Michael Croft is a local author and Reno native who spent his youth hanging out around his fatherโ€™s motel, the Parkway, on Sierra Street. He teaches small writing workshops in his home. Learn more by visiting michaelcroftworkshops.com.

When did you know you were going to be a writer?

I got interested in it in college. And, initially, I was very taken with a professor. Heโ€™s no longer with usโ€”Dr. Ahmed Essa. And I enjoyed taking English classes from him. โ€ฆ I was a business major pretty much by family dictate. So every semester would roll around, and Iโ€™d look in the schedule to see which classes Dr. Essa was teaching. So I took all of these English classes, and Iโ€™d say, โ€œWell, Iโ€™ll take all of those business classes next semester.โ€ This was a distinct moment. I was standing outside on the patio of the student union, overlooking Manzanita Lake, going through the catalog for the upcoming semester. Iโ€™d taken all of the classes I could take from him. The only thing I could take was a creative writing class. โ€ฆ I liked him, but I thought, โ€œWriting, no, I donโ€™t want to do that.โ€ I went ahead and, during that time, something just happened. โ€ฆ I went in indifferent, and I left that semester intense, ready to go. And I knew I needed more, and so I was very fortunate in that time to meet a writer by the name of Floyd Salas. He took me under his wing. โ€ฆ I moved to San Francisco and โ€ฆ I got a degree in creative writing. โ€ฆ I came back with two desiresโ€”to go into the clubs and work part-time and to start writing a novel. โ€ฆ And one novel led to another.

Youโ€™ve do different types of writing.

In fact, I finished a novel just a couple of months ago. Iโ€™m getting ready to cast it out into the world. But Iโ€™m much more prudent about that step than I used to be. โ€ฆ And in the interim, I know that when my baby leaves the house, Iโ€™ll need to do something. So Iโ€™m going to be writing a short story. โ€ฆ And then Iโ€™ve taught. โ€ฆ I started and directed the TMCC Writersโ€™ Conference for 16 years.

Tell me about your new workshops.

Well, we started about a year ago. And Iโ€™ve been in workshops. Iโ€™ve taught some workshops in the past. I tell incoming people that weโ€™re going to sit around my dining room table and have adult conversations about stories. And if I could, I would do that every night. Sit there with four or five people and solve the riddle of the story. That surpasses anything on cable. โ€ฆ And I know that writers tend to be isolated. And trying to reach them is a challengeโ€”but also being one of those isolated people, Iโ€™ve certainly experienced that. You need your privacy to write, but to bring a story or a novel to fruition, you need other people. Thatโ€™s a fact. And I strongly believe if you want to write, one of the things you need to do is help that writer sitting next to you. โ€ฆ Some people are a little nervous about coming in. I go to great lengths, for a lot of reasons, to create an environment thatโ€™s very comfortable and inviting. All levels are encouraged. Floyd Salas said to me one time, โ€œDo you know the definition of novel?โ€ He said, โ€œNew every time. So, no matter how much experience you have, youโ€™re always starting over.โ€ You go back to the beginning state. โ€ฆ I stress reading with generosity. Itโ€™s an absolute must. We always start out speaking to the strength in any piece. โ€ฆ And then we start to build. The things that arenโ€™t working, simply arenโ€™t working. Theyโ€™re not a statement on a personโ€™s talentโ€”absolutely not. Thatโ€™s just the process. I stress daydreaming on paper. We encourage mistakes. Those mistakes can be discoveries.

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