A Writer's Moment
A look at writing and writers who inspire us.
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“One of the great joys of life is creativity. Information goes in, gets shuffled about, and comes out in new and intere...
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“There was never yet an uninteresting life. Such a thing is an impossibility. Inside of the dullest exterior there is a drama, a comedy, ...
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“Librarians and romance writers accomplish one mission better than anyone, including English teachers: we create readers for life - and w...
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A Writer's Moment: 'Property of the imagination' : “The English language is nobody's special property. ...
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A Writer's Moment: 'Information In; Creative Responses Out' : “One of the great joys of life is creativity....
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A Writer's Moment: 'Story ideas surround you' : “I always tell my students, 'If you walk around with your eyes and ears...
Thursday, February 19, 2026
A Writer's Moment: 'It's what you can't stop thinking about'
'It's what you can't stop thinking about'
“You
have your identity when you find out, not what you can keep your mind on, but
what you can't keep your mind off.” – A. R. Ammons
Born
in North Carolina on this date in 1926, Ammons worked as an elementary school
principal and a glass company executive before turning his full attention to
literature – both teaching and writing. From 1964 to 1998 he
taught creative writing at Cornell University while authoring hundreds, if not
thousands, of poems.
Ammons
wrote about nature and the self, themes that had preoccupied Ralph Waldo
Emerson and Walt Whitman and that remained the central focus of his
work. His Collected Poems, 1951–1971 (a terrific read) won
a National Book Award. And his Selected Poems is an
excellent introduction to his works In his work, Ammons focuses on
change, both in nature and in daily life.
Shortly
before his death in 2001 Ammons was asked: “What is poetry?”
“Poetry,"
he replied, "is the music of words . . . the linguistic correction of
disorder.”
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
A Writer's Moment: 'It's not a matter of choice'
'It's not a matter of choice'
“Writing
is not a matter of choice. Writers have to write. It is somehow in their
temperament, in the blood, in tradition.” –
N. Scott Momaday
Native
American Momaday, a Kiowa was a novelist, short story writer, essayist and poet
and winner of both the Pulitzer Prize (for his novel House Made of Dawn)
and National Medal of Arts. While “House” has been called “A
Classic,” he is perhaps best known for the novel/memoir/folklore work The
Way to Rainy Mountain.
Momaday
grew up on Reservations in Arizona and New Mexico, and earned degrees from the
University of New Mexico Stanford, where he also began his writing career,
focusing first on poetry.
Also
a renowned teacher and speaker, he was one of the nation’s first Native
American academics and created a curriculum based on American Indian literature
and mythology. In addition to his national honors, he was
awarded some two dozen honorary degrees and was named a fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences. Selected for the Native American Hall
of Fame in 2018, Momaday died in 2024.
“I am interested in the way that we look at a
given landscape and take possession of it in our blood and brain,” Momaday
said. “None of us lives apart from the land entirely; such an
isolation is unimaginable.”
Monday, February 16, 2026
A Writer's Moment: 'That thing humans do'
'That thing humans do'
“Literature
has as one of its principal allures that it tells you something about life that
life itself can't tell you. I just thought literature is a thing that human
beings do.” – Richard Ford
Born
in Mississippi on this date in 1944, Ford is a Pulitzer Prize winning novelist
and short story writer best known for his novels The Sportswriter, Independence
Day, The Lay of the Land, and Let Me Be Frank With You. He
also wrote the best-selling short story collection Rock Springs,
which has many widely anthologized stories.
The
grandson of a railroad engineer, Ford started his adult life working for the
railroad before deciding to further pursue his love of literature by studying
English Literature at Michigan State University.
“I
started reading literature at 17 or 18, and I felt this extra beat to life,” he
said. “Reading is probably what leads most writers to
writing.” And so he became a writer, although he took a swing at law
school first before dropping out to attend a creative writing program at the
University of California. His first books were well received but not
big sellers, so he went to work as a sportswriter, which eventually led to his
first bestseller, The Sportswriter.
Journalism
and his personality have provided plenty for his writing base. “My job is
to have empathy and curiosity for things that I've never done,” he
said. “Also, I'm a person whom people talk to.”