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What’s happening in the Alabama writing world…

The Dynamics of Science and Nature Writing for Fiction and Nonfiction Virtual Workshop

Please join us on Saturday, April 10, at 3 p.m. Eastern/2 p.m. Central. Environmental fiction author Claire Datnow and nonfiction author Heather Montgomery will discuss: How powerful storytelling techniques are the keys to touching readers’ hearts, to ignite their imagination, and inspire them to build bridges to tomorrow. Designed for both fiction and nonfiction writers

Claire Datnow was born and raised In Johannesburg, South Africa. Her family originated from Linkuva, Lithuania. Claire taught creative writing to gifted and talented students in the Birmingham Public Schools. She earned an MA in Education for Gifted and a second MA in Public History. Her books for middle schoolers include The Adventures of the Sizzling Six, an eco-mystery series, and Edwin Hubble, Discoverer of Galaxies. Her books for adults include a memoir, Behind The Walled Garden of Apartheid and The Nine Inheritors. Claire has received numerous scholarships and awards, including the Alabama Conservancy Blanche Dean Award for Outstanding Nature Educator, a Beeson Samford Writing Project Fellowship, a Fulbright Memorial Fund Teacher Scholarship, and Birmingham Public School Teacher of the Year. She enjoys visiting schools to inspire students to write their own eco-mystery stories, to become wise stewards of the earth, and to take action in their own communities. Claire serves Southern Breeze as a local liaison. 

Heather Montgomery writes for kids who are wild about animals. Her subjects range from snake lungs to snail tongues. Heather’s 16 nonfiction books include: Bugs Don’t Hug: Six-Legged Parents and Their Kids (Charlesbridge),Who Gives a Poop? Surprising Science from One End to the Other (Bloomsbury), and Something Rotten: A Fresh Look at Roadkill (Bloomsbury), which is an NCTE Orbis Pictus Recommended Book, a Junior Library Guild Selection, and a VOYA Nonfiction Honor Award Winner. Heather is a long-time volunteer with Southern Breeze and currently serves as our PAL liaison. 

 Both Claire and Heather are mentors for the Southern Breeze Mentorship Program! Thanks to Local Liaison Stephanie Moody for hosting this event. 

**The event is free, but registration is required. To register, please complete this form: Event Registration Form

Alina Stefanescu
A sure cure for rejection: Writing advice from Judy DiGregorio
Guest blogger and AWC member, Judy DiGregorio.

Guest blogger and AWC member, Judy DiGregorio.

Get mad, then get published

Anger erupted in me like hot lava when an editor met with me to critique my manuscript at a writing conference. His insensitive comments irritated me so much that I fled home after the session, sat down at my computer, and literally pounded the keyboard as I began to flesh out an article rebutting each thing he said.   My fragile ego couldn’t handle honest feedback. 

 I wanted to be petted and stroked like my calico cat.  I wanted to be tickled under the chin.  Instead, the editor had informed me, in effect, that my writing had fleas. To work through my anger and frustration, I wrote an article about the experience called “Feedback: Who Needs It?” In the article, I addressed each criticism and suggestion the editor had offered during my evaluation.  

After I cooled down, I realized the suggestions he offered me were invaluable.  They were specific. They were accurate.  They were true. I needed to hear them.    

After several rejections, I successfully sold the article to Inscriptions, the e-zine for professional writers.  Then I sent a copy of it to the editor, thanking him for the suggestions that had enabled me to publish the article.  I was still a beginning writer, but I had already learned one lesson.  Accept criticism gracefully and learn from it.  I wanted to be the best writer I could be, but I could not improve without help. 

I continued writing and submitting my work. During a particularly frustrating period, I received 27 rejection letters in a row.  Finally, I received a handwritten note scribbled on the bottom of a form letter from an editor at Field and Stream.  The note chastised me for not paying more attention to the magazine guidelines. 

Under the note, the editor had scrawled a word that electrified me -- “Retry.”   This editor obviously recognized my talent, even if she didn’t accept this particular piece. I kissed the letter reverently and stuffed it into my pocket.  In my excitement, I pulled it out to read and reread. 

 Unfortunately, when I scanned the letter again the next day, I made a startling discovery.  The scribbled word at the bottom of the page matched the signature block on the letter. It didn’t say ‘Retry.’  It said ‘Betsy,’ the editor’s first name.  In my desperation to be published, I had misread the editor’s handwritten signature.  My hopes of fame and fortune popped quicker than a balloon.

 Back to the computer I crawled.  I wrote an article detailing the experience entitled “Desperately Seeking Publication.”   After several more rejections, I finally sold this article to Inkspot, another online publication for writers.  Unfortunately, Inkspot folded before publishing it so I resold the article to The Writing Parent .

