Key West Literary Seminar

Collins, Wier to teach Writers' Workshops

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Billy Collins and Dara Wier collage We're happy to announce that two of our most popular faculty members will be returning for the Writers' Workshop Program next January 11-14. Two-time U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins will offer a three-day workshop titled "Strategies in Reader-Based Poetry." "'Reader-based poetry' might sound as redundant as the medical field known as 'patient care,'" Collins explains in the course listing, "but, sadly, that is not the case. Our gathering will have as its starting point the poet's duty to engage and sustain the attention of a reader."

Also returning to the program is Dara Wier, director of the MFA program for poets and writers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and co-director of the Juniper Initiative for Literary Arts and Action. Her four-day workshop, "Discovering What You Want to Say," promises to stress the importance of "poets as readers of their own poems, and poets as writers who thrive on upsetting some of the conventions of writing and reading." In contrast to Collins's approach, Wier says "It's most important for you to be your own best reader, not your only reader, but your most insightful, alert, aware, difficult, hungry, demanding, and encouraging reader."

Other faculty include E.J. Miller Laino, whose four-day workshop is called "Getting To The Next Level: The Practice of Poetry." Miller Laino has published poems in journals and magazines including The American Poetry Review and New York Quarterly, and teaches creative writing and poetry workshops at Florida Keys Community College. She first taught in our program in 2003.

More writers' workshops and faculty members will be announced in the coming weeks. Our Writers' Workshop Program main page will list all faculty members and provide links to course description, requirements, and biographical material. Click here to register for a writers' workshop.

The journal of the Key West Literary Seminar features recordings from our audio archives, exclusive interviews, essays, news about the Seminar, and dispatches from Key West's literary past and present. It is created by Arlo Haskell. Send email to arlo [at] kwls [dot] org

Each January, we explore a different literary theme through lectures, panel presentations, readings, informal gatherings, and discussions. In January 2011, we explore food in literature with our 29th annual Seminar, THE HUNGRY MUSE.

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This page contains a single entry by Arlo Haskell published on April 3, 2009 9:36 AM.

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