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                    <text>About Wilkes

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Revise This - September 2008

Revise This!

Revise This! - May
2008
REVISE THIS ARCHIVES
2017
Contents:

2018

James Jones First Novel Fellowship Winner Announced  |

Revise This! -

Award-winning Novelist Jeff Talarigo Joins Faculty|

November 2019

Etruscan Press Managing Editor Joins Poetry Faculty | 
Student Profile: Rev. Raphael Ezeh | Faculty Notes |  Student Notes 

 James Jones First Novel Fellowship
Winner Announced

Margarite Landry

Margarite Landry, of Southborough, MA, won first place for her novel
Blue Moon in the 17th Annual James Jones First Novel Fellowship, co-

Revise This! Archives

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 2008

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�sponsored by the Creative Writing Department
of Wilkes University and
the James Jones Literary Society.
Landry was awarded $10,000. Her novel, which competed with about 520
other submissions,
follows the story of a single mother and her son, who
bring a lively, troubled foster
child into their home.
Landry, who earned a Ph.D. in Victorian Literature from Columbia
University, was inspired
to craft the story after a boy on the street asked
her where she was going. She told
him she was going to teach at a
college down the street, but the boy didn’t even know
what a college was.
“I fell in love with the boy,” Landry said. “He was so vulnerable.”
Throughout the years, Landry has had a variety of writing jobs, including
editing
math books and ghost writing self-help books. She currently is an
associate professor
of English/Professional Writing at Fitchburg State
College in Massachusetts.
 Now that her novel is award-winning, Landry plans to make some final
revisions and
try to get it published. She also has short stories slated to
be released in Pisgah Review and The Bellingham Review.
The runner-up winners were Matthew Dillon, of Port Townsend, WA, for
his manuscript
tilted Restoration, and Nicholas Gerogiannis, of
Birmingham, AL, for his manuscript titled SERE. They were each
awarded $750.
 The James Jones Fellowship was established in 1992 to “honor the spirit
of unblinking
honesty, determination, and insight into modern culture as
exemplified by (the writings
of) James Jones.” Requests for guidelines
should be sent, along with a stamped, self-addressed
envelope, to
James Jones First Novel Fellowship, c/o Creative Writing Department,
Wilkes University, 84 West South Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18766, or via
e-mail to
jamesjonesfirstnovel@wilkes.edu
 
The submission deadline for entries is March 1 of each year.

Award-winning Novelist Jef Talarigo
Joins Faculty

�Jeff Talarigo

Award-winning author Jeff Talarigo is the newest addition to the faculty of
the Graduate
Creative writing Program.
Talarigo is the author of The Pearl Diver, winner of the American
Academy of Arts and Letters Rosenthal Award. His latest book
is The
Ginseng Hunter. He was born in Pennsylvania and educated at Slippery
Rock University. He currently
lives in Boston with his wife and son.
When doing a book tour over the summer, Talarigo was encouraged by
advisory board
member and novelist Colum McCann to join the
program’s faculty.
What Talarigo plans to stress to fiction students is to write what you don’t
know.
“I like the idea of stepping outside of who you are and writing about
what you’re
not familiar with,” Talarigo said. “I also find that it’s a
challenge, and it forces
me to improve my writing with each book and to
go in different directions.”
Currently, Talarigo is working on a novel about Palestine, influenced by
his trips
to the region in 1990 and 1993 and plans to complete a solid
draft of the novel by
the summer. He is also doing research for a novel
about Chechnya. 

 
Etruscan Press Managing Editor
Joins Poetry Faculty

Doris Umbers

Doris Umbers, the current managing editor for Etruscan Press, has joined
the Graduate
Creative Writing Program as a poetry faculty member.
Umbers currently teaches at Empire State College and received her PhD
in English from
Binghamton University, where she edited the literary
journal Harpur Palate. Umbers also worked as an editorial assistant to

