may28$tomay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - wordpress… · • these workshops take place...

14
May 28 to May 31, 2013 storycatcherworkshop.com Tuesday, May 28th (Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center Atrium) 3 to 5 pm Checkin & Registration 5 to 6pm Reception o 5 to 5:30 Intermediate Workshop Participants meet with their instructors) o 5:40 Opening Remarks 6 pm Keynote: Jonis Agee “To Awaken the Sleepers”

Upload: others

Post on 30-Sep-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

           

 May  28  to  May  31,  2013  

storycatcherworkshop.com        

 Tuesday,  May  28th  (Mari  Sandoz  High  Plains  Heritage  Center  Atrium)      

3  to  5  pm    Check-­‐in  &  Registration    5  to  6pm  Reception  

o 5 to 5:30 Intermediate Workshop Participants meet with their instructors) o 5:40 Opening Remarks

 6  pm    Keynote:    Jonis  Agee    “To  Awaken  the  Sleepers”    

     

Page 2: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

 Wednesday,  May  29th    (Chadron  State  College  and/or  Locations  in  Region)  

9  to  11  am  Beginning  Workshops    (1  of  2)    

• These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating material, and tips and techniques for shaping your work for publication.

o Beginning Fiction (Poe Ballantine and Matthew Evertson) o Beginning Poetry (R.F. McEwen) o Beginning Non-Fiction Prose (Rich Kenney)

8  to  11  am  Intermediate  Workshops  (1  of  3)    

• Intermediate to Advanced Level. Space is limited and additional registration fee required. These workshops take place over three mornings and focus on writing that is already in progress, with an emphasis on peer editing, revision and shaping your narrative towards publication.

o Memoir/Nonfiction (Linda Hasselstrom) o Fiction (Pamela Carter Joern)

   

1  to  3  pm    Jonis  Agee  “A  Sense  of  Where  You  Are”    • Non-fiction/Fiction: writing about place. (All levels)

 3:15  to  4:15  pm    Paula  Bosco  Damon  "Get  Down  to  Writing”  

• Non-fiction/Fiction: This hands-on workshop will demystify the perennial question of what to write about and demonstrate how to crack the code for writer’s block. (All Levels)

 “Writing  Around”  (field  trips  with  writing  opportunities—locations  and  times  TBA)  

 Evening  Readings  (TBA)  

   

 Thursday,  May  30th  (Chadron  State  College  and/or  Locations  in  Region)    

9  to  11  am  Beginning  Workshops    (2  of  2)    • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a

specific genre, generating material, and tips and techniques for shaping your work for publication.

o Beginning Fiction (Poe Ballantine and Matthew Evertson) o Beginning Poetry (R.F. McEwen) o Beginning Non-Fiction Prose (Rich Kenney)

8  to  11  am  Intermediate  Workshops  (2  of  3)    

• Intermediate to Advanced Level. Space is limited and additional registration fee required. These workshops take place over three mornings and focus on writing that is already in progress, with an emphasis on peer editing, revision and shaping your narrative towards publication.

o Memoir/Nonfiction (Linda Hasselstrom) o Fiction (Pamela Carter Joern)

 1  to  3  pm    Jonis  Agee  “The  First  Five  Pages”    

• Non-fiction/Fiction: how to open your story with a lasting impression. (All levels)

Page 3: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

 1  to  3  pm    Kwame  Dawes  “Chameleons  of  Suffering”    

• Poetry: Beginning with a half-hour exploration of empathy through a short lecture, Kwame will then lead a hands-on workshop for poets through a series of exercises and discussion. (All levels)

3:15  to  4:15  pm    Marianne  Kunkel  "Publishing  in  Journals:  An  Insider's  View"  • Seminar—strategies of publishing poetry and prose in contemporary literary journals, and her

talk will be followed by a Q&A on the subject. (All levels)  

“Writing  Around”  (field  trips  with  writing  opportunities—locations  and  times  TBA)    

Evening  Readings  (TBA)      

 Friday,  May  31st    (Chadron  State  College  and/or  Locations  in  Region)    

8  to  11  am  Intermediate  Workshops  (3  of  3)    • Intermediate to Advanced Level. Space is limited and additional registration fee required.

These workshops take place over three mornings and focus on writing that is already in progress, with an emphasis on peer editing, revision and shaping your narrative towards publication.

o Memoir/Nonfiction (Linda Hasselstrom) o Fiction (Pamela Carter Joern)

 9  to  10  am  Poe  Ballantine  “Writing  Life”    

• Stories from a working author and a life of writing (All levels)  

10:15  to  11:15  am  Paula  Bosco  Damon  "Journaling,  Blogging  and  Writing  Environment”  • Non-fiction/Fiction: This workshop will touch on the benefits of establishing a journaling

routine, the ups and downs of blogging and the importance of writing environment.    WRITING  FESTIVAL    1  to  5  pm  (Mari  Sandoz  High  Plains  Heritage  Center  Atrium—Open  to  the  Public)    

• Booksellers, Vendors, Displays all afternoon  

1  to  2:20  pm  Open  Mic  • Readings from Session Participants

 2:30  to  3:20  pm  Writing  Round  Table  

• Discussion with Workshop Faculty  

3:30  to  4:30  pm  Special  Reading—Kwame  Dawes  and  Marianne  Kunkel  • Kwame Dawes and Marianne Kunkel will read from their work and from recent issues of

Prairie Schooner, followed by a Q&A.  

