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Garden of Literacy Sci-Fi Writing Workshop

Making the Impossible Possible: The Art of Social Justice Speculative Fiction

Participants will gain an understanding of the power of speculative fiction to act as social commentary. We will examine the work of multiple speculative authors and unpack their symbolic use of speculative elements, and folks will have the opportunity to pitch and workshop an original speculative “novum,” or a fantastical story element that marks a narrative as speculative fiction. Participants will gain an understanding of the process of “mind mapping,” a structured brainstorming technique that allows writers build out an initial story idea into a full outline. In the second half, there will be time to begin drafting their own stories and an opportunity for final reflections and Q&A.

  • Introduction
  • Discussion: Speculative Fiction as Social Commentary
  • Developing a Novum and Mind Mapping a Story
  • Free Writing
  • Reflections and Q&A

This workshop is designed for all ages

Limit of 12 people, registration is required

Cost: $35 per person | 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm


About Brenna Harvey

Brenna Harvey (they/them) is a writer, comedian, and museum educator from Hartford, Connecticut. They hold an MA in sociology from the University of Connecticut and are currently pursuing an MFA in fiction writing at Southern Connecticut State University. They teach improv performance and comedic sketch writing through the Sea Tea Comedy Theater in downtown Hartford. They also work as a museum educator at Hartford’s Harriet Beecher Stowe Center, where they facilitate conversations about history in order to inspire social change in the present.

Their short fiction has been published in Cossmass Infinities, Strange Religion, Land Beyond the World Magazine, Night Frights, Cast of Wonders, and OMGQueer. Their story “The Land of Rought Draft” was awarded third place in the Royal Nonesuch Humor Writing Contest by the Mark Twain House & Museum, and their story, “‘Are My Underwater Sperm Darts Normal?’ And Other Teen Questions” was a judge’s pick for Queer Sci Fi’s annual flash fiction contest.