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Shop for Classes (listed alphabetically by title)

Memberships

For a one-time fee of $50, you can become a lifetime member of the Writing Salon, which entitles you to pay the discounted rate. Add the membership to your shopping cart, then click on “Continue Shopping” and add the class or classes that you want to take, being sure to select the “Member” payment option for each class that you choose. When you are finished shopping, proceed to checkout.

$50.00Price:
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Gift Certificates

A gift certificate is good for up to one year.

You have five options to choose from: 1) $55 for any half-day workshop, 2) $95 for any full-day workshop, 3) $185 for a 5-week class, or 4) $335 for a 9-week class, 5) $50 for a membership.

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You must use YOUR name on the checkout form, because your name is on the credit card you are using to make the purchase. However, you can put the gift recipient's name and email address in the spaces further down on the checkout form that ask for: "Name of Student, if Different from Person Paying" and "Email of Student, if Different from Person Paying." That way we will know who the gift certificate is for, for our records. But the automated purchase confirmation and receipt emails will go only to you, the purchaser.

We don't send printed or emailed gift certificates. You will need to present the gift to your recipient in the form of a card, note or verbal communication.

Gift recipients can then simply call the Writing Salon, give us their name (we keep a records of gift certificates that have been purchased), and tell us which workshop they want to take. If they want to take a longer class, they can simply pay the additional amount. Please remember, gift certificates are good for only one year from date of purchase.


$55.00Price:
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Approaching Difficult Material with Craft and Courage - Ruth Schwartz: 5 Tuesdays, Oct. 12-Nov. 9, 7-9:30 p.m. Berkeley

Writing about physical illness, emotional pain, childhood trauma, addiction, and other difficult circumstances can present writers with some unique challenges, and also some unique opportunities.

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How can we ensure that deeply personal writing will be compelling and even luminous for our readers? How can we avoid getting mired in emotional or linguistic ruts? That’s where both the craft and the courage come in!

“When we dive consciously and skillfully into personally difficult material, whatever the genre, we can deepen our ability to see and hold complexity, name truth, and, ultimately, connect with our readers – as well as with ourselves – more powerfully,” says instructor Ruth L. Schwartz.

“Poet Bruce Weigl says, ‘Say it clearly and you make it beautiful, no matter what.’ In this class, we’ll explore what kinds of clarity – and what kinds of beauty – Weigl is referring to. We’ll explore ways to cultivate the breadth and depth that the best writing requires of us. And, in the process, we just may help ourselves heal.

"This class will offer a variety of resources, approaches and techniques to help you cultivate both depth and craft. You’ll read and discuss published examples of extraordinary personal writing, including poetry by Bruce Weigl, Sharon Olds and Robert Hass, and prose by Joy Harjo and Lauren Slater. In-class and take-home writing exercises will offer multiple ways to approach material effectively. You’ll use tools like visualization and humor, "and in the process," says Ruth, "we’ll find ways to honor the enormous, messy, magnificent complexity of our truths – and write them well. Ultimately, we’ll expand the range of (e)motion available to us, as writers and as human beings."

Note: 10 CEUs are available for licensed MFTs or LCSWs.

Ruth L. Schwartz is the author of four award-winning books of poems, including Edgewater, a 2001 National Poetry Series winner selected by Jane Hirshfield. Her memoir, Death in Reverse, documents the year following her donation of a kidney to her former partner. Her poems and essays have appeared frequently in The Sun (sometimes under a pseudonym, at the editors’ request), and she has received numerous literary fellowships, honors and prizes. Ruth is currently a Distinguished Visiting Writer in the low-residency M.F.A. program at Ashland University and also teaches privately. In addition, she is a practicing hypnotherapist and shaman who honors and wrestles with pain, beauty and truth in all their disguises.


$215.00Price:
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Blogging for Writers - Britt Bravo, Saturday, Oct. 23rd, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Berkeley

What do Gayle Brandeis, Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez, Gretchen Rubin, Samantha Wilde, Carolyn Rubenstein, Kimberly Wilson, Lisa Sonora Beam, Temra Costa, Bryant Terry, Beth Kanter, and Keri Smith have in common?  They are all published authors who blog.

