Category Archives: Events

2023-24 Creative Writing Reading Series Announced

audience members clapping
Audience members clap following Samuel Kọ́láwọlé’s reading at the Foster Auditorium on Thursday, Jan. 26, 2023 in University Park, Pa.
Credit: Jackson Ranger, Daily Collegian

We’re excited about next year’s line-up in our creative writing reading series. You can find the names and dates here!

As always, the reading series includes a mix of poets, fiction writers, and nonfiction writers (and some who tackle more than one genre). It includes faculty members who have recently published a book (Julia Spicher Kasdorf in March), alumni (Christine Hume in April), as well as other nationally and internationally known writers.

Natasha Trethewey’s delayed visit as Emily Dickinson Lecturer has been rescheduled for this fall. We hope you’ll join us for an exciting reading by this award-winning poet, memoirist, and former U.S. Poet Laureate. This event marks the kick-off our reading series and will be held on Thursday, September 21, 6 pm, in the HUB-Robeson Center’s Freeman Auditorium. 

Mary E. Rolling Reading Series presents Abby Minor on April 13

Book Jacket for poetry collection, As I Said, by Abby MinorUNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Poet Abby Minor will offer a reading at Penn State as the final event in this year’s Rolling Reading Series. The reading, which is free and open to the public, will take place at 6:00 p.m. on Thursday, April 13, in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium on the University Park campus.

Abby Minor’s first book, As I Said: A Dissent (Ricochet Editions, 2022), is a collection of long documentary poems concerning reproductive rights, embodiment, justice, and citizenship in U.S. history. It is a book described by poet and Penn State professor Julia Spicher Kasdorf as filled with “lines that dance and leap, each a necessary testament to a life planted in the ridges of Appalachia and reaching back to the nits of New York tenements.” Minor is also the author of two poetry chapbooks, Real Words for Inside (Gap Riot Press) and Plant Light, Dress Light (dancing girl press). Awarded Bitch Media’s 2018 Writing Fellowship in Sexual Politics, she has received residencies and awards from Split this Rock, The Rensing Center, Sundress Academy for the Arts, The Penland School of Crafts, the C.D. Wright Women Writers Conference, and the Ora Lerman Charitable Trust. She earned her MFA in creative writing at Penn State.

Abby Minor lives in the ridges and valleys of central Pennsylvania, where she works on poems, essays, drawings, and projects exploring reproductive politics. Since 2017, she has worked as the founding director of Ridgelines Language Arts, a non-profit providing expert language arts instruction outside of academic institutions and to those who are marginalized in the region. Through Ridgelines, she also teaches poetry workshops in her county’s low-income nursing homes. Minor currently serves as a board member of Abortion Conversation Projects and collaborates widely with other organizations and activists.

The April 13 reading will begin with a “choreopoem” performance (including live music and choreographed dance) and continue with readings from As I Said. All of the poems presented will revolve around themes of reproductive rights and politics.poet Abby Minor outdoors in polka dot shirt


The Mary E. Rolling Reading Series is a program offered by Penn State’s Creative Writing Program in English. The series receives 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 University Libraries.

Out Loud: Local Poets to Read from New Books 3/24 in Bellefonte

The next event in the “Out Loud Bellefonte” poetry series will feature two local poets this Friday, 3/24, 7 pm: Lee Peterson and Leah Poole Osowski. The event will be held in the fellowship hall behind St. John’s Episcopal Church, 120 W. Lamb Street, Bellefonte, PA.

On Friday, these poets will read from their award-winning new collections: Exceeds Us and In the Hall of North American Mammals.  (Bellefonte Art Museum poetry workshop the next day, Saturday, March 25 at 10:00 a.m.) Out Loud is sponsored by the Bellefonte Historical and Cultural Association (bellefontearts.org) and St. John’s Episcopal Church (stjohnsepiscopalbellefonte.org) with community storytelling and poetry workshops at the the Bellefonte Art Museum for Centre County (bellefontemuseum.org).

Lee Peterson’s most recent collection of poems, In the Hall of North American Mammals, won the 2021 Cider Press Review Book Award (Cider Press Review, 2023). The Needles Road, a chapbook, was a Seven Kitchens Press Editor’s Series selection (Seven Kitchens Press, 2022). Her first full-length collection, Rooms and Fields: Dramatic Monologues from the War in Bosnia, was selected by Jean Valentine for the Stan and Tom Wick Poetry Prize (Kent State University Press, 2004). Peterson lives in State College and teaches writing and works with international students at Penn State University’s Altoona campus.

