Drew Myron's Blog, page 65

January 5, 2013

Write Now! 10 Online Classes

We take stock. We look ahead. We make plans. In this new year, have you a thirst to improve your writing? Start now!


The selection of online writing courses seems to expand daily. Now dozens of respected organizations offer quality classes.


Here are 10 to Consider*:


The Writers Studio
Offering beginner to advanced workshops in fiction and poetry. Classes are 10 weeks, with an emphasis on "encouraging students to try on voices and attempt a variety of narrative techniques as a way of discovering their own material and personal voices."  Now offering free Craft Class podcast.


WoodSprings Institute
University-level literary instruction, offering workshops in poetry, short story, novel, creative non-fiction, and memoir. Also: manuscript mentoring and MFA prep courses.


UCLA Extension Writers' Program
A pioneer in online offerings, UCLA has 175 beginning to advanced-level online courses in fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, writing for the youth market, feature film writing and television writing. Classes are typically 10-weeks, though some 6-week and 12-week options are available.


Stanford Continuing Studies
The Writer's Studio offers approximately 20 courses every quarter in the principal genres of creative writing— novel, short story, poetry, creative nonfiction, and screenwriting. All writing levels welcome.


MOOC - Massive Open Online Course
It's the Year of the MOOC, according to the New York Times.  The world of free, online, university-level courses is growing, from Coursera to Udacity and dozens more. Classes skew to science and technology with writing classes in short supply but that may change, and quickly. In fact, the number of MOOCs has become so unwieldy that outside websites have popped up to sort and rate courses and providers, see knollop and coursetalk.


The Loft Literary Center
Classes for adult and youth, online and on-site, all writing genres. Serves beginning, intermediate and advanced writers. Scholarships available.


Lisa Romeo's I Should Be Writing! Boot Camp
Led by no-nonsense nonfiction writer Lisa Romeo, this popular tough-love class helps turn the stuck, blocked, and rutted into happily producing writers. The six-week course is open to both new and seasoned writers.


Gotham Writers' Workshop
With more than 7,000 students annually, this New York-based organization is one of the most popular writing resources. Their interactive classes have been named Best of the Web by Forbes magazine. Six and 10 week workshops available in seemingly every genre.


Chicago School of Poetics
Offering online classes fostering innovative poetics. Students use visual web conferencing, desktop sharing, and collaborative whiteboards. The school offers "an alternative to, and a community beyond, the Creative Writing MFA."


Cambridge Writers' Workshop
Offering creative writing courses and literary salons in a variety of genres, including translation and manuscript prep. Classes run six to 10 weeks.



Have you taken a class from any of these organizations? Did you love it? hate it? Would you take another? I'd love to hear your experience!



*This is NOT a sponsored list. No compensation has been offered, considered or received.



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Published on January 05, 2013 15:31

January 2, 2013

Thankful Thursday: Plenty


In a post-holiday haze, I'm bumping into books and magazines, stumbling over journals and papers, and sinking into stories and poems. I am surrounded by plenty, sated and grateful.


It's Thankful Thursday, a weekly pause of gratitude for people, places and things that bring joy. What are your thankful for today?



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Published on January 02, 2013 22:32

December 30, 2012

I Did It!

The jig is up. In the waning light of 2012, and before I walk into the fog of New Year promise, I'm taking stock and admitting that: 


1. I'm not going to write every day.


2. I'm not going to lose 10 pounds.


3. I won't run daily, give up sugar, or grow nicer, kinder, and more patient.


As the new year nears I dread those well intentioned, high-octaned, and, ultimately, short-lived resolutions to live more! do more! be more! Can we just jump ahead to March when all those commitments are distant (and, admit it, painful) memories?


This year, instead of resolutions, I'm doing the I Did It list. This brilliant idea is the work of writer Lisa Romeo, who says: "It's my small act of defiance against all the emotionally upsetting lists we humans tend to mentally make as the year draws to a close: the one that ticks off the things we failed to do all year. . . As writers we tend to see our writing year as a finite lot of things not yet achieved instead of a valuable step along an infinitely curvy road. Give yourself a break. Please."


I like her style. I'm starting my Did It list now.

How about you? Did you take a class? teach a class? write a poem? start a novel? join a writing group? Write it down! You might be surprised and heartened by all you've accomplished.


 

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Published on December 30, 2012 17:36

December 27, 2012

Thankful Thursday: All Your Nothings


and may all your nothings, too, hold something up and sing.



— Michael Blumenthal
from And the Cantilevered Inference Shall Hold the Day



In this last week of the year. In this season of illumination, when everything lights and shines against deep winter, dark night. In this time of reflection, hope and, yes, hints of sorrow and sometimes regret, this poem arrives. And gratitude swells for words that fit just right.


Read the full poem here.


 It's Thankful Thursday, a weekly pause to appreciate the people, places and things that bring joy. What are you thankful for today?



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Published on December 27, 2012 08:42

December 25, 2012

White-Out, Black-Out, Erase


A brief affair



Light on details


we’re obliged to ask


questions, talk about


nothing much.


 


Against this fictional utopia,


hope is a slow burn.


In the dark, tales


are engineered.


 


- Drew Myron


 


Every writer has a special trick to get the mind stirrin' and words flowin'. My go-to is the erasure poem. Out of words and inspiration? Just pick up any print material and start scratching. By mining words that are not my own, new combinations appear and fresh ideas follow. For me, the erasure poem is a way to kick my head and hands into the writing groove. Some are keepers, most are not. But the process is always fun.


For great erasure inspiration, see:


Mary Ruefle (white-out erasure books)


Austin Kleon (newspaper black-out poems)


Lawrence Sutin (text and collage erasure books)



What's your trick? Have you tried an erasure poem? How do you kickstart your writing mind?


