Hayden’s Ferry Review

  • Hayden’s Ferry Review

    Hayden’s Ferry Review has it all: Fiction. Nonfiction. Poetry. Art. International/Translation

    Hayden’s Ferry Review  is a semi-annual & international literary journal edited by the Creative Writing program at Arizona State University.

    “While we also focus on tradition, our main purpose is to introduce the world to up and coming writers.”

    Hayden's Ferry ReviewHayden’s Ferry Review looks for well-crafted work that challenges readers, takes risks, and engages emotionally and artistically.

    SUBMISSIONS ARE OPEN

    Note: Hayden’s Ferry Review does not accept submissions via mail or email.   Submittable  is the only way for work to be considered for publication.

    Hayden’s Ferry Review looks for “cutting edge classics, experimental nuance, and that one thing about your cousin Gina. Don’t pretend you don’t know what we’re talking about . . . “

  • Modeling— Becca Lawton’s Cool Writing Tips . . . Prompt #285

    Becca LawtonHere’s an entertaining idea from Rebecca Lawton’s Cool Writing Tips.

    Becca’s advisor at Mills College introduced “Modeling,” — an exercise “in which you select an excerpt of masterful writing … and fill in the blanks.”

    Rebecca Lawton writes, “Modeling is a sort of Mad Lib exercise, where each part of speech is swapped out for a word of your choice.”

  • Connecting to Nature and Creativity

    Suzanne MurrayGuest Blogger Suzanne Murray writes about: Connecting to Nature and Creativity as a Gift for Ourselves and the World.

    Nature and creativity are doorways to the sacred. They can help us connect to the deeper parts of ourselves, the knowing of our hearts and souls. They can assist us in being more present in the moment and give us access to expanded capacities of intuition, inspiration and imagination. Connecting to the natural world, which is inherently creative, opens us to our own creative gifts, which allows us to bring forth new possibilities and solutions for our own lives and our troubled world.

    The ongoing tragedies in the world combined with instant access to these events through the news and social media can leave us feeling helpless and hopeless. Our psyches and nervous systems overwhelmed.

    Spending time in nature as well as creative play can be a balm for heart and soul and help us ground our lives in an expanded sense of self. Spending time in nature and creative play relaxes us, bringing us more into the moment where we can breathe more deeply and release our worry about the future. They can increase our sense of well being allowing us to connect to a sense of peace.

    I’ve been connecting to nature and creativity for most of my life and know the joy, satisfaction and comfort that both offer.

    Excerpt from Suzanne Murray’s August 17  Blog Post.

    Suzanne Murray shares her knowledge of connecting to nature and creativity in a one-day workshop, “Connecting to Nature and Creativity,” in Point Reyes on September 17.

    “We will explore a very special place I have known since I was a teenager to deepen our connection to nature and our creative capacities.”

  • What haunts you? Prompt #284

    Sit still for a moment. . . take a few deep breaths. Relax into your chair.

    For this writing experience, tap into what haunts you. As Rebecca Lawton says in Cool Writing Tips:

    ” See the detail of the memory with clear eyes and write it down as best you can remember it.”

    Becca RowingThere will be a repeat series of Becca Lawton’s Cool Writing Tips. This will only be available for the month of September, 2016. Sign up now so you don’t miss a single inspirational tip.

    Write as if you were dying” features Rebecca Lawton as a guest blogger and highlights one of her Cool Writing Tips. I found her friendly style of writing about writing to be affirming and inspiring. I think you will, too.

  • Magic Carpet Ride . . . Prompt #283

    Lolita.miniGuest Blogger Becca Lawton’s post “Write As If You Were Dying” got me to thinking about how we spend our days. Most of our days are filled with things we have to do, accomplishing what needs to get done to pay bills, buy food, do the laundry, chores, clean whatever needs cleaning, and so on.

    What if, one day next week you could do anything you want. What would it be?

    This is different from  Prompt #164, “Write About A Perfect Day” where money and restrictions are not a factor.

    For this writing, be realistic, what could you do in a day that would be fun and something you could afford?

    This might be challenging for you . . . all the more reason to make the effort to sit down and Just Write.

    Okay, so what if that type of writing sounds like no fun at all and you might have to research if places are open, what the cost is, etc.

    What if you want to go on a flight of fantasy and write about it?  What if you had a magic carpet that could take you anywhere?

    Write about an ideal day where money and time constraints don’t matter.  You can do anything and everything you want. Distance and time do not matter. This is your Magical Day. What would you do?

    Whether writing about something you can realistically do or something that is total fantasy:  Write about your ideal day from beginning to end.

  • Write as if you were dying

    What would you write if you knew you would die soon?

