San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Seaside celebratio­n of storytelli­ng

Top authors speak about their craft at PLNU’S annual Writer’s Symposium by the Sea

- BY SETH COMBS Combs is a freelance writer.

Twenty-eight years ago, Dean Nelson had an idea. He wanted to bring the best and brightest literary minds to the seaside campus of Point Loma Nazarene University to talk about their lives and, within the process, hopefully inspire local audiences to do the same.

The annual Writer’s Symposium by the Sea started humbly enough, booking notable local writers to come and speak in a small conference room. But the school soon expanded the outlook of the symposium to bring in profession­al writers, authors and journalist­s of the highest caliber to speak at the university’s auditorium­s. Nearly 30 years and dozens of writers later, the symposium has become one of the premier literary events in the city.

“It’s been a big evolution, but I still adhere to the original roots of what we wanted to do,” said Nelson, a journalist and founder of PLNU’S journalism program. “We want to bring in people who have a body of work, not just someone who did a one-off or a celebrity who had someone ghostwrite their memoir. Those are valuable, but what we’re trying to say to the audience and to our students is ‘aspire to this.’ We want it to be elevating and inspiring.”

An important aspect that Nelson is always keen to point out is that the symposium, which takes place at the PLNU campus beginning Feb. 20, isn’t just for writers, but rather for anyone who has an appreciati­on for groundbrea­king writing and journalism. Essentiall­y, anyone who wishes to be inspired by the words of others.

“You don’t have to be a writer, an aspiring novelist or a poet, or even a frustrated screenwrit­er. You don’t have to be any of those things to appreciate what storytelli­ng does for society,” Nelson said.

Nelson points to this year’s writer’s symposium theme (“Writing That Celebrates”) as not only a prompt for this year’s lineup, but a central tenet of the event itself.

“We’re a storytelli­ng species, and it’s how we pass values down to one another,” says Nelson. “This is a symposium that celebrates storytelli­ng and acknowledg­es that. So we bring in great storytelle­rs who are going to tell some great stories. And through that, they’ll help everybody to understand the role that storytelli­ng plays not just in our culture, but in our personal lives.”

The symposium also includes a Student Short Film Festival, now in its third year, which will kick off the symposium events on Feb. 20. The writers events follow Feb. 21 through 24.

Here are the celebrated writers who will be speaking at this year’s symposium:

Anthony Doerr 7 p.m. Feb. 21

Nelson calls the Pulitzer Prize- and Carnegie Medalwinni­ng novelist someone who “celebrates the existence and the value of a well-crafted story.” Known for his impeccably fluid style of writing and for his inimitable ability to weave together the multiple perspectiv­es of his characters, the Idaho-based writer is likely best known for his acclaimed 2014 novel “All the Light We Cannot See,” which is told from the perspectiv­e of a German orphan boy and a blind French girl during World War II. The book is being adapted into a Netflix limited series starring Mark Ruffalo and Hugh Laurie. His most recent novel, 2021’s “Cloud Cuckoo Land,’’ was his most epic story yet, interconne­cting multiple characters from 15th-century Constantin­ople to a spaceship in the distant future.

William Finnegan 7 p.m. Feb. 22

The multihyphe­nate writer and journalist has covered a variety of topics since becoming a staff writer at The New Yorker in the late ’80s. From Mexican politics to U.S. police unions, there’s nary a topic that Finnegan hasn’t tackled. His 1998 book “Cold New World,” which documented impoverish­ed families in four U.S. communitie­s, now seems downright prophetic in its hard look at the continued rise of income inequality. A lifelong surfer, he won the Pulitzer Prize in 2016 for his autobiogra­phy “Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life.” “His writing is celebratin­g nature in a way,” says Nelson. “People who have read ‘Barbarian Days’ almost feel like it’s reading Melville — he’s so in awe of the ocean.”

Maria Hinojosa Feb. 23

An accomplish­ed reporter, journalist, essayist and talk show host, Hinojosa has a résumé so accomplish­ed and distinguis­hed, she won a Pulitzer Prize in 2022 for her work at Futuro Media Group, a nonprofit she founded in 2010 that is devoted to news and programmin­g that explores “the complexiti­es of an increasing­ly diverse and connected world.” Also known for her groundbrea­king work at National Public Radio (“Latino USA”), CNN and PBS, Hinojosa has found time to co-host a podcast (“In the Thick”) and write a number of nonfiction books and poetry collection­s. Her acclaimed memoir “Once I Was You” also took a hard look at the United States’ treatment of immigrants and was recently adapted into a book for young adults in hopes of inspiring future journalist­s. Her work “celebrates people who live out in the margins or who are otherwise invisible,” says Nelson. “She celebrates that life.”

N. Scott Momaday Feb. 24

Momaday is the only speaker at the symposium whose talk will be pre-recorded. Nelson traveled to New Mexico (along with a camera crew) to capture the author and poet in his element. Momaday is perhaps best known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning 1968 novel “House Made of Dawn,” which is often cited as a classic of Native American literature (Momaday is a member of the Kiowa tribe). He is also the author of several books of poetry, short-story collection­s and several anthologie­s on his Kiowa heritage. Nelson calls him “a treasure” and a writer who “celebrates ancestry, myth, and the value of how stories get passed down over the centuries to shape people and culture.”

 ?? DEBORAH HARDEE ?? Anthony Doerr, author of “All the Light We Cannot See” and “Cloud Cuckoo Land,” will be at the symposium.
DEBORAH HARDEE Anthony Doerr, author of “All the Light We Cannot See” and “Cloud Cuckoo Land,” will be at the symposium.
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