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Hard Times: Writing Workshop In-Person
Heal through writing and storytelling. Get instructor guidance, prompts, feedback and a supportive community in-person twice per month. This ongoing program offers a creative outlet for people facing addiction and recovery, poverty, homelessness, loss, and other life challenges. No experience needed. Explore writing prompts on the topic of revolutionary love and bridging differences during March and April as part of the One Book One Boulder series.
Workshops are led by local writers and instructors Sarah Elizabeth Schantz and Malinda Miller in collaboration with Lighthouse Writers on the second and fourth Tuesdays, 3 - 5 p.m. at the Main Library.
Access the many formats of "See No Stranger: A Memoir and Manifesto of Revolutionary Love" in our online catalog. Learn more about One Book One Boulder, discover upcoming events and join book discussion groups at boulderlibrary.org/one-book.
- Date:
- Tuesday, Mar 11 2025
Show more dates
Tuesday, Mar 25 2025
Tuesday, Apr 8 2025
Tuesday, Apr 22 2025
Tuesday, May 13 2025
Tuesday, May 27 2025
- Time:
- 3:00pm - 5:00pm
- Location:
- Flatirons Room, Main Library
- Audience:
- Adult
- Categories:
- Classes & Activities One Book One Boulder
Parking at the Main Library:
The first 90 minutes of parking are free. An additional 90 minutes may be purchased for $1.25/hour. Kiosks accept credit cards and coins. You can also use the ParkMobile app on your smartphone. In the app, input your vehicle and payment info, and enter the code for the lot you’re parked in. The code for the Arapahoe Lot is 95405 and for the Canyon Lot it is 95406. Mondays – Fridays: 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturdays & Sundays: free parking. Please note: there is a fee per transaction, even for the free 90 minutes each day. If you would prefer to avoid this fee, please use a kiosk.
Instructor Bios:
Second Tuesday of the month: Sarah Elizabeth Schantz is primarily a fiction writer living on the outskirts of Boulder, Colorado in a Victorian-era farmhouse where her family is surrounded by open sky and century-old cottonwoods. She literally grew up in a bookstore with parents who worshipped all things literature. A two-time Pushcart nominee, she has won several literary awards like Best New Stories from the Midwest and The Orlando Prize for Short Fiction hosted by the foundation, A Room of Her Own. Including the occasional poem, her short stories and essays have been published in journals such as The Los Angeles Review, Bombay Gin, Third Coast, The Adirondack Review, Midwestern Gothic, Hunger Mountain, and most recently Cutthroat. Her first novel Fig debuted from Simon & Schuster in 2015 and was selected by NPR as A Best Read of the Year before winning a 2016 Colorado Book Award. She is currently hard at work on her second novel, Roadside Altars, as well as a collection of short stories that circle grief as a connecting theme. When she isn't writing or teaching the craft of writing, she is likely reading, soaking in salt or milk baths, making candles, daydreaming, gardening, or wandering the woods or plains on full moons.
Fourth Tuesday of the month: Malinda Miller is the director of news and media relations at the University of Colorado Boulder, an instructor for the Lighthouse Young Writers Programs, and a visiting artist for Poetry Outloud. She feels most at home at the top of Weston Pass in Colorado or in the Nevada desert where her family has a ranch just off Highway 50, named by Life Magazine as the Loneliest Highway in America. Previously an associate editor at Many Mountains Moving, her poetry and nonfiction has appeared in A Poetic Inventory of Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado Life Magazine, the Mountain Gazette, the Coloradan, and others. She has a MFA in poetry from Western State Colorado University and a MA in journalism from the University of Colorado Boulder.