~low residency mfa in creative writing~
Creative Writing
Distinguished Faculty for Discerning Writers
STAN SANVEL RUBIN, Director, Poetry
"This is a
small, very selective
program for motivated and
experienced
adults. There are high standards, but no condescension. No
enforcing an aesthetic as if it were the aesthetic. Instead, individual
choices, individual challenges, individual achievement-all of which
it's our job to support. As a writer, I know writing is a way of
being.
There's a time for community, and a time for solitude. When we're
together, sparks will fly, and there will be high spirits as well as
intelligent conversation with people who care about writing. (Bring
your passion to residency.) When you're working at home, you will have
new voices, new skills, and a new vision working for you. The process
matters as much as a credential. The purpose? What you make it."
Stan Sanvel Rubin
served for over twenty years as Director of the Brockport Writers Forum
and Videotape Library (SUNY), a multi-faceted literary arts program. He
holds the SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching. The
Post-Confessionals,
a collection of his interviews with contemporary American poets, was
published by Associated University Presses. Hidden Sequel, winner of the Barrow
Street Book Award for 2005, was published in 2006. He is
the author of four
other collections, Lost and Midnight, both from State
Street
Press, On the Coast, a chapbook (Pudding
House, 2002), and Five
Colors, from
CustomWords (WordTech, Cincinnati). His poems
have
appeared in such magazines as The
Kenyon Review, Virginia Quarterly Review, Poetry Northwest, The Georgia
Review, The Ohio Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, Chelsea, Iowa Review and
several anthologies. He was awarded a 2002
Constance J. Saltonstall Foundation Grant in poetry. He regularly
writes essay-reviews of contemporary
poetry for the journal, Water-Stone.
LINDA BIERDS—Poetry Master Class, Summer 2008 Residency
Linda Bierds is the author of seven volumes of poetry, most recently Flight: New and Selected Poems. Among her many awards are the PEN/West Poetry Prize and two National Endowment for the Arts grants, as well as fellowships from the Ingram Merrill, John Simon Guggenheim, and John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur foundations. She teaches at the University of Washington.
"The
autobiography of her
imagination would be only half as intense were the writing
itself less beautiful and clear, less perfect to pitch"
—Stanley
Plumly
____________________________________________________________________________________
Faculty
David Biespiel Gary Ferguson Jim Heynen Rebecca McClanahan Lia Purpura
Mary Clearman Blew Greg Glazner David Huddle Kent Meyers Marjorie Sandor
Fleda Brown Adrianne Harun Judith Kitchen Brenda Miller Peggy Shumaker
Kevin Clark Sherry Simpson
SUZANNE BERNE
Suzanne Berne is the author of three novels: The Ghost at the Table (Algonquin, 2006), which was listed as one of the Best 100 Books of 2006 by the Boston Globe; A Perfect Arrangement; and A Crime in the Neighborhood, which was a Barnes & Noble Discover Book and a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Her short stories and essays have been published in such places as The Threepenny Review, Epoch, Voge, Ploughshares, The Boston Review, and The London Sunday Times. She lives in Newton, MA, and teaches fiction workshops at Boston College.
DAVID BIESPIEL
David
Biespiel's latest
book is The
Book of Men and Women, published by the University of Washington
Press in its Pacific Northwest Poetry Series. Other books of
poetry include Shattering Air,
Pilgraims & Beggars,
and Wild
Civility. His
anthology, Long Journey:
Contemporary Northwest Poets,
received the William Stafford
Memorial Award from the Pacific Northwest Booksellers
Association. Among his honors are a Wallace Stegner Fellowship in
poetry at Stanford University, a Lannan Fellowship, and a National
Endowment Arts Fellowship in literature. In addition to being
director and writer-in-residence at The Attic Writer's Workshop in
Portland, Oregon, he teaches at Oregon State University and serves as
Writer-in-Residence at Wake Forest University. He recently retired as
the editor of Poetry Northwest,
a magazine that has revived the discussion of poetry and other arts,
but he remains active as a contributor to POLITICO.
MARY CLEARMAN BLEW, Nonfiction, Fiction, Criticism
Mary
Clearman Blew grew up
on a small ranch in Montana and is author of the acclaimed essay
collection All But the Waltz;
a memoir, Balsamroot; the story of her aunt, Writing
Her Own Life: Imogene Welch, Western Rural Schoolteacher. Her latest book is a novel, Jackalope Dreams, published by
University of Nebraska Press.
She
has also published three books of short stories, most recently Sister Coyote (2001). In
addition, she has edited two collections of Idaho essays—one on water,
one on fire. Her own most recent book of essays is Bone Deep in
Landscape
(2001). Her stories have been reprinted in both the Best American and O'Henry collections. She was
twice the recipient of the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award, once in
fiction and
once in nonfiction. In 2004, she received the "Distinguished
Achievement Award" from the Western Literature Association. She
teaches in the MFA program at the University of Idaho.
