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Alums James Charlesworth & Leah Huizar Will Kick off Rolling Reading Series 9/9/21

Two Penn State alumni–novelist James Charlesworth and poet Leah Huizar–will kick off this year’s Mary E. Rolling Reading Series. The reading is free and open to the public and will be held in Foster Auditorium in Paterno Library on Thursday, September 9, at 7:30 pm, as well as livestreamed.

Originally from Pennsylvania, James Charlesworth earned a BA from Penn State University and an MFA from Emerson College in Boston, where he currently lives. His first novel, The Patricide of George Benjamin Hill, was published in 2019. Writer and reviewer Laura van den Berg calls it, “a vital debut novel, with thrilling plot and unforgettable characters. A brilliant send-up of American mythologies.” She further describes it this way: “When estranged siblings flock to their wealthy, scandalized father, the poisonous illusion of the American dream, of capitalism and conventional masculinity and familial betrayal, is powerfully exposed.” Charlesworth is a frequent contributor of music-related essays for marchxness.com, and his short fiction has appeared in Natural Bridge and was a finalist in Glimmer Train’s Short Story Award for New Writers. He is a member of the Advisory Board of the Writers Association of Northern Appalachia and a recipient of a Martin Dibner Fellowship.

A writer and poet with an MFA from Penn State University, Leah Huizar is currently an Assistant Professor of English at Drake University in Iowa, where she teaches creative writing (poetry) with additional focus on Latinx poetics and literature. Originally from Southern California, Huizar’s writing draws on the cultural and historic landscapes of the West Coast and the ways in which colonization, faith, and gendered injustices have shaped it. Her work has been published in Nimrod International JournalCrab Orchard Review, Acentos Review and elsewhere. Her debut collection of poems, Inland Empire, was published by Noemi Press (2019). About the collection, Penn State Professor Julia Spicher Kasforf writes: “in these exquisitely crafted lyrics, [Huizar] claims a place for herself in that fleeting repository of gilded dreams, California. Guided by desire and devotion to language, her search leads to landscapes ruled by 16th century Queen Calafia, the Virgin of Guadalupe, and La Llorona; haunted by migrations of the Indios and the labor of field hands; celebrated in the Grape Day Festival and holy eucharist.”

The Mary E. Rolling Reading Series is a program offered by Penn State’s Creative Writing Program in English. The series 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 University Libraries. A full list of readings in the 2021-22 series, as well as links for livestreams and virtual readings, can be found at https://creativewriting.psu.edu/2021-22-reading-series/.

PSU Creative Arts Journal KLIO Launches 2021 Edition

Students in ENGL 209/Literary Journal Practicum are hard at work creating the next edition of KLIO, an online creative arts journal and sister to the print literary magazine, Kalliope. 

You can read about the new editors and staffers in a recent series of blog posts introducing the students and their favorite selections from past editions of Klio.

SEEKING SUBMISSIONS: This semester, staff plan to evaluate and publish work throughout the rolling submission period (March 1-April 19), so students should submit their creative output as soon as possible.

From Klio’s Submission page:
Klio welcomes submissions of writing, art, and music from any Penn State student (undergraduate or graduate) enrolled at any of the campuses–University Park as well as Commonwealth Campuses. In addition, we are open to hearing from recent graduates (alums no more than 5 years out).

What we’re looking for: In addition to publishing traditional creative writing and visual art intended for the page, we also aim to use our online platform to share digital and cross-disciplinary works, including graphic narratives, comics, performance art, music, dance, and film.

If you’d like to pitch a guest feature for our blog, email your idea to our blog editor at prompt.klio.psu@gmail.com (for example, guest bloggers might review a book or conduct an interview with a Penn State connection, or spotlight a Penn State creative artist, organization, or event).

More details and instructions on submitting here: https://klio.psu.edu/submit/

 

Cary Holladay to Read 3/25 as Fisher Family Writer-in-Residence

Award-winning fiction writer, professor, and Penn State alumna Cary Holladay will visit Penn State virtually as the Fisher Family Writer-in-Residence during the week of March 22-26. As part of her visit, Holladay will give a free reading from her works at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 25. Read more about the event and Holladay on Penn State News. 

