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Spokane Convention Center [clear filter]
Saturday, April 16
 

9:30am PDT

Images & Objects: Writing Workshop with Serena Crawford
Images and Objects: Engaging Your Reader

As fiction writers, we strive to build worlds that readers can enter. We want our audience to experience our stories through our characters’ eyes and ears. In this workshop, we will explore the use of images and objects as a way to hook readers, immerse them in our stories, and keep them glued to the page. As we write and develop our craft, we will also have the chance to share our work. This will be an activity-based workshop with several writing activities/sessions, short craft discussions, analysis of a short excerpt, and opportunities for participants to share work.

Two-hour writing workshop with fiction writer Serena Crawford.
Workshop registration via BrownPaperTickets.com.

Serena Crawford’s story collection, Here Among Strangers, won the Spokane Prize for Short Fiction. Her work has appeared in Epoch, Ascent, The Rumpus, Beloit Fiction Journal, The McNeese Review, and elsewhere. She has taught creative writing for Writers in the Schools, the University of Portland, and the University of Oregon. The recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship and an Oregon Literary Fellowship, she lives in Portland, Oregon.  


Saturday April 16, 2016 9:30am - 11:30am PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

9:30am PDT

Surprising Yourself: Writing Workshop with Diane Cook
Surprising Yourself: Writing Workshop with Diane Cook9:30-11:30 a.m. Saturday 4/16

My favorite reading moments are when I come upon something in the story that takes me completely by surprise. Being taken by surprise is also my favorite moment when I'm writing. It might sound counter-intuitive, but it's possible to turn off your critical--even conscious--mind when writing new material. And doing so can lead you to new turns and twists in your work that are revelatory and unexpected. In this session, we'll use writing exercises  to help us explore the hidden spaces of the scenes we're trying to bring to life. And we'll work to turn off that inner editor who sometimes says, Stop! You can't do that. In this session, we'll aim to overcome that voice and write ourselves into a place of surprise. Bring a short scene or moment from something you're working on. And bring a lot of paper (or your computer.) We'll be writing a lot. Registration through Brown Paper Tickets.

Diane Cook is the author of the story collection Man V. Nature, and was formerly a producer for the radio show, This American Life. Man V. Nature was a finalist for the Guardian First Book Award, Believer Book Award and the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction, and received Honorable Mention for the PEN/Hemingway award. Her stories have appeared in Harpers, Tin House, Granta, and elsewhere and anthologized in Best American Short Stories. She is the recipient of a 2016 fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. She lives in Oakland, CA.

 


Saturday April 16, 2016 9:30am - 11:30am PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

9:30am PDT

Word Pyromania: Poetry Workshop with Rob Carney

WORD PYROMANIA: EXERCISES THAT CAN SPARK.  

The playwright Tom Stoppard was once asked, “Where do your ideas come from?” He answered, “I wish I knew. I’d move there.” Nevertheless, he’s had a career full of ideas, and he’s shaped them into great plays. For instance, a friend gave him a note once, telling him Freud, Lenin, and James Joyce all lived on the same block in Zurich in 1916 and he should write a play about it. It turned out to be true and that the dadaist Tristan Tzara lived nearby also, but no play arose from those facts until Stoppard discovered that Joyce and a minor diplomat named Henry Carr were embroiled in a lawsuit and counter suit over the cost of a suit. Carr had purchased it as his costume for the part of Jack Worthing in Joyce’s production of The Importance of Being Earnest, and Joyce wouldn’t pay him back. The play is called Travesties. It’s pretty brilliant. And the point is that it probably came not from facts and ideas but from fun with language, from the multiple meanings of the word “suit.”

This poetry workshop will be about fun with words. We’ll take a shot at one or two exercises less about whamming our ideas into lines for poems and more about letting language discover what it wants to. 

Come with pens, paper, and a readiness to see what some new exercises might compel you to discover. Workshop registration via BrownPaperTickets.com.

