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  1. 16 de ene. de 2023 · Those of you who have been long-time readers of Creative Nonfiction, will know that every issue from the first to the 78th —from 1994 to 2022—leads with my “What’s the Story” column. Sometimes it is about the issue we are publishing and other times about the craft or the history of the genre. Today, it’s […]

  2. This issue is a celebration of writerly playfulness, exploration, and risk-taking, featuring breathless, epistolary, speculative, second-person, and snarky essays. Plus, an interview with Hysterical memoirist Elissa Bassist, close reads of work by Steve Coughlin, Jaquira Díaz, Margo Jefferson, and R. Eric Thomas, micro-essays, and more.

  3. Alumni & Contributor Updates: Early 2024. April 2, 2024. Read the full story →. Hippocampus Magazine is an online creative nonfiction magazine featuring memoir, essays, interviews, reviews, articles; also seeking cnf submissions.

  4. This document provides a table of specifications for a grade 12 creative nonfiction midterm exam. It outlines two major areas: (1) Introduction to Literary Genres, which focuses on understanding fiction and nonfiction, identifying conventions, and comparing genres; and (2) Principles, Elements, Techniques, and Devices of Creative Nonfiction, including close reading texts and identifying ...

  5. 8 de nov. de 2010 · Creative nonfiction in business? Creative non-fiction is basically expressing facts through storytelling. Storytelling is an effective tool for persuading people. Persuasion is key in business dealings, i.e., with customers, suppliers, employees, colleagues, bosses, investors, and business partners. Management gurus also utilize creative non- fiction techniques to sell their books / ideas.

  6. Creative Nonfiction is the voice of the genre. Every issue is packed with new, long-form essays that blend style with substance; writing that pushes the traditional boundaries of the genre; notes on craft; conversations with writers and editors; micro-essays; and more. Themes demonstrate the editors' belief that true stories, well told, can ...

  7. The word ‘Creative’ refers to the range of techniques and unorthodox forms that you might choose to use. ‘Nonfiction’ refers to the subject matter—accounts of people, events and experiences that are steeped in truth. Don’t let the creative part fool you; it isn’t an invitation to exaggerate or make up facts. It is not a license to ...