Thurber house 2
Yesterday I finished another class at Thurber house and this time the teacher seemed to kind of understand what he was talking about. And I don't mean that in a poor way. He's a descent writer but he had the same trouble many writers have and that is how to explain or teach a concept. Even King struggles with this. You'd think he'd have a lot to teach with his wealth of knowledge but his book about writing is one of his smallest. For me, explaining writing is like explaining a joke, it dies on the table. The teacher from yesterday seemed to understand this but didn't focus into what I felt was the core of his class: keep the reader asking questions. He brought up several books of different genres that had that unputdownable factor. The book he quoted the most was Harlam Shuffle which starts the first paragraph with a heist. The first paragraph. Think about that. No opening, no description. The book starts with a heist. Most stories have a type of opening but the writer here gets to the bone at the start. It's an interesting way to catch the readers attention, something that I hope to emulate.
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