�Binghamton’s Creative Writing Program
and as an assistant to the
director of the Poetry Center in Patterson, NJ. Her poems
have appeared
in various anthologies and journals, including Columbia: A Journal of
Literature and Art and the Paterson Literary Review. She also authored,
What Persists, which was a finalist for the BkMk Press John Ciardi Prize
for Poetry.
Umbers had her first experience as a faculty member in January when
she stayed on
campus to experience the 8-day residency. “Having heard
of the residency before joining
Etruscan Press, I was delighted to be able
to experience it not only as a managing
editor, as I did the previous year,
but also as a member of the creative writing faculty,”
she said.
She adds that she noticed a real sense of community among the faculty
members and
writers and looks forward to working with students who are
“self-motivated, who can
work outside the classroom and bring that living
to their writing.”
Students working with Umbers can expect to learn about linguistics and
nature and
how they influence poetry. “The endangerment of our
biological environment is in part
caused by language. I bring that learning
to my own poetry as well as my teaching,”
Umbers said.
She also wants to stress to students the importance of revision and
patience in the
writing process, which she learned from working on her
manuscript and trying to get
it published. “One of the more important
things I can bring to the program is the
idea of a poet’s work as a lifetime
of work, a continuum, and the patience such a
view requires—not just
patience but the resolve to work tirelessly despite the ever
changing
world of publishing,” Umbers said.
Students will also be able to approach her about opportunities with
Etruscan Press,
which is housed in the creative writing office of Wilkes
University. The press offers
internships in all aspects of the publishing
world. Umbers would also like to share
with students the work of the
poets the press publishes, including William Heyen and
H.L. Hix, both
National Book Award finalists.

 
 Student Profle: Rev. Raphael Ezeh

�Rev. Raphael Ezeh

M.A. student Rev. Raphael Ezeh is proof that the low-residency Graduate
Creative Writing
Program of Wilkes University extends beyond the
borders of the United States.
 Ezeh was born in Umodioka Village, located in southeast Nigeria, and
moved to the
United States nine years ago as part of a missionary
congregation called the Missionary
Society of St. Paul of Nigeria. He
worked in a regional headquarters in Houston for
a year, before being
reassigned to New Orleans and later Chicago, where he currently
resides
and works as the pastor of Corpus Christi Church in the city’s  south side.
 
“Mostly, I do what every pastor in a Catholic parish does – minister to
parishioners,
celebrate the sacraments, work with various ministries in
the parish and work with
the administration of the parish and parish
facilities,” Ezeh said.
 
When searching for creative writing programs, Ezeh did a simple Internet
search and
discovered the program at Wilkes. He found it appealing not
only because of its low-residency
aspect, but also because it was one of
the few programs he found that offered poetry,
fiction and screenwriting
as areas of study.
 
Ezeh’s faith and experience of two cultures have had a direct influence
on his creative
thesis, a screenplay and novel he’s working on about a
boy named Jamar who struggles
to overcome poverty. The screenplay
and novel are set in a Nigerian village and also
Chicago, tracing Jamar’s
journey.
 
“I believe that people in Africa and the Western World can learn a lot from
each other,”
Ezeh said. “I wanted to bring aspects of Nigerian and
American cultures and lifestyles
together.”
 
The family theme that runs through Ezeh’s thesis is also a reflection of
his home
culture. “In my culture, immediate and extended family
relationships and communal
spirit run very deep and play vital roles in
everyone’s lives,” he said. “I see a
lot of individualism here in America.”
 
Ezeh is uncertain how long he will be living in the United States, but he
does know
any transfer to another country by his missionary organization

�would not happen until
a few years, allowing him to complete the
graduate program.
 
 
Faculty Notes
Marlon James
Marlon James’ second novel, The Book of Night Women, will be
published in February by Riverhead Press. The book focuses on the
story
of Lilith, a Jamaican slave who works on a sugar plantation at the
end of the 18th Century, and The Night Women, a group of slaves plotting
a revolt.
Michael Mailer
The Lodger, a remake of Alfred Hitchcock’s 1927 film produced by
Michael Mailer, will be released
on DVD on February 10. The movie stars
Simon Baker, Rachel Leigh Cook and Hope Davis
and follows the story
of a modern serial killer emulating Jack the Ripper.
David Poyer
David Poyer’s latest novel, The Weapon, was published in November by
St. Martin’s Press. The book is the 11th in his Dan Lenson series.
 