After publishing several articles in regional and local magazines, I lobbied the editor of our local paper to give me a humor column.  I informed him that I was dependable, funny, and cheap.  He didn’t care.  I left him sample columns and persisted in visiting him every three months.  After nine months, he finally gave me a column -- to stop my visits, I guess.  Unfortunately, he took another job after my column appeared four times.   The interim editor cut back on local columnists so I was once more columnless.  

When a new editor finally started work, I employed the same strategy I had with the first editor. Again, I had to wait almost a year.  This time the editor offered me a humor column in the newspaper’s supplementary publication, Senior Living magazine.  I accepted at once and am still writing for it. The pay is low, but the exposure is high. The magazine is distributed in hospitals, fitness centers, credit unions, and hotels. Writing for Senior Living has given me a great deal of visibility and added to my writing credentials.  

I’ve learned quite a bit since that first painful writing critique several years ago. I’ve learned to handle rejection and accept criticism.  I’m a woman of small talents and big feet.  Yet, I’ve learned that patience and persistence enable me to successfully publish in a variety of newspapers, magazines, and anthologies. You can do it, too. 

Just be patient, be persistent, and be published! #  

JUST START

Stop procrastinating and start writing.  Grab a pencil and paper or sit down at your computer.  Write something.   Write anything.  Write a letter to your husband, your mother, or your doctor.   Keep a small notebook with you and jot down any ideas that occur to you during your daily routine.  Ideas are like bubbles so capture them quickly before they pop.

Take a writing class on the Internet or at a local college. Try to become the best writer you can be.  Join a local writers’ group.  Attend a writing conference.

Accept that you will have to make sacrifices to find time to write.   Most of us work full time and write in our spare time.  Turn off the television and turn on your brain.  Cultivate this habit.

Review and revise your work after the first draft.  Wait several days or weeks before doing it.  What sounded like Shakespeare when you initially wrote it may now sound like gibberish.  

Touch someone with your writing.  Nothing will give you more encouragement than hearing the words, “I loved your article.”  Polish and perfect your work before you submit it.  Writing takes both skill and determination. All you have to do is start!


Judy DiGregorio is recognized as a Woman of Distinction in the Arts by the YWCA. She is also a Distinguished Alumna of New Mexico Highlands University. She has published hundreds of columns and essays in The Writer, Army-Navy Times, New Millennium Writings, the Chicken Soup books, and numerous anthologies and has worked as a humor columnist for Anderson County Visions Magazine, Senior Living andEvaMag. Judy's collection of humorous essays, Life Among the Lilliputians from Celtic Cat Publishing , was featured at the 2009 Southern Festival of Books in Nashville. She also participated in the 2010 Southern Festival with her second book, Memories of a Loose WomanCeltic Cat Publishing also released a CD, Jest Judy, read by the author and available on itunes, and also published her third humor book, Tidbits, in the summer of 2015. 

Judy has served on the Playhouse Board of Directors where she frequently performs on stage and has prepared over 100 press releases. She has been featured on Channel 10 “Your Stories” by Abby Ham, on Live at Five, and on WDVX Tennessee Shines Radio several times. Judy has spoken at the UT Writers in the Library Series, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the Y-12 National Security Complex, as well as numerous writing conferences and festivals including the Tennessee Mountain Writers’ Conference in Oak Ridge, Alabama Writers’ Cooperative, and Chattanooga Writers Conference. In her spare time, Judy hangs out with her first (and last) husband and writes light verse and humorous essays, sings with the St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church Choir, performs Sephardic Hispanic music with Vera Maya, and cuddles her great granddaughter.

Alina Stefanescu
The Winds of Change: Children’s Environmental Climate Fiction

by Claire Datnow

The gale force winds of climate change are calling. They’re calling to scientists, writers, and artists to weave stories that will inspire the children of tomorrow to dream up a brighter future. Happily, many are responding to that call with a spate of new nature and environmental narratives which use science as a springboard to create powerful children’s literature. After decades of misinformation, denial, and inadequate attempts to reduce the dire impact of climate change young people around the world are troubled, angry, and frustrated. They are searching for ways to understand and to take action. 

Compelling narratives interwoven with science can entertain, educate, inspire, and empower them. I am certain that young people studying the natural sciences from kindergarten to college will bloom into the next generation of environmental leaders. They will understand the science and the issues underpinning society’s challenging ecological problems. And they will apply their knowledge to create a stronger connection between what must be done and how to get things done. Still, we need something more to close that chasm between cognition and action. We need something to electrify us, move us, spur us on, to stop us in our tracks. 

