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Thinking Out Loud: William Least Heat-Moon

University of Missouri Press

If you are a creative type, then you may have given some thought to the process behind creating. Whether you paint, write essays or solve engineering problems, Columbia author William Least Heat-Moon has written a book that illuminates the creative process. Least Heat-Moon discussed his new bookWriting Blue Highways on KBIA's Thinking Out Loud. He also speaks this Thursday at 7:00 p.m at the Daniel Boone Regional Library in Columbia.

Before William Least Heat-Moon was a famous author who happens to live in Columbia, Missouri, he was recently divorced and the disillusioned holder of a PhD who happened to live in Columbia.

The 1977-78 trip that he took to find out about America became Blue Highways, a book that stayed on the New York Times bestseller list for 42 weeks after it came out in 1982.

In order to become a better writer, Least Heat-Moon relied on good writers and teachers. One of those teachers who influenced and helped him was the late Stephens College professor Jack Lezebnik.

Jack taught English at Stephens and became my friend and counselor over the years. He was sixteen years older than I was: A World War II veteran, a good reader and a really excellent editor. By watching him edit my prose I learned how to revise. It was that great gift that he gave me. I went in there and I had no idea about how to rework what I'd put down, very little idea, even though at that time I had a PhD from the University in the English Department. You would think that a PhD in English would know how to write. Well, I knew the basics but to make a sentence sing - I hope they sing - that's what Jack was good at. He was my editor and read everything I wrote up through Road to Quoz. Working together with him over the other six books, I learned what he had to teach. In fact, the last thing we did together I was disagreeing with him almost as much as I agreeing with his ideas. Whenever he pointed out something he thought was weak or incorrect I always considered it because he rarely was wrong. His solution might not be what I wanted, but he had identified a problem that was there that other readers would pick up on.

In his new book Writing Blue Highways, Least Heat-Moon explores the role of teachers, the need for creative types to have the discipline to revise and what's wrong with some contemporary authors. William Least Heat-Moon will speak about Writing Blue Highways this Thursday evening at 7:00pm at Columbia's Daniel Boone Regional Library.

Listen to Thinking Out Loud each Tuesday afternoon at 6:30 on KBIA.

Trevor serves as KBIA’s weekday morning host for classical music. He has been involved with local radio since 1990, when he began volunteering as a music and news programmer at KOPN, Columbia's community radio station. Before joining KBIA, Trevor studied social work at Mizzou and earned a masters degree in geography at the University of Alabama. He has worked in community development and in urban and bicycle/pedestrian planning, and recently served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Zambia with his wife, Lisa Groshong. An avid bicycle commuter and jazz fan, Trevor has cycled as far as Colorado and pawed through record bins in three continents.
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