 Student Notes
Chris Bullard
M.A. student Chris Bullard had two poems, “Million Dollar Movie” and
“Godzilla Agonistes”
published in the Popular Culture section of the
winter 2008-2009 issue of the journal
Umbrella.
Richard Fellinger
M.F.A. student Richard Fellinger had a short story, “A Completely New
Life,” accepted
for publication in an upcoming issue of The Potomac
Review. It will be the fourth story published from his rust-belt short story
collection.
Carol MacAllister
M.A. student Carol MacAllister’s short story, “Red Light,” was short-listed
in the
2008 Christmas Chiller contest in the U.K.

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                    <text>About Wilkes

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Revise This - August 2009

Revise This!

2017
2018
REVISE THIS ARCHIVES

Revise This! November 2019

Contents:
Norman Mailer's Home Transformed to Writer's Colony | Lawrence
Schiller Joins Advisory Board
Jeff Talarigo Makes Noteable Book List Student Profile: Alysha Haran |
Faculty Notes |  Student Notes

Norman Mailer's Home Transformed to Writer's
Colony

Brick Dedicated to Wilkes

Revise This! Archives

n


 2009

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�Prior to Norman Mailer’s death in 2007, his friends and colleagues,
J. Michael Lennon and Lawrence Schiller, wanted to do something to
honor his legacy.
Lennon and Schiller, both advisory board members of Wilkes University’s
Graduate Creative
Writing Program, contemplated having a chair at a
university endowed in Mailer’s name.
But when Mailer seemed
uninterested in the proposal, Lennon, Schiller and Mailer’s
family decided
to launch the Norman Mailer Writers Colony at Mailer’s house in
Provincetown,
Mass.
Mailer, the first advisory board member of the creative writing program,
and his wife,
novelist Norris Church Mailer, started coming to
Provincetown in 1983. They spent
much more time there throughout the
1990s, according to Schiller, executive director
of the colony. 
“The house had become part of the town’s cultural heritage,” Schiller
said. “Norman
often said that Provincetown had become for him what
Key West and Cuba were for Hemingway.”
The colony is fitting to Mailer’s legacy because he regularly provided
guidance to
beginning writers and always wrote back to them if they sent
him a letter, according
to Lennon, Mailer’s biographer. Writers will now
have the chance to stay at his house
and work one-on-one with wellpublished writers and editors through the fellowship
program and
workshops.
“He always felt that as a writer, he had to give back and should never
ignore an emerging
writer,” said Lennon. He added that when Mailer’s
house was cleaned out last summer,
hundreds of manuscripts by other
writers were found.
 
The first seven fellows accepted to the colony will arrive at the house on
July 5.
William Kennedy, also an advisory board member of the creative
writing program, Don
DeLillo Doris Kearns Goodwin, and editors from
The New Yorker, Playboy, The New York Review of Books and Random
House Publishers will be there to offer writing advice and discuss their
careers.
 
The workshops are a separate program from the fellows and require a
payment from participants.
These short courses are geared towards
intermediate and advanced writers and have
specializations such as
writing biographies and new journalism. 
What the workshops have in common, however, is that they all
incorporate Mailer’s
work or different aspects of his life in the
curriculum. They will be taught by people
who knew Mailer, including
Lennon and Kaylie Jones, a fiction faculty member of the
creative writing

�program.
“I loved Norman and I am proud to be involved in this project,” said
Jones. “I’ll
be teaching a week-long workshop on memoir writing. I have
wonderful students and
am looking forward to the experience.”
In addition, the colony will also give annual awards to emerging writers.
In association
with the Provincetown Arts Press, the colony presented the
first ever Normal Mailer
Cape Cod Writing Award for Exceptional Writing
to Salvatore Scibona on June 6. Scibona
is the author of The End, a
finalist for a National Book Award. The colony, in collaboration with the
National
Council of Teachers of English, will also sponsor the Norman
Mailer National Writing
Awards for college and high school students. 
For more information about the colony, visit www.nmwcolony.org, or
www.wilkes.edu/creativewriting.

