A new creative writing course built entirely around the use of photographs, and the crafting of compelling nonfiction narratives from them. The essential concept will be to employ photographs as storytelling vehicles. So we will be using curling, drugstore-printed Kodak shots from our own family albums. We will be using searing and famous images from history books. We will be taking things from yesterday's newspaper. We will even be using pictures that were just made by the workshop participants outside the campus gates with a disposable camera from CVS or with their own sophisticated digital Nikon. In all of this, there will be one overriding aim: to achieve memorable, full-bodied stories. To locate the strange, evocative, storytelling universes that are sealed inside the four rectangular walls of a photograph. They are always there, if you know how to look. It's about the quality of your noticing, the intensity of your seeing.
 Writers as diverse as the poet Mark Strand and the novelist Don DeLillo  and the memoirist Wright Morris have long recognized the power of a  photograph to launch a story. In this course we are going to employ  memory and imagination to launch our stories, but most of all we are  going to make use of fact-everything that can be found out, gleaned,  uncovered, dug up, stumbled upon. Because first and last, this is  nonfiction, this is the art of reported fact. So a lot of this class  will go forward using the tools and techniques of journalism: good,  old-fashioned reporting and research, legwork. And turning that  reporting into writing gold. 
 A photograph represents time stopped in a box. It is a kind of  freeze-frame of eternity. It is stopped motion, in which the clock has  seemed to hold its breath. Often, the stories inside of photographs turn  out to be at surprising odds with what we otherwise thought, felt,  imagined. 
 Say, for instance, that you hunger to enter the photographic heart of  this youthful, handsome, dark-haired man-who is your father-as he leans  now against the gleaming bumper of a 1951 Pontiac. It was three decades  before you were born. The moment is long buried and forgotten in your  collective family's past-and yet in another way, it is right here before  you, on this photosensitive surface. Whether the figure in the  photograph is alive or deceased, you are now going to try with all of  your writing and reporting might to "walk back in." Almost literally.  You are going to achieve a story about this moment, with a beginning,  middle, and end.    
"Every great photograph has a secret," a noted critic once said. An essayist for Time magazine once wrote: "All great photographs have lives of their own. But sometimes they can be false as dreams."
Candidates for the course are asked to submit as soon as possible one or two samples of their best creative nonfiction prose to Paul Hendrickson, Fisher-Bennett Hall, Room 234 (please slide work under the door if no one is in the office). Paper copies only, no electronic submissions. Be sure to include name, phone number, email address, the last four digits of your social security number.

 Department of English
Department of English