Rainier Writing Workshop
"I am impressed with the caliber, commitment, and generosity of the faculty. Their willingness to engage with us in and out of our classroom made this experience unlike any other I've had."
"I am impressed with the caliber, commitment, and generosity of the faculty. Their willingness to engage with us in and out of our classroom made this experience unlike any other I've had."
Poetry
Editor in Residence. Mentor. Workshops and classes in nonfiction and poetry.
Statement: "I am an editor because I am a writer; I am a writer because at some point – I believe I was in my mid-twenties – simply taking in the world no longer seemed enough, and because I have crazy but loving dreams of whacking a few readers in the gut the way my favorite writers have whacked me. I try to edit via compassionate insinuation [from the Latin "insinuare": to introduce by windings and turnings], doing my best to enter the intention and spirit of a piece to determine how it might be finished more completely and accurately. But I also edit via compassionate fiat, because some things just don't work if you fail to handle them thoughtfully enough. In one sense, I suppose, there's what a good editor must strive to be: thoughtful enough. And, I would argue, good writers must be so as well. Once I sat at a dinner gathering of writers and said, 'For a piece of writing to be genuinely great, someone has to want to kill you for having written it.' This isn't true, of course, but I think it's next door to something that needs to be true."