
“Big Secret Number One to writing fiction is that you have to make a mess. Many messes,” says instructor Steve Mitchel. “You have to throw truckloads of words down onto the page knowing full well that most of them will end up in the compost.”
In this 3-week class, you’ll write without worrying about finished products, using excerpts from a variety of stories and novels as springboards to generate work. Fun, in-class writing exercises will have you experimenting with essential elements of craft such as character, point of view, and setting.
By the end of class, you’ll have pages of new fiction and a better understanding of how craft can serve your stories. Along the way, you’ll never lose sight of the fact that most great fiction emerges from what Philip Roth calls “months of freewheeling play.”
About The Writing Salon's In-Person Classes
Before your class meets, you'll receive an email from The Writing Salon with more information about your class. If you have any questions about in-person learning, please don't hesitate to reach out to us at hello@writingsalons.com.
Steve Mitchel was awarded the Crazyhorse Fiction Prize for his story, “Dog People.” His story “The Return of the Capellmeister” was a finalist for LitMag’s Virginia Woolf Award for Short Fiction. He earned a B.A. in political science from Stanford University, a J.D. from Northwestern University and an MFA in fiction writing from the Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. He’s led fiction writing workshops throughout the Bay Area and has taught legal writing to law students at Northwestern and U.C. Berkeley.
- Wednesday, February 04, 6:30pm-9:00pm
- Wednesday, February 11, 6:30pm-9:00pm
- Wednesday, February 18, 6:30pm-9:00pm
The arc of the class was perfect for a beginning writer - I haven't written for fun in a long time and this class really was the highlight of my week. Having weekly classes made me accountable to actually start writing - and now I'm hooked. And the format was perfect for getting me the tools and motivation to get started.
Steve was great. I appreciated the structure of class - learning a concept, seeing it modeled in an author’s work, and then trying it on ourselves.