Episodes
Tuesday Jul 12, 2022
Wendy Call - Archive Interview (7/4/22)
Tuesday Jul 12, 2022
Tuesday Jul 12, 2022
An interview from the archives with award winning writer, educator and translator Wendy Call.
This week’s Write the Book Prompt is to choose one of the following sentences, and translate it into a language of your own design.
- Tomorrow morning, as the sun shines up and over the eastern wall of your house, you will awaken to a gift of joy.
- He ran through the woods and hopped the stones in a bright, cold stream, shouting that he had won.
- Alone, without purpose or thought, she brings a hand to her face and feels the cool touch of her own comfort.
Pick one of these sentences, or really any sentence you come up with, and translate it into a language of your own invention. Make up sounds that feel like these sounds, shape them into words, see what other sentences come out of your unusual translation. Try to create a sense of the sentence that another reader might come close to understanding, if not intellectually. Sure, it might be nonsense, but it might feel just right, too.
Good luck with your work in the coming week, and tune in next week for another prompt or suggestion.
Music Credit: Aaron Shapiro
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Friday Feb 01, 2019
Jim McGarrah - Archive Episode #545 (1/28/19)
Friday Feb 01, 2019
Friday Feb 01, 2019
Interview from the archives with award-winning Poet and Essayist Jim McGarrah, about his collection The Truth About Mangoes (Lamar University Press).
Thanks to Jim's title, The Truth About Mangoes, and to the fact that there's a lot in the news about what is true and what is false, this week's Write the Book Prompt is to write a poem, story, scene, or essay about a truth being seen differently from two or more perspectives.
Good luck with your work in the coming week, and please listen next week for another prompt or suggestion.
Music Credit: Aaron Shapiro
Thursday Sep 08, 2016
Fomite Press - Interview #416 (9/5/16)
Thursday Sep 08, 2016
Thursday Sep 08, 2016
Marc Estrin and Donna Bister, founders of Vermont's Fomite Press, "a literary press whose authors and artists explore the human condition -- political, cultural, personal and historical -- in poetry and prose."
Good luck with this prompt, and please listen next week for another!
Music credits: 1) "Dreaming 1″ - John Fink; 2) "Filter" - Dorset Greens (a Vermont band featuring several former South Burlington High School students).
Saturday Jul 30, 2016
Douglas Glover/Numéro Cinq - Interview #410 (7/25/16)
Saturday Jul 30, 2016
Saturday Jul 30, 2016
A conversation with Douglas Glover, founder, publisher and editor of the online magazine Numéro Cinq.
This week’s Write the Book Prompt, generously suggested by my guest Douglas Glover, is an "aphoristic mad lib." Doug began studying aphorisms early in his writing career, once he realized what they were and how they were used by certain writers he admired. This is from the Numéro Cinq website: “Generally speaking, aphorisms are terse, pointed sayings meant to provoke thought and argument. There are several basic types, but they often set up as definitions or clever balanced antitheses or even puns.” Doug recommends approaching the aphorism as a formal experiment. Decide which type appeals to you, and then sit down and write some. Don’t write just one; write many. Don’t spend too much time. Play with them, see what happens. Don’t think about what you mean ahead of time. The exercise is meant to be an act of discovery. After you’ve written some, play with putting them into thematic passages in your work. A few examples:
- If you have a scene where a husband and wife are fighting, insert a love aphorism. “And what is love? An erotic accident prolonged to disaster." (Douglas Glover, "Bad News of the Heart")
- Have a scene where you want to compare and contrast two types of people? "There are two kinds of readers; the adventurers who glory in the breathtaking audacity and risk of a well-turned aphorism and the weenies who, lacking courage themselves, find it affront in others." (Douglas Glover sent this in an email “to a recalcitrant student.”)
- Here’s one that I wrote for a Numéro Cinq Aphorism Contest, back in the days when Numéro Cinq had more contests. “Truth prowls in mansions of wit.”
1) The definition aphorism:
_____ is _____.
2) The two (or three) kinds aphorism:
There are two kinds of ______: the _______, and the ________.
Good luck with your work in the coming week, and please listen next week for another prompt or suggestion.
Music credits: 1) “Dreaming 1″ - John Fink; 2) “Filter” - Dorset Greens (a Vermont band featuring several former South Burlington High School students).