Rob Carney is originally from Washington State and earned his BA from Pacific Lutheran University, his MFA from Eastern Washington University, and his PhD from the University of Louisiana-Lafayette. He is a two-time winner of the Utah Book Award for Poetry and the author of three previous books and three chapbooks of poems, including Story Problems and Weather Report from Somondoco Press. His work has appeared in Cave Wall, Mid-American Review, Poetry Northwest, Quarterly West, Redactions, River Styx, Sugar House Review, other journals, as well as the Norton anthology, Flash Fiction Forward. In 2014 he received the Robinson Jeffers Tor House Prize for Poetry. His most recently published collection of work, 88 MAPS, is about the places, times, and wildness we should say yes to, and it’s about looking at all our real and figurative cul-de-sacs and saying no. Currently, he is a Professor of English at Utah Valley University.

Saturday April 16, 2016 9:30am - 11:30am PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

9:30am PDT

Workshop: Harnessing the Power of Place with Joe Wilkins

Layers of Landscape: Harnessing the Power of Place

Though we live in a world chock full of chain restaurants and department stores, on-screen communications, and cross-country airplane travel, we ignore the power of place at our own psychological and, increasingly, physical peril. Truly, place and landscape are active forces in all our lives. They shape and re-shape us; they offer us foundation and refuge; they challenge us to be good citizens of our biotic and built communities. In life and in writing, we ought to be aware of this; we ought to try to understand and harness the power of place. This session offers writers four ways they might begin to do just that. Participants are asked to bring a pen and paper or a laptop computer for in-session writing.

$20 students/$30 general. Workshop registration through BrownPaperTickets.com.


Saturday April 16, 2016 9:30am - 11:30am PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

12:00pm PDT

Writing Workshop for Undergraduate Students

Gonzaga University’s literary journal, Reflection, will be hosting an hour-long workshop for undergraduate students wishing to expand their own writing in the hopes of future publication. This event will take place on April 16th at the Spokane Convention Center as part of the Get Lit! Festival. The focus of this workshop will be to encourage students to continue producing work that may be considered for their own school publications. The workshop itself will consist of two 20-minute prompts in which the students will be able to create pieces based off of these prompts. Following the writing, there will be an opportunity for the writers to share a piece that they began in the workshop with the incentive that these works will eventually grow into pieces to be considered for their school literary journals in the upcoming year. Gonzaga is excited to get students thinking, producing, and submitting as part of this highly esteemed GetLit! Festival and we hope to see you there!

Free, no pre-registration required. Spokane Convention Center, Room 202A.


Saturday April 16, 2016 12:00pm - 1:00pm PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

12:00pm PDT

BUTCHER PAPER Book Launch
Join Scablands Lit and the Get Lit! Festival to celebrate the publication of Butcher Paper, a new graphic novel by Simeon Mills. He'll be joined by Seattle cartoonist Tom Van Deusen, and their conversation will be moderated by fiction writer Shawn Vestal. Butcher Paper will be available for sale and both authors will be available for signings. Free and open to the public.

Simeon Mills is a cartoonist, writer, and teacher living in Spokane. His graphic stories have been included in various journals, such as The Florida Review, RiverLit, Rock & Sling, and Okey-Panky. His graphic novel, Butcher Paper, was published by Scablands Books. See his work at www.simeonmills.com.

Tom Van Deusen is a cartoonist from Seattle, Washington. He has numerous self-published titles including, "Scorched Earth" and "Eat, Eat, Eat". His comics have appeared in The Seattle Weekly and online with Study Group Comics and Boing Boing. He is a founding member of Intruder, Seattle's free, long-running comics newspaper. He has performed his hilarious comic stories at Short Run, Pecha Kucha, Gridlords and Sugar City. Tom also runs the micro-publisher Poochie Press Publications, which has published Dennis P. Eichhorn's "Real Good Stuff" and Kelly Froh's "The Weeknight Casserole Collection".


