Rethinking Creative Writing: The First Interview!

Wordamour is pleased to announce that today’s blog post is actually over at Erika Dreifus’ blog/newsletter/website Practicing Writing.

It’s fitting that Wordamour’s first  interview about the book would appear on this site, as she has admired Dreifus’ work and her site for years and has been admonishing her readers to make it part of their regular reading.  It’s a great resource.  And her book of stories, Quiet Americans, has been making all kinds of best lists.

Erika asked some wonderfully in-depth questions and Wordamour had a great time answering them.  It’s a terrific way to find out more about the book.

So what are you waiting for?  Get thee over to Practicing Writing  and check it out!

By y’all!

SV

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Literary Little Rock

The Great Bear Writing Project had its annual writing marathon in Little Rock today, reminding Wordamour what a great town this is for word/book lovers.  First, there’s the sumptuous Main Branch of the Central Arkansas Library, a lovely building with a fantastic collection and a new fifth floor holding the nonfiction, a new cafe and panoramic views of downtown Little Rock.  Then there’s the Arkansas Studies Institute.  And the piece de resistance, the multistoried Rivermarket Books which features three floors of beautiful gently used books. . .and a huge range of bibliophile gifts.

We’ll let the photos below tell the rest of the story. . .

Bye y’all,

SV

PS Click on any photo to zoom in for a larger, clearer image.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

And so it begins. . .

The library edition of Rethinking Creative Writing, actually the ebook being made available to libraries worldwide, is out!

And your library wants to order it, right?  Right! Information on ordering is available here.

If you just want to see the link to the e-reader edition on the Sony e-store, that’s here.  And for more general information about the book, check here.

Word has been pretty positive so far, so I’m pumped.  My friend Erika Dreifus over at one of my favorite writing blogs,  Practicing Writing, has read it and sent along kind words.  And she wants to interview me about it for Practicing Writing; more on that as it develops. . .

My friend Anna Leahy, who administers the Creative Writing Pedagogy facebook page, was kind enough to put word out there and the response was good!  And when I put a link to the book in my own status, the response was truly encouraging.  I am lucky to have such friends.

Anthony Haynes, my brilliant editor at Professional and Higher says we’re taking the John the Baptist approach with the book, announcing the e-reader/library edition first, drumming up buzz.  Next will be the hardcover.

All in all very exciting stuff. . .with more to come!

Bye for now y’all!

SV

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

We Interrupt This Broadcast

For some serious antiquing. I’ll be out of town for Bargains Galore on 64 this year, so consider this post a substitute.

This is Mr. Wordamour’s birthday weekend and as a present from the kids he wanted them to go hiking with him to the top of Pinnacle Mountain outside Little Rock.  Normally I like hiking around Pinnacle but he knew I’d been looking forward to the first-ever Antiques Fair in Conway, Antiques Alley, for months and so he excused me from going along.

Yes, Mr. Wordamour gives me an entire day on my own for antiquing on HIS birthday weekend.  That’s just the kind of husband I have.  I’m darn lucky and I know it. Nonetheless, he is being feted all day today.

Anyway, all I can say is it was an amazing!  fair and I hope the sponsors holds lots more of them.  Then I’ll be less jealous when I open the pages of my favorite magazines and read about all the amazing fairs in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and California but nowhere near ME!!

Enjoy the photos.  Lots of eye candy.  My absolute favorite booth was Willownest–click for her gorgeous blog/store near Round Top, TX (another antiques mecca).  If it’s silver and white and glittery it came from Willownest.

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Wordamour’s Summer Vacation–and an Oatmeal Bread Recipe

As usual,  Wordamour’s summer vacation to do list is filling up with stuff; the Great Bear Writing Project, meetings about some new projects, writing a couple of articles, reading for the 4C’s and the Norman Mailer Nonfiction awards.  Also looking forward to some good books and family time.

Another thing Wordamour is looking forward to is a week at the Writer’s Colony at Dairy Hollow in Eureka Springs, where Wordamour plans to whip a third draft of the novel into shape.  Working on the second right now and relatively pleased with how it’s going–we’re getting closer, folks.  The day before Wordamour’s residency  starts she is doing a publishing workshop at the Eureka Springs library under the Dairy Hollow auspices as well (more on that as it develops), which not only sounds fun but is also paying for the entire week. Don’t you just love it when bartering works out!

Anyway, this weekend, in her garage sale travels, Wordamour actually came upon the following, for cheap, and it was actually signed by the author and legendary foodie, Crescent Dragonwagon (also children’s lit royalty, she is a children’s writer and daughter of famous editor/doyenne Charlotte Zolotow) who ran Dairy Hollow when it was a bed and breakfast.

Reading the book was great fun but the recipe Wordamour was most interested in trying out first was the Dairy Hollow Oatmeal Bread Supreme.  And oh man, was it supreme–or rather sublime.  Which is why it’s being posted here:

Dairy Hollow Oatmeal Bread Supreme

Place in a large bowl:

3 cups oatmeal, 1 tablespoon salt, 1/3 cup mild honey

Heat together until the butter melts:

1 3/4 cups heavy cream, 1/4 cup water, 1/4 buttter

Pour the hot mixture over the oatmeal and let stand till lukewarm.  Meanwhile, combine in a small bowl:

1/3 cup lukewarm water, 2 tablespoons yeast, 2 tablespoons honey

By the time the oatmeal-milk mixture has reached lukewarm, the yeast honey-mixture should be bubbling exuberantly.  Combine the two and stir in, a cup at a time

2 cups unbleached white flour

Continue adding unbleached white flour till dough is stiff enough to knead and do so, for 5 or 6 minutes, on a floured surface,until dough is smooth and elastic.  Place in a clean greased bowl and let rise until doubled in bulk–about an hour.  Punch down dough, shape into two loaves and place the loaves into greased bread pans to rise a second time.  Let rise again, this time about 45 minutes and bake for about 50 minutes at 375.  This last bit is what the recipe calls for, but I find I have to be sure to put the loaves on the bottom rack and start checking them at 40 minutes to make sure they don’t burn.  Ovens must run hotter than they did 25 years ago, when the cookbook was published.

