Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Robin Hemley Reading 4/17

Columbia College Chicago Presents
a Creative Writing-Nonfiction Program Event
Sponsored by the Department of English in the School of Liberal Arts & Sciences:

A reading by ROBIN HEMLEY
Hokin Hall
623 S. Wabash Ave., Room 109
Tuesday, April 17, 5:30p.m.

The event is free and open to the public.
 
Hemley_Robin_Photo Credit Catherine Segurson.jpg
Photo: Catherine Segurson
   
ROBIN HEMLEY is the author of eight books of nonfiction and fiction and the winner of many awards including a 2008 Guggenheim Fellowship, The Nelson Algren Award for Fiction from the Chicago Tribune, The Story Magazine Humor Prize, an Independent Press Book Award, two Pushcart Prizes and many others.  His fiction, nonfiction, and poetry has been published in the U.S., Great Britain, Germany, Japan, the Philippines, Hong Kong, and elsewhere and he frequently teaches creative writing workshops around the world.  He has been widely anthologized and has published his work in such places as The New York Times, Orion, The Wall Street Journal, Chicago Tribune, New York Magazine, and many of the finest literary magazines in the U.S.  The BBC is currently developing a feature film based on his book Invented Eden that tells the story of a purported anthropological hoax in the Philippines.  His popular craft book Turning Life Into Fiction has sold over 60,000 copies in its lifetime. His third collection of short stories, Reply All, is forthcoming in 2012 from Indiana University Press (Break Away Books) and The University of Georgia Press will publish his book A Field Guide for Immersion Writing: Memoir, Journalism, and Travel, also in 2012. He is a Senior Editor of The Iowa Review as well as the editor of a popular online journal, Defunct (Defunctmag.com) that features short essays on everything that’s had its day.  He currently directs the Nonfiction Writing Program at The University of Iowa and is the founder and organizer of NonfictioNow, a biennial conference that will convene in November 2012 in Melbourne, Australia.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Lia Purpura Reading 4/5

A reading by
LIA PURPURA
Alexandroff Center Lecture Hall
600 S. Michigan Avenue, Room 921
Thursday, April 5, 6:00p.m.

The event is free and open to the public.
 
jed lia.jpg    
Photo credit Alan Kolc.


LIA PURPURA
is the author of seven collections of essays, poems and translations, most recently, Rough Likeness (essays, Sarabande Books, January 2012). Her awards include Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award (for the essay collection On Looking), NEA and Fulbright Fellowships, three Pushcart prizes, work in Best American Essays, 2011, the AWP Award in Nonfiction, and the Beatrice Hawley award in Poetry.  Recent work appears in Agni, Field, The Georgia Review, Orion, The New Republic, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, and elsewhereShe is Writer in Residence at Loyola University, Baltimore, MD and teaches in the Rainier Writing Workshop MFA Program.

Monday, March 12, 2012

THE 33 READING SERIES: March 15th


RYAN COURTWRIGHT is an MFA candidate at Columbia College.  He has been published by himself and in collaboration by The Sonora Review, The Normal School, Maggy Poetry, Anti-, Pleiades: A Journal of New Writing, Lo-Ball Magazine, Shampoo, and Pistola Magazine among others.

TOM NOWAK lives and writes in Chicago where he is an MFA candidate at Columbia College. His poems have appeared or are upcoming in Columbia Poetry Reviewapt, and Arsenic Lobster. He is currently level 5 in Skyrim and keeps getting caught stealing horses.

INGRID SAGOR received her BA in English in 2010 from Western Washington University in Bellingham, WA—the most northwestern point of the continental US—and moved to the flatlands of Chicago in November 2010. For five years, Ingrid worked as a hairstylist and while she loved creating beautiful styles, she is happy to put her brain instead of her hands to work while studying at Columbia College in their MFA in Creative Nonfiction program. Her work has been published in Jeopardy Literary Magazine, Labyrinth, Free Verse and The Everett Herald. Ingrid is a Follett Fellow and a takes pride in her position as a Graduate Student Instructor.