    Today’s Guest Blogger, Rebecca Lawton, took the plunge and explored what it means for our work to be “so essential that we must complete it before we leave this earth.”

    Becca’s Cool Writing Tips during the month of August were such a success, she’s repeating the series in September. So, if you missed out in August, you have another chance to be inspired by Becca Lawton’s Cool Writing Tips.

    Becca opened the second week of Cool Writing Tips with this provocative quote from Annie Dillard:

    Write as if you were dying. At the same time, assume you write for an audience consisting solely of terminal patients. That is, after all, the case. What would you write if you knew you would die soon?

    Becca responds as if she were having an intimate conversation with Annie:

    Ms. Dillard, I’m so glad you asked that question. Now if I could only answer it.

    “What would you write if you knew you would die soon?” is a good question, but it’s one I find myself turning from, wanting to say, “Next!”

    Because to answer the question of what we’d write if we knew we’d die soon acknowledges that we will, in fact, die.

    And, the truth of the matter is, we will. Someday. Die. Hopefully not today or anytime soon, but sometime. And, given that fact, what should we write today?

    When I was writing my first novel I was also raising a child and working for a consulting firm that took the biggest part of my days. I’d rise early to steal a few hours before changing hats to care for my daughter and then go off to work. As I drove to the office, my characters still spoke to me, making their case that they needed my attention, and now.

    I’d promise to get back to them and then immerse myself in my consulting work. I’d only begin tuning into the novel again on my way home.

    Often—almost every day —I worried that I wouldn’t live long enough to see my novel finished. The thought that I might not finish this important life’s work terrified me. Not even when I was running the biggest rapids in the United States every day had I so considered death a possibility. Not even when I realized how quickly my daughter was growing did I feel immortal. No—it was the writing.

    That we find our work so essential that we must complete it before we leave this earth strikes me as a positive sort of feeling, if paranoid.

    Because, if we can’t really face the question as posed in Anne Dillard’s quote, maybe we can at least check  in with ourselves about how we’re spending our time. We can ask ourselves, “Would I keep slaving away at this thing if I knew it was the last thing I’d ever write (or paint or design or photograph?) If no, then why don’t I regroup?”

    We’re all terminal—but that’s okay. As Annie Dillard says, let’s assume that’s who our audience is. Because that is also who we are. And if we let that simple fact keep us honest and on track, I believe it will.

    Becca LawtonRebecca Lawton is the award-winning author (and co-author) of seven books. Her  path as a writer and fluvial geologist started with her first career, rowing rafts on the Colorado in Grand Canyon and other Western rivers.

    Some of her writing stems from observations in the field as a guide and researcher. Her essays and stories have been published in Aeon, Brevity, Hakai, More, Orion, The San Francisco Chronicle Magazine, Shenandoah, Sierra, Thema, Undark, and many other journals and anthologies.

  • Detour . . . Prompt #282

    Write about a detour you have taken.

    Or write about a detour someone you know has taken.

    Detour 1

     

  • Scarlet Tanager: Submit poetry for anthology

    Do you want your poetry to be part of an anthology?

    Submit to Scarlet Tanager to be considered for their anthology about California species, habitats, and geography, as well as historical, emotional, spiritual, political, aesthetic, or philosophical content.

    Scarlet Tanager is looking for poems that “go beyond simple description of place.”

    From their Submissions Page:

    The anthology will include poems on the coast and ocean, redwood forests, deserts, rivers, oak woodlands, grasslands, valley, chaparral, foothills, and mountains.

    Poems on urban environments welcome too!

    The aim is to celebrate California’s landscapes and also to document destruction and change.

    All forms and styles of poetry are welcome, as long as they focus on California.

    You do not need to live in California to submit.

    Please click on Scarlet Tanager Submissions for details on how to submit.

  • Saved . . . Prompt #281

    Life SaverWrite about saving a life.  Someone’s life you saved, or someone who saved your life.

    The save could be literal: CPR was performed, pulled from water, put out a fire, rescued from a snarling animal or a threatening situation.

    The save could be inspirational: Something read in a book, a magazine, a placard, a wall hanging; a mental shift; a realization; an epiphany; something that was said; a behavior change; a belief change.

    You get the idea . . . Saved. However you interpret this. Just write!

  • Food For Thought . . . Prompt #280

    Pat's presentA friend delivered a gift wrapped in black and white paper with sayings on canning jars.

    Today’s prompts are inspired from that gift wrapping paper. Choose one to write about. Or choose several:

    Food for thought.

    Foodies are the best people.

    Season everything with Love.

    Just beet it.

    Stay hungry – Stay foolish!

    Eat. Drink. And be amazing.

    Eat more greens.

    Farm to table & table to soul.