Finding the Real Story: an exploration of the essential elements of story
for both fiction and nonfiction writers, begins October 7
with Anya Achtenberg

Join us for 10 sessions of intensive exploration of the essential elements of writing story, and for work on shaping these elements to embody the deeper truths and powerful emotions which move us into writing. We will work to explore the mystery of human behavior in story form, and develop ways to deepen characterization. We will work to discover plot—rather than be constricted by it. We will tap into the power of the visions and voices of our narrators and characters, and the mix of truth and fiction that creates a world both imagined and deeply real. We will explore narrative summary, active scene and dialogue, the workings of subtext; the power of your story’s context, the technique of simultaneity; dialogue; the music of prose; the story’s metaphor; revision. Begin new stories and discover ways to complete old ones in an atmosphere both supportive and challenging, with in-class and at-home writing explorations, and feedback aimed at helping each participant understand the scope of their own work.

v 10 Wednesdays, beginning October 7, 7:00-9:30 pm. Fee: $300.

v Lake Street and 39th Avenue South, Minneapolis, above the Blue Moon Cafe.

v For registration and more information, contact Anya at aachtenberg@gmail.com or 651.214.9248.

v See her website at www.anyaachtenberg.com

Anya is a master teacher. Her grasp of world writers and of craft allows her to liberate this knowledge…, so that we can learn to wield the pen with power.”
—Demetria Martinez, novelist (Mother Tongue), poet, memoirist, journalist
Contact aachtenberg@gmail.com ; 651.214.9248. See: http://anyaachtenberg.com/

Posted by Sherry - 21/09/09 - 0 comments

 

Posted by Sherry - 15/09/09 - 0 comments

 

Posted by Sherry - 15/09/09 - 0 comments

 

Bookmaking:  a six hour writing intensive workshop

to jumpstart and/or revitalize

your book project hosted by TRUE COLORS BOOKSTORE

 

 

 

  

 In this workshop we will explore creating your book, no matter what genre you have chosen—fiction (short stories/novel), memoir (prose/poetry).  We will examine the stories you need to tell in order to discover the theme of your project.  Emphasis will be on overall theme and how it affects organization, format, and production.  Discussion will also include the healing power of bookmaking.  This workshop is for writers who are interested in creating a book (chapbook, art book, literary book) no matter where you may be in the process (not yet begun, started, first draft, etc.).

 

Participants should bring with them their book in progress if they have one (poems, chapters, ideas, etc.).  Also any visual items that might enhance the book (possible cover art, documents or photos, etc.)   

 

$50 cash or check due the day of the workshop:

Saturday, September 26th, 10:00 am-4:00 pm
Register today by emailing squanlee@msn.com, limit twelve

Workshop location: True Colors Bookstore / 4755 Chicago Avenue / Minneapolis /MN /55407

 

Sherry Quan Lee approaches writing as a community resource and as culturally based art of an ordinary everyday practical aesthetic.  Author How to Write a Suicide Note:  serial essays that saved a woman’s life, Loving Healing Press, 2008 and Chinese Blackbird (Asian American Renaissance 2002/reprinted Loving Healing Press 2008).  www.SherryQuanLee.com

 

Kris Frykman is an artist, educator, healing arts counselor, writer and creativity coach. Community Faculty at Metropolitan State University since 2001 teaching Written and Visual Communication, Written and Visual Storytelling as Healing Arts, Writing II: Focus on Visual Communications, and Writing in Your Major. She’s currently coauthoring and editing a healthcare book.

Posted by Sherry - 12/09/09 - 0 comments

 

Where is Michael Moore?

 Healthcare; a love poem.

On the way to work this morning I thought about healthcare.  I asked myself, where are all of Obama’s supporters now?  We wanted change.  What are we willing to do for it?  I have done nothing but scratch my head and wonder what it is I can do.  I am a writer, I remind myself, and it may not be much, but I can write about healthcare in support of our President.

However, the hovering question that kept me alert in the worst traffic I’ve experienced since the beginning of summer and throughout the 15 minute detour delay was—the question bothering me was, where is Michael Moore?

I don’t lose friends quietly; I lose them in loud and unwinnable arguments.  I lost a friend because of Michael Moore.  Because I didn’t believe Michael Moore was god.  Because I didn’t believe Michael Moore has done more to help “working class” people than ……..  our definition of working class differing…..my belief that “working class” are more likely to be poor and less likely to be Moore’s audience, than the more likely less poor progressives who already understand and applaud Moore’s messages, thus a pat on the back for Moore, and a “we’re cool” pat on the back for the audience. I believe Moore isn’t a god, he’s a movie maker; he eats well, he lives well, etc.  The problem between my friend and I began when I sent a video that my sister sent me that happened to show another side of Mr. Moore (Mr. Moore not the movie maker).  My friend was outraged.  I learned, don’t slander a friend’s guru (it wasn’t slander, really), or if you do (I didn’t) be ready to lose that friend.  I’ve seen most, if not all, of Michael Moore’s movies.  I even own one or two.  But, I see him as human, like the rest of us.  And not at all perfect.

