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Crafting The Personal Essay: A Guide for Writing and Publishing Creative Non-Fiction

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Dinty W. Moore

Crafting The Personal Essay: A Guide for Writing and Publishing Creative Non-Fiction 1st Edition, Kindle Edition

  • ISBN-13 978-1582977966
  • Edition 1st
  • Sticky notes On Kindle Scribe
  • Publisher Writer's Digest Books
  • Publication date August 11, 2010
  • Language English
  • File size 2761 KB
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  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B005FWYTFA
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Writer's Digest Books; 1st edition (August 11, 2010)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ August 11, 2010
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2761 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 274 pages
  • #85 in Composition
  • #94 in Nonfiction Writing Reference
  • #2,211 in Fiction Writing Reference (Books)

About the author

Dinty w. moore.

Dinty W. Moore was born and raised in Erie, Pennsylvania, and spent his formative years fishing for bluegill, riding a bike with a banana seat, and dodging the Sisters of St. Joseph. He earned a BA in writing from the University of Pittsburgh, worked briefly as a journalist, and also served short stints as a documentary filmmaker, modern dance performer, zookeeper, and Greenwich Village waiter. It was only after failing at each of these professions that he went on to earn an MFA in fiction writing from Louisiana State University.

A National Endowment for the Arts fellowship recipient, Moore has guest taught creative nonfiction seminars across the United States as well as in Ireland, Scotland, Spain, Switzerland, Canada, and Mexico. In addition to editing the journal, Brevity, he is on the editorial board of Creative Nonfiction magazine.

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Erika Dreifus

Writer and resource maven, main navigation, search site, crafting the personal essay: an interview with dinty w. moore.

Home » Resources » Interviews with Practicing Writers » Crafting the Personal Essay: An Interview with Dinty W. Moore

crafting the personal essay pdf

By Erika Dreifus

I met Dinty W. Moore a number of years ago through the Association of Writers and Writing Programs , of which he is now president. His concern for writing pedagogy, and his particular expertise in nonfiction, impressed me at the start, and they continue to inspire me. When I learned about his newest book, Crafting the Personal Essay: A Guide for Writing and Publishing Creative Nonfiction , I asked him instantly if he’d participate in an interview for the newsletter. Graciously, he agreed.

Dinty W. Moore’s memoir Between Panic & Desire was winner of the Grub Street Nonfiction Book Prize in 2009. His other books include The Accidental Buddhist and The Emperor’s Virtual Clothes. He has published essays and stories in The Southern Review, The Georgia Review, Harpers, The New York Times Sunday Magazine, The Philadelphia Inquirer Magazine, Gettysburg Review, Utne Reader, and Crazyhorse, among numerous other venues. Moore is a professor of nonfiction writing at Ohio University.

Please welcome Dinty W. Moore.

ERIKA DREIFUS (ED) : Dinty, what inspired you to write Crafting the Personal Essay , and why at this time?

DINTY W. MOORE (DWM) : I’ve noticed that the world of literary or creative nonfiction has been dividing itself as of late into two distinct camps: memoir and narrative journalism. I love to read and write in both of these sub-genres, by the way, but I hate to think that the personal essay, perhaps the oldest and certainly one of the most flexible forms of literary nonfiction, is going to be forgotten. So perhaps this book will help to re-introduce the genre to a modern audience. I have to give a nod to Patrick Madden here as well, and all of the great work he has done to preserve the classic essay at his site Quotidiana .

ED : Whom do you envision as the ideal reader(s) for this book? What do you hope readers will gain from it?

DWM : The urge to share our best thoughts, to display our carefully-constructed ideas and discoveries to other souls, is fairly universal. That’s why so many folks in all walks of life and situations decide at some point that they want to be writers. Too often, though, these beginning writers – and when I say beginning, I mean the 65-year-old as much as the 19-year-old – have a limited view of their options: poetry or fiction, a novel or a memoir? The field of possibilities is so much wider.

Frankly, there is a pretty good market for the essay too: from women’s magazines, to The New York Times, to literary magazines, to the Huffington Post.

ED : In this book, you emphasize the importance of curiosity. You quote Phillip Lopate on where to start one’s writing: “…what do we need to generate nonfiction?: I would say, curiosity. It sounds more tepid than obsession, but it’s a lot more dependable in the long run. You follow out a strand of curiosity and pretty soon you’ve got an interesting digression, a whole chapter, a book proposal, a book.” What are you curious about these days, Dinty? What might be generating some of your nonfiction?

DWM : Well, it is a bit of a cliche, I’m afraid, but I’ve just reached a certain age (okay, fifty-five, if you must know) where I am meditating pretty regularly on the idea that my time on this planet is not endless. Not in a morbid way, but just as a discernable fact. I hope certainly to have another thirty or forty years to cause trouble in this world, but the truth is, I’m likely a good ways past my halfway point. So what do I do with that? How does that change perspective?

I’m in the very early stages of a project that will – I hope – widen the lens on these concerns. What I know about this book project so far is that it will be a quirky, individual, memoirist/essayistic hybrid look at mortality, heaven, hell, myths of the afterlife, and Dante Alighieri.

But that’s what I imagine about the book here at the beginning. Every book I’ve written has been very different from my intention by the time I reach the end.

ED : Part One of this book attends to a variety of personal essays: memoir, contemplative essays, lyric essays, spiritual essays, gastronomical essays, humorous essays, nature essays, and travel essays. Part Two helps writers reach readers and includes a section on publication. If your editor/publisher had given you an unlimited page count, what other topics, if any, might you have wanted to cover in the book?

