, please visit The Writer’s Center’s blog, First Person Plural. TWC INSIDER Published Books Awards Sarah Blake’s novel The Postmistress, Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam, was Elizabeth Murawski’s collection Zorba’s Daughter published in February. See her workshop on page 14. was selected by Grace Schulman for the 2010 May Swenson Poetry Award. It will be published by Susan Coll’s novel Beach Week was published in May by Farrar, Straus Utah State University Press in June of this year. and Giroux. See her workshop on page 14. Her chapbook, Out-Patients, will be published Amy Dawson Robertson’s first novel, Miles to by Servinghouse Books in 2010. Go, was published this year by Bella Books. Kathryn Erskine’s Young Adult novel, Mockingbird, Laura Shovan won the first annual Clarinda was published by Penguin/Philomel in April. Harriss Poetry Prize, sponsored by CityLit Project. Alan Orloff’s Diamonds for the Dead was pubLaura’s chapbook, Mountain, Log, Salt, and Stone, lished by Midnight Ink in April. debuted at CityLit Festival this April, where she read with Maryland Poet Laureate Stanley Plumly. Sarah Pekkanen’s The Opposite of Me was published by Simon & Schuster She is a Maryland State Arts Council Artist-inin March. Education for poetry. Nani Power’s book, Ginger and Ganesh: Adventures in Indian Cooking, Culture and Love, was published in May by Counterpoint. Rose Solari’s poem "Math & the Garden" will appear in the anthology Share your news with Initiate: An Oxford Anthology of New Writing, forthcoming from Oxford The Writer’s Center community! University Press and Blackwell Books in November 2010. In June, she led a To be included in The Writer's Center Workshop & Event Guide, seminar at Oxford's Kellogg College Creative Writing Series, entitled “Divided e-mail your news along with a high-resolution book cover image or author photo to [email protected]. by a Common Language: Divergent Paths in British and American Poetry.” The deadline for the winter issue is August 26. Thomas Young’s novel, The Mullah’s Storm, will be published by Putnam in September. Saturday September 11 Noon–3:00 P.M. Meet workshop leaders, staff members, and Board members, and learn about our fall workshops at our Open House. This event is limited to 80 people. Email: [email protected] For more details: 212-888-8171 www.mysterywriters.org Mystery Writers of America, the premier membership organization devoted to the mystery/ crime genre is launching a new series of conferences—MWA University MWA-U is a one-day symposium of classes from six top-notch authors. From “What do you do now that you have an idea” to “The Writing Life,” it’s an up-close look at the essentials of mystery writing. Cost: $50 35 THANK YOU angels—$10,000 + Friends—$100–$249 Omega/Tau Foundation Anonymous, Paul Abrams, Esthy Adler, Carolyn Alsup, Susan Angell, Carol Ashworth, B.K. Atrostic, Martin Auerbach, Ron Baker, Raymond Baker, Jaime Banks, Marc Bastow, Bruce Berger, Emily Best, Samantha Betts, Anita Bigger, Margaret Blair, Martin Blank, Donald Bliss, Stephanie Boddie, Mickey Bolmer, Diane Booth, Jon Bowersox, Judith Bowles, Ellen Braaf, Jo Buxton, Anne Buzzanell, Dana Cann, Sally Canzoneri, Nancy Carlson, Mary Carpenter, Cecilia Cassidy, Alice Cave, Albert Christopher, Jennifer Cockburn, Lloyd Collier, Richard Currey, Richard Cys, Deborah Darr, Andrew Dayton, Joe Dellinger, Gregory Djankian, Sharon Donnell, Charles Dubois, Kathleen Emmet, Linda Fannin, John Farrell, Patricia Fisher, Jack Fitzgerald, Allan Freedman, Elisha Freedman, Lisa Freedman, Flora Freeman, Patricia French, William Friedman, Nan Fry, Marie Gaarder, Martin Galvin, Patricia Garfinkel, John Gaudet, Gwenn Gebhard, Maria Gimenez, Robert Giron, Jennifer Gore, Karen Gray, James Gray, Claire Griffin, Patricia Griffith, Maria Gupta, Betty Hafner, Bonnie Hammerschlag, Harold Hanson, Phillip Harris, Frederick Harrison, Rebecca Hayden, Ellen Herbert, Jay Herson, Mary Anne Hoffman, Thomas Holzman, Tim Hussion, Cheryl Jacobson, Victoria Jaycox, Michael Jones, Frank Joseph, Rochelle Kainer, Laura Kaiser, Therese Keane, Caroline Keith, Maureen Kentoff, Timothy Kerr, Eugenia Kim, Michael Kirkland, Peter Kissel, Ann Knox, Joseph Kolar, Susan Korytkowski, Patricia Kreutzer, Rhys Kuklewicz, Vicki Lambert, Rodney Lay, David Lees, Carol Levin, Lawrence Lewin, Lisa Lipinski, Tarpley Mann Long, David Lublin, Patrick Madden, Linda Marshall, Elizabeth Martin, Catherine Mansell, Alice Mcdermott, Robert Mcelwaine, Suzanne Mcintire, David Mckinney, John Merriam, E. Ethelbert Miller, Lynn Mobley, Carol Mossman, Cantwell Muckenfuss and Angela Lancaster, Andrew Nitz, Jean Nordhaus, Terrance O’Connor, William O’Grady, Caroline Osborne, James Papian, Joanna Pappafotis, Valerie Patterson, Kathleen Patterson, Arne Paulson, Cathleen Petree, Andrew Popper, Jeffrey Porro, Jeffrey