FLEDA BROWN, Poetry, Nonfiction
"I’ve
taught many kinds of
workshops—one-shot 3-hour sessions,
weekend retreats, and semester-long creative writing classes. Sometimes
students come into a workshop simply wanting a push, sometimes they
need help finding their voices. Everyone talks about “finding a voice,”
as if we all knew what this means. We don’t. I don’t. What I can do in
a workshop is to help students allow themselves to be clumsy, foolish,
and sometimes nuts in their writing, while loosely hanging onto the
reins. What are the reins? I don’t know that, either, but we can figure
it out by looking closely at the best work we can get our hands on. No
one ever had a “voice” that came from nowhere. It develops partly from
bouncing off other voices—the ones in the workshop, and the ones on the
page. I dearly love being around when the bounce lands in new
territory."
Fleda
Brown is the author of
six collections of poems, most recently Reunion, winner of the 2007 Felix
Pollak Poetry Prize, published by the University of Wisconsin Press.
Driving with Dvorak, a
memoir in essays, is published by the University of Nebraska
Press. Her poems have appeared
in Poetry, Kenyon Review, Southern
Poetry
Review, American Poetry Review, The Georgia Review, and many
other journals and anthologies, and they have been used as texts for
several prizewinning musical compositions performed at Eastman School
of Music, Yale University, and by the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble. In
2004, she won the Ohio State Univ/ The
Journal award for creative
nonfiction. She has written on
teaching poetry and on the craft of
writing, and she is co-editor of Critical
Essays on D.H. Lawrence (G.K. Hall). She holds a Ph.D. from the
University of Arkansas and taught at the University of Delaware for 27
years, where she directed the Poets in the Schools program. She served
as poet
laureate of Delaware and now lives in Michigan. www.fledabrown.com.
KEVIN CLARK, Poetry
“One
of my goals in the writing
workshop is to help students enhance
what is idiosyncratically best in their writing while they
simultaneously try other directions. There’s a context for this kind of
teaching. The short story writer Al Landwehr once told me that the act
of writing well is like the act of reading the best book you’ve ever
read. You are utterly transported, ecstatic. But, as Al noted, the next
day you come back to your work and you realize that what you have
written is not the best thing in literary history. In fact, it can’t
walk; it has warts; it hacks like a consumptive. As a writing teacher,
I hope to help you readily achieve the first ascendant state of
creativity and quickly overcome the second deflating state of starting
over. The whole enterprise need not be a jaw-clenching struggle; it
should be a habitual, quotidian pleasure."
Kevin Clark’s textbook, The Mind's Eye: a
Guide to Writing Poetry,
was recently published
by Longman. Kevin’s
book Self-Portrait with Expletives is winner of the
2009 Pleiades Press book contest and will be published in the
Lena-Miles Wever Todd Poetry Series, distributed by LSU Press. His first
full-length collection of poetry, In
the Evening of No Warning,
was published by New Issues Press. His
poems have appeared in numerous magazines and collections, including The
Antioch Review, The Georgia Review, Gulf Coast, Ploughshares, Crazyhorse,
and The Iowa Review.
He also won the Angoff Award from The
Literary Review for best
contribution in a volume year. Clark
has written essays about numerous contemporary American poets,
including John Ashbery, Sandra Gilbert, Sandra McPherson, Ruth Stone,
and Charles Wright. His critical articles and reviews have appeared in
many journals and collections, among them The Iowa Review,
Papers on Language and
Literature, The Southern Review, Contemporary Literary Criticism, The
Georgia Review, and Poetry
International. He was
awarded the Distinguished Teaching Award
at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, CA, where he teaches poetry writing and
modern and contemporary American literature. He lives in San Luis
Obispo with his family. www.calpoly.edu/~kclark.
STEPHEN COREY, Nonfiction, Poetry
"I am an editor because I am a writer; I am a writer because at some point--I believe I was in my mid-twenties--simply taking in the world no longer seemed enough, and because I have crazy but loving dreams of whacking a few readers in the gut the way my favorite writers have whacked me. I try to edit via compassionate insinuation [from the Latin "insinuare": to introduce by windings and turnings], doing my best to enter the intention and spirit of a piece to determine how it might be finished more completely and accurately. But I also edit via compassionate fiat, because some things just don't work if you fail to handle them thoughtfully enough. In one sense, I suppose, there's what a good editor must strive to be: thoughtful enough. And, I would argue, good writers must be so as well. Once I sat at a dinner gathering of writers and said, 'For a piece of writing to be genuinely great, someone has to want to kill you for having written it.' This isn't true, of course, but I think it's next door to something that needs to be true."
Stephen Corey is the author
of four
full-length collections of poetry, the latest being There Is No
Finished World (White
Pine Press, 2003), and six chapbooks. His poems, essays, reviews, and
articles have appeared in dozens of periodicals and anthologies, among
them The
American Poetry Review, The
Southern Review, Shenandoah, The Kenyon Review, Yellow Silk, The
Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses, and The 'Poetry'
Anthology, 1912-2002.
