The Hack learns to write
Because of my lack of j-school education--or any real education at all--I constantly looked for ways to get better. When opportunities for training came along, I was always the first to sign up (and not just because sometimes they involved travel to warm places during chilly months).
One year a very talented Detroit Free Press writing coach named Susan A. came to town. Her workshop was terrific, two full days of talking about writing--how to structure long pieces, how to write narrative, how to report for detail, how to distinguish between random detail and telling detail...
That workshop carried with it the added bonus of friendship; during the course of her visit, Susan and I became good friends. One night we went out to dinner at the Pickwick, the famous journalist stomping ground I have written about before. And one night I invited her to my house, with only slightly tragic results.
At the time, Toby and I lived alone in a little white house on the top of the hill in Duluth. Toby, as I have no doubt mentioned before, could be a cranky dog, and he didn't much care for strangers. The way to his heart was pretty easy, though: toss him a tennis ball.
So I had developed a fairly cumbersome but effective ritual of inviting people over, asking them to wait outside, handing them a tennis ball, going and getting Toby, and then asking my guest to toss him the ball. After that, we could all go in the house with no problem. (I had a friend who used to do the same thing with cheese: Whenever someone came over, she met the guest at the door with a cube of cheese. "Thank you," they'd say, looking around for a glass of wine to go with it. And Anne would say, "It's not for you. It's for the dog.")
Anyway, I tried to go through the convoluted tennis ball exercise with Susan, but she stopped me. "Don't worry. It'll be fine." And she followed me into the house, sans tennis ball. She squatted down to pet Toby, and he--not recognizing her--leaped at her and barked. I grabbed him, she stood up, I threw him in the bedroom, she sat down and said, "No harm done."
(But later she told me she was afraid of dogs, and that made me feel even worse. If only we'd stuck to the tennis ball routine.... Or, better yet, if only I'd just trained him properly to begin with.)
One summer I went out to Wesleyan University on a journalism scholarship to attend a week-long writing conference. I took classes from Richard Bausch and Anne Bernays and David Slavitt and a whole bunch of other East Coast literati. At the time, I didn't think any of it was very helpful, and I wrote letters home mocking the whole thing and telling cruel, witty stories about some of the speakers and most of the participants.
But I found myself quoting their advice after I got home.
This was often the case when I went to writing workshops--and for a while, I went to quite a few. A week at Wildacres Writing Workshop, in the glorious mountains outside of Asheville, N.C. (We stayed in cabins with front porches that had rows of rocking chairs overlooking the hazy blue mountains.)
A week at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg, Florida. (In November! Every morning I brought my breakfast down to the dock and ate while watching the cormorants and the pelicans.)
A week in December at the American Press Institute in Pomona, California. (A very intense week, with long, serious workshops all day and lots of drinking at night and a half-day field trip to the Getty in L.A.)
A long, rainy weekend in New York City, studying again with the folks from Poynter. (I bought an umbrella, and walked and walked and walked.)
And each time I'd think, Huh, I already know all this. It's fun to be in Florida (or California, or New York, or North Carolina), but they're not telling me anything I don't already know.
But they were. They were often telling me things I knew instinctually, or things I had picked up through extensive reading but had never thought deeply about. These conferences gave me context and vocabulary and structure for what it was I was trying to do.
And each time I'd come home and try to put my new knowledge into practice, and each time I would find that all I had done was raise the stakes in my head, and made the writing process harder, and harder, and even harder.
A note on the photo: At Wildacres Writing Workshop, outside of Asheville, N.C., the summer of 1993. I'm with my friends Jan and Marjorie.



















20 Leave a message!:
I feel so privileged to be the first to comment tonight! Great hearing about all your writing classes. I love your one-sentence summaries! Keep your Hack stories coming! Please! Thank you!
It never ceases to amaze me that how takes someone to state the obvious before it actually sinks in.
Each time you became more knowledgeable and realized that you could be a better writer than you already were, and you being the serious and dedicated person that you were, took this to heart and tried your darndest to be one.
I have never followed a writing course, but would love to take a good one. I suppose I would want to take a non fiction course, as that seems to be my cuppa tea.I have tried to write fiction and I stink. I do know my own strong points and that is not one of them, at least, to this date it isn't.
You were meant to be a hack and a good one you are. In my next life, I'll come back as one, I hope I don't forget to do that.
Lovely stories and not having gone way back in your blog archives, I'd no idea you'd learnt on the job. Fascinating.
