One Story Summer Workshop: Dispelling Myths, Making Magic

The idea for One Story’s Summer Workshop for Emerging Writers was to find talented writers on the verge of their careers who were trying to figure out which next step was right for them.  We would gather them in our Can Factory for an intensive week of workshops, classes, and panels about the special stuff of writing and the not-as-special stuff of publishing.  Music would swell.  I would cry.  Balloons would be released.  If we were lucky, a little magic would occur.

Of course in the way life tends to go…all of that happened.

My assistant Michael J. Pollock and I put together a tiring week of craft lecturers and panels, then combed through the rich and varied writing portfolios of all the tremendous people who applied.  On Sunday, July 24th, we welcomed the students at a cocktail at the Can Factory and I promised them a week that would intellectually and physically tire them out so much they would spend all of Saturday sleeping. 

Every morning, I led workshop.  We made our way through the students’  stories, novel excerpts, short shorts and, in Patrick Gaughan’s case, prose poems.  I knew the week would be all green lights Monday morning during introductions.  Julia Strayer, the first to go, asked me what I meant when I said: tell everyone a little about yourself.  “What would anyone want to know?”  She said.  After I explained that any detail would do, she said “Fine,” blew the blonde bangs out of her eyes and stated, deadpan, “I like fast cars.” 

Every afternoon, a visiting writer lectured on a particular element of craft, starting with our own  Hannah Tinti, who delivered a lecture on structure.  Myla Goldberg, Terese Svoboda, Allison Amend and Ann Napolitano gave talks on character, figuring out where the story starts, dialogue and description, respectively.

Each night a different panel of professionals dispelled common myths of publishing.  The students found agents Renee Zuckerbrot, Paul Cirone and Julie Barer so warm and friendly they couldn’t believe they had previously thought agents were scary.  “They’re just people who like books, just like me,” Sarah Broderick said.

On Editors night, Johnny Temple (Akashic Books), Carla Blumenkranz (n+1), and Scott Lindenbaum and Andy Hunter (Electric Literature) spoke about publishing ideology in the wake of digital advancement.  Together, these illustrious editors dispelled the myth that New York fiction editors drive Audi convertibles, wear magic clothes pressed and washed by animated birds, and eat sandwiches made from the dreams of young writers. 

Not only did we learn about craft issues during the week, but I got to learn about the students who came from as far as England to attend the intensive.  Mackenzie Brady and Joseph Jordon, for example, are both training for the New York Marathon, and would wake at 5am every morning to run Prospect Park which is, you know, insane.

Speaking of running, the week itself took on the pace of a marathon.  We on The One Story staff had to keep ourselves energized.  I did so by excessive caffeine intake and dancing around to INXS.  Michael took what he called “gentlemen’s naps” in Prospect Park before each night’s panel.  Our amazing staff helped us every step of the way by setting up and taking down drinks and snacks for each event, and generally being a joy to be around.

On Thursday night, we enjoyed “An Evening with Sam Lipsyte,” who read hilarious excerpts from his newest novel “The Ask,” and told moderator and Managing Editor Tanya Rey a list of words his teacher Gordon Lish banned in stories: restaurant, thigh, splayed.

Themes sprung up.  For example, writers who are also rock stars or who have “screamed loudly in front of bands”: (Johnny Temple, Myla Goldberg, Sam Lipsyte), working with Gordon Lish (Sam Lipsyte, Terese Svoboda), and community.  Another theme was community.  Josh Henkin and Deborah Landau , Directors of the MFA programs at Brooklyn College and NYU, respectively, listed it as a major reason to attend an MFA program, to find people who are trying to do the same thing you are, to find “your readers.”  And the final theme was a little thing called magic.  Over and over, speakers mentioned it as the unexplainable factor in a favorite piece.  Hannah called a good resolution of a story “a magic feeling you get in the pit of your stomach.”  And, I began every workshop by saying, “Let’s make some magic, people.”

Here is where I talk about the moon.  Every evening in Brooklyn, the moon sat fat above the rooftops like it was auditioning for a movie with Cher about opera and bread.  On Friday night, we had our final reading and “family” dinner.  During dessert our hilarious intern Adina Talve-Goodman debuted a slideshow of pictures she had taken throughout the week to the song “Damn it Feels Good to be a Gangster.”  As I drove home in my Hummer, eating a croissant made out of gold, I felt a hollow, buzziness in my stomach, as if I had just taken a good hill fast in my car.  It could only be one thing: a good resolution to a story.

