Welcome to all!

The Steering Committee has prepared a mix of online and in-person workshops, events and social gatherings for the Geneva Writers Group community and friends! Please take a look at the upcoming program below.


Upcoming Events

    • 06 Jan 2026
    • 19 Mar 2026
    • 22 sessions
    • Online via Zoom
    Register

    Write Through Winter Studio: A New Year–to–Equinox Generative Co-Writing Journey


    From the turning of January toward the slow brightening of March, join us for a gentle, steady, companionable writing practice—one that helps you rekindle your stories, renew your creative rituals, and return to the page with warmth, courage, and delight.

    Write Through Winter invites writers of all genres to experience the regenerative power of a shared creative space: a place for inspiration, experimentation, accountability, and quiet companionship as we write our way through the season together.

    The Winter Studio opens on January 6, 2026.

    Let’s begin again—together.

    Hosted by the GWG × Andra Otilia Nicolescu*


    ✨ About the Winter Studio

    As the year begins, winter offers a rare kind of clarity: a season of inwardness, deep listening, and slow renewal. This studio is designed to honor that rhythm.

    Across two guided sessions each week, we will gather to set intentions, write in silence, share optional reflections, and cultivate a gentle but transformative momentum in our work.

    Whether you are beginning a new project, returning to a long-paused manuscript, or simply seeking a ritual to anchor your practice, the studio offers a welcoming and flexible creative home.


    ✏️ Overview of the Programme

    Session Dates: January 6 – March 19, 2026

    Schedule: Tuesdays & Thursdays, 8:30–10:30am Geneva time

    Two hours of facilitated co-writing each session, with structure, spaciousness, and quiet accountability.


    What Else to Expect in Our Write-In Sessions

    • Gentle goal-setting & intention framing to help you arrive on the page with clarity

    • Two or three focused writing sprints held in companionable silence

    • Optional studio time for questions, reflections, or shared creative co-working

    • Weekly prompts & creative challenges to spark new ideas and sustain your momentum

    • A shared digital workspace with writing resources, inspiration, and space to connect

    • A welcoming community of writers moving through the season together


    Seasonal Extras:

    Throughout the programme, participants will also be invited to occasional pop-up offerings—surprise prompts, mini-craft interludes, reflective check-ins, and other winter-brightening activities announced along the way.


    Who should join us?

    All writers and curious creative minds are welcome to join and find renewed motivation and inspirationp in community - whether you'll be able to attend all of only part of the sessions, we look forward to writing with you!


    Winter Studio Pricing

    We offer flexible options so you can join the Studio in the way that best supports your writing practice—whether you’d like to attend occasionally or journey with us through the full winter season.

    10-Session Package: Members CHF 60 · Non-Members CHF 90

    12-Session Package: Members CHF 75 · Non-Members CHF 120

    Full Winter Studio (All Sessions): Members CHF 120 · Non-Members CHF 165

    Single Session: Members CHF 10 · Non-Members CHF 15

    We are committed to making this programme accessible to all. If cost is a barrier, please contact us at genevawriters@gmail.com to discuss options.


    Meet Andra, Your Commnity Co-Navigator!

    Andra Otilia Nicolescu is a Romanian-American writer, editor, and human rights lawyer who works at the crossroads between fiction and history, memory and archive, and legal and critical theory. Her Pushcart Prize–nominated literary fiction and creative non-fiction has appeared in literary journals including Glimmer TrainCatapult MagazineBlunderbuss, and Matca Literara, where she currently is a collaborating editor. 

    Since 2020, she has found creative reaffirmation in literary mentorships, practice collectives, and fellowship communities, experiences that rekindled her motivation, creativity and practice,  

    This year, she’s grateful to have been welcomed by the Geneva Writers’ Group’s diasporic homeshores, and is more than ever drawn to co-creating and facilitating shared, generative spaces for like-minded explorers.

    She’d love for you to drop a word — to say hello, share your story, or tell her about the visions and inspirations that keep you returning to the page with us this November.

