2013 Recap
We’re now on winter hiatus until February 6, 2014 so here’s a chance to take stock of what we did in our 13th session.
We spent about half our class time this fall writing on invented or short word prompts: “letterhead”, for example, and “I mailed it in my sleep,” and “open letter.” Over the years we have fallen into a rhythm of spending 10-15 minutes on an opening prompt. People come in, sit down, grab a pen and start writing until the energy wanes. Usually this is evident and collective; the group tends to finish around the same time. This fall what we noticed is that we sometimes spent 30-40 minutes on the opening prompts, no matter how simple they are. Is this the result of working on a persistent theme (letters)? Have we learned from our year’s investigation into architecture with The Stanza Project?
The other half of our two hours together was spent reading outside texts. Here’s a list of most of them:
Daniel Simko’s Mythology/ from the Fragments
Elizabeth Bachinsky’s When I have the Body of a Man
Publisher’s rejection letter to Gertrude Stein
Found letter at the New Orleans Ritz
Found letter inside a book in Germany
Anne Sexton’s Letter Written on a Ferry While Crossing Long Island Sound
W.S. Merwin’s To Luck
Lewis Carroll’s Letter to Annie
Gillian Anderson’s Dear Me letter
Mark Twain’s Innocents Abroad letters
Stephen King’s On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
Czeslaw Milosz’s Dedication
Tess Gallagher’s Love Poem to an Illiterate Friend
Charles Bukowski’s 8 Count
Irit Shimrat’s letter to Thursdays Writing Collective from Beirut
Wikipedia definition of mailbox
Nick Flynn’s Haiku (failed)
This last one we looked at under special circumstances: Nick Flynn, who had popped by to write with us before, visited as a guest author. He read his poem out loud to us and answered questions about form, method, content, intention. He also led us through a writing exercise on description that turned our thinking on its side. His ideas about the subconscious and symbolism provoked a lot of after class discussion. Thanks, Nick!
Our winter break can seem long to those of us accustomed to a writing practice based on collectivity. We’re looking forward to resuming in February when we sink into more writing on the theme of letters and begin editing our work towards a 7th publication.
Happy New Year, all!