Is writing your cup of tea? -ok
Two Saturdays a month, French Theory now plays host to a new intimate writing event.
Is writing your cup of tea? -ok
Two Saturdays a month, French Theory now plays host to a new intimate writing event.
Le Salon des Hydropathes de French Theory
"For me writing is a celebration of the senses."Maïa Brami
“For me writing is a celebration of the senses. My workshops are like a delicious tasting menu”, explains writer Maïa Brami with a smile. “A lot of the regulars at my courses at the MAHJ kept asking me to organise a regular get-together and I have finally found the ideal cocoon to do so. When you are alone at home it’s not easy to find inspiration, to get past writer’s block or to stay on track if you have chosen a longer format.”
It is above all a very human adventure. Everyone comes together around the table, people get to know each other, listen, give advice, surprise each other and laugh too. At the end of the day, it’s all about enjoyment. “People forge new friendships and some of the most enthusiastic ones have even created their own writing group!” Maïa adds.
Next dates : 8 et 29 February, from 5pm to 7:30pm
Price : 40 euros – Tea time included
Register : maiabrami@free.fr
Places are limited.
Portrait de Maïa Brami
Maïa Brami is a writer and journalist. She has been directing writing workshops for over 20 years and is the President of the Intercultural Writing Competition in Chatenay-Malabry. Maïa chooses not to limit herself to one particular genre preferring a wider audience.
Childhood and women are at the centre of her work driven by questions of maternity and medically assisted reproduction : L’inhabitée (L’Amandier, 2015), Paula Becker, la Peinture faite femme, (L’Amandier, 2016), Tout va bien se passer (La feuille de thé, 2019), created in Paris, at the Reine Blanche Theatre in 2018