4:30  pm  Book  Signing  • Workshop Faculty will be available to sign books.

       

Page 4: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

 Faculty  and  Workshop  Descriptions  

   

 Special  Guest:    Jonis  Agee    Jonis  Agee  was  born  in  Omaha,  Nebraska  and  grew  up  in  Nebraska  and  Missouri,  places  where  many  of  her  stories  and  novels  are  set.  She  was  educated  at  The  University  of  Iowa  (BA)  and  The  State  University  of  New  York  at  Binghamton  (MA,  PhD).  She  is  Adele  Hall  Professor  of  English  at  The  University  of  Nebraska  —  Lincoln,  where  she  teaches  creative  writing  and  twentieth-­‐century  fiction.  She  is  the  author  of  twelve  books,  including  five  novels  —  Sweet  Eyes,  Strange  Angels,  South  of  Resurrection,  The  Weight  of  Dreams,  and  her  most  recent,  The  River  Wife  —  and  five  collections  of  short  fiction  —  Pretend  We've  Never  Met,  Bend  This  Heart,  A  .38  Special  and  a  Broken  Heart,  Taking  the  Wall,  and  Acts  of  Love  on  Indigo  Road.  She  has  also  published  two  books  of  poetry:  Houses  and  Mercury.  In  her  newest  novel,  The  River  Wife  (Random  House,  2007),  five  generations  of  women  experience  love  and  heartbreak,  

passion  and  deceit  against  the  backdrop  of  the  nineteenth-­‐century  South.  The  book  has  been  selected  by  the  Book  of  the  Month  Club,  the  Literary  Guild,  and  as  a  main  selection  by  the  Quality  Paperback  Book  Club.      Jonis  Agee's  awards  include  ForeWord  Magazine's  Editor's  Choice  Award  for  Taking  the  Wall  and  the  Gold  Medal  in  Fiction  for  Acts  of  Love  on  Indigo  Road;  a  National  Endowment  for  the  Arts  grant  in  fiction;  a  Loft-­‐McKnight  Award;  a  Loft-­‐McKnight  Award  of  Distinction;  and  two  Nebraska  Book  Awards  (for  The  Weight  of  Dreams  and  Acts  of  Love  on  Indigo  Road.  Three  of  her  books  —  Strange  Angels,  Bend  This  Heart,  and  Sweet  Eyes  —  were  named  Notable  Books  of  the  Year  by  The  New  York  Times.      Jonis  owns  twenty  pairs  of  cowboy  boots,  some  of  them  works  of  art,  loves  the  open  road,  and  believes  that  ecstasy  and  hard  work  are  the  basic  ingredients  of  life  and  writing.    (Author’s  Website:  http://mockingbird.creighton.edu/ncw/agee)      Keynote  Address:    “To  Awaken  the  Sleepers”    Afternoon  Stand  Alone  Sessions:    “A  Sense  of  Where  You  Are”    (Non-­‐fiction/Fiction:  writing  about  place)      “The  First  Five  Pages”    (Non-­‐fiction/Fiction:  how  to  open  your  story  with  a  lasting  impression)    

Page 5: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

Linda  M.  Hasselstrom    Linda  M.  Hasselstrom  is  the  full-­‐time  resident  writer  at  Windbreak  House  Writing  retreats,  established  in  1996  on  her  ranch.  Her  latest  nonfiction  book,  No  Place  Like  Home:  Notes  from  a  Western  Life,  won  the  2010  WILLA  in  creative  nonfiction  from  Women  Writing  the  West.  Dirt  Songs:  A  Plains  Duet,  poetry  with  Nebraskan  Twyla  Hansen  (The  Backwaters  Press)    received  the  Nebraska  Book  Award  for  Poetry  2012.  The  book  was  also  a  finalist  for  best  poetry  book,  High  Plains  Book  Awards,  Billings,  MT,  and  

finalist,  WILLA  award  for  poetry,  Women  Writing  the  West,  both  in  2012.  She  was  recognized  for  Distinguished  Service  to  the  Humanities  by  the  South  Dakota  Humanities  Council  in  2011  and  is  special  consultant  to  the  Rural  Literature  RALLY  initiative,  State  University  of  New  York,  Buffalo,  NY.  Her  writing  has  appeared  in  dozens  of  anthologies  and  magazines.  A  poetry  collection,  Bitter  Creek  Junction,  won  the  Wrangler  for  Best  Poetry  from  the  National  Cowboy  &  Western  Heritage  Museum,  Oklahoma  City,  OK.  Bison:  Monarch  of  the  Plains,  was  named  best  environmental  and  nature  book  of  1999  by  the  Independent  Publishers  Association.  Formerly  visiting  faculty  for  Iowa  State  University,  Ames  and  online  mentor  for  the  University  of  Minnesota’s  Split  Rock  writing  program,  Linda  is  an  advisor  to  Texas  Tech  University  Press.    (Author’s  Website:  http://www.windbreakhouse.com/index.htm)    Intermediate  Workshop:  Memoir  &  Non  fiction  Clean  as  Bone,  Pure  as  Water:  Revising  Your  Writing  Students  will  submit  up  to  20  pages  of  nonfiction  writing  by  May  10.  I  will  write  line-­‐by-­‐line-­‐comments  in  the  text  of  each  submission.  Class  time  will  focus  on  evaluating  and  revising  essays  for  potential  publication  with  emphasis  on  language,  sentence  structure,  editing,  beginnings  and  endings  and  abundant  individualized  handouts.  Please  bring  to  class  one  copy  of  your  submission  for  each  student.  Please  attend  the  opening  ceremonies  to  receive  additional  information.  (Full  submission  instructions  will  be  provided  to  participants  of  this  workshop  after  they  register)    