He has co-edited three books in as many genres, most recently (with
Warren Slesinger) Spreading the
Word: Editors on Poetry
(The Bench Press, 2001). He has worked
as a literary editor for nearly thirty-five years, first with The Devil's
Millhopper from
1976-1983, and since then with The
Georgia Review, where he
currently serves as editor.
He lives in Athens, Georgia and serves as Editor-in-Residence in the
MFA Program at PLU.
GARY FERGUSON,
Nonfiction

Gary Ferguson first answered the call to adventure at age 12, loading up his purple sting-ray bike with camping gear and riding with his older brother through the central Midwest. By age 18, he made his way across North America by rail and by thumb. At 25, Ferguson plunged full-time into the freelance writing life. He is the author of 16 books on nature, science and history, including The Great Divide: The Rocky Mountains in the American Mind, Decade of the Wolf: Returning the Wild to Yellowstone, and Hawks Rest (National Geographic), which became the first book to win nonfiction Book of The Year from both the Pacific Northwest and Mountains and Plains booksellers associations. His nature and science-based essays can be heard on National Public Radio affiliates throughout the country. He is currently serving as the William Kittredge Distinguished Visiting Writer, University of Montana.
GREG GLAZNER, Poetry, Mixed-Genre, Criticism
"I
love the reciprocal relationship
between technical matters on the
one hand, and subject matter on the other. I’ve been focused for
years on how the explosiveness of just being alive can call into
question the aptness of one’s acquired technique. Equally, I’ve
been fascinated with how a technical revision—cutting a weak stanza,
say, or letting the sound of a word dictate a next phrase that unmoors
some of a poem’s original intended meaning—can sometimes result in
vastly livlier subject matter. I think that the most difficult
and rewarding thing about being a writer is that we are forced to honor
two opposite and essential necessities at once: the necessity to learn
and master craft, and the necessity to be given over to a process that
takes us beyond our conscious intentions into something more akin to
dreaming. I go to lengths to make sure that my workshops and
mentor relationships honor this rich doubleness."
Greg Glazner is the author of two books of poetry, Singularity (W.W. Norton, 1996) and From the Iron Chair (1992), which was chosen by Charles Wright for the 1991 Walt Whitman Award. His chapbook, Walking Two Landscapes, was published in 1984. A recipient of the Bess Hokin Award from Poetry, his poems have appeared in Ironwood, The Laurel Review, New England Journal, Pequod, Quarterly West, The Southern Poetry Review, and The Texas Review. He received a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2005, and is currently at work on a multi-genre book called Zeno's Cure (his poetry/music project is called Zeno's Run). He is a professor at the College of Santa Fe in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
ADRIANNE HARUN, Fiction
"I
don't believe there's any one
route to writing good fiction, and sorrowfully, I also have come to
believe that the magic book or teacher possessing the secret of fiction
writing does not actually exist. I do, however, believe in the
great promise of intuitive leaps, emotional honesty, constant
exploration, and the relentless practice of craft through
revision. As a mentor, I ask a lot of questions, and I tend to
prod my students also into asking questions of their own work. I
will always suggest far too much reading, but I'll also point writers
toward other arts--music, architecture, visual arts--and other literary
genres--mysteries, poetry, plays--when I feel a connection is in the
offing or needs to be considered. My goal as a teacher is to act
as an informed yet curious companion--sometimes guiding, always
listening--as my students find their own paths."
Adrianne Harun is the author of The King of Limbo and Other Stories (Houghton Mifflin, 2002), a Sewanee Writers Series selection and a Washington State Book Award finalist. Her stories have garnered awards from the Chicago Tribune (Nelson Algren Award), Story Magazine, and other journals, and have been noted in Best American Mystery Stories. A long-time resident of Port Townsend, WA, she has taught workshops throughout the state and currently works as an editor.
LOLA HASKINS, Poetry
"For
me, mentoring is helping
students
say what they came to
say.
I love it when they finally, clearly, hear their own voices. And it
thrills me to have been part of making good work all it can
be. In group situations, I believe in two things: kindness
and honesty. It isn’t kind to give dishonest praise. But
without kindness, raw honesty is counterproductive. I see
workshops as, essentially, cooperatives. I may have
had more experience than my students, but I’ve never thought I had all
the answers. Besides, anyone who thinks there’s only one answer
to anything hasn’t lived long enough yet. What happens in groups is
that we learn from each other. And in the end, what really
happens is that we teach ourselves."
