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MFA in a Box

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By exploring the relationship between the writer and love, grief, place, family, race and violence, John Rember helps you see how to go deep in your writing. He also tells you what you'll find there and how to get back. Along the way, you'll learn how to see the world as a writer sees it.

“A big part of writing involves grappling with the terrors and discouragements that come when you have writing skills but can’t project yourself or your work into the future,” says Rember. “My hope is that MFA in a Box will help writers balance the despair of writing with the joy of writing. It’s a book designed to help you to find the courage to put truth into words and to understand that writing is a life-and-death endeavor — but that nothing about a life-and-death endeavor keeps it from being laugh-out-loud funny.”

REVIEWS/COMMENTS

"The essential truths about excellent writing are brought under consideration partly through the use of familiar fables and fairy tales. Another part is illustrated by the author’s own life experiences. Rember cleverly makes the reader dig into her own unconscious wisdom to recognize the true jewel at the center of a story. This book is not filled with rules and dogma to guide the writing process. Instead, an understanding of our relationship to our place on earth, acknowledging that our civilization is built on violence, and 'how the big moments in life require a witness,' impel us to infuse our stories with truth." — The Judges of the Hoffer Awards (MFA in a Box was named to the Hoffer Award Grand Prize Short List in May 2011)

“What makes [this book] different than the many, many books about writing on the market today is the way Rember engages his readers in some of the issues every writer faces — writing about place, about family, about grief — not as problems to be overcome but as issues to be understood.” — Jeff Baker, Book Editor, The (Portland) Oregonian

“Witty, audacious, and wise, John Rember’s MFA in a Box is a unique and valuable book that addresses the subject—and the life experience—of Creative Writing from both a practical perspective and in a manner so highly personable you’ll read it like a memoir—and want to meet the author. Rember has the storyteller’s magic. You’ll be enthralled. And walk away a more astute and vibrant writer.” — Robin Metz, author of Unbidden Angel, winner of the Rainer Maria Rilke International Poetry Award, and Director of the Program in Creative Writing at Knox College

“I started reading the book on the plane to a convention. Every chapter is an essay, one of those rich interconnected thought-weavings that we got to listen to as Pacific [University] students, with the addition of a top ten list at the end of each — valuable for focus and review, but also often funny. I found, reading on the plane, that when I was done with the first essay, I didn’t want to read the second. I wanted to write. So I dug out my carry-on and switched activities. On the plane ride home? Same thing. One essay, and then writing. Obviously, this is a rare writing book. I have read quite a few, and I don’t remember any of them making me want to write that moment like this does. The cover says it’s ‘a Why to Write Book,’ and the evidence says it’s convincing.” — Author Felicity Shoulders

“If you are ready to plunge into the depths of your writer’s soul and uncover the secrets that you might be holding back, then MFA in a Box could change the whole way you think about the process of writing.” — Sharon Harrigan, Author, Poet, Journalist, Walking on the Highway, Dec. 2010

“John Rember’s MFA in a Box is the best book on writing I’ve read since Stephen King’s On Writing. It should be on every writer’s bookshelf.” — Randy Richardson, author of Lost in the Ivy, President of the Chicago Writers Association

“MFA in a Box by John Rember is possibly the best book I’ve read about writing and living the creative life in general, and I have a personal library full of such books. I wish I had read this 30 years ago while I was at [college] hoping to be a writer some day.” — Gretchen Little, ”A Book Review and More,” Squidoo, October 2010

“There is such a wealth of life in each essay…deep, authentic stuff about relationships, politics, religion, mythology, and everything is discussed with such perfect humor. I love the Rules for Writers at the end of the chapters…great stuff…really useful as well as entertaining. This book should be mandatory for any writing course, undergrad or graduate. This is so much more than a craft book…this is an inspiration. It makes me want to write, helps me find the courage to do so, and allows me see the purpose in the hard work of it.” — Author Rebecca Elgin

272 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2011

16 people are currently reading
599 people want to read

About the author

John Rember

12 books16 followers
John Rember lives and writes in the Sawtooth Valley of Idaho. Recurring themes in his writing include the meaning of place, the impact of tourism on the West, and the eventual impossibility of industrial civilization.

