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Lou Ureneck

The writing craft, from hand to hand

By Lou Ureneck
September 28, 2009

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I GOT A C-minus on my first paper in freshman English in college. The professor’s comments made it clear that the grade was an act of charity. The gap between my work as a writer and his standards as a teacher yawned as broadly and hopelessly as some river gorge. We could hardly see each other across the chasm. The assignment was to analyze a short story by Flannery O’Connor, and I could make no sense of it - or at least none of the kind of sense that makes a term paper.

I passed the class through force of sheer earnestness and the degree of effort that inspires a teacher’s pity.

The next year, I took a second required writing course. The teacher taught us how to build a piece of writing from a set of exercises over 13 weeks that we linked like railroad cars into a final paper. Mine was about a ferryboat ride across the Delaware Bay that tried to convey something about the power of passages. I was 18 years old at the time, there was trouble at home, and I was feeling the pressures and possibilities of movement and change.

Looking back, I can see that the class writing exercises were miniature studies in description, exposition, and narration. I discovered in the class that writing was something that I could learn, its mysteries could be unlocked through an understanding of technique and that I thoroughly enjoyed the task of making sentences that snatched and then conveyed the ideas, feelings, and images that were slopping around inside of me like water in a bucket.

I got an A in the class, and I have been fascinated by the act and teaching of writing ever since.

My sophomore-class writing teacher (Mr. Alan Rose, where are you?) gave me one of the greatest gifts of my life. I don’t exaggerate when I say it ranks up there with motherly love.

“Empowerment’’ is an over-used word, but it is the word that exactly describes what I gained in Mr. Rose’s class. I learned that the observations, sensations, thoughts, and experiences of my life had value - as much value or even more as scoring a touchdown or owning something expensive - if I could find ways to communicate what I saw and felt to others.

I could use this gift - this encouragement to write - to deepen my appreciation of the aspects of the world that I found remarkable or beautiful by reliving them in language. It gave me the pleasure (as the poet Robert Pinsky has put it) of attempting something difficult. It set before me the aspiration toward mastery.

It also gave me a livelihood. In the third week of the course at the University of New Hampshire, Mr. Rose walked me across the hall to meet the English Department chairman, Donald Murray, who was adviser to the student newspaper. That was almost 40 years ago.

I’m in a position now to pass along the gift of encouragement. This has been one of those marvelous life turns that seem too good to be true. The students who come to me mostly want to be journalists. They are drawn by the excitement of the news, the chance to do work that matters and the urge to write. I love them for wanting to be reporters.

As I work with them, I can’t help but think that there are many others out there in the world who deserve this gift of writing. I think of the young people who are not in college because they lack the money or encouragement. It’s the people in the worst circumstances who most would benefit from the chance to see that their experiences and observations have value, and that the value can be expressed by writing. I salute those teachers who bring writing programs to prisons.

The teaching of writing, like much of academia, is fraught with argument, which is fine since it’s worth arguing about. For me, it begins with the validation of what the student brings to the page, eventually gets to grammar, and then we move on to Flannery O’Connor.

Lou Ureneck, a guest columnist, is Journalism Department chairman at Boston University. His memoir, “Backcast: Fatherhood, Fly-fishing, and a River Journey Through the Heart of Alaska,’’ won the National Outdoor Book Award.

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