Lola Haskins has two recent books: a poetry advice
book (Not
Feathers Yet: A Beginner's Guide to
the Poetic Life, Backwaters
Press) and an illustrated book of
fables about women (Solutions
Beginning with A,
Modernbook). A new collection is forthcoming in Spring
2010. Her poems have appeared in The Atlantic,
Christian
Science Monitor, London Review of Books, Beloit Poetry Journal,
Georgia Review, Southern Review, etc. and has been broadcast on
NPR and BBC. Her collections include Desire Lines, New
and Selected Poems
(BOA, 2004), The Rim Benders
(Anhinga, 2001) , Extranjera
(Story Line, 1989), Hunger
(Iowa, 1993). and Forty-Four
Ambitions for the Piano
(University Press of Florida,
1990). Her awards include the Iowa Poetry Prize (for Hunger); narrative poetry prizes
from Southern
Poetry Review
and the New
England Review;
the Emily Dickinson/Writer Magazine Award from the Poetry Society of
America; two NEAs and four grants from the Florida Division of Cultural
Affairs. Besides writing poetry, Ms. Haskins enjoys
performing it, especially in collaboration. Most recently, she
shared the title role of Mata Hari with a dancer in a ballet whose
libretto she wrote for Dance Alive!, a touring dance company. She
lives in Gainesville, Florida.
ROBIN HEMLEY, Nonfiction, Fiction
Robin Hemley was awarded a
Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship in 2008. He has published eight
books of nonfiction and fiction, most recently Do-Over. Invented Eden, The
Elusive, Disputed
History of the Tasaday
(Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2003) which deals with a purported
anthropological hoax in the Philippines, was an American Library
Association's Editor's Choice book for 2003. His memoir, Nola: A Memoir Of
Faith, Art And Madness
(Graywolf, 1998), won an Independent Press Book Award for Nonfiction.
His popular craft book Turning Life
Into Fiction has sold over
40,000 copies and will soon be
reissued by Graywolf Press. He is also the author of the novel, The Last Studebaker (Graywolf) and
the story collections, The Big Ear
(Blair) and All You Can Eat
(Atlantic Monthly Press). His awards for his fiction include, The
Nelson Algren Award from The Chicago
Tribune, The George Garrett
Award for Fiction from Willow Springs, the Hugh J. Luke
Award from Prairie Schooner,
two Pushcart Prizes, and many others. He is currently the
director of the nonfiction program at the University of Iowa.
JIM HEYNEN, Fiction, Poetry, Nonfiction
For me,
the greatest pleasure in teaching is spotting what is most promising in
a poem, story, novel, or essay—and going from there. Finding the
possibilities in a piece of writing requires generous and attentive
reading. It is hard, empathic work but can be far more rewarding
than starting with the critical scalpel and going flaw-hunting.
The flaws tend to dry up and flake off the page without much messy
coercion if the reader and writer agree on what and where the real
promise is. One of my favorite metaphors I draw from the sport of
curling: when teaching, I like to think of myself as the person with
the broom clearing the way for another’s earnest intentions.
Jim
Heynen has two books—a novel and a book of short
stories—forthcoming from Milkweed Press. Best known for his
short-short
stories about 'the boys,' he has also published poems, novels,
nonfiction, and short fiction. His stories
about the boys have been featured often on National Public Radio's "All
Things Considered," as well as on radio in both Sweden and Denmark.
Astronaut George Pinky Nelson took a taped collection of the stories
for bedtime listening on his last space mission. The most recent
collection of these stories, The
Boys' House, was named Editors' Choice
for Best Books of 2001 by The Bloomsbury Review, Newsday, and
Booklist. He lived for many years in the Northwest and received a
Northwest Booksellers Award for one of his story collections. He has
received National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships in both poetry and
fiction and in 1978 was selected as for a US/UK Bicentennial Exchange
Fellowship to England. He has published two YA novels with Henry
Holt and has just completed an adult novel. He currently lives in
St. Paul, Minnesota.
DAVID HUDDLE, Fiction, Poetry, Nonfiction
"Listening has become a philosophy for me as both a teacher and a writer. I've become a better writer by way of paying more attention to
what my writing is trying to convey to me as I'm working on it. I've become a better teacher by way of giving my students more "say" in the
classroom. As a reader, I'm often trying to help other writers discover their work's "truest" impulses. And though I've been teaching for
thirty-two years now, I still get chills when I read a terrific passage in a manuscript or when a member of a workshop speaks with illuminating
generosity. It's not that I don't have opinions that I'm eager to share--in recent years, I've even found myself pounding the table and surprising
myself with the passion of my words, something I was far too cool to do in my first twenty-five years of teaching."
JUDITH KITCHEN, Nonfiction, Fiction, Criticism, (Poetry)
"I believe in passionate memory, remembered passion, and the long, slow, often lonely, labors of the writer. That said, I also believe in the joint effort that can result in inspired revision. My deepest interest is in how to shape material, how to discover the underlying issues and then find a structure to enhance them. In both fiction and nonfiction, I like to see where personal experience intersects with the imaginary (or the critical) way of thinking. I look forward to a freewheeling discussion where questions count more than answers."