The smell while it’s baking is absolutely heavenly and the bread itself divine. This one is definitely a keeper.

Hoping to have more time to check in now that summer’s here.

Enjoy, y’all,

SV

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Get yer (priceless) writing advice here!

Friend Bill Lychack, author of the luminous The Architect of Flowers and The Wasp Eater  is interviewed over at Julianna Baggott’s blog here and the writing advice is pure, pure gold.

Go. Read it. Now.

Then go read his books.  If you haven’t already.

By the way, I pride myself on being a very good speller but a few words always trip me up.  One of them is rhythm.  The other, I’ve discovered in the past few months since Bill’s wonderful collection of stories debuted, is architect.   Thanks, Bill, for this new bit of self-knowledge.

Bye y’all,

SV

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Flashlight Memories: A Real Treat

I have a short essay, “The Library: It’s a Family Thing,” in this wonderful new book: Flashlight Memories, which is all about people’s early experiences with reading and books, otherwise known in academia as “literacy autobiographies” or “literacy narratives.”  Let me tell you, identifying and writing about where your love of literacy comes from can be a very powerful thing.

And let me tell you, I am one sucker for a good literacy narrative, so I love curling up with these reading memoirs as a reward at the end of a long, stressful day.  Memoirs like the one from the woman whose mother didn’t understand her longing to read in bed at night, who didn’t really understand her daughter’s longing to read period, but whose truck-driver grandfather encouraged her by secretly giving her a flashlight and an apply to snack on while she read, then secretly provided her with batteries and reading snacks for the rest of her childhood.  The stories are wonderfully written, not treacly, just good stories.

So what about you?  What’s your literacy story?

Post it in the comments section by May 15.  I’ll do a drawing May 15 and send a copy of Flashlight Memories to the winner!

Bye y’all,

SV

PS  My essay concerns my mother’s childhood reading and library habit; the kicker is, that picture on the front really could have been her as a child.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

And now for something completely different

or maybe not–it concerns colleges and universities after all, which is where Wordamour teaches.  This Mama Ph.D. blog post at Inside Higher Ed reminded me of what has stayed in the back of my mind for years, of what makes me relieved, yes I’ll say it out loud, that I don’t have daughters.

I have been the victim of this culture, the culture of rape at colleges and universities and the culture of rape writ large.  My experiences are very similar to those expressed by Mama Ph.D.–only different because, of course, they are mine.  I won’t recount them here because they are so like the stories many of my gender peers could tell, they’re almost a cliche.

So I will simply bring your attention to this tip sheet.  If you are a woman, you will find it a very different tip sheet on personal safety than you are used to receiving in your email.

Let me ask, men who read this blog (and those I know do not support this culture), do you routinely receive recirculated well-meaning emails (I’ve sent a few myself) with tips about how to protect yourself in society?

We do.

Things are looking up for Wordamour, the vertigo is receding, the next post will be a happy one, but she could not pass up the opportunity to repost this tip sheet in the hopes of writing for change.

Read it. Please, recirculate it, for your daughters, your wives, your mothers, your friends, your lovers.  Use your words for change.

Bye y’all,

SV

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Cover reveal!

 

At last, I can reveal the cover of Rethinking Creative Writing in Higher Education: Programs and Practices that Work.

Yes, I’m biased but I think it’s absolutely lovely:

My UK publishers at Professional and Higher, Anthony and Karen Haynes report that they have appointments with American publishers at the London Book Fair next week so keep your fingers crossed.  If you recall, a giant cloud of ash intercepted the appearance of American publishers at the London Book Fair last year.

The London Book Fair.  Doesn’t that sound great?  I want to go someday just for fun.  Guess I’ll have to add it to the bucket listt.

In other news, it’s been a strange week in Wordamour-land.  She returned from DC only to somehow contract a mysterious viral inner ear infection whose major symptom is wicked vertigo.   While she is improving she will be relieved when the world stops spinning. . .completely and in the meantime spends long periods of time trying not to make any sudden moves.

Blogging for NWP continues (see previous post) and spring has sprung in Arkansas.  This means, among other things, the annual Arkansas Literary Festival this weekend.  Wordamour is really jonesing to go, especially to support UCA peeps Robin Becker, Mark Spitzer, et al, but suspects the viral thing will also have its say on that matter.  We will just have to see.

Bye y’all,

SV

 

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

NWP Needs YOU! Blogging for NWP

Our goal is to reach 1,000 blog posts by April 8th to raise awareness about federal funding cuts to the National Writing Project.

Your story about what NWP has meant to you counts!  We NEED you to tell your story.  NWP has created a Posterous group blog as another way for people to participate and reach the 1,000 post goal.

ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS WRITE AN EMAIL.

Compose an email. The address for the email is

post@blog4nwp.posterous.com

The subject line should be for the headline you want for the post.

Whatever you type into the body of the message will be the body of your post. Tell your story here about what the writing project has meant to you as a teacher, as a person.  Or tell your story about what it has done for your students.

Sign the email with your name and writing project site.

To view the blog go to http://blog4nwp.posterous.com (no www in the address).

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under Uncategorized