Guest Faculty Archives

Field Notes from world-class authors, thinkers, and creators who have taught inside Manuscripts.

The Guest Faculty Archives is a curated teaching library drawn from live guest lectures delivered to Manuscripts authors. Each Field Note captures a precise insight about writing, publishing, creativity, or authorship, preserved as a short-form lesson you can return to anytime.
These are not interviews or highlights.
They are instructional moments, extracted for Modern Authors.

Voice Is the First Signal a Story Works

Ruffin emphasizes that voice precedes plot. Modern Authors should listen for aliveness in the opening pages, because voice is what earns the reader’s trust before ideas ever land.

Build Your Book from Portable Notes, Not Perfect Conditions

Handler’s process is intentionally imperfect: notebooks, scraps, index cards, messy drafts. That’s the point. Modern authors don’t need the perfect writing retreat, they need a portable system that works in real life, between meetings and obligations.

Short Stories Teach Completion

Ruffin explains that short stories are moments, while novels are accumulations. Modern Authors benefit from mastering both, learning completion through small forms before scaling into book-length work.

The Only Question That Matters Early: Do You Like Writing?

Handler’s mentor gave him the most important early-stage advice: nobody can certify you as a writer. The only way forward is to write and learn whether the work itself is something you want to live inside. Modern authors need systems, not permission.

Write From What’s Deep Inside You

Ruffin teaches that authentic writing starts with curiosity, not agenda. Modern Authors create resonance by wondering how others think, feel, and speak, then building stories that feel lived-in rather than constructed.

Writing Begins in Loneliness

Handler reframes loneliness as the core feature of reading and writing rather than a flaw. Modern authors often think isolation means they’re stuck, but he argues the opposite: writing is meant to feel solitary. If you feel alone in the work, you’re not failing, you’re participating in the oldest literary tradition there is.