Lawrence Schiller Joins Advisory Board

Lawrence Schiller

Novelist, photojournalist, screenwriter and director Lawrence Schiller is
the latest
member to join the Advisory Board for the Graduate Creative
Writing Program of Wilkes
University. 
Schiller grew up outside of San Diego, Calif. and has worked for Life
magazine, Paris Match, The Sunday Times, Newsweek, The Saturday
Evening Post and other publications as a photojournalist.
He was also a close friend to Norman Mailer, the program’s first ever
advisory board
member, and is currently the executive director of the
Norman Mailer Writers Colony
in Provincetown, Mass. He was asked to
join the advisory board by program co-founder
and advisory board
member J. Michael Lennon.
“Mike Lennon, who has been a close friend of mine for a number of
years, introduced
me to this aspect of education, which I was not

�involved in first-hand,” said Schiller.
“As time went on, Mike thought my
ideas could aid the university, even though I don’t
come from a strict
education background.”
“In all ways, Mr. Schiller represents the ideal Advisory Board member,”
said Program
Director Bonnie Culver. “Our program is designed for
working, producing writers. Mr.
Mailer advised us at the beginning of the
program to make this program less about
a degree and all about the craft
and business of writing. Our graduating students
have their theses read
by outside readers who are agents, editors, publishers, or
producers
such as Mr. Schiller. It is that industry hands-on learning that makes our
M.A./M.F.A. unique.”
Along with writing his own novels, Schiller has worked with other writers
on their
novels, including Mailer’s The Executioner’s Song. He has also
directed seven motion pictures and miniseries for television. The
adaptation
of The Executioner’s Song and Peter the Great won Emmys.
He is also a consultant to NBC news and has written for the New Yorker.
In addition, Schiller serves on the executive board of the Norman Mailer
Writers
Colony. 

Jeff Talarigo Makes Notable Book List

Jeff Talarigo

Wilkes-Barre, Penn. – Jeff Talarigo, a fiction faculty member of Wilkes
University’s
Graduate Creative Writing Program, landed on the American
Library Association’s Notable
Book List of 2009 for The Ginseng Hunter,
his second novel. 
The winners were chosen by the Notable Books Council, which includes
librarians and
academics from across the country. The award makes
available to readers a list of
25 books of fiction, nonfiction and poetry that
the council considers to be well-written
and important.
“I would say five out of my ten favorite novels are on past lists. Having my

�name
even mentioned amongst these people is a great honor,” Talarigo
said.
Authors of the selected titles will be invited to speak at the Library Tastes
Breakfast
at the ALA Annual Conference in July. Talarigo, a resident of
Boston, says if he is
invited, he will definitely attend.
The Ginseng Hunter takes place in contemporary China, along the
Tumen River, which separates China from
North Korea. The book follows
the plight of North Koreans who have escaped their country
by crossing
the river.
Talarigo visited the river in 2003 for research, and was surprised at how
rural the
area is. “It’s the most accessible place for refugees to cross,” he
said. “It’s dangerous,
but very barren. There are so few people there.”
His next book will focus on Lebanon during the civil war in 1982 and the
story of
a Palestinian woman who becomes a nurse in Beirut. The story
will also focus on the
Gaza Strip, where Talarigo visited in the early
1990s. Talarigo hopes to complete
a solid draft by the end of the year.

 Student Profle: Alysha Haran

Alysha Haran

Most of the students enrolled in the Graduate Creative Writing Program
of Wilkes University
have the luxury of completing their school work in a
comfortable room. But for Alysha
Haran, a Navy lieutenant, her writing is
often produced while onboard her ship in
the middle of the ocean.
Haran works as a surface warfare officer onboard the USS Pinckney,
home ported out
of San Diego. Many nights, she stands watch as fleet
officer of the deck; otherwise,
her job consists of driving the ship in a
battle formation as part of the NIMITZ Strike
Group.
Haran is responsible for the safety of navigation, engineering, and
weapons employment
for air and surface/subsurface defense. Haran also
serves as the ship’s electrical
officer and assistant chief engineer.

