Life of a Writer – Summer Edition

EXCITING UPDATES FROM SPALDING MFA STUDENTS, ALUMNI, FACULTY, AND STAFF ON PUBLISHING, PRODUCING, AND OTHER DOINGS – ENJOY!

STUDENTS

Theresa Anne Carey’s (SW) second semester screenplay, MESTENGO, written under the tutelage of fabulous mentor Sam Zalutsky, has advanced as a Semi-Finalist in the Austin Revolution Film Festival (winners to be announced mid-July).

Taylor Riley (CNF) began a new job as Managing Editor at the Henry County

Vivian Sánchez’ (P) new poetry book in Spanish: “Borderline y otros poemas” it’s going to be published in Mexico this Spring 2018. You can follow Sánchez on Twitter: @VivianSanchbraj, and on Facebook, here.

ALUMNI

Kristin Brace (F’ 12) is thrilled to announce that her first full-length poetry collection, Toward the Wild Abundance, was selected for the 2018 Wheelbarrow Books Poetry Prize (Emerging) and will be published by Michigan State University Press in late 2019.  Her first book, a chapbook of poetry called Fence, Patio, Blessed Virgin, was released in August 2018 from Finishing Line Press. A second chapbook, Each Darkness Inside, is forthcoming from Finishing Line Press in summer 2019. More at www.kristinbrace.com.


 

Chad V. Broughman (F’ 16) is the 2018 Etching Press Chapbook Prize in Prose winner for his collection of short stories entitled the forsaken… Etchings Press, the University of Indianapolis student-run publisher, stated that “Broughman expertly strings together four stories of broken people surviving events that leave them with deep emotional scars. Through trauma, family, societal ideals of strength and masculinity, and mental health issues, Broughman’s characters and their stories evoke visceral heartbreak and empathy in readers.”

Additionally, Broughman won the 2016 Rusty Scythe Prize Book Award and has been published in numerous reviews and journals nationwide. He also won the 2017 Adobe Cottage Writers Retreat in New Mexico and recently was named a finalist in the William Faulkner: William Wisdom Creative Writing Competition.

Barry Drudge (F ‘18) and Drema Drudge (F ‘13) joined friends David and Shirley Rogers in conducting the EvenSong service at the Timbercrest Senior Living Community on May 30, 2018. They read psalms and poems and quotes by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Phillis Wheatley, and Helen Keller. In addition, Barry performed gospel songs by James L.L. Hendrix and Russell and Cynthia Taff, with Drema joining him with background vocals on the second. Barry played piano, sang, and shared the story behind the songs to the welcoming group.

Jeffrey Fischer Smith (PW ’17) and Julie Nichol’s (SW ’15) short film “Reservations” was an official selection in Shorts at the Seaside in Blackpool, United Kingdom in May and in the Genre Celebration Festival in Tokyo, Japan, in December 2018, and a semi-finalist in LA CineFest in Los Angeles, CA, in April. The film is based on Jeffrey’s short play, “Reservations,” which was written for his first Spalding residency. The play also was produced as part of Queer as F*ck in San Francisco, CA, in June. As part of The Grief Dialogues, Jeffrey’s short play “A Dog Dreams” was performed in Pittsburgh, PA, in April, Seattle, WA, in June and will be presented at the Dramatist Guild National Conference in New York, NY, in July. “A Dog Dreams” also was produced at Odenbear Theatre in Taos, NM, in June. His full-length play (and thesis), “When the Son is Shining,” will receive a staged reading at Cincinnati LAB Theatre New Works Festival in July. Even more exciting – fellow Spalding MFAer Heather Meyer’s (PW ’16) play, “The Hired Man,” will be in the festival and fellow Spalding MFAer Elizabeth Harris (PW ’15) is co-artistic director of the theatre. More information about Jeffrey can be found on Facebook here.

Barry George (P ’09) was the keynote speaker at the Haiku Society of America’s spring meeting in Cleveland. His presentation, “The Originality of Issa,” was a workshop based on the practices and philosophy of the Japanese master Kobayashi Issa (1763-1827). Barry’s own haiku was recently published in Echoes 2, an international anthology of haiku in English.  It is available here.  Follow Barry on Facebook, here.   Barry is the author of The One That Flies Back from Kattywompus Press , and Wrecking Ball & Other Urban Haiku from Accents Publishing.