    **While Andra's website undergoes some reluctant renovations, you can find traces of her unrequited auto-fictions, postmemorial hauntings, and other dialectical blunderbussinsg, scattered across common timespaces

    Write to us with questions at genevawriters@gmail.com!

    • 09 Jan 2026
    • 18:30 - 21:30
    • The Library in English, Rue de Monthoux 3, 1201 Genève
    • 76
    Register

    New Year, New Pages: A Winter Literary Celebration!

     

    Let’s welcome 2026 together — with words, creativity, and community! Join GWG members, friends, and fellow artists for a festive evening apéro to kick off the year in good spirits and creative company.

    The night will feature member readings* to celebrate the stories, poems, and projects that carried us through 2025 — and to toast what’s ahead. We’ll also introduce some interactive surprises, special announcements about upcoming events and opportunities in the year to come, and playful collaborative activities!

    Friends and family are welcome!

      Date & Time: Friday, 9 January, 18:30 - 21:30

      Location:  The Library in English, Rue de Monthoux 3, 1201, Geneva

    Members: FREE

    Non-Members: CHF 25

    *Please note, members will have up to 3 minutes to read.

    • 14 Jan 2026
    • 17 Jun 2026
    • 12 sessions
    • Online Via Zoom
    Register

    Fundamentals of Writing

    A 6 Month Virtual Workshop with Zoë Wells


    Based on university-level writing courses in the US and UK, this Fundamentals of Writing series offers a step-by-step introduction to writing theory. By breaking a story down into its essential components, we’ll demystify what makes “good” writing and learn how to craft cohesive, creative, and impactful work with consistency.

    The course consists of twelve sessions—six theory-based and six practical—and you are welcome to attend as many as you wish.

    Consider this your Writing 101.


    THEORY Session 1: Plot Arcs and Structures – Beginnings, Changes, and Resolutions

    14/01/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    Stories are defined by movement — but how does plot actually work?

    In this session, we explore major plot frameworks, from the classic three-act structure to the seven basic plots, and examine how these patterns shape literary fiction, suspense, and everything in between. By understanding how stories move, you’ll learn what your own plots can teach you about your writing.

    Texts discussed: Raymond Carver, Neighbours • Shirley Jackson, The Lottery • Chigozie Obioma, The Fishermen


    PRACTICE Session 1: Practical Writing – Plots and Changemakers

    28/01/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    This hands-on session focuses on change, the engine of every plot. Through guided exercises, you’ll experiment with how shifts, reversals, and choices alter the direction and emotional impact of a story — and how to avoid predictable plotlines while strengthening narrative momentum.


    THEORY Session 2: Character and POV – Motivation, Voice, and Narrative Style

    11/02/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    A story without a voice is a story untold. This session examines how point of view shapes narrative meaning, tone, and emotional impact. We’ll look at the purposes different narrators serve and how selecting (or crafting) a voice becomes one of the most powerful artistic decisions a writer makes.

    Texts discussed: Carmen Maria Machado, The Husband Stitch • Helen Oyeyemi, Books and Roses • Virginia Woolf, Mrs Dalloway

    PRACTICE Session 2: Practical Writing – Playing with Point of View

    25/02/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    What happens when you change the storyteller? In this session, we experiment with shifting narrators and angles of perspective. You’ll discover how POV alters tension, intimacy, and meaning while uncovering new possibilities within your own stories.


    THEORY Session 3: Dialogue – Natural Tones and Unnatural Voices

    11/03/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    Dialogue is deceptively difficult: seamless when done well, disruptive when done poorly. This session breaks down what makes dialogue effective, when to use it, and how it shapes character, pacing, and story dynamics. We’ll analyse examples that reveal how dialogue can quietly transform a narrative.

    Texts discussed: Ernest Hemingway, A Clean, Well-Lighted Place • Lawrence Hill, “So What Are You, Anyway?” • Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice


    PRACTICE Session 3: Practical Writing – Talking Our Way Through Dialogue

    25/03/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    Through targeted exercises, we’ll practice crafting dialogue that carries emotion, reveals character, and controls narrative rhythm. This session focuses on balancing believability with intention, sharpening your ear for voices that elevate your fiction.