�She heard about the graduate program through a simple Internet search
for online degrees.
Originally from San Rafael, Ca., she has experience
working in the film business.
She worked as a line producer in Los
Angeles for eight years where she mostly worked
on commercials, but
her role expanded into feature work at the end of the career. 
During that period, she was scheduled to board one of the flights that
crashed into
one of the World Trade Centers on September 11, 2001.
The attack encouraged her to
join the Navy. “It was a last minute change
of travel plans that kept me from being
a passenger on one of the planes
that struck the towers on September 11th,” she said. “It was the impetus
for joining the Navy; I raised my right hand thirty
days later.”
While other students have fewer challenges completing an online
graduate degree, Haran
often has to deal with sluggish technology. “Most
of the time I’m doing school work
I’m literally in the middle of the ocean,”
she said. “We are dependent on satellites
for connectivity, and it’s slow at
best.”
But Haran stresses her job has been an incredible inspiration in her
writing. She
plans to use her experience, including deployment to the
Arabian Gulf and the Horn
of Africa, as material for a book.
 “The six to seven month deployment will give me the structure and frame
of reference
I need to be able to talk about the story of sailors, how we
come together to form
a crew and what we go through collectively and
individually during a combat deployment,”
Haran said.
She has also been deployed to the Philippines and port visits have
included Chennai,
India, Kota Kinablu, Malaysia, Singapore and Hong
Kong. She will return from deployment
shortly before the January
residency. 
Faculty/Staff Notes
Philip Brady’s memoir, By Heart: Reflections of a Rust Belt Bard, has
been chosen as Foreword Magazine’s Book of the Year for 2008 in the
category for essays.
Christine Gelineau’s manuscript, Appetite for the Devine, has been
selected as the Editor’s Choice in the McGovern Series of the Ashland
Poetry
Press. The manuscript is slated to be published in April 2010, and
will be her second
book with Ashland.
Kaylie Jones’ memoir, Lies My Mother Never Told Me, has been named
one of the hottest summer reads by the website The Daily Beast,
www.thedailybeast.com. The book will officially be released on Aug. 25.

�Assistant Director Jim Warner has joined the staff of Etruscan Press and
will serve as the business manager and
associate editor. The press is
housed in the offices of the creative writing program
and has published
two National Book Award finalists – Chromatic by H.L. Hix and Shoah
Train by William Heyen.   
 
Student/Alumni Notes
M.A. student Chris Bullard’s poetry manuscript, You Must Not Know
Too Much, has been selected by Plan B Press, www.planbpress.com, as
the winner of their 2009 chapbook contest. The press, based out of
Philadelphia,
also plans to publish the book.
M.F.A. student Richard Fellinger was awarded the annual Beverly Hiscox
Scholarship during the June residency. The
scholarship was established
by Hiscox’s children to honor her service to Wilkes University. The
students recipient is a non-traditional student who who demonstrates
need and writing
talent.
Alum Andrea Janov had three poems accepted for publication in the allpunk rock issue of Chiron Review. The issue will be out in December.
 M.A. student Carol MacAllister will have an article published in the
boating magazine Living Abroad. The article, “Boating Superstitions,” will
be published in the September edition.
 
M.F.A. student Taylor Polites was awarded the annual Norris Church
Mailer scholarship at the June residency. The
scholarship is given to
promising, emerging writers enrolled in the program.

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                    <text>About Wilkes

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Revise This - November 2009

Revise This!

2017
2018
REVISE THIS ARCHIVES

Revise This! November 2019

Contents:
2009 James Jones First Novel Fellowship Winner Announced
Jim Warner joins Etruscan Press | Student Profile: Chris Bullard
Wilkes University Awards Scholarships | Faculty Notes |  Student Notes 

