Showing posts with label Gotham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gotham. Show all posts
(Thank you, Reference Librarian. Thank you, Susan Tekulve.)
For those of you who didn't know me when I was actually younger than I am today—that is my second memoir, Into the Tangle of Friendship, as well as my fourth, Seeing Past Z: Nurturing the Imagination in a Fast-Forward World, nested in with Handling the Truth.
I eagerly anticipate my time with Converse students and the Converse community—not to mention friends, old and new.
Read more...
Poets and Writers features HANDLING THE TRUTH as a Best Book for Writers
Thursday, January 9, 2014
And how grateful I am to Jason Poole for letting me know. Oh, this is good news on a warming but cold day as the sound of a saw buzzes in my house-under-repair background..... Thank you, Poets & Writers, Jason Poole, and, of course, Amy Rennert and Gotham.
The link is here. Check out the other fine featured books.
Read more...
The link is here. Check out the other fine featured books.
Read more...
Raw to the Bone: On Springsteen, Rivers, and the Arc of Creativity in Poets' Quarterly
Friday, December 6, 2013
April Lindner had the idea to gather us (Jane Satterfield, Ned Balbo, Ann Michael, me—her Springsteen loving friends) at the Glory Days Symposium at Monmouth University more than a year ago. We each gave papers, each talked about the influence that Bruce Springsteen has had on us.
I spoke about the arc of creativity under the influence of Bruce Springsteen's river songs, and I'm so happy to be able to share a link to that full essay here today, for the piece now stands among works by Donald Hall, Daisy Fried, Barbara Crooker, and Caroline Maun (among others) in the current issue of Poets' Quarterly.
It begins like this, below, and carries forward here:
Read more...
I spoke about the arc of creativity under the influence of Bruce Springsteen's river songs, and I'm so happy to be able to share a link to that full essay here today, for the piece now stands among works by Donald Hall, Daisy Fried, Barbara Crooker, and Caroline Maun (among others) in the current issue of Poets' Quarterly.
It begins like this, below, and carries forward here:
Many thanks to Leslie Nielsen, and Ann Michael.Might as well start with “Shenandoah,” the old pioneer song that Springsteen and the Seeger Sessions Band transformed into sweet bitters in the living room of Springsteen’s fabled New Jersey farmhouse. “Shenandoah,” the tenth song on the We Shall Overcome/Seeger Sessions album, is music being made, as Springsteen himself has said. Music created in the moment, held between teeth, conducted with the frayed bracelet strings of an uplifted hand. It’s music hummed, hymned, and high in the shoulder blades, deep in the blue pulse of a straining vein. Patti’s lighting candles in the darkening farmhouse, as the band tunes in. The antique clock ticks. The thickly framed mirror doubles the volumes of sound and space. And now the Sessions Band is elaborating, confabulating, and the Shenandoah roves.
Read more...
Meet me in Boston, at NCTE/ALAN
Thursday, November 7, 2013
I am blessed that Tamra Tuller and Chronicle Books have generously invited me to NCTE/ALAN this year on behalf of GOING OVER. This is a team that believes in me and in this book, and for their brand of fervent faith I will always be grateful.
I'll be in Boston from November 22 (Friday evening) through Tuesday, November 25, and my schedule is here. I hope we find each other.
Saturday, November 23
11:30-12:30
NCTE Conference/GOING OVER Signing/Chronicle Books/Booth #1007
Saturday, November 23
1:00-2:00 PM
NCTE Conference/HANDLING THE TRUTH Signing/Penguin/Booth #933
Sunday, November 24
9:00-10:00
NCTE Conference/GOING OVER Signing/Anderson's Bookstore/Booth #1631
Sunday, November 24
5:00-7:00 PM
ALAN Reception
Tuesday, November 25
2:10-2:50 PM
ALAN Conference
Celebrating International Voices ALAN Panel:
Tara Sullivan, Sharon McKay, Eliot Schrefer, Ann Burg, Beth Kephart
Moderated by Karin Perry, ALAN Membership Secretary Read more...
I'll be in Boston from November 22 (Friday evening) through Tuesday, November 25, and my schedule is here. I hope we find each other.
Saturday, November 23
11:30-12:30
NCTE Conference/GOING OVER Signing/Chronicle Books/Booth #1007
Saturday, November 23
1:00-2:00 PM
NCTE Conference/HANDLING THE TRUTH Signing/Penguin/Booth #933
Sunday, November 24
9:00-10:00
NCTE Conference/GOING OVER Signing/Anderson's Bookstore/Booth #1631
Sunday, November 24
5:00-7:00 PM
ALAN Reception
Tuesday, November 25
2:10-2:50 PM
ALAN Conference
Celebrating International Voices ALAN Panel:
Tara Sullivan, Sharon McKay, Eliot Schrefer, Ann Burg, Beth Kephart
Moderated by Karin Perry, ALAN Membership Secretary Read more...
Labels:
Chronicle Books,
Going Over,
Gotham,
Handling the Truth,
NCTE,
Tamra Tuller
the Jen Doll/Hairpin/Handling conversation and (wow) First Person Arts
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
If you're looking for a new entertainment channel, you can't do much better than Jen Doll, whose essays, opinions, and reviews appear in all the most important places (New York Times Book Review, New York Magazine, Village Voice, The Atlantic, Vulture) and whose Twitter Feed is my personal go-to late night/early morning/any time of day First Aid Kit. Jen made my last year when she reviewed Small Damages for the NYTBR. She made my 2013 BEA when we met for the first time. And she made my yesterday train ride when she sent word that a conversation we'd had about memoir (Jen has her own due out next year and it sounds a — Ma — Zing) was now up and running at The Hairpin.