Moderators
avatar for Shawn Vestal

Shawn Vestal

Shawn Vestal is the author of the novel Daredevils (2016) as well as Godforsaken Idaho, a collection of short stories that was named the winner of the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize, which honors a debut book that "represents distinguished literary achievement and suggests great promise... Read More →

Authors
avatar for Simeon Mills

Simeon Mills

Simeon Mills is a cartoonist, writer, and teacher living in Spokane. His graphic stories have been included in various journals, such as The Florida Review, RiverLit, Rock & Sling, and Okey-Panky. His graphic novel, Butcher Paper, was published by Scablands Books.


Saturday April 16, 2016 12:00pm - 1:30pm PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

12:00pm PDT

All We Can Hold: Poetry of Motherhood
Join Sage Hill Press and the Get Lit! Festival to launch All We Can Hold, a collection of poetry on motherhood. The volume features work by Sherman Alexie, Kathleen Flenniken, Terry Martin, Katrina Roberts, Martha Silano, Dorianne Laux, Malena Morling, Freya Manfred, and others. At the book launch, there will also be readings by Laura Read, Connie Wasem Scott, Laurie Klein, Maya Jewell Zeller, Ellen Welcker, Kate Peterson, and Beth Cooley, and other contributors. Books will be available for purchase and the contributing authors will be available to sign books.

All We Can Hold was co-edited by Emily Gwinn and Elise Gregory. More information about the book can be found at www.allwecanhold.com/.

Authors
avatar for Beth Cooley

Beth Cooley

Young Adult novelist and poet, Beth Cooley lives in Spokane and teaches at Gonzaga University. Her books include Ostrich Eye and Shelter.
avatar for Emily Gwinn

Emily Gwinn

Emily Gwinn lives in Spokane where she teaches, writes, mothers, and makes attempts at gardening. She is the Assistant Executive Director for the LiTFUSE Poets' Workshop in Tieton, Washington.  She received her MFA in Creative Writing from Eastern Washington University. Her poems... Read More →
avatar for Kate Peterson

Kate Peterson

Kate Peterson earned an MFA from Eastern Washington University in Spokane, where she works as an adjunct professor, a regional coordinator for Poetry Out Loud, and a Writers' Center responder. Her poetry has been published or is forthcoming in Glassworks, Baldhip, The Sierra Nevada... Read More →
avatar for Laura Read

Laura Read

Laura Read is Spokane’s second poet laureate, appointed to the position October, 2015. She is the author of the chapbook The Chewbacca on Hollywood Boulevard Reminds Me of You and the collection Instructions for My Mother’s Funeral, which won the 2011 AWP Donald Hall Prize... Read More →
avatar for Connie Wasem Scott

Connie Wasem Scott

Connie Wasem Scott is the chair of the English department at Spokane Falls Community College, where she teaches literature, composition, and creative writing classes. She is also the faculty advisor of the SFCC literary magazine The Wire Harp. She previously taught at the University... Read More →
avatar for Ellen Welcker

Ellen Welcker

Ellen Welcker has collaborated with visual artists, other writers, and as part of several multi-genre productions, including 2016's Terrain's Uncharted, a collaboration with the Spokane Symphony that reimagined the classic "Peter and the Wolf," and 2018's performance of her chapbook... Read More →
avatar for Maya Jewell Zeller

Maya Jewell Zeller

Maya Jewell Zeller is the author of the book Rust Fish (Lost Horse Press, 2011) and the chapbook Yesterday, the Bees (Floating Bridge Press, 2015); other essays and poems appear widely. Maya teaches writing for Gonzaga University, Central Washington University, and the Community Colleges... Read More →



Saturday April 16, 2016 12:00pm - 1:30pm PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

1:45pm PDT

Railtown Almanac

Sage Hill Press launches the second volume of Railtown Almanac, which ventures into the realm of prose, collecting short stories and essays from accomplished authors and emerging writers of all ages. Featured readers include Laurie Klein, Chris Cook, Travis Laurence Naught, Jaime Baird, Maya Jewell Zeller, Jennifer Catlin, Mary Kunkel, Aileen Keown Vaux, Anne Kilfoyle, Molly Smith and Melissa Dziedzic. The book will be available for purchase before and after the reading at the vendor table. Railtown Almanac celebrates the talent and vitality of Spokane’s literary and artistic community.


