Write The Book: Conversations on Craft
Arts:Books
Alice Lichtenstein, whose new Pulitzer-nominated novel is The Crime of Being (Upper Hand Press).
This week’s Write the Book Prompt was suggested by my guest, Alice Lichtenstein. She has found it fun to assign her students a prompt she calls “ekphrastic fiction.” Ekphrastic writing is written in response to a work of art. Alice recommends googling Edward Hopper, many of whose paintings are clearly narrative in nature, and letting his work inspire your writing. Often his works exhibit a single figure posed in such a way and lit in such a way that the figure naturally lends itself to story. So this week, engage in a free-written response to a Hopper painting. Explore the narrative--who is this, in the painting, what has just happened to him or her, what’s going to happen next? See where it takes you.
Good luck with your work in the coming week, and tune in next week for another prompt or suggestion.
Music Credit: Aaron Shapiro
Sue William Silverman - Archive Interview (1/10/22)
Elizabeth Bluemle Archive Interview (12/27/21)
Joshua Ferris Archive Interview - 12/20/21
Joy Cohen - 12/13/21
A.E. Hines - 12/6/21
Peter Stamm - 12/6/21
Wendy Sanford - 11/29/21
Jonah Lehrer - 11/15/21
Anne Lamott - Archive Interview (11/8/21)
Uwem Akpan - 11/1/21
Michael Freed-Thall - 10/25/21
Melissa Perley - 10/25/21
Thomas Christopher Greene - Archive Interview (10/18/21)
Donald Antrim - 10/11/21
Lisa Peterson - 10/4/21
Ruth Ozeki - 9/27/21
Gary Miller - 9/20/21
Ralph Culver - 9/20/21
Maggie Smith - 9/13/21
Jessica Hendry Nelson - Archive Interview (9/6/21)
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