A Writer's Moment
A look at writing and writers who inspire us.
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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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“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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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, April 16, 2026
A Writer's Moment: 'Stimulating the urge to write'
'Stimulating the urge to write'
“No
one can teach writing, but classes may stimulate the urge to write. If you are
born a writer, you will inevitably and helplessly write. A born writer has
self-knowledge. Read, read, read. And if you are a fiction writer, don't
confine yourself to reading fiction. Every writer is first a wide reader.” – Cynthia
Ozick
Born
in New York City on April 17, 1928, Ozick has written fiction and a wide range
of nonfiction, including politics, history, literary criticism, and The
Holocaust. Ozick’s lyrical fiction style has earned such accolades
as “The greatest living American writer” (from several of her contemporaries),
and the title “The Emily Dickinson of The Bronx.” And her essay
style has been called everything from “uncompromising” to “biting” to
“brilliant.”
She
has authored 7 novels, 8 short-story collections (her short stories have won
multiple O. Henry Award first prizes), and 10 books of essays. Still going strong on the eve of her 98th
birthday, she released In a Yellow Wood: Selected Stories and Essays in
2025.
Recipient of a National Jewish Book Council
Award for Lifetime a=Achievement, she also was a finalist for the National Book
Award (for her Puttermesser Papers), won both the PEN/Nabokov and
PEN/Malamud Awards, and earned the Presidential Medal for the Humanities. Her works have been translated into 17
languages.
“In
an essay, you have the outcome in your pocket before you set out on your
journey, and very rarely do you make an intellectual or psychological
discovery,” she said. “But when you write fiction, you don't know
where you are going - sometimes down to the last paragraph. That is the pleasure of it."
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
A Writer's Moment: 'Your topic? It's the whole world'
'Your topic? It's the whole world'
“Mark
Twain was a great traveler and he wrote three or four great travel books. I
wouldn't say that I'm a travel novelist but rather a novelist who travels - and
who uses travel as a background for finding stories of places.” –
Paul Theroux
Born
in Medford, Mass., in April of 1941, Theroux has become both an accomplished novelist AND travel
writer. His best-known works are The Great Railway
Bazaar and The Mosquito Coast, adapted into both
a popular movie and Apple TV series.
Winner
of the prestigious James Tait Black Memorial Prize for The Mosquito
Coast, he also earned the Royal Geographic Society’s Patron Medal (in 2015) and the
Whitbread Prize for Best Novel (for Picture Palace) in
1978. And, his novels Saint Jack, Half-Moon Street and The
Chinese Box have been adapted into films. The prolific Theroux has authored some 80 books, including a 2024 novel Burma Sahib
and a 2025 collection, The Vanishing
Point: Stories.
To Theroux, the whole world is a book topic. “Everything is fiction,” he said. “You only have your own life to work with in the way that a biographer only has the letters and journals to work with.” And, as for his travel writing: “The job of the travel writer is to go far and wide . . .make voluminous notes . . . and tell the truth.”
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
A Writer's Moment: Giving ideas 'emotional reality'
Giving ideas 'emotional reality'
“Fiction
allows you to embody certain ideas and give them an emotional reality. The
characters allow you to get close viscerally to an idea.” – Anne
Michaels
Born in Toronto on this date in 1958, Michaels is a poet, novelist and teacher whose numerous writing awards include a handful for her both her book of poetry The Weight of Oranges and her novel Fugitive Pieces. The latter not only earned a Books in Canada First Novel Award, but also the Trillium Book Award, the Orange Prize for Fiction, and the Guardian Fiction Prize.
“It's
a fantastic privilege to spend three or four hundred pages with a reader,”
she said. “You have time to go into certain questions that are painful or
difficult or complicated. That's one thing that appeals to me very much about
the novel form.”