Judith Kitchen has recently
edited (with Ted Kooser, former
U. S. Poet Laureate) an anthology of bird poems--The Poets Guide to the Birds,
Anhinga Press. She is the author of a novel, The House
on
Eccles Road, winner of the S. Mariella Gable Prize from Graywolf
Press, two collections of essays, Distance and Direction
(Coffeehouse Press) and Only the Dance (U. of South Carolina
Press), as well as a critical study of William Stafford, Writing
the World (Oregon State University Press). She is co-editor of two
collections of short essays, In Short and In Brief
(both W. W. Norton), and the editor of a third collection, Short Takes:
Brief Encounters with Contemporary Nonfiction. Her awards
include an NEA fellowship in poetry, a Pushcart Prize in nonfiction,
and recognition as a
distinguished teacher of adults. She has judged
a number of national awards, including the Pushcart Prize for poetry,
the Theodore Roethke Prize, the Anhinga Prize, the AWP Nonfiction
Award, the Bellingham Review's
Annie Dillard award for creative nonfiction, the Bush Foundation
fellowships, and the
Oregon Book Award. She is an Advisory and Contributing Editor for The
Georgia Review where she regularly reviews poetry. In addition, she
has the distinction of being called—by Newsday—the Evel Knievel
of literature. www.judithkitchen.com
DINAH LENNEY, Nonfiction
“As an actor
and a writer, I’m
interested in overlapping craft, in
strategies having to do with cultivating voice – finding it, honing it,
applying it, and getting it right, whatever it is. “Pursue, keep up
with, circle round and round your life… Know your own bone, gnaw at it,
bury it, unearth it, and gnaw at it still.” So wrote Thoreau, and the
words are comfort and inspiration both, as they apply to craft, and to
our personal themes whatever they are. Meanwhile, said Martha Graham to
Agnes DeMille, “…It is not your business to determine how good it is
nor how valuable it is… Keep the channel open, no artist is pleased…
There is no satisfaction whatever at any time. There is only a queer,
divine dissatisfaction, a blessed unrest that keeps us marching and
makes us more alive than others…” A bit bleak that, but what a relief –
a delight, in fact -- to keep company with a community of like-minded
people…”
Dinah is the author of
Bigger than Life: A Murder, a Memoir,
published
by the University of Nebraska in Tobias Wolff's American Lives Series,
and excerpted in The New York Times. She co-authored Acting for Young
Actors (Watson-Guptill, with director Mary Lou Belli), and has taught
acting for film and for musical theatre at UCLA, Pepperdine, and the
University of Kentucky. Dinah has contributed to various publications
and anthologies, among them Agni and The Los Angeles Times, where she
also writes with some frequency for the Book Review. She's lectured at
UCLA, UC Riverside, and Scripps, and gave the keynote address at the
Sacramento Writers' Conference last summer. She currently teaches in
the Masters of Professional Writing program at the University of
Southern California, in the Bennington Writing Seminars, where she
earned her MFA in Creative Nonfiction. A working actor, Dinah most
recently played a man disguised as a woman on The Sarah Connor
Chronicles. She lives in Los Angeles - just over the hill from
Dodger
Stadium -- with her husband and two children.
www.dinahlenney.com
REBECCA McCLANAHAN
"In my
workshops, I am not
interested
in “fixing” so-called flawed texts; fixing is the work of morticians. I
am interested in helping writers discover what their drafts want to be
when they grow up. How do we locate the essay hiding within the messay,
the memoir stalled on a ME-more track, the poem trying to sing its way
out of the journal’s pages? Our task as writers is not only to pay
attention to our world but also to use the materials of the world in
extraordinary ways. To do this, we must uncover the subtle design, the
“figure in the carpet” that is woven into even the most everyday
events. Often we must proceed without knowing what form the work will
finally take. We write our way into the question, into the mystery.
Writing begets more writing; meaning grows on the page."
Rebecca McClanahan’s most
recent books are Deep Light: New and
Selected
Poems 1987-2007 and The
Riddle Song and Other Rememberings, which won
the 2005 Glasgow Award for nonfiction. She has also published four
previous volumes of poetry and three books about the writing craft,
including Word Painting: A
Guide to
Writing More Descriptively.
Her
work has appeared in The Best
American Poetry, The Best American
Essays, The Kenyon Review, Georgia Review, Boulevard and
numerous
anthologies, and her awards include the Wood prize from Poetry, a
Pushcart Prize in fiction, and (twice) the Carter prize for the essay
from Shenandoah. She lives in North Carolina.
KENT MEYERS, Fiction, Nonfiction
"I’ve heard
writers say that, to avoid
influence, they never read
fiction when they’re writing it. I, on the other hand, want to be
influenced—by everything: the shadows on the sidewalk, the expression
on a stranger’s passing face, the music from an open window and, yes,
other writers. I want to borrow power and style and voice, use them to
challenge and stretch me. If that influence is too strong in the first
draft, by the time the novel or story has gone through several
revisions, it will have subsumed all those influences, taken them in
and become its own thing. The same ought to be true for a writing
workshop. We should be influenced and challenged by all those other
minds—and yet in the end, emerge with our own, unique voice, an
amalgamation that isn’t an amalgamation at all."
"There's always one
more thing you can
read."
"I think the
greatest risk a writer can take may be writing in the
first person, nonfiction voice—
in other words, in one's own
voice."
