The Eleventh Hour Lecture Series is comprised of hour-long presentations at 11:00 a.m. each weekday of the Festival. The series features issues of special interest to writers, including aspects of craft, process, the writing life, and publishing. Fridays in the Eleventh Hour are reserved for a faculty reading.

The Eleventh Hour Series is free and open to the public. In 2023, the series is held in Phillips Hall, Room 100

 

To listen to past lectures, visit the Eleventh Hour Podcast on the Writing University webpage.

 

Recent Lectures in the Eleventh Hour Series: 

 

In Praise of Terrible Ideas: Revision Strategies for Prose. Rachel Yoder, Presenter

Author Kelly Link says in a Fail Safe podcast interview, “The really terrible ideas are much, much closer to interesting ideas than ideas which are good enough.” With this in mind, we'll take a look at the revision process and how to deploy what may seem like terrible ideas to your advantage, among other revision strategies. In addition to looking at the creative processes of a number of authors—examining their first and final drafts, the changes they made, and their thinking behind the process—we'll go over the basics of line editing. At the end of the lecture, you'll have some revision techniques to try out with your own writing as well as a better understanding of what works for your own creative process. To fully take advantage of this lecture, participants should have a completed short story draft in hand to use during exercises.

 

Prepping for Publication: How and Where to Submit Your Manuscripts. Kelly Dwyer, Presenter

You’ve written and revised a novel, memoir, story, flash fiction, or poem, and now you want to submit it for publication. As she navigates the publication of her third novel, Ghost Mother (Union Square & Co., 2024), author Kelly Dwyer will take us through the process. We’ll discuss where you might consider sending your shorter works and how to send a novel or memoir to an agent. Kelly will provide tips on how to write an appealing query letter and synopsis, as well as touch on contemporary issues around self-publishing and AI. This presentation is for writers at all stages, from beginning writers who have never submitted their work, to published authors who are looking to finetune their submission process. By the end of the hour, we’ll all be this much closer to seeing our writings in print!

WATCH THE VIDEO

 

Good Sound: Poetry for Prose Writers. Diana Goetsch, Presenter

We should require of prose what we expect of poetry: vividness, compression, and good sound. The last of these is often neglected by prose writers, as though they were working in a silent genre, or sound was merely a decorative concern. Wrong. What Duke Ellington said of music—“If it sounds good it is good”—holds true for writing. So does the converse: if it isn’t music, it can’t be wisdom. This Eleventh Hour talk will present how central good sound is to fiction and nonfiction writing—providing examples and techniques for improving sound in prose.

 

Crafting “Excess.” Darius Stewart, Presenter

For this talk, we—together, you and I, audience and speaker—will explore maximalist writing as an aesthetics of excess that, according to Will Hertel, strives to “submerge readers with informational deluges, utilizing a variety of subject material and literary techniques and genres to maintain attention.” However, chief among our discussion will be the question: what if one is a writer who only wants to use this technique occasionally, and elsewhere engage in a less elaborative style? Can this be achieved by crafting excess—that is, attending deliberately to pacing, use of figurative language, and/or a robust narrative voice? I believe so. Writers of any genre and experience can benefit from our discussions, which will include examinations of prose works from Richard Wright, Gloria Naylor, Don DeLillo, and Maxine Hong Kingston.

 

Exploring the Power of Image Through Haiku. Robert Anthony Siegel, Presenter

One of the key elements in successful writing is imagery—the word-pictures that directly transmit what the writer sees. But while fiction and nonfiction students typically get a lot of help with things like plot and structure, imagery often goes unmentioned, in part because it is so very hard to talk about how to make better images. Therein lies the value of haiku for prose writers. The super-short, imagistic form of poetry imported from Japan offers a strikingly clear (and very fun) way to practice making images. Over the course of the hour, we will read and write haiku together, using the experience to deepen our understanding of the role of imagery in our own writing, and to enrich our visual imaginations.

 

What’s Hidden Beneath: A Writer’s Exploration of Form, Genre and Grief. Juliet Patterson, Presenter

Part-lecture, part-artist-talk, this session will unveil one writer’s process in, through, and about grief. Poet Juliet Patterson, author of Sinkhole: A Legacy of Suicide (Milkweed Editions, September 2022), will discuss the challenges and pitfalls of writing memoir connected to ancestral trauma, considering methods of research, creating scenes, and crafting a narrative. How do we integrate research and history into our work? How can we use form as a method of inspiration? How can we embody our memories more authentically? And how do we manage our emotional body in the process of writing? These are some of the questions we’ll address in this talk through a variety of short exercises and discussion.

