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Creative - PPT Presentation

Writing The Writing Center Presents Creative Writing Quick and Dirty Brought To you by This workshop is adapted from the Gotham Writers Workshop Faculty handbook Gotham Writers Workshop The Practical Guild from New Yorks Acclaimed Creative Writing School ID: 335560

creative writing short man writing creative man short hey speech blind story april jeannie night appearance show door workshop

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Slide1

CreativeWriting

The Writing Center Presents

Creative Writing: Quick and DirtySlide2

Brought To you by:

This workshop is adapted from the Gotham Writers’ Workshop Faculty handbook:

Gotham Writers’ Workshop: The Practical Guild from New York’s Acclaimed Creative Writing SchoolSlide3

Activity

Let’s get started.

Write a scene in which Character A is making an excuse, apologizing to Character B, for a recent offense or insult. .

Character A might be either a famous person from history, yourself, or your mom.Slide4

Our Focus

Fiction

Short StoriesSlide5

Short Story

What is a short story?

Short (duh)

Narrative–Usually Written in Prose

Usually focuses on a single

theme with limited charactersSlide6

Strategies for Writing Short StoriesShow and TellBringing the Story to LifeSlide7

Show and TellThe tranquil, square-faced, shagheaded

little buffalo-eyed blond called

Frankie Machine and the ruffled, jittery punk called Sparrow felt they

were about as sharp as the next pair of hustlers. These walls, that had

held them both before, had never held either long.Slide8

Show and TellGreta is a twenty-three-year-old artist and interior designer who dislikes

having a roommate.Slide9

Show and TellAfter a stressful week at Mr. Feinmen's

, experimenting with materials that might transform their front foyer into a low-ceilinged cave, Greta sat at a secluded corner of the cafe, sipping tea. Maybe once her roommate left for the night, she could have a little time to experiment with molding the wire mesh into skeleton marionettes.Slide10

Bringing the Story to LifeAction

Speech

Appearance

ThoughtSlide11

ActionShe laughed again, as if she said something very witty, and held my hand for a moment, looking up into my face, promising that there was no one in the world she so much wanted to see. That was the way she had.Slide12

Action: Stage Directions

He was running over the tiled floor of the operating room with a mop

. “Are you still doing that?" I said.

“Jesus, there's a lot of blood here," he complained.

“Where?" The floor looked clean enough to me.

“What the hell were they doing in here?" he asked me.

“They were performing surgery,

Georgie

," I told him.

“There's so much goop inside of us, man," he said, "and it all wants to get out."

He leaned his mop against a cabinet.

“What are you crying for?" I didn't understand.

He stood still, raised both arms slowly behind his head, and tightened his ponytail. Then he grabbed the mop and started making broad random arcs with it, trembling and weeping and moving all around the place really fast

. "What am I crying for?" he said. "Jesus. Wow, oh boy, perfect."Slide13

SpeechUpon spying the Grand Canyon for the first time, Jeannie andBilly-Joe exclaimed, "What a splendid vista!"

"See?" Their mother pointed. "The scrub brush creates a harmonious

palate of green-tinted lushness in the vastness of the canyon."

"I'll have to relate this to my fourth-grade class!" said Jeannie.Slide14

Speech When they finally reached the edge of the Grand Canyon, Jeannieand Billy-Joe opened their eyes wide in amazement. "Wow," said

Billy-Joe.

"That's so awesome," Jeannie whispered.

"See the scrub brush like we saw in Grandma's backyard?" Their

mother pointed. The children nodded.

"I'm going to talk about this for class," Jeannie said.

"Can we take a picture?"Slide15

Speech"Hey. Um, hey.”

"Oh, hey.”

"Hey, Dana. It's Gina."

"Oh, hi. Wait, can you hold on?” “Okay.”

"Hey. What's up?"

"Good. I mean, nothing. How're you doing?"

"Good. Where are you?"

"On my cell."

"I mean, where."

"Oh, on my way after work, like, in the street."

"Yeah?"

"Um, yeah."Slide16

Speech"Hey, Dana. It's Gina.""Hi. What's up?"

"Good. I mean, nothing. How're you doing?"Slide17

Speech"Hey, Dana, it's Gina.""Hi. Was I supposed to call you?"

"Yeah, it's Wednesday. Are you still up for seeing a movie?“

"I have to wait to see what Matt is doing."Slide18

AppearanceNow he was a sturdy, straw-haired man of thirty with a rather hard mouth and a supercilious manner. Two shining, arrogant eyes had established dominance over his face and gave him the appearance of always leaning aggressively

forward. Not even the effeminate swank of his riding clothes could hide

the enormous power of that body. He seemed to fill those glistening boots

until he strained the top lacing and you could see a great pack of muscle

shifting when his shoulder moved under his thin coat. It was a body

capable of enormous leverage—a cruel body.Slide19

Appearance: The Five Senses We

lived on Waverly Place, in a warm,

clean

, two-bedroom flat that sat above a small Chinese bakery specializing in steamed pastries and Dim Sum. In the early morning, when the alley was

still quiet

, I could

smell fragrant

red beans as they were cooked down to a pasty

sweetness

.