Science and literature can cross-fertilize one another. Storytellers need to understand the powerful methods of science that provide solutions to pressing problems, and scientists need to apply the building blocks of powerful writing to become better communicators. For me, the books I will write will always be grounded in science. Telling a moving story about climate change does not mean making up facts—we have enough of that already—the basis of the narrative has to be the truth and reality of climate change. As storytellers we hold the keys to touching our readers' hearts, to ignite their imagination to build a bridge to tomorrow, and empower them to take action for the greater good of humanity and the wellbeing of the Earth. We need to reject narratives of division. We need storytellers from all disciplines to blur boundaries, expand empathy, and stretch our capacity for caring. The winds of change are calling loud and clear for narratives that will illuminate our vital connection to one another and to this precious blue planet on which all life depends. 

Claire Datnow was born and raised in Johannesburg, South Africa, which ignited her love for the natural world and for indigenous cultures. Her published works include a middle grade Eco mystery series. She taught gifted and talented students creative writing and ecology. Together with her students she founded a nature trail, now named in her honor, the Alabama Audubon-Datnow Forest Preserve. She would love for you to read her memoir, BEHIND THE WALLED GARDEN OF APARTHEID .

Resources on Environmental Literature for Parents & Educators

 The books range from mysteries to thrillers, yet they all share strong environmental themes.

The Adventures of the Sizzling Six Eco mystery series by Claire Datnow.

Blogs on Environmental Fiction and a list of books (upper elementary and middle grades) 

Environmental Novels in Juvenile and Young Adult Fiction

Chapter Books to Inspire Young Environmental Advocates


Alina Stefanescu
A conversation with NEA Arts Fellow in Poetry, Lauren Slaughter
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Alina Stefanescu got the chance to chat with Birmingham writer, Lauren Slaughter, about life in pandemic. In the meantime, she won an NEA Arts Fellowship—and we celebrate her writing, work, and life here.

I want to begin by thanking you for this opportunity to talk about writing and life. The first time I heard the name Lauren Slaughter, it was firmly attached to the word poet. But in the last year, you've published some incredible essays and fiction. I'd love to know more about the context that created those pieces. Has your identity as a poet shifted into something broader, or do you (like some) still primarily approach the page as a poet who may also write prose? Why or why not?

Thank you so much for the invitation! And thank you, too, for your kind words about my prose writing recently. It’s funny, but I think that I’ve mostly returned to prose (my first love, as a writer) for rather pragmatic reasons. For a long time, especially when my children were younger, I’m not sure I could process or deal with more text than I could lay out on my counter in a page or two. I could print it out, and walk by on my laps through the house, and etch in an edit here or there. I could see the whole thing. It’s certainly not easier to write poetry than it is to write prose, but during this pandemic, I’ve noticed that I have only been able to write poetry and I think it’s for similar reasons. 

I’ve also had the experience of writing about a subject in poetry and then feeling like it needed a lot more physical space and exploration than I was able to give it on the first go, and in the I-centered lyric (my poems are hopelessly I-centered--I’m working on it). For example, I rather feverishly wrote a poem responding to the 2017 bomb threats to Jewish Community Centers when they occurred because my daughter attended one of the local centers for daycare at the time. The parents I know found the experience quite traumatic--the bomb threats kept occurring, we kept having to send our children to school because what else could one do? There was work to get to and the threats seemed to be empty ones. It was awful and eye-opening about the hate in this country--everywhere. I knew that I had a lot more writing to do to examine what happened. More recently, I was able to write that story

And to your question regarding whether or not I approach the page as a poet or prose-writer? I came to poetry rather late--or, at least it used to feel that way--so I spent a lot of energy feeling like a prose-writer masquerading as a poet. Then, getting back into writing prose after a rather long break, I felt like a poet pretending she could write stories. I couldn’t win! So, now I guess I’m working on trying to use the form that works with the kind of exploration I want to do on a subject. Or, maybe it’s not that deliberate and I’m mostly just winging it. Yeah, that’s probably more like it. 


Winging it sounds familiar and necessary, especially during this time of international pandemic. How has your writing process been affected, if at all, by the pandemic? How are you managing having kids at home while also editing, teaching, and trying to bring words to the page?  

Gosh, I think the pandemic is having a profound effect on anybody who is writing right now. I have some writer friends who are absolutely pouring work onto the page (even ones with kids and jobs!) and I also know so many writers whose impulse to create is just not happening right now. Or, they want to write but other responsibilities are keeping them from it. I can relate to all of it. I’ve written exactly four poems in the past--what, 100 days?--and each of them was composed with a kind of fury I usually only experience once a year (if that). So, I guess right now you could say that I’m either obsessively writing or binge-watching Schitt’s Creek or chasing the kids. No inbetween exists. 


