Collaborating with Süpernørmål! Here's a taste

I have been having a blast practicing with my favorite weird band, Süpernørmål. Here’s a taste.

The new piece, “The Singularity” runs about 30 minutes. It’s a series of poems I have been working on with space and space travel as my (triggering) subject. It is different every time we do it—I use different poems from the series, and the musicians tune off of each other.

Personnel: Eric Eaton on bass and gizmos, Mike Dank on drums and gizmos, James Barr on guitar and gizmos, Chris Rohde on pedal steel and gizmos, and me on vox with gizmos.

News: Elizabeth George Foundation is Wonderful!

I am very happy and grateful to announce that I have received a grant from the Elizabeth George Foundation to complete work on a short story collection (or is it a novel?) in progress entitled Looking and Being.

I promise to use it well. Thanks so much to my recommenders and to the Foundation, which champions emerging writers during and after their MFA programs. Now it is time to get to work!

News: 'The Revision Laboratory' Workshop at A Public Space

Delighted to announce I’ll be teaching a followup to my “Flexing the Sentence” class in May and June, 2021. Here is the description:

For some of us, an unblank page is scarier than a blank one. Many writing workshops encourage us to improve a composition through revision, which only characterizes a draft as a mess of problems to be solved. But what if revision were a playful experiment, not a search for solutions? What if our motivation were curiosity, not fear of failure? In this workshop, perfectionism is banned. Results are secondary: what matters is process. Participants will approach a single text with multiple modes of revision to release the hidden story inside the story, sharpen the story’s friction and energy, discover metaphor, and make the language more singular and alive. Light reading and writing homework. Experiments will be shared aloud in class.

Course Schedule
Sundays, May 23–June 27, 2021
3:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m. ET
6 sessions
Online on Zoom


Reading: Art Walk L/A and Local Writers Read

Recently I had the privilege of reading for a virtual art walk sponsored by L/A Arts Lewiston Auburn. I look forward to going up to Lewiston for an in-person art walk when this crappy pandemic is over, but in the meantime, here is the lovely conversation I had with Claire Guyton and Josh Gauthier of Local Writers Read. Plus a special shoutout to Dean Bakopoulos and his tonally brilliant story “What I Did on the Moon” in Leon Literary Review. Enjoy!

News: 'Experiments in Narrative Ekphrasis' Workshop at The Loft

I am really looking forward to being a teaching artist at The Loft in March. My class is six weeks, purely generative, all online, asynchronous, and open for adult writers of all levels of experience. It is part of The Loft’s new Sense of Adventure course series.

Description:

Gallery View—Experiments in Narrative Ekphrasis

Ekphrasis—the literary response to visual art—often takes the form of poetry, but this class will be geared toward generating narrative prose and/or hybrid texts. Participants will receive prompts in the form of specific artworks (to be viewed online) and methods for translating the art into fiction, memoir, or other narrative forms. These exercises will be followed by analysis of writing by John Keene, A.S. Byatt, Don DeLillo, Tyehimba Jess, or Ali Smith, all created in response to the same artworks. Techniques might include imagining an instance of seeing the work, imagining the life of the work’s subject or artist, or letting the work trigger associations and memories.

All levels of experience are welcome; the goal is to think like a beginner, take risks, and discover new approaches to the page. Sharing creative work with the class is optional; the teaching artist will offer private, supportive feedback on all exercises, with an emphasis on the uniqueness of each writer.

Time commitment will be 40% writing/rewriting, 30% reading, and 30% analysis and (asynchronous) discussion. There will be a week-long break March 8–14.

Click here for enrollment info.

Here’s a YouTube interview with Savannah Brooks at The Loft where I discuss the class, my idea of adventure in COVID times, budget travel, armchair travel, and virtual galleries and museums.


News: 'Flexing the Sentence' Workshop at A Public Space

I’m delighted to announce I’ll be teaching a four-week Zoom workshop via A Public Space Academy in February. Would love to see you there!

Course description:

Workshop: Flexing the Sentence

Online Sundays Feb 7-28 3:00-5:00PM Eastern

The sentence is an infinitely elastic instrument containing thousands of microdecisions. So which decisions make your sentences become your sentences? This class will examine virtuosic sentences—from Herman Melville to Toni Morrison—exploring what these sentences might have been in the hands of another writer, exposing what makes them unique. We will look at syntax, diction, and sonic elements, as well as attitude and subtext. We’ll read theories of the sentence as well, applying them to our own sentences to push them deeper into singularity, sharing our discoveries and revisions. Part bootcamp, part yoga—all on the page, of course—this workshop will focus on strength and flexibility in the prose line, building confidence in composition and revision. Homework will be light reading and small-scale writing.

Click here for enrollment info.

Influence: Leslie Samuels

Leslie Samuels was one of my dearest friends in the world. I am still processing her death, which surprised me (and many other fans/friends) in the fall of 2018. She was my neighbor, collaborator, camping buddy, and pretend sister. I’ll write more about her work when I’m more ready. In the meantime, here are some photos of her performances, which took place in Chicago, San Diego, and Williamsburg Brooklyn.

Her mind and facility with the live image have been a major inspiration for my stories about artists. I am very grateful. My story collection is dedicated to her.