You are Invited to Our Public Events
Are you a Tahoe Area local or visitor? Every year, the Community of Writers puts on a number of readings and events as part of our Summer Writing Workshops that are open to the public, and most are free of charge.
2016 Schedule of Events
2016 Literary Events:
Public Events – You are Invited
Are you a Tahoe Area local or visitor? Every year, the Community of Writers puts on a number of readings and events as part of our Summer Writing Workshops that are open to the public, and most are free of charge.
Are you interested in our Literary Events in other areas too? Every year we hold several events which may be of interest to to you.
Tell us where you live and what events you are interested in by clicking on the button below.
Get Updates!
Please check back here later for 2016 Events, or join our mailing list to get updates on our Public Events. Please join us!
View our Calendar
2016 Events Which May be of Interest:
Panels & Craft Talks
Don’t miss the chance to hear our staff share insights into the craft and business of writing. Topics are new each year, with the exception of our popular publishing panels, which feature agents, editors, and publishers providing insights and answering questions on this shifting landscape. Most panels and craft talks take place during the afternoon. Admission is free to the public and no reservations are required.
Craft talks this year will be given by: Thomas Barbash, Dava Sobel, and Ron Carlson.
Late Afternoon Short Takes Readings
On many a late Tahoe afternoon during the Writers Workshops, we invite staff members to keep things energized with a round of fast fiction and nonfiction readings. Admission is free to the public and no reservations are required.
Evening Special Events
Reservations and/or ticket purchase recommended: Suggested donation $20/$8 student.
The Community of Writers also invites you to attend our remarkable evening events. This year we offer Special Events on two separate evenings, Wednesday and Saturday with readings by prominent, beloved and bestselling authors. $20 adult/$8 Student. No one will be turned away for lack of funds.
On Wednesday, July 27 we will present: Dana Johnson, Anne Lamott, Héctor Tobar, and Matt Sumell. More details & tickets.
On Saturday, July 30 we will present: Sarah Shun-lien Bynum, Michelle Latiolais, Kirstin Valdez Quade, and Elizabeth Tallent. More details & tickets.
For the nonfiction crowd, on Tuesday, July 26 we present “The Big Nonfiction Book” an evening panel discussion about the risks and rewards of writing a large, research-driven narrative. We will be joined by celebrated nonfiction writers Jason Roberts, author A Sense of the World: How a Blind Man Became History’s Greatest Traveler; nature writer Jordan Fisher Smith, whose new book Engineering Eden was just published by WW Norton; internationally bestselling author Dava Sobel, author of Longitude; and Héctor Tobar, author of the book Deep Dark Down about the trapped Chilean miners. Moderating will be Julia Flynn Siler, journalist and author of, most recently, Lost Kingdom: Hawaii’s Last Queen, the Sugar Kings, and America’s First Imperial Adventure.
Admission is free to the public and no reservations are required.
On Thursday, July 28 at 5:30 pm, we present The Published Alumni Reading Series. The Community of Writers is delighted to celebrate the success of these writers and to present them to the participants, staff, and the public. Please join us to hear reading from Stephanie Kegan, Nayomi Munaweera, Marian Palaia, Juan Alvarado Valdivia, Heather Young – Introduced by Matt Sumell
This event is supported by Noel Corngold and Emily Adelsohn Corngold.
Also Thursday we say goodbye to our good friend and beloved colleague, the novelist and reviewer Alan Cheuse, who died last summer. In “A Writers Tribute to Alan Cheuse,” various authors will read from his work and musicians will perform. All are welcome. Admission is free and no reservations are required.
Calendar View Print Schedule of Events
2016 Schedule of Literary Events
Tuesday, July 26
1:00 PM | Craft Talk: “The Germs (of stories, that is): From Where Do Stories Emerge?” | by Tom Barbash |
2:00 PM | Panel: “Telling Truth through Fiction: Trans- muting 'Real' Events into Imaginative Fiction” | with Rhoda Huffey, Joanne Meschery, Victoria Patterson and Amy Tan - moderated by Jane Ciabattari |
3:00 PM | Panel: “The Historical Novel” | with Sands Hall, Edie Meidav, Gregory Spatz, and Mary Volmer - moderated by Jason Roberts |
4:00 PM | “The Writing Community, Prizes and the Life of the Writer" | Jane Ciabattari in conversation with Oscar Villalon |
5:00 PM | Short Takes Staff Readings | Mark Childress, Natalie Serber, Andrew Tonkovich, and Mary Volmer |
7:30 PM | Panel: “The Big Nonfiction Book: Conquering Research to Find the Story” | with Jason Roberts, Héctor Tobar, Jordan Fisher Smith and Dava Sobel Moderated by Julia Flynn Siler |