EMILY SCHIKORA is an MFA candidate in Nonfiction at Columbia College Chicago where she is also a Graduate Student Instructor and Follet Fellow. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Cirque: A Literary Journal for the North Pacific Rim, Habit, and M Review. She grew up in Fairbanks, Alaska and now divides her time between Chicago and Portland, Oregon.

Friday, February 17, 2012

The Lifespan of a Genre: Micah McCrary Interviews John D'Agata

Newcity has published an interview with essayist and editor John D'Agata by MFA Candidate Micah McCrary. 

McCrary brings his sharp sense of the essay form to the conversation, and the two explore the boundaries and conventions of the generic labels nonfiction writers apply to their work. What does it mean to write journalistic essays? Essayistic journalism? Research-heavy memoir? What do we call nonfiction that forsakes fact? McCrary and D'Agata press these issues, and try to give name to a form that is by definition always shifting, always trying to figure itself out.

D'Agata is the author of About a Mountain and Halls of Fame, and the editor of the nonfiction anthologies The Next American Essay and The Lost Origins of the Essay. He will be giving a reading at Columbia College next week along with Jim Fingal, the fact checker whose correspondence with D'Agata became the meat of the pair's new book: The Lifespan of a Fact, published by W.W. Norton & Company.

The reading, which is open to the public, will take place February 23 at 7 p.m. in Hokin Hall at 623 S. Wabash in Chicago.

Be sure to bone up beforehand and read McCrary's interview here


Bookslut Interviews David Lazar

David Lazar was interviewed by Andy Fitch at Bookslut for its February 2012 issue. The Q&A interview is a part of the publication’s new “Constructive Nonfiction” series, which aims to highlight the work of publishers, translators, impresarios, and teachers within the nonfiction community.

Check out the interview here!

Sunday, January 22, 2012

MFA Candidates Publish in Columbia Poetry Review


Candidates Jennifer Tatum-CotamagaƱa and Wes Jamison will have poetry appearing in the upcoming issue of Columbia Poetry Review.  Tatum-CotamagaƱa's "topieceward" and an excerpt from her longer work "The Pain We Do Inflict," as well as Jamison's "Not in Me as Much as On" have found themselves a home in Columbia Poetry Review no. 25

Friday, November 4, 2011

A Conversation with Ashley Butler



Ashley Butler was born and raised in Virginia. She has a BA from Columbia University and an MFA from the University of Iowa. Her work has appeared in Ninth Letter, jubilat, Gulf Coast, Creative Nonfiction, and POOL. She lives in Texas.

This was Ashley's first visit to Columbia College.

Many of us are interested, especially as graduate students, in the process of piecing together a collection of nonfiction. I was wondering if you could tell us how you personally pieced everything together—how you took the work that you started in undergrad and carried it throughout your entire graduate career and basically put it into a book.

I wrote a few personal essays before going to grad school and I thought that if I wrote a book it might look just like that—just very straightforward personal essays. And that expectation made it difficult for me to really get at some of the other subjects that I think I really wanted to get at that were important. And when I went to grad school, fortunately, you know, John D’Agata was there and he helped a lot of us think of the essay in broader terms and really challenged our idea of what an essay is. And that complicated my idea of what the project would be—I just started experimenting and things started going in a different direction, so I stopped thinking about what it would look like and tried to follow the inquiry.

And then later I started talking with Sarah Gorham at Sarabande, and she helped me structure the overall piece and said “You need more essays like this.”

You started talking to her during your program, or after you graduated?

Yeah, it was my final year at Iowa, and I started talking more with her. And she helped.

So you were already working with an editor during your third year?

Mm-hmm.

How did that happen?

She came to Iowa for a conference, I think it was the NonfictioNow conference, and there was an opportunity to meet with her one-on-one and we just really got along. And she said, you know, to stay in touch, and it just sort of evolved from there.

