A Passing Statement and a Single Tweet Started One of the Most Brilliant Writing Residencies Ever Imagined

Maybe we’re a bit biased, being writers and all, but it was a stroke of pure brilliance when author Alexander Chee, in a December interview with PEN America, stated his love of writing on trains. “I wish Amtrak had residencies for writers,” he said, and with that simple statement, Chee ignited a movement — literally and literary — to giving American writers an opportunity to see the country while working on their craft. After reading the Chee’s PEN America interview, Jessica Gross, writer for the New York Times Magazine, the Paris Review and many other prestigious publications hopped on Twitter and asked Amtrak how to get this program going. They responded, asking Gross and Quartz editor Zach Seward if they’d like to go for a test run. Gross took them up on the offer, and jumped on the Lake Shore Limited for a free ride from New York City to Chicago and back again. “I’m only here for the journey,” Gross wrote about her experience in the Paris Review. “Soon after I get to Chicago, I’ll board a train and come right back to New York: thirty-nine hours in transit — forty-four, with delays. And I’m here to write.”
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It may be easy to assume that Amtrak’s writers’ residency program is nothing more than a ploy for media attention. But Julie Quinn, the company’s social media director, told the Wire that because of “overwhelming demand”, the company wants to turn the program into a regular operation. “We would’ve never known until really in the last 48 hours what type of response a program like this would warrant, and we have been pleasantly surprised,” Quinn says. The company isn’t sure yet exactly how the program will be structured, but Quinn says the goal is to “engage with writers several times a month”, possibly through a “tiered approach.” For now, the trips will remain free for writers, but Quinn says that could change, depending on the program’s regularity — and Amtrak’s bottom line. Interested writers — and Quinn says that anyone with a writing background would be considered, not just published authors — can apply through social media, by tweeting the company with the hashtag #AmtrakResidency.
There’s no telling how far this program could travel. Amtrak operates more than 300 trains a day on more than 21,000 miles of track. The company connects more than 500 destinations in 46 states, DC and Canada. And given the financial trouble the company has had in recent years, attracting a crop of successful writers, many of whom are active on social media — even if Amtrak is footing the bill — is a promotional opportunity that a fledging transportation business could only dream of. As for Chee, he tweeted last week that his Amtrak writer’s residency dream has come true. And he’s in it for the long haul, committing to a trip from New York City to Portland in May.
Updated: Monday, March 10, 2014: Amtrak has released an official application for its Residency program. Up to 24 writers will be selected for the program starting March 17, 2014 through March 31, 2015. 
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Want a Free House? Write Two Paragraphs to Win It

It’s like a writer-in-residence program, only permanent. A clever new nonprofit called Write-a-House is giving away homes in Detroit to a select few writers, in the hopes that it’ll entice them to come to the city and stay.

The goal is to support writers in need and, ultimately, to bolster Detroit’s growing creative community. At the same time, Write-a-House hopes to revitalize Detroit’s neighborhoods: it purchased abandoned homes in a high-vacancy part of town and it’s working with another nonprofit, Detroit Young Builders, which gives at-risk youth training in construction, to renovate the houses before giving them away.

Low-income writers of any stripe — journalists, authors, poets, etc. — and from anywhere are eligible to apply for the residency. The winners, chosen by a panel of literary types, will be asked to finish the renovations, live in their house for two years, blog about it for Write-a-House and actively participate in the local literary community. Then, they’ll get the deed.

The first three houses under renovation are all within walking distance of each other in a working-class, mostly Bangladeshi and African-American neighborhood north of Hamtramck. If all goes as planned, Write-a-House will fix up another three homes in another neighborhood the following year and then do it all over again the year after that.

“Our long, long term goal involves building a literary colony in Detroit,” Write-a-House says on its website. Who knows? Maybe years from now kids will be studying the Detroit Literary Renaissance in English class.

Kanye West Probably Won’t Answer This Young Woman’s Letter, But You Can

Girls Write Now provides mentorship and college prep to aspiring writers in New York City. The nonprofit specializes in helping young women who especially need a boost—almost 70 percent of the girls it serves live below the poverty line, and 20 percent are immigrants. Girls Write Now matches girls with professional writers who help them put together a portfolio, and publish their work. Girls Write Now is seeking donations to support its expanded mission–it now makes therapists available to all participants, and as Dani Green’s moving poem demonstrates, they can use them. “Whenever I feel overwhelmed, I write a letter to rapper Kanye West,” Green explains. She speaks movingly about wanting to climb out of the poverty that has gripped her family. She wants to escape “this place where dead dreams lurk in the footprints of everyone you’re close to.” With the help of Girls Write Now, she’ll have a more promising future.