The art and craft of writing by one of the few grandmasters of American literature, a bonanza for writers and readers written by Kurt Vonnegut's former student.
Author, editor and writing teacher Suzanne McConnell was a student of Kurt Vonnegut's at the Iowa Writer's Workshop during its heyday, the period from 1965-67, when Vonnegut, along with Nelson Algren and other notable authors were in residence. This was also the period when Vonnegut was writing his masterpiece, Slaughterhouse Five, and had a lot to say about the writing process. Vonnegut and McConnell became friends, and stayed in touch over the years. She has published short memoirs of him in The Brooklyn Rail and The Writer's Digest, and led a panel at the 2014 AWP conference on Vonnegut's legacy, titled "Vonnegut's Legacy- Writing about War and Other Debacles of the Human Condition." McConnell has taught writing at Hunter College for thirty years and, outside of the university setting, to pretty much all ages in a wide range of settings. She is Fiction Editor for the Bellevue Literary Review. Her own fiction won First Prize in the 2015 New Ohio Review's Fiction Contest, First Prize in the 2014 Prime Number Magazine Awards for Flash Fiction, and has been nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize. An excerpt from her novel, add title here , won Second Prize in the 2008 So to Speak's Fiction Contest. She lives in New York City and Wellfleet, MA, with her husband, the artist Gary Kuehn.
“A love song for the writing life by one of the world’s finest
humanist writers, Kurt Vonnegut’s wry and compassionate voice is
given a resonant echo chamber here by the wise and abidingly
respectful presence of his former graduate student, Suzanne
McConnell. Part homage, part memoir, and a 100% guide to making art
with words, Pity the Reader: Writing With Style is a
simply mesmerizing book, and I cannot recommend it highly enough!”
—Andre Dubus III
The blend of memory, fact, keen observation, spellbinding
descriptiveness and zany characters that populated Vonnegut’s work
is on full display here, in a kind of workshop forum, with
explanations by the writer himself, as recorded by a fellow writer,
McConnell, who knew Vonnegut for decades. The result is Vonnegut as
we’ve never seen him before, a man of kindness and generosity,
humility and extraordinary introspection, whose humor and
creativity served as a kind of protectorate, a shield, and most
importantly a fountain of creativity to quench his life-long thirst
for a better, kinder planet. It’s a must read for any young
writer." —James McBride, author of the National Book
Award-winning novel, The Good Lord Bird
“Pity us not at all! What could be more welcome than Kurt
Vonnegut’s acerbic writing advice expertly illuminated by veteran
teacher/writer/editor Suzanne McConnell. A timely book for writers,
readers, teachers and book-lovers alike. It’s unsentimental,
unvarnished, and 100 percent treacle-free. If you’ve longed to be
under Vonnegut’s spell once again, this is the book for you.”
—Danielle Ofri, MD, author of What Patients Say, What Doctors
Hear
"As both biography and artifact, Pity the Reader is priceless.
But the practical guidelines on writing well are themselves worth
the price of admission, even for those of us who do not write
fiction, and even those who do not write at all. Indeed,
many aspiring writers pay good money for the kind of advice
and insight contained herein, not least of all in the form of
tuition at any of the world’s many MFA programs." —Jeremy Justus,
Provincetown Arts
"I hate getting advice, personally. This is not that kind of
book—it complains grumpily about the discomfort required to write
truthfully and it celebrates the long history of art as 'a very
human way of making life more bearable.' In short, it reminds us of
the important things. Suzanne McConnell takes us eloquently into
the joys of rediscovering Vonnegut, in a guide that will be
profoundly useful to writers thinking about fiction’s purposes as
well as its methods." —Joan Silber, author of Improvement,
winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award
"This is such a rich, generous book about writing and reading and
Kurt Vonnegut as writer, teacher, and friend, that I find
myself at a loss for the right good words. It’s a breeze to
read. Every page brings pleasure and insight. It captures the
spirit of the man some of us were lucky enough to know and
gives future generations a sense of him as a teacher and writer. It
traces how Vonnegut grew as a writer and how his writing took
shape. I have read it three times now and find it not only a
meticulous homage and worthy memorial to a great human being and a
lasting writer, but a true help, for all of us at any age, who
yearn to write with style.” —Gail Godwin, bestselling author
of A Southern Family among many others novels, and the
forthcoming Old Lovegood Girls
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