Posted: April 11th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Caroline Donahue, Podcast Interview, Remabulous, Writing | No Comments »

Long time Writing Workshops Los Angeles student Caroline Donahue has done a podcast interview with me about writing and teaching writing. Caroline is the mastermind behind Remabulous Coaching, a business designed to help people follow their creaive dreams. If you’ve ever been in a class with Caroline, you know she’s smart, funny, compassionate, and dedicated to writing and leading a life of joy and making art. (I also know she has helped a client finish and publish a book!)
To listen to the podcast go here.
This podcast also serves as a sort of introduction to a teleseminar on Tuesday, 4/14 at noon (Pacific time), where I will be the guest. The teleseminar is the preview of a teleseminar series Caroline will be leading, called The Road Not Taken. On Tuesday we will be speaking about the writing life, how to get started on a writing project, and so on. Basically, you get on a conference call, listen to Caroline and I talk about these issues, and then you are free to ask questions and interact–all over the phone.
To join us on this free preview call for the Reclaiming the Road Not Taken teleseminar series, RSVP to teleseminar@remabulous.com.
Posted: March 31st, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »
Short Fiction Workshop, spring/summer 2009
Thursdays, 7:30 to 9:30 pm, May 21, 2009 to July 16, 2009 (no class 7/2)
$360 for new students; $320 for returning students (payment plans available!)
Enrollment limit: 8 students
For the first four weeks of this eight-week course, we will do in-class writing exercises and discuss published short fiction from a craft perspective. We will cover such topics as characterization, point of view, structure, voice, and scene, and there will be short take-home writing assignments. For the final four weeks of the course, we will workshop student work in a serious environment meant to challenge and inspire every member of the class. Each student will have the opportunity to workshop one short story manuscript.
If you’re interested, email writingworkshopsla@gmail.com
Posted: March 9th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: fiction writing seminar, Vroman's Bookstore, Vroman's Ed | No Comments »
I’m teaching a two-day writing seminar in beginning fiction writing techniques. The seminar will take place at Vroman’s Bookstore in Pasadena, California, on two consecutive Saturdays, March 14th and March 21st. Vroman’s Ed, the bookstore’s education program, is wonderful. The conference room where I teach is a spacious and welcoming environment to write in; there are black-and-white photos of old California on the walls, which I always find intriguing and inspiring. The students are smart and down-to-earth, and, of course, bookish. And, there’s a big, fabulous bookstore right next door!
Here’s the course description of the seminar:
In this seminar we will explore the major tenets of fiction writing, including characterization, narrative voice, prose style, point of view, scene and summary, dialogue, and structure. We will look to published fiction for guidance, and dive into various short writing exercises that promise to be challenging, fun, and eye opening. No prior fiction writing experience is required for this course, although more experienced writers will also find the course useful. Students will leave the seminar with the beginnings of several promising projects, as well as the skills to follow through with them.
I’ve taught this seminar once before, and the insights and work of the students amazed me. There were so many promising stories begun over those two days. I’m confident this seminar will be as successful, if not more so.
This seminar costs $250 plus tax. It will begin both days at 10 am and go until 3 (with an hour break for lunch).
If you’re interested, please call Vroman’s Bookstore at 626 449 5320 to sign up!
Posted: February 19th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Mrs Dalloway., Virginia Woolf | No Comments »

A passage from the inimitable Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf:
So she sat. She got up, blundered off among the little tables, rocking slightly from side to side, and somebody came after her with her petticoat, and she lost her way, and was hemmed in by trunks specially prepared for taking to India; next among the accouchement sets, and baby linen; through all the commodities of the world, perishable and permanent, hams, drugs, flowers, stationery, variously smelling, now sweet, now sour she lurched; saw herself thus lurching with her hat askew, very red in the face, full length in a looking-glass; and at last came out into the street.
I love the alliteration of “perishable and permanent” followed by two single-syllable words, “hams, drugs,” which contrast, in their specificity, so nicely with the broad statement of “all the commodities in the world.” I also love the complicated syntax, how we get “she lurched” at the end of the long breathless sentence, rather than at the beginning. I bet those rule-loving teachers who prohibit their students from writing scenes in which a character eyes himself in the mirror are biting their tongues right about now…
I’m a sucker for a list like this. And what a way to move a character through space!
Let’s try for this kind of greatness, okay? Okay.
Posted: February 10th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Imagery, Lynda Barry, What It Is, Writing Exercises | No Comments »

Lynda Barry’s new book, What It Is, a sort of memoir/collage/graphic meditation/artist’s workbook, is blowing my mind! In it she asks, “What is an image?” and “What are thoughts?” and, “When did you first notice you were bad at something? And then what happened?” All of these questions are accompanied by Lynda Barry’s strange and wonderful drawings and collages. It’s a mesmerizing and inspiring book.
I used one of her exercises in the novel class last night, after our workshop. I won’t give away too much, because I want you to buy the book, but here’s how it starts:
1. Number your page 1 through 10.
2. Start with the image “other people’s mothers” and list the first 10 mothers you can think of.
3. Choose a mother from the list. Picture her in a place you have seen her before.
Sounds enchanting, no? I love how Barry urges us to get inside of imagery, to move around in it, and see an image fully. It’s great help to the fiction writer.
Posted: December 10th, 2008 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »
Here you can read about the latest happenings at Writing Workshops Los Angeles, including new classes, readings, seminars, and more. If you are a prospective student, we’d love to hear from you. If you are a returning student, well, then, you know we already adore you.
A new short fiction workshop is starting soon and spaces are already filling up–click on our ‘Classes’ page for more information.