If youโve been trying to decipher the mystery behind writing great fiction, let acclaimed mystery writer Walter Mosley be your guide. Actually, Mosley, who this year became the first Black man to receive the National Book Awardโs Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters for lifetime achievement in writing has written far more than mysteries since publishing his first novel, Devil in a Blue Dress in 1990. In his still-ongoing career, he has published more than 50 works across multiple genres, including science-fiction, young adult, erotica, plays, screenplays, nonfiction, and two books on the craft of writing.
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Launching Thursday, December 3, Mosley brings all that experience and expertise to MasterClass with a series on fiction and storytelling for the popular educational platform.
In his new class, Walter will share tips on how to structure a story, the mechanics of putting together character, plot, and compelling dialogue, and how writing and fiction can help you better understand the world. Adding an important voice to the timely conversations around race and representation, Walter shares how heโs used writing as a device to illuminate racial issues, uplift Black men as heroes and protagonists, and provide insight into how anyone can use fiction as a means of personal discovery.
The resulting series is more than Six Easy Pieces (sorry, we couldnโt help ourselves). In 13 lessons, Mosley gives real talk coupled with some requisite tough love on the writing process, some of which he also shared with The Root for an upcoming episode of our literary podcast, The Root Presents: Itโs Lit!ย
โPeople always come up to me when Iโm doing a reading or an event, and they say, โWell, how do you write a novel?โโ he explained when asked what attracted him to the MasterClass format. โAnd itโs not that much to write a novel, but itโs a little bit too long for me to just sit down and say, you know what Iโm saying? You have to make more of a little bit more of a commitment than that. So the two books I wrote I think are really useful, and also, the MasterClass is also a thing where people can listen and learn and kind of, you know, engage. And then, I think if I did it right...then people will be able to learn about writing, and I know a lot about writing and also about talking about writing,โ he chuckled. โI know a lot about talking about writing.โ
Mosleyโs path to becoming a bestselling writer didnโt begin in elite graduate programs; he began taking writing courses in his mid-30s. Thirty years and countless accolades later, heโs still no elitist when it comes to the craft of writing.
โWriters are writers,โ he told us. โYou know, writers can be hanging out on the street corner in Atlanta....prisons are filled with writers. People just writing their stories down, you know. And maybe itโs just letters;ย a lot of people writing novels; a lot of people writing poetry.โ
Regardless of the genre, Mosley maintains the true power of writing isnโt in the finished product.
โI do think that everybody should write a novel,โ he said. โDoesnโt matter if everybody publishes a novel; I donโt care if they do. But even if you donโt, to write a novel opens yourself to yourself. And I think thatโs really important.โ
Walter Mosleyโs course on Fiction & Storytelling is available on MasterClass now.
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