    THEORY Session 4: Setting – Believability, Detail, and Beauty

    08/04/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    As Carmen Maria Machado notes, “Places are never just places.” In this session, we explore how setting functions as mood, metaphor, context, and even catalyst. By analysing vivid fictional worlds, we’ll consider how to make our own settings feel alive and indispensable.

    Texts discussed: Julia Armfield, The Great Awake • Ross Raisin, Ghost Kitchen • Khaled Hosseini, The Kite Runner


    PRACTICE Session 4: Practical Writing – Setting

    22/04/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    Using guided prompts, we’ll experiment with different approaches to creating effective settings — from atmospheric landscapes to dynamic urban scenes. Learn how world-building (even in realism) influences tone, character, and narrative energy.


    THEORY Session 5: Detail – When to Show and When to Tell

    06/05/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    “Show, don’t tell” is one of writing’s most repeated rules — but also one of its most misunderstood. This session examines when showing is essential, when telling is more efficient, and how detail functions in stylistic and structural terms. We’ll analyse sparse and lush prose to understand both ends of the spectrum.

    Texts discussed: Ernest Hemingway, Hills Like White Elephants • Anton Chekhov, The Student • Cormac McCarthy, The Road


    PRACTICE Session 5: Practical Writing – Show Don’t Tell

    20/05/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    Through writing exercises, we’ll test different levels of detail and explore how much information a story truly needs. This session helps you refine your stylistic preferences, sharpen your descriptive instincts, and cultivate a voice that feels confident and intentional.


    THEORY Session 6: Narrative Reliability – The Known and the Unknown in Writing

    03/06/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    The space between what a story tells and what a reader understands is where literature becomes most alive. This session explores reliable and unreliable narration as tools for complexity, tension, and depth. We’ll analyse how writers manipulate truth and ambiguity to shape interpretation.

    Texts discussed: Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper • Claire Vaye Watkins, “Ghosts, Cowboys” • Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse-Five


    PRACTICE Session 6: Practical Writing – Reliable and Unreliable Narrators

    17/06/26 — Wednesday, 19:30–21:30

    How much does your narrator reveal — or conceal? In this session, we’ll experiment with varying degrees of narrative reliability to see how trust, withholding, and perspective reshape a story. Learn to use unreliability not as confusion, but as craft.


    Fundamentals of Writing Pricing

    Sliding-Scale Member Rates

    GWG offers a trust-based sliding scale to ensure equitable access. Participants are encouraged to select the pricing tier that best aligns with their financial circumstances.

    Accessible rates support those with limited means, standard rates cover core costs, and pay-it-forward rates help fund subsidized places for others in the community.

    Member – Pay It Forward: CHF 450

    Member – Standard: CHF 340

    Member – Accessible: CHF 280

    Non-Member: CHF 480

    Two-Session Package: Members CHF 60 · Non-Members CHF 80


    Zoë Wells is a short story writer and novelist. She has spent a decade working in literary magazines in the UK as a reader, editor, and contributor, for publications including Poetry Wales and Bandit Fiction. Her own short stories have been longlisted for prizes including the BBC National Short Story Award, the White Review Short Story Prize, and the Bridport. Her writing has been featured in the anthologies Night-Time Stories (Emma Press), IX: The 2021 Manchester Anthology (Centre for New Writing), and Reclaim: An Anthology of Women’s Lives (Bandit).

    • 20 Jan 2026
    • 10:00 - 11:30
    • Pages & Sips, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève
    • 8
    Register

    Snippets

    Monthly in-person writing sessions



    Get your writing juices flowing! 

    Creative, themed writing sessions to inspire you for your current project or for a new one, while connecting with local creative writers. We will produce 3-4 snippets of writing from prompts to put our creative minds to work. We will share our creations, either by describing them or reading them out. 