Still, on the way to work it dawned on me, where is Mr. Moore?  Immediately after seeing Sicko (June 2007), I would have liked to have gotten on a plane and moved to a country where I would be guaranteed healthcare!  That’s how convincing Moore’s movies can be.  But, I’m smart enough to know, after the popcorn is gone, and I’m home thinking how lucky I am I have good healthcare/including dental care because I am a State employee, that there are at least two, but most likely three or four or five slants to every story (I’m a creative writer, after all) and I shouldn’t pack my bags too quickly—has Mr. Moore packed his bags? 

Still, where is Michael Moore, presenter of doom, when President Obama is trying to promote change, trying to better the U.S. healthcare system–and needs all the Michael Moore help he can get?

I decided to find out.  One search on the internet, one click on one article by Mike Collett-White (Reuters) told me exactly where Mr. Moore might be—perhaps in Venice where his new movie premiered on Sunday, Capitalism:  A Love Story.  Moore is quoted as saying “Capitalism is an evil.  . . You have to eliminate it and replace it with something that is good for all people and that something is democracy.”

Moore is quoted as saying:  “Democracy is not a spectator sport, it’s a participatory event, . . . If we don’t participate in it, it ceases to be a democracy. So Obama will rise or fall based not so much on what he does but on what we do to support him.”

Is Moore participating in creating healthcare change, or just flaunting how bad our healthcare system is?  Am I participating in change, or just writing a solitary blog chastising a film maker who is good at making the U.S. look bad?

I am not a politician.  I don’t know much about politics.  But I do know I want to see healthcare change in America.  I want my friend who is now 43 years into living with diabetes, and no longer able to pay $900/month for healthcare which he has had to pay since he was laid off from yet another failed high tech communications business ($900 which doesn’t even cover all of his healthcare needs) and even though he has put hours of volunteer time into the healthcare industry hoping to find a new career, one he is passionate about, he has yet to be hired by anyone in the industry, perhaps because one’s experience living with the disease is not a line anyone wants to see on a resume.  Oh, don’t get me started.  Another friend is a writer who has never had healthcare, but is an artist dedicated to social justice and America needs writers to deliver the truth, but truth sayers are not necessarily well-loved citizens; yet they too, or maybe even more than most, deserve healthcare coverage.  I, like many friends I know who are nearing or past the age of 62, would love to retire and spend my time where my passions are; for example, getting people to write their stories (about the need for healthcare change). But I can barely dream (and I am a dreamer) of ever retiring before 65 when I become eligible (maybe I will still be eligible) for Medicare because healthcare goes out the window with “early” retirement; and then at 65 one must be able to afford supplemental healthcare insurance.  I’m digressing.

Where is the love?  I know it’s a cliché, but where is the love?  Why aren’t all of us who supported Obama for President not rallying now? Let’s make some noise, write some letters, march in the streets.  Do whatever we as individuals can do.  I am starting by writing this blog entry, it’s not much, but it’s something. 

This entry is a poem, a love poem.  Don’t let the format confuse you. 

Another lunch hour gone by.  I am posting my poem as is. I have some reading to do.  There’s a lot I don’t know about healthcare/reform.  If there’s one thing I can do now (well after work) is to  research, read, and try to sort fact from fiction.  And then, maybe I will write a poem that behaves like a poem.

Note:  My insurance is through Health Partners; here’s an interesting read about Minnesota’s Health Partners

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/economy/Health-co-ops-may-not-be-realistic-nationwide-57649247.html

 

Sherry Quan Lee

September 8, 2009

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by Sherry - 08/09/09 - 0 comments

 

WHAT IS THERAPY AND WHAT DOES LOVE HAVE TO DO WITH IT?

 

Tom Vogel recently wrote about St. Kate’s English professor, Geri Chavis, and the classes she teaches which focus on “therapy” (MinnPost.com, August 17, 2009 http://www.minnpost.com/from_our_partners/2009/08/17/10869/university_of_st_catherine_st_kates_engli).  Chavis’ work interests me because I believe writing saves lives. Karim Khan, book reviewer, claims, In several poems, Lee points to the therapeutic effect of writing as a life-saving habit

 ( http://blog.sherryquanlee.com/2009/08/ernest-dempsey-reviews-how-to/ ).   When I was interviewed by Karim Khan, I had the opportunity to express my thoughts about “therapy” (http://www.bookpleasures.com/websitepublisher/articles/941/1/Meet-Sherry-Quan-Lee-Author-of-How-to-Write-a-Suicide-Note-serial-essays-that-saved-a-womans-life-Reflections-of-America/Page1.html):

Ernest:

For you, and some other writers including myself, writing saves lives. And How to Write a Suicide Note is persistent on this point. One poem in the book specifically indicates [Because] Writing Saves Lives. Since you also teach writing, did you ever include writing as therapy in your lessons?

