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Memoir Writing – Mine and refine your memories

mcclungnew25 Saturdays, Nov. 13-Dec. 18 (skip Nov. 27), 2-4:30 p.m.
$185 members/$215 others San Francisco

Note: This is a beginner’s class. If you have already started a memoir and want guidance at an intermediate level, Kathleen also offers a  Memoir Writing “Continuation” class.


Memoir is not reserved only for the rich and famous. In fact, beautiful and haunting memoirs—books and essays—grow out of our ordinary lives, carefully observed. Both the distant past and the not-so-long ago can be mined, remembered and re-created skillfully in writing. This class is a guide to the mining and refining process. “The gold of memoir,” says instructor Kathleen McClung, “combines the gifts of a novelist—vivid characters and settings, lively and suspenseful narration—with a poet’s introspection and close attention to language.

“In this class we’ll focus on finding and shaping evocative stories from our own lives, stories that build from our specific and unique life events and move toward resonant, universal themes. Through readings, discussions, and writing exercises, we’ll explore the basic elements of memoir: selecting key moments and passages, scene-setting and dialogue, using fresh sensory detail, reflecting and musing on the meanings of our experiences so that our work “speaks” to readers. We will find and fine-tune our own distinctive writing voices, essential for this genre.

Class participants will have opportunities to try their hand at writing and sharing short memoir pieces and will be guided in giving and receiving encouraging, constructive feedback for ways to develop/deepen the writing. Readings will include excerpts from Judith Barrington’s Writing the Memoir and Tristine Rainer’s Your Life as Story, as well as work by a variety of contemporary memoirists.”

Kathleen McClung has mentored hundreds of writers at Skyline College, the Writing Salon, and other colleges, and she has taught/advised student teachers in the credential program at Mills College. She has also edited books at small presses including UCSF Nursing Press, Food First Books, and Westview Press.  Her memoir, poetry, and fiction have been published in Poets 11, Bloodroot, Spirituality & Health, Poetry Northwest, The Rambler, Hot Flashes, and elsewhere, and her work has received awards from the Soul-Making Literary Competition, Memoirs Ink, Writers Digest, Sacramento Poetry Center, the National Society of Arts & Letters, and the Academy of American Poets. Kathleen coordinated the 2010 Women on Writing (WOW) community event and served as a reviewer for the 2010 William Saroyan International Prize for Writing.


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