Last Saturday morning beginning around 9:10 or so, the day tripped over itself into a standstill. The light faded to sepia. The warmth of the October ground stopped rising with the usual progression, and the air cooled suddenly. I grabbed the colander, the extra printer paper, and the index card with a round pinhole pricked in the center and ran out into my driveway. It was a party out there. My neighbors, kids, dogs - and we each had some tools of the eclipse watching sort. Lots of colanders. I love my community. We oohed and awed at the tiny crescent moons reflected on our blank paper, and we shifted the pinholes around to see the best effect. The shadows on the street cast from the trees and leaves, viewed without any tools, were ultimately my favorite views of this annular eclipse right at the maximum of 85%.
As a writer, I need a community of writers in order to feel productive in my writing. I get validation for the art and my efforts through sharing my experience with other writers. I founded Tangled Roots Writing soon after graduating from Goddard College with my MFA because when I came back to Tahoe, I found myself asking, where are all the writers? I needed to create the community for myself.
Two opportunities are right around the corner, coming up fast this late Fall for any writer looking to belong within a community and to build their writing skills. In the workshops offered below, you can gather the community that you need for your own art making.
1. The Monday Night Creative Writing Workshop series runs for 6 weeks and the next session starts October 30th. We'll explore craft, technique, and write new material using fun prompts for fiction, non-fiction, and poetry. We'll meet for 6 Monday nights online and also simultaneously in my living room as a hybrid format. The workshop is flexible to offer writers the option each week. The cost is $180.
2. From the Community of Writers, the Writers Annex offers online short courses throughout the year with a focus on studying the work of a particular founding poet of the Poetry Workshop (held each year at Palisades in Olympic Valley, CA). I've taken a short course deep dive into the poetry of Lucille Clifton taught by Kazim Ali, the poetry of W.S. Merwin taught by Victoria Chang and Matthew Zapruder, and the poetry of C.D. Wright taught by Brenda Hillman and Forrest Gander. They were each of them inspiring for my own understanding of my own writing. I'll be participating in the next course focusing on the poetry of Galway Kinnell, taught by Major Jackson. I mean, Wow, the knowledge and experience of these poets teaching these courses goes deep and wide. My favorite part of the course is learning how the teaching poet thinks about and learns from other master poets. If you want to join me in this next course, it runs November 30th - December 14th, meeting Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4-6 pm.
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