Wednesday, July 27
1:00 PM | Craft Talk: “The Construction of a Nonfiction Narrative” | by Dava Sobel |
2:00 PM | Panel: “Humor, Voice, Character and Subtext” Fiction” | with Mark Childress, Dana Johnson, Anne Lamott, Matt Sumell - moderated by Andrew Tonkovich |
3:00 PM | Panel: “The Heart of Memoir” | with Anne Lamott, Natalie Serber, Jane Vandenburgh Moderated by Sands Hall |
5:00 PM | Short Takes Staff Readings | with Edie Meidav, Jason Roberts, Julia Flynn Siler, Gregory Spatz |
7:30 PM | Staff read & talk about their work: | Dana Johnson, Anne Lamott, Héctor Tobar, Matt Sumell Reserve Tickets |
Thursday, July 28
1:00 PM | Panel: “Book Editors” | with Reagan Arthur, Erika Goldman, Joy Johannessen, Calvert Morgan, Jack Shoemaker - moderated by Michael Carlisle |
2:00 PM | Panel: “Literary Agents” | with Noah Ballard, Joy Harris, and BJ Robbins - moderated by Joy Johannessen |
3:00 PM | “Journals We Edit, Journals We Read” | with Oscar Villalon and Andrew Tonkovich |
5:00 PM | Published Alumni Reading | Stephanie Kegan, Nayomi Munaweera, Marian Palaia, Juan Alvarado Valdivia, Heather Young - Introduced by Matt Sumell |
7:30 PM | A Writers’ Tribute to Alan Cheuse: | Various readings, music and tributes by staff. All are welcome! |
Friday, July 29
No events scheduled
Saturday, July 30
1:00 PM | “You Must Read This: The Narrative Technique Which Stopped You In Your Tracks” | Various staff will read excerpts and discuss TBA |
2:00 PM | Panel: “Adaptation” | with Craig Bolotin, Héctor Tobar, Mark Childress, Nancy Kelly, Amy Tan - moderated by Louis B. Jones |
3:00 PM | Panel: “Silence, Cunning, Exile: The Risks and Rewards of Untraditional Narratives” | with Sarah Shun-lien Bynum, Louis B. Jones, Michelle Latiolais, and Al Young - moderated by Andrew Tonkovich |
5:00 PM | Short Takes Staff Readings | with Lisa Alvarez, Rhoda Huffey, Victoria Patterson and Al Young |
7:30 PM | Special Event: Staff Read and Talk about their Work | Sarah Shun-lien Bynum, Michelle Latiolais, Kirstin Valdez Quade, Elizabeth Tallent Reserve Seats |
Sunday, July 31
1:00 PM | Craft Talk: “The Knowing Character and Other Craft Notes” | by Ron Carlson |
2:00 PM | Panel: “The Craft of Writing the Short Story” | with Sarah Shun-lien Bynum, Ron Carlson, Kirstin Valdez Quade and Elizabeth Tallent - moderated by Thomas Barbash |
3:00 PM | Panel: “Writing Beyond The Conference” | with Victoria Patterson, Rhoda Huffey, Julia Flynn Siler - moderated by Lisa Alvarez |
Monday, August 1
9:45 AM | "The Closing Talk" In which this former participant, an internationally bestselling novelist, sends the participants on their way with wisdom and advice. | by Amy Tan |
Visit our Calendar for more details.
Bay Area Benefit Poetry Reading
Friday, June 17, at 7:00 p.m.
First Congregational Church of Berkeley
2345 Channing Way, Berkeley, CA 94704
Natalie Baszile · Meg Waite Clayton
Frances Dinkelspiel · Marian Palaia · Josh Weil
Emceed by Capital Public Radio’s
Beth Ruyak
7 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016
Sierra 2 Center for the Arts & Community
2791 24th St., Sacramento
Doors open at 6:30
$20 Advance/$25 at the Door
More Information
Tickets Available at Brown Paper Tickets
All proceeds benefit the Community of Writers at Squaw Valley
Summer Writers Workshops
AUTHOR BIOS:
Josh Weil is the author of the novel The Great Glass Sea (Grove Atlantic, 2014) and the novella collection The New Valley (Grove Atlantic, 2009). A New York TimesEditor’s Choice and Powell’s Indispensable selection, The Great Glass Sea won the Dayton Literary Peace Prize and the GrubStreet National Book Prize; it was short-listed for The Center for Fiction’s Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Prize and the Library of Virginia’s Literary Award in Fiction and was long-listed for VCU Cabell Award. The New Valley (also a New York Times Editor’s Choice) won the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction from The American Academy of Arts and Letters, the New Writers Award from the GLCA, a “5 Under 35” Award from the National Book Foundation, and was short-listed for the Library of Virginia’s Literary Award. Weil’s other fiction has garnered a Pushcart Prize and appeared in Granta, Esquire, Tin House, and One Story. He has written non-fiction for The New York Times, The Sun, Poets & Writers and Time.com. He has taught at the Community of Writers. Born in the Appalachian mountains of Southwest Virginia, he currently lives with his family in Northern California’s Sierra Nevada. www.joshweil.com
The Community of Writers is grateful for the support of Michael Carlisle, Mohamed Ali Gawdat, The Anne & Gordon Getty Foundation, Hachette Book Group, Bobbie Bristol Kinnell, The Lojo Foundation, Deborah Dashow Ruth, and Lou De Mattei and Amy Tan, as well as numerous individual contributions from our friends, former participants, and staff.
The Community of Writers is a nonprofit corporation. All donations are tax-deductible