Join the Kalliope staff and contributors to celebrate the release of Kalliope 2019!
All posts by Alison Jaenicke
2019 English Department Awards Dinner Honors Contest Winners
On Tuesday, April 2, the English Department celebrated English Department Writing Award winners (along with those receiving outstanding alumnus and teaching awards), at its 2019 Spring Awards Ceremony.
You can find a full list of this year’s writing award winners, as well as the names of judges, on our awards page. Below are some photos from the event.
Katie Fallon’s Book Vulture: Rolling Reading Series & Centre County Reads Selection
On Thursday, April 4, nonfiction writer, conservationist, and Penn State grad Katie Fallon will speak on the University Park campus about her book Vulture: The Private Life of an Unloved Bird. The event will take place at 7:30 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the Nittany Lion Inn.
Katie Fallon is the author of Vulture (UPNE, 2017) and Cerulean Blues: A Personal Search for a Vanishing Songbird (Ruka Press, 2011), as well as two books for children. Her essays and articles have appeared in a variety of literary journals and magazines, and she has taught writing at Virginia Tech, West Virginia University, and in the Low-Residency MFA programs of West Virginia Wesleyan College and Chatham University. She is also a founder of the Avian Conservation Center of Appalachia. Fallon lives in Cheat Lake, WV, with her family.
In Vulture, Katie Fallon discusses the turkey vulture, an overlooked and under-appreciated species that plays an extremely important role in our ecosystem. Written as a travelogue, scientific exploration, ecological memoir and love story, Vulture appeals to a wide variety of readers.
The Evening with Katie Fallon is the final reading in this year’s Mary E. Rolling Reading Series. It is also the culmination of the slate of events surrounding the 2019 Community Read of Vulture: The Private Life of an Unloved Bird, an annual event organized by the Center for American Literary Studies (CALS) and Centre County Reads (Information about additional events related to the Community Read can be found at http://cals.la.psu.edu/ and http://www.centrecountyreads.org/.)
The Mary E. Rolling Reading Series is a project of Penn State’s Creative Writing Program in English. It receives generous support from the College of the Liberal Arts, the Department of English, the Joseph L. Grucci Poetry Endowment, the Mary E. Rolling Lectureship in Creative Writing, and the University Libraries. Additional support for this reading was provided by the Penn State Sustainability Institute.
The event is free and open to the public; no registration is necessary.
Parking at The Nittany Parking Deck is free with validation from the Nittany Lion Inn.
Rolling Reading Series Presents Jennifer Vanderbes on March 14
Award-winning novelist and non-fiction writer Jennifer Vanderbes will give a reading on Thursday, March 14, as part of the Mary E. Rolling Reading Series. The event will be held at 7:30 pm in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium.
A former Guggenheim fellow, Jennifer Vanderbes is the author of three novels: The Secret of Raven Point (2014), Strangers at the Feast (2010), and Easter Island (2003). Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Granta and The Atlantic. Her forthcoming nonfiction book, The Gatekeeper, about the thalidomide scandal of the 1960s, has been awarded a grant by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and will be published by Random House and HarperCollins UK. Vanderbes’ work has been translated into 16 languages.
Vanderbes’ first novel, Easter Island, was named a “Best Book of 2003” by The Washington Post and The Christian Science Monitor. Of her most recent novel, The Secret of Raven Point, Kirkus Reviews writes: “Part mystery, part coming-of-age tale, part World War II novel, Vanderbes’…moving latest novel…is an empathetic, oblique take on the layers of damage done during war…unusual and affecting.”
Jennifer Vanderbes received her B.A. in English Literature from Yale and her M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She currently lives in New York City.
Poet Kimiko Hahn to Read as Fisher Family Writer-in-Residence
Kimiko Hahn, this year’s Fisher Family Writer-in-Residence, will read from her work on Wednesday, February 27, in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium at 7:30 pm.
Kimiko Hahn is the author of nine books of poems, including: Brain Fever (2014) and Toxic Flora (2010), both collections prompted by science; The Narrow Road to the Interior (2006) a collection that takes its title from Basho’s famous poetic journal; The Unbearable Heart (1996), which received an American Book Award; and the award-winning Earshot (1992). Since initiating the annual NYU/CUNY Chapbook Festival, now in its seventh year, Hahn has added chapbooks to her publication list. Chicago Review of Books characterizes Hahn’s most recent chapbook, Brood (2018), as “poetry that reflects on the feelings of loss, uncomfortable silences, and the hidden stories buried in our everyday objects…poetry that cuts to the raw emotionality of familial life–the melancholia of emotionally austere families, fathers who seem too distant, and daughters who don’t see or talk to you as much as they should.”
