Finding the writers' muse in Neufeld's fiction-nonfiction class

SALISBURY — One of the pleasures of small-town life is being able to develop skills in areas that don’t relate directly to your job. For many people, even those who are not retired, there is adequate time to learn knitting, play the cello, take a tennis class or join a women’s volleyball team.

Or to take a writing seminar, which is the choice made by a dozen men and women who signed up for John Neufeld’s class (held at St. John’s Church) in fiction and non-fiction writing. Some consider themselves writers already, and wanted an extra push that might help get their work published. Others had simply decided they have things to say and wanted some guidance on how to do so.

Neufeld has been writing fiction professionally for decades, and is the author of one of the most popular young adult novels ever, a sympathetic exploration of mental disorders in a teenage girl, called “Lisa, Bright and Dark.� His latest novel, called “April Fool,� is set in a small New England town (hmmm) and its cover promises “suspense, romance, politics, manners and murder.� It will be published this year.

In between writing, he has taught classes to a variety of age groups and in a variety of settings. Some of his students were in fifth grade, others have been college students. Here in Salisbury, where he taught classes with the Taconic Learning Center continuing education program, many of his students were retirees.

He debuted this latest class, which is not connected to any organized group, in 2007. For his first six-week session, 11 people signed up. Neufeld started them off with writing basics, teaching them to present their thoughts with style, vigor and clarity.

Some chose to do memoirs, others wrote short stories. Gaile Longdon Binzen of Salisbury, who came to the class looking for that extra push she needed to finish a novel, worked on a book about life in England during World War II.

Grace Wallace Brown of Ashley Falls worked on an amusing short story (fiction, one assumes) about a high-fashion model who is six-months pregnant but lets herself get talked into doing one more fashion “shoot� on a chilly day on the Hudson River.

Some students, Neufeld said, chose not to write at all.

“They were nervous,� he said, though he added, “No one was shy.�

Students worked on their individual pieces and then read them to the class. Critiques were shared — gently, for the most part.

“It was like a discussion at school,� Neufeld said. “You sit around a table and share ideas. You try not to be defensive. And people did manage to do that.�

“John is a good mediator,� said Peter Fitting, a Salisbury resident who took the class. “He encouraged us to talk about each others’ writing and because there was variety in the group, we’d get different kinds of feedback.�

“I think that mostly what writers want is to have someone else hear their work,� Binzen said. “And this class gives you that opportunity.�

Binzen, who is 72, also felt she needed encouragement to take her completed fiction and try to get it published (“I just need to get off my duff,� she said in her crisp British accent.).

But of course her work is now already in print, in a booklet, “The Writers Book 2007,� that Neufeld made of completed fiction from the class. Two hundred copies were printed and they can be found at area libraries and other public spots.

That first class was followed by a smaller, invitation-only writing workshop. Neufeld is offering another open-enrollment workshop this summer, beginning June 2. The class will meet at St. Johns Church in Salisbury from 10 a.m. until noon every Monday for six weeks. “We’ll explore short fiction, nonfiction, memoirs and childrens books,� Neufeld said. “Students are encouraged to explore both their imaginations and their capabilities among their cohorts.�

The cost for the class is $90; for information or to enroll, call Neufeld at 860-435-6240.

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