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"One of the best ways to try out new ideas and build an audience for your writing is to start a blog," says instructor Britt Bravo. "The first thing a publisher is going to ask you is, 'Do you have a platform?' A blog, combined with other social media tools like Twitter and Facebook, is a great way to build it."

During the class you'll learn how to:

- Pick the best blogging platform for you
- Choose blog post topics that are engaging for your readers and fun for you to write
- Increase traffic and community engagement
- Listen to what other people are saying about your "brand" online
- Find your blogging tribe
- Use social media tools like Facebook, Twitter, and Flickr in conjunction with your blog
- Find time to write
- Measure your success

"You'll walk away with a blogging plan that you can start tomorrow," says Bravo.

Britt Bravo is a blogger, podcaster, creative career coach, and social media consultant for artists, creative entrepreneurs and nonprofits. She began blogging in 2005 with the launch of her personal blog, Have Fun * Do Good. Since then, she has written for the Huffington Post, WEtv’s WE Volunteer blog, BlogHer, NetSquared, the Stanford Social Innovation Review Opinion Blog, WorldChanging, The Extraordinaries, and the Global Center for Cultural Entrepreneurship blog. She also produces the Big Vision Podcast, and the Arts and Healing Podcast. In 2007, the East Bay Express named her the Best Podcaster/Blogger Most Dedicated to Social Change. Britt is a frequent speaker about blogging and social media, and has presented at events such as the Bioneers, BlogHer Conference, Ladies Who Launch, Stanford Women’s Leadership Conference, Writing for Change Conference, and San Francisco Writer’s Conference. For more information about her work, go to www.brittbravo.com.


$110.00Price:
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Books to the Sky: Writing for Children - Lindsey Alexander: 5 Thursdays, Oct. 11-Nov. 8 , 7-9:30 p.m. San Francisco

“The greatest stories we read as children still live large in our memories,” says Lindsey Alexander. “From Charlotte’s Web to Harry Potter to Where the Wild Things Are, the books we discover as children shape us, inspire us to read on, and maybe even turn us into writers.”

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If you’re eager to share a story with the next generation of readers, this workshop will stoke your creative fire, hone your writing craft, and give you invaluable insight into the world of children’s publishing. Whether you’re interested in picture books, chapter books, or young adult novels, this class will help you to begin new projects or further develop projects that you’ve already begun.

Class time will be divided between workshopping and in-depth discussion of strategies for getting published. You’ll learn the ins and outs of the children’s book market — how to find and approach editors and agents, how to write stand-out query letters, how to craft submissions that shine, what to do when an editor or agent requests revisions, and how to negotiate for a higher advance.

Every week, students will submit pages from a work-in-progress, or responses to weekly writing prompts. “We’ll examine what makes writing books for children different than writing books for adults,” says Lindsey. “We’ll also explore how to find a voice that young readers will love. And at the end of the course, you will have the option to submit a query letter and your work to me for additional critique.”

As a child, Lindsey Alexander wrote fan mail to her favorite authors and illustrators, a number of whom, she says “amazingly wrote back.” Years later, as an editor at HarperCollins Children’s Books, she had the pleasure of collaborating with some of these same talented people. Among the authors she’s worked with are Sarah Weeks, Laura Numeroff, Jean Craighead George, and William Joyce. Lindsey holds an MFA from The New School University and has taught at The New School and the Monterey Bay Writers Studio. As an editorial consultant, she works with a variety of clients, including both trade and academic publishers, and literary agencies.


$215.00Price:
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Discovering Your Poetry - Alison Luterman, 5 Tuesdays, Nov. 16th-Dec. 14th, 7-9:30 p.m. Berkeley

“Many beginning students come to a poetry class hoping for quick critiques and suggestions for revision.  There are times when it’s right to want this, but not until you’re nearing the final draft,” says Alison Luterman.

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" The first ten, twenty or hundred times writing and revising the poem are a discovery process. What more is there underneath the poem? What leaps can you make? What gems can you uncover?

"A poem is a nest built out of the twigs and ribbons of ordinary words. Poets are like magpies — stealing images, details, scraps of dialogue, and the flotsam and jetsam of everyday life to construct their nests, nests that enable consciousness to fly."