 

A Woman of Genius: Remembering Lynda Hull. Susan Aizenberg, Presenter

In the years between 1980 and her death at age thirty-nine in an automobile accident in 1994, the late Lynda Hull composed a body of work that marks her as one of the great lyric poets of our generation, including two prize-winning collections, Ghost Money (1986) and Star Ledger (1991), and a posthumous third collection, The Only World (1995). In 2006, all three collections were brought together in a single volume, Lynda Hull: Collected, in Graywolf’s RE/VIEW series edited by Mark Doty. During her life, Hull was teacher and mentor to many poets, one whose devotion to her students and to the art of poetry demonstrates, as Mark Doty has written of her, “how transformative the exchanges between teacher and student might be.” In this Eleventh Hour, we’ll remember Lynda Hull and celebrate her enduring legacy as both a brilliant poet and a generous and remarkable teacher.

 

Under Review: A Panel on Pitching, Submitting, Community, and the Future of Literary Journals. Lynne Nugent, Nina Lohman, and Hannah Bonner, Presenters

With the shuttering of publications like Tin House, Astra, Catapult, Bookforum, and The Believer (albeit briefly), it’s a strange time to cut your teeth as a writer. Midsized journals are abandoning experimentation and innovation in order to secure funding. Meanwhile, massive journals like The New Yorker, The New York Times, and The Atlantic have shifted toward fleeting think-pieces, celebrity clickbait, and hate-reads to attract corporate advertisers. It feels like the floor could drop out at any moment, and yet, whenever we look around a room full of writers, we know there’s still so much brilliant art being created. So where’s this art to go? Good news is: for every sad headline, there are two or three working editors who’ve carved out new venues and are opening doors—these opportunities just might be a bit trickier to find. Join editors Lynne Nugent, Nina Lohman, and Hannah Bonner as they provide an insider look into the present, past, and future of literary journals. Yes, we’ll cover tips and tricks for pitching your work (as well locating the right places to pitch), but we’ll also explore how to cultivate a community of readers and collaborators in an ever-changing landscape. Hope can be a dangerous word, but where’s the fun in art without a little risk?

 

Upcoming Eleventh Hour Lectures

Chaos & Control: A Poetry Workshop

When
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Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
Do your poems ignite in form or flurry? Are you a counter, a feeler, a connector, or a mess? A tinkerer or an iterator? Do your lines tend to blossom or knot? In this poetry workshop we’ll read and respond to participant poems with attention to control and chaos (not mutually exclusive) and how they manifest in one’s subjects, processes, revision practices, and endings. This class will be generative, joyful, energetic, and inquisitive. We’ll begin the week by sharing participant-made “calibration bouquets” (a small collection of what influences or provokes your writing) in order to quickly get to know each other’s work. Though our discussions will center participant writing, we’ll also take a look at poems by Lo Kwa Mei-en, Harryette Mullen, Oliver Baez Bendorf, and Lauren Shapiro—all writers interested in the intersection of turmoil and structure. This workshop is open to poets at all levels with a desire to explore what makes a poem fit together or fall apart. Each participant will workshop at least three poems, and our week together will include a one-on-one conference and personalized reading list. In this workshop, we will offer feedback/first impressions on writing you produce in our week; workshop writing you bring from home.

A Taste of the MFA in Fiction

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Presenters
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Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
This weeklong course offers participants the unique opportunity to explore the craft of fiction through the lens of the guidelines, strategies, and principles that are commonly taught in MFA programs. Whether one is a seasoned writer or just starting out, this course is designed to build and strengthen your narrative skills in a supportive and enriching environment. This is a fiction workshop for participants with work in progress. We will cover essential writing principles such as voice, tone, character development, structuring plot, the art of creating compelling dialogue, and more. The course will also provide an exploration of various narrative techniques that can elevate a writing sample. Throughout the workshop, participants will gain experience with effective workshop techniques that encourage constructive criticism and detailed feedback. Writers will evaluate the work of their peers while also receiving thoughtful insights on their own writing. This collaborative approach fosters a community of learning, where one can connect with fellow writers and enhance one’s storytelling abilities. In addition to the craft of fiction, we will discuss the application process for MFA programs, offering guidance on crafting a strong statement of purpose and strategies for becoming a competitive candidate. This includes tips on presenting your writing application effectively and showcasing your artistic vision. By the end of this workshop, participants will emerge with a deeper understanding of the narrative craft, increased confidence in their writing, and valuable insights into pursuing an MFA in fiction. Join us for this unique experience as you take the first step toward honing your skills and advancing your writing journey in a dynamic and supportive setting. In this workshop, we will workshop writing you bring from home.

