Sorry I didn’t post much last week, and I’m sorry I missed a reply to the entry about listening.
I was busy last week working on a story and preparing for the inaugural Storyteller Ranch Dallas MothUp (the theme was “Love Hurts”):
Christopher Gronlund from Marcel Cairo on Vimeo.
Anthony Wendell says
Chris you are a natural storyteller, great job. I hope you keep doing this.
At school we have something called The Writers Project which brings writers to campus to read and talk about their work. This semester they changed things up a little bit by inviting oral storytellers. I’ve attended a couple of these sessions and it was a great experience, there’s something personal and intimate about this kind of storytelling.
http://writersproject.sunyacc.edu/
Christopher Gronlund says
Thank you, Anthony. I’m telling another story this Friday (March 19). I really enjoy writing a couple pages to get the story down, recording it to see how long it takes me, and then going through the story over and over during my cool down walk after jogging.
The Writer’s Project sounds very cool. The one creative writing class I took required that we read 5 novels over the semester. I was more interested in writing, though. I understood the instructor’s reasons for making us read (it’s important for writers to read), but I deliberately avoided reading at that time. (Although I did read Vonnegut’s Cat’s Cradle for the class.)
When I explained to the instructor that I deliberately avoided reading because I was 21 and didn’t want to be too influenced by what I read, she told me I could satisfy the “reading” assignments by attending a week-long series of lectures with writers at Southern Methodist University.
It was worth the drive each night. I got to see Ray Bradbury speak, meet a poet laureate (Howard Nemerov), and hear a comedic writer talk about his process. I did leave early during the lecture of a playwright…he was just reading everything and not speaking, and he talked more about himself. And there was one other writer who focused on essays. She was very nervous, but had some good moments in her talk.
That week of hearing writers speak was a huge influence on me.
I’m glad you have something like that where you are.