In this class, you will spend some time giving and receiving feedback, says Alison, but the main focus will be on in-class writing exercises and discussions to help you generate more and better material. You will focus on process over product, on going deeper rather than rushing to find closure.

Alison Luterman's first book of poems, The Largest Possible Life, was published by Cleveland State University Press. Her second book See How We Almost Fly won the Pearl Poetry Prize in 2008 and is now available from Pearl Editions. Two of her poems appear on The Library of Congress website as part of the Poetry 180 project that former poet laureate Billy Collins initiated. One of her poems was featured for several years on BART in the mid-90's and another poem, "I Confess" was on view for commuters in Portland's public transit system. She has had poems published in many magazines and anthologies, including The Sun, Poetry East, Oberon, Kalliope, The Brooklyn Review, Salt River Review and others. She has taught poetry to thousands of children through California Poets in the schools, and to adults at Esalen Institute, Omega Institute, the Santa Barbara Writer's Conference, and The Mendocino Coast Writer's Conference.


$215.00Price:
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Fiction Workshop: Sharpen Your Storytelling Skills - Elaine Beale, 9 Thursdays, Oct. 14-Dec. 16 (skip Nov. 25), 7-9:30 p.m. Berkeley

In this busy, over-stimulating world it can be difficult to set aside the time to write—even if it’s the thing we want to do more than anything else. Working with a supportive teacher and a group of enthusiastic peers can help balance the solitude demanded by writing.

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And meeting regularly with fellow writers also helps us increase our commitment and hone our writing skills.

In this class students will submit their work for feedback and be guided through the process of revision. They’ll learn about the strengths of their short stories or novel excerpts and they’ll receive input on what needs more work. Students will also discuss the various aspects of craft, and look at some pieces from published writers. A few short exercises may also be assigned to help students generate new work and put into practice what they learn in class.

“Becoming a better writer means learning about the craft from other writers,” says instructor Elaine Beale. “But it also means finding and staying true to your own style and voice. In this workshop, we’ll seek to respect the unique voice of each participant while helping him or her write with more power, more confidence, and ultimately greater impact on the reader.”

“For those who are having trouble generating new work,” adds Elaine, “there’ll be deadlines and exercises to provide inspiration. For those who are more prolific but need guidance through the process of revision, there’ll be extensive feedback to help with rewrites. And for everyone, there’ll be lots of thought-provoking discussion about what makes good fiction. I always like to make my workshops stimulating, lively and fun.”

Elaine Beale's most recent novel, Another Life Altogether, has received positive reviews from the Boston Globe, Lambda Literary, and Publishers Weekly, and was featured in Oprah Magazine as one of the ten must-read books of March 2010. Elaine has taught creative writing for more than a decade and is also teaching one-day Writing Salon workshops on plot, character development, inspiring the muse, and mystery writing.


$365.00Price:
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Inspiring the Muse - Elaine Beale, Saturday, Nov. 6th, 10 a.m.-4 p.m, Berkeley

Had a difficult time making time to write even though you know you want to? Perhaps you feel uninspired or don’t quite know what it is you want to write about.

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Or maybe you need a boost to your creativity that will help your words flow.

“We live such busy lives,” says instructor Elaine Beale. “Demands come at us from all directions. It can be very challenging to make the time to write. Besides, writing creatively requires a level of inner stillness and disconnection from the busyness that surrounds us. Sometimes we simply need to take a day to reconnect with our creative selves.

“This workshop will be chock-full of discussions and exercises designed to jump-start participants’ writing and reignite their imaginations. It will be a supportive and inspiring place where creative sparks will fly and you’ll get lots down on the page.”

Elaine will also provide advice and materials designed to help participants maintain a writing practice after the workshop is over. “Ideally,” she says, “I want everyone to leave with a renewed commitment to their creative selves, as well as concrete techniques that will help them convert that commitment to actual writing.”

Elaine Beale's most recent novel, Another Life Altogether, has so far received positive reviews from the Boston Globe, Lambda Literary, and Publishers Weekly, and was featured in Oprah Magazine as one of the ten must-read books of March 2010. Elaine has taught creative writing for more than a decade and is also teaching our Berkeley Novel Writing class, as well as occasional short workshops on plot development and mystery writing.