I am not an inherently cool dude-ess, but chilling with Jen makes me feel as if I am. And either she was typing uber fast when we were having our phone conversation a few weeks ago, or she has perfect handwriting/perfect recall, because I've never seen my own words transcribed with such precision.
So here. Meet Jen Doll, if you haven't already, by following this link to our conversation.
You'll find that she's a tad addictive.
And on another topic entirely: Did my fellow WXPNers/First Person Arts performers knock it out of the park at Kelly Writers House last night, or what? We'd gathered to give Philadelphia a taste of what is to come at the First Person Arts Festival, which launches November 6 and features an incredible line-up of storytellers, humorists, performance artists, and writers (Toni Morrison, Sonia Sanchez, Rita Dove, Ana Castillo, and Dani Shapiro among them). Supremely seductive stories got told. I encourage you to tune in on November 4, 8 PM at WXPN 88.5 to hear these hip hopping storytellers for yourself.
(And another round of hugs to Angela and Chang, for being my personal cheering section.)
Thanks to Karina Kacala, who organized the event, and thanks to Becca Jennings and Alli Katz, for holding our hands, and thanks to Andrew Panebianco, Katie Samson, Raphael Xavier, Yaba Blay, fellow artists, and thanks to Michaela Majoun and her inimitable radio ways. And come see us at First Person Arts. I'm on stage with Dani Shapiro on November 10 at 4 o'clock at Christ Church Neighborhood House. And then I return on November 16, 11 o'clock, for a two-hour memoir workshop called The Spices of Life. Registration is required.
See you then?
Say yes. Read more...
I am not an inherently cool dude-ess, but chilling with Jen makes me feel as if I am. And either she was typing uber fast when we were having our phone conversation a few weeks ago, or she has perfect handwriting/perfect recall, because I've never seen my own words transcribed with such precision.
So here. Meet Jen Doll, if you haven't already, by following this link to our conversation.
You'll find that she's a tad addictive.
And on another topic entirely: Did my fellow WXPNers/First Person Arts performers knock it out of the park at Kelly Writers House last night, or what? We'd gathered to give Philadelphia a taste of what is to come at the First Person Arts Festival, which launches November 6 and features an incredible line-up of storytellers, humorists, performance artists, and writers (Toni Morrison, Sonia Sanchez, Rita Dove, Ana Castillo, and Dani Shapiro among them). Supremely seductive stories got told. I encourage you to tune in on November 4, 8 PM at WXPN 88.5 to hear these hip hopping storytellers for yourself.
(And another round of hugs to Angela and Chang, for being my personal cheering section.)
Thanks to Karina Kacala, who organized the event, and thanks to Becca Jennings and Alli Katz, for holding our hands, and thanks to Andrew Panebianco, Katie Samson, Raphael Xavier, Yaba Blay, fellow artists, and thanks to Michaela Majoun and her inimitable radio ways. And come see us at First Person Arts. I'm on stage with Dani Shapiro on November 10 at 4 o'clock at Christ Church Neighborhood House. And then I return on November 16, 11 o'clock, for a two-hour memoir workshop called The Spices of Life. Registration is required.
See you then?
Say yes. Read more...
Introducing Compose: A Journal of Simply Good Writing
Saturday, October 26, 2013
When writer/teacher/friend Jennie Nash invited me to share an excerpt from Handling the Truth in the journal Compose, I had no idea just how beautiful this magazine was. I trusted Jennie; that was enough. I said yes before digging further.
Yesterday, Compose released its second issue. This biannual, digital magazine has Suzannah Windsor, Jennie Nash, Lisa Romeo, Andrew Rojas, Reem Al-Omari, Tamara Pratt, Christi Craig, and Tiffany Turpin Johnson on its mastthead. It features both new and emerging writers of fiction, poetry, and nonfiction—and interviews with such powerhouses as Eva Langston and Rebecca Hazleton.
The Fall 2013 issue is dear to my heart, not just because it includes a beautifully designed excerpt from Handling the Truth (I'm in love with the chosen image; it's so perfect for memoir), but because it has an essay called "Mean Mail" by my friend Katrina Kenison (we had talked about this incident in her life; it is amazing to read of it here and now) and an interview with the ever-kind and ever-smart Marion Roach Smith.
And plenty more.
Please take a look at what some very smart and generous literary people can do when they put their minds and talents together.
This is Compose. Read more...
Yesterday, Compose released its second issue. This biannual, digital magazine has Suzannah Windsor, Jennie Nash, Lisa Romeo, Andrew Rojas, Reem Al-Omari, Tamara Pratt, Christi Craig, and Tiffany Turpin Johnson on its mastthead. It features both new and emerging writers of fiction, poetry, and nonfiction—and interviews with such powerhouses as Eva Langston and Rebecca Hazleton.
The Fall 2013 issue is dear to my heart, not just because it includes a beautifully designed excerpt from Handling the Truth (I'm in love with the chosen image; it's so perfect for memoir), but because it has an essay called "Mean Mail" by my friend Katrina Kenison (we had talked about this incident in her life; it is amazing to read of it here and now) and an interview with the ever-kind and ever-smart Marion Roach Smith.
And plenty more.