Sherry:

I taught a workshop Writing to Save Your Life, an interdisciplinary workshop for Women of Color. Some of the students from that workshop continue to write and share their stories. One of the students later taught a similar workshop, and she and another writer in her workshop (which I co-facilitated) are now managing the blog I started in conjunction with the first workshop! So, yes, in my classes, I introduce my belief that writing can save lives. However, writing as ‘therapy’ connotes something different for me:  it conjures a feeling that we need to be fixed. Instead, isn’t it the world that needs to be fixed? We must keep ourselves alive! Keep our stories alive! So together we can make a difference. I believe writing can be a necessary part of therapy, but therapy needs to be facilitated by professionals. While there are professional art therapists—I am not one.

There are many women of color writers who have saved my life. Their stories familiar-the anger, the pain, the confusion, the loneliness, the abuse, the struggle, the triumph, the beauty, the passion, the creativity, and the love. I use the work of other writers such as Jungian therapist Clarissa Pinkola Estés as well as my own writing, as writing prompts. I encourage students to write the often very difficult stories that allow them to let go of what needs to be let go of, in order to keep going!   Here’s a quote from Estés that I find inspiring:

“Creativity is not a solitary movement. That is its power. Whatever is touched by it, whoever hears it, sees it, senses it, knows it, is fed. That is why beholding someone else’s creative word, image, idea, fills us up, inspires us to our own creative work. A single creative act has the potential to feed a continent. One creative act can cause a torrent to break through stone”? (Women Who Run With Wolves, Ballantine Books, 1992, page 299)

I will never forget the angel I met at a Split Rock writing workshop. After introductions and at the end of the class she came up to me and asked if I was the Sherry Quan Lee that had read at the Loft some seven or eight years before. She went on to recite some lines from my poems! We might never know when we have touched someone’s life with our words, but our words can be transformative!  I keep some of the letters and notes from people whose lives I have touched. It is not narcissistic. It’s what I return to when I wonder what my purpose in life is. When I wonder if my life/my writing matters.  When I’m feeling low down. The kind words others have written to me save my life time and time again.

In Shay Youngblood’s Black Girl in Paris (Riverhead, 2000), Eden says:

“…and between my tears words began to bloom on the page, one after the other. Words crowded each other, trying to lead me out of despair. I was exuberant. The maps I’d made were guides to my interior. I remembered all the places I’d been, all the things I’d seen, and I caught them in my imagination. Jimmy was with me and Langston too. I wrote to understand where I had been, where I was going, to make sense of the world that had led me to the small room on the edge of the abyss.”

Writing by colorful women writers has kept me alive, along with my own writing. Writers like Audrey Lorde, Joy Harjo, Evelina Galang, Toi Derricotte, Nikki Giovanni, Cherrie Moraga, Gloria Anzaldúa, Wang Ping, Linda Hogan, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Eden Torres, bell hooks, Maxine Hong Kingston, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, Ana Castillo, and others have given me the courage to discover who I am as I continue to map my life through writing.

………………

English professor, Chavis, according to the article, is a board member of the National Association for Poetry Therapy.  My understanding, from Vogel’s article, is Chavis uses literature as the basis for therapy—stories and poems that students might connect with.  But it isn’t clear that she uses students’ own stories and poems. 

I believe writing our personal stories is the path to understanding, to making sense, and even to changing our life’s direction.  That said, what we write could be the story or poem that Chavis uses in her class at St. Catherine University in one of her therapy literature courses!  Chavis uses reading and discussion, but no place in the article is the act/the art of writing mentioned.  She said reading builds self esteem.  How can one disagree?  However I would fervently add, reading can’t happen without writing.  When I teach classes, both reading and writing are emphasized, the heavier emphasis being on the writing.  I also have taught at St. Catherine University.  I taught Creative Writing to healthcare students—a requirement at St. Kate’s.  I used literature such as The Diving Bell and the Butterfly by Jean-Dominique Bauby, and The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, as examples, but we focused on the students’ stories.