2009 James Jones First Novel Fellowship Winner
Announced

Tena Russ of            Riverwoods, II

Revise This! Archives

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 2009

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�Wilkes-Barre, Penn. –Tena Russ, of Riverwoods, Il., won first place for
her novel
After Paradise in the 18th Annual James Jones First Novel
Fellowship, co-sponsored by the Graduate Creative
Writing Department
of Wilkes University and the James Jones Literary Society.
Russ was awarded $10,000. This year’s contest drew 674 submissions,
and this was not
the first time Russ had entered her manuscript in the
competition. 
“I actually entered the contest several times and never made it to the
second level.
I almost didn’t even enter the contest this year,” she said. 
Russ was shocked to learn that her manuscript, which has undergone
several revisions,
finally won. She was notified that she won by novelist
Nina Solomon, a judge for the
competition and a faculty member of the
creative writing program. 
“It was like Ed McMahon just came to my door. When Nina called, I
literally got goose
bumps,” Russ said.
Russ was not always heavily involved in writing. Following her studies at
Northwestern
University and the American Academy of Art, she worked
as a portrait artist.
She started writing regularly after she joined a local writers group and
took an additional
writing workshop at Northwestern University. The
professor brought in published authors
at the end of the semester, and
the experience encouraged Russ to become a writer. 
“The challenge of learning to write has been so rewarding in many ways,”
Russ said.
“I love every part of it. I do it every day now.” 
Prior to winning the James Jones competition, Russ’s manuscript won
first place in
the Novel-in-Progress category of the William FaulknerWilliam Wisdom Writing Creative
Writing Competition of 2008. 
Her second novel will focus on Sam, a secondary character in After
Paradise who is a Vietnam War veteran, suffering from Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder. The
novel is in the prewriting stages. She is also still
revising After Paradise. 
 Russ also volunteers in a literacy program for young children, The
Canine Reading
Buddies. Once a month, she and Cami, her German
Shepherd, meet with children at a
library where the children enjoy
reading to Russ and her dog.The submission deadline
for entries is

�March 1 of each year.
The runner-up winners of the James Jones competition were Michael
Schiavone, of Gloucester,
Mass., for his manuscript Call Me When You
Land, and Christine Wade, of New York, for her manuscript Seven Locks.
They were each awarded $750. 
The James Jones Fellowship was established in 1992 to “honor the spirit
of unblinking
honesty, determination, and insight into modern culture as
exemplified by (the writings
of) James Jones.” Requests for guidelines
should be sent, along with a stamped, self-address
envelope, to James
Jones First Novel Fellowship, c/o The Graduate Creative Writing
Department, Wilkes University, 84 West South Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA
18766, or via
e-mail to jamesjonesfirstnovel@wilkes.edu

Jim Warner joins Etruscan Press
Jim Warner, Assistant Director of the Graduate
Creative Writing Program of Wilkes
University,
has been named business manager and
associate editor of Etruscan Press.
Warner, a published poet, said his duties with
Etruscan will involve community outreach,
managing finances, and organizing the office to
ensure it runs more efficiently. The
press is
Jim Warner,
Assistant Director of
the Graduate
Creative Writing
Program at Wilkes

housed in the creative writing offices.
“I’ve always wanted to be involved in the
publishing industry. It’s a new challenge
and a
new world to me. There’s so much untapped
potential here,” Warner said.
Etruscan just signed a new three-year contract to

remain on campus, and Warner hopes
to strengthen the relationship
between the university and the press through community
outreach
projects, including working with the downtown Wilkes-Barre Barnes &amp;
Noble
to have book launches. The press will also eventually reach out to
local high schools
to start programs in the arts.
Warner made clear that his duties with the creative writing program will
still be
his top priority, and he described the work he now does with
Etruscan as a “part-time
job” done off-hours. However, the press is tied
into the creative writing program
in several ways. Its current graduate
assistants are enrolled in the program, and
some of Etruscan’s founders
and directors also teach in the program, including poet
Philip Brady and
fiction writer Robert Mooney. 

�The press will continue to publish about eight manuscripts a year in the
genres of
poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Etruscan will eventually consider
publishing more
manuscripts a year, according to Warner.
Warner’s own writing has appeared in the poetry journals Drunken Boat,
Word Riot, Cause &amp; Effect, and other publications. His first collection of
poems, Too Bad It’s Poetry, was published in 2007 by Paper Kite Press,
located in Kingston. His follow-up book,
Jim Warner’s Second Book, will
be published by Paper Kite in December.  

