2025 Pre-con Classes

Register for all four pre-con classes for $75. The New Nature Writing Con classes on July 18-19, Saturday and Sunday, are by separate registration.

Monday, July 14

3-4 pm, Badgley Hall (EOU campus)

Class: “Flash Fiction” with Molly Reid. Registration required

As critic Sean Hooks writes, “Flash fiction is something different from just a short story writ small.” Flash fiction—which let’s define as a story of less than 1,000 words—embraces fragmentation, chaos, rebellion, and anarchy. It breaks rules and doesn’t apologize. Jayne Anne Phillips says, “The one-page fiction can be a compressed, weighted, perfectly balanced, read-in-one-moment example of the miracle. Fast, precise, over. And not over. The one-page fiction should hang in the air of the mind like an image made of smoke.” Join us to look at some contemporary examples and then write some flash ourselves.

Tuesday, July 15

3-4 pm, Badgley Hall (EOU campus)

Class: “In the Fewest Possible Words: Poetry’s Art of Concision” with Christopher Kondrich. Registration required

If poetry differentiates itself from prose as a genre often characterized by concision, how can a poem achieve this and still connect with readers? How much can a poem omit and still be fully realized? How much can a poem rely on what isn’t on the page and still be a lasting, memorable work? In this class, we will delve into poems whose brevity belie their resonance. We will explore the strategies poets use and how to implement these strategies in our own work. Attendees should come with a piece of writing—a poem or paragraph—to reimagine according to the strategies shared.

 

Wednesday, July 16

3-4 pm, Badgley Hall (EOU campus)

Class: “What If? Building Speculative Worlds from One Small Change” with Megan Kruse. Registration required

What if one small change reshaped the world as we know it? In this generative writing workshop, we’ll draw inspiration from writers like Octavia Butler, Margaret Atwood, and Emily St. John Mandel, exploring how a single imaginative twist in technology, environment, or society can become the seed of an entirely new world.

Thursday, July 17

3-4 pm, Badgley Hall (EOU campus)

Class: “Joy, Write” with Allison Cobb. Registration required

In the midst of chaotic change, environmental crisis, and much that feels unsettled/unsettling, how do we locate moments of joy and find space for creative wonder? In this workshop we will practice techniques for opening to inspiration, for locating the felt knowledge that comes from intuition, and leads, as Audre Lorde asserted, to our most radical and daring ideas. We will need these ideas, and our emotional and bodily knowledge, to reimagine the world in support of our collective survival.