Leah Poole Osowski is the author of hover over her  (Kent State University Press, 2016), chosen by Adrian Matejka for the 2015 Wick Poetry Prize, and Exceeds Us (Saturnalia, 2023), winner of the Alma Award. Her poetry has appeared in The Southern Review, The Georgia Review, ZYZZYVAGettysburg Review, and Ninth Letter, among others. Her nonfiction has appeared in Black Warrior Review, Indiana Review, and Quarterly West. She has received fellowships from Image  Journal’s Glen Workshop and the Vermont Studio Center, and is poetry editor of Raleigh Review. Originally from Massachusetts, she holds an MFA from the University of North Carolina Wilmington. She was the 2018 Emerging Writer in Residence at Penn State Altoona.

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Adrian Matejka to Read 3/23 as Fisher Family Writer-in-Residence

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA — Award-winning poet and Poetry magazine editor Adrian Matejka will visit Penn State as the Fisher Family Writer-in-Residence during the week of March 20-24. As part of his visit, Matejka will give a free public reading at 6:00 p.m. on Thursday, March 23, in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium on the University Park campus. Read more about the poet and event on Penn State News.

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Mary E. Rolling Reading Series presents Krista Eastman on February 23 

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. —Nonfiction writer and Penn State grad Krista Eastman 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, February 23, in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium on the University Park campus.  

Krista Eastman is the author of “The Painted Forest,” which was named one of the best literary nonfiction debuts of 2019 by Poets & Writers magazine. “The Painted Forest” also won the Council for Wisconsin Writers’ Nonfiction Book Award and an Outstanding Achievement Award from the Wisconsin Library Association. Her essays have appeared in journals such as Conjunctions, The Georgia Review, and Kenyon Review and have been named Notable in Best American Essays. 

Eastman was born and raised in the Driftless hills of Wisconsin. After living in Senegal, France, Antarctica, and the eastern U.S., she returned to Wisconsin where she lives with her partner and young son. Eastman earned her master of fine arts (MFA) in creative writing at Penn State. 

West Virginia University Press, publisher of “The Painted Forest,” characterizes the book of essays this way: “Eastman explores the myths we make about who we are and where we’re from… uncovers strange and little-known ‘home places’—not only the picturesque hills and valleys of the author’s childhood in rural Wisconsin, but also tourist towns, the ‘under-imagined and overly caricatured’ Midwest, and a far-flung station in Antarctica where the filmmaker Werner Herzog makes an unexpected appearance.” Reviewer Caryl Pagel calls it a “a surprising and tender book in which a reader might be reminded of the considered natural observations of Annie Dillard, the unrelenting gaze of Lia Purpura, or the masterful storytelling of Jo Ann Beard. Eastman is interested in interrogating the history and ethos of several specific places…as well as elegantly demonstrating the ways in which landscapes shift and morph through generations and recall.” 

 

Poet Julia Spicher Kasdorf to Launch New Collection: AS IS

On Friday, January 27, at 7 pm, The Midtown Scholar Bookstore in Harrisburg will host the book launch of poet and Penn State professor Julia Spicher Kasdorf’s new new poetry collection, As Is. This free in-person event is open to the public and will include a reading, audience Q&A, and book signing. The event is also available for streaming.

Click here to watch this event via YouTube Live.

For more information on the event, the location, the poet, and the book, visit the Midtown Scholar Bookstore and Cafe Events page. 

An Evening with Julia Spicher Kasdorf: As Is

Mary E. Rolling Reading Series presents Samuel Kọ́láwọlé on January 26

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. —Fiction writer and Penn State assistant professor Samuel Kọ́láwọlé 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, January 26, in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium on the University Park campus.

