Faculty

Butler’s bountiful harvest

After months of preparation, planning, and a venue upgrade, on Tuesday Butler’s first annual Writer’s Harvest came and went without a hitch. It was, in the words of one of our attendees, “One of the coolest, most amazing things I’ve ever gotten to see.” Hopefully you managed to hear about it from a friend, read about it in the paper (or on this very blog), or maybe you saw one of its beautiful posters– and hopefully you attended.

butler writer's harvest john green second helpings community kitchenIf you did, you saw eight (8!) tall boxes of donated rice and dried pasta filled to the brim, and you saw 761 spectators of all ages fill Clowes Hall. Considering the capacity of our original venue – Atherton Hall’s Reilly Room – is 400, and those eight boxes of donations added up to over 900 pounds of food (1.2 pounds of food per attendee), I’d say this harvest was a resounding success. Not bad for our first, eh? Continue reading

Butler’s bountiful harvest

After months of preparation, planning, and a venue upgrade, on Tuesday Butler’s first annual Writer’s Harvest came and went without a hitch. It was, in the words of one of our attendees, “One of the coolest, most amazing things I’ve ever gotten to see.” Hopefully you managed to hear about it from a friend, read about it in the paper (or on this very blog), or maybe you saw one of its beautiful posters– and hopefully you attended.

butler writer's harvest john green second helpings community kitchenIf you did, you saw eight (8!) tall boxes of donated rice and dried pasta filled to the brim, and you saw 761 spectators of all ages fill Clowes Hall. Considering the capacity of our original venue – Atherton Hall’s Reilly Room – is 400, and those eight boxes of donations added up to over 900 pounds of food (1.2 pounds of food per attendee), I’d say this harvest was a resounding success. Not bad for our first, eh? Continue reading

Butler’s first annual Writer’s Harvest

Slim profile version of Writer's Harvest promo flyer, which will appear in Nuvo.The third event in our Conversations@Efroymson series, which also happens to be our most exciting yet, is Butler’s first annual Writer’s Harvest. On Tuesday October 29, 7:30 PM at Clowes Memorial Hall, Indiana-based fiction powerhouses John Green, Ben Winters and Susan Neville will be giving readings– but that’s just the “writer” part. The “harvest” part is where you come in. We will be collecting your donations of dried pasta and white rice on behalf of Indy non-profit community kitchen Second Helpings. The event is, as always, free and open to the public.

While they do cook and deliver about 3,500 meals (about 150 pounds of pasta and rice!) every day, eliminating hunger is only one half of what Second Helpings does. The company also provides culinary job training to unemployed and underemployed adults. Their mission statement reads: “We’re not just teaching people to cook – we’re providing an avenue for people to transform their own lives. We don’t just collect food – we rescue food because we can’t stand to see it go to waste when others have none.” Naturally, your donation will be much appreciated. But we plan to make it worth your while; allow me to introduce our readers: Continue reading

Chamonix Memorixs: Part I

The Butler MFA program is growing faster than ever, and in the early summer that growth paid dividends to a handful of students who got to spend three weeks in writerly nirvana, attending intensive workshops in Chamonix, France. Part graduate workshop, part scenic vacation, part mad-science experiment, the first Chamonix Summer Writing Program was a resounding success– so much so that it is being offered again, now a permanent offering to Butler students.

Butler University ChamonixBut you absolutely shouldn’t take my word for it. You should, however, take Jim Hanna‘s word for it. Because he went. And despite this glamorous head shot, he is most assuredly not a paid actor. He was kind enough to answer a few questions and share a near-death experience with me. Continue reading

Chamonix Memorixs: Part I

The Butler MFA program is growing faster than ever, and in the early summer that growth paid dividends to a handful of students who got to spend three weeks in writerly nirvana, attending intensive workshops in Chamonix, France. Part graduate workshop, part scenic vacation, part mad-science experiment, the first Chamonix Summer Writing Program was a resounding success– so much so that it is being offered again, now a permanent offering to Butler students.

Butler University ChamonixBut you absolutely shouldn’t take my word for it. You should, however, take Jim Hanna‘s word for it. Because he went. And despite this glamorous head shot, he is most assuredly not a paid actor. He was kind enough to answer a few questions and share a near-death experience with me. Continue reading

The art of chapbooking

forhan mugPublished by Los Angeles-based Silver Birch Press, Butler MFA instructor Chris Forhan’s new chapbook Ransack and Dance is in many ways not new. In fact, most of the chapbook’s 24 poems were penned between 7 and 10 years ago, before Forman met his wife (fellow poet and Butler faculty member) Alessandra Lynch and moved to Indy. When Melanie Villines reached out to Forhan, hoping to include his poem “The Church of the Backyard” in Silver Birch’s Summer Anthology, he had a few more poems to offer, but perhaps not enough for a full book. In short, this was the conception of Ransack and Dance. If you’d like to read the full story and catch a sample poem, head to Butler’s Newsroom.

What I’m actually here to do is sell you on chapbooks. Forhan calls the chapbook “a quick, intense experience.” Compact, with thematic unity. I would call them underutilized. Say you’re a fairly young – or fairly inexperienced – poet, or prose poet, essayist, or… short-storyist. You may not have enough work to fill a book just yet, and you certainly don’t have a body of work from 7-10 years prior to draw upon at your leisure. But, say you have about 30 pages of work you’re proud of.

For you, a chapbook is surmountable. It’s a starting point. A stepping stone. A hook to hang your hat on. A chance to see your work – and your work alone – featured either in print or in a digital package, ready to be consumed by others. And conveniently, many presses who publish chapbooks are especially friendly to neophytes. What’s even better, because chapbook print runs tend to be on the small side with equally small distribution, many publishers will allow work previously published in chapbooks to appear (when the time arrives) in your full-length book.

forhan coverYou’re probably thinking I can’t sweeten this pot any further. Chapbooks are chaptastic, you get it. But wait, there’s more: Contests! Cash prizes! Finally making your parents proud of your decision to write (mileage may vary)! Random example: BLOOM runs a yearly contest and selects winners in poetry, prose, and nonfiction. Black Lawrence Press also has a well-established yearly contest that accepts poetry and fiction. For poets, this list will be of interest. And of course, there’s always NewPages for a comprehensive contest listing, but you should be checking that site regularly anyway.

Point is, you may not be Chris Forhan, but if you’re reading this post, which is located on an MFA program’s blog, chances are good that you are a newish writer with an itch to get published. Just remember that it doesn’t have to be either a lit mag or a book. Chapbooks are a totally valid and more accessible way to get your writing, and your name, out there.