The  written  word  is  to  be  clean  as  bone  /  pure  as  water,  hard  as  stone.  Two  words  are  not  as  good  as  one.  

-­‐-­‐Old  Elizabethan  rhyme      

 Pamela  Carter  Joern    Pamela  Carter  Joern  is  an  award-­‐winning  novelist,  short  story    writer,  playwright,  and  a  teacher  of  writing.  The    Plain  Sense  of  Things,  (University  of  Nebraska  Press,  2008)  was  a  Midwest  Booksellers  Association  Connections    Pick.  The  Floor  of  the  Sky  (University  of  Nebraska    Press,  2006),  was  a  Barnes  and  Noble  Discover  Great  New    Writers  selection,  winner  of  an  Alex  Award  and  the  Nebraska    Book  Award.      Pam  won  the  2001  and  2008  Tamarack  Awards  for  the  short  story,  sponsored  by  Minnesota  Monthly  Magazine.  Her  work  has  appeared  in  the  Red  Rock  Review,  South  Dakota  Review,  Water~Stone,  Laurel  Review,  Feminist  Studies,  Great  River  Review,  Minnesota  Monthly  Magazine  and  an  anthology,    Times  of  Sorrow,  Times  of  Grace  (  Backwaters  Press).  She  has  

received  a  Minnesota  State  Arts  Board  fellowship  and  a  Career  Initiative  grant  from  the  Jerome  

Page 6: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

Foundation.    Pam  has  written  six  plays  that  have  been  produced  in  the  Twin  Cities  area.  She  holds  an  MFA  in  creative  writing  from  Hamline  University  and  teaches  at  the  Loft  Literary  Center  in  Minneapolis.  (Author’s  Website:  http://www.pamelacarterjoern.com)    Intermediate  Workshop:  Fiction    You  will  have  the  opportunity  to  respond  respectfully  to  others’  work  and  to  receive  feedback  on  your  own.  We’ll  focus  on  what  works  well  and  what  questions  are  generated  for  further  development.  We’ll  venture  into  elements  of  craft  as  they  arise,  i.e.  using  sensory  detail,  capitalizing  on  point-­‐of-­‐view,  developing  character,  writing  successful  dialogue,  creating  tension,  mining  your  setting.  There  will  be  handouts  for  your  future  reference,  and  in  addition  to  the  workshop  comments,  I  will  provide  written  feedback.  Please  submit  up  to  20  pages,  double-­‐spaced,  by  May  10,  either  a  short  story  or  excerpt  from  a  short  story  or  novel.  If  from  a  novel  or  longer  story,  please  include  a  one  paragraph  synopsis.  Ideally,  participants  will  receive  copies  of  submissions  in  advance  of  the  workshop  so  we  can  be  adequately  prepared.  You’ll  receive  further  instructions  once  you’ve  registered.  Please  also  bring  to  the  workshop  a  printed  copy  of  your  submission  for  each  participant.  (Full  submission  instructions  will  be  provided  to  participants  of  this  workshop  after  they  register)      

   Kwame  Dawes    Ghanaian-­‐born  Jamaican  poet,  Kwame  Dawes  is  the  award-­‐winning  author  of  sixteen  books  of  poetry  (most  recently,  Wheels,  2011)  and  numerous  books  of  fiction,  non-­‐fiction,  criticism  and  drama.  He  is  the  Glenna  Luschei  Editor  of  Prairie  Schooner,  and  a  Chancellor’s  Professor  of  English  at  the  University  of  Nebraska.      Kwame  Dawes  also  teaches  in  the  Pacific  MFA  Writing  program.    Dawes’  book,  Duppy  

Conqueror:  New  and  Selected  Poems  will  be  published  by  Copper  Canyon  in  2013.  (Author’s  Website:  http://www.kwamedawes.com)    “Chameleons  of  Suffering”  Poetry  Workshop  Beginning  with  a  half-­‐hour  exploration  of  empathy  through  a  short  lecture,  Kwame  will  then  lead  a  hands-­‐on  workshop  for  poets  through  a  series  of  exercises  and  discussion.    Reading  &  Book  Signing  (with  Marianne  Kunkel)  Kwame  Dawes  and  Marianne  Kunkel  will  read  from  their  work  and  from  recent  issues  of  Prairie  Schooner,  followed  by  a  Q&A.    

