The only bi-lingual bi-cultural writing conference
in the world, the seventh year.
Scene: Four jam-packed days in the charming city of San
Miguel. Close-up on the sprawling Hotel Real de Minas, set back from a noisy
cobblestone street, tucked among bougainvillea and fruit trees. 200+
writers/editors of all types clustered to learn and to celebrate the written
word.
Theme: "Creative Crossroads of Americas" and indeed it is. Canadians, North-Americans, Mexicans, a smattering of South Americans and Europeans, find common ground.
Hotel Real de Minas, San Miguel de Allende, MX |
Voices: A huge ballroom filled to the brim with folding
chairs facing a small stage, flanked by large original Mexican paintings, three
times a day features remarkable keynote speakers: Canadian Merilyn Simonds
talks about a sense of place and the divine [and hysterically funny] Margaret
Atwood speaks of writing and hope. American Naomi Wolf advocates for advocacy
in writing and native-American Joy Harjo of music and poetry as the gateway to
the soul. Polish-Mexican Elena Poniatowska beguiles us with a cultural and
creative history of her adopted homeland. She moves me to tears with her
humility and dignity – truly I wanted to kiss the hem of her long red skirt.
Sandra Cisneros makes a surprise appearance to read from a work in progress and
to introduce La Senora Poniatowska whose stories I am reading and who continues
to wow me. How sad that so few of her works have been translated into English
and how sad that Americans so rarely enjoy the works of great international
writers.
Elena Poniatowska |
Workshops: Fiction, memoir, humor, travel writing, blogging,
etc., and a literary salon on Emile Zola presented by Bea Aronson, a French
ex-pat professor of comparative literature. Later that day, I ducked out of my
afternoon workshop to enjoy her seminar on Proust. Aronson hosts a weekly salon
her on all things artsy and if I lived here, I would attend them all. One
workshop on fiction is good, others not so much, more for beginners, which
thankfully I no longer am, although always more to learn, and not all workshops
are raves, there is a bit of griping about teachers who have come to promote
books, but one cannot expect perfection in any conference or event of this
scope, nor so in life.
Tally: 42 speakers and educators, including four agents who
take pitches every fifteen minutes between sessions, a little like speed dating
but we take whatever opportunity comes our way. Note: Two agents I pitch want
to read my new novel SHE RUNS. Oh happy day!
Lunch: Buffet or distributed in colorful bags by sweet young
volunteers, accompanied by spontaneous conversations of not only writing but
politics, media, personal journeys. I encounter a local, Lyn Prashant, a grief
therapist, who spent the first seven years of her life in the same building in
the Bronx where I grew up and we share memories of friends and locale. I meet a
smart sassy retired lawyer turned short-story writer who is already winning
awards. A middle-aged LA back-packer searching for her "inner Latina" and writing her memoir, an Australian screenwriter turned novelist who is definitely going to be a huge success, a sweet young editor
who moves around a lot with her Coast Guard partner and is peddling her own
fiction, a retired ex-pat living in Oaxaca, among others.
Bea Aaronson |
Fiesta: The second night, held on the grand at Insituto
Allende, the place that put this place on the map, on the grand patio facing
the glowing spire of the Parroquia in the Jardin [center of the city] features
fun food and lively indigenous dancers, and another opportunity to cement new
friendships. Ms. Atwood is seated at the table next to mine, and when she is
suddenly alone for a moment, I chat briefly with her [okay, at her] and she is
most gracious. I feel more accomplished by sheer proximity.
Sidebar: Throughout the day, in the lobby, on the lawn, sitting on stone benches, writers write - computers, notebooks, ipads, on their laps, words flowing on their pages. Perfect punctuation.
Closing: A production of an original play on Dorothy Parker
and a final reception that I miss because I am beat and opt instead to have a quiet dinner with my daughter.
Epilogue: I am inspired, exhausted, over-stimulated. Blessed to be here, staying in Dana's gorgeous
apartment, enjoying time with her and also the company of new friends and her
lovely colleagues at LifePath Retreats. I feel honored to have been in the company of so many whose
voices demand to be heard. More than ever, I am proud to say: I am a writer. Soy escritora.
Footnote: Here another week, working, playing, taking
private Spanish lessons, enjoying more time with Dana. Have computer, can live
anywhere, and especially happy to be back in SMA – a blend of Santa Fe, Laguna
Beach and Berkeley, grounded in Mexican culture and sensibility. Like no place else I've been. Muy Bien.
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