4.2 I Points of Entry: Cross-currents in storytelling, 2004

Title

4.2 I Points of Entry: Cross-currents in storytelling, 2004

Subject(s)

Literature
Faculty

Description

Vol. 2, No. 1

Contents:

Essay:
- The personal and reality: Essay, literary journalism and fiction: Editor's introduction
- Great expectations: The Virginian-Pilot's commitment to storytelling by Maria Carrillo
- The right stuff: Listen, stay out of the way and eavesdrop by Lon Wagner
- Risky business: Newspaper tradition is hard to break by Diane Tennant
- Straight talk: Six bitter truths about narrative writing by Earl Swift
- The reward: Seeing narrative for what it is- Reporting at its best by Denise Watson Batts
- Challenging Capital-J Journalism: "I can bring your paper something you've never had," she said. It sounded crazy by Bob Moser
- The trickster in the newsroom by Russell Frank

Literary journalism:
- To build a mouse by Jon Franklin
- Simple things, All-every one of them out of reach by Kimberly Lenz

Personal narrative:
- Personal narrative in an impersonal world by Madeline Blais
- Beer, bullock, and a black orchid: How close is too close to a powerful source? by Sam Kinch, Jr.
- Embeds, balance and objectivity: It's be great if somebody read this by William H. McMichael
- Take a long breath: Diving deep and writing hard truths by Jules Corriere
- Fail better: How I came to collect and retell community stories by RIchard Owen Geer
- Mission to Rwanda by Kari J. Bodnarchuk

Fiction:
- The witching of young oak by Lee Francis

Essays:
- On "The witching of young oak" by Lee Francis

Book review essay:
- Caught between the rhetoric of scene and the rhetoric of Polemic: A review of random family by John C. Hartsock

2 copies

Date

2004

Publisher

Minuteman Press

Call Number

4.2 I

Original Format

Official publication