 Marianne  Kunkel      Marianne  Kunkel  is  the  Managing  Editor  of  Prairie  Schooner  and  a  Ph.D.  student  in  poetry  at  the  University  of  Nebraska-­‐Lincoln,  with  a  specialization  in  women’s  and  gender  studies.  Her  poems  have  appeared  in  Columbia  Poetry  Review,  Hayden's  Ferry  Review,  Poet  Lore,  Rattle,  River  Styx,  and  elsewhere,  and  her  chapbook  is  The  Laughing  Game  (Finishing  Line  Press).    Publishing  in  Journals:  An  Insider's  View  Seminar—strategies  of  publishing  poetry  and  prose  in  contemporary  literary  journals,  and  her  talk  will  be  followed  by  a    Q&A  on  the  subject.    

Reading  &  Book  Signing  (with  Kwame  Dawes)  

Page 7: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

Kwame  Dawes  and  Marianne  Kunkel  will  read  from  their  work  and  from  recent  issues  of  Prairie  Schooner,  followed  by  a  Q&A.    Founded  in  1927,  Prairie  Schooner  is  a  national  literary  quarterly  published  with  the  support  of  the  UNL  English  Department.  It  publishes  fiction,  poetry,  essays,  and  reviews  by  beginning,  mid-­‐career  and  established  writers.  For  more  information,  visit  http://prairieschooner.unl.edu.    

R.F.  McEwen    R.F.  McEwen  has  been  a  tree  trimmer  since  1963  and  English  teacher  since  1972.  He  is  currently  a  professor  of  English  at  Chadron  State  College,  in  Chadron,  Nebraska,  where  he  has  taught  since  1986.  His  poems  have  appeared  in  the  South  Dakota  Review,    Kansas  Quarterly,  Melville  Extracts,  Prairie  Schooner,  Rural  Voices,  Midwest  Quarterly,  The  Literary  Journal  of  the  Seamus  Heaney  Center  for  Poetry,  Belfast,  and  other  journals.  His  Heartwood  and  other  Poems  was  featured  on  CBS  “Sunday  Morning.”    He  co-­‐produced  “Tell  a  Story:  Joe  Heaney  in  the  Pacific  Northwest”  (Camsco),  a  two-­‐

CD  collection  of  the  stories  of  Joe  Heaney,  the  noted  Irish  sean  nos  singer  and  storyteller.  His  forthcoming  Bill’s  Boy’s  and  other  Poems  is  being  published  by  Black  Star  Press,  Lincoln,  Nebraska.  And  his  poem  “Stacking  Rick  Wood:  Getting  On”  is  the  poem  for  November  in  the  current  (2012)  Nebraska  Poets  Calendar.    His  poems  are  written  for  the  most  part  in  blank  verse  and  are  more  often  than  not  narrative.      (Author  Info:  http://prairieschooner.unl.edu/?q=fusion/work/quare-­‐garden-­‐dry-­‐end-­‐state)    Beginning  Poetry  (all  levels)  This  workshop  will  be  devoted  to  writing  narrative  poetry,  poetry  that  tells  a  story,  rather  than  confessional,  emotive  poetry  that  explores  one’s  own  feelings.  Narrative  poems  explore  the  feelings  of  fictional  characters  involved  in  fictional  plots  that  carry  the  weight  of  universal  themes.  We  will  do  quite  a  bit  of  writing,  some  reading  and,  I  hope,  discussion  of  the  persistent  problems  involved  whenever  one  attempts  to  tell  a  story  that  will  change,  mystify,  and  provoke  an  audience  of  strong  readers  and  listeners.      

Poe  Ballantine    Poe  Ballantine’s  work  has  appeared  in  The  Atlantic  Monthly,  regularly  in  The  Sun  Magazine,  Kenyon  Review,  and  The  Coal  City  Review.  His  second  novel,  Decline  of  the  Lawrence  Welk  Empire,  won  Foreword  Magazine’s  Book  of  the  Year.  The  odd  jobs,  eccentric  characters,  boarding  houses,  buses,  and  beer  that  populate  Ballantine’s  work  often  draw  comparisons  to  the  life  and  work  of  Charles  Bukowski  and  Jack  Kerouac.  In  addition  to  garnering  

numerous  award  nominations  including  The  Pushcart  Prize  and  The  Pen/O.  Henry  Prize,  Ballantine’s  work  has  been  included  in  the  1998  Best  American  Short  Story  and  2006  Best  American  Essay  anthologies.  His  memoir,  Love  and  Terror  on  the  Howling  Plains  of  Nowhere,  is  being  published  by  Hawthorne  Press  this  September  (and  is  now  available  for  preorder).  (Author  Info:  http://hawthornebooks.com/authors/poe-­‐ballantine)    Beginning  Fiction  (with  Matthew  Evertson,  All  Levels)  This  workshop  will  offer  a  blend  of  “theory”  and  “practice”  in  the  fundamentals  of  writing  fiction.  The  “theory”  will  be  introduced  through  Matthew  Evertson  as  he  shares  the  “nuts  and  bolts”  lessons  he  has  gleaned  over  the  years  from  both  taking  and  teaching  fiction  writing  classes.  Poe  Ballantine  will  then  share  his  insights  from  years  of  honing  his  craft  as  a  working  writer,  publishing  his  stories  and  novels  to  critical  acclaim.    

