Alone with All That Could Happen: On Writing Fiction

(Author)
Available
Product Details
Price
$29.95
Publisher
Press 53
Publish Date
Pages
252
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.57 inches | 0.82 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781950413553

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About the Author
David Jauss is the author of four collections of short stories, Black Maps, Crimes of Passion, Glossolalia: New & Selected Stories, and Nice People: New & Selected Stories II; two collections of poems, You Are Not Here and Improvising Rivers; and a collection of essays, Alone with All That Could Happen (2008) and On Writing Fiction (2010). He has also edited three anthologies, most recently Words Overflown by Stars: Creative Writing Instruction and Insight from the Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Program. His short stories have been published in numerous magazines and reprinted in such anthologies as Best American Short Stories, The O. Henry Awards: Prize Stories, and The Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses, as well as in The Pushcart Book of Short Stories: The Best Stories from the Pushcart Prize. He is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, a James A. Michener/Copernicus Society of America Fellowship, and three fellowships from the Arkansas Arts Council and one from the Minnesota State Arts Board. His collection Black Maps received the Associated Writers and Writing Programs Award for Short Fiction. A professor emeritus at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, he teaches in the low-residency MFA in Writing Program at Vermont College of Fine Arts.
Reviews

What you hold in your hands this moment is now a gift to you. It is the gift of a man who is beloved by his students, beloved by his colleagues, and beloved by his readers. You will find in these pages, whether he is writing about such practical matters as point of view or such seemingly esoteric issues as Janusian thinking, a teacher who cares deeply about his students and a writer who cares just as deeply about the power of words and all they can mean. His is a fierce kind of caring-he takes this vocation seriously-and yet it is also a nurturing kind, as you will soon see.

The best way I know to discover how words do their work, and to understand how they can become art, is for the apprentice to study with a fierce and compassionate master of that art. David Jauss is just such a master, and this book grants its readers-you who desire to know what it means to write-an invaluable course of study, all at the hands of this extraordinary teacher, writer, and human. -Bret Lott, excerpt from the "Foreword"