Schitt's Creek is the gift that keeps on giving. I agree that the in-between is an amorphous gray zone I wish I could imagine inhabiting. A little cardinal mentioned something about a new poetry collection on the horizon--which is so exciting. Can you tell us a little bit about it? Okay, nevermind, can you tell us a lot about it?

The book is called, Spectacle, and in many ways it is an exploration of how we are shaped by the way women, in particular, are seen--it is something we either embrace or reject. I thought a lot about my daughter, mother, and sister as I wrote the book, and they each find their way into the poems in different ways. I’d describe the project as explicitly feminist, in that it both criticizes—and, occasionally, celebrates—the ways a woman’s body is seen and experienced as a kind of curiosity--something for display. Also, I zoom out in a number of poems to consider how this motif can be explored in the media and art. I look particularly at the work of Dutch portrait photographer, Rineke Dijkstra, whose work I encountered on a trip to the Guggenheim about five years ago.  Her photographs are so arresting to me, so powerful, because she seems to capture her subjects in their most vulnerable moments. When I read my Dijkstra poems, I often say that her portraits are the anti-profile pic or the selfie you would like if it didn’t look so much like you--so you delete it. 

Also related to the central theme and title are poems that look at contemporary American culture and so many spectacles of violence, such as the Pulse nightclub shooting and, again, those bomb threats made to Jewish Community Centers. A few new poems related to the pandemic will probably also make their way into the book before final edits. 


The phrase "spectacles of violence" stood out. Walter Benjamin and others came to mind. I was wondering if any other writers informed your work in this new collection, particularly any essayists or memoir or nonfiction writers. If so, how? If not, what part of the literary landscape influenced your recent work?

Yes, thank you. I think I engage with violence in many ways in the book; violence perpetuated against women particularly, but also toward and within our American culture right now. My previous collection of poems, a lesson in smallness, was published in 2015, so most of the poems in this new book were written during the Trump presidency. And he’s all spectacle, of course-- nothing but! I was surely writing some of these poems in response to a president who brags about grabbing “pussy.” 

I’ve always gravitated most to women writers, but I think even more so during the writing of this book, a book about the woman’s body as made and inherited spectacle. I often read the way I eat; by constantly adjusting to get just the right balance on the plate. It’s a bit spastic in reality, as I’m reading bits of this and that, forgetting to finish one book before picking up another. I spent the most time these past years with Anne Carson, Wislawa Szymborska, C.D. Wright, Rae Armantrout, Marie Howe, Erin Belieu, Louise Gluck, Grace Paley, Dickinson. Jane Hirshfield and Zadie Smith’s essays, and Rebbeca Traister who writes on the value and importance of female rage. And, of course, there are the Dijkstra photographs. 


It feels like our relationships to words change over time as those words thicken or connote more? Has parenting changed or modified or sharpened the meaning of certain words for you? What words in particular shaped your forthcoming collection--and how did these words alter the formal dynamics or constraints you set for yourself?

This is an amazing question. 

Yes, I think parenting has adjusted my relationship to language in general. I am--or, I try very hard to be--aware and deliberate about the words I use with my children and one of my greatest joys is teaching my children new words (though I’m met with eye rolls sometimes now that they are older). Those moments where I lose control of my words due to frustration or tiredness are the moments I hope don’t stand out in the minds of my children when they grow up. They stand out to me, though. 

I do think this appreciation of language and the power of it has found its way into my work. I wrote the collection without a title in mind and it was when I began to words like: beholding, dilation, scrutiny, shines, mirror, invisible, eruption, muted, blooming, fluorescence, and, of course, spectacle that I started to see clearly the themes of the book I’d been writing. 


Muted and blooming, I love imagining those juxtapostions. Some poets have mentioned spending more time listening rather than reading during this pandemic. Have you found any podcasts or music that keeps returning to enter your work? Does Spectacle have any musical influence? Also I would love to know more about your experience as a librettist. 

I can relate. For me, and I suppose I’m not alone, it has been hard to concentrate sometimes. Also hard to sit. I admit loving to listen to audiobooks--it’s calming to have someone read me a story. Most recently I listened to Memorial Drive by Natasha Tretheway, who is also the reader. Her voice is one of my favorite poet’s voices and through the story she tells is terrible, and yet it occurs in the poet’s rhythms and language and is full of profoundly beautiful moments. Though I do listen way too much to NPR I’ve been trying to counter that with books, music (old favorites, like Bjork) and poetry podcasts like, The Slowdown. 