DWM : Writing a book is hard enough. You want me to make it longer?

Perhaps I would add more about the importance of enjoying the process of writing, or writing because the activity itself is satisfying. I just came from a writer’s conference where too much of the talk was about author platforms, big publishing deals, agents, and book jacket design. Those are interesting topics certainly, but quite distracting from what is important about writing in the end.

ED : Many of this newsletter’s readers will likely be familiar with a particular recent blog post of yours, written as editor of Brevity , a prominent online journal featuring “concise literary nonfiction.” In this post , you explained some recent circumstances that were inducing the journal to consider requiring a submission fee, and you sought feedback from commenters. The post drew nearly 300 comments and a great deal of attention elsewhere.

Now that a few weeks have passed, please tell us what you think about first, the responses that the post generated, and, second, how likely it is that Brevity will indeed be instituting a fee.

DWM : I was pleased by the level of discussion about our idea. Instead of focusing on the idea that Brevity is bad for considering this fee, or Brevity is right to consider this move, many of those who commented on the blog and elsewhere grasped immediately that this was a larger issue, related to major changes in the distribution model in publishing. Clay Shirky has written about this at length in his books Cognitive Surplus and Here Comes Everybody . Everything we thought that we knew about supply, demand, pricing, access, gatekeepers, and reading is changing, as fast as we can boot up our browsers. You don’t have to like this idea, but it is happening.

As far as what we will do – I’m still mulling it over, still asking smart people, and reading Shirky’s new book to help me decide.

ED : Is there anything else you’d like to tell us?

DWM : We have a steady stream of information on nonfiction writing and publishing, and on some of the ongoing changes in online publishing, over at the Brevity blog .

We are also looking for guest bloggers, so if you have something to say on the topics of literary publishing, literary magazines, nonfiction writing, or digital publishing, feel free to send us a message at brevitymag(at)gmail(dot)com. Check the blog first, though, to see our format.

ED : Thanks so much, Dinty!

This interview was originally published in the September 2010 issue of The Practicing Writer .

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  5. Crafting The Personal Essay

    Crafting the Personal Essay is designed to help you explore the flexibility and power of the personal essay in your own writing. This hands-on, creativity-expanding guide will help you infuse your nonfiction with honesty, personality, and energy.

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    Crafting the Personal Essay is designed to help you explore the flexibility and power of the personal essay in your own writing. This hands-on, creativity-expanding guide will help you infuse your nonfiction with honesty, personality, and energy.

  7. Crafting The Personal Essay: A Guide for Writing and Publishing

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  8. Crafting The Personal Essay by Dinty W. Moore (ebook)

    Crafting the Personal Essay is designed to help you explore the flexibility and power of the personal essay in your own writing. This hands-on, creativity-expanding guide will help you infuse your nonfiction with honesty, personality, and energy. You'll discover: • An exploration of the basics of essay writing. • Ways to step back and ...

  9. Crafting The Personal Essay

    Award winning essayist Scott Russell Sanders once compared the art of essay writing to "the pursuit of mental rabbits"—a rambling through thickets of thought in search of some brief glimmer of fuzzy truth. While some people persist in the belief that essays are stuffy and antiquated, the truth is that the personal essay is an ever-changing creative medium that provides an ideal vehicle for ...

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    When you receive a paper assignment, your first step should be to read the assignment prompt carefully to make sure you understand what you are being asked to do. Sometimes your assignment will be open-ended ("write a paper about anything in the course that interests you"). But more often, the instructor will be asking you to do something specific that allows you to make sense of what you ...

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  14. Crafting the Personal Essay: An Interview with Dinty W. Moore

    ERIKA DREIFUS (ED): Dinty, what inspired you to write Crafting the Personal Essay, and why at this time? DINTY W. MOORE (DWM): I've noticed that the world of literary or creative nonfiction has been dividing itself as of late into two distinct camps: memoir and narrative journalism. I love to read and write in both of these sub-genres, by the ...

  15. Crafting the Personal Essay

    Crafting the Personal Essay is designed to help you explore the flexibility and power of the personal essay in your own writing. This hands-on, creativity-expanding guide will help you infuse your nonfiction with honesty, personality, and energy.

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    For more than four hundred years, the personal essay has been one of the richest and most vibrant of all literary forms. Distinguished from the detached formal essay by its friendly, conversational tone, its loose structure, and its drive toward candor and self-disclosure, the personal essay seizes on the minutiae of daily life-vanities, fashions, foibles, oddballs, seasonal rituals, love and ...

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    In this comprehensive guide, Dinty W. Moore leads readers through the elements of the personal essay, including how to move past "journaling" and write for an audience, and offers advice on developing routines and publication strategies as well as over a hundred writing prompts for writers at all stages of their craft.

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    Crafting the Essay: Individually-Paced Format. Bring your experiences to life on the page in this personal essay course. Through 10 assignments, we'll experiment with different essay formats to describe scenes, illustrate conflicts, narrate events, share memories, and extract meaning for yourself and your readers.

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    Think about starting your essay with a story (it might start mid-action) or hook to grab your readers' attention. Consider having a thesis statement or a sentence that forecasts the rest of the personal statement and argues for you as a good candidate. For example, you might say, "the lessons I learned about teamwork, empathy, compassion, and communication will serve me well in a ...

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