The Mystery of the Mystery: Character & Plot in the Mystery Genre

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Presenters
Event status
Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
In this course we will look at what makes a satisfying mystery novel, and the relationship successful mysteries build with their audience. While we often consider mysteries to be a mastery of puzzle and plot, we will examine the propulsive power of character-driven action vs. situational plot. We’ll explore the processes of major mystery writers including classic, golden age, noir, and modern literary authors. Throughout the week, we will write a series of exercises to build our own versions of key elements of the mystery genre, and workshop new writing. This course is also a deep dive into the novelist’s dilemma of how much to know before you begin writing. How do we kindle our creativity, know where we are going and avoid frustration, especially in knowing what happens next? The mystery genre is an excellent container to explore the conditions of the writing process and find our own balance of structure and play, while examining suspense vs. tension and the possibilities of upending both our and the audience’s expectations. Participants can expect to leave this course with an expansive understanding of the mystery genre, nourishing tools to support their writing process, and a personal plan of how to develop and draft their own mystery novel. In this workshop, we will generate new writing through guided exercises and prompts; offer feedback/first impressions on writing you produce in our week.

Writing in the Danger Zone

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Presenters
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Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
Why do we avoid certain topics in our writing? “Oh, I could never write about _____!” Even with the permission of storytelling, many of us avoid writing the truth—our truth. The truth can be scary. So we write about something else, something safe, while our unwritten words follow us across our days like a troubling shadow. In this all-genre workshop, we will enter the Danger Zone. If these words make your heart flutter, perhaps it is the right moment for you to take this journey. It will take trust, courage, and most of all support—from one another in our summer community, and from the examples we’ll read by other brave writers who have gone there before us. Do you have a manuscript underway, and can’t shake the feeling of circling your Danger Zone, round and round, remaining on the outside of your own writing and uncertain how to enter? We will workshop your pages and, together, look for openings. (Even a gentle, tiny crack can be enough to break the spell.) Do you hunger to write something true about your life but have told yourself, “I’m not ready”? Together, we will gently (there’s that word again) follow in-class prompts to translate your creative longing into the start of a new draft. This workshop is designed to be useful to, and respectful of, wherever you are in your process. By the end of our session, which is exuberantly open to all writers at any stage in a writing life, we will grow our confidence and lessen the sense of danger, coaxing into the light not just pages but a process we can build upon, one sentence at a time. In this workshop, we will generate new writing through guided exercises and prompts; offer feedback/first impressions on writing you produce in our week; workshop writing you bring from home.

Fiction Bootcamp: From Writing Prompt to Full-Fledged Narrative

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Presenters
Event status
Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
This workshop is designed for students writing their first novel (or short story) or those who are starting the next one. Purposefully crafted for the beginner or intermediate writer, Novel Bootcamp is created specifically for writers who are fuzzy about where to begin, what do to next, and how to develop a new story from scratch. Curriculum centers mainly around engaging writing prompts to help you generate ideas with results that will surprise you. Consider the writing prompts as idea-incubators for locating the emotional truth in your story. The goal is to find your voice, develop characters, zero in on theme and invent your story—whether that means uncovering your structure or developing the tools to build your fictional world. Each class will include in-class writing, workshopping the results, and craft talks on subjects like how to write believable dialogue, the elements of theme, and tips for staying the course. All fiction genres (literary, contemporary, speculative) and forms (novel, novella, short story, micro stories) are welcome. In this workshop, we will generate new writing through guided exercises and prompts; offer feedback/first impressions on writing you produce in our week.

Weeklong Session Beginning June 22

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Event status
Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
Workshops being held during the weeklong session running June 22 - 27, 2025.

Writing History: Tricks of the Trade in Historical Fiction and Memoir

When
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Presenters
Event status
Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
This weeklong workshop is intended for anyone whose writing project involves bringing the past to life, whether it’s your own life, the life of family members, or the life and times of fully fictional characters. Some topics we’ll consider: What’s the best way to conduct your research, then incorporate that research into your narrative? How do you animate the past? If you’re writing memoir and the significant events have already happened, how do you make them feel fresh for the reader? What are some writerly tricks when writing historical prose, and what are some common pitfalls to avoid? Workshop members are expected to arrive with a 5- to 10-page sample of their writing project, which the group will consider. We’ll also generate new work using directed writing prompts. Instructor Eric Goodman’s eight book, Mother of Bourbon, a historical novel, will be published in April 2025. His sixth book, Cuppy and Stew (2020), combined historical fiction and faux memoir, so he’s spent considerable time in the past five years wrestling the past onto the page. In this first-time workshop, he’ll pass on what’s he learned. In this workshop, we will generate new writing through guided exercises and prompts; offer feedback/first impressions on writing you produce in our week; workshop writing you bring from home.