Please take a look at what some very smart and generous literary people can do when they put their minds and talents together.
This is Compose. Read more...
my conversation with Barbara DeMarco-Barrett is live and available here.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
And I'm proud as a peacock to know this superstar writer/interviewer and to sometimes have the thrill of talking with her. Barbara is ridiculously smart about books (she writes her own) and authors (she knows them all) and our conversation ranged from memoir to rivers to El Salvador, voice to personhood to the wonders of multiple drafts, to the books I did not include in my appendix.
I goofed on one memoir's title.
I had fun despite the goof.
I hereby apologize to ..... well, let's see if anyone notices.
The conversation is here. Read more...
I goofed on one memoir's title.
I had fun despite the goof.
I hereby apologize to ..... well, let's see if anyone notices.
The conversation is here. Read more...
Labels:
Barbara DeMarco-Barrett,
Gotham,
Handling the Truth
Talking with the great Barbara DeMarco-Barrett on KUCI
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Barbara glows even more than the cover of Handling the Truth. Thank you, Barbara, for another great conversation on KUCI.
Read more...
Memory is more than perhaps. Thoughts on researching memoir, in Book Country
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Readers of this blog know that I spent part of this past Saturday with my niece, reviewing old things in envelopes, old things stored away for countless years in my father's attic.
Funnily enough, I came home from that adventure with Julia and sat down to meet a deadline from Book Country, which had asked me to write about how memoirs can be researched.
It was a coincidence. I took advantage of it. I wrote the piece that begins like this below and can be found in its entirety here.
Funnily enough, I came home from that adventure with Julia and sat down to meet a deadline from Book Country, which had asked me to write about how memoirs can be researched.
It was a coincidence. I took advantage of it. I wrote the piece that begins like this below and can be found in its entirety here.
Earlier today my niece, Julia, and I opened the door to my father’s attic, where a single box among many boxes bears my name. I had agreed to help Julia with a school photography project—to search, with her, for elements from my past that would somehow explain who I am.Read more...
Letters were there—old boyfriends, a marriage proposal, a key-sized envelope containing the dust of some prom flowers. A postcard upon which each hand-inked letter was no larger than a sugar ant. Names: Tanya, Steven, Pierre, Rob. An evaluation from the library where I’d worked as a University of Pennsylvania student; the supervisor noted, in square boxes, that I’d been “excellent” in all things. I also read, however: Although Beth chats to her friends at the checkout desk for long periods of time, she seems to be able to continue working and be accurate.
Labels:
Book Country,
Gotham,
Handling the Truth,
Penguin
My interview with Ploughshares: Empathy, Delight
Saturday, September 14, 2013
It was a tremendous honor to be interviewed by Erinrose Mager for Ploughshares Literary Magazine not long ago. Her questions were remarkable. She gave me room to answer at length.
And so, rushing off to the Big Apple as I now am, I quicklyshare a conversation that begins like this, below, and can be found in its entirety here:
Apropos of your chapter in Handling the Truth, “Exercising Empathy,” can you articulate how you underscore the importance of empathy when teaching writing students? In the classroom, what texts do you often cite that exercise empathy deftly? Why are these texts so crucial to understanding empathy as the cornerstone of memoir?
One of the reasons that I love being in a classroom is that we are endlessly learning empathy from one another. I spend a lot of time in the early sessions building trust. I require the students to get engaged—to pay attention to the work that arises from in-class exercises and to the person doing that work. I require them to notice who is speaking, and why. We interview one another. We define expectations. We make psychic and literal room for one another; it’s a very small classroom. We establish a framework, and a mood, and so we are prepared. We are empathic.
The best writers of memoir demonstrate empathy both for themselves and for those whom they include in their stories. There are two pages in Natalie Kusz’s memoir, Road Song, that I read out loud every year. Kusz was a little girl walking home from school in her new home of Alaska when she was attacked by tethered huskies. That attack will define the remainder of her childhood and much of her adolescence as she succumbs to countless operations to repair her devastated face.
But when Kusz writes about the attack, she writes almost gently, almost quietly, of the violence. She writes of the mittens she was wearing:
Empathy is, according to Merriam-Webster, “the imaginative projection of a subjective state into an object so that the object appears to be infused with it.” Kusz projects as she writes. The students project as they read. And this sort of projection happens in many wonderful memoirs. I think of Patricia Hampl, Gail Caldwell, Lucy Grealy, Caroline Knapp, Abigail Thomas. And, by the way, let us not assume that empathy is a talent reserved for women; read Geoffrey Wolff and Mark Richard and C.K. Williams and many others, and you’ll find it there.
When a memoirist lets us see her or his world—when she or he evokes it instead of judges it—we are taught empathy. We are inspired by it.
You explain many wonderful writing exercises in Handling the Truth. What is one exercise that you turn to, time and again, when teaching memoir? What is it about this exercise that affects students so deeply? Read more...
And so, rushing off to the Big Apple as I now am, I quicklyshare a conversation that begins like this, below, and can be found in its entirety here:
Apropos of your chapter in Handling the Truth, “Exercising Empathy,” can you articulate how you underscore the importance of empathy when teaching writing students? In the classroom, what texts do you often cite that exercise empathy deftly? Why are these texts so crucial to understanding empathy as the cornerstone of memoir?
