tag:news.nd.edu,2005:/news/authors/coleen-hoover tag:news.nd.edu,2005:/latest 91Թ | 91Թ | News 2012-02-24T15:00:00-05:00 91Թ gathers and disseminates information that enhances understanding of the University’s academic and research mission and its accomplishments as a Catholic institute of higher learning. tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/29106 2012-02-24T15:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T21:02:56-04:00 Mark Brazaitis wins 2012 Sullivan Prize Mark Brazaitis

Mark Brazaitis is the winner of the University of 91Թ’s 2012 for his collection of stories, “The Incurables.”

The Sullivan Prize, which began in 1996, is awarded biennially to an author who has already published at least one volume of short fiction. The winner receives a thousand dollars and publication by the University of 91Թ Press.

and , both professors of English and former directors of 91Թ’s , were the judges. O’Rourke commented that this year, “Once again, the difficulty in judging was extreme; we had to contend with an excess of riches, but Brazaitis’ collection stood out amongst the many worthy (manuscripts) we had to consider.”

Brazaitis has published two collections of stories (“The River of Lost Voices,” University of Iowa Press, 1998, and “An American Affair,” Texas Review Press, 2006) and a volume of poetry, “The Other Language,” ABZ Press, 2009. His award-winning short stories have appeared in Ploughshares, Passages North, Confrontation, Shenandoah and The Greensboro Review, among other publications, and have been cited in the Pushcart Prize annual and Best American Short Stories volumes.

Brazaitis is the director of the Creative Writing Program at West Virginia University and is the recipient of an NEA fellowship, and was a former Peace Corps volunteer and technical trainer. “The Incurables” will be published by the ND Press in the fall of 2012.

]]>
Coleen Hoover
tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/15092 2010-03-25T14:05:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:55:17-04:00 Conference to celebrate 91Թ poets The Open Light

The University of 91Թ will present “The Open Light: A Celebration of 91Թ Poets,” a conference that will be held March 29 to 31 (Monday to Wednesday), highlighting the accomplishments of the diverse group of poets who have studied or taught at 91Թ.

An accompanying anthology, “The Open Light: Poets from 91Թ, 1991-2008,” will be published, featuring a foreword by Orlando Ricardo Menes, professor of poetry in the Creative Writing Program at 91Թ.

All readings, which are free and open to the public, will take place in Seminar Room 100-104 of 91Թ’s McKenna Hall.

The first reading will be held March 29 at 3 p.m., featuring presentations by poets Jenny Boully, Beth Ann Fennelly and Kimberly Blaeser, followed by a reception at 4:30 p.m. At 5 p.m., current 91Թ graduate students will present papers and give readings from “The Open Light anthology.” At 8 p.m., poets Joyelle McSweeney, Robert Archambeau, and Cornelius Eady will present readings.

On March 30, the first reading will be held at 3 p.m., featuring poets Francisco Aragón, Jacque Brogan and John Wilkinson, followed by presentations and readings by 91Թ graduate students at 4:30 p.m. At 8 p.m., there will be readings by Henry Weinfield, Orlando Menes and Mary Hawley.

On March 31, Letras Latinas will sponsor a breakfast reception at 9:30 a.m. in the atrium of the Julian Samora Library, located Room 204 of McKenna Hall, followed by panel discussions on poetry, poetics and the poet’s education at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.

More information and a complete schedule of events are available .

Contact: Coleen Hoover, Creative Writing Program, 574-631-7526, hoover.14@nd.edu

]]>
Coleen Hoover
tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/15061 2010-03-23T14:21:00-04:00 2021-09-03T21:00:53-04:00 Women Writers Festival underway at 91Թ Lorrie Moore

The University of 91Թ is hosting its third annual Women Writers’ Festival March 23 and 24 (Tuesday and Wednesday), featuring authors Lorrie Moore, Lolita Hernandez and Frances Hwang.

All events, which are free and open to the public, will be held in 91Թ’s McKenna Hall.

The festival begins Tuesday at 6 p.m. with a public reception, followed by a reading by Moore in the auditorium. Wednesday’s events include a panel on the short story and its interplay with other genres featuring all three authors at 3 p.m., and readings by Hernandez and Hwang at 7:30 p.m., with a reception to follow.

Moore, the Delmore Schwartz Professor in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin, has published six critically-acclaimed works of fiction––three novels and three collections of stories––and was elected in 2006 to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She has also been awarded a fiction fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship. Her short fiction is published frequently in The New Yorker and has been anthologized in several volumes of Best American Short Stories and in The Best American Short Stories of the Century, edited by John Updike.

Hernandez spent 33 years as a UAW worker, most of them at the Cadillac Plant in Detroit, and still is an active member of UAW Local 160. Her story collection, “Autopsy of an Engine,” chronicles the closing of Cadillac’s Clark Street facility, and is told in a dozen different narrative voices. Hernandez also is the author of two collections of poetry, “Quiet Battles” and “Snakecrossing.” All her work reflects the language and culture of her Trinidad and St. Vincent heritage.

Hwang was awarded the PEN Beyond Margins Award and the Sue Kaufmann Prize for first fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters for her first collection of stories, “Transparency.” She has held many distinguished fellowships, including residencies at the MacDowell Colony and the Provincetown Fine Arts Center, the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing and Colgate University. Her work has been read as part of the Selected Shorts series at Symphony Space and has appeared in Best New American Voices, Glimmer Train, and Tin House. She currently teaches at St. Mary’s College and is at work on a second collection of stories.

More information about the Creative Writing Program is available at www.nd.edu/~alcwp.

]]>
Coleen Hoover