Meg Wolitzer. Photo: Nina-Subin |
From Keynote Speaker Meg Wolitzer, author of the current bestseller The Interestings, all the way through a Literary Death Match that will pit the Mark Twain House's Director of Writing Julia Pistell against the most fun, famous and talented writers you know, this weekend is an inspiring exploration of literary creativity and craft.
In the shadow of Mark Twain's breathtaking home, writers of all levels of experience are invited to spend a weekend writing, learning, exchanging ideas, and getting books signed by the authors you've been dying to meet. The roster includes: a panel on Criticism with former Granta Editor-in-Chief John Freeman; workshops and discussions on aspects of the writing craft, including jump-starting a novel, poetry as memoir, researching for nonfiction essays, and much more; lectures on aspects of publishing, including finding an agent, pitching to publicity outlets, and editing for publication; and an all-day marathon of authors selling and signing books.
Sunday morning will feature an expo of and book signing by members of the Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association. Writers range from recurring favorites Bessy Reyna, Susan Campbell, and Mary Sharnick to first-time presenters Matthew Dicks, Vivian Shipley, and Qais Akbar Omar. Also presenting will be Tim Parrish, Susan Schoenberger, Wayne English, TJ Jarrett, John Casey, Mike Morin, Patricia Chaffee, Steve Courtney, Ravi Shankar, Leslie Johnson andJohn Stanizzi.
The cost of the weekend is $160. This includes an opening and closing reception, coffee, and a small lunch on Saturday. The weekend will kick off at 6 pm Friday with a reception preceding Wolitzer's keynote at 7 and continue with programs from 9 am to 4 pm Saturday and Sunday. For tickets: 860-280-3130; here for tickets.
Friday, April 25
6 pm: Welcome Reception
7 pm: Keynote Conversation with Meg Wolitzer
Meg Wolitzer's novels include The Interestings; The Uncoupling; The Ten-Year Nap; The Position; and The Wife. She is also the author of a novel for young readers, The Fingertips of Duncan Dorfman. Wolitzer's short fiction has appeared in The Best American Short Stories and has won a Pushcart Prize. Woltizer has been reviewed with raves in the The New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Chicago Tribune, the Atlantic, People, and many more prestigious publications. She is a New York Times bestselling author. She will speak on the subject of her writing life and her works.
8 pm: Book Signing with Meg Woltizer
Saturday, April 26
ALL DAY: Buy the books of your favorite authors and get them signed after each session
10 am: Workshops
11 am: Workshops
noon Critics’ Panel
Three world-class literary and cultural critics will discuss their work as critics, the importance of literary critics today, and our current literary landscape. With John Freeman (former editor of Granta), Carole Goldberg (former Books Editor of the Hartford Courant), and David Bromwich (a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences).
1 pm: Lunch break (lunch will be provided)
2 pm: Workshops
3 pm: Workshops
4 pm: Playwriting Panel
For the third year in a row, be dazzled by incredible playwrights in conversation with one another. This year, we welcome Edwin Sánchez (Barefoot Boy With Shoes On), Ken Ludwig (Lend Me a Tenor), and Douglas Carter Beane (Lysistrata Jones; The Little Dog Laughed), in conversation with the Hartford Courant’s Frank Rizzo.
5:30 pm: Dinner break. Find a great meal out on the town in Hartford.
7 pm Literary Death Match
Literary Death Match, co-created by Adrian Todd Zuniga, marries the literary and performative aspects of Def Poetry Jam, rapier-witted quips of American Idol’s judging (without any meanness), and the ridiculousness and hilarity of Double Dare.
Each episode of this competitive, humor-centric reading series features a thrilling mix of four famous and emerging authors (all representing a literary publication, press or concern — online, in print or live) who perform their most electric writing in seven minutes or less before a lively audience and a panel of three all-star judges. After each pair of readings, the judges — focused on literary merit, performance and intangibles — take turns spouting hilarious, off-the-wall commentary about each story, then select their favorite to advance to the finals.