The Fisher Family Writer-in-Residence is primarily funded through the generosity of Steven Fisher, ’70. Each year for more than a decade, a well-known poet, fiction writer, or nonfiction writer has visited campus for a week to work with students in the graduate creative writing program and undergraduate creative writing classes.
The Fisher Family Writer-in-Residence is also sponsored by the Joseph L. Grucci Poetry Endowment, University Libraries, the Department of English, and the College of Liberal Arts. The reading is free and open to the public.
Author photo: © Beowulf Sheehan
First Rolling Reading of 2019: Shale Play, by Kasdorf and Rubin: RESCHEDULED FOR 2/18
Julia Spicher Kasdorf and Steven Rubin will present their collaborative documentary project and book Shale Play: Poems and Photographs from the Fracking Fields on Monday, February 18, (rescheduled from earlier dates) as part of the Mary E. Rolling Reading Series. The event will be held at 7:30 pm in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium.
Kasdorf is author of three books in the Pitt Poetry Series, most recently Poetry in America. Her poems were awarded a 2009 NEA fellowship and a Pushcart Prize and appear in numerous anthologies. She is a Professor of English and Women’s Studies at Penn State, where she teaches creative writing. Rubin is a documentary photographer whose work addresses rural poverty, refugee migration, immigrant detention, and the social and environmental impacts of energy development. He has been a Fulbright-Nehru Scholar in India, a Nieman Fellow at Harvard, an Alicia Patterson Journalism Fellow, and an Open Society Institute Media Fellow. He is an Associate Professor of Art at Penn State, where he teaches photography.
In the parlance of the oil and gas industry, “shale play” refers to a region exploited for its natural gas by means of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling—transient industrial processes that often occur far from the populations that benefit from them. Amid polarized claims about fracking and pressure to develop these areas around the world, this project gathers evidence from everyday life in the Marcellus Shale Play. Rosa Furneaux of Mother Jones magazine characterizes Shale Play as “a collage of voices, drawing in the testimonies of activists, residents, industry lawyers, and workers. Kasdorf explores the nuances and tensions of her home state without allowing any one perspective to dominate.” Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature puts the work in perspective this way: “The long sleep of the Appalachians has been dramatically interrupted by the sudden discovery of the Marcellus Shale. This book helps us see and understand what that has meant for the region. It’s a classic tale, with echoes of the region’s past—and deep implications for the planet’s future.”
Mary E. Rolling Reading Series events are free and open to the public. The series is a project of Penn State’s Creative Writing Program in English. It receives generous support from the College of the Liberal Arts, the Department of English, the Joseph L. Grucci Poetry Endowment, the Mary E. Rolling Lectureship in Creative Writing, and the University Libraries.
Upcoming Opportunities for Student Writers: Kalliope and Contests!

Penn State Undergraduate Writers Take Note!
Several upcoming opportunities for FAME and FORTUNE at Penn State:
January 20, midnight: submit your writing and/or art to KALLIOPE, Penn State’s Undergraduate Literary Magazine. Details here: https://kalliope.psu.edu/submissions/.
January 28: submit to the English Department’s Undergraduate Writing Contests. Details here: http://english.la.psu.edu/undergraduate/awards.
Questions? Contact Alison Jaenicke, acj137@psu.edu
Justin Torres to Read September 20
New York Times bestselling novelist Justin Torres will give a reading on Thursday, September 20, as part of the Mary E. Rolling Reading Series. The event will be held at 7:30 pm in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium.
Torres’ first novel We the Animals (2011) has won numerous awards, has been translated into fifteen languages, and has been adapted into a feature film, released in August, directed by Jeremiah Zager (see trailer below). National Public Radio called it a “brilliantly compressed novel…taut, elegant, lean,” noting that it is “told in a series of scenes that burst open like exploding stars, full of violence and light… a kind of ode to the bond of brotherhood.”
Torres has also published short fiction in The New Yorker, Harper’s, Granta, Tin House, The Washington Post, Glimmer Train, Flaunt, and other publications, as well as non-fiction pieces in publications like The Guardian and The Advocate. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard, and a Cullman Center Fellow at The New York Public Library. The National Book Foundation named him one of 2012’s 5 Under 35. He lives in Los Angeles, where he is Assistant Professor of English at UCLA.
Mary E. Rolling Reading Series events are free and open to the public. The series is a project of Penn State’s Creative Writing Program in English. It receives generous support from the College of the Liberal Arts, the Department of English, the Joseph L. Grucci Poetry Endowment, the Mary E. Rolling Lectureship in Creative Writing, and the University Libraries. Co-sponsorship for this reading is provided by the LGBTQA Student Resource Center and Latina/o Studies.
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