     

    When? The second or third Tuesday of each month; 10-11.30

    Where? Pages and Sips in the old town, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève

    FOR GWG MEMBERS ONLY!

    Cost: 10 chf, and support our host Pages & Sips by purchasing something (coffee, tea, croissant...)

    Who is the leader? 

    Carol Waites has been a professional writing trainer and coach for 25 years, more recently immersing herself in creative writing. She loves sharing ideas and seeing others’ creative talents unfold. She also loves networking with other like-minded people from different backgrounds. She is now writing her memoir of her time at the United Nations.




    • 24 Jan 2026
    • 10:30 - 16:30
    • Foound, Rue Jean-Dossier 7, 1201, Geneva, Switzerland
    Register


    Rewriting the Myths: Successful Storycraft and Modern Resonance

    In Person Workshop with Bea Fitzgerald


    From sweeping myth retellings to reimagined classics, stories that breathe new life into the old have captured bestseller lists, literary prizes, and readers’ hearts alike. But reinventing a familiar tale is far more than repackaging the original—it’s an act of transformation.

    In this workshop, mythology retelling author Bea Fitzgerald explores how to build compelling worlds and magic systems, deepen timeless themes, and position your story in today’s literary landscape. Whether you’re drawing subtle inspiration from an existing canon or completely rewriting it from the ground up, this session will help you craft a retelling that feels both ancient and entirely new.

     Saturday, January, 10:30 – 16:30

     Foound, Rue Jean-Dassier 7, 1201 Geneva

     Workshop Fees:

    Full day: CHF 70 (Members) | CHF 100 (Non-Members)

    Morning only: CHF 50 (Members) | CHF 70 (Non-Members)



    Bea Fitzgerald is an award-winning, Sunday Times bestselling author of numerous titles including Girl, Goddess, Queen; The End Crowns All; and A Beautiful Evil. Having spent numerous years working in publishing, Bea is now focused on writing anything from YA romances inspired by Greek mythology to dark and twisty novels for adults. When she’s not writing, she’s entertaining her followers on TikTok and Instagram under the handle @chaosonolympus.


    • 21 Feb 2026
    • 10:30 - 16:30
    • Foound, Rue Jean-Dossier 7, 1201, Geneva, Switzerland
    Register


    When the Open Page Becomes the Theatre:

    In Person Workshop with Dr. Cristina A Bejan


    Author, playwright, and spoken word poet Dr. Cristina A. Bejan brings her wide-ranging experience as a professional theatre artist into the Geneva Writers Group . Through practices such as Rodin Statue Work—where we discover that we, too, are works of art—and Theatre of the Oppressed exercises that invite us to stand in another’s shoes, writers will be encouraged to look beyond the all-too-familiar interior terrain of contemporary creative writing.
    Together, we will push our imaginations outward, toward other worlds, other lives, and realities beyond the borders of the self.
    This workshop invites us to ask difficult questions of the past and present while also sparking hope for a more just and luminous future. It is at once a call to action and a safe, generative playground.

    Please come with your favorite pen and an open heart!

    Saturday, February 21, 10:30 – 16:30

     Workshop Fees:

    Full day: CHF 70 (Members) | CHF 100 (Non-Members)

    Morning only: CHF 50 (Members) | CHF 70 (Non-Members)




    An award-winning author, theatre artist and spoken word poet, Dr. Cristina A. Bejan has published books in all of her genres (history, poetry, playwriting). Her plays have been performed in 4 countries and her hit play DISTRICTLAND was bought for TV development. She has appeared as an expert on A&E's The History Channel, C-SPAN, and multiple Romanian TV channels. Her work has been featured in the Washington Post, Times Literary Supplement, Foreign Policy, Libertatea and ELLE Romania magazine ... among many more print and audio outlets. In NYC she has performed at La MaMA Experimental Theatre Club and launched 5 published plays at The Drama Book Shop. Bejan is the only Rhodes Scholar (since the establishment of the scholarship in 1903) to hold Romanian citizenship and the recipient of the the George Parkin Distinguished Service Award 2025 (Rhodes Trust). She earned her Masters and PhD at the University of Oxford, fully funded by merit-based Rhodes and Fulbright scholarships and many grants. Bejan is also the Executive Director of Bucharest Inside the Beltway, a multicultural arts & culture platform that she co-founded in 2014 to promote local and international inclusive voices in the arts. She is currently working on a number of writing projects while auditing classes at the Sorbonne. Please visit cristinaabejan.com 