One of the reasons that I love being in a classroom is that we are endlessly learning empathy from one another. I spend a lot of time in the early sessions building trust. I require the students to get engaged—to pay attention to the work that arises from in-class exercises and to the person doing that work. I require them to notice who is speaking, and why. We interview one another. We define expectations. We make psychic and literal room for one another; it’s a very small classroom. We establish a framework, and a mood, and so we are prepared. We are empathic.
The best writers of memoir demonstrate empathy both for themselves and for those whom they include in their stories. There are two pages in Natalie Kusz’s memoir, Road Song, that I read out loud every year. Kusz was a little girl walking home from school in her new home of Alaska when she was attacked by tethered huskies. That attack will define the remainder of her childhood and much of her adolescence as she succumbs to countless operations to repair her devastated face.
But when Kusz writes about the attack, she writes almost gently, almost quietly, of the violence. She writes of the mittens she was wearing:
I watched my mitten come off in his teeth and sail upward, and it seemed unfair then and very sad that one hand should freeze all alone; I lifted the second mitten off and threw it away, then turned my face back again, overtaken suddenly by loneliness.When I read these words aloud (through tears, always), there is silence in the room. There is huge respect for a writer who, at that traumatic moment in her life, cares for the weather, cares for the mittens, speaks of loneliness, not rage. This is a writer whose entire book is filled with that kind of concern for other things, and other people.
Empathy is, according to Merriam-Webster, “the imaginative projection of a subjective state into an object so that the object appears to be infused with it.” Kusz projects as she writes. The students project as they read. And this sort of projection happens in many wonderful memoirs. I think of Patricia Hampl, Gail Caldwell, Lucy Grealy, Caroline Knapp, Abigail Thomas. And, by the way, let us not assume that empathy is a talent reserved for women; read Geoffrey Wolff and Mark Richard and C.K. Williams and many others, and you’ll find it there.
When a memoirist lets us see her or his world—when she or he evokes it instead of judges it—we are taught empathy. We are inspired by it.
You explain many wonderful writing exercises in Handling the Truth. What is one exercise that you turn to, time and again, when teaching memoir? What is it about this exercise that affects students so deeply? Read more...
what happens when a former student reviews your book about memoir making
Sunday, August 18, 2013
A few moments ago, a link was posted on Facebook. One click, and I was reading a review of Handling the Truth, written by my former student Stephanie Trott. Stephanie had come into my classroom fully formed, best as I could tell. A Bryn Mawr senior who'd already worked in Manhattan publishing and was crafting perfect sentences, Stephanie made the trek each Tuesday, and made us all better people for her presence. We have stayed in touch since, Stephanie and I. Postcards arrive. Emails. Funny and alluring updates from her travels around the world, for Stephanie has a truly interesting job which I suspect she will tell you about in some book, some day. She's destined.
So it made me teary eyed—that's what happened—to read her words about Handling the Truth in Cleaver Magazine, a stellar and well-reviewed literary magazine that was created by my friend, Karen Rile, and her daughter, Lauren. Karen teaches with me at Penn. She's been there far longer than I have, has taught far more classes, is widely known and loved, and deservedly won a new teaching award a year ago. Karen has been my guide to many things at Penn—me the spring-semester adjunct, and she the every-semester teaching goddess. And what a magazine she has built. What content, and what a following.
How beautiful then, to be able to thank them both, in this single post. And to do that on a day when I'm writing about my love for Penn and that riverway, Locust Walk, in today's Philadelphia Inquirer. It all circles back.
Stephanie's review begins like this, below, and can be read in its entirety at Cleaver Magazine, here.
So it made me teary eyed—that's what happened—to read her words about Handling the Truth in Cleaver Magazine, a stellar and well-reviewed literary magazine that was created by my friend, Karen Rile, and her daughter, Lauren. Karen teaches with me at Penn. She's been there far longer than I have, has taught far more classes, is widely known and loved, and deservedly won a new teaching award a year ago. Karen has been my guide to many things at Penn—me the spring-semester adjunct, and she the every-semester teaching goddess. And what a magazine she has built. What content, and what a following.
How beautiful then, to be able to thank them both, in this single post. And to do that on a day when I'm writing about my love for Penn and that riverway, Locust Walk, in today's Philadelphia Inquirer. It all circles back.
Stephanie's review begins like this, below, and can be read in its entirety at Cleaver Magazine, here.
It is a rainy Tuesday in January and I lace up the new cherry-red boots before heading out the door of my warm little warren. Through the stone-laden campus, across the slippery streets of town, and onto the train that will take me into the city. I am in my final semester as an undergraduate student at Bryn Mawr College and I still have not learned to buy shoes that fit my feet — I dig into the walk through West Philadelphia, burdening myself with blisters that will not heal until the first flowers have shed their petals to spring. Stumbling onto the porch of the old Victorian manor, I step into the most challenging, inspiring, and rewarding fourteen weeks I’ve yet experienced: I step into Beth Kephart’s Creative Non-Fiction class.Read more...
Flash forward one and a half years later and I am standing on the back steps of my first apartment, wearing shoes that (finally) fit and hooting jubilantly at the tiny brown box in front of me. I hug the cardboard to myself as though I could absorb the details of its journey osmotically and greet it with as much euphoria as though it were a friend returning from a far off journey. But I suppose that’s exactly what Beth Kephart’s Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir is: stories of both the familiar and strange, a chance to learn through another’s experiences, and an invitation to have our own unique adventures while meditating on the specialness of times we have already put to rest.
today is the day, the winner is, and thank you, Serena, for this amazing review of Handling the Truth
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
I took my corporate work outside for an hour yesterday—needed the air, needed to get my heart to stop pounding so hard. This little fellow greeted me. "What the heck are you up to?" he said.