$110.00Price:
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Intro to Creative Writing: Having Fun with the Fundamentals - Aurora Brackett, 5 Saturdays, Nov. 13th-Dec. 18 (5 weeks, skip Nov. 27), 10:30 a.m-1 p.m., Berkeley

“I believe that anyone can learn to write well and really enjoy the process,” says Aurora Brackett. “Writing isn’t a gift bestowed by magic. It’s a practice.  And in the busy lives we lead it is hard to make time to practice. This class will give you that time.”

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For five weeks you will live as writers, paying attention to the world around you and translating your experience (and imaginations) into language. “Our classroom will be a creativity laboratory,” says Aurora. “We’ll do writing exercises, read aloud, look at art, listen to music, study maps and old photographs, tell jokes and make up fables. We’ll read stories, poems and personal essays and take them apart to see how they work. You’ll learn to take notes and to pay attention to detail as you go through your days — observing crowds in airports, the facial expressions of a Safeway cashier, a story overheard on the bus. The exercises and assignments I give will help you put it all together: vivid details, imagination, structure and voice.

“Our classroom will also become a community. We’ll listen to each other’s work and exchange feedback. Along the way we’ll talk about our obstacles and triumphs. I’ll bring in essays by authors about their writing practices, to give us perspective. Our conversations about the process of writing will help you to stay motivated, to keep writing even after the class is over.”

You don’t need to have any experience in writing to take this class. Most people come here simply with a desire to write. They leave with a community of writers to support them, work they are proud of, and a strong sense of their own innate creativity.

Aurora Brackett loves to teach as much as she loves to write. She has an MFA in Creative Writing from San Francisco State University (where she received a Wilner Award for Short Fiction) and has taught there, at Johns Hopkins University and at College of Alameda. Her stories and poems have been published or are forthcoming in Cosmopsis Quarterly, Alimentum Journal, Tinfish, The Portland Review and Fourteen Hills. She has been awarded residencies at the Vermont Studio Center and Hedgebrook.


$185.00Price:
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Intro to Fiction/Starting Your Novel "Combo" Special - Junse Kim/Karen Bjorneby, Sundays, Oct. 10-Dec. 12 (10 weeks), 2-4:30 p.m, Berkeley

These are two great classes for beginners. You can also  come back later on and take our follow-up combo: Fiction Writing/Novel Writing.

$365.00Price:
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Intro to Fiction: Laying the Foundation - Junse Kim, Sundays, Oct. 10th to Nov. 7th (5 weeks), 2-4:30, Berkeley

We writers too often need others to tell us that our writing is good,” says instructor Junse Kim. “And this is where it all goes horribly wrong. We become impatient for praise, obsessed with completing a story before learning the basic skills we need to write it.

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It’s the equivalent of, say, an aspiring carpenter who has committed to building a beautiful house, yet doesn’t know how to hammer in a nail or saw a piece of wood.”

In this class, you’ll develop concrete skills and narrative techniques through fun writing exercises designed to help you master your craft. At the end of five weeks, you’ll have a better grip on how to use these techniques (for developing character, setting and plot) as tools for building your story. The class will also analyze other narrative genres, from movie scenes to comic books, to analyze storytelling skills you can apply to your fiction writing.

NOTE: We used to always tell people to take this class BEFORE taking the 9-week Fiction Workshop. However, we’ve discovered that some people have actually found it just as valuable to take the 9-week Fiction Workshop first, and this one second! In fact, Junse has had quite a few MFA creative writing graduates who take this “intro” class — and, of course, they’ve already taken tons of other fiction writing classes! So it’s really up to you. We don’t have any strict “rules” about it.

Junse Kim, like many Writing Salon students, didn’t begin to pursue a writing life until well after graduating from college. Before ever taking a writing class, he worked as a concert promoter, Peace Corps volunteer, managerial consultant, scriptwriter, nonprofit fundraiser, and “full-time” temp. He has since received a Pushcart Prize (for his short story Yangban), a Faulkner Award, and the Philip Roth Residence in Creative Writing at Bucknell University. His fiction and creative nonfiction have been published in the Ontario Review, ZYZZYVA, and Cimarron Review, as well as two anthologies: Pushcart Prize XXVII and Echoes Upon Echoes: New Korean American Writing.