    • 24 Feb 2026
    • 10:00 - 11:30
    • Pages & Sips, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève
    • 8
    Register

    Snippets

    Monthly in-person writing sessions



    Get your writing juices flowing! 

    Creative, themed writing sessions to inspire you for your current project or for a new one, while connecting with local creative writers. We will produce 3-4 snippets of writing from prompts to put our creative minds to work. We will share our creations, either by describing them or reading them out. 

     

    When? The second or third Tuesday of each month; 10-11.30

    Where? Pages and Sips in the old town, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève

    FOR GWG MEMBERS ONLY!

    Cost: 10 chf, and support our host Pages & Sips by purchasing something (coffee, tea, croissant...)

    Who is the leader? 

    Carol Waites has been a professional writing trainer and coach for 25 years, more recently immersing herself in creative writing. She loves sharing ideas and seeing others’ creative talents unfold. She also loves networking with other like-minded people from different backgrounds. She is now writing her memoir of her time at the United Nations.




    • 11 Mar 2026
    • 19:00 - 21:00
    • Online (Zoom)
    Register


    Like a Person Digging:

    A MemoryWorks Masterclass with Q.M. Zhang


    Have you been searching for your history, only to find the stories you've been told are not true, and parts have been left out or erased? What tools do you need to excavate a past that has gone underground? What will you make out of the remains you unearth?

    This workshop will introduce participants to the creative practice of memory work. Akin to what Toni Morrison called “literary archeology,” Memory Work involves both research and imagination: “On the basis of some information and a little bit of guesswork, you journey to a site to see what remains were left behind and to reconstruct the world that these remains imply” (The Site of Memory).

    Q.M. Zhang will introduce you to some of the creative tools and practices that emerged in the making of her award-winning, hybrid book, Accomplice to Memory (Kaya Press, 2017). You will consider what it means to be a next generation writer: How to harness the urgency of the present as you journey to sites of your past. How to conduct yourself like a person digging. You will turn over soil, gather fragments and traces you find there, and use these materials for your experiments with hybrid forms of writing.


    Where: Online via Zoom

    Date: March 11, 2026

    Time: 19:00-21:00 CEST 

    Masterclass FeesCHF 30 (Members) | CHF 45 (Non-Members) 




    Q.M. Zhang is a writer, teacher, and founder of Q.M. Zhang | MemoryWorks, a creative research & writing practice for individuals and communities who are trying reclaim histories that have been censored, silenced, or erased. This practice grew out of three decades of teaching on the borders of social science and creative writing, and the making of her award-winning hybrid book, Accomplice to Memory (Kaya Press, 2017), which combines memoir, fiction, and documentary photographs to explore intergenerational silences and omissions in her own immigrant family history.

    In 2020, Zhang left academia to devote herself to the practice of memory work in the world. She launched MemoryWorks as a collective space for those she calls next gen writers: children of migrants & refugees, descendants of Indigenous & enslaved people, offspring of settlers & slavers—all who write in order to understand their proximity to history. As a creative practice, memory work draws on a myriad of sources: images and objects, documents and dreams, maps and myths, conversations and hallucinations, policy and propaganda, the real and the imagined and the possible. At the core of this practice are hybrid tools and forms for writing into the cracks between what we’ve been taught to remember, what’s been distorted or disappeared, and what we have to imagine to get closer to truth.

    Q.M. Zhang is Associate Professor Emerita of Cultural Psychology & Creative Nonfiction at Hampshire College and an Advisory Editor to The Massachusetts Review.


