Writing Circle Mondays | John Stoddard Cancer Center

Writing Circle Monday sessions are sponsored by Stoddard Cancer Center as part of the Charlie Cutler Healing and Wellness Program and inspired by the Amherst Writers & Artists  method, which believes that everyone is a writer.

Each session participants create a safe space, and then write together for timed intervals to writing prompts. Writing prompts inspire stories from participants’ lives. After each timed-writing session, participants will have the opportunity to read their stories to the group, which is healing on many levels.

Cancer patients and survivors are welcome to sign up for one to eight sessions. Registration is required, as each session will cap at 10 writers. For questions or to register, call (515) 241-8505 or email Gina Mandernach at Unity Point at [email protected].

Writing Circle Mondays | John Stoddard Cancer Center

Writing Circle Monday sessions are sponsored by Stoddard Cancer Center as part of the Charlie Cutler Healing and Wellness Program and inspired by the Amherst Writers & Artists  method, which believes that everyone is a writer.

Each session participants create a safe space, and then write together for timed intervals to writing prompts. Writing prompts inspire stories from participants’ lives. After each timed-writing session, participants will have the opportunity to read their stories to the group, which is healing on many levels.

Cancer patients and survivors are welcome to sign up for one to eight sessions. Registration is required, as each session will cap at 10 writers. For questions or to register, call (515) 241-8505 or email Gina Mandernach at Unity Point at [email protected].

Writing Circle Mondays | John Stoddard Cancer Center

Writing Circle Monday sessions are sponsored by Stoddard Cancer Center as part of the Charlie Cutler Healing and Wellness Program and inspired by the Amherst Writers & Artists  method, which believes that everyone is a writer.

Each session participants create a safe space, and then write together for timed intervals to writing prompts. Writing prompts inspire stories from participants’ lives. After each timed-writing session, participants will have the opportunity to read their stories to the group, which is healing on many levels.

Cancer patients and survivors are welcome to sign up for one to eight sessions. Registration is required, as each session will cap at 10 writers. For questions or to register, call (515) 241-8505 or email Gina Mandernach at Unity Point at [email protected].

2nd Sunday Swift Youth Writers Groups

Join us on October 12th for the 2nd Sunday Swift Youth Writers Group held from 2 to 4 PM at the Ames Public Library. We are scheduled to meet in the P.E.O. room, but check monitors incase the location changes.
We supply notebooks, pens and other materials to prompt and inspire stories. This Sunday, Claire Kruesel will lead the Swift Youth Writers group. She looks forward to writing with those of you who can join her.
Swift Youth Writers Groups are an Ames Writers Collective FREE community outreach program held in partnership with the Ames Public Library. The Ames Writers Collective community outreach programs are funded by grants and generous donors.
Join us! Happy Writing!

2nd Sunday Swift Youth Writers Groups

It’s almost Fall and the start of the new school year, which means the 2nd Sunday Swift Youth Writers Groups are starting up again.
On Sunday, September 8thLinea King kicks off the Swift Youth Writers groups series. She looks forward to writing with those of you who can join her from 2 to 4 PM at the Ames Public Library. We are scheduled to meet in the P.E.O. room, but check monitors incase the location changes.
We supply notebooks, pens and other materials to prompt and inspire stories. You can learn about Linea and her writing philosophy by clicking here.
Swift Youth Writers Groups are an Ames Writers Collective FREE community outreach program held in partnership with the Ames Public Library. The Ames Writers Collective community outreach programs are funded by grants and generous donors.
Join us! Happy Writing!
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In The Media News

2nd Sunday Swift Youth Writers Group & Linea King

Hey Youth Writers! It’s almost fall and time to write at our monthly Swift Youth Writers Groups held on the 2nd Sundays of the month at the Ames Public Library.

This month, join our talented and fun-loving writer and facilitator, Linea King. Click here to read about Linea and her writing philosophy.

Youth writers meet upstairs in the P.E.O. Room from 2 to 4 PM. Do check the monitors incase of room changes. We supply notebooks and pens, and other supplies to prompt and inspire stories.