Page 8: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

 Writing  Life  (All  Levels)  My  workshops  are  inspired  by  my  years  of  itinerancy,    "Mining  the  Lost  Years,"  "The  Life  of  a  Drifter,"  "The  Importance  of  Being  an  Outsider,"  and  so  on.    I'm  frequently  lumped  in  with  the  Beat  Movement,  though  I  don't  share  much  with  them  (except  the  traveling).  My  non-­‐fiction  work  is  almost  entirely  emotion-­‐based,  and  I  will  share  my  insights  about  process,  the  importance  of  the  small  press  (breaking  in),  reader  psychology,  and  any  other  questions,  problems,  and  concerns  the  budding  writer  might  have.      

Matthew  Evertson    Matthew  Quinn  Evertson  is  Professor  and  Chair  of  the  Department  of  English  and  Humanities  at  Chadron  State  College  in  Chadron,  Nebraska,  where  he  teaches  American  Literature,  Native  American  Literature,  Western  American  Literature  and  Writing.  He  is  currently  working  on  a  book-­‐length  comparative  study  of  Stephen  Crane  and  Theodore  Roosevelt  and  is  also  currently  teaching,  researching  and  writing  about  the  regional  influences  upon  the  literature  of  the  Great  Plains.    More  recently  he  has  focused  on  expanding  creative  writing  opportunities  at  Chadron  State  College,  complementing  his  scholarly  work  with  his  long  interest  in  writing  fiction  (he  has  studied  fiction  writing  at  both  the  undergraduate  and  graduate  level,  and  has  completed  several  writing  workshops).  His  publications  include  “Fields  of  Vision:  Human  Presence  in  the  Plain  Landscapes  of  Terrence  Malick  and  Wright  Morris”  in  Terrence  Malick  Film  and  Philosophy  (New  York:  Continuum,  May  2011)  “Cather  in  the  Rye:  ‘Paul’s  Case’  in  Anticipation  of  Holden  

Caulfield”  in  Critical  Insights:  The  Catcher  in  the  Rye,  by  J.D.  Salinger  (New  York:  EBSCO/Salem  Press,  2011),  “Strenuous  Stories:  The  Wilderness  Tales  of  Stephen  Crane  and  Theodore  Roosevelt”  which  appears  in  Stephen  Crane  Studies  (2005);  and  "Love,  Loss  and  Growing  Up  in  J.D.  Salinger  and  Cormac  McCarthy"  which  appears  in  The  Catcher  in  the  Rye:  New  Essays  (Peter  Lang,  2002).    Beginning  Fiction  (with  Poe  Ballantine,  All  Levels)  This  workshop  will  offer  a  blend  of  “theory”  and  “practice”  in  the  fundamentals  of  writing  fiction.  The  “theory”  will  be  introduced  through  Matthew  Evertson  as  he  shares  the  “nuts  and  bolts”  lessons  he  has  gleaned  over  the  years  from  both  taking  and  teaching  fiction  writing  classes.  Poe  Ballantine  will  then  share  his  insights  from  years  of  honing  his  craft  as  a  working  writer,  publishing  his  stories  and  novels  to  critical  acclaim.        

Rich  Kenney    Rich  Kenney  is  a  former  Little  League  centerfielder  from  Boston,  Massachusetts.  As  a  social  worker,  radio  talk  show  host  and  newspaper  columnist,  he  has  worked  with  people  like  Big  Ray,  the  cigar-­‐smoking,  twenty-­‐year-­‐old  special  needs  student  with  a  heart  bigger  than  his  48-­‐inch  waistline;  and  Edgar,  the  elderly  slide  trombonist  dying  of  cancer  with  a  scheme  to  retrieve  his  horn  from  a  hock  shop.    Kenney  writes  about  hawks  herding  clouds  or  old  ticket  stubs  caught  in  cobwebs.  He  writes  about  tiny  canes  the  color  of  clouds  hanging  on  a  wall  outside  a  preschool  classroom  for  kids  who  are  blind.  

The  recipient  of  a  Creative  Writing  Fellowship  from  the  

Page 9: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

Arizona  Commission  on  the  Arts,  Kenney  has  also  contributed  commentaries  to  National  Public  Radio.  Recent  publications  include  nonfiction  prose  in  The  New  Social  Worker  and  Social  Work  Today;  and  poetry  in  Rockhurst  Review  and  Third  Wednesday.    

Kenney  holds  degrees  from  the  University  of  Texas  (MSSW),  and  the  University  of  Arizona  (BA).  He  is  currently  an  assistant  professor  and  Director  of  the  Social  Work  Program  at  Chadron  State  College  in  Chadron,  Nebraska.  

 Beginning  Creative  Nonfiction  (all  levels)  Creative  Nonfiction  is  the  place  for  all  writers  to  come  clean.  But  don't  sweat  the  interrogation  lights...  In  this  workshop,  we  will  use  other  techniques  like  language,  setting  and  detail  to  help  you  tell  your  story.    You’ll  fish  for  the  moon  with  kites  (metaphor),  write  “Dear  Johns”  to  snappers  (clarity),  or  mix  sweet  literary  martinis  (form)  to  uncover  insights  and  truths.  With  focus  on  the  word,  creative,  in  creative  nonfiction,  you  will  tap  into  memories  and  life-­‐changing  moments  to  awaken  the  stories  inside  waiting  to  be  told.      