Samuel Kọ́láwọlé’s work has appeared in AGNI, Gulf Coast, Washington Square Review, Georgia Review, Harvard Review, The Hopkins Review, and elsewhere. Born and raised in Ibadan, Nigeria, Kọ́láwọle studied at the University of Ibadan and holds a Master of Arts degree in Creative Writing with distinction from Rhodes University, South Africa. His fiction has been supported with numerous fellowships, residencies, and scholarships, and he was a finalist for the Graywolf Press Africa Prize, shortlisted for UK’s The First Novel Prize in 2019, and won a 2019 Editor-Writer Mentorship Program for Diverse Writers.

Kọ́láwọlé has taught creative writing in Nigeria, Ghana, Uganda, South Africa, Sweden, and the United States. A graduate of the MFA program in Writing and Publishing at Vermont College of Fine Arts, he returned to VCFA to join the faculty of the low-residency MFA program. In 2022, he joined the creative writing faculty at Penn State.

Samuel Kọ́láwọlé’s debut novel “The Road to Salt Sea” is forthcoming from Amistad / Harper Collins. Set along the trans-Saharan migration route, from Nigeria to Libya, the novel explores the current global migration crisis. It follows Rufus Tacitus, a hopeful university graduate turned accidental murderer, on an unrelenting journey of escape across the continent to the Italian coast. Bestselling author Julianna Baggott says of the novel: “I cannot think of another time in my life when I have come across a new writer as profoundly talented as Samuel Kọ́láwọlé. And his profound talent has brought us a beautifully rendered, brutal novel told with great empathy and heart. ‘The Road to Salt Sea’ has all of the markings of a masterful and enduring work of literature. And I get the feeling that Kọ́láwọlé is just warming up.”

More on Samuel Kọ́láwọlé can be found on his website: samuelkolawoleauthor.com


The Mary E. Rolling Reading Series is a program offered by Penn State’s Creative Writing Program in English. The series receives 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 University Libraries. A full list of readings in the 2022-23 series can be found at creativewriting.psu.edu.

Writer Stephen Graham Jones Offers Graphic & Gripping Reading

by Gita Passi~

On Tuesday, November 8, I attended my second live reading of the semester, from contemporary NYT best-selling novelist Stephen Graham Jones, presented by the Penn State English Department Creative Writing Program as part of the Rolling Reading Series.

Jones opened with a lighthearted anecdote recalling his first experience with emails in the early 90s, some of which were to his professor, Bill Cobb (Director of Creative Writing), who had warmly introduced his former student from the podium a few moments prior. Shortly after, Jones began the first reading of the night, a short horror story entitled “Love is a Cavity I Can’t Stop Touching,” which tells of two young lovers who bind themselves for life by scooping out and consuming pieces of each other’s thigh muscles. This piece set the tone for the rest of the night’s offerings, which were packed with incredible imagery, albeit vividly disturbing and graphic. It was impossible not to be on the edge of your seat, and I found myself squinting and flinching at certain lines as I clung to each story with the rest of the audience.

Jones balanced the heaviness of his writing with quips and jokes throughout the event, warranting chuckles and exhales of built-up tension from around the room.

After the second reading about a truck driver, Jones explained that flash fiction is his favorite genre to write in, as the pressure and compression forces the author to become innovative and fit a novel’s worth of work in less than 1000 words. The second-to-last reading, “Can You See the Indian,” was the first nonfiction and first-person reading of the night. Jones humorously described nonfiction writing as “fiction, with less lies.” The last reading took the form of a numbered list, which demonstrated its purpose by allowing Jones to disregard transitions, since, as he described, “the numbers just follow each other.”

The event ended with a Q&A session, where audience members asked questions ranging from advice on how to start stories of their own, to Jones’ thoughts on classic horror films in relation to his own writing. In response to a question about working with comic artists on works like “Earthdivers,” Jones explained the process of viewing various samples of artwork provided by his publicist to find the perfect match for his narrative–Italian artist Davide Gianfelice. The ongoing comic book series “unites four Indigenous survivors in an apocalyptic near future as they embark on a bloody, one-way mission to save the world by traveling back in time to kill Christopher Columbus and prevent the creation of America.”

More information about Stephen Graham Jones, his works, and upcoming live events can be viewed on his website.


Gita Passi is a Penn State student majoring in Digital Arts and Media Design with a Photography minor. She is currently enrolled in ENGL 50: Intro to Creative Writing, where she was introduced to Stephen Graham Jones’ work. During the fiction unit, the class read two short stories–“Moonboys” and “Bad Code“–both published in Lightspeed, an online magazine of science fiction and fantasy.