"I've never
taken a creative writing class."
"If you're
going to write prose, write every day."
"A writer
finishes."
—from an online
Interview with
Catherine Tudor
Kent
Meyers' third novel, Twisted
Tree, was recently published by Harcourt Brace. He is
the author of
two other novels (The River Warren
and The Work of Wolves), a
book of short stories (Light in the
Crossing), and a
collection of
personal essays (The Witness of
Combines). Two of
his books were
listed as Notable Book of the year by The New York Times and his work
has been cited in Best American
Short Stories and Best of the
West. His most recent novel, The Work of Wolves, received the
Mountains and Plains Bookseller's Award in 2005 and was listed as one
of the best books of 2004 by The
Christian Science Monitor. A recipient of a fellowship
from the National
Endowment for
the Arts, he has also received distinguished teaching awards from both
the Faculty and Student Senates at Black Hills State University where
he is Writer-in-Residence. He lives and works in
Spearfish, South Dakota.
BRENDA MILLER, Nonfiction
"As
both a writer and a teacher,
I'm so interested in how we make
authentic connections, especially in a world that has grown so busy and
‘digitized’ that such connections can be rare, fleeting, and absolutely
stunning. I look forward to being witness, cheerleader, mentor,
and companion as you find your true voice in creative nonfiction.”
Brenda Miller is the author of Season of the Body (Sarabande
Books, 2002) which was a finalist for the PEN American Center Book
Award in Creative Nonfiction, and Blessing of the Animals (Eastern
Washington University Press, 2009). She has received five
Pushcart Prizes, and her work has appeared in numerous literary
journals, including Fourth Genre, Creative Nonfiction, The Sun, Utne
Reader, The Georgia Review and Witness. She co-authored, with Suzanne
Paola, the textbook Tell it Slant: Writing and Shaping Creative
Nonfiction (McGraw-Hill, 2004), and she serves as Editor-in-Chief of
the Bellingham Review. http://mweb.facstaff.wwu.edu/millerb
ANN PANCAKE, Fiction, Nonfiction
"My greatest commitment as both a writer and a teacher is to writing that originates in deep personal investment because I believe that only by writing from this place in ourselves do we produce real art. For this reason, I think the most valuable expertise I can bring to my students is not my education in literature, nor what I've learned about craft after practicing it for twenty years, although I'll bring those, too. It's my ability to listen: to students, as they describe their interests, backgrounds, and aspirations, and to their drafts, from their earliest conceptions to their final stages. Through this kind of close listening, I help students find their passions. I guide them towards discovering and developing their own authentic voices. And I teach them to identify and then realize their drafts' richest potential."
Ann Pancake’s novel, Strange As This Weather Has Been, was published by Shoemaker & Hoard in Fall 2007, and was a New York Times Editor's Choice, winner of the 2007 Weatherford Award, and a finalist for the 2008 Orion Book Award. Her collection of short stories, Given Ground, won the 2000 Bakeless award and was published by the University Press of New England in 2001. Other prizes she has received include a Whiting Award, an NEA Grant, a Pushcart Prize, the Glasgow Prize, the New Millennium Award for creative nonfiction, and creative writing fellowships from the states of Washington, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania. Her fiction and essays have appeared in journals and anthologies like Glimmer Train, Virginia Quarterly Review, Shenandoah, and New Stories from the South. She holds a PHD in English Literature from the University of Washington. http://annpancake.blogspot.com
LIA PURPURA, Nonfiction, Poetry
“Just recently,
when I read David Foster Wallace’s description of a phenomenon he calls
“Total Noise” (“that seething static of every particular thing and
experience, and one’s total freedom of infinite choice about what to
choose to attend to and represent and connect, and how, and why, etc.”)
I felt my role as a teacher clarify and firm up anew. I want to help my
students settle and still their vision and fortify their own authentic
responses to the Noise that daily threatens us to overwhelm us all. The
bracing joy of receiving a real, live
temperament/disposition/sensibility is what I long for (and fall
for) as a reader. As a mentor, I look forward to finding these
moments in my students’ work, studying them, marveling at them – and
then, working with them, in whatever way the poem or essay requires.”
Lia Purpura’s collection of poems, King Baby, won the 2007 Beatrice
Hawley Award from Alice James Books. Her collection of essays, On Looking (Sarabande Books, 2006)
was a finalist for the National Books Critics Circle Award. Increase (essays) won the
Associated Writing Programs Award and was published by the University
of Georgia Press in 2000. She is also the author of Stone Sky Lifting (winner of the
Ohio State University Press Award in poetry, 2000), The Brighter the Veil (poems) and Poems of Grzegorz Musial: Berliner
Tagebuch & Taste of Ash (translations). Her work has
appeared in many magazines, including Agni,
DoubleTake, The Georgia Review, Field, The Iowa Review, Orion,
Parnassus:Poetry in Review, The Paris Review and elsewhere. She
recently served as Visting Writer at The University of Iowa’s
Nonfiction Program, and at MFA Programs at the University of Alabama
and Bennington. Her awards include an NEA Fellowship, a Fulbright
Fellowship and a Pushcart Prize. She is Writer-in-Residence at Loyola
College in Baltimore, MD.