 Paula  Bosco  Damon    Paula  Bosco  Damon  is  an  award-­‐winning  author,  whose  short  non-­‐fiction  has  won  countless  honors,  including  first  place  in  national  and  state  writing  competitions.    Damon  has  taught  writing  courses  at  the  University  of  South  Dakota,  Vermillion;  Briar  Cliff  University,  Western  Iowa  Tech  Community  College  and  St.  Luke’s  College,  all  in  Sioux  City,  Iowa.  Additionally,  she  has  led  numerous  writing  workshops  in  South  Dakota.  In  2011,  Damon  conducted  a  writing  workshop  at  the  National  Federation  of  Press  Women’s  annual  convention.    A  popular  keynote  speaker,  the  writer  has  conducted  readings  in  New  York,  Pennsylvania,  Iowa,  South  Dakota  and  Nebraska,  including  Chadron  State  College  and  Chadron  Public  Library,  among  others.      

 Currently,  Damon  is  the  director  of  marketing  and  communication  at  Briar  Cliff  University,  Sioux  City,  where  she  is  on  the  editorial  staff  for  the  University’s  award-­‐winning  literary  and  art  publication,  The  Briar  Cliff  Review  and  a  guest  lecturer  in  the  University’s  writing  classes.    A  regular  contributor  to  the  Vermillion  [S.D.]  Plain  Talk  and  the  Carroll  [Iowa]  Times  Daily  Herald,  the  author  submits  a  creative  non-­‐fiction  piece  to  both  papers  weekly.    She  holds  a  master's  degree  in  English  and  bachelor's  degree  in  journalism  from  the  University  of  South  Dakota.  For  samples  of  Damon’s  work,  please  visit  her  story  archive  at  http://my-­‐story-­‐your-­‐story.blogspot.com/.  Her  chapbook,  Look.  Don’t  Look.  [Briar  Cliff  University  Press],  is  available  upon  request.    Get  Down  to  Writing  (all  levels)  This  hands-­‐on  workshop  will  demystify  the  perennial  question  of  what  to  write  about  and  demonstrate  how  to  crack  the  code  for  writer’s  block.      Journaling,  Blogging  and  Writing  Environment  (all  levels)  This  workshop  will  touch  on  the  benefits  of  establishing  a  journaling  routine,  the  ups  and  downs  of  blogging  and  the  importance  of  writing  environment.      

Page 10: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

 Registration  &  Costs  

 Workshop  Sessions  are  open  to  all  aspiring  writers  of  all  ages  and  abilities.    (We  recommend  that  High  School  Participants  be  at  the  Junior  level  or  above).    General  Registration:    $150    

• All workshop participants must pay the general registration fee, which gains you access to all beginning workshops and special sessions over the four days.

• There is no deadline for General Registration, and you do not need to sign up for any specific sessions in advance.

• Students and Mari Sandoz Heritage Society Members Receive a 20% discount      

Additional  Fees:  Intermediate  Workshop  Tuition:  $100    For  writers  who  have  work  in  progress  and  are  interested  in  revising  and  refining  their  writing  for  publication  with  one-­‐on-­‐one  feedback  with  your  workshop  leader.  When  registering,  please  select  ONE  of  the  following  options  :  

• Linda Hasselstrom (non-fiction prose/memoir) • Pamela Carter Joern (fiction)

Space  is  limited  to  12  writers  per  workshop,  so  early  registration  is  encouraged.  INTERMEDIATE  WORKSHOP  REGISTRATION  DEADLINE:  MAY  10,  2013  

o Late registration and on-site registration may be available for intermediate workshops—depending on enrollments. There will be a 20% surcharge on any late or on-site registrations for this workshop.

o In order to fulfill our workshop commitments to faculty and other participants, we cannot cancel your reservation or offer refunds after May 10.

o You need to pay both your general registration and your intermediate workshop fees ($250 total) when you register.

     

Scholarships:  A  limited  number  of  scholarships  are  available  for  student  applicants  based  upon  written  samples  of  their  work.  Please  follow  the  instructions  in  the  application  at  the  end  of  this  document.      

 HOUSING  

 In  order  to  provide  the  utmost  value  and  flexibility  for  our  workshop  participants,  housing  costs  have  NOT  been  added  to  your  workshop  registration  fee.  Instead,  participants  will  have  the  following  options  for  securing  their  own  accommodations  while  in  the  region:  

o A limited number of dormitory-style rooms will be available for rent at Chadron State College during the Workshop and Festival. Costs are approximately $13 per person, per night, double occupancy, and $17.50 per person, per night, for a private room.

o A list of hotels in the region will be provided. Several of these will be partnering with us to provide a discount rate to our conference participants.

o Chadron State Park (approximately 9 miles south of CSC) and Fort Robinson State Park (approximately 25 miles to the south of CSC) have cabins, camping facilities and other forms of lodging as well.