Thank you to the talented and lovely students of our inaugural Workshop: Mackenzie, Eric, Sarah, Joseph, Brianna, Erin, Bobby, Julia, Meghan, Jude and Patrick.  Thank you to all the amazing professionals who came in to lend their expertise.  Thank you to our wonderful staff; Maribeth Batcha, Tanya Rey, Hannah Tinti, Jenni Milton, Cordelia Calvert, and Adina Talve-Goodman who helped Michael and me pull off a great show.  Thank you to Nathan at the Can Factory and Nana, our caterer with the mostest.  Thank you to Scottadito Osterio Toscana, who hosted our yummy final Italian family dinner.  And thank you to Michael J. Pollock, who never fails to crack us all up. 

I will think of all of you while I am on the beach next week with Jay-Z and the cast of Mad Men, being massaged by singing, animated blue jays.  Damn.  It does feel good to be a gangster.

For more pictures, check out our Facebook page.  I hope you will join us if and when we do this crazy intensive next year.  Bring Vitamin Water.

Until then I remain your dedicated Associate Editor,

Marie-Helene

The One Story Workshop for Writers…so far.

We’re at the beginning of day 5 of 6 for the One Story Workshop for Writers.

The workshop is designed to help emerging writers determine what will be the next phase of their writing journey.  On Sunday, we welcomed 11 excited and talented students to a jam packed week, one that Associate Editor Marie-Helene Bertino promised would “tire them out intellectually and physically so they spend the full day after its conclusion sleeping.”  Each morning they workshop their short stories, novel excerpts, short shorts and, in one case, prose poems with Marie-Helene. 

Every afternoon they have been treated to craft lectures with different writers.  Hannah Tinti kicked off the lecture series with a discussion about story structure in which she read aloud from “Cat in the Hat” and we all sat and listened like good little four year-olds before bed realizing, at last, that the little fish was right. Myla Goldberg encouraged everyone to take a walk and eavesdrop in order to build strong characters during her lecture. And yesterday One Story author Terese Svoboda (Issue #130: “Bomb Jockey”) stressed the importance of using contradictions to create energy, in her lecture on how to begin a story.

At night the tone changes as the panels of agents, MFA directors, and editors address questions of the business side of writing and publishing. The question driving the workshop has been: Are MFAs for me? I am happy to say that as someone who is always asking this question to my bank account and my writing, this workshop has been honest and illuminating.

Onto day 5: a lecture on dialogue with Allison Amend (Issue #13, “Stations West”), and a reading by Sam Lipsyte!

Terese Svoboda shows us how to create a powerful opening line.

MFA directors Josh Henkin (Brooklyn College) and Deborah Landau (NYU) talk about what they look for in an application.

Wilson’s Tunneling to the Center of the Earth

As we did last summer, we’ll be running our “From the Trenches” blog column through the fall, where our summer interns will have the opportunity to inform you on almost anything–beach reads, sewage, envelope stuffing, you name it. Below is a review of Kevin Wilson’s story collection, Tunneling to the Center of the Earth. For those of you keeping score at home, the collection won the Shirley Jackson prize last week. Enjoy!

From a fake granny, to a sorter of Q’s at the Scrabble Factory, to a big-toothed baby, to an agent at Worst-Case Scenario, Inc, Wilson’s characters captivate us with a sense of immediacy. All we have to do is listen.

And yet, each narrative, in its own discrete way, makes us, the readers, an integral part of Tunneling to the Center of the Earth. In his Q&A interview regarding “Worst-Case Scenario” (issue #42), Wilson revealed that one of his greatest challenges in writing is “embracing the ridiculous nature of the story without making the concerns of the characters ridiculous.” Clearly, he has risen to that task by placing his characters in situations that are at once fantastically bizarre and real; by creating strange realities that are microcosms of our “true” reality.

He explores the dead and disturbing, but with a comical flair that reminds us that laughter, or, at the very least, hope, can endure even in the most depressing set of circumstances.

Kevin Wilson Wins the Shirley Jackson Award!

Tunneling to the Center of the Earth

Congratulations to One Story writer Kevin Wilson (“Worst-Case Scenario”, issue #42) for winning the Shirley Jackson Single-Author Collection Award for his short story collection Tunneling to the Center of the Earth (Harper Perennial)!