I am, after my writing is finished and ready to go public, thrilled when I read what someone else has written that says basically what I have said, but said differently. The great aha, twice, or thrice!  It’s all been said before, I’ve been told.  When I finished writing How to Write a Suicide Note serial essays that saved a woman’s life, I discovered my theme of getting rid of/killing off what is keeping me from living, so I can live, was a similar theme in Charissa Pinkola Estés’ book, Women Who Run With Wolves (a must read, by the way, for those of us who sometimes let creativity slip by the wayside for a myriad of reasons).  I wasn’t distraught that, oh darn, I have just written and published something not original; instead, I was thrilled that what I had discovered for me, had previously been discovered/or uncovered by someone else!

I am not sure reading literature could have literally saved my life the way my life was saved by my own writing (what makes something that has been written, literature?).  I wrote a suicide note, once, to my adult children.  As always, when I write something new, I read and reread it and reread it to make sense of it, to make it better–or, in this case, perhaps, to linger.  I believe the note kept me from dying. It spoke to me.  It challenged me. Death by my own hand wasn’t the legacy I wanted to leave my grown sons, nor was the suicide note.  And thank God because life, the birth of two incredible grandsons, is the gift I have recently been given.  Not to be overly sentimental, but I do believe writing saves lives. (Again, I am not a therapist and my suicide attempts were not from a clinically diagnosed depression.  I react.  Sometimes I overreact.  I am feather hitting stone.) Check out this entry from the Women of Color blog, October 2007, by me:

http://blog.lib.umn.edu/leexx065/writingmulticulturalidentity/

Stories that Save Lives

Leslie Marmon Silko in “The Storyteller’s Escape” (STORYTELLER, Seaver Books, 1981) wrote, “The storyteller keeps the stories / all the escape stories / she says ‘With these stories of ours / we can escape almost anything / with these stories we will survive.”

As a writer I often wonder if my writing gets better as my life gets better or if my life gets better as my writing gets better. I do know that I have been writing about identity for almost thirty years and the writing and the life depend on each other.

Gloria Anzaldua wrote in THIS BRIDGE CALLED MY BACK, “I write to record what others erase when I speak, to rewrite the stories others have miswritten about me, about you.”

I started writing about identity when I went to a feminist bookstore and realized there were no books about me, a mixed race woman, Black and Chinese. I wrote poem after poem which eventually became a chapbook, A LITTLE MIXED UP, published by Guild Press in the early 80s.

I write because I have to. If I didn’t write the silence would be unbearable. There would be no place for the anger, the pain, the loneliness to disappear. If I didn’t write love wouldn’t be possible.

Love is the essence of the mapping of who I am. My curriculum vitae is a map of my journey towards a holistic life. each line on my cv a blessing and a hope. I have other maps. My chapbook, A LITTLE MIXED UP; my memoir in verse, CHINESE BLACKBIRD published by Asian American Renaissance in 2002; and my almost completed manuscript, HOW TO WRITE A SUICIDE NOTE: serial essays that saved a woman’s life. Each map embraces all of who I am integrating race, class, gender, age, etc. into my stories.

Eden says in BLACK GIRL IN PARIS by Shay Youngblood, “…and between my tears words began to bloom on the page, one after the other. Words crowded each other, trying to lead me out of despair. I was exuberant. The maps I’d made were guides to my interior. I remembered all the places I’d been, all the things I’d seen, and I caught them in my imagination. Jimmy was with me and Langston too. I wrote to understand where I had been, where I was going, to make sense of the world that had led me to the small room on the edge of the abyss.”

Writing by colorful women writers has kept me alive, along with my own writing. Writers like Audrey Lorde, Joy Harjo, Evelina Galang, Toi Derricotte, Nikki Giovanni, Cherrie Moraga, Gloria Anzaldua, Wang Ping, Linda Hogan, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Eden Torres, bell hooks, Maxine Hong Kingston, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, Ana Castillo, etc., etc. etc. have given me the courage to discover who I am as I continue to map my life through writing.

http://www.tc.umn.edu/~leexx065/recommend.html

 

What is therapy?  How does literature cure/cure what/cure who?  What ails us, what ails the world?  I read and I write, both help me survive; and I pray that in some small way, I have contributed to the healthiness of a nation/of a world.

 

First draft/another love poem:

 

What is therapy and what does it have to do with love?

 

Exercise.  Walking.  Running.  Biking.  Swimming.  Eating.  Not eating.  Bowling.  Dancing.  Yes, dancing.  Doing.  Not doing.  Dreaming…..Delving.  Monkey mind.  The art of writing.  Words.  Stories.  My stories.  Music.  Rhythm.  Melody.  Repetition.  The Amen.  The Hallelujah.  The exclamation.  Travelling.   Ranting.  Beatitudes.  Beckoning.  Forever.  Living.  Your stories.  Poetry.  Compassion.

 

Sherry Quan Lee

September 1, 2009

 

Comments welcome?  How has writing saved your life?  How have other writers’ stories saved your life?  What works of literature do you recommend?

Posted by Sherry - 01/09/09 - 2 comments