All posts by Alison Jaenicke

Writers Conference of Northern Appalachia at St. Francis U, March 15-16 

The Writers Conference of Northern Appalachia (WCoNA) is coming to Saint Francis University in Loretto, PA, Friday, March 15, through Saturday, March 16. The program features 25 workshops and presentations on topics including poetry, voice, developing a sense of place, screenwriting, marketing your book, publishing, Appalachian heritage and history, character development, and memoir.

The event, focused on building recognition for the region’s literature and helping its writers hone their craft, kicks off with an open mic on Friday evening. During the Friday evening opening, USA Today best-selling author David Poyer will offer a special presentation on writing in the age of AI.

Saturday’s conference sessions will begin with a keynote by Maxwell King. After a distinguished career as editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer, King served as president of The Heinz Endowments and The Pittsburgh Foundation. He has written a poetry collection, Crossing Laurel Run, followed by the New York Times-bestselling biography, The Good Neighbor: The Life and Work of Fred Rogers. Most recently, Mr. King published American Workman: The Life and Art of John Kane, a book about a man whose experience in northern Appalachia typifies the misunderstood and overlooked voices of the region.

Presentations and workshops will be offered in four sessions throughout the day Saturday. Penn State faculty members Julia Spicher Kasdorf (Director of Creative Writing) and Alison Jaenicke (Assistant Director of Creative Writing) will co-lead a workshop called “Writing Y/our Roots in Northern Appalachia” on Saturday afternoon.

WCoNA invites participating authors to sign and sell books at the conference’s book sale. Attendees will have opportunities to network and establish new relationships based on the common appreciation for the literature of northern Appalachia.

According to WCoNA founder and president PJ Piccirillo, a novelist from Elk County, the contributions of writers interpreting life in northern Appalachia have been underrecognized, though the region’s people, places, cultures, and landscapes are as rich as those that have given rise to renowned literary traditions. “We believe the stories, poems, and essays inspired by our experiences deserve to be represented and valued as a body of work,” Piccirillo said. “To increase access to this outstanding literature, we’re building a brand for our writers among booksellers, agents, publishers and, most importantly, readers.”

Registration is open with early-bird pricing through February 15 at www.wcona.com. Sponsorships are also available.

CALS 2024 Writing Contest: Lost & Found

Penn State’s Center for American Literary Studies (CALS) has launched its 2024 writing contest.

“Lost and Found” Writing Contest

All entries are due by Monday, March 11.

This contest is part of the 2024 Centre County Reads/CALS Community Read of Brendan Slocumb’s The Violin Conspiracy, a novel centered on the history of a Stradivarius passed down through the generations of a Black Southern family.

You can find the contest poster below and more details on the CALS website: https://cals.la.psu.edu/programs-series/centre-county-reads/

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Julianna Baggott to Read 1/25 as 2024 Fisher Family Writer-in Residence

Julianna Baggott will give a free public reading on Thursday, January 25, 6 pm, in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium.

Baggott has published over twenty books, some pseudonymously, including “Pure” and “Harriet Wolf’s Seventh Book of Wonders,” both New York Times Notable Books of the Year. She heads the production company Mildred’s Moving Picture Show; her projects are in development at Disney+, Netflix, MGM, Paramount, Universal, and elsewhere.

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Submit to Undergraduate Writing Contests by 1/22/24

The English Department’s Annual Undergraduate Writing Contests offer students the opportunity to earn recognition and cash prizes for their fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. In addition, first-place winners may opt to have their work published in the student literary journal Kalliope. 

Visit the department’s writing contest page for details. Submit by Monday, January 22, 2024!

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Kọ́láwọlé’s Debut Novel Cover Revealed, Release Date 7/2/24

author Samuel Kolawole

The long-anticipated debut novel The Road to the Salt Sea by Penn State faculty member Samuel Kọ́láwọlé now has a cover!

Debutiful, a website/podcast dedicated to promoting debut authors, revealed the cover today in a news story that characterizes the book this way:

“The Road to the Salt Sea is the forthcoming debut novel from Nigerian writer Samuel Kọ́láwọlé likened to the works of Omar El Akkad and Mohsin Hamid’s. Set to release on July 2 from Amistad Press [an imprint of HarperCollins], the novel follows a lowly hotel worker whose life collides with a sex work and a dangerous guest. Throughout Kọ́láwọlé explores the Nigerian class system and how fate and fortune are fickle things.”

Read more about the book and the cover design here on Debutiful…. 

Pre-order a copy of The Road to the Salt Sea here!

book cover with words The Road to the Salt Sea by Samuel Kolawole. Single black figure with abstract red paths in front.

Chika Unigwe Reads to Full Audience 11/2

Woman (Chika Unigwe)standing at podium speaking to audience

On November 2, Nigerian-born writer Chika Unigwe visited Penn State and gave a reading, as part of the Mary E. Rolling Reading Series.

In its coverage of the event, the campus student newspaper The Daily Collegian noted that Unigwe read an excerpt from her novel “The Middle Daughter,” which is a retelling of the myth of Persephone and Hades, as well as an unpublished short story set in Belgium, where Unigwe said she lived for a time.

The article by student reporter Jadzia Santiago also offered some insights from students, professors, and the author herself.

“Seeing the authors gives us that reminder that (authors) are real people and this is something that we can do,” BA/MA student Cindy Rodi said. “We can succeed in the work that we truly love.”

Samuel Kọ́láwọlé, assistant professor of English and African studies and longtime friend of Unigwe’s (featured together in below image), said it’s not possible to “tell the story of African literature in the last 20 years without mentioning (Unigwe),” who he said is “one of the major writers” in the African literature landscape.

Read the full article here.

(top photo credit: Alexandra Antoniono, Daily Collegian)

Visiting writer Chika Unigwe and Penn State writing professor Samuel Kolawole seated before reading, with full audience in background.

Mary E. Rolling Reading Series Presents Chika Unigwe November 2

black-and-white image of author Chika Unigwe, wearing hat and smiling.

Nigerian-born writer Chika Unigwe will offer a reading as part of this year’s Mary E. Rolling Reading Series. The reading, which is free and open to the public, will take place at 6:00 p.m. on Thursday, November 2, in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium on the University Park campus.

Chika Unigwe has published four novels, including “On Black Sisters’ Street” (2011), which won the NLNG Prize for Literature worth $100,000; “De Zwarte Messias” (2014), a fictional rendition of the Nigerian memoirist Olaudah Equiano’s life; and a short story collection, “Better Never than Late” (2019). Her latest novel, “The Middle Daughter,” was published by Dzanc Books in April 2023. Her work has been widely translated.

Unigwe is currently a Professor at Georgia College, where she teaches in their MFA in Creative Writing program. She has served as Creative Director of the Awele Creative Trust, as a judge for the Man Booker International Prize (in 2016), and as Bonderman Professor of Creative Writing at Brown University (in 2016-17). She has been the recipient of many fellowships and has earned numerous awards for her writing. Most notably, she won the 2003 BBC Short Story Competition for the short story “Borrowed Smile,” and was nominated for the 2004 Caine Prize for African Writing for the short story “The Secret.” She writes a weekly column for the Nigerian Daily Trust.

About Unigwe’s latest novel, “The Middle Daughter,” Nigerian novelist Helon Habila observes: “Chika Unigwe’s modern retelling of the myth of Hades and Persephone is pitch perfect—it is a meditation on the need we all share for belonging, and family, and love; a commentary on the journey we must all take in search of freedom.”

(author photo credit:  Misan Harriman)

book cover for Chika Ungiwe's novel The Middle Daughter (abstract rendering of three women)