John's latest book, A Hundred Little Pieces on the End of the World, is a meditation on teaching, writing, and friendship in an increasingly fragile world. MFA in a Box: A Why to Write Book was recognized by the Nautilus Awards, Hoffer Awards, and Midwest Book Awards as one of the best new books on creative writing. His memoir Traplines: Coming Home to Sawtooth Valley was named Idaho Book of the Year by the Idaho Library Association. He is also author of three short story collections: Sudden Death, Over Time; Cheerleaders from Gomorrah: Tales from the Lycra Archipelago; and Coyote in the Mountains.

John has written numerous articles, stories, and essays for publications ranging from Travel and Leisure to Wildlife Conservation to High Desert Journal to The Huffington Post. He taught for many years at The College of Idaho in Caldwell and in the Pacific University MFA program in Forest Grove, Oregon.

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Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews
Profile Image for Lynn Demarest.
Author 1 book5 followers
December 3, 2012
"MFA in a Box" is a beautifully written book not so much about the mechanics as the psychology of fiction writing. The author, a beloved professor of creative writing in the northwest, argues that the best authors endeavor like Buddhas to dive into awful truths everyday people wanting to maintain their sanity naturally avoid.

Rember echoes the advice of my old writing teacher, the deceased Harry Crews, when he implors aspiring novelists to be so honest their mother (and everyone else) despises them -- to trust where the story wants to go and go there. (A task easier done, Rember notes, by authors who reject the idea that stories belong to them and accept the idea that they belong to the stories.)

The subtitle of the book is "A Why to Write Book" but I contend that the book is really still a how to write book, in that it is full of advice about how to enter into the forbidden zone and come back sane enough to keep from blowing your brains out a la Hemingway.

One strange thing: Rember consistently uses "may be" in place of "maybe." For me, it was a little distracting and made me wonder if he couldn't have used an editor in addition to a spell checker.

A single reading is probably insufficient.

Read King's "On Writing" first, but don't neglect this insightful advice from a man who should know.









Profile Image for Andrea.
583 reviews18 followers
October 21, 2012
If ever there was a solid argument for why writers need to continue on with their craft, even in the face of a general disavowal of its importance, this is it. While it claims to be a "why" to write book there is plenty of "how" in here as well. The concepts presented about writing and living a creative life are not easy, and I have to admit that I did not grasp everything in this book on the first read through. I hope to have time for more reads in the future. But the depth of this book is what made me give it 5 stars. There is stuff to mull over in here that could occupy you for decades. I have not yet read a book about writing that I found as brutally honest as this one. This is not happy, life is great book about how to write pretty stories or poems for Readers Digest. This is a book about the hard things in life, perhaps the hardest things in life, and why grief and suffering need to be at the core of our writing practise. I did not come out of this book feeling warm, fuzzy, and encouraged. Instead I emerged feeling slightly terrified, stunned, but perhaps empowered to revisit writing in a more serious way. If you are a writer, if you want to be a writer, if you think you're a writer, read this book.
Profile Image for Leo Robertson.
Author 39 books493 followers
December 22, 2015
If Adam West was an MFA professor...
Didn't connect to the long rambling stories laid out in each chapter, but the lists of rules at the end were not bad.
Also, apparently does not supplant an MFA.
Huh.
Profile Image for TC.
101 reviews22 followers
January 2, 2013
This is pretty much what I'd expect an MFA to be: a bloviating gassbag of a baby boomer, still fighting against The War and ranting about how evil Robert McNamara is and whatnot, rambling at length about the emptiness of "modern society" because it "isolates us from suffering" and how it's the job of a writer to take all those readers down into Hades to face their misery. He conveys this with winding anecdotes that are his life's reminisces: some are self-effacing and mildly humorous; but none are without Deep Meaning(TM). He also makes some points by lapsing into Literature Professor mode, providing critique of a few classics (The Book of Job, The Epic of Gilgamesh), spiced-up with cool references to Terminator 2 (just to show he's with-it, man). In-between we occasionally stumble on some interesting ideas that an aspiring writer such as myself can add to the collection of aphorisms that may or may not make for useful advice someday (at least if you're a white middle-class American male; like all good ivory tower inhabitants, he does his best to imagine what it must be to not be one, and still be a writer). To complete the experience for us, he even dons what appears to be a genuine tweed jacket on the back cover's photograph.