Prince, Anne Rayburn, Barbara Rosing, Larry Roszman, Phyllis Rozman, Anthony Rylands, Mary Sasser, Martin Shapiro, Mary Sheehan, Daniel Silver, Myra Sklarew, Louise Smith, Mary Smith, Thomas Smith, Eugene Sofer, Lynn Springer, Eric Stone, Kathy Strom, Linda Sullivan, Sherry Sundick, Carrington Tarr, Caroline Taylor, Gary Thomas, Anne Thompson, Trudy Todd, Norma Tucker, Jane Udelson, Margaret Ullman, Ann Varnon, Ira Wagner, Nancy Weil, Mary Westcott, Katherine Williams, Roger Williams, Aaron Williams, Peter Wilson, Jane Winer, Christy Wise, Robert Wise, Matthew Wolf, Catherine Woodard, Anne Yerman, Zofia Zager Laureates—$5,000–$9,999 John and Sally Mott Freeman, Ann Mclaughlin, Linna Barnes and Christian Mixter, Rose Solari and James Patterson benefactors—$2,500–$4,999 Cicely Angleton, Susan Coll, Timothy Crawford, Neal Gillen, John Hill, William Reynolds, Mier Wolf patrons—$1,000–$2,499 Kenneth Ackerman, Margot Backas, Tom Birch, Toni Clark, Mark Cymrot, Virginia Grandison, Paul Hopper, Felix Jakob, Perry Maiden, Charlotte Moser, Pamela Peabody, Charles and Betty Peissner, Claudia Smith, Dulcie Taylor and George Williams, Ernst Volgenau, Wilson Wyatt Sustainers—$500–$999 Anonymous (3), Sandra Beasley, Sandra Bracken, Patricia Davis, Cynthia Hamilton, Tom Healy, Stacy Lloyd, Bill and Louisa Newlin, Quinn O’Connell, Chris Piers, Maryhelen Snyder, Ed Torrero, Clinton Vince, Marcia Wagner, Anne Woodworth Supporters—$250–$499 Michelle Berberet, Phillip Budahn, Robert Carpenter, Missy Craig, Janet Crossen, Lisa Crye, Sally Edwards, Barbara Esstman, Carol Gallant, Jorge Goldstein, Theodore Groll, Melinda Halpert, Brigid Haragan, Phil Harvey, Les Hatley, Philip K. Jason, Lizbeth Kulick, Dylan Landis, Raima Larter, James Lehrer, Steven Marcom, Peter Pastan, Carol Peck, Lois Perry, Mary Procter, Helen Reid, Paul Rice, Theodore Rockwell, Gerald Thompson, Craig Tregillus The Writer’s Center has been selected to be part of the 2010–11 Greater Washington Catalogue for Philanthropy, a prestigious honor bestowed upon only 68 of 250 local applicant organizations. 36 January 1, 2009–June 1, 2010 REGISTRATION 1 WORKSHOP REGISTRATION FORM GENERAL INFORMATION BECOME A DONOR Please consider making a tax-deductible gift with your registration: Name $100 $1000 $250 $500 $_________ Other Amount Address SUBSCRIBE TO POET LORE City State Zip Phone $10 Subscription Rate (1 Year) E-mail 2 3 4 CALCULATE YOUR TOTAL PAYMENT WORKSHOP INFORMATION Workshop $ ____________ TOTAL DUE PAYMENT METHOD Check (enclosed) Workshop Leader Location Add a subscription to Poet Lore, the oldest continually published literary magazine in America. Start Date $ Fee Credit Card (complete section below) Card Number Expiration Date Signature REFUND POLICY All dropped workshops are assessed a $25 handling fee. Workshops may be dropped 48 hours in advance of the first meeting for a full refund minus the $25 fee; workshops dropped within 48 hours of the second class are refunded at the value of the remaining class meetings, minus the $25 fee. TELL US ABOUT YOU How did you learn about The Writer's Center? Workshop & Event Guide Word of Mouth Newspaper Ad Google Ad Other ________________________ Please sign to indicate you understand our policy WHAT IS YOUR AGE? ASSISTANCE Please let us know if you require accommodations due to a physical limitation by calling 301.654.8664 prior to your first class meeting. Younger than 18 50–64 BECOME A MEMBER FOR OFFICE USE ONLY Members receive discounts on all workshop registrations for one year, along with a continually improving slate of benefits, including a discount in our onsite bookstore. For more information about membership levels see page 18. $50 Community Member $250 Contributing Member $1000 Sustaining Member $5000 Patron Member DCP ______ 19–24 65+ CP ______ Card _______ 25–35 36–49 Code _______ $100 Premium Member $500 Supporting Member $2500 Sponsoring Member $10000 Laureate Member 06/10 4508 Walsh Street Bethesda, MD 20815 301-654-8664 www.writer.org NON-PROFIT US POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO. 3007 SUBURBAN, MD workshop & event guide THE WRITER'S CENTER Return Service Requested CONTAINS DATED MATERIAL Inside this issue: Cave Canem + Letras Latinas An Interview with R. Dwayne Betts Internationally Acclaimed Danish authors A Tribute to Edgar Allan Poe Readings, Performances, and Events And the fall workshop schedule including early bird workshop discounts
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without at least one reading or spoken word performance
taking place. Many of these series seek help greeting patrons,
setting up, selling books or refreshments, and publicizing
workshops - The Writer`s Center
Metered parking is across the street from
our building. The meters require $1.00
per hour and are routinely monitored.
The meters are free on weekends.