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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!sgiblab!cs.uoregon.edu!news.uoregon.edu!news.u.washington.edu!alex
- From: alex@biostat.washington.edu (Alex MacKenzie)
- Subject: Graduate School
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.225800.7666@u.washington.edu>
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Univ. of Wash.
- Distribution: na
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 22:58:00 GMT
- Lines: 44
-
- Ah, yes, I once contemplated grad school and the Creative Writing major.
- But the only real motive I had was to get into the academic system so I
- could land one of those mythical "cushy English professor" jobs which
- held a certain allure during my misguided youth.
-
- Now I know better. And I'm glad I never did it. (I work for professors
- now, and I would not want that life one little bit. The office politics and
- the tenure chase are very large and unpleasant aspects of the job.) I
- believe my eventual reasoning (on not going) went something like this:
- If I'm already a good writer, I don't need to go. If I'm not a good
- writer, and I go, and don't improve, and do get the Mythical Professor
- job, I'll end up being one of those creative writing instructors who has
- never been published (I knew a few of them--pathetic creatures they
- were, too). That would not be a good thing. The question then became:
- is there a way I can hone my skills and find out how good I am without
- spending 2 or more years and thousands of dollars on a graduate writing
- program? And the answer was, of course there is. It's called Clarion
- West. They DON'T limit the workshop to SF and fantasy, although that
- is definitely the focus. It's basically a 6-week writer's boot camp for
- "those on the verge of professionalism", in which you write and/or
- critique every day, with a different professional writer as your instructor
- for each week. This is the workshop at which Harlan Ellison traditionally
- makes students write a story a day, and if they don't turn one in, they
- don't get to critique the others' stories that day. A very intense
- experience, in which you receive approximately two years worth of
- writing instruction in a month-and-a-half. The critical feedback alone is
- worth it--you'll learn more about yourself and your abilities and
- capabilities than you ever thought possible, and you'll learn what it takes
- to be a successful writer. And it doesn't cost as much as an MFA.
-
- The simplest way to learn about writing, of course, is to write, send it
- out, and keep sending it out until you figure out what works. And read
- the sort of books you want to write, and STUDY them. This method
- takes a little longer, but it's a damn sight cheaper than either of the
- above.
-
- (You can also just keep rereading Crawford's posts on writing--they're
- full of damn good advice, on a level similar to the things I learned at
- Clarion.)
-
- Submit, Submit, Submit!
-
- Alex
-
-