 


 

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Published on December 25, 2012 17:04

December 20, 2012

Thankful Thursday: Moved to Good Cheer

It's been a grim week. Hearts are heavy with the mass shooting of children, with the sudden death of poet Jake Adam York, and with a strain of flu that has hit unusually hard this winter. In all this, the thread of thankfulness that stitches the season with hope and joy feels rather thin and tenuous.


And still, it is Christmas. We have our symbols, our traditions, our touchstones. For me, it's Silent Night. I'm not sentimental but that song tears me up. Usually, it hits me while I'm driving alone at night along a quiet road. A distant radio station plays a static version of Silent Night, and I am overcome with a melancholy ache.


Sometimes I am among others, in a crowd, when the song flattens me — while mumble-singing at church, or while buying milk at the market.


It's a lonely sort of lump-in-the-throat.


Once, I broke down at the Dollar Store. I was ambling down the aisles of cheap plastic baubles when Silent Night played over the din of harried shoppers. Overwhelmed with the season, I rushed from the store holding back a sob.


The other night, at Seashore Family Literacy, a small group of youngsters offered an impromptu concert to a mix of proud parents and restless siblings. Beaming and happy, the children belted out their favorites and valiantly mumbled through tougher terrain. All the while, their joy, their effort, was contagious. When the earnest young ones sang Silent Night, I was lifted from my state of ache and moved to good cheer.


Thank you Seashore singers for allowing Christmas spirit to trump a string of dark days.


 


It's Thankful Thursday, a weekly pause to appreciate people, places, things and more. Joy contracts and expands in proportion to our gratitude. What makes your world expand? What are you thankful for today?


 


 
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Published on December 20, 2012 21:45

December 15, 2012

Winter, this muteness

Hold on, a friend says, light will return. Oh, these December days of long dark and little light. In this season — when the heart is heavy, the body chilled — I cling to her refrain.



December


Too long alone again and words clutter,


hover behind my clenched teeth, my mouth


no longer sure what slight adjustments equal speech.


 


My tongue is the petal of a tulip touched by front.


My throat, in the next year, will belong to the hawk


or the fat, black garden snake lying dormant


now in the crawlspace beneath the house.


 


Winter is made of this muteness and these windows


and the long view of white fields through icy glass


where nothing moves and nothing raises its voice.


 


Sandy Longhorn
from Blood Almanac


 

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Published on December 15, 2012 15:58

December 12, 2012

5 Great Novels of 2012

After a rough patch in which every book I read left me with an underwhelming sense of "eh," I'm happy to announce the literary lethargy has passed. In this last month I have enjoyed a joyous rush of really good books. Mind if I share my favorites?


5 Great Novels of 2012  


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The Orchardist
by Amanda Coplin
A spare and moving story set at the turn of the century in the Pacific Northwest. A masterful debut in both character and pace.


 


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Beautiful Ruins
by Jess Walter
An Italian history and a modern Hollywood combine for an engaging love story.


 



Rules of Civility
by Amor Towles
Set in 1930s New York, this fictionalized tale of money, opportunity and social circles is both energetic and touching — and a loving tribute to a glorious city.


 



The Shore Girl
by Fran Kimmel
Glass Castle meets Ghostbread in this story of lives on the edge, written with clarity and perception by an author who smartly skips the cloying sentimentality that often infuses this topic.


 


All the Dancing Birds
by Auburn McCanta
In this hand-me-the-hanky fiction, the narrator — a woman with Alzheimer's — shares the story of her eroding mind.


 


How's your reading life? What's on your shelf, or your mind? What book grabbed you and won't let go?



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Published on December 12, 2012 09:51

December 9, 2012

I've had this meal

Anthony's Diner


Yes, to the fresh
blueberry cobbler
even though I'm not
hungry and it will
double my bill,
because I'm on the verge
of tears and can't finish
my egg salad sandwich,
because this waitress
who never smiles,
whose eyes are hard
from seeing,
has somehow noticed
my sadness
and when she offers the cobbler
there is that other thing in it—
she and I, part of that small
black tepee of crows
I saw on the road this morning,
all business, sharing this beautiful violent day.


Diane Swan
from the 2012 Women Artists Datebook


 

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Published on December 09, 2012 15:04

December 6, 2012

Thankful Thursday: Hang On Lil' Tomato


It's time again for Thankful Thursday, a weekly pause for gratitude. Go ahead, take a moment to appreciate the big things (life, love) and small things (books, breakfast) and the assortment of people, places & things inbetween.


On this Thankful Thursday, I am thankful for Pink Martini, a quirky but elegantly cool band from Portland, Oregon that mixes, mashes and dishes up delightful tunes such as the one above. 


Hang On Little Tomato


The sun has left and forgotten me
It's dark, I cannot see
Why does this rain pour down
I'm gonna drown
In a sea
Of deep confusion

Somebody told me, I don't know who
Whenever you are sad and blue
And you're feelin' all alone and left behind
Just take a look inside and you will find

You gotta hold on, hold on through the night
Hang on, things will be all right
Even when it's dark
And not a bit of sparkling
Sing-song sunshine from above
Spreading rays of sunny love

Just hang on, hang on to the vine
Stay on, soon you'll be divine
If you start to cry, look up to the sky
Something's coming up ahead
To turn your tears to dew instead

And so I hold on to his advice
When change is hard and not so nice
You listen to your heart the whole night through
Your sunny someday will come one day soon to you


— Pink Martini



Join me, won't you? Gratitude, like people, gains strength with a bit of appreciation. Please share your Thankful Thursday thoughts in the comment section below, or on your very own blog, facebook page, twitter account, school locker, cubicle wall, bathroom mirror . . .


 

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Published on December 06, 2012 05:25