Authors
avatar for Jeff Dodd

Jeff Dodd

Jeffrey Dodd teaches at Gonzaga University, sometimes well, and he’s written some poems that he likes. He could crochet you a nice little hat, but it’s getting a bit warm out for that, isn’t it? In the attached photo, he wasn’t sure which way to look.


Saturday April 16, 2016 1:45pm - 3:00pm PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

1:45pm PDT

Debut Authors Tell All

During 2015, six female authors in Spokane launched their debut books, leading to the obvious question, What's in the water? The group was profiled in the Inlander, each with different perspectives on how their book came to be published. During Get Lit!, they will discuss their rising success in publishing, from getting an agent to editing their manuscripts to promoting their books. Sharma Shields explores the mystical side of the Pacific Northwest as she follows her protagonist’s obsession to find Bigfoot in The Sasquatch Hunter’s Almanac. In War Bonds, Cindy Hval, a columnist for The Spokesman Review, tells the often overlooked stories of couples and their romances during World War II. Stephanie Oakes, author of The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly, crafts the poetic tale of a young girl coming to terms with her dark past in the Kevinian cult, which cost not only years of her life but also her hands. S.M. Hulse gives hope to graduate students in her MFA-thesis-turned-novel Black River, a modern-day Western set against past violence in its characters’ lives. In the young adult novel You and Me and Him, Kris Dinnison explores the bonds of friendship as two characters struggle to maintain their relationship while interested in the same guy. This panel will be moderated by Chey Scott, writer and listings editor for the Inlander. Free admission!


Authors
avatar for Kris Dinnison

Kris Dinnison

Kris Dinnison learned to read when she was five years old. She grew up reading books nobody else had read and listening to music nobody else had heard of and thinking she was weird, which she kind of was. She spent nearly two decades as a teacher and librarian working with students... Read More →
avatar for Cindy Hval

Cindy Hval

Cindy Hval’s “Front Porch” column appears regularly in the Spokesman-Review and offers insight from her perspective as a mother, a writer, and a cat-lover. Her first book is War Bonds: Love Stories from the Greatest Generation. Her work has appeared in numerous magazines... Read More →
avatar for Stephanie Oakes

Stephanie Oakes

Stephanie Oakes is a young-adult author from Spokane. Her first book, The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly, retells the Grimm brother’s fairy tale “The Handless Maiden” using the modern setting of a religious cult. Oakes earned her MFA in poetry from Eastern Washington University... Read More →
avatar for Sharma Shields

Sharma Shields

Sharma Shields is the author of a short story collection, Favorite Monster, and a novel, The Sasquatch Hunter's Almanac. Her writing has appearaed in Electric Lit, the New York Times, Kenyon review, Iowa REview, Fugue and elsewhere, and has garnered such awards as the Autumn House... Read More →


Saturday April 16, 2016 1:45pm - 3:00pm PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

3:30pm PDT

Making Your Own Comic or Graphic Novel: Tips for Artists and Writers
Making your own comic or graphic novel can be a challenge.  Coming up with ideas, writing a script, designing your own characters, finding artists or drawing your own book, printing, marketing, Kickstarter (crowdfunding), can all be very daunting to the person who wants to step out on their own to tell the stories that are important to them. Join Manny Trembley to learn about the steps it takes as well as ask any questions you might have. You don't need to reinvent publishing a comic.  Learn from Manny's successes and failures as he has traversed the rocky landscape of self-publishing.

Free; no pre-registration required.

Moderators
avatar for Manny Trembley

Manny Trembley

Manny Trembley is a two-time Eisner Award nominated author, illustrator, father of two boys, Jasper and Jared, and husband.  He is a video game designer and spends his free time making graphic novels. He has created five successful Kickstarters. The first was Martin Monsterman and... Read More →

Saturday April 16, 2016 3:30pm - 5:00pm PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

3:30pm PDT

If You Ain't No Place
You'd be crazy to miss out on this: a one-of-a-kind writing workshop and craft discussion with not one, but two current poets laureate: Tod Marshall (Washington State) and Laura Read (City of Spokane). This is an opportunity not to be missed! Free; no pre-registration required.