The Balancing Act: Narration, Character and Dialogue in Prose Fiction

When
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Presenters
Event status
Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
Good storytelling requires a sure touch with narration, characterization, and dialogue. None of these ingredients can be neglected. But when do you use which? How do you find the right balance? This is a nuts-and-bolts craft workshop for fiction writers of all levels. Novelists, short story writers, and flash aficionados are all welcome. We’ll compare the merits of first-person and third-person narration, and the extra risks of using the second person. We’ll also dissect characterization techniques and the question of empathy. Does your main character have to be “likeable”? What is “likeable” anyway? We’ll also ask questions about dialogue, idiolect, and profanity (yes, swearing is an artful activity!). We’ll reflect on when to give your characters a rest and let your narrator do the talking. The common saying, “Show, don’t tell” isn’t always true, but this fact begs the questions: How do I show? When do I tell? During the week, we will generate new writing through guided exercises and prompts; offer feedback/first impressions on what you produce; AND, for participants who desire it, we will workshop writing you bring from home. (This last activity is not obligatory, but it is encouraged.) I’ll also supply reading materials from eminent writers to illustrate key issues. Whether you’re an experienced writer or a newbie, whether you’re in the process of revision or haven’t finished your first draft, you will leave this workshop with a keener appreciation of the tools at your disposal and how they might serve your writing. In this workshop, we will generate new writing through guided exercises and prompts; offer feedback/first impressions on writing you produce in our week; workshop writing you bring from home.

"You Must Change Your Life": Addressing the "You" in Poetry

When
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Presenters
Event status
Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
In this generative poetry-writing workshop, students will learn to recognize and manage that most slippery of pronouns in life and in poetry, “you.” Who “is” you in this poem? Can “you” be a cat? A bus? A planet? Me? Are you so vain you think this poem is about you? How dare “you”? Has this poem even met me? What is it this poem wants from me, the reader? Alternatively, what do I (the poet) want from you (the reader)? In five days with five respective units, we will cover: Unit 1: Cover letter (the private is public) Unit 2: The direct address (who are you this time?) Unit 3: The indirect address (expert eavesdropping) Unit 4: Mistaken identity (I thought you were someone else) Unit 5: I (who am I to address you thusly?) Students will have the opportunity to share work with one another, to read the works of life-changing poets, to receive feedback on previously written poems regarding how to radically re-envision their relationship to the reader (or you), and to meet one-on-one with me towards the end of the course. All levels welcome. In this workshop, we will generate new writing through guided exercises and prompts; offer feedback/first impressions on writing you produce in our week; workshop writing you bring from home.

Putting It Together: How to Make Your Book

When
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Presenters
Event status
Scheduled
Attendance Required
No
Description
Do you dream of making a book but feel like you’ll never write enough? You may already have more than you think. Whether you have scattered drafts, notes scribbled in the margins, or a collection of short pieces, this workshop will help you shape them into something whole—a zine, a chapbook, or even a full-length manuscript. In this workshop, we will: Gather the writing you already have, no matter how unfinished or fragmented. Organize these pieces like a collector arranging their most cherished keepsakes—finding connections, themes, and surprising through lines. Curate and showcase them with an editor’s eye, revealing the larger work that’s been waiting to emerge. Along the way, you’ll generate new writing in class, explore strategies for revision and re-writing, and develop a deeper understanding of your book’s potential structure. We’ll examine works by writers such as Cara Blue Adams, Carmen Maria Machado, Claudia Rankine, and Megan Stielstra—authors who have skillfully assembled their own books from a mosaic of prose. This workshop is ideal for writers with works in progress—whether in fiction or nonfiction—but is open to anyone eager to explore how smaller pieces can form a bigger picture. With feedback from both peers and the instructor, you’ll leave with a stronger sense of your book’s blueprint, a clearer vision for your project, and a renewed creative momentum. Come with what you have. Leave with a book in the making. In this workshop, we will generate new writing through guided exercises and prompts; offer feedback/first impressions on writing you produce in our week; workshop writing you bring from home.