Today I'm up to releasing Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir. I cannot believe this day has finally come. I know that there have been other Beth books before this one—and certainly this book could not have been written without the knowledge I'd gained from writing the memoirs, the poetry, the history, the fiction, too. Still, somehow, Handling feels like the very first book. The jangle of nerves. The hopes. That sense of expectation. Here, in this book, are the things I've learned, the things I've taught, the books I've loved, and the students who inspire me. Also my mother, father, husband, son.
It's all here. Jangles. Tangles. Nerves.
That is one of the reasons I am particularly grateful to Serena Agusto-Cox for helping me celebrate this day with her absolutely beautiful reflections on this book. Serena came to my event in Alexandria, VA, and bought her copy there. She has been gracious ever since, sending me notes as she read through. I know how much time she spent putting together her review, and so, for that reason especially, I encourage you to read it here.
My favorite part:
Finally, a few days ago, I put into motion a Handling contest, asking readers to name their favorite memoirs. Such intriguing titles came forth—everything from Crossing the Moon, Angela's Ashes, Wild, and The Thing About Life is That One Day You'll Be Dead to The Glass Castle, The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating, two Joan Didions, and several mentions of Anne Lamott's Operating Instructions. But the winner, randomly chosen (and not by me) is .... Kim Nastick, who chose Joan Didion's Blue Nights, a book I do write about in Handling.
Kim, send me a note and I'll get you a signed copy.
Read more...
Today I'm up to releasing Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir. I cannot believe this day has finally come. I know that there have been other Beth books before this one—and certainly this book could not have been written without the knowledge I'd gained from writing the memoirs, the poetry, the history, the fiction, too. Still, somehow, Handling feels like the very first book. The jangle of nerves. The hopes. That sense of expectation. Here, in this book, are the things I've learned, the things I've taught, the books I've loved, and the students who inspire me. Also my mother, father, husband, son.
It's all here. Jangles. Tangles. Nerves.
That is one of the reasons I am particularly grateful to Serena Agusto-Cox for helping me celebrate this day with her absolutely beautiful reflections on this book. Serena came to my event in Alexandria, VA, and bought her copy there. She has been gracious ever since, sending me notes as she read through. I know how much time she spent putting together her review, and so, for that reason especially, I encourage you to read it here.
My favorite part:
She shares her favorite places, her favorite music, her favorite memoirs, and her students’ work, and she begs that anyone interested in writing memoir do it because the story must be told and is relate-able to someone outside the self. Writing the genre requires the writer to be as honest with herself as she can be and to fill the gaps in memory with facts from documents or cross-referencing conversations and moments with those that share the memory. Reading this reference memoir is like getting to know Kephart on a personal level, but it’s also about getting to know the writer inside you — the one that wants to write the book but doesn’t know where to start. Although this advice is geared toward those who wish to write their own personal histories, there is sage advice for other writers — fiction writers struggling with what tense to put their book in, for example.Thank you to all of you who have cheered me on in this endeavor. Thank you to those who will join me this evening at the Free Library of Philadelphia, 7:30, for a reading and workshop. Those who want to know more about the book—or read my students' work, or read about new memoirs I've loved, or see some of the reviews—please visit this dedicated Handling the Truth page.
Finally, a few days ago, I put into motion a Handling contest, asking readers to name their favorite memoirs. Such intriguing titles came forth—everything from Crossing the Moon, Angela's Ashes, Wild, and The Thing About Life is That One Day You'll Be Dead to The Glass Castle, The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating, two Joan Didions, and several mentions of Anne Lamott's Operating Instructions. But the winner, randomly chosen (and not by me) is .... Kim Nastick, who chose Joan Didion's Blue Nights, a book I do write about in Handling.
Kim, send me a note and I'll get you a signed copy.
Read more...
Beth asks Beth: A Handling the Truth Interview
Monday, August 5, 2013
Back in December, I sat down and asked myself a few questions about teaching and truth. I don't know who felt more nervous—the interviewee or the interviewer. But I share the essence of that little just-girls chat below, on the eve of the launch of this book, the galleys for which I have held in my hand for close to a year. I am so eager for tomorrow—eager for the book, eager to celebrate authors I love and the students who inspire me, and eager to see some of you at the Free Library of Philadelphia for a talk and workshop (start time is 7:30 PM).
The Handling the Truth giveaway is still live. More about the contest here. And more about the book here.
Read more...
The Handling the Truth giveaway is still live. More about the contest here. And more about the book here.
What is memoir, and what is
not?
Real memoirists write to discover a life, to understand its meaning, to share what has been learned, to reach beyond themselves. They do not write to pronounce, proclaim, accuse, retaliate, lecture, or self glorify. They leave therapy to the paid professionals.
Why write a book like this now? Hasn’t the memoir form morphed and leaked into a catchall phrase?
Yes, HANDLING is a brave endeavor. But what was my choice, really? I fully believe that memoir, done right, can heal, uplift, and instruct. That it is an embattled form of community, worthy of defense and explanation.
Can you really teach someone to write memoir?
I believe that you can help aspiring memoirists discover their purpose as writers, frame their lives against the backdrop of meaningful questions, and identify and wield the most telling details. I have been amazed by the engineers who emerge from my classroom as talented and ultimately published young memoirists. I have been gratified to watch the journeys of young and old writers—those who weren’t sure at first, and who became sure in time.