By daybreak, our flat was

heavy with the odor

of fried sesame balls and curried chicken crescents. From my bed, I would

listen as

my father got ready for work, then locked the door behind him, one-two-three

clicks

.Slide20

Thought I liked to walk up Fifth Avenue and pick out romantic women from the crowd and imagine that in a few minutes I was going to enter into their lives, and no one would ever know or disapprove.

Sometimes, in my mind, I followed them to their apartments on the corners of hidden streets, and they turned and smiled back at me before they faded through

a door into the warm darkness.

At the enchanted metropolitan twilight, I feel a haunting loneliness sometimes, and feel it in the others—poor

young clerks who loitered in front of windows waiting until it was time for a solitary restaurant dinner—young clerks in the dusk, wasting the poignant moments of night and life.Slide21

Using all the Tools This blind man, feature this, he was wearing a full beard! A beard on a

blind man! Too much, I say. The blind man reached into the back seat and dragged out a suitcase. My wife took his arm, shut the car door, and, talking all the way, moved him down the drive and then up the steps to the front porch. I turned off the TV. I finished my drink, rinsed the glass, dried my hands. Then I went to the door.

My wife said, "I want you to meet Robert. Robert, this is my husband. I've told you all about him.” She was beaming. She had this blind man by his coat sleeve.

The blind man let go of his suitcase and up came his hand. I took it. He squeezed hard, held my hand, and then he let it go.

"I feel like we've already met," he boomed.

"Likewise," I said. I didn't know what else to say. Then I said, "Welcome. I've heard a lot about you."Slide22

Creative writing

Advice

Learn by reading: study other authors in your genre

Write with an audience in mind

Practice: Keep a journal or blogSlide23

Ways to Improve Your Creative Writing On Campus

Creative Writing Groups: Fridays at 4pm in 300 Bessey Hall

Weekly group peer review of your creative writing pieces.

Writing Center: Bring in your creative writing for one-on-one consultations

Hear (or perform) Creative Writing: Open Mic night at the Union on Wednesday, or the Writing Center Open Mic night, or various poetry slams Slide24

Ways to Improve Your Creative Writing Online

Writing.com: A resource that allows your to share your writing with others for feedback and also has prompts and tips to inspire stories.

theteacherscorner.net/daily-writing-prompts/: has daily writing prompts

Dailywritingtips.com: blog with daily writing tips.Slide25

Creative writing

Practice

Take a few minutes to revise your activity from the beginning.Slide26

Creative writing

Respond

Share your writing in small groupsSlide27

The Query LetterMr. Frank Miller

Four Winds Quarterly

321 Main Street

Yellow Plains, WI 19123

Dear Mr. Miller,

Please consider my short story "Hard Cider Seesaw" (2,300 words) for your magazine.

As

Four Winds Quarterly publishes fiction with a strong narrative line, I thought this tale

Of a young man's confrontation with his childhood adversary (a most unlikely bully)

might be of interest to you.

My prose has been short-listed for the Mid-States New Writer Award and the

Lexicon

First Fiction Prize. My poetry has been published in several literary magazines, and I'd

love to add

Four Winds Quarterly to my list of credits.

An SASE is enclosed for a reply, but I don't need the manuscript back. I wish you

continued success with your magazine.

Best,

Matthew PiperSlide28

Novel QueryMs. Pam Goodwin

The Goodwin Agency

123 Fourth A venue, Suite 567

New York, N.Y. 10000

Dear Ms. Goodwin,

Please find, enclosed, the first three chapters of April Rising (90,000 words). As your agency handles emerging writers, including J.J. Porter, whose work resembles my own, I wondered if this mainstream novel might be of interest to you.

Ellen Kaplan, carefree and twenty-three, returns to her affluent suburban home, only to discover that someone has taken her place. The culprit is April, former farm girl,

HerbElixer

saleswoman and proud owner of a porcelain Jesus collection. Rescued from destitution by Ellen’s older brother, April has cast a spell of familial love on the entire Kaplan clan. Ellen sets out to topple her rival but in so doing discovers more than she bargained for, including the possibility that April may not be the enemy after all. This blackly comic tale explores friendship and family values at their most dysfunctional.

A bit about me. I have a B.F.A. from New York University, where I co-founded the Rough Draft writers’ workshop, and was published in

The

Minetta

Review.

I’ve traveled extensively and currently live on a plane.

I've included a stamped self-addressed envelope for a reply only. I very much look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,

Corene

Lemaitre