Page 11: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

   

MEALS:    

Workshop  participants  often  find  that  they  need  a  relaxing  break  between  sessions.  Some  may  want  to  gather  socially  with  other  workshop  members  over  a  leisurely  lunch,  while  others  may  want  to  grab  a  quick  bite  and  work  on  their  writing  in  solitude.  In  order  to  provide  the  most  value  and  flexibility  for  your  workshop  experience,  meals  have  NOT  been  added  to  your  workshop  registration  fee.    

o As part of your registration fee, snacks and refreshments WILL be provided for the Opening Ceremonies and Reception on Wednesday afternoon.

o As part of your registration fee, continental Breakfast with coffee and tea service (and other light refreshments) WILL be available each morning before the workshop sessions in the Sandoz Center Atrium. Coffee and Tea service will also be provided throughout the day for breaks during the workshop sessions.

o Tickets for the NOON banquet at the Saturday Festival will be $12 o Noontime lunches and evening dining will be on your own. A list of dining options

will be provided, with several restaurants in the region providing special rates or discounts for workshop participants.

   

LOCATION    

The workshop sessions will take place on the campus of Chadron State College, which lies within the southern boundary of the city of Chadron, Nebraska, with a population of approximately 6,000 residents. Chadron State College is located about 290 miles north of Denver, Colo., and 100 miles south of Rapid City, S.D. U.S. Highways 20 and 385 intersect in Chadron. For driving directions and regional and campus maps, please visit this website: http://www.csc.edu/visitors/location.csc. The city of Chadron has a municipal airport with daily flights to Denver International Airport. In addition to our workshop sessions on campus, other events will take place in the rugged beauty of the surrounding region. The scenic Pine Ridge of northwestern Nebraska has long been recognized as the most beautiful portion of the state. The prairie and hills around Chadron are rich in pioneer history, and the town was founded in 1885. Fort Robinson, twenty-eight miles away, was once a colorful frontier military post and provides a variety of activities amid its historic buildings, including the Post Playhouse, sponsored each summer by the college’s theatre department. Chadron State Park, the Pine Ridge, the Museum of the Fur Trade, the Sandhills of Nebraska, the Hudson-Meng Bison Site, the Agate Fossil Beds, the Black Hills of South Dakota, and the Hot Springs Mammoth Site provide opportunities for exciting day trips, including sight-seeing, fishing, hunting, hiking, mountain biking and skiing. In 2000, Sports Afield designated Chadron as one of the “top 50 outdoor sports towns” in the nation and one of the four best mountain biking towns in the United States. Outside Magazine has selected Dawes County, where Chadron is located, as one of the nation’s top 100 counties in which to live. The climate in the Pine Ridge Region during late May/Early June is typically pleasant, with clear skies and moderate temperatures—with highs in the low eighties and lows in the upper forties. The Chadron State College residential campus, occupying two hundred eighty-one acres, is bound on the south by the tall, pine-clad buttes of the Pine Ridge. Twenty-four major buildings with more than one million square feet of floor space provide state-of the art facilities for

Page 12: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

residential students. A highlight in the last decade was the development of the Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center, which pays tribute to the western Nebraska native who became one of America’s leading authors—and which will be our “headquarters” for the Workshop and Festival this year. The center focuses on the settlement and development of the High Plains region, including the history of the cattle industry in the C.F. Coffee Gallery. The center houses an archive of important historical documents and artifacts, as well as a state-of-the-art digitizing laboratory, the Kosman electronically mediated classroom, a gallery of rotating artistic and historical exhibits, permanent exhibits on Sandoz and the high plains environment, and the outdoor Heritage Gardens that feature Sandhills and pioneer plantings.

About  the  Workshop    The  Story  Catcher  Writing  Workshop  and  Festival  takes  its  inspiration  from  one  of  Nebraska’s  most  prominent  writers,  Mari  Sandoz  (1896-­‐1966),  who  grew  up  in  the  region  on  the  homesteads  her  family  settled  in  the  late  1800s.  In  addition  to  building  an  impressive  career  as  an  author,  Sandoz  went  to  great  lengths  to  encourage  other  writers,  conducting  summer  writing  workshops  on  college  campuses,  reviewing  manuscripts  sent  to  her  by  aspiring  authors  from  all  over  the  nation,  and  teaching  creative  writing  through  programming  produced  by  Nebraska  Public  Television.  A  prolific  writer  and  dogged  researcher,  her  works  crossed  the  boundaries  of  history,  fiction,  biography,  memoir,  journalism,  ethnography,  ecology,  activism  and  advocacy  for  marginalized  groups,  such  as  Native  Americans.  It  is  fitting,  therefore,  that  this  passionate  teacher  of  writing  who  captured  so  many  stories  from  this  region  should  be  the  inspiration  for  our  workshop.        The  workshop  and  festival  itself  takes  its  name  from  The  Story  Catcher,  Sandoz’s  last  published  novel,  and  winner  of  the  Levi  Strauss  Golden  Saddleman  Award  in  1963  and  the  Western  Writers  of  America  Spur  Award  for  best  juvenile  fiction  in  1964.  Set  in  the  same  high  plains  region  of  our  workshop,  the  novella  follows  the  trials  and  tribulations  of  a  young  Oglala  Sioux  searching  for  his  place  within  a  mid-­‐nineteenth  century  tribal  society  facing  white  encroachment  and  continued  conflict  with  neighboring  tribes.  Turning  his  back  on  the  glory  he  might  gain  as  a  warrior,  he  instead  wins  honor  and  a  new  name:  “Story  Catcher,”  recorder  of  the  history  of  his  people.    It  is  our  goal  to  channel  this  spirit  of  Sandoz  and  The  Story  Catcher—to  guide  and  encourage  the  participants  of  our  workshop  in  capturing  their  own  creative  ideas,  to  help  transform  those  ideas  into  written  works  that  can  then  be  shared,  discussed  and  revised,  and  to  celebrate  the  best  qualities  of  writing  from  this  workshop—and  this  region—in  a  festival  that  may  inspire  the  story  catcher  in  all  of  us.      In  response  to  requests  from  our  previous  workshop  participants,  this  year  we  are  offering  a  greater  mix  of  workshops  that  focus  on  getting  started/generating  writing,  workshops  that  focus  on  revising  work  in  progress  towards  publication,  and  general  sessions  on  writing,  creativity  and  getting  published.        