MARJORIE SANDOR, Fiction, Nonfiction
“One day in
college, my favorite teacher
came to the limit of
her
patience with me. I had nearly suffocated a personal essay full of
similes and metaphors and the word "I." She looked at my
five drafts, handed them back and said, "You can do better than this.
Just tell the truth.” The simple rightness of this struck me like a
blow to the head, and still does: it is a model of great teaching. Of
course I still commit, on a daily basis, the sins of over-decorating,
of willful obscurity and unmediated anger and blindness to irony, but I
know, thanks to her, that there is another way. And I try to follow her
example as a teacher, too.
“The Italian
writer Natalia
Ginzburg once said she
wanted to be "the recording angel" of her family. I like this idea, and
even better, her example. Her sentences are laconic, unadorned,
stripped down in language and tragic in historical context, but rich in
compassion, humor, and irony. She regards her characters with an
astonishing tenderness, from a little distance, as if she hovers just
above the earth's surface, still part of its atmosphere, but not
confined by its petty passions. Another great writer, Nadine Gordimer,
says you must write as if you were already dead. I almost know what she
means, and I will spend the rest of my life reaching to accomplish it,
if only in a single sentence that bears witness to the beautiful
failures we are bound, by our humanness, to create. I read for it,
write toward it, and teach with it always in mind.”
Marjorie Sandor is the author
of two short story collections: A Night of Music (Ecco, 1989) and Portrait of My
Mother, Who Posed Nude in Wartime (Sarabande Books, 2003), which
was awarded the prestigious National Jewish Book Award in 2004.
Her
collection of personal essays, The
Night Gardener: A Search for Home (1999, The Lyons Press) won
the 2000 Oregon Book Award for literary nonfiction. Her work has
appeared in Best American Short
Stories 1985 and 1988, the
Pushcart
Prize XIII, The Georgia Review, The New York Times Magazine, and
elsewhere. She is on the faculty of the M.F.A. program at Oregon State
University in Corvallis and in 2004-2005 she served as President of the
Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP).
PEGGY SHUMAKER, Poetry, Nonfiction
"Language is one way we make our way in the world. Our intensive sessions will involve writing new material for poems and working on drafts we've generated. We'll also practice reading as writers--looking at poems and prose to find tools we can adapt for our own uses. My own work comes from two deserts--the Sonoran desert of southern Arizona and the subarctic desert of Interior Alaska. Most of my poems depend on images and sounds to create their worlds. Right now I'm at work on a nonfiction book and a book of new poems."
Peggy Shumaker's books of poems include Underground Rivers (Red Hen Press), Wings Moist from the Other World and The Circle of Totems (Pitt), Braided River (Limner Press), and Esperanza's Hair (U. Alabama Press). Blaze, a poetry/painting collaboration with the Alaska artist Kes Woodward, was published in 2005 by Red Hen Press. Her memoir, Just Breathe Normally, was published by the University of Nebraska Press in 2007. Her essays have appeared in such journals as Prairie Schooner and Ascent. She has won a poetry fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, and several awards for teaching. She is professor emerita from University of Alaska Fairbanks. Peggy Shumaker grew up in Tucson, and earned her BA and her MFA from University of Arizona. She worked for years doing residencies for the Arizona Commission on the Arts, with prison inmates, honors students, gang members, deaf adults, teen parents, little kids and elderly folks. She has given readings in art galleries, a governor’s mansion, a clearing in the woods, an abandoned bank, on reservations, in libraries, at a gold dredge, under the hoodoos at Bryce Canyon, on a riverboat, and at many bookstores, community centers, and universities. www.peggyshumaker.com; www.borealbooks.org
SHERRY SIMPSON, Nonfiction
"My favorite
moment
is when a writer who's struggling with a piece
or a
direction hears the right question and then realizes what to do
next. To me a workshop or mentorship doesn't involve 'teaching'
or 'learning' so much as rediscovering what we already know but may
have forgotten, overlooked, or masked. I think we're all
apprentices to our work, and the heart of this relationship lies in the
way we choose to be in the world. I want students to interrogate
their experiences, trust their sensibilities, and open themselves to
the possibilities revealed through their work and the work of
others. I hope they'll cultivate the narrative expanse of the
draft and the beautiful discipline of revision. I'm drawn by
language yoked to purpose--language that rises from intonation and
rhythm rather than words that rely on mere ornamentation. I
believe that facts offer us some of the most imaginative
opportunities. And is it so much to ask that all this thinking
and exploring could be fun now and then?"
Sherry Simpson is the author of
five books of nonfiction, most recently The Accidental
Explorer: Wayfinding in
Alaska. The
Way Winter Comes: Alaska Stories has recently been reissued in
paperback. She is currently an Associate Professor at the
University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Her essays have appeared in In Fact, an anthology of the best
of Creative
Nonfiction (W. W.
