Tag Archives: diy mfa

Yea or nay for an MFA?

Tomorrow we’ll pick up with our series on clues in non-mysteries!

We’ve talked before about getting an MFA. I’d love to get a grad degree, and I’d love to improve my writing. But in the end, I’m not sure an MFA program is the best choice for me, or for many writers.

And I’m not the only one who feels that way. Gabi Pereira of DIY MFA fame holds a real MFA. She’s grateful for the experience, she’s glad she did it, and she’d do it again, but if you ask her flat out whether she recommends an MFA, the answer is no.

As she actually told an interested MFA student:

“Seriously, if your only goal is to get published: go home, sit yourself at your workspace and write the book. If you think getting an MFA will help motivate you or improve your writing, then it sounds like a good fit for you. But if all you want is a ‘get-published’ card, then just go home and write the book.”

Among other points she makes in a whole series (several of which we mentioned when we talked about it last):

  • An MFA is most likely not the only way to get where you want to be in writing (unless that’s teaching).
  • It’s dang expensive!
  • It’s not the best path to publication.
  • Putting your life on hold to study writing isn’t realistic—learning to make writing part of our day-to-day lives is
  • Non-literary fiction is often discriminated against.

To be sure, there are a lot of positives to an MFA as well:

  • Writing is a priority
  • Reading is a priority
  • You can survive harsh critiques
  • How to work within the writing community

That said, I haven’t totally given up hope. I just have to find a program that is local or low-res, well-funded, into genre fiction… that’ll happen, right?

What do you think? Is an MFA for you?

Photo by Joshua Nixon

T is for thinking creatively

I’d come up with this idea a while ago and couldn’t quite figure out what I was going to write. But I did keep seeing awesome posts on creativity in writing coming up in my feed reader.

And then it clicked! One of the courses of DIY MFA 2.O is Craftivity: creativity in writing craft. So check out the posts so far for great ideas on tapping into different avenues for creativity!

D is for Do It Yourself

So I’d been all set to blog about disappointments in writing (no comment on why 😉 ), when I came across this via fellow Crusader J.C. Martin’s blog:

the DYI MFA 2.0

We’ve talked about MFAs before. I love and hate the idea, since I really want to go back to school and hope to never have to work like that again 😉 .

But a practical, self-guided, self-designed course to become a better writer? I’m all over that.

What do you think? What would you put in a DIY MFA course? Do you want to participate?