$215.00Price:
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Keep Them Guessing: The Art of Mystery Writing - Elaine Beale, Saturday, Oct. 16th, 10 a.m.-4 p.m, Berkeley

Mysteries are one of the most popular and diverse genres in fiction today.  They sell by the millions and hundreds of authors have established long and successful careers in mystery writing.

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The contemporary mystery offers immense opportunities for the creation of quirky protagonists, unusual settings, stories with social or political relevance, and even for books that put new twists on the genre or that seem to defy the demands of the genre altogether. Nevertheless, writing a mystery demands certain key skills and a knowledge of what works in this particular area of fiction.

If you want to try your hand at a mystery novel, or have already started but aren’t sure how to pull it all together, this workshop will get you going and give you tips re: how to stay on track. “We’ll look at the key issues that make a mystery successful,” says instructor Elaine Beale, “from developing a compelling protagonist and maintaining momentum, to creating a plausible, keep-them-guessing-to-the-end plot.”

Elaine Beale’s first novel, Murder in the Castro, was published in 1997, and her second, Another Life Altogether, was released by Random House this year and has received positive reviews from the Boston Globe, Lambda Literary, and Publishers Weekly. It was also featured in Oprah Magazine as one of the ten must-read books of March 2010. Elaine has taught creative writing for more than a decade and is also leading one-day Writing Salon workshops on plot, character development and inspiring the muse.


$110.00Price:
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Raw Writing - Jamey Genna, 5 Mondays, Nov. 15-Dec. 13: 7-9:30 p.m. Berkeley

“Not long ago I was feeling distant and unconnected from my writing,” says instructor Jamey Genna, “trying too hard to create a finished product even before I had more than a rough beginning.

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I was also encountering a lot of writing friends who were stalled in their work: novelists who had written the first 50 pages and then stopped themselves by doing constant revision; short story writers who had ideas for stories but no inspiring atmosphere or time to sit down and put pen to paper. I decided it might be time for me to: 1) put a hold on studying craft, 2) stop revising so much, and 3) get back to generating more new material.

Raw Writing is a class that won’t leave you feeling raw. In this one-day version of Jamey's upcoming 5-week Raw Writing class (Nov. 15th-Dec. 13th), you'll use visualization and relaxation techniques, along with both short and longer timed writing exercises, to put the joy of discovering fresh new material back into the writing process. You’ll also read some snippets of short fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry for inspiration. "This class will be about generating the rough, unrefined stuff, without judgment or criticism," says Jamey. "Don’t get me wrong, the act of revision has its place, but this class is about energizing your writing with exercises that will give you new, raw material. You’ll be able to share what you feel like sharing, look for that sentence or paragraph that calls out to you, and reconnect with the initial act of creation."

Whether you are a new or experienced writer, you can come to this class to gather more raw, uncooked "ingredients," and worry about cooking them later!

Jamey Genna received her masters in writing from the USF, where she is also a major projects advisor. Her short fiction has been in many literary magazines including Storyglossia, Cutthroat, Dislocate, Shade, Pinyon, and Georgetown Review. Her short story “Stories I heard when I went home for my grandmother’s funeral” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her collection of fiction Nobody Has to Die for It to Tell You Something was both a finalist for the Ontario Prize and a semifinalist for the Iowa Prize. Her collection of short-short fiction I’ll Tell You That Story in a Minute was a finalist for the 2007 Elixir Press Chapbook Awards.


$215.00Price:
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Raw Writing - Jamey Genna, Saturday, Oct. 9th, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (with a break for lunch, cafe on premises) Berkeley

“Not long ago I was feeling distant and unconnected from my writing,” says instructor Jamey Genna, “trying too hard to create a finished product even before I had more than a rough beginning.

Additional DescriptionMore Details

I was also encountering a lot of writing friends who were stalled in their work: novelists who had written the first 50 pages and then stopped themselves by doing constant revision; short story writers who had ideas for stories but no inspiring atmosphere or time to sit down and put pen to paper. I decided it might be time for me to: 1) put a hold on studying craft, 2) stop revising so much, and 3) get back to generating more new material.

