Showing posts with label Mentor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mentor. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Grimes and Writing Center Readings

Be sure to come out to the Roosevelt Reading Series Event tonight to spend an evening with novelist, playwright, and memoirist, Tom Grimes. Read an excerpt of Mentor beforehand, and consider supporting your writer by picking up a copy at the Reading, which you can get signed at the dinner to follow. Mentor is freshly released by Tin House.

And tomorrow, dine on pizza and sip refreshments at the Halloween Reading hosted at the Writing Center (Room 650) from 4:30-6pm. Winners of the 2cd Annual Flash Fiction contest will be announced and their stories read. Writers were asked to write a story on fear--the results were not only stimulating, but also creepy and fantastic.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Interview with Tom Grimes

Tom Grimes will be visiting in a few weeks to partake in the Roosevelt Reading Series, as well as join our Creative Nonfiction II/III workshop for an evening.

In anticipation of his reading from
Mentor: a Memoir (a book about, among other things, late Iowa Writers' Workshop director Frank Conroy), here's a fascinating interview with Grimes via Bookslut. Interviewer JC Hallman writes, in a thoughtful introduction:
And Mentor, I think, beyond its telling portrait of an elusive personality (one absolutely essential to understanding the state of creative writing these days), is interesting precisely for the light it sheds on the art of memoir. It seems to me that memoir has too often become about writers creating disguises for themselves -- we learn after a book has appeared that exaggerations, omissions, or outright inventions catapult it from what we're currently comfortable categorizing as nonfiction. The book puts on too many clothes. I long for books that strive toward a kind of nakedness, regardless of fidelity to "facts." I long for a whole library that reveals rather than preens.
Tom Grimes is the author of five novels, a play, and a memoir. He edited "The Workshop: Seven Decades from the Iowa Writers Workshop," the creative writing program from which he graduated. He now directs the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Texas State University.