What are the biggest mistakes memoir writers make? Why does it matter that they get those things right?
So much to say here, and so little room. Perhaps it’s easiest to say this: Beginning memoirists tend to believe that just because something happened to them, that something will be of interest to others. But it’s never the thing that happened that matters most. It’s what has been learned, and how the learning has been shaped.
Which memoirs have been most influential for you?
The first memoir I read was Natalie Kusz’s extraordinary Road Song. I still teach that book, and I still cry when I read it. Running in the Family (Michael Ondaatje), The Duke of Deception (Geoffrey Wolff), Just Kids (Patti Smith), Let’s Take the Long Way Home (Gail Caldwell)—I’m afraid I could go on and on here. As for those who have written about the making of memoir, I am a giant Patricia Hampl fan and Vivian Gornick was quite smart in her delineation of the situation and the story.
Can you ever really tell the truth?
We can tell our truth. That’s all we’ve got. We know when we start to exaggerate. We know when we “lie” to make things fit or to make the story turn out a certain, perfectly symmetrical, deeply self-congratulatory way. We know when what we write will not resonate with others who have lived the adventure alongside us. We know what we are doing.
Do you always hurt someone when you write a memoir?
You don’t have to. There are those who haven’t. But goodness, it is a difficult, dangerous, so slippery slope. We forget that even when we write out of love and toward love, we can hurt simply by freezing another in time, by not giving them room to change on the page.
Why do beauty and authenticity still matter?
How could they not? What do we have without beauty? What can we trust in the absence of the authentic? What good are we, especially as writers, if we do not aspire toward both?
What is the difference between memoir and autobiography?
Memoir yearns to understand what a life means. Autobiography merely tells you, most often in chronological fashion, what happened. The first celebrates our shared human condition. The second shouts, Look at me.
What do you ultimately want readers to take away from HANDLING THE TRUTH?
I have written this book for both readers and writers, for teachers and students, for the questing souls out there. If I have to name one single thing that I hope readers will take away from this (beyond all the books I recommend and hope they will read), it is this: Truth matters. It can change a life.
If you could recommend one memoir that every aspiring memoirist should read, what would it be? Why?
Running in the Family by Michael Ondaatje, because this extraordinary book proves how powerful—and wholly artistic—memoir can be. Running is a poem, a pastiche, a collage, a plot, a confession. It stretches our idea of the form. It changes every time that we read it, just like life itself.
Real memoirists write to discover a life, to understand its meaning, to share what has been learned, to reach beyond themselves. They do not write to pronounce, proclaim, accuse, retaliate, lecture, or self glorify. They leave therapy to the paid professionals.
Why write a book like this now? Hasn’t the memoir form morphed and leaked into a catchall phrase?
Yes, HANDLING is a brave endeavor. But what was my choice, really? I fully believe that memoir, done right, can heal, uplift, and instruct. That it is an embattled form of community, worthy of defense and explanation.
Can you really teach someone to write memoir?
I believe that you can help aspiring memoirists discover their purpose as writers, frame their lives against the backdrop of meaningful questions, and identify and wield the most telling details. I have been amazed by the engineers who emerge from my classroom as talented and ultimately published young memoirists. I have been gratified to watch the journeys of young and old writers—those who weren’t sure at first, and who became sure in time.
What are the biggest mistakes memoir writers make? Why does it matter that they get those things right?
So much to say here, and so little room. Perhaps it’s easiest to say this: Beginning memoirists tend to believe that just because something happened to them, that something will be of interest to others. But it’s never the thing that happened that matters most. It’s what has been learned, and how the learning has been shaped.
Which memoirs have been most influential for you?
The first memoir I read was Natalie Kusz’s extraordinary Road Song. I still teach that book, and I still cry when I read it. Running in the Family (Michael Ondaatje), The Duke of Deception (Geoffrey Wolff), Just Kids (Patti Smith), Let’s Take the Long Way Home (Gail Caldwell)—I’m afraid I could go on and on here. As for those who have written about the making of memoir, I am a giant Patricia Hampl fan and Vivian Gornick was quite smart in her delineation of the situation and the story.
Can you ever really tell the truth?
We can tell our truth. That’s all we’ve got. We know when we start to exaggerate. We know when we “lie” to make things fit or to make the story turn out a certain, perfectly symmetrical, deeply self-congratulatory way. We know when what we write will not resonate with others who have lived the adventure alongside us. We know what we are doing.
Do you always hurt someone when you write a memoir?
You don’t have to. There are those who haven’t. But goodness, it is a difficult, dangerous, so slippery slope. We forget that even when we write out of love and toward love, we can hurt simply by freezing another in time, by not giving them room to change on the page.
Why do beauty and authenticity still matter?
How could they not? What do we have without beauty? What can we trust in the absence of the authentic? What good are we, especially as writers, if we do not aspire toward both?
What is the difference between memoir and autobiography?
Memoir yearns to understand what a life means. Autobiography merely tells you, most often in chronological fashion, what happened. The first celebrates our shared human condition. The second shouts, Look at me.
What do you ultimately want readers to take away from HANDLING THE TRUTH?
I have written this book for both readers and writers, for teachers and students, for the questing souls out there. If I have to name one single thing that I hope readers will take away from this (beyond all the books I recommend and hope they will read), it is this: Truth matters. It can change a life.
If you could recommend one memoir that every aspiring memoirist should read, what would it be? Why?
