May 16-18, 2024
Join us for three days of writing, reading, and connecting over words
Anaïs Nin
We write to taste life twice, in the moment and in retrospection… to record the journey … to expand our world…
Schedule of Events
Thursday, May 16
5:00 – 5:30 p.m. | Registration & Check-In | Lecture Hall Entry
Writing workshop participants can check in early for individual workshops and receive materials.
5:30 p.m. | Opening Keynote with JESS WALTER | Lecture Hall
Friday, May 17
2:00 – 5:00 p.m. | Writing Workshops 1 & 2 | Multiple Library Rooms
Registration is required for workshops, which are limited to 15 attendees each. All breakouts are free and open to all levels.
Saturday, May 18
10:30 – 11:30 a.m. | Writers Roundtable | Lecture Hall
The five “To Taste Life Twice” writing instructors will come together for a panel discussion and share more about their writing lives and practice. Join us to hear from these esteemed Idaho writers and to pose your own questions to them. Coffee and light pastries will be provided. No registration required.
1:00 – 4:00 p.m. | Writing Workshops 3, 4 & 5 | Multiple Library Rooms
Registration is required for workshops, which are limited to 15 attendees each. All breakouts are free and open to all levels.
5:00 – 7:00 p.m. | Reading & Storytelling Event | Lecture Hall
To close out the seminar, all attendees and the public are invited to hear readings from participants, instructors, and more special guests. Food and beverages will be available for purchase. Open to all: seminar attendees, family and friends, and the general public! Learn more here.
More Opportunities for Participants
Manuscript Review with Christian Winn
As part of the seminar, TTLT instructor Christian Winn will offer one-on-one manuscript reviews for 2-3 individuals. Participants who sign up will pay Christian directly ($100 per manuscript review – there will be a page/word limit), share a manuscript ahead of time, then meet with him one-on-one during the weekend at an agreed upon time. Email Martha Williams at mwilliams@comlib.org if you are interested in this opportunity.
Publishing Consulting with Kim Cross
After you’ve written a manuscript, your next question may be: “How do I go about getting this published?” TTLT instructor Kim Cross is offering through the seminar half-hour or one-hour consultations ($50 for thirty minutes; $100 for an hour) for those who want to know how to go about pitching something for publication. Kim will accept 2-3 appointments each day, and they must be scheduled at least 1 week ahead of the seminar. She will read 3-5 pages of a sample writing in advance. Email Martha Williams at mwilliams@comlib.org if you are interested in this opportunity.
About the Instructors
Anna Caritj is the author of Leda and the Swan (Riverhead, 2021). She is an assistant professor in the MFA and undergraduate creative writing programs at Boise State University, where she also serves as editor-in-chief of the Idaho Review. She grew up in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, where much of her work takes place. She lives in Boise, Idaho with her husband and son.
Kim Cross is a journalist, historian, and New York Times Best-Selling author of meticulously reported narrative nonfiction. Her magazine features have been recognized in “Best of” lists by the New York Times, the Columbia Journalism Review, and Best American Sports Writing. Her first book, What Stands in a Storm, was a Barnes & Noble Discover pick, Good Reads Choice Award finalist, and winner of the Fitzgerald Prize for Literary Excellence. Her latest book, In Light of All Darkness, won the Truman Capote Prize and has been nominated for an Edgar Allan Poe Award by the Mystery Writers of America. She teaches Feature Writing for Harvard Extension School’s master’s program in journalism and is a founding writing instructor of the Hemingway Center’s Sawtooth Writing Retreat.
Alan Heathcock is the award-winning author of Volt and 40. He’s won a National Magazine Award, Whiting Award, NEA Prose Fellowship, and has twice been named a Literary Fellow by the Idaho Commission on the Arts. His work has been featured in numerous newspapers and magazines, including GQ, Time, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, and he’s been a contributor to NPR’s “All Things Considered”.
tai simpson (she/her) is also named “The Storyteller” in the Indigenous language of the Nimiipuu, commonly known as the Nez Perce Tribe. As a direct descendant of Chief Redheart, tai takes great pride in serving her community as an organizer and advocate. tai catalyzed her racial and social justice organizing while studying Sociology and Political Philosophy & Public Law at Boise State University. She is an organizer for the Indigenous Idaho Alliance and co-Director with the Idaho Coalition Against Sexual & Domestic Violence. As an antiracism educator and community organizer, she uses Indigenous storytelling to depict the lens of “old ways” and how they protect the sacred, build strength in the community, and keep nature in balance; these principles support her work to champion radical inclusion, equity, and liberation.
Christian Winn was Idaho’s 2016-2019 Writer in Residence, he is the founder of the Writers Write fiction workshop series, co-founder and Director of Storyfort, and producer of the Campfire Stories reading series and the Couch Surfer Artist Series. He is a graduate of Seattle Pacific University and the Boise State University MFA program.
Email Martha Williams, Director of Programs and Education, for more information.