At least I only paid $16.95 and spent a few hours on it, unlike the poor hapless hopefuls that actually go through this for a few years to get that MFA.
Profile Image for Randy Richardson.
Author 7 books44 followers
July 13, 2012
"MFA in a Box" is the best book on writing I've read since Stephen King's "On Writing." It should be on every writer's bookshelf.
Profile Image for Robert.
Author 13 books47 followers
May 29, 2011
John Rember is unafraid to stare down life's big questions, but does so always with a twinkle in the eye. Like the fool in King Lear's court, he will rap you on the noggin with a truth so sweet it hurts. If you don't close his book somehow transformed, you may well be un-transformable.

Rember's "why to write" book is a memoir of the creative heart and mind in conflict with itself, which is to say a universal struggle that any artist will recognize. More than this, he emerges triumphant over big issues-family, violence, bearing witness, estrangement, grief. Gilgamesh, "Hansel and Gretel," Greek mythology and Paris Hilton all figure in to his survey of literature and culture, teaching through the age-old workshop mantra of showing, rather than telling us, what good, deep writing is all about.

John demonstrates time and again what it means to write as a fully engaged human being, teaching along the way that deep writing is deep living, and profound fun.

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Profile Image for Geoffrey Waring.
20 reviews2 followers
June 12, 2014
This book really surprised me. Not really anything to do with an MFA at all, it is a perpetually strange little book, part memoir, part philosophical inquiry, part writing advice. Its subtitle-- "a why to write book" -- is pretty apt, as it explores the philosophical reasons for writing at all, for writing and thinking and engaging with the world more deeply, drawing freely on the author's life and thoughts. This is seriously one of the best books on writing I've ever read, but don't expect career advice, advice on forming plot or character or writing beautiful sentences. The book goes much deeper, and challenges the reader to go deeper before picking up a pen at all.
Profile Image for Michael Smith.
Author 6 books4 followers
December 30, 2012
Frankly, I was surprised by how much I enjoyed the book. This is likely because the author spent most of his time writing well crafted little memoir pieces that imaginatively supported the obligatory "rules for writing" lists in each chapter. Whatever with rules for writing (as Rember himself surely would say); the point is Rember's prose. Much enjoyed.
6 reviews1 follower
December 1, 2011
Yes, think. I do not usually read to make me think but this one encourage some study. Which is good for us. Gave me many books to look into for future reading.
Profile Image for Amber H..
4 reviews1 follower
January 24, 2019
Excellent. This book is a pleasure to read whether or not you are interested in doing writing of your own.
Profile Image for Heather Shaw.
120 reviews13 followers
August 21, 2012
This book changed how I write and how I think about writing. And his images are still swimming around in my head, weeks later. Planning to re-read, and soon.
Profile Image for L..
28 reviews
January 30, 2020
I was fortunate enough to purchase a used copy of this book from an online retailer, complete with cynical-scolding scribblings of disagreement along the margins in nearly every essay. (Nearly. It was easy to tell where the previous owner/reader gave up, as the unsolicited Hot Takes abruptly stopped three essays from the end. Here's a super cool idea: if you hate a book so much that you intend to deface it so thoroughly, make sure you also scribble a link to your blog post/review on the inside of the front cover so your unwilling audience can feel like they have some faculty in the decision.)

I wrote my own notes in the margins of this book. In pen. Which is fine, because I'm not going to sell it to a used bookstore. I can't promise it won't end up there when I die, but this is already getting a little too pessimistic/existential for a casual Goodreads review, so let's agree to abandon that trajectory. Flipping back through my notes, the general sentiment I seemed to express - the general feeling I experienced while reading this work - was that of being witnessed. Seen/heard/known.

Let me put this another way: my college writing program ruined writing for me - which, for me, is no different from saying that it slowly and steadily devoured my soul. I went to college for writing because writing was what I loved and what I felt compelled to do with my life and my time, and it didn't turn out the way I thought/hoped it would.