Running in the Family by Michael Ondaatje, because this extraordinary book proves how powerful—and wholly artistic—memoir can be. Running is a poem, a pastiche, a collage, a plot, a confession. It stretches our idea of the form. It changes every time that we read it, just like life itself.
What do teachers
of memoir do?
I
have learned the answer to this question over time. Teachers of memoir create a safe space for truth
telling. They ask the right
questions and generate the kinds of exercises (which may involve cameras, food,
long walks, photographic research) that enable minds to travel backward through
time and to emerge, in the present, with a deepened understanding of both self
and others (and, of course, the world).
Teachers of memoir suggest the right books to read. They listen before they assert. They never judge another’s experience,
only help shape it into art.
Is it good, as a
writer, to be and feel vulnerable?
Absolutely. Vulnerability is, in many ways, the key
to writing memoir. All true
memoirists reckon honestly with the imperfect, the splintered, the flawed. All true memoirists are human.
Have we run out of
topics, as memoirists?
I
might have thought we had run out of topics, but then I started teaching at
Penn. The personal stories my
students tell are so original, heartbreaking, and surprising that I just hold
my breath and wait and receive.
A
Muslim-Hindu young man, born in Canada, writes about what it is to become an
American. A young woman writes of
watching her best friend die in a tragic accident. Another writes of her young obsession with cooking, another
of the loss of a young brother. A
young man writes of his struggle with religion, another writes of his obsession
with power training, another writes of the aftermath of a breakup of an
almost-secret relationship, another writes of stepping out into the world as a
gay man, another writes of his love for his mother, another writes of nearly
dying and worrying for his mother’s soul.
These stories are sui generis
because they have only been lived once, this specifically, and this
specifically detailed.
Memoir
reminds us of just how significant and particular and ripe with potential each
one of us is.
You have a chapter
titled “Do You Love?” in Handling the
Truth. What’s that about?
It’s
sort of simple, really. If we don’t
know what we love, what we’re passionate about, what makes us crazy with
desire, what we yearn for, we’re not ready to write memoir. Autobiography, maybe. But not memoir.
Is the
first-person pronoun the only way to write memoir?
Isn’t
it great that the answer to this question is no? Memoirs come in second person, third person, even graphic
art or photographically assisted formulations—and any manner of variation. I’m very insistent that my students
find their right truth-telling form.
I ask them to read memoirists like Mark Richard, Dorothy Allison, and
Alison Bechdel before they go too far.
You have written
eight acclaimed novels for young adults and have two more set to launch. Yet you teach memoir at Penn. Why? Why not teach writing for children?
I
get asked this question a lot. I
write novels for young adults because my students remind me, again and again,
of just how intelligent they are, how searching, how open to new kinds of
stories, how deserving of them. I
write novels for young adults because I believe, so firmly, in the imagination
of the young, in its generosity. I
love to write the teen story that transcends—that speaks to every generation.
But
I feel I have a responsibility, as one who has also written and studied memoir,
to teach these young minds what happens when you begin to frame a true story,
when you begin to speak truthfully about yourself. There are a whole lot of ways to get “truth telling”
wrong. And there can be
consequences even when you get it right.
If I can protect somehow, if I can caution, if I can help my students
live their real lives with even greater integrity, then that is what I am drawn
to do.
It’s
hard to put into words just how much I love my students. I feel I can serve them best by
teaching memoir, on the one hand, and by writing stories that I hope will help
broaden their worlds, on the other.
Basically,
I’m privileged to live in both worlds.
Read more...
complete gratitude for the Booklist review of Handling the Truth
Thursday, August 1, 2013
National Book Award finalist Kephart, who has written several memoirs and teaches a college course on the subject, offers an exploration of the genre that is informative and enjoyable. Drawing on the work of dozens of great authors (Annie Dillard, Mary Karr, Jeanette Winterson) as well as student comments, Kephart dives deeply into all that memoir can offer writers while acknowledging the pitfalls of oversharing and naming high profile memoir-abusers. Her insights are thoughtful and erudite. “Real writers,” she says, “do not write to trump or abolish. They write . . . to rumble or howl, or because language is salvation or because they’ve been alive or because they have survived”. As instructive as Kephart’s book is, it is not a how-to but rather a careful argument for the value of memoir, a form that allows writers to know themselves and readers to join them in the journey. Intense, provocative, endearing, and kind, Handling the Truth recalls Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird (1995). The appendix alone is a reading course not to be missed. Delightful.
— Colleen Mondor Read more...
— Colleen Mondor Read more...
Labels:
Booklist,
Gotham,
Handling the Truth
headed to Bank Street, for a mini conference, in November
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Many of you have asked whether I'll be spending time in New York City with Handling the Truth.
The answer, magnificently, is yes. At the invitation of Jennifer Brown, I'll be sharing my thoughts about teaching, truth, and the autobiography of hair at a Bank Street Mini Conference. Seeing the great Jenny Brown in a city I love is treat enough. Perhaps I'll also get to see some of you.
Read more...
The answer, magnificently, is yes. At the invitation of Jennifer Brown, I'll be sharing my thoughts about teaching, truth, and the autobiography of hair at a Bank Street Mini Conference. Seeing the great Jenny Brown in a city I love is treat enough. Perhaps I'll also get to see some of you.
