Munster Literature Centre
Ionad Litríochta an Deisceart

Creative Non-fiction workshop starting 16 July, four weeks only €120

How to Improve Our Memoir or Personal Essays by Learning and Practicing the Core Elements of Creative Non Fiction: a Craft Workshop with David McLoghlin

  • 4-week course, Wednesday evenings 7 to 9 pm
  • Class # 1 starts on 16 July, Classes 2, 3 and 4 are on 23 July, 30 July, 6 August
  • All levels are welcome
  • €120 ( €100 concession) for the series of four workshops
  • For booking enquiries email info@munsterlit.ie

This is an online course through Zoom for those writers who are beginning or revising a project, whether memoir or personal essays. Each two-hour class will be equally divided between creative writing workshop and the craft of memoir. We will discuss exemplary texts, as we learn about, and then practice, how to

  • “show” and when to “tell”. Here you will learn the importance of scene to bring your story alive with dialogue and descriptive, immersive language.
  • use free-writing as a process to progressively hone in on the story you want to tell, and / or assist you in freeing you from blocks.
  • work with time by moving between present and past convincingly without confusing the reader, possibly employing more than one timeline, or at least establishing greater awareness of your “narrative present.” (By narrative present I mean the life of the adult narrator that is telling the story.)
  • identify the “story within the story” or throughline / central narrative thread, and work with leitmotifs by implementing recurring images or thematic elements.
  • create a balance of authentic scenes and exposition by weaving interjections by the adult narrator into the narrative, thus adding richness and texture. Scenes happen in an approximation of real-time while exposition is the informative linking material between scenes that helps us compress time, and deliver vital information.
  • find a structure that works for you by mapping plot points, carving out obligatory scenes, and polishing the narrative arc.

We will focus on in-class exercises and you’ll be encouraged to develop and sustain a writing practice to help you to generate new work, or revise a work in progress. This class stresses community, and will help you to build connections with other writers: hopefully “writing buddies” with whom you can share work long after our time together has come to an end. The semester also comprises “office hours” where you can meet with me via Zoom before or after class to discuss any aspect of your writing process that is on your mind. This is an especially important part of the class for me, as I very much enjoy assisting writers in teasing out the essential core of the story that they need to tell.

David McLoghlin has taught many memoir courses with The Irish Writers Centre, The Center for Fiction, Hudson Valley Writers Center and The Shipman Agency. His third book of poetry, Crash Centre, was recently shortlisted for the Pigott Prize in association with Listowel Writers Week. While living in New York City between 2010 and 2020 he was Resident Writer at Hunts Point Alliance for Children in the South Bronx, and an NYU Teaching Fellow at Coler Specialty Hospital. An essay was recently published on Poetry Foundation’s website, and an essay about his grandfather, the golf architect, Eddie Hackett, widely considered “the Father of Irish Golf Design,” is forthcoming in Golfer’s Journal. He is at work on a memoir and a fourth collection of poetry.