Old friend from far away : the practice of writing memoir / Natalie Goldberg.

By: Goldberg, NatalieMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Free Press, 2008, c2007Edition: 1st Free Press hardcover edDescription: xxi, 309 p. ; 23 cmISBN: 9781416535027; 1416535020Subject(s): English language -- Rhetoric -- Study and teaching | Autobiography -- Authorship -- Problems, exercises, etc | Biography as a literary formAdditional physical formats: Online version:: Old friend from far away.DDC classification: 808/.06692 LOC classification: PE1479.A88 | .G63 2008Online resources: Publisher description | Sample text | Table of contents only
Contents:
Read this introduction -- Note to reader -- Section 1 -- Go -- I remember -- Test 1 -- No one has ever died -- Die -- Three -- Coffee -- Tell me -- Dishes -- Jean Rhys -- Four-letter word -- Ugly -- Home -- Peach -- James Baldwin -- Again -- What's in front of you -- Outside -- End -- Section 2 -- Test 2 -- Funny -- Storage -- Third -- Steve Almond -- Nuts -- Grade -- No mush -- Scratch -- Sideways step -- Section 3 -- Test 3-I remember -- Monkey mind -- Wild at heart -- Allen Ginsberg -- Plain -- Bolt -- Bicycle -- Great students -- Moment -- Zora Neal Hurston -- Reading aloud -- Sitting -- Hand -- Hearing -- Chin -- Tongue -- Just sitting-or do the Neola -- Practice notebook -- Walking -- Linda Gregg -- Happy -- Ice cream -- Cook -- Potatoes -- Verb -- Hard and soft -- More than ten minutes -- Sprinting -- Religion -- Jimmy Santiago Baca -- Pull -- Wild -- Section 4 -- Addict -- Polite -- Repair -- Awake -- Nothing -- Facing it -- Boring -- Ordinary -- Something -- Swim -- Poor -- Lie -- Mistake -- Weather -- Fantasy -- Vice -- Hand and wrist -- Jump -- Care -- Section 5 -- Test 4 -- Cezanne -- Apples -- Joan Mitchell -- Vast affection -- No -- Ahead -- Sickness -- Driving -- Window -- Paris -- Quiet -- No stop -- Birthday -- Say -- Ring -- Mind -- Time -- Close -- No whining -- Reading life -- Long -- No more -- Suicide -- Times -- Fish -- Give up -- Death -- Sex-or money -- Fat -- Obese -- Smoke -- Chang-Rae Lee -- Enamored -- At the edge -- Fight -- Fourth -- Four words -- Perfect -- Lucky -- Spit -- Dresser -- Section 6 -- Test 5 -- Blind -- Not here -- Politics -- Not you -- Half 'n half -- Place -- Some place -- Two -- No topic -- Title -- Implied -- Section 7 -- Test 6 -- Not published -- Too long -- Portrait -- Ad -- Last letter -- One -- Song -- Hattie's -- Bar -- Different times -- Broken -- Everything -- Ache -- Topic of topics -- More -- Cannot -- Radish -- Children -- Flat cake -- Orient yourself -- Anchor -- Inventory of good-bye -- First meetings -- Morning glory! -- Give up -- Haunt -- Divorce -- Repeat -- One thing -- Hot -- Nothing -- Winter -- No fun -- Trip -- Defeat -- Sound -- October thirty first -- Section 8 -- Test 7 -- Good -- Big state -- Big continent -- Poignancy -- What -- Orchard -- Mother -- Resistance -- Knew -- Air waves -- Cracked sentence -- Down -- Section 9 -- Test 8 -- Series -- Fulfilled -- Section 10 -- Test 9 -- Baby memoir -- Caryl Phillips -- House -- Recipe -- Diet -- Structure -- Vast -- Over -- Turning around -- Not take -- Well -- Guidelines and suggestions for writing memoir -- Some great memoirs to read.
Summary: From the Publisher: Twenty years ago Natalie Goldberg's classic, Writing Down the Bones, broke new ground in its approach to writing as a practice. Now, Old Friend from Far Away-her first book since Writing Down the Bones to focus solely on writing-reaffirms Goldberg's status as a foremost teacher of writing, and completely transforms the practice of writing memoir. To write memoir, we must first know how to remember. Through timed, associative, and meditative exercises, Old Friend from Far Away guides you to the attentive state of thought in which you discover and open forgotten doors of memory. At once a beautifully written celebration of the memoir form, an innovative course full of practical teachings, and a deeply affecting meditation on consciousness, love, life, and death, Old Friend welcomes aspiring writers of all levels and encourages them to find their unique voice to tell their stories. Goldberg's enormously popular workshops have given countless students the ability to heed the call to write. Old Friend from Far Away recreates her trademark workshop style with its terse, demanding writing "sprints" that train the hand and mind to quicken their pace and give up conscious control. These exercises divert the eye from the obvious and redirect it to the tactile details we miss, the embarrassments we pass over, and the complications we overlook in the blur of everyday living. Goldberg writes, "No one says it, but writing induces the state of love." Old Friend from Far Away guides us into that state of love, where heightened attention and a rhythm of focus allow the patterns and details of the past to emerge on the page. Millions of Americans want to write about their lives. With Old Friend as the road map for getting started and following through, writers and readers will gain a deeper understanding of their own minds, learn to connect with their senses in order to find the detail and truth that give their written words power and authenticity, and unfold the natural structure of the stories they carry within. An absolute joy to read, it is a profound affirmation of the capacity of the written word to remember the past, free us from it, and forever transform the way we think about ourselves and our lives. Like Writing Down the Bones, it will become an old friend to which readers return again and again.
Item type: Book List(s) this item appears in: English Department - Professional Reading
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Martha's Vineyard High School Library
Professional Collection/808.06692/GOLDBERG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39844500004979

Includes bibliographical references.