    • 17 Mar 2026
    • 10:00 - 11:30
    • Pages & Sips, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève
    • 9
    Register

    Snippets

    Monthly in-person writing sessions



    Get your writing juices flowing! 

    Creative, themed writing sessions to inspire you for your current project or for a new one, while connecting with local creative writers. We will produce 3-4 snippets of writing from prompts to put our creative minds to work. We will share our creations, either by describing them or reading them out. 

     

    When? The second or third Tuesday of each month; 10-11.30

    Where? Pages and Sips in the old town, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève

    FOR GWG MEMBERS ONLY!

    Cost: 10 chf, and support our host Pages & Sips by purchasing something (coffee, tea, croissant...)

    Who is the leader? 

    Carol Waites has been a professional writing trainer and coach for 25 years, more recently immersing herself in creative writing. She loves sharing ideas and seeing others’ creative talents unfold. She also loves networking with other like-minded people from different backgrounds. She is now writing her memoir of her time at the United Nations.




    • 14 Apr 2026
    • 10:00 - 11:30
    • ONLINE
    • 11
    Register

    Snippets

    Monthly in-person writing sessions



    Get your writing juices flowing! 

    Creative, themed writing sessions to inspire you for your current project or for a new one, while connecting with local creative writers. We will produce 3-4 snippets of writing from prompts to put our creative minds to work. We will share our creations, either by describing them or reading them out. 

     

    When? The second or third Tuesday of each month; 10-11.30

    Where? Remote session on Zoom 

    FOR GWG MEMBERS ONLY!

    Cost: 10 chf, and support our host Pages & Sips by purchasing something (coffee, tea, croissant...)

    Who is the leader? 

    Carol Waites has been a professional writing trainer and coach for 25 years, more recently immersing herself in creative writing. She loves sharing ideas and seeing others’ creative talents unfold. She also loves networking with other like-minded people from different backgrounds. She is now writing her memoir of her time at the United Nations.




    • 12 May 2026
    • 10:00 - 11:30
    • Pages & Sips, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève
    • 9
    Register

    Snippets

    Monthly in-person writing sessions



    Get your writing juices flowing! 

    Creative, themed writing sessions to inspire you for your current project or for a new one, while connecting with local creative writers. We will produce 3-4 snippets of writing from prompts to put our creative minds to work. We will share our creations, either by describing them or reading them out. 

     

    When? The second or third Tuesday of each month; 10-11.30

    Where? Pages and Sips in the old town, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève

    FOR GWG MEMBERS ONLY!

    Cost: 10 chf, and support our host Pages & Sips by purchasing something (coffee, tea, croissant...)

    Who is the leader? 

    Carol Waites has been a professional writing trainer and coach for 25 years, more recently immersing herself in creative writing. She loves sharing ideas and seeing others’ creative talents unfold. She also loves networking with other like-minded people from different backgrounds. She is now writing her memoir of her time at the United Nations.




    • 09 Jun 2026
    • 10:00 - 11:30
    • Pages & Sips, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève
    • 10
    Register

    Snippets

    Monthly in-person writing sessions



    Get your writing juices flowing! 

    Creative, themed writing sessions to inspire you for your current project or for a new one, while connecting with local creative writers. We will produce 3-4 snippets of writing from prompts to put our creative minds to work. We will share our creations, either by describing them or reading them out. 

     

    When? The second or third Tuesday of each month; 10-11.30

    Where? Pages and Sips in the old town, Grand-Rue 37, 1204 Genève

    FOR GWG MEMBERS ONLY!

    Cost: 10 chf, and support our host Pages & Sips by purchasing something (coffee, tea, croissant...)

    Who is the leader? 

    Carol Waites has been a professional writing trainer and coach for 25 years, more recently immersing herself in creative writing. She loves sharing ideas and seeing others’ creative talents unfold. She also loves networking with other like-minded people from different backgrounds. She is now writing her memoir of her time at the United Nations.




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