This book helped me understand why. It also helped me consider all the ways I might recover what I've lost.

Read this if you can't remember why you bother.
Profile Image for Julia.
Author 2 books35 followers
September 1, 2018
A book about writing that is not really a book about writing (although it is also a book about writing) but more a book about life and being alive in all senses of the word. Reads more like a memoir or a novel and I read it compulsively over a couple of days. There are some great tips in here (and some wisdom) so have your highlighter ready. I also found it useful to list all the books he references as I went along and now have an extensive reading list.
Profile Image for Chase.
152 reviews4 followers
July 22, 2020
A lot of rambling yet a good and instructive read. A "Why" to write seems like a marketing move. Wouldn't writers find their own "why" themselves? If given it wouldn't be as strong, nor would they find their own way like writers should. Why would I need to write mother, couldn't I write father too?

I'm sure Rember's thoughts would be better understood in one of his classroom lectures. There's certainly important body language that's need to follow his direction.
Profile Image for Alia Luria.
Author 5 books81 followers
January 30, 2015
I have been making my way slowly through John Rember’s MFA in a Box and finally finished it today. I find his voice, which I suspect is the same voice he adapts when holding workshops for his students, to be witty and engaging. I even picked up his recent short story collection Sudden Death, Over Time before I had even finished MFA in a Box. As usual, my “to read” list is packed to the gills, and I I haven’t yet had the chance to crack it yet. When I first started reading MFA in a Box, I found the title incredibly incongruous. It reads like part memoir, part advice book, and part philosophical ramblings, each chapter its own little island. It wasn’t until I reached almost the last page before I realized that the title was completely fitting. Each chapter examines a theme, such as violence, family, grief, etc. and infuses it with a mixture of personal stories from the author, philosophy and psychological evaluation and good old fashioned writing advice. It was as if each chapter was my own personal MFA workshop conducted by Mr. Rember. Sure, there were no readings and no discussion, but diversity of expression draws you in to the chapter. So many points of view are expressed in each section, so many stories told, so many threads followed, that you leave the chapter slightly discombobulated but in awe of the possibilities.

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Profile Image for Janet.
14 reviews
June 27, 2016
You've read all the writing books you're supposed to. You've followed the plotting script to the letter. But something is still missing from your story, and you know it. John Rember's memoir-as-teaching aid will probably come off more as therapy than technique class, and that's my guess what he was going for in the first place. MFA in a Box will help you unclog your creative drains and get to depths you were afraid of going to before, and touch subject matter you have been hiding away in dusty boxes in your brain for years. Read Stephen King, follow James Scott Bell's outlines but meditate upon John Rember.
Profile Image for Mike O'Mary.
Author 4 books30 followers
September 6, 2011
This is a "must-have" book on creative writing. MFA in a Box is a thought-provoking and entertaining discussion of creative writing and what it means to be a writer. It's not intended to take the place of an MFA in creative writing, but whether you have an MFA or not, this book will make you a better writer.
Profile Image for Ashleigh Spicy Geek.
222 reviews29 followers
July 7, 2013
I liked learning on different authors and books that I should read. That's about all I got out if this. And don't use metaphors. He said that enough times. In all I was disappointed with this book and expected a lot more. It seemed more like him rambling about his life than trying to inform people on why they should write like this book was supposed to do
Profile Image for Anne White.
Author 33 books369 followers
Read
May 22, 2016
Challenging and sometimes dark and uncomfortable, especially the chapter about Gilgamesh and goddesses. But otherwise...though it took forever to finally get it finished (between other books), it was worthwhile, especially if you want to write or read about the deeper places stories can take us. Or maybe the higher places: I finished reading the Kindle edition at 10,000 feet in the air.
Profile Image for Meegan.
392 reviews16 followers
March 31, 2016
For the record, I had to read this for an Advanced Creative Writing class. If I didn't depend upon reading this for a grade, I would have skipped it. Rember is all over the place. Literally. This book was practically a biography with a few lines about writing thrown in. I'm sorry for those of you who like Rember, but I do not.
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews

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