Sponsors:   Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Society The vision of the Mari Sandoz Heritage Society is to perpetuate and foster an understanding of the literary and historical works of Mari Sandoz, and to honor the land and the people about

Page 13: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

which she wrote: Native Americans, ranchers, farmers and the people who settled the High Plains country. The Society hosts a conference and presents the Pilster Great Plains Lecture Series. Additionally, the society provides collections on loan to the Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center at Chadron State College. Contributions to the Mari Sandoz Heritage Society are tax-deductible. To join the Society, or for more information, e-mail [email protected] or visit our website: www.marisandoz Chadron State College Department of English and Humanities Chadron offers a wonderful setting for the study of English literature and the humanities, with abundant beauty, natural resources, and open spaces to help open our minds. Many of our English major course offerings, such as Great Plains Literature, Literature Across Borders, and Environmental Literature have been developed with an eye towards the natural spaces of the High Plains where we live, teach, and learn. Our unique partnership with the Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center offers further opportunities to read and write within a regional and environmental context. In other words, English majors at CSC benefit from an unfettered exposure to the great outdoors; here, you can literally get outside yourself. For more information, please visit our website: http://www.csc.edu/english/ CONTACT INFORMATION Please visit our website for updates and the most current information, as well procedures for registering for the workshop or attending the festival http://www.storycatcherworkshop.com Story Catcher Summer Writing Workshop and Festival Staff: Dr. Matthew Evertson, Director Chadron State College Department of English & Humanities (ADM 206) 1000 Main Street Chadron, NE. 69337 (308) 432-6462 [email protected] Cindy Evert Christ, Communication Coordinator Mari Sandoz Heritage Society (402) 304-8103 or [email protected] Planning Committee: Matthew Evertson, Professor, Chadron State College Department of English and Humanities Katherine Bahr, Professor, Chadron State College Department of English and Humanities Elisabeth Ellington, Assistant Professor, Chadron State College Department of English and Humanities Sarah Polak, Director, Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center

Page 14: May28$toMay31,2013 storycatcherworkshop.com$$$ - WordPress… · • These workshops take place over two mornings and focus on the elements of writing in a specific genre, generating

 Story  Catcher  Scholarship  Application  The  Mari  Sandoz  High  Plains  Heritage  Society  and  the  department  of  English  and  Humanities  at  Chadron  State  College  are  pleased  to  announce  that  a  limited  number  of  full  and  partial  tuition  waivers  will  be  offered  to  support  talented  STUDENT  writers  this  year.      Depending  on  the  number  of  applicants  and  the  merit  of  the  writing  samples  that  are  submitted,  a  variety  of  waivers  will  be  awarded  (full  or  partial  remission  of  the  general  registration  fees  and  full  or  partial  

remission  of  tuition  for  the  intermediate  workshops)    Each  scholarship  recipient  is  responsible  for  her  or  his  transportation  and/or  lodging  costs.  Visit  our  web  site  for  further  information  about  the  workshop:  http://www.storycatcherworkshop.com    

APPLICATION PLEASE PRINT   Name ___________________________________________________ E-mail ______________________________________

Address ___________________________________________ Daytime Telephone _(_____)____________________ City ________________________________________________ State _______ Zip Code___________ __ SCHOOL NAME AND LOCATION If you are interested in registering for one of the intermediate workshops, please indicate which

workshop you would like to attend: • Linda Hasselstrom (non-fiction prose/memoir) • Pamela Carter Joern (fiction)

BY COMPLETING THIS APPLICATION YOU AFFIRM THAT ALL WRITING SAMPLES ARE YOUR OWN. (evidence of plagiarism will result in rejection of the application or cancellation of the award)

 1. The deadline for application is MAY 1, 2012 (postmark). 2. Submit no more than 10 pages of prose or poetry. Manuscripts and supporting materials will

not be returned. 3. The conference planning committee will review the applications and contact recipients at

least two weeks prior to the workshop.  Send  application  materials  to:  Story Catcher Writing Workshop Scholarship Committee Dr. Matthew Evertson, Director Chadron State College Department of English & Humanities 1000 Main Street Chadron, NE. 69337 (308) 432-6462  OR  EMAIL  the  above  information  and  writing  samples  to  [email protected]