2nd Sunday Swift Youth Writers Groups are offered as an Ames Writers Collective FREE community outreach program in partnership with the Ames Public Library.

Open Write Tuesday with founder, Ana McCracken

Join Ana McCracken for our Open Write Tuesday on Zoom.

WHAT’S AN OPEN WRITE?

We Zoom in, share what we’re working on, and write for ~90 minutes. At the end, we share our successes, and sign off. Easy peasy.

Click here to register for the Zoom link.

To learn about Ana , check her out here.

Open Write Tuesday

Join us for our Open Write Tuesday on Zoom.

What’s an Open Write?

We Zoom in, share what we’re working on, and write for ~90 minutes. At the end, we share our successes, and sign off. Easy peasy.

Click here to register for the Zoom link.

Open Write Tuesday with Speculative Fiction Author Rachel Aukes

Join Rachel Aukes for our Open Write Tuesday on Zoom.

WHAT’S AN OPEN WRITE?

We Zoom in, share what we’re working on, and write for ~90 minutes. At the end, we share our successes, and sign off. Easy peasy.

Click here to register for the Zoom link.

To learn about Rachel and what she’s written and published, check her out here.

Categories
Author

Claire Kruesel

What’s your genre?
Poetry (but I dabble in CNF, memoir, and sci-fi)

Are you published?
Traditional publisher

What inspired you to become a writer?
Perhaps it was being gifted diaries at a young age—or perhaps those gifts were based on observance of an inner drive I felt to document—but I’ve been writing as long as I can remember, and felt a serious devotion to somehow reducing the emotional entropy of this world by putting it into words. In other words, as a young girl writing in my diary, I was trying to figure out the world around me and how I felt about it, and to give it some sort of logical and witnessed form that was also poetic. I always loved reading and libraries, and writing was a way to get closer to those sacred places.

What author do you admire and how have they inspired your writer?
This is the hardest question for me because I find inspiration everywhere, and for me there’s no author who immediately comes to mind as more personally impactful than others. Overall, I often think about how religious texts captured the hearts and devotion of so many through effective storytelling. Humans crave stories as a form of organizing our knowledge, connecting in community, reinforcing values, and ascribing meaning to our experiences. So—the authors of religious texts and songs, even though I am not traditionally religious, inspire me as a writer by demonstrating that there has long been a visceral need for stories. When I’m feeling uninspired as a writer, it gives me courage to remember this.

Name three of your favorite books and their authors.
This is too hard! These are emotional and not academic choices based on childhood/young adulthood:
Neuromancer by William Gibson (1984)
The Wicked Pigeon Ladies in the Garden by Mary Chase (1968)
The Crown Snatchers (English translation of Die Kronenklauer) by F. K. Waechter and Bernd Eilert (1972)

What’s one thing readers should know about you?
The sound of my writing is tied to my training as a choral singer. I’ve been singing continuously in ensembles since 1989 so I’m always thinking about how something sounds, liaises to its neighbors, and connects to the bigger whole (columns/”chords”). Perhaps this will explain the weird physical arrangements in some of my poems.

What one piece of advice would you give to a budding writer?
Craft your life to support the best way you write. I’ve learned that when inspiration visits, I need to have prepared for its arrival. This can look like always carrying a notebook or, more often, drafting a poem in an email app on my phone. I regret every time I brushed off inspiration for a seemly more urgent mundane task of living.

Author Bio
Claire Kruesel (KREE-zuhl) lives and writes from Story County, Iowa, focusing primarily on the intersections of science, art, objects, and grief. She received an MFA in Creative Writing and Environment from Iowa State University. Her poetry has been published in Rattle, the anthologies Fracture and Prairie Gold, and elsewhere. Her day job involves mentoring biochemistry undergraduates on science communication. Claire also teaches Pilates and yoga, travels to France and Italy whenever she can, and sings with Ames Chamber Artists. Click here to visit Claire.