Raw Writing is a class that won’t leave you feeling raw. In this one-day version of Jamey's upcoming 5-week Raw Writing class (Nov. 15th-Dec. 13th), you'll use visualization and relaxation techniques, along with both short and longer timed writing exercises, to put the joy of discovering fresh new material back into the writing process. You’ll also read some snippets of short fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry for inspiration. "This class will be about generating the rough, unrefined stuff, without judgment or criticism," says Jamey. "Don’t get me wrong, the act of revision has its place, but this class is about energizing your writing with exercises that will give you new, raw material. You’ll be able to share what you feel like sharing, look for that sentence or paragraph that calls out to you, and reconnect with the initial act of creation."

Whether you are a new or experienced writer, you can come to this class to gather more raw, uncooked "ingredients," and worry about cooking them later!

Jamey Genna received her masters in writing from the USF, where she is also a major projects advisor. Her short fiction has been in many literary magazines including Storyglossia, Cutthroat, Dislocate, Shade, Pinyon, and Georgetown Review. Her short story “Stories I heard when I went home for my grandmother’s funeral” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her collection of fiction Nobody Has to Die for It to Tell You Something was both a finalist for the Ontario Prize and a semifinalist for the Iowa Prize. Her collection of short-short fiction I’ll Tell You That Story in a Minute was a finalist for the 2007 Elixir Press Chapbook Awards.


$110.00Price:
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Screenwriting Workshop - Terrel Seltzer, Sundays, Oct. 17-Dec. 19 (9 weeks, skip Nov. 21), 7-9:30 p.m. Berkeley

“At some point, every produced screenwriter, whether working in Hollywood or in the Independents, wrote a “calling card” script – the one that got them noticed and out of the slush pile on to the production list,” says Terrel Seltzer.

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"In this class I’ll give practical, de-mystifying advice from a veteran screenwriter’s experience, focusing on three crucial elements to help aspiring writers get a foot in the door: 1) Concepts that sell: the need for a “strange attractor,” which is often called “the high concept idea,” 2) Characters that actors will vie to play: “structuring both the outer journey (physical plot) and the inner journey (emotional arc) of your protagonist hero, and 3) Conflict: how to get it, because a screenplay has to have it (and most beginner’s scripts don’t).

"My approach is to teach by personal example, to provide a professional insider’s look at the screenwriting process. By studying scripts of well-known movies and referencing my own current script-in-progress, I’ll demonstrate how to choose a premise that actually has a fighting chance, and then how to story map that concept, character build, sequence and outline the narrative, and ultimately start writing a screenplay. Class writing assignments (for those who want to do them) will encourage students to develop an idea, or to hone an already written screenplay into a calling card script."

Terrel Seltzer is a self-taught screenwriter. She learned the craft by watching and outlining literally hundreds of movies. Her career started in the Bay Area, working with SF director Wayne Wang, for whom she wrote the screenplays for the independent films Chan is Missing and Dim Sum. Her two produced Hollywood screenplays are How I Got into College (with Lara Flynn Boyle and Anthony Edwards) and One Fine Day (with Michelle Pfeiffer and George Cloony). Currently, she has two scripts in development: Magick written for director Robert Zemeckis at Dreamworks, and Foolproof, a spec script recently optioned by Warner Brother Classics.


$365.00Price:
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Starting Your Novel - Karen Bjorneby, 5 Sundays, Nov. 14-Dec. 12, 2-4:30, Berkeley

You want to write a novel, or you are writing a novel, but . . .

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maybe you shy away from talking about it with your co-workers, neighbors or brother-in-law (you know the way he rolls his eyes and calls you a dreamer). So come to this workshop instead, where you’ll meet other people who are doing what you’re doing, or want to do. “We’ll talk about your idea, how to make sure it has enough weight to carry a novel,” say Karen Bjorneby. “We’ll talk about your character and make sure she’s so compelling we all can’t wait to find out what she’ll do next. . . what changes is she going to go through along the way? We’ll talk about plot; how are you going to make enough things happen? Or how are you going to keep from being melodramatic? We’ll talk about structure—how do you organize this huge thing and not get overwhelmed?

“We’ll share tips on the process, on getting the pages written, on keeping going, on when to go back and revise and when to keep moving ahead. And of course we’ll be talking about the nuts and bolts of craft—making your scenes work and your voice sing.”