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PSU Libraries Announces Circus-Themed Short Edition Contest

Penn State Libraries Short Edition is sponsoring a short fiction and poetry writing contest coming up called A Night at the Circus”. Anyone in the Penn State Community can submit stories revolving around this theme—whether it’s a literal interpretation or a metaphorical one. We’d love to see writers get creative with what they can do with “A Night at the Circus.

The contest runs from Monday, March 1 to Friday, April 2. If accepted by the Editorial Board, a writer’s story or poem will be published on the Penn State Short Edition website.

In addition, five student winners will also have their stories published in Penn State’s short story dispensers as well as win a $100 cash prize. Honorable mentions (this can be anyone from the Penn State community) will be published in the dispensers, too.  

This semester, we’re providing feedback if their submission doesn’t meet Short Edition’s standards. This way, they’ll be given a chance to revise their work. If resubmitted before the deadline and improvement is shown, they will be published on the website. Plus, writers will  still be eligible for the contest prizes.

Visit the website for more information: https://psu.short-edition.com/writing-contest 

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CALS Announces “Forms of Address” Writing Contest

Entries to the “Forms of Address” Writing Contest are being accepted through March 15, 2021.

This contest is part of the 2021 Centre County Reads/CALS Community Read of The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal About Identity, Race, Wealth, and Power—a Finalist for the 2020 Kirkus Prize for Nonfiction—in which author Deirdre Mask examines the ways in which street addresses provide for ongoing race, class, and other divisions.

Relatedly, “forms of address” denote guidelines for how to address properly government officials and professional persons, and religious dignitaries and royal figures, among others, in spoken greetings and written documents. Inspired by the range of styles, occasions, and categories “forms of address” encompass, enter your best writing—7,500 words or less—in which someone (or something) addresses someone or something else in ways that signal and/or unsettle hierarchical attitudes, ideas, and assumptions in one of the following categories:

  • Best Short Fiction,
  • Best Nonfiction,
  • Best Poetry, and
  • Best Entry for a Writer under 18.

Winners will receive a $200 grand prize. Please send entries to cals@psu.edu and include a cover letter with your name, address, contact information, a brief biography, and contest category. Winning entries will be displayed at Schlow Centre Region Library and on the CALS website.

For more information on Community Read events, see the CALS website. 

“Field Language: the Paintings and Poetry of Warren and Jane Rohrer” to Open February 10

Warren Rohrer, Fields: Amish I, 1974, oil on linen (on display at Palmer Museum)

After a long delay caused by the museum’s COVID closure, an exhibition organized by guest curators and English Department professors Julia Spicher Kasdorf and Chris Reed, and curated by Joyce Robinson, Assistant Director of the Palmer Museum, will open at Penn State’s Palmer Museum of Art on Wednesday, February 10, and will extend through April 25, 2021.

According to the Palmer website, the exhibit “Field Language: the Paintings and Poetry of Warren and Jane Rohrer,” “examines the art of Warren Rohrer (1927–1995) as it evolved in conversation with poet Jane Turner Rohrer (b. 1928), his partner of nearly fifty years. The dialogues Field Language traces flow between husband and wife, painting and poetry, and between tradition and modernism. Both Rohrers left the rural lifeways of a Mennonite upbringing to go ‘into the world.'”

Kasdorf explains that “The luminous paintings may change the way people look at agricultural marks on the land—or at least provide an escape from the snow—and poems are presented as text on the wall and via audio domes.”

Visiting the museum and exhibit is free, but requires a timed-entry ticket, which can be reserved via the Palmer website.

As part of the programming around the Field Language exhibit, poets and professors Julia Spicher Kasdorf and Shara McCallum will offer a Zoom event on Thursday, April 1, at 4:30 pm. The Museum Conversation and Poetry Reading–entitled “Truths of a Woman’s Life”–will offer “an intimate look at the biography and craft of Jane Rohrer, the Field Language poet whose words often revealed complex relationships through everyday life.” Register for the event here.

