I have been skimming a 2022 book about storytelling by Mark
Yaconelli titled Between the Listening and the Telling: How stories can save us.
Google Books has a preview through page 21. There is a 29-second video at Hearth
Community on August 2, 2022 titled Storytelling is being human together with
this description:
“Storytelling is being human together. We tell stories to
savor the pleasure of living. We share stories to help one another remember who
we are and what matters. We tell stories to weave our lives together. We tell
stories to keep our souls intact when suffering overtakes us. This is story as
medicine. This is how story can save us.”
Twelve chapters and three interludes in the book are titled:
A Place the Soul Once Knew
Confession
The Catacombs
Coming-Out Parade
Pure Medicine
Interlude: Clara
The Hearth
Storycatcher
Undocumented Stories
Tragedy
Interlude: Shoes
The Apocalypse
Sacred Stories
Interlude: The Faun
Home
There is an excerpt on June 28, 2022 at Broadleaf Books
titled The Healing Power of Stories, taken from page 15 of Chapter 2:
Confession. Another excerpt on September 5, 2023 at Thriving in Ministry titled
‘Between the Listening and the Telling: How Stories Can Save Us' that comes on page
150 from Chapter 11: Sacred Stories.
And a striking excerpt on page 93 from Chapter 7: Storycatcher
says that:
“One night in an Irish pub, over dinner with writer Brian
Doyle, I talked about my newly discovered work, drawing stories forth from
people and towns and organizations. ‘You’re a seanachie,’ he declared. Seanachie,
he explained, is a Gaelic word meaning ‘storycatcher.’ In traditional Irish towns,
a storycatcher’s role was to unearth, gather, and share stories to strengthen and
bind people to one another.
After Brian’s declaration, I began to claim my vocation as a
storycatcher. I learned to ask questions that drew forth memories: A scared
place from childhood. A memorable winter. A sacrifice. A missed opportunity. I
learned to listen for patterns, for change, for the revealing heat of emotion.
I read books by writers, oral historians, and professional storytellers and
noted how they went about their craft. Over time I learned the warp and woof of
stories, how they gather, arch, spiral, and spring forth. I learned how to root
up the deepest stories from people and communities, how to catch their scent,
how to ferret them out from the tangle of a person’s living.
I discovered that in every town the stories wait, like seeds
beneath the concrete. They wait within the receptionist who sailed alone across
the Black Sea, within the store manager who raised his two sisters after their
mother died, within the well-dressed grandmother who spent her youth stealing
horses in Saskatchewan. Lower me down into a seemingly empty, colorless place –
a fast-food restaurant, a warehouse chain store, a gray office cubicle – and I
will excavate a story that will break your heart, a true story that will bust
your sides with laughter or unlock all that’s bound up in you, a story that
will aim you like the North Star toward whatever is true and right. Give me a
few hours of your time and I will mirror back a story from your life that will
fill you with self-compassion. There’s no need to make anything up, no need for
fiction. The truth waits to be told, but few know how to catch it. And fewer
still know how to tell it.”
There is a 45-minute interview at Hearth Community on August
9, 2022 titled Anne Lamott Interviews Mark Yaconelli About His Newest Book.
Images of a fireside storyteller and
lady catching a ball
came from OpenClipArt.