With the help of various writing exercises, class members will work on developing written plot summaries, making sure there’s enough action and enough character development. “Our goal is to get you so close to your main character you’ll know all his secrets, hopes, fears, dreams…better than his own therapist would!” says Karen “We’ll also do writing exercises to help you connect with your setting. And we’ll share what you’ve written, so that you’ll get feedback on your craft, your style, and on that special quality you bring to your writing that makes it uniquely yours.”

Karen Bjorneby started writing by participating in workshops just like this one. She is the author of Hurricane Season: Stories from the Eye of the Storm, which received a Foreword Honorable Mention as best independent/university press short story collection of the year at Book Expo America. She has received a Pushcart Special Mention, two other Pushcart nominations, a National Magazine Award nomination, and she was named a Tennessee Williams Scholar at the Sewanee Writers’ Conference. Her fiction and poetry have appeared in nearly two dozen publications including The Threepenny Review, The North American Review, New Letters, StoryQuarterly, Confrontation, The New Orleans Review, The Nebraska Review, and The Sun. She is currently at work on her own novel and is “very familiar with the pitfalls along the way, having fallen into several of them myself.”


$215.00Price:
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Write from Real Life: Personal Essays & Memoirs - Alison Luterman, 9 Wednesdays, Oct. 13-Dec. 15 (9 weeks, skip Nov. 24), 7-9:30 p.m. Berkeley

This class will help you plunge into the personal themes that make your real life stories uniquely yours.

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For the first four weeks, instructor Alison Luterman will lead carefully crafted writing exercises designed to elicit the undertones and overtones that give events resonance and elevate anecdotes into the realm of art. The latter weeks will be dedicated to refining and then workshopping the pieces you have begun, bringing them to the next level of craft.

"Every one of us is neck-deep in the middle of our own long and winding stories, stories that, when shared, can help us bridge the gap between ourselves and the rest of the world," says Alison. "What's wonderful about finding and honing these stories - about being a writer, in fact, is that...it redeems everything, even the moment of burning shame when you flunked the driving test three times, even the fact that you could never decide what you wanted to be when you grew up. It reminds you that once you were twenty and limber and unafraid to sleep in the cornfield when hitchhiking across France. And, like the smell of fresh coffee or a first kiss, it heightens the senses. We'll workshop your essays or memoir excerpts from the standpoint of craft, voice, and structure, using the techniques of fiction writing, playwriting, and even poetry to enliven your writing."

Alison Luterman has been shamelessly telling tales from her own life ever since she could grip a sweaty pencil. She has published essays in The Sun, Radiance, Response, The East Bay Express, and The Boston Phoenix. Her book of poems, The Largest Possible Life, won The Cleveland State University Poetry Prize, and a recent poem, "The Quilts from Gee's Bend, Alabama," won the latest Writer's Digest poetry award. Her play, Saying Kaddish with My Sister will be produced in January of '08 by the Jewish Ensemble Theatre of Michigan. She has taught poetry to thousands of school children through California Poets in the schools, and is an adjunct creative writing instructor at New College. She also performs improvisational dance, singing, storytelling and poetry through the Wing It! performance ensemble. She has given workshops and readings around the country.


$365.00Price:
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Writing Historical Fiction - Jess Wells, 5 Saturdays, Nov. 13-Dec. 18 (skip 11/27), 2-4:30 p.m. Berkeley

Whether you’re intrigued by Norse settlements, your own grandmother’s journey to America, or an imaginary character from a far-away time, historical fiction can be an enchanting new outlet for your writing, transporting you and your writing into worlds that are incredibly fun to create.

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This introductory workshop will clue you in to the unique requirements for writing historical fiction, and set you up for a successful journey into this increasingly popular genre.

Do you want to reintroduce a little-known hero/heroine into popular culture? Would you like to tell the sweeping saga of your own family's struggle in America? And since any story more than 50 years in the past is considered historical fiction, even your own childhood tale could be the source of your inspiration.