Karen George’s (F ’09) second poetry collection, A Map and One Year, is now available from Dos Madres Press, here. All the poems in the book are found poems created from different source documents.

Mary Knight (W4CYA ’13) is pleased to announce that she and her writing partner, Christie McLean Kesler, recently signed a contract with NCTE (National Council of Teachers of English) to publish a professional development book called CoreEmpathy: Literacy Learning with a Greater Purpose. The original inspiration for this project grew out of Mary’s graduate lecture at Spalding on “The Power of Empathy in Young Adult Literature and How to Evoke It.”

Also, Mary’s debut novel, Saving Wonder, was selected for Choose to Read Ohio–a distinguished list of 20 books chosen every two years by the State Library of Ohio, the Ohioana Library Association, and the Ohio Center for the Book “to encourage Ohioans of all ages to read and enjoy books together.”

Mark Madigan (P ‘17) has had several poems accepted recently: “The Drumming Out” will appear in the Spring/Summer 2018 issue of Valparaiso Poetry Review; “Major Music Studios” will appear in the July/August issue of The Broadkill Review, and “Percy” will appear later this year in Third Wednesday. Additionally, Finishing Line Press has accepted a chapbook of his poems, Thump and other poems, for publication. The poems in this chapbook are all set in foreign locations.

Paula Hendrickson, Mildred Lewis, Marilyn Millstone
 
Steffi Ruben, Matthew Weaver, Charles White

Marilyn Millstone (PW ’16) has three productions of three different plays happening this summer, including two back-to-back world premieres:

  1. Her short comedy Compos Mentis will be produced at the End of the Road New Short Play Festival, July 13-15, Gulf Shores, Alabama (this is the play’s 8th production — a perennial shout-out to Spalding mentor Charlie Schulman for the great residency in which it was workshopped!);

  2. Her short play Play Date will premiere at the 2018 Rockford New Play Festival; the Festival will be streamed live on Facebook on August 23, details here.  

  3. The next day, August 24 (through the 26th), her new one-act play Birthday Girl will premiere at the 2018 Silver Spring Stage One-Act Play Festival, Silver Spring, Maryland.

Rick Neumayer (2014 Spring) read a new short story, “Settling An Old Score,” at the June session of “Spalding at 21c: Voice and Vision.”

Diana Raab (CNF ’03) published several Memorial Day articles.  The first, “Remembering Loved Ones on Memorial Day? at Thrive Global is available here.   The second, “Writing a Creative Eulogy for Your Beloved”, ran in Psychology Today and is available here.

STAFF & FACULTY

Dianne Aprile (CNF Faculty)  Dianne recently taught a class on Personal Writing at Cloud 9 Art School in Bothell, WA. While in Louisville for the Spalding MFA residency, Dianne had a reunion with a class member from a workshop she taught decades ago, specifically for homeless women in transition. It was inspirational and heartening for Dianne to meet up with her former student, who is still writing and now in college working toward a degree. While teaching the class, Dianne used funds from a Kentucky Foundation for Women grant to print copies of the class’s prose and poetry, and she staged a reading for the women when the class ended.

Jason Hill’s (Coordinator of Student Services and Marketing and Alumni, F ’14) story “Some Guesses About People in the Backgrounds of Our Photos” will be published in The Timberline Review Issue 7, this Fall/Winter.

Elaine Neil Orr (CNF/F Faculty) “Coming to the U.S. was a bit like going to Mars,” author Elaine Neil Orr tells of her transition moving to the American South, after being born and raised in Nigeria by her missionary parents in an interview at Encore.  The full interview can be found here.

Lesléa Newman (W4CYA Faculty) published a new poetry collection entitled LOVELY (for adults) which was reviewed in Mom Egg’s Review, available here  and was reviewed in IthacaLit, available here.  You can find Lesléa on Twitter: @lesleanewman, and on Facebook here.