Shara McCallum Wins Award for Essay on Race, Migration, Memory, and Loss

Penn State English Professor Shara McCallum, best known for her poetry, has has also written personal essays and essays on poets and poetics for the past twenty years. Her forthcoming collection of personal essays in progress–Through a Glass, Darkly–explores race, migration, memory, and loss.

Cover of The Southern Review, Fall 2020 EditionThe collection’s titular essay appeared in the Autumn 2020 edition The Southern Review and received the journal’s Oran Robert Perry Burke Award for Nonfiction, awarded to an “exceptional essay published in the previous calendar year.”

You can read “Through a Glass, Darkly” in The Southern Review, Autumn 2020. A conversation about the essay was featured in A Writer’s Insight.

To read more about Shara McCallum and her work, visit her author website. 

Upcoming Deadlines for Students to Submit Writing

Don’t miss out on several upcoming opportunities that offer undergraduate writers valuable recognition and prize money!

Penn State English Department’s Undergraduate Writing Contests: Submit your fiction, nonfiction, and poetry to the department’s contests by January 25th for the chance to win awards and prize money. You can submit and find more details on the English department’s website.

Kalliope 2021Submit your fiction, nonfiction, poetry, art, and photography for the chance to be published in this year’s edition of Kalliope, Penn State’s Undergraduate Literary Magazine by January 31st, midnight. Details on how to email your submissions can be found on Kalliope‘ website.

Mary E. Rolling Reading Series to Feature Penn State Professor Toby Thompson

Toby Thompson, Penn State Associate Professor of English, will offer a reading as part of the Mary E. Rolling Reading Series. The reading, which is free and open to the public, will be held virtually via Zoom at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, January 28, 2021 (link provided below).

Toby Thompson is the author of six books of nonfiction, including: Positively Main Street: Bob Dylan’s Minnesota; Saloon; The ’60s Report; Riding the Rough String: Reflections on the American West; and Metroliner – Passages: Washington to New York. Throughout his long career, Thompson has written for publications as diverse as Vanity Fair, Esquire, Rolling Stone, Gray’s Sporting Journal, GQ, Men’s Journal, Sports Afield, Playboy, Outside, Big Sky Journal, Western Art & Architecture, The New York Times, and The Washington Post.

Book cover for Fired On: Targeting Western American Art, by Toby Thompson. Cover art is image of a man on a horse.

His most recent book, Fired On: Targeting Western American Art, published in March 2020 by Bangtail Press, joins Riding the Rough String and Metroliner to complete a trilogy of collected pieces of reportorial nonfiction, personal essays, and profiles. The book, which takes its name from the 1907 oil painting by Frederic Remington, explores three centuries of art in Western America and paints a larger portrait of the West and its inhabitants.

Thompson describes the collection as “eclectic … comprised of brief lives and random asides, saloon tributes and artist profiles, book and music notices. The earliest was written in 1983, the latest in 2019.” Author Carl Hiaasen calls it a “…first-rate collection, impressively diverse and vastly enjoyable. Toby Thompson is blessed with that rare journalistic talent for painting epic pictures with small, unforgettable details.”

Thompson has taught nonfiction writing at Penn State for over 30 years. He divides his time between State College and his homes in Livingston, Montana, and Cabin John, Maryland.

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

ZOOM Link for Thompson’s January 28 Reading at 7:30 pm:
https://psu.zoom.us/j/97769385641?pwd=WGRHbVRMVGRtMEdrL3lZbHJuellhZz09

PSU Short Edition Competition: “The Witching Hour” (October 5-30)

Penn State Library’s Short Edition has a short fiction/poetry writing contest coming up called “The Witching Hour”.

Anyone in the Penn State Community can submit their scary stories/poetry.

It runs from Oct. 5 -Oct. 30. If accepted by the Editorial Board, their story will be published on the Penn State Short Edition website.

In addition, five student winners will also get their stories published in Penn State’s short story dispensers as well as a $100 cash prize.

Honorable mentions (this can be anyone from the Penn State community) will be published in the dispensers, too.

Attached is the poster;  the link to the website leads to more information (and it’s where you submit):

https://psu.short-edition.com/writing-contest