"You can't just throw a tapestry over the flat screen TV in your scene and call it historical," says instructor Jess Wells. "There are real differences between modern life and life in the past, which require real differences in your writing. That challenge, to me, is the greatest thing about this genre: it's like a three-dimensional chess game – the bottom layer is the character's story, the middle layer is the unique historical setting and events, and the top layer is the language.

"Each week we'll discuss an aspect of the craft of historical fiction, investigate research opportunities, and examine a different section of one of the greats of historical fiction: Perfume: The Story of a Murderer by Patrick Suskind. I'll give you take-home writing exercises to help you brainstorm and move your work along. I'll also set aside time at the end of each class to look at your specific projects, in terms of plot development, character development, or research requirements.

"My goal is to help you identify an era and an area that speak to you. Maybe you'd like to reintroduce a little-known hero or heroine into popular culture. Or tell the sweeping saga of your own family's struggle in America. And since any story more than 50 years old is considered historical fiction, you might even be able to use your own childhood as a source of your inspiration. The possibilities are endless!"

Jess Wells is the author of thirteen volumes of work, including the novel The Mandrake Broom (Firebrand, 2007), which dramatizes the fight to save medical knowledge during the witch-burning times in Europe 1465-1540. Her work on The Mandrake Broom earned her a San Francisco Arts Commission Grant for Literature to write her second historical novel, which will chronicle the early years of Christine de Pizan in the French court of Charles V. Her short stories, essays, and erotica are included in more than three dozen literary anthologies, journals, university curricula, and she is a four-time finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards. Jess has also taught this workshop at the Saints and Sinners Literary Conference, the Golden Crown Literary Conference, and at Other Words in Florida.


$215.00Price:
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Writing Historical Fiction - Jess Wells, Saturday, Oct. 30th, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Berkeley

Whether you’re intrigued by Norse settlements, your own grandmother’s journey to America, or an imaginary character from a far-away time, historical fiction can be an enchanting new outlet for your writing.

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This introductory workshop will help you discover the unique requirements of writing historical fiction and setting yourself up for a successful journey into a popular new genre.

Says instructor Jess Wells, "We'll look into how to research and when to stop researching, how to create credible characters without arcane dialogue and, most importantly, how to choose a historical era that excites your imagination. I've chosen to focus on the Middle Ages because I'm fascinated by inventions that change the way people live, and this era was filled with watershed moments. Of course, the gorgeous fabrics and remarkable settings don't hurt, either."

Whether you come to this workshop to explore the seed of an idea, flesh out an already existing plan, or move further along on a story you've already started, bring your questions and your drafts. "We'll set aside time to look into your specific ideas, challenges and questions," says Jess.

"We'll start the day with a brief look at your ideas (regardless of how new or undeveloped they are) and then I'll talk about the unique challenges of writing historical fiction. After lunch, we'll go through research techniques, a bibliography of the books that will become your best friends, and do some brainstorming exercises to help you create well-rounded characters. We'll examine the first chapter of Perfume: The Story of a Murderer by Patrick Suskind, to see what a masterful job he does of working with time, place, and setting. (If you read the book ahead of time, great, but I'll hand out copies of the chapter during the workshop.) Last but not least, we'll take what we've learned and look at your project/ideas, in the hopes of sending you home with a solid grasp on the era, area, character, and story you want to tell."

Jess Wells is the author of thirteen volumes of work, including the novel The Mandrake Broom (Firebrand, 2007), which dramatizes the fight to save medical knowledge during the witch-burning times in Europe 1465-1540. Her work on The Mandrake Broom earned her a San Francisco Arts Commission Grant for Literature to write her second historical novel, which will chronicle the early years of Christine de Pizan in the French court of Charles V. Her short stories, essays, and erotica are included in more than three dozen literary anthologies, journals, university curricula, and she is a four-time finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards. Jess has also taught this workshop at the Saints and Sinners Literary Conference, the Golden Crown Literary Conference, and at Other Words in Florida.


$110.00Price:
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There is only one reason to use this special payment option:

If you have a credit (that you opted to take in lieu of a refund when a class you were registered for was cancelled) and you would like to add to the credit in order to take a higher priced class, you can do that here.

However, please call us first at 415.609.2468 in order to confirm that we have your credit on file, and what the additional amount should be. Once that is confirmed, you can use this option to add to your credit.

$30.00Price:
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