Norton), Alaska Quarterly
Review,
American Nature Writing, The Sierra Club, and as a freelance
writer she has served as a columnist for the Anchorage Daily
News, Fairbanks Daily
News-Miner. She has
also been a commentator for KTOO-TV,
Juneau; a book reviewer for the San
Francisco Chronicle Book Review, a travel columnist for Alaska Magazine, and published a
series of articles on the gray whale rescue in The Washington Post. Her
awards include the Andres Berger Nonfiction award by Northwest Writers,
Inc., numerous awards from the Alaska Press club, and she has been a
Bakeless Nonfiction Scholar at the Bread Loaf Writers Conference.
Guest Faculty
CHARLES BERGMAN, Environmental Writing
Charles Bergman has
written and photographed
extensively on
nature, and his work has appeared in such journals as Smithsonian,
Audubon, and National
Geographic. He is the author of three books:
Wild Echoes: Encounters with the Most Endangered Animals in North
America; Orion’s Legacy: A Cultural History of Man as Hunter; and Red
Delta: Fighting for Life at the End of the Colorado River, which
was
awarded the Washington State Book Award in 2003. Charles
Wilkinson
says of that book, “Charles Bergman trains our eye away from the
excesses of the past toward the future.” Bergman is a Professor
of
English at Pacific Lutheran University and lives in Steilacoom,
Washington.
ALBERT GOLDBARTH, Poetry, Nonfiction
Albert
Goldbarth is
Distinguished Professor of Humanities at Wichita State U. He’s the
author of more than twenty collections of poetry, including Heaven and Earth: A
Cosmology,
which won the National Book Critics Circle Award, and Heaven and Popular Culture, winner of the Ohio
State Univ./The Journal Award.
His books of creative essays (or, as he prefers to call them, belle
letters) include: Many Circles: New
and Selected Essays, A Sympathy of Souls, Great Topics of the World, and
Dark
Waves and Light Matter.
He’s also the author of a novel, Pieces
of Payne (Graywolf). His
other honors include a second National
Book Critics
Circle Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, the P.E.N. West Award, and three
NEA Fellowships. Of him, Joyce Carol Oates has said, "He is a dazzling
virtuoso who can break your heart."
BRENT SPENCER, Fiction, Nonfiction
Brent
Spencer is a novelist,
short-story writer, and screenwriter whose published work includes the
novel The Lost Son (Arcade
Publishing) and a collection of stories, Are
We Not Men? (Arcade Publishing). The collection was chosen by
the
editors of The Village Voice Literary Supplement as one of the best
books of the year. He teaches creative writing and film at
Creighton
University in Omaha, where he also coordinates the Film Studies Minor.
Among his awards are the Wallace Stegner Fellowship from Stanford,
where he was also a Jones Lecturer in Creative Writing, and the James
Michener Award at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, where he earned an MFA.
He has also been awarded fellowships from Yaddo, The MacDowell Colony,
and The Millay Colony. His fiction, poetry, and articles have appeared
in The Atlantic Monthly, The
American Literary Review, Epoch, The
Missouri Review, GQ, Writers Digest, and elsewhere. His short
story
"The True History" appears in the latest edition of Best American
Mystery Stories (2007). He lives outside Florence, Nebraska,
along the
Missouri River.
JESS WALTER, Fiction, Nonfiction
"I
am always surprised how many
writers don't actually like to write. It is thrilling drudgery at
best, the elemental work of prose writing: using language, voice and
style to construct sentences that build characters and move
action. But most of us became writers to tell stories. And
I think we lost something when "plot" became a dirty word in MFA
programs, cast off to the genre ghettos and replaced by turgid phrases
like "story architecture" and "narrative shape." There is a
profound pleasure in simply writing the story you'd love to read."
2009 Guests
Mary Rockcastle,
editor of Water~Stone Review, Hamline University
Recipients
of the Stanley W. Lindberg Editor's Award
2008 Guests
Rick
Barot, Winner of the Katherine A. Morton Prize from Sarabande Books
Sam Green,
Washington State Poet Laureate, Brooding Heron Press
Sally Green,
Brooding Heron Press
Recipients
of the Stanley W. Lindberg Editor's Award
2007 Guests
Natasha Trethewey, Winner of the 2007 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry
Fiona McCrae, Graywolf Press
2006 Guests
Albert Goldbarth, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award
David Biespiel, Poet, Editor of Poetry Northwest
Christopher Howell, Editor, Eastern Washington University Press
Recipient of the Stanley W. Lindberg Editor's Award
2005 Guests
Marvin Bell, Poetry Master Class (Summer 2005), Mentor (2005-2006)
Stephen Corey, Editor-in-Residence
Recipient of the Stanley W. Lindberg Editor's Award
2004 Guests
Sam Hamill, Copper
Canyon Press
Recipient of the
Stanley W. Lindberg
Editor's Award
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