The two finalists then compete in the Literary Death Match finale, which trades in the show’s literary sensibility for an absurd and comical climax to determine who takes home the Literary Death Match crown.
Sunday, April 27
ALL DAY: Connecticut Authors and Publishers Book Fair and Signing
10 am: Workshops
noon: Lunch break A light lunch will be provided.
1 pm: Workshops
The acclaimed Hartford reading series, Syllable, brings the opportunity for workshop registrants to read 5 minutes of their work at a time to close out the program. Submit up to two pages of work by lunchtime on this day and close out the program with presenting your latest (or most polished) work to a crowd of peers. Readings will be curated by Pistell in order to showcase as wide a variety of writers as possible.
The mission of Syllable: A Reading Series is to provide a space for Connecticut writers of all levels to showcase their work, and to expose the public to a variety of writing styles. Syllable aims to be another brick in the strong arts community in the Greater Hartford area.
In the shadow of Mark Twain's breathtaking home, writers of all levels of experience are invited to spend a weekend writing, learning, exchanging ideas, and getting books signed by the authors you've been dying to meet. The roster includes: a panel on Criticism with former Granta Editor-in-Chief John Freeman; workshops and discussions on aspects of the writing craft, including jump-starting a novel, poetry as memoir, researching for nonfiction essays, and much more; lectures on aspects of publishing, including finding an agent, pitching to publicity outlets, and editing for publication; and an all-day marathon of authors selling and signing books.
Sunday morning will feature an expo of and book signing by members of the Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association. Writers range from recurring favorites Bessy Reyna, Susan Campbell, and Mary Sharnick to first-time presenters Matthew Dicks, Vivian Shipley, and Qais Akbar Omar. Also presenting will be Tim Parrish, Susan Schoenberger, Wayne English, TJ Jarrett, John Casey, Mike Morin, Patricia Chaffee, Steve Courtney, Ravi Shankar, Leslie Johnson andJohn Stanizzi.
The cost of the weekend is $160. This includes an opening and closing reception, coffee, and a small lunch on Saturday. The weekend will kick off at 6 pm Friday with a reception preceding Wolitzer's keynote at 7 and continue with programs from 9 am to 4 pm Saturday and Sunday. For tickets: 860-280-3130; here for tickets.
Here's the full schedule:
Friday, April 25
6 pm: Welcome Reception
7 pm: Keynote Conversation with Meg Wolitzer
Meg Wolitzer's novels include The Interestings; The Uncoupling; The Ten-Year Nap; The Position; and The Wife. She is also the author of a novel for young readers, The Fingertips of Duncan Dorfman. Wolitzer's short fiction has appeared in The Best American Short Stories and has won a Pushcart Prize. Woltizer has been reviewed with raves in the The New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Chicago Tribune, the Atlantic, People, and many more prestigious publications. She is a New York Times bestselling author. She will speak on the subject of her writing life and her works.
8 pm: Book Signing with Meg Woltizer
Saturday, April 26
ALL DAY: Buy the books of your favorite authors and get them signed after each session
10 am: Workshops
Edwin Sanchez |
- Tim Parrish: In Tension: Conflict in Fiction and Memoir
- Susan Campbell: Ferreting Out the Facts
- Susan Schoenberger: Finding an Agent
11 am: Workshops
- Bessy Reyna: Poetry as Memoir
- Mary Sharnick: Making A Scene: Jump Start Your Novel
- Wayne English: Writing for the Web
- Patrice Fitzgerald: Self-Publishing: The Reality of Doing It Yourself
noon Critics’ Panel
Three world-class literary and cultural critics will discuss their work as critics, the importance of literary critics today, and our current literary landscape. With John Freeman (former editor of Granta), Carole Goldberg (former Books Editor of the Hartford Courant), and David Bromwich (a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences).