How did you reach a point where you thought that each of the essays in Dear Sound of Footstep would be relevant enough to each other to piece together?

Relevant enough to each other?

Yeah. I know that a lot of editors talk about writing a book of essays that share the same theme or share the same place or characters or things like that. And I know that that’s not really applicable in 100% of situations, but I keep hearing that advice: to have work that ties together if you’re going to put together a collection.

Well, the argument for the book became how to embody and complicate absence in order to come to terms with this other issue. More specific, loss of the mother and dealing with grief. So in that respect, the essays do cover a lot of the same ground, but they’re using different subjects—there’s [that] the narrator is in sort of a different mode in some of them…I think that they are different enough in and of themselves, but they do cover the same ground.

You’ve written pretty consistently in your book about place and space. Why are you so interested in each of those?

Well, I think for this project space is this vertical between Earth and Space, as a metaphor for the grief that the narrator is experiencing and that relationship with the dead. So that is part of the obsession, and it’s a way to think about death and the afterlife, you know, for someone who really loves science. I think that’s probably where that comes from.

And the place part? Is that specifically honing in on Outer Space and Earth? Do you pre-determine your settings when you go to write about spaces?

When you talk about place is there a specific essay you’re thinking? Like the Richmond, Virginia essay?

Yes! That, for example.

I guess that was important because it’s where I grew up. Landscapes, I mean, being in a particular place—your surroundings—you can become aware of how your attention moves and it reveals a little bit about your belief systems, too: what’s important to you, where your eye lands.

Belief systems regarding what?

I think what you value is reflected in how you interact with an environment and where your attention goes.

A little bit of a technical question: how much of Dear Sound of Footstep appeared elsewhere before you published it all as a book?

I don’t even remember how many essays are in there, but probably a quarter of it. Maybe less; I’m not sure.

So could you talk to us a little bit about the process of taking work that’s already published and putting it together with work that hasn’t? You said that a quarter of the book had previously appeared in journals or whatnot, so what about the other three-quarters of it?

Haha. They were rejected.

Was there any particular process to putting together the rejected work and the published work? When you started working with Sarabande, what was it like having to dialogue with them about the fact that this work had already been published so maybe you didn’t want to edit further because it had already been published. The other three-quarters of the book were completely open to all the editing that went into changing the manuscript for publication.

I think publication is . . . maybe it’s an instance of the essay that exists for, you know, a particular reader of that magazine. And so I don’t think it’s necessarily the end state of that essay. So if changes need to be made, then. . . .

A few of us are taking a course, currently, called “Form and Theory of Nonfiction.” So I’m interested to hear whether or not you have your own theory on form. Basically, how you justify your own form when you’re writing an essay, or any of the essays that came out in Dear Sound of Footstep. How you decide you want to manipulate space on the page.

Theory” sounds so formal, and I just try to see, you know, where the essay goes, what it wants to do. I don’t try to force page breaks or a certain mode of writing on a piece, but sometimes there are certain ways, like, in which the essay “Dear Sound of Footstep, Move Me or Tread,” that was really different for me when I wrote it because I just started off writing lines, sentences, and thinking about the Aphorism and what it would mean to. . . . It was a very different process for me. I try not to force anything; just see what comes out.

How did you feel at the time you were writing the essays, as far as "this essay is about this, but it might actually be about this"? I guess that’s something we’re sort of learning how to do right now in our program.

I guess in, uh, the lifting bodies essay (“Karman Vortex”) it just felt intuitive, so I guess maybe that’s hard to talk about; and I tried not to think too much about what those metaphors were doing.

Lastly: do you have any advice for students in MFA programs now about what they should be experimenting with, how they should be preparing to put together a thesis, or anything like that?

I would say, you know, stay open. And just keep pushing outside of the tendencies that you find yourself going towards.

Interviewed by Micah McCrary


(PDF)