Workshop, 8/18 at 5 pm

31-29 31st St, Astoria, NY

Creating Sensory Details: How often have you heard this famous refrain: Show, don’t tell. But how exactly? And why? Most writers interpret it to mean that one should write vividly with detailed images and sensory information (show) rather than dull summaries (tell). Working through a series of writing exercises, we’ll explore the scientific impact sensory details have to emotionally engage readers.

Click here for more info and to RSVP via Facebook.

Testimonial

Click here to listen!

Love this feedback from last month’s “Snapped!” show. All the work that goes into every installment of No, YOU Tell It! is well worth the results.

Interested in bringing a camaraderie-building experience like no other to your school, office, or organization? Contact me, I’m happy to chat.

Oh, What a Night!

4 storytellers, 3 creative team members, 2 two-hour story workshops to develop the pieces on the page, 1 personalized rehearsal session with each storyteller to help them best embody their partner’s story on stage = an unforgettable evening of No, YOU Tell It! “Snapped!” stories for a PACKED house at Dixon Place.

Pictured left to right: Mike Dressel, Robb Leigh Davis, Mariam Bazeed, Erika Iverson, Kent D. Wolf, Naomi Gordon Loebl and ME. Photo credit: Ariel Mahler

HELP us keep the switched-up storytelling going by donating via our sponsored artist page with The Field. Click here to find out more about what we do, our goals, and to make your tax-deductible donation.

Any amount is welcome and needed. Another way to help is to SPREAD THE WORD. Subscribe to the No, YOU Tell It! podcast on iTunes, AudioBoom, or noyoutellit.com.
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Thank you again to our amazing audience last night and a special shout out to Lambda Literary for helping us curate this invigorating evening of Queer Storytelling with a Twist.

Happy Pride everyone!! Keep the storytelling going!

Queer Storytelling with a Twist

Get lit(erary) for Pride 2019 as fellows from Lambda Literary team up with my storytelling series No, YOU Tell It! for a night of queer nonfiction with a twist: Each participant develops their own true-life tale on the page and then trades scripts with a partner to present each other’s story on stage.

These four storytellers have been working with the No, YOU Tell It! creative team for the past month to turn out and trade tales inspired by the theme “Snapped!”

Mariam Bazeed, Lambda Literary Fellow

Kent D. Wolf, The Friedrich Agency

Robb Leigh Davis, Meditation on a Theme

Naomi Gordon-Loebl, Lambda Literary Fellow

Don’t miss this special night of queer story swapping coming up on June 11th at Dixon Place! Doors/Drinks at 7 pm. Stories start right at 7:30.

It’s FREE and oh have we got some stories for you…

360 One Turn Residency

Yesterday, I was one of two writers to kick off Holes in the Wall Collective‘s new 360 writing residency. Six hours, 360 minutes, in a space chosen for you and your project.

“Make it real, make it plain, and tell the whole story.” Congressman John Lewis presented this as the mission statement for March a graphic novel trilogy that brought the civil rights movement and Lewis’s own incredible story to life.

When I arrived at Housing Works Bookstore and discovered that my writing perch wasn’t within reach of an electrical outlet (the horror… the horror…), I found this March journal in the “For Sale” stacks near the register. What a treasure!

Yesterday, I clicked 360 minutes closer toward the completion of my memoir. Having struggled to “tell the whole story” for years, I’ve also found a new writing mantra for when the task at hand feels too daunting.

Make it real. Make it plain. Tell the whole story!

Story Starters

Great second session with the 7th graders at Madison Junior School this week. Each student created four distinct openings using various story starter techniques. Love watching their personal narratives take shape!


Memoir Residency

Honored to be a returning as a teaching artist this spring at Madison Junior School in New Jersey for their memoir unit.

Here’s a fun shot from my first day working with 200+ 7th graders! Started the wheels spinning to generate seed ideas for their personal narratives.

By the end of the unit, each student will draft, revise, and polish a personal story. This summer, I’ll edit and publish the finals into an anthology of their work. Such a thrill to help these young writers become published authors.