The details here:
Bank Street Writers Lab Mini-Conference: The Nitty-Gritty
9AM to 12 Noon, Saturday, November 9, 2013
Opening Keynote: Beth Kephart on the teaching of truth
In a half-day program featuring an esteemed panel of reviewers and a study of mentor texts
Bank Street College of Education
610 West 112th Street
New York, NY 10025
Read more...
in which my nieces (and Serena) take their turn at responsive writing, at Hooray of Books
Sunday, July 28, 2013
One of the very great privileges of spending yesterday in Alexandria, VA, at Hooray for Books, in the company of Debbie Levy, family, and friends, was the time we took to write together. Debbie encouraged us to write in the tradition of her mother's poesiealbum—the book of brief holocaust-era letters, urgings, and clippings that inspired her book, The Year of Goodbyes. She asked us, specifically, to think about this:
What about you are you sure your friends or classmates will remember 70 years from now? What do you hope they forget? (We adults were urged to think about what we hope long-lost friends who encounter us now will remember—and forget.)
Since we had been talking about the thin line between fiction and truth, I urged our readers/writers to take something from their pocket and write its autobiography. We heard from paperclips, car keys, phones, and a dollar bill, among other laughter-inducing things.
Here, below, are two responses. The first is by my niece, Julia, who is entering her second year at the Corcoran College of Art and Design; she is a talented photographer. The second is from Claire, whose 13th birthday I helped celebrate earlier this year. She's a big reader, a fabulous student, and all-round athlete.
And then there's this amazing narrative about our day together, written by Serena Agusto-Cox, who dressed her super-well-behaved little girl in bright pink and shared her with us. Serena has a response to the writing prompt in this post—a beautiful poem. I encourage you to click this link, and read it for yourself.
Read more...
What about you are you sure your friends or classmates will remember 70 years from now? What do you hope they forget? (We adults were urged to think about what we hope long-lost friends who encounter us now will remember—and forget.)
Since we had been talking about the thin line between fiction and truth, I urged our readers/writers to take something from their pocket and write its autobiography. We heard from paperclips, car keys, phones, and a dollar bill, among other laughter-inducing things.
Here, below, are two responses. The first is by my niece, Julia, who is entering her second year at the Corcoran College of Art and Design; she is a talented photographer. The second is from Claire, whose 13th birthday I helped celebrate earlier this year. She's a big reader, a fabulous student, and all-round athlete.
The Remember? Forget? Exercise/Julia Emma Kephart Roberts
I go to a small small school in the basement of a museum, where you can usually find me in the first cubby of one of the largest darkrooms you've ever seen. There are about 300 students total - smaller than my graduating high school class. I know them all by name and face. I follow them on instagram and tumblr and flickr and every other website imaginable. But older folks be forewarned this means nothing in the actual relationship I have with these people. It also means nothing in regards to what I know about them or what they know about me. What stands out to one person about myself could be completely overlooked or misread by another. Because if you think about it, none of us really know what is remembered or forgotten or even if any of it is true or false, just what we remember about ourselves.
Autobiography of a SmartPhone/Claire Kephart Roberts
There’s a sad but almost happy loneliness the comes with being placed in someone's back pocket and sat on about a hundred times each day. You don’t get to choose what you wear, how you act, or most of all who you are. Everything about you is decided by someone of a higher standard. Although I am smarter then most significants around me I have no choice but to sit quietly and do what I am told. But the idea that my quietness has changed the life of anyone who finds me and my friends is almost remarkable. Significants put their life in us, what we hold is more then a game and social websites, everything typed and every scratch we acquire puts a new, maybe scary thought in our significant's head. Every little thing we do slowly eventually will blur our significant's lines until unreadable and they have no choice but to totally completely rely on us until we ourselves rule them.
And then there's this amazing narrative about our day together, written by Serena Agusto-Cox, who dressed her super-well-behaved little girl in bright pink and shared her with us. Serena has a response to the writing prompt in this post—a beautiful poem. I encourage you to click this link, and read it for yourself.
Read more...
Handling the Truth: Jilly Joy and Chippy Present the Book Trailer
Sunday, July 7, 2013
So here we are. Book trailer time. I didn't know what to do until I heard Jilly Joy and Chippy having this conversation in the forest. I'm hoping they are still so absorbed in their private conversation that they'll never know of this uber-secret video recording.
More on Handling the Truth (the book, the early reviews, writing exercises, student work, books I love) can be found here. Handling will be released as an original paperback by Gotham on August 6th.
And it really does glow in the dark.
Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir arrives
Friday, July 5, 2013
Am I afraid to open it? Yes. (I feel this way about every book.)
Will I open it someday? Perhaps. (I think that is required, and probably sooner or later, as I have two book interviews scheduled for next week. I need to know myself, to the degree that is still possible. To the degree that I can bear myself.)
Do I love the cover? Absolutely. (It's a dream cover, and you can't lose it at night.)
Many thanks to the Gotham team for making Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir the reality it has become. I very much wanted this to be a paperback book, so that it would not represent a burden on writers' and students' budgets. Gotham saw this—and many other things—in precisely the same way, and for that I'm ever grateful.
Read more...
holding the actual O magazine summer reading issue in my own two hands for the first time
Friday, June 14, 2013
It's Flourescent! The actual Handling the Truth cover arrives, with blurbs and all
Friday, June 7, 2013
Look what just arrived on this very soggy day.
No one will lose sight of this book.
Ever.
Read more...
Labels:
Gotham,
Handling the Truth,
Katrina Kenison,
Marie Arana
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)