News from Grand Valley State University

Grand Valley hosts retreat for writers

Writers who are serious about improving their understanding of their craft can turn to Grand Valley State University Writers Retreat August 5-7 for a weekend of first-rate instruction. The weekend will be packed with seminars, workshops, readings, individual consultation, and writing time, all led by established professional writers.

Participants can choose from two tracks -- non-fiction/memoir or poetry. They will discover new perspectives in the company of other writers and use the retreat setting to put full attention to their writing. The participating writers will interact with established authors, in a small workshop setting. They'll hear expert advice about getting published from editors and publishers. Other topics include how to turn an idea into a first draft and to use imagination to transform personal memories into meaningful writing. All the while, the participants will develop a sense of community with other writers. Visiting memoirist Michael Steinberg and poet Alice Friman will lead sessions along with Grand Valley faculty writers Ander Monson and Patricia Clark. Clark was recently named Grand Rapids Poet Laureate.

The retreat runs August 5-7 and will be held at Grand Valley's Pew Grand Rapids Campus located in the heart of downtown Grand Rapids. Retreat goers will be lodged in Winter Hall, which features apartment style rooms and private bathrooms. Readings will take place at the DeVos Center's intimate Loosemore Auditorium. Inspired by the beauty of the campus and energized by the rhythms of Michigan's second largest city, participants are sure to enjoy an atmosphere of creativity, learning, and sharing.

The cost for the workshop is $495 per person. The registration fee includes workshop instruction, materials, lodging/linens, meals, parking, and computer access. Scholarships are available. To apply for a scholarship, complete a one-page statement of financial need and explain how you hope to benefit from the retreat.

Registration is available online at www.gvsu.edu/learn or by calling (616) 331-7180.

INSTRUCTOR BIOGRAPHIES

  • Michael Steinberg is a memoirist, teacher, and the founding editor of the award-winning literary journal, "Fourth Genre: Explorations in Nonfiction." His latest book, "Still Pitching," was chosen by Foreword Magazine as the 2003 Independent Press memoir/ autobiography of the year. It was also cited by the American Association of University Presses and the Melton Center for Jewish Studies as a recommended book for public and school libraries. Other books include "Peninsula: Essays and Memoirs from Michigan;" "The Fourth Genre: Contemporary Writers of/on Creative Nonfiction;" and "Those Who Do, Can: Teachers Writing, Writers Teaching" (the latter two co-edited with Robert Root). Additional awards include the Missouri Review Editor's Prize, a Roberts Writing Award, the Harness Race Writers of America Award for feature writing, and a Writers' Voice Fellowship. His essays and memoirs have been cited several times as "Notable Essays of the Year" in Best American Essays and Best American Sports Writing. He taught writing at Michigan State University for more than two decades. More recently, in addition to teaching at several writers' conferences, he's been on the faculty of both Vermont College and University of Southern Maine low residency MFA programs.
  • Alice Friman's latest book is "The Book of the Rotten Daughter," (forthcoming from BkMk Press). Her other books are "Zoo," (University of Arkansas Press, 1999), winner of the Ezra Pound Poetry Award from Truman State and the Sheila Motton Prize from the New England Poetry Club; "Inverted Fire," (1997 BkMk); and "Reporting from Corinth," (1984, Barnwood). Friman is professor emerita of English, Creative Writing, and Poetry, and the associate editor of Arts & Letters at Georgia College and State University in Milledgeville, Georgia. Friman has received fellowships from the Indiana Arts Council and the Arts Council of Indianapolis, has been invited to teach at Curtin University in Australia, and she has had residences at such artists colonies as Yaddo and the Millay Colony. Among her numerous awards are three prizes from the Poetry Society of America and the 2001 James Boatwright Prize for Poetry from Shenandoah.
  • Ander Monson teaches nonfiction and fiction workshops at Grand Valley State University where he is an assistant professor in the Writing Department. He edits the magazine Diagram and the New Michigan Press, and he is the senior editor of the Del Sol Press. Two books were published in May 2005: "Other Electricities," a book of stories, by Sarabande Books, and "Vacationland," a poetry collection, by Tupelo Press.
  • Patricia Clark's new book, "My Father on a Bicycle," was published by Michigan State University Press in March 2005. The award-winning poet-in-residence and professor of writing at Grand Valley was named in March as the poet laureate for the city of Grand Rapids. Clark was also the recipient of a Creative Artist Grant from ArtServe Michigan for 2003. Clark won the first book award from Women in Literature for her previous book of poetry, "North of Wondering." She is also the co-editor of "Worlds in Our Words: An Anthology of Contemporary American Women Writers." Her poems have appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, Poetry, Slate, Stand Stand, New England Review, North American Review, Pennsylvania Review, Black Warrior Review, and Seattle Review.
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