Thanks for asking about  my experience as a librettist. It was incredible and I would love to do it again. Maxwell Dulaney, a professor of composition and theory at Tulane, was in the beginning stages of composing  an opera about the Eurydice myth and he asked me to come on board to write the libretto. He felt it was important for a woman to write the libretto, as the opera was to be about the experience of Eurydice and not the experience of Orpheus, which is the way the story is traditionally told. I loved imagining this world and collaborating with Max. It was a totally different way of writing and sometimes there was a steep learning curve. Mostly, I had to be prepared to cut, let go, and not become too attached to the language I had chosen because much of it had to be rearranged to fit the score. Selections from the opera, Already Root, were performed in New York in 2018 and I will never forget the beautiful soprano serenading the audience with my words. Chills! 

That sounds like something worthy of a love tweet. By which I mean this endless poem called "Love" that Alex Dimitrov has created on twitter, a sort of new form adapted from a poem originally published in American Poetry Review, and continued in real time with one tweet a day. For the fun of it--and because pandemic demands new forms in both interviews and life--I would love to hear what you love. Using "I love" as an anaphora. What ten things do you love today, Lauren?

I love the light between the trees

and dear old friends as old as me.

My cat that died, his inside purr.

I love my husband’s brillo beard.

I love to sleep outside with owls

and between my wormy children.

I love the words I couldn’t write,

the secret sound of someone else.

And I love you. And after this. 

And wedding cake. A big fat slice.


I love this so much--you just brought poetry into the wreck of my room, and I am so grateful. I can't wait to read Spectacle. I can't wait for this pandemic to end. On that note, I'd love to share any recent craft resources you've discovered or created that might help poets and writers who hope to smuggle some writing-time into the holiday season.

Aw, thanks. Thank you so much for interviewing me and for everything Alabama Writers’ Forum does to support writers in the state. I know it is a labor of love, and I’m so grateful to be part of this community. 

As for resources, the fantastic online journal, Pigeonholes, has a wonderful free feature, Lessons from a Distance, that offers generative exercises and tutorials. I was happy to share a favorite exercise of mine there recently. Otherwise, what I love most is to put on my earbuds and lose myself in one of the many fantastic poetry podcasts available these days while I chop onions or clean up after the kids or take care of some other domestic minutia. It’s a great escape and always leaves me energized. The Slowdown and The New Yorker: Poetry and current favorites. 


Lauren Slaughter is the recipient of a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award and author of the poetry collection, a lesson in smallness. Her poems, essays, and short stories appear or are forthcoming in Image, RHINO, Pleiades, Kenyon Review Online, New South, The Journal, and 32 Poems, among many other places. She is an assistant professor of English at The University of Alabama at Birmingham where she is also Editor-in-Chief of NELLE, a literary journal that publishes writing by women.

Alina Stefanescu
2020 AWC Writing Contest Winners.

Congratulations to all the winners and to those who entered our annual writing contest! We are grateful to our judges, who served in volunteer capacity during a pandemic time without any financial renumeration. May 2021 bring us closer as a community, and may we begin by celebrating some Alabama winners!

2020 AWC Writing Contest Winners

1st Chapter of a Novel


First Prize: “Millie’s Razor” by Dave Hammond

Second Prize: “O’Banion’s Bluff” by Whitney Adrienne Snow

Third Prize: “A Small Town Guide to Re-Inventing Yourself” by Christopher Jay Jones

Flash Fiction

First Prize: “A View from the Precipice"” by Dave Hammond

Second Prize: “The Most Precious Item” by Vic Kerry

Third Prize: “Reruns” by Larry Wilson

Memoir

First Prize: “A Rusty Piece of Tin” by Daniel Leonard

Second Prize: “The Fall of a Septuagenarian Cyclist” by Jeff Grill

Formal Poetry

First Prize: “How Love Wins” by Jeanette Willert

Second Prize: “Livin’ with Peace” by Jeral Williams

Third Prize: “What Are You Doing Here (Gigan)” by Leonard Temme

Short Story

First Prize: “Moon River” by Doug Gray

Second Prize: “Collect” by Christopher Jay Jones

Third Prize: “The Missing Piece” by Lauren Foreggar

Free Form Poetry

First Prize: “Isabel Dances the Lace” by Gurupert Khalsa

Second Prize: “Transposing Ann Carson” by Catherine Hall Kiser

Third Prize: “Nursery Dreams” by Kathleen Duthu

Alina Stefanescu