Having coffee with Matthew Dicks means hearing a lot of stories. Makes sense, he’s a multiple winner of the Moth StorySLAMS.
For the uninitiated, Moth StorySlams (and their NPR radio component, The Moth Radio Hour) are events where storytellers — pros mixed in with just regular folks who throw their name in a hat — stand up and tell a story. It is old-school entertainment that harkens back to a time when digital didn’t exist.
Dicks, who lives in Newington, Connecticut, has become a grandmaster of sorts on the storytelling circuit in just four short years. Since winning his first slam in 2011, he’s participated in 37 Moth StorySLAMS in New York City, winning 18 of them. He has also competed in 13 Moth GrandSLAM championships, winning three times.
Today, when he’s not writing a novel (he’s written four, the most recent of which is The Perfect Comeback of Caroline Jacobs), Dicks runs SpeakUp, a Hartford-based organization devoted to promoting the art of personal storytelling and to teaching people how to identify and tell their stories.
Here are a few of Dicks’ tips about the art of storytelling:
What makes a good storyteller?