Writers at Work: Lessons from Novelist Ron Hansen & Editor Dale Keiger
Pull up a chair for a conversation with three writers talking the craft of storytelling: short-form and long-form, character and detail, structure and voice. Writer Ron Hansen is renowned for fiction anchored in history that can take readers on startling psychological journeys. He has been a finalist for the National Book Award, and many know he penned the novel The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, made into a movie starring Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck. What you might not know is that for more than a decade he also loaned his talents as literary editor for Santa Clara Magazine. In a first for the CASE Editors Forum, he sits down to discuss his work as a storyteller. He is joined by an Editors Forum veteran, Dale Keiger, editor emeritus of Johns Hopkins Magazine. Keiger’s career as a writer and essayist spans nearly half a century. He has a few ideas for what makes good storytelling as well—and some concerns about where it’s heading. Maria Henson is a Pulitzer Prize winner and former Nieman Fellow at Harvard, and she serves as associate vice president and editor-at-large at Wake Forest University. She oversees Wake Forest Magazine, teaches journalism, and serves on the senior leadership team. Hosting this trio in conversation is Steven Boyd Saum, who has delivered keynote addresses and Magazine 101 workshops at previous Editors Forums. He also had the privilege of serving as editor of Santa Clara Magazine with Ron Hansen as his partner in crime, and he now serves as executive director of strategic communications and content at Saint Mary's College of California.