Category: personal

Bread Loaf Diaries

The first time I heard of Bread Loaf was from my friend L. in a writing class in 2001. Shortly thereafter I happened upon Rebecca Mead’s article in the New Yorker, which begins thus:

There are very few places in America where it can be claimed definitively that poets kick ass, and one of them is the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, which takes place over eleven days every August in the Green Mountains of Vermont. At Bread Loaf, which is the oldest and most prestigious writers’ conference in the country, poets are not the effete, marginal figures of popular imagination. This was amply demonstrated at this year’s poets-versus-fiction-writers football game, a regular fixture in which those who traffic in metre and rhyme go head to head on the Bread Loaf meadow with crafters of experimental, semi-autobiographical narratives.

Mead provides some history on the conference, what kind of work one can hope to do during the two weeks, drops names of frequent faculty, and then gets to the part that is remembered by most of my writer friends:

The triple compulsions of Bread Loaf have, traditionally, been getting published, getting drunk, and getting laid; and, though each is honored more in the breach than in the observance, the reputation lingers. The conference is informally known as Bed Loaf–it comes as something of a disappointment to discover that, in coining a nickname, the finest literary talents of the twentieth century couldn’t come up with anything better than a low pun–and for many years it was as notorious for its debauchery as for its higher-minded pursuits. (…) Attendees of conferences dating to the early nineties will, when pressed, tell of finding conferees rutting in hedgerows, and sometimes will even confess to engaging in some rutting themselves. Similarly, Bread Loaf used to be famous for the quantities of alcohol ingested: the faculty would take off for Bloody Marys before lunch and Martinis before dinner, and some could be found still boozing at dawn in the faculty lounge, Treman Cottage, if they had not already taken off for the hedgerows.

Things have changed somewhat, Mead explains. Bread Loaf is “a primmer place now,” she says. And yet, upon finding out that I was attending this year, a number of my friends cautioned against too much partying.

Three years ago, Dave Koch (one of the founding editors of the Land-Grant College Review) wrote a diary for Slate, describing the work he had to do for his waitership. And today I found myself madly googling for it, as prep for the kind of work I’ll be doing.

I’ll be in transit most of today, so check back again tomorrow for on-site posts.



Back in Action

Until last weekend, I hadn’t realized how tethered I was to my computer. We’d decided to go camping in the woods, and I had no choice but to be unplugged. I started to feel the itch after only a few hours out–not just the itch to check email, but just to see what was up online. So it was nice to get a little detox and just enjoy nature and be in the moment.

I came home yesterday to a ton of work, so please bear with me. I will answer your email soon.

And I’m also getting ready to go to the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, which I’ll be attending on a work-study scholarship, starting tomorrow. I’ll try to post occasionally from Vermont.



Out and About

I’m still in Seattle. In fact, I’m planning on spending the rest of the week here, hiking, camping, and trying to stay away from computers. If you’re in need of your literary news fix, may I suggest the fine blogs listed here? Back soon, insha’llah.



Off Site

I’m up in Seattle this weekend, to attend the Arab Festival, which is taking place at the Seattle Center, right by the Space Needle. There are tons of shows and activities scheduled (including a stand-up comedy night with Maysoon Zayid, Dean Obeidallah, and the inimitable Ahmed Ahmed). I’m also doing an event at the Eve Alvord Theatre on Sunday at 3 pm, sharing the stage with Dr. Nada Elia, of Antioch University, to talk about the current Arab American literary scene. Check it out if you’re interested.



Author Website

One of the necessary stops in preparing for the release of Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits was getting an author website. Here it is: Lailalalami.com. It has information about my book, an excerpt, contact details, and dates for my upcoming book tour. If you live in one of the cities I’ll be visiting in the fall, it would be nice to meet you.