The Shirley Jackson Award honors authors who have a knack for “psychological suspense, horror, and the dark fantastic,” according to the award’s webpage. Despite Wilson’s conviction, “I’m not going to win,” his collection of short stories Tunneling to the Center of the Earth, which features “Worst-Case Scenario”,  is more than deserving of this prize.

It is perhaps Wilson’s simultaneous humility and confidence as a writer that allow him to explore the complexity of his characters’ understanding of themselves and their relationships with one another. Stay tuned for a more detailed upcoming post about Wilson’s award-winning short stories.

Jim Hanas’ Summer of (Free) E-book Love

One Story author Jim Hanas (issue #8, “The Cryerer”) is feeling generous in this summer heat! In anticipation of the fall release of his newest short story collection, Why They Cried (e-book, Joyland and ECW Press), he’s giving away FREE copies of his first e-book, Single, until Labor Day. Single contains two stories that will appear in Why They Cried, including “The Cryerer”. Hurry up and get your sneak preview of Hanas’ upcoming collection!

Visit his webpage to download Single in various electronic and print formats. Technology not your best of friends? Not to worry—you can call Jim at his very own support line: 347-WHY-THEY (347-949-8439) or email him using the link posted on the site.

OS Authors Shortlisted for the Frank O’Connor Short Story Award!

The shortlist for the 2010 Cork City – Frank O’Connor Short Story Award is out, and 2 of our beloved authors are on it! Both Robin Black (issue #104, “Harriet Elliot”) and Laura van den Berg (issue #102, “What the World Will Look Like When All the Water Leaves Us”) are now in the running for the  €35,000 prize, the world’s richest award for the form. It’s given to what is judged to be the best original collection of stories published in English in the 12 months preceding its award in September. Unlike past years’ shortlists, which consisted of more authors from the UK and Ireland, five of the six places on this year’s short list have been taken by American authors. Another unusual feature is that as many as three of the books have been published by small presses. (Go Dzanc! Go Graywolf!) All of the shortlistees have agreed to go to Cork next September to attend the awards ceremony and to read from their books at the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Festival.

Let’s give it up for Robin and Laura, and cross our fingers for them. We wish you the best, ladies!

Issue #138: The Husband

I’ve been a fan of T Cooper’s writing since I read Lipshitz 6 or Two Angry Blondes, which made me go and seek out his first book, Some of the Parts. There is a truth to T’s characters that as a reader I rarely come across, and so I’m just over the moon that we’re running one of his new stories,“The Husband,” in our pages. What is interesting about this piece is how it turns from an exploration of grief to a study of masculinity, all while maintaining a tight emotional through-line. The husband in this story is also a father, and finds himself mourning not only his wife, but also his daughter, who has transitioned from female to male, and taken on a different name: Daniel. Daniel’s father watches his new son’s ease inhabiting the world, just as his own masculinity is failing him. What follows is both beautiful and heartbreaking, as the husband retreats into memories of the days when he could still take hold of his wife’s dress and pull the zipper down. To find out more about how T wrote this story, visit his Q&A with us. And be sure to check out T’s new graphic novel, The Beaufort Diaries, out this month with Melville House. Trailer is below, narrated by X Files/Californication actor & One Story crush David Duchovny!

Seth Fried Reading in NYC

Seth Fried, author of One Story issue #124 “Frost Mountain Picnic Massacre,” a story that engendered a fear of face paint in all who read it and for that was awarded a Pushcart Prize, will read from his short story collection on July 28th at 6:30pm at Apexart, a super cool space that supports emerging and independent artists.  The reading is part of their “Almost Famous” series, which showcases bright young talent.  This is fitting since Seth, whose collection will be published in 2011 by Soft Skull Press, is lousy with talent.

July 28th  Apex Art Almost Famous Reading Series – 6:30 pm
291 Church Street, NYC, 10013

3 Writers We’ve Been Watching

On June 24th, 2010 Dzanc Books published their own “20 Writers to Watch” in response to the “20 Under 40″ list from The New Yorker and three One Story authors have made the list! Congratulations to Kelly Link (issue #59: “The Great Divorce”), Yannick Murphy (issue #109: “The Good Word”), and Laura van den Berg (issue #102: “What the World Will Look Like When All the Water Leaves Us”). Dzanc Books used different criterion from that of The New Yorker and, according to them, their list better represents “the independent publishers of today.” Sounds like One Story to me!