If You Ain’t No Place

Our title is from Richard Hugo’s The Triggering Town.  In his book, Hugo reminds poets of the importance of identifying the “where” of a poem and how rooting creativity to place can allow the imagination to grow in unexpected ways.  In this workshop, we will explore ways to connect our imagination to the real and imagined landscapes of Spokane and, more broadly, Washington. 

There are many ways, of course, that we can think about “place.”  Perhaps specific flora and fauna conjure up place for us (salmon and Arrowleaf Balsamroot, delicious huckleberries).  Perhaps titles of towns and neighborhoods or geological phenomena do the same (Anacortes, Mt. Rainier, Hillyard, and Twisp; The Columbia, Steptoe Butte, and sharp columns of basalt, to name only a few).  Perhaps people—individuals or groups—make a “where” vivid in our minds (The Legion of Boom or the Wobblies, Chief Garry or Ken Griffey Junior, Jimmy Marks or Kurt Cobain, Hope Solo or Sherman Alexie, Bing Crosby or Cathy McMorris Rodgers—to name only a few). 

Using a controlled range of diction and some parameters regarding line and sound texture, we will form a supportive community to draft a poem that might reveal something about where we are and who we are.

Special thanks to Humanities Washington, ArtsWA, and the City of Spokane for recognizing the importance of poet laureate programs in our communities.

Authors
avatar for Tod Marshall

Tod Marshall

Tod Marshall is Washington State’s Poet Laureate and a professor at Gonzaga University. His books of poetry include Bugle, The Tangled Line, and Dare Say. He has also published a collection of his interviews with contemporary poets, Range of the Possible, and an attendant anthology... Read More →
avatar for Laura Read

Laura Read

Laura Read is Spokane’s second poet laureate, appointed to the position October, 2015. She is the author of the chapbook The Chewbacca on Hollywood Boulevard Reminds Me of You and the collection Instructions for My Mother’s Funeral, which won the 2011 AWP Donald Hall Prize... Read More →


Saturday April 16, 2016 3:30pm - 5:00pm PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201

3:30pm PDT

Synergy for the Lone Playwright: A Playwriting Workshop with Marc Beaudin

Theatre is perhaps the most collaborative art form. Directors, scenic designers, actors, lighting designers, costumers, sound engineers and makeup artists all work together toward a shared vision to create a living work of art. Throughout the process, they challenge and inspire each other. A creative spark in one field will open up new ideas and understandings in others. However, there is often one artist within the project who is isolated from this collaborative synergy: the playwright.

While some playwrights believe in the value of their isolation, assuming it results in their work being “pure” or “unadulterated,” I contend that they revel in their lonely garret to the detriment of their work and of the art of theatre. The greater the ability to listen and respond to the other artists involved, the stronger the synergistic effects will be. Developing a script with the director and actors who will eventually stage it provides a chance to test every line and action against the truth of performance.

But if this isn’t possible, what can be done? This workshop will explore techniques for gaining the benefits of collaboration even when one is working alone. We’ll discuss ways to tap into the writer’s imaginative powers to collaborate with hypothetical actors and to see one’s work as part of the grand, interlocking machinery of theatre. This will result not only in stronger writing, but ones more likely to find production.

We will also examine the roots of character, action, conflict and arc to determine what makes a scene – and how a scene is not a script and a script is not a play and a play is not theatre. We’ll discover what is needed for each of these building blocks to lead to the next. Finally, we’ll consider the value of subtext, mystery and uncertainty in creating true theatre.

$20 student, $30 general. Registration through BrownPaperTickets.com.

Saturday April 16, 2016 3:30pm - 5:30pm PDT
Spokane Convention Center 334 W Spokane Falls Blvd, Spokane, WA 99201
 
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