Butler MFA

Happy Holidays

Happy holidays and best wishes for a happy New Year!

Thanks to all the students, faculty, alumni, and guests who celebrated with the Butler MFA at the annual Holiday Party. Along with delicious food and drinks, impossibly difficult literary trivia and a book exchange were highlights of the evening. Of course, the best part of any Butler MFA party is enjoying new and old friendships.

party2 PicMonkey Collage

Happy Holidays

Happy holidays and best wishes for a happy New Year!

Thanks to all the students, faculty, alumni, and guests who celebrated with the Butler MFA at the annual Holiday Party. Along with delicious food and drinks, impossibly difficult literary trivia and a book exchange were highlights of the evening. Of course, the best part of any Butler MFA party is enjoying new and old friendships.

party2 PicMonkey Collage

Visiting Writers Q & A

Butler MFA students have the unique opportunity to meet with our outstanding line-up of visiting writers at intimate Q & A sessions. Like the public readings, the Q and A sessions are open to all students but have a significantly smaller audience and provide a conversational environment. These casual gatherings are held at the home of Butler’s MFA, the ECCW.

Unlike the readings, the entire Q & A is devoted to asking and answering questions. In the past, great writers have provided writing and publishing advice, encouragement, words of wisdom, and insights into their work. In this relaxed setting, the authors’ reveal their true personalities and beliefs. It’s also a great time to get your book signed or take a photo with your favorite author.

This year’s Q & A sessions have been scheduled but are subject to change to accommodate our writers. They are all held at the Efroymson Center for Creative Writer on Butler’s campus.

Nikky Finney

Tuesday, September 15th at 9:30

Joyce Carol Oates

Tuesday, September 29th at 9:30

Gerald Stern and Anne Marie Macari

Wednesday, October 7th at 1:00

Laila Lalami

Wednesday, October 14th at 12:00

Denis Johnson

Thursday, November 12th at 9:30

Dean Young

Wednesday, November 18th at 1:00

Visiting Writers Q & A

Butler MFA students have the unique opportunity to meet with our outstanding line-up of visiting writers at intimate Q & A sessions. Like the public readings, the Q and A sessions are open to all students but have a significantly smaller audience and provide a conversational environment. These casual gatherings are held at the home of Butler’s MFA, the ECCW.

Unlike the readings, the entire Q & A is devoted to asking and answering questions. In the past, great writers have provided writing and publishing advice, encouragement, words of wisdom, and insights into their work. In this relaxed setting, the authors’ reveal their true personalities and beliefs. It’s also a great time to get your book signed or take a photo with your favorite author.

This year’s Q & A sessions have been scheduled but are subject to change to accommodate our writers. They are all held at the Efroymson Center for Creative Writer on Butler’s campus.

Nikky Finney

Tuesday, September 15th at 9:30

Joyce Carol Oates

Tuesday, September 29th at 9:30

Gerald Stern and Anne Marie Macari

Wednesday, October 7th at 1:00

Laila Lalami

Wednesday, October 14th at 12:00

Denis Johnson

Thursday, November 12th at 9:30

Dean Young

Wednesday, November 18th at 1:00

Work Hard, Play Hard

Butler’s MFA classes officially start today. However, the fun has already begun. Here at the Butler MFA, we like to work hard, play hard, and write best. We aim to build a community of writers who will support students for life, not just three years.

Last Saturday, the Efroymson Center for Creative Writing was packed with faculty and staff, new and returning students, and alums for the annual Welcome Back Celebration. Delicious food, drinks, and conversation were enjoyed by all.

mfaparty

Monday, Booth held its annual kick-off meeting at the ECCW with a pizza party and orientation session for new readers. The turnout was fantastic, and all the editors and readers are excited for a great year.

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Tuesday, a feisty bunch gathered a few miles off campus at the Broadripple Brew Pub for Trivia Night. Poets, fiction and nonfiction writers, along with a few professors and spouses, united to create two powerhouse trivia teams. Although neither team won the grand prize, one team did out perform the other earning major bragging rights. There was talk about making Trivia Night a regular gathering. Look for notices on the MFA facebook page.

Trivia night

Dialogue to host MFA reading

A Midsummer Night's Reading Butler University MFA

The difference between reading and hearing a great poem or story can be the difference between confetti in a bag at Party City and the magic of a million little paper snowflakes fluttering down at the end of a celebration. Though we all grow up to learn to enjoy reading, there is something much more communal and human about gathering to hear the compositions of storytellers who are worthy of their peers’ attention and of the words themselves. Jim Hanna, a third-year MFA candidate, knew from talking to his peers in Dialogue, the MFA student-run workshop group he coordinates, that this was an outlet the Butler program needed. So he created a recurring, casual reading series that serves as a complement to Dialogue‘s workshops that run during the year. The latest event, “A Midsummer Night’s Reading 2: Electric Much Ado,” takes place at the Efroymson Center for Creative Writing at 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 17. The reading is open to the public.

“The Midsummer Night’s Readings, like all the readings we do, have two purposes,” Hanna says. “The first, naturally, is to entertain. Readings should be fun, so I often encourage writers to read their most provocative, funny, or poignant work.  The second purpose, because we’re all students, is to learn. These readings are attended by the same people you’re in classes with. These are low-pressure events. We’re all there to have fun, to be supportive, and also to provide an audience.”

For the same reason MFA students might encourage their Creative Writing Camp students to read their work aloud, the Dialogue readings are a chance for participants to hear how their work actually sounds, to listen to their characters come to life in front of an audience. Sometimes a tough, fast-talking wise guy is fun to write and seems natural on the page, but reading it aloud might make you realize you’ve just been ripping off Goodfellas for 200 pages.  “Readers learn a lot about their work when they read it aloud, or at least they learn something different than they would learn if they workshopped it,” Hanna says.

Of course, there’s another, more primal urge that motivates MFA students to show up to the ECCW during the summer months.

“The other great thing about our readings is the food,” Hanna says. “Everyone brings a dish, and it seems that an unspoken requirement of the program is that you must be talented in the kitchen. We’ve had some excellent spreads in the past.”

No pressure, first-years.

Hanna hopes to keep the reading momentum going for the rest of the year, aiming to put on two events per semester–perhaps aligned with the holidays to excuse the consumption of large amounts of food and/or chocolate. “We’re planning on having one around Halloween and one around Thanksgiving in the Fall,” Hanna says. “And probably another Valentine’s Day reading and maybe an Easter Reading.”

With both facets of Dialogue, the purpose has always been simple: to encourage writers to be active as much as possible, gathering, sharing, and refining their work in a somewhat-structured, supportive environment. 

“Our goal should ultimately be to outgrow the structures of the program, to become full-fledged, disciplined writers who will continue to carve time out of their busy lives, even though no one is paying them for it, and there are no more deadlines,” Hanna says. “But the truth is we all need support, no matter where we are in our careers. Which is one reason we’re open both to current students and alumni.”

Hanna welcomes both poets and fiction writers to join in the group. Culinary skill may or may not be a factor in your work’s reception during any given reading. To win the crowd over, we recommend bringing a very large jar of Nutella and 30 spoons.