Read this introduction -- Note to reader -- Section 1 -- Go -- I remember -- Test 1 -- No one has ever died -- Die -- Three -- Coffee -- Tell me -- Dishes -- Jean Rhys -- Four-letter word -- Ugly -- Home -- Peach -- James Baldwin -- Again -- What's in front of you -- Outside -- End -- Section 2 -- Test 2 -- Funny -- Storage -- Third -- Steve Almond -- Nuts -- Grade -- No mush -- Scratch -- Sideways step -- Section 3 -- Test 3-I remember -- Monkey mind -- Wild at heart -- Allen Ginsberg -- Plain -- Bolt -- Bicycle -- Great students -- Moment -- Zora Neal Hurston -- Reading aloud -- Sitting -- Hand -- Hearing -- Chin -- Tongue -- Just sitting-or do the Neola -- Practice notebook -- Walking -- Linda Gregg -- Happy -- Ice cream -- Cook -- Potatoes -- Verb -- Hard and soft -- More than ten minutes -- Sprinting -- Religion -- Jimmy Santiago Baca -- Pull -- Wild -- Section 4 -- Addict -- Polite -- Repair -- Awake -- Nothing -- Facing it -- Boring -- Ordinary -- Something -- Swim -- Poor -- Lie -- Mistake -- Weather -- Fantasy -- Vice -- Hand and wrist -- Jump -- Care -- Section 5 -- Test 4 -- Cezanne -- Apples -- Joan Mitchell -- Vast affection -- No -- Ahead -- Sickness -- Driving -- Window -- Paris -- Quiet -- No stop -- Birthday -- Say -- Ring -- Mind -- Time -- Close -- No whining -- Reading life -- Long -- No more -- Suicide -- Times -- Fish -- Give up -- Death -- Sex-or money -- Fat -- Obese -- Smoke -- Chang-Rae Lee -- Enamored -- At the edge -- Fight -- Fourth -- Four words -- Perfect -- Lucky -- Spit -- Dresser -- Section 6 -- Test 5 -- Blind -- Not here -- Politics -- Not you -- Half 'n half -- Place -- Some place -- Two -- No topic -- Title -- Implied -- Section 7 -- Test 6 -- Not published -- Too long -- Portrait -- Ad -- Last letter -- One -- Song -- Hattie's -- Bar -- Different times -- Broken -- Everything -- Ache -- Topic of topics -- More -- Cannot -- Radish -- Children -- Flat cake -- Orient yourself -- Anchor -- Inventory of good-bye -- First meetings -- Morning glory! -- Give up -- Haunt -- Divorce -- Repeat -- One thing -- Hot -- Nothing -- Winter -- No fun -- Trip -- Defeat -- Sound -- October thirty first -- Section 8 -- Test 7 -- Good -- Big state -- Big continent -- Poignancy -- What -- Orchard -- Mother -- Resistance -- Knew -- Air waves -- Cracked sentence -- Down -- Section 9 -- Test 8 -- Series -- Fulfilled -- Section 10 -- Test 9 -- Baby memoir -- Caryl Phillips -- House -- Recipe -- Diet -- Structure -- Vast -- Over -- Turning around -- Not take -- Well -- Guidelines and suggestions for writing memoir -- Some great memoirs to read.

From the Publisher: Twenty years ago Natalie Goldberg's classic, Writing Down the Bones, broke new ground in its approach to writing as a practice. Now, Old Friend from Far Away-her first book since Writing Down the Bones to focus solely on writing-reaffirms Goldberg's status as a foremost teacher of writing, and completely transforms the practice of writing memoir. To write memoir, we must first know how to remember. Through timed, associative, and meditative exercises, Old Friend from Far Away guides you to the attentive state of thought in which you discover and open forgotten doors of memory. At once a beautifully written celebration of the memoir form, an innovative course full of practical teachings, and a deeply affecting meditation on consciousness, love, life, and death, Old Friend welcomes aspiring writers of all levels and encourages them to find their unique voice to tell their stories. Goldberg's enormously popular workshops have given countless students the ability to heed the call to write. Old Friend from Far Away recreates her trademark workshop style with its terse, demanding writing "sprints" that train the hand and mind to quicken their pace and give up conscious control. These exercises divert the eye from the obvious and redirect it to the tactile details we miss, the embarrassments we pass over, and the complications we overlook in the blur of everyday living. Goldberg writes, "No one says it, but writing induces the state of love." Old Friend from Far Away guides us into that state of love, where heightened attention and a rhythm of focus allow the patterns and details of the past to emerge on the page. Millions of Americans want to write about their lives. With Old Friend as the road map for getting started and following through, writers and readers will gain a deeper understanding of their own minds, learn to connect with their senses in order to find the detail and truth that give their written words power and authenticity, and unfold the natural structure of the stories they carry within. An absolute joy to read, it is a profound affirmation of the capacity of the written word to remember the past, free us from it, and forever transform the way we think about ourselves and our lives. Like Writing Down the Bones, it will become an old friend to which readers return again and again.

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