1 pm: Lunch break (lunch will be provided)
2 pm: Workshops
- TJ Jarrett: Poetry
- John Casey: What’s Funny
- Mike Morin: Pitching for Publicity
3 pm: Workshops
- Vivian Shipley: Revising for Publication
- Patricia Chaffee: Freelancing for Local Markets
- Susan Schoenberger: The Fiction Writer’s Mindset
- Mary-Ann Tirone Smith: The Art of the Memoir: The Remembered Life
4 pm: Playwriting Panel
Douglas Carter Beane |
For the third year in a row, be dazzled by incredible playwrights in conversation with one another. This year, we welcome Edwin Sánchez (Barefoot Boy With Shoes On), Ken Ludwig (Lend Me a Tenor), and Douglas Carter Beane (Lysistrata Jones; The Little Dog Laughed), in conversation with the Hartford Courant’s Frank Rizzo.
5:30 pm: Dinner break. Find a great meal out on the town in Hartford.
7 pm Literary Death Match
Literary Death Match, co-created by Adrian Todd Zuniga, marries the literary and performative aspects of Def Poetry Jam, rapier-witted quips of American Idol’s judging (without any meanness), and the ridiculousness and hilarity of Double Dare.
Each episode of this competitive, humor-centric reading series features a thrilling mix of four famous and emerging authors (all representing a literary publication, press or concern — online, in print or live) who perform their most electric writing in seven minutes or less before a lively audience and a panel of three all-star judges. After each pair of readings, the judges — focused on literary merit, performance and intangibles — take turns spouting hilarious, off-the-wall commentary about each story, then select their favorite to advance to the finals.
The two finalists then compete in the Literary Death Match finale, which trades in the show’s literary sensibility for an absurd and comical climax to determine who takes home the Literary Death Match crown.
Sunday, April 27
ALL DAY: Connecticut Authors and Publishers Book Fair and Signing
10 am: Workshops
- Steve Courtney: Telling Someone Else’s Story
- Ravi Shankar: Collaborate to Recreate; or How to use your Friends to Make Yourself a Better Writer
- Leslie Johnson: Fiction TBD
- Aisha Sabatini Sloan: The Art of the Essay
- David Handler: Mystery
- Christine Beck: What Writers Need to Know about the Law
- Protecting your work against unauthorized use or theft.
- Avoiding claims of defamation by people you have written about either by name or in a way that makes them recognizable.
- Avoiding claims that you have used a trade name or product name without permission.
- Vladimir Alexandrov: Researching and Writing a Forgotten Black American's Amazing Life
noon: Lunch break A light lunch will be provided.
1 pm: Workshops
- Matthew Dicks: A Sneak Peak Into the Publishing Industry
- John Stanizzi: Poetry
Ken Ludwig |
John L. Stanizzi is the author of Ecstasy Among Ghosts, now in its fourth printing, Sleepwalking, Windows, Dance Against the Wall (www.antrimhouzebooks.com), and After the Bell (BigTable Publishing). His poems have appeared in The New York Quarterly, Tar River Poetry, Rattle, Freshwater, Passages North, The Spoon River Quarterly, Poet Lore, The Connecticut River Review, and many other publications, as well as being featured on The Writer’s Almanac. Twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize, in 1998 Stanizzi was named The New England Poet of the Year by The New England Association of Teachers of English. He teaches English at Manchester Community College and Bacon Academy, where he also directed the theater program for fifteen years. He lives with his wife, Carol, in Coventry, Connecticut. Workshop TBD.
2 to 3:30 pm: Closing program: Syllable Series
- Qais Akbar Omar: Case Study of a Memoir
2 to 3:30 pm: Closing program: Syllable Series
The acclaimed Hartford reading series, Syllable, brings the opportunity for workshop registrants to read 5 minutes of their work at a time to close out the program. Submit up to two pages of work by lunchtime on this day and close out the program with presenting your latest (or most polished) work to a crowd of peers. Readings will be curated by Pistell in order to showcase as wide a variety of writers as possible.
The mission of Syllable: A Reading Series is to provide a space for Connecticut writers of all levels to showcase their work, and to expose the public to a variety of writing styles. Syllable aims to be another brick in the strong arts community in the Greater Hartford area.
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