The word sentence shares the same etymological roots as sentiment, as sentient, as sensual. A teacher told me that as a writer you have a choice to write a sentence that describes a drowning, or to write a sentence that feels like drowning. How do you get your writing to cling to readers’ nervous systems? Can you make a reader feel like they want to vomit by using these phonemes repeatedly: /g/ /k/ /t/? We’ll cover the basics of a few strategies to help our sentences feel like what they’re describing


Steven Dunn (a.k.a Pothole, cuz he’s deep in these streets) is a Whiting Award winner who was shortlisted for Granta Magazine’s Best of Young American Novelists. He’s the author of three novels: Potted Meat (Tarpaulin Sky, 2016), water & power (Tarpaulin Sky, 2018), and Tannery Bay (FC2/University of Alabama Press, 2024), which is co-authored with his homie Katie Jean Shinkle. He teaches in the MFA programs at Stetson University and Regis University

Writing Sentences that Feel

  • Saturday Apr 27 2024, 10:00 AM - 11:15 AM
  • 1780 Topaz Dr
    Loveland, Colorado
    United States
    80537