I'm in struggle at the moment - to do a course or not to do a course. I read a lot of 'how tos' (some good, some stink) and I keep doing but I still have no idea if I'm doing the right thing or doing it well or badly. Still I guess as long as I'm doing.
JJx
I attended a creative writing workshop once. It was taught by Joyce Hifler. I think I was about sixteen. I also took dance every summer. The dance class was in the morning followed by the writing class in the afternoon. I never had time to change, so I went to writing class in my leotards and dance skirts. Unfortunately, that's about all I remember of the class.
I've never attended a writing course but that one you went to outside of Asheville, staying in a cabin with a front porch and a rocking chair overlooking the "hazy blue mountains", would be my cup of tea.
That Wildacres workshop sounds great. I'd love to sit on a porch like that with great views. Would even do a writing workshop for that. Not sure it'd do any good but I'd go.
Oh god I know about raising the stakes. But it makes it all teh more exciting too doesnt it? Realising how much you've learnt?
I think I'd attend the licking of a stamp workshop if it was in a place like Asheville. Sounds wonderful.
Writing courses are definately on my 'to do 'list.
MJ--i have a few more...
WT--it's true, at least for me. i need to hear the words, even if i already have the concept. words are what i hang onto.
irene, i've written some fiction, but i prefer non-fiction. i just don't have a vivid enough imagination for ficiton.
jj, kaycie, lane, the workshops i went to were useful for a couple of reasons. some of them (the ones geared toward professional journalists, at poynter at API) don't just have a high level of instructor, they have a high level of participants; you have to apply to get in, and so you are assured that everyone is starting at roughly the same spot. and you can learn from each other.
wildacres was lovely; you had to take the same morning course all week so i signed up for non-fiction writing. and then in the afternoons you could bounce from class to class and see what you liked. i bounced from "writing for children" to "short-story writing" to "novel writing."
the non-fiction class was terrific, taught by a magazine editor from New York. though we did disagree on one key point: she thought i should have rewritten some of the quotes in my story to make them stronger.
and i maintain that you can never rewrite quotes at all. quotes are what the person said; you don't have license to change it.
(i'd be interested in dumdad's thoughtso n that.)
I'm not a journalist but I agree with you - if you change a quote it isn't a quote. Certainly it's possible to misquote unintentionally - but to change a quote deliberately and arbitrarily? That ain't right.
Whatever you did it obviously worked well for you. But I think you were born with it to start.
Okay - now I'm really jealous Laurie. Writing courses! The cabin with the rockers out front! The dock with the pelicans! Grrrrrr -
You have been extremely blessed in your life girl. And - it's obvious the lessons paid off.
Rewrite quotes? Hello....they're quotes! I'm with you on this one, Laurie.
I had not put it into words before but you are so right about knowing how to write making it harder to do.
You do it very, very well.
bookwoman, sandy:
what the editor from New York told me is that it is perfectly all right to tweak the quote just a little to give it power. not to rewrite it wholesale, but just to noodge it a bit.
the example she used was the kicker of the story I had brought for critique. my story ended on a quote, with the source saying something about her house.
the editor said it would be more powerful, would resonate more, if i changed "house" to "home."
when i objected, she said nobody would ever know, the source will never remember exactly which word she had uttered, and that "all magazine writers do this."
but i argued with her, and i still believe her wrong. i have been trained to see quotes as sacrosanct. this is why i often put them in italics instead of quotation marks--because quotation marks should be reserved for direct quotes, not recollected quotes, not quotes that are close to what the person said, but quotes that are exactly what the person said, or as close as i can get them.
so i guess i will never move to new york and work for big magazines. but i guess i'm ok with that.
other than that one disagreement, i thought the New York editor was terrific and i learned a lot from her. stuff i still remember and use today.
Great fun to see how you honed those skills - and a good editor is indeed worth her weight in gold. I always listen to one. When my agent came back with "your novel should be a YA, revise" and letters from sharp editors saying the same, I turned up my nose in artistic huff. That was three years ago. Guess what? I'm revising.
Laurie,looking at some of your writing it makes fell like a novice writer.compared to your writing if both of us submitter for an article to be published your's would mine would not be.Hugs and blessings your way.
Asheville, in my mind, is one of the most beautiful places in the world.
I admire how principled you are. It can be hard to stick to them in a work environment, especially when higher-ups aren't. I love this series.
Hi Laurie,
interesting post.
Would it be possible for you to send me more info on the writing seminar in Pomona; or perhaps their website? I've been thinking about going back to school, but uni is not in the works for me at the moment...perhaps this might augment meanwhile! :)
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