Master Class: How (and Why) to Use Scrivener to Write Your Next Book with Ruth Franklin

Master Class: How (and Why) to Use Scrivener to Write Your Next Book with Ruth Franklin

$125.00

1 Session: TK
1:00-3:00pm ET
Ruth Franklin

Ruth Franklin's criticism appears regularly in The New Yorker, Harper's, and other publications. Her books include Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life (winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award) and The Many Lives of Anne Frank. She teaches nonfiction writing (criticism, biography, and memoir) in the MFA program at Columbia University. She’s here to show you how she organizes her projects:

I've used Scrivener to write two books and dozens of magazine articles and essays, and I’m convinced that it is the best software available for structuring and drafting a long-form project—fiction or nonfiction. Unlike Word or Google Docs, Scrivener is a platform that allows you to visualize your entire book at a glance; to organize your notes so that you can actually find the information you need; and to easily and flexibly move from research to draft. But for those accustomed to traditional word processing, there’s a bit of a learning curve.

In this two-hour masterclass, I’ll walk you through the process of setting up a Scrivener project and demonstrate some of the features that make this software so useful, including snapshots of each version of a draft, in-line notes and comments (to yourself or others), and the fun “notecards on a bulletin board” view. There will be plenty of time to answer all your questions. I’m a nonfiction writer, but Scrivener is equally applicable to fiction and nonfiction.

I’m not getting a cut from the manufacturer for this—I promise! I’m just a devoted fan who can’t imagine writing a book without Scrivener.

Workshop Highlights:

  • Learn how to create and structure a Scrivener project

  • Explore features that can help you write more easily and creatively

  • Come away inspired!

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Ruth Franklin is a book critic and former editor at The New Republic. Her most recent book is The Many Lives of Anne Frank (Yale University Press, 2025), which Publishers Weekly, in a starred review, called “an essential look at the diarist’s legacy.” Her first biography, Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life (Liveright/W.W. Norton, 2016) won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Biography about and was named a New York Times Notable Book of 2016, a Time magazine top nonfiction book of 2016, and a “best book of 2016” by The Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle, NPR, and others. In The Washington Post, Elaine Showalter called it “a sympathetic and masterful biography that both uncovers Jackson’s secret and haunting life and repositions her as a major artist.”

Franklin’s work appears in many publications, including The New Yorker, The New York Times Book Review, The New York Review of Books, and Harper’s. She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in biography, a Cullman Fellowship at the New York Public Library, a Leon Levy Fellowship in biography, and the Roger Shattuck Prize for Criticism. Her first book, A Thousand Darknesses: Lies and Truth in Holocaust Fiction (Oxford University Press, 2011), was a finalist for the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature. 

She was asked by the New York Institute of Humanities about how she conducts research and how long it took to write the Jackson biography: “I spent about six years on [the book]. A lot of it was spent doing archival research. Jackson’s archives are in the Library of Congress, about 50 boxes full of papers. And then her husband, Stanley Hyman, has his own archives at the Library of Congress, so that’s another 50 boxes or so. Along the way I was able to uncover more correspondence in people’s private collections. So it was mostly that and also a lot of interviewing. I travelled around, to California where two of Jackson’s children live, and to Vermont, where her other two children live, and to various other places. I interviewed students who studied with Stanley Hyman, and neighbors who had lived near Jackson and Hyman.”

Franklin attended Columbia as an undergraduate, and holds a Masters in Comparative Literature from Harvard. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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