Writer Xu Xi Addresses “Vanishing” Hong Kong & Unreliability of Memory

by Gita Passi~

On Thursday October 13th, I attended a live hour-long presentation and reading from contemporary novelist and essayist Xu Xi, presented by the Penn State English Department Creative Writing Program as part of the Rolling Reading Series.

Before the presentation began, Xi displayed an image of Hong Kong as it was when she lived there as a child. She opened by speaking about the changes that the city has gone through since then, and more recent changes within the past two years. The audience viewed images of her 1950’s childhood apartment in Tsim Sha Tsui (TST,) and observed how the area has been modernized over time.

She tied this precursor to the first reading of the evening, “When Your City Vanishes,” which is a collection of creative nonfiction readings about Hong Kong’s past and future. Following this, she read an excerpt from her Hong Kong fiction work “Lightning,” which was about a grandmother’s reaction to her granddaughter’s blossoming love life in relation to her own romantic experiences.

The evening was concluded with a Q&A session where audience members asked a variety of questions, ranging from the languages Xi speaks as a transnational writer, to the advice about being a writer while also having a day job.

 

Xi provided tips in response to a question about how to deal with the unreliability of memory and its relationship with imagination in nonfiction writing, specifically regarding her work Dear Hong Kong. Xi explained that fact checking memories from childhood with family members and lifelong friends would fill in significant gaps; she recalled her second sister keeping photos of her parents, and her rebellious Aunt Pristine who provided information about Indonesian life and Xi’s mother’s family.

Another student sought advice on how to avoid slipping away from the present moment when writing about the past in creative nonfiction. Xi suggested finding a voice of experience and innocence and braiding them together. She explained that it was important to ask ourselves why we remember some memories, but not others. Memories that we remember clearly are usually related to something happening in our present-day life; this is where we can draw and maintain a connection to the present while discussing the past.

More information about Xu Xi, her works, and upcoming live events can be viewed on her website.

 


Gita Passi is a Penn State student majoring in Digital Arts and Media Design with a Photography minor. She is currently enrolled in ENGL 50: Intro to Creative Writing, where she was introduced to Xu Xi’s work. During the creative nonfiction unit, the class read an excerpt from “Interruptions” (2016), a collection of essays in response to images by photographer David Clarke.

Mary E. Rolling Reading Series presents Stephen Graham Jones on Nov. 8

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Novelist Stephen Graham Jones will offer a reading at Penn State as part of this year’s Rolling Reading Series. The reading, which will take place at 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday, November 8th, in Paterno Library’s Foster Auditorium on the University Park campus, will be free and open to the public. 

Stephen Graham Jones is the New York Times bestselling author of nearly thirty novels, novellas, collections, and comic books. His doctoral dissertation at Florida State University later became his debut novel “The Fast Red Road: A Plainsong” (2000) and was praised by Native American Renaissance writer and scholar Gerald Vizenor. Many of his works reside in horror, science fiction, and experimental fiction genres and have received literary acclaim. His popular and recent works include the novels “The Only Good Indians” (2020), described by The New York Times as “gritty and gorgeous,” and “My Heart is a Chainsaw,” Book 1 in The Indian Lake Trilogy (2021), Winner of the Bram Stoker Award for Best Novel. The Indian Lake Trilogy Book 2, “Don’t Fear the Reaper,” is set to be released in February 2023.   

Jones’ lifelong admiration for horror movies, and his inspiration at first viewing “Scream” in 1996, is distinctly reflected in his work. His novel “My Heart Is a Chainsaw” was described by novelist Alma Katsu as “an homage to slasher films that also manages to defy and transcend genre.” National Book Award winner and author Tananarive Due described Jones as “a literary master who happens to write horror,” noting “you’ve never read a book quite like ‘The Only Good Indians.’”  

Jones’ many awards include an NEA grant, the LA Times Ray Bradbury Prize, four Bram Stoker Awards, two Shirley Jackson Awards, and five This is Horror Awards. Jones resides in Boulder, Colorado, with his wife, children, and dogs. He is the Ivena Baldwin Professor of English at the University of Colorado and is an enrolled member of the Blackfeet Tribe of the Blackfeet Indian Reservation of Montana.