Today’s post marks my official return to TeachingAuthors.com and I am smiling.
Both the timing and the blog’s current “Summer Doings” theme couldn’t be better.
I’ve been dying to share news of the Vermont Manuscript Workshop I was lucky enough to facilitate July 10-15 at the Landgrove Inn in Landgrove, Vermont.
It was truly a “Wish you were here!” postcard waiting to be written.
The Workshop’s location in the Green Mountains was something to write home about.
Non-stop green everywhere you looked, up, down and all around.
Crayola Sky Blue skies. Puffs of cheery white clouds.
Horses.
Cows.
Crystal-clear brooks.
Rolling hills and peaks.
Wooden bridges.
Think: a Currier & Ives print of Vermont Summer come to life, sound-tracked by bird songs that stopped you in your tracks.
More noteworthy, though, were my five talented, committed, smart and personable picture book writers – (pictured, from left to write) Dorothy Wiese, Shelley Smithson, Jean Horrigan, Donna Brown and Becky Hohensee.
Their
travel to Vermont from, respectively, Hampshire, Illinois, East Lansing,
Michigan, Baltimore, Maryland, Rutland, Vermont and Houma, Louisiana, paled against
the staggering metaphorical distance they traveled in coming to know their
stories, honing their craft and readying their manuscripts for readers.
They
became a supportive, caring Writers Group abracadabra,
just like that.
Speaking
of which, Magic of all sorts filled our days and nights.
Mornings
we gathered after breakfast in the Inn’s sunlit Studio up on the hill to focus
on character, plot, writer choices, revision and reader considerations.Most afternoons after lunch writers worked independently and/or worked one-on-one with me on a bench by the pond.
Evenings after dinner were reserved for reading-aloud the day’s work.
Author/editor/teacher Barbara Seuling, who founded the Vermont Manuscript Workshop 23 years ago (!), gifted us one afternoon with her insights and experience.
SplashingCowBooks Publisher Gordon MacClellan, who happened to live 20 minutes down the road in Manchester, stopped by to acquaint us with his publishing company as well as his new venture in marketing and distributing independently-published children’s books (DartFrog) and the New England Children’s Review.
At
our opening Meet-and-Greet, I’d gifted each writer with her very own magic
wand. P. L. Travers’ words graced each
writer’s folder.
“We are all looking for magic…..But indeed we have to wave the wand for ourself.”
I’d
toasted to a week of magic when we’d first gathered and raised our glasses and
that toast proved prophetic.
Watching
these talented writers discover their magic
as well as the magic in their stories was nothing short of magic for me.Each connected with her world, her story, herself, ensuring readers connect as well.
Though
I surely do not excel at iPhone picture-taking, the Good News about the photos
that follow is: there are no pictures of my index finger!
Here’s
our very own Landgrove Inn Round Table at which we dined 3 times a day on
gourmet meals cooked by (to my surprise) the Cubs-hat wearing Chef Joe
Kapitanski.
Note the Cubs cup in the middle of the table which held writers’ favorite inspirational quotes extracted daily.
Here’s
a photo of Gordon and me, showcasing the final art for the cover of my Missouri
writer Joe Lawson’s mg novel TACKLING TIRES, out next month.
And
I’ve been pinching myself ever since.
Next
year’s dates are now on the calendar: July 9-14, 2017!I’m counting down the days to again making magic in the magical Green Mountains.
I’m wishing you ’ll be there!
Esther
Hershenhorn
OH Esther! I wish I could join you next year! I need to work on my manuscripts, to get them off the ground, so they will be good enough to be seen by other eyes ;)
ReplyDeleteThis will be my motivation- Vermont 2017!!!
Thank you for this amazing blog.
Shirin
This sounds so wonderful, Esther. I know everyone there grew as a writer under your kind encouragement.
ReplyDelete