Craft Seminar: How to Reconstruct a Scene with Anna Clark

Craft Seminar: How to Reconstruct a Scene with Anna Clark

$95.00

1 Session: Sunday, April 19
2:30-4:30pm ET
Anna Clark

Anna Clark is an investigative journalist at ProPublica and creative nonfiction faculty in Alma College's MFA program. Her books include The Poisoned City: Flint's Water and the American Urban Tragedy, winner of the Hillman Prize and longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction. She's spent years thinking about these questions:

How do you breathe life into crucial moments of your story -- evoking time, place, character, and action in vivid narrative detail -- when you weren't there to see it yourself? In memoir or personal essay, how do you break through the foggy filter of half-remembered moments and write scenes with confidence? In narrative nonfiction, how do you translate reams of research into a gripping story without sacrificing truth?

In this interactive seminar, we'll dig into the art of reconstructing scenes. We'll begin with a generative exercise to get us going, and we'll learn from work by writers such as Candice Millard, David Grann, Sheri Fink, Bridgett M. Davis, Sarah M. Broom, and Maxine Hong Kingston. From dialogue to research to discerning when it's worth zooming in at all, we'll survey techniques for bringing multi-dimensionality and emotion to our work without sacrificing our faithfulness to truth. We'll leave time for brainstorming solutions to challenges students face with scenes in their personal projects.

Workshop Highlights:

  • How to tell when it's worth zooming in for a scene in the first place

  • How to find the kind of detail that's essential for great nonfiction scene

  • How to navigate through the unknowable -- without losing narrative force

This class has 3 partial scholarships available for a reduced fee of $45. To apply, please fill out this form by Friday, April 10.

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Anna Clark is a journalist living in Detroit. She is the author of The Poisoned City: Flint’s Water and the American Urban Tragedy (Metropolitan Books, 2018), which was named one of the year’s best books by the Washington Post, the San Francisco Chronicle, Kirkus Reviews, Audible, Amazon, the New York Public Library, and others. It won the Hillman Prize in Book Journalism and the Rachel Carson Environment Book Award. It was also a finalist for the NYPL Helen Bernstein Award for Excellence in Journalism, and was longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction. She is a reporter for ProPublica, and her writing has appeared in Elle, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Politico, Next City, and other publications. She was a correspondent for the Columbia Journalism Review for nearly five years.

The Poisoned City is also a Michigan Notable Book, and won a State History Award and the Gross Award for Literature. Clark also edited A Detroit Anthology, another Michigan Notable Book, and she is the author of Michigan Literary Luminaries: From Elmore Leonard to Robert Hayden. She was a founding board member and applications director for Write A House through the time that it rehabilitated three vacant homes in Detroit and gave them away to writers, for free. She has also been a writer-in-residence in Detroit high schools through InsideOut Literary Arts for four years, and a longtime co-leader of an improv theater workshop at a men’s prison in Macomb County, Michigan. She co-curates the Motor Signal Reading Series.

When asked about what drew her to the story of Flint's water crisis, Clark said, "Part of what I think has been so discomfiting about the Flint crisis is that it’s threatened our sense of what the common good is. What is the purpose of a city at all? Why do we have a public sector? What are the limits of running these places like a business? What the Flint crisis has shown is how far we can chip away at that undergirding philosophy of the common good before it starts to cause mortal harm to people."

Clark was a Fulbright Fellow creative writing in Nairobi, Kenya, and she received the Excellence in Environmental Journalism award from the Great Lakes Environmental Law Council. Her writing was a “notable” pick in Best American Sports Writing 2012; a “best commentary” finalist from the Mirror Awards; and a first-place winner from SPJ-Detroit in online investigative reporting. She also serves as a contributing editor at Waxwing Literary Journal, where she especially likes to review literature in translation.

A graduate of the University of Michigan’s Residential College, she also holds an MFA from the Warren Wilson Program for Writers, where she focused on fiction. She lives and works in Detroit.

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