Student Profile: Chris Bullard
Some of the most well-known poets often balanced their writing with
other professions.
William Carlos Williams was a doctor. T.S. Elliott was
a banker. Chris Bullard, one
of the Wilkes University Graduate Creative
Writing Program’s most well-published poets,
balances his writing with
his duties as an administrative judge for the Social Security
Administration in Vorhees, N.J.
Bullard, who resides in Collingswood, NJ, has had his poetry has been
published by
some of the most prominent literary journals in the country,
including Green Mountains Review, Nimrod, and Atlanta Review. His
work is also forthcoming in Rattle, and his chapbook, You Must Not Know
Too Much, won the 2009 Plan B Press Chapbook Contest. As a result,
Bullard was given a cash
award and 50 printed copies of the book.
His interest in poetry predates his interest in law. He’s been writing poetry
since
high school, when he served as the editor of the school’s literary
magazine. His influences
early on included Edgar Allan Poe and Robert
Frost, but his influences broadened when
he attended the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia as an undergraduate.
 Once he graduated, he knew he had to make a serious decision about
his writing career.
“At the end of college, I either had to go to writing
school or do something else
with my life,” he said. “It was easier for me to
ask my parents for money for a career
in law than for a famous writers’
school.”
Bullard added that he also had no interest in becoming an academic, a
career for many
poets. The world of academia seemed too political to
him.
But balancing poetry with his law career wasn’t as easy as Bullard had
hoped it would
be. He stopped writing after law school until he was about
40. “I had reached a point
with my poetry where I couldn’t think of
anything interesting to do. I also wasn’t
in contact with any poets,” he
said.

�But he eventually started writing again, once his career situation changed
and he
had more time. He also hired private poetry tutors to strengthen
his work.
Now, Bullard’s career involves hearing claims of people who believe they
are disabled
and deserve Social Security funds. But his job has not
influenced his work. “I have
written I think only one poem about my work,
though I have certainly seen the human
condition. I pretty much have
heard everyone’s beefs with the world.”
He became interested in the Wilkes program because he and his wife
have a home in
the area, and he was impressed by the quality of the
faculty. He is now completing
his M.F.A. and has expanded his own
knowledge of contemporary poetry, due his work
with the poetry faculty.
“I tend to reread people I like, but the program has definitely brought me
up to date,”
Bullard said. “When I started working with Christine
[Gelineau], she had me read all
of these people I had not heard of but
have been impressed with.”
He recently completed two full-length collections of poems, which he’s
been submitting
to presses and contests. One of the books is entitled
Back and features all formal verse, and the other book, Under Growth,
includes the poems from You Must Not Know Too Much and additional
work.

 Wilkes University Awards Scholarship to Taylor
Polites and Richard Fellinger
Wilkes University awarded the 2009-2010 Norris Church Mailer
Scholarship to fiction
writing major Taylor Polites, of Provincetown, Mass.
, and the 2009-2010 Beverly Blakeslee
Hiscox ’58 Scholarship to fiction
writing major Richard Fellinger, of Camp Hill, Pa. 
The Norris Church Mailer Scholarship was established in 2004 by Mr.
Norman Mailer, husband of the novelist Norris Church
Mailer; other
friends; and a gift from the estate of the late Gordon Smith. It is
awarded
annually to a graduate student in the creative writing program who has
both
artistic promise and financial need. Selection is made by a faculty
committee appointed
by the director of the creative writing program.
The Beverly Blakeslee Hiscox ’58 Scholarship was established by her
children with
love and affection to honor their mother’s dedicated service
to Wilkes University
as trustee from 1986 - 2003. First preference is given
to a non-traditional student
with family responsibilities.

�Faculty/Staff Notes
Phil Brady’s memoir, By Heart: Reflections of a Rust Belt Bard, was
chosen by Foreword Magazine as Essay Book of the Year.
Program co-founder and director Bonnie Culver’s play, “The Cell,” and
Jean Klein’s play, “The Test,” will run on Nov. 13 and Nov. 14 and Nov.
20 and Nov. 21 at The Venue
at 35th in Norfolk, VA. For more info, visit
http://www.venue-35.com.
Program co-founder and advisory board member J. Michael Lennon’s
interview with fellow advisory board member Lawrence Schiller was
published in the
third issue of The Mailer Review in October. The
interview focuses on the origins of Norman Mailer’s Oswald’s Tale,
including the successful effort to convince the Russian KGB to reveal
their tapes
of Lee Harvey Oswald in Minsk in the early 1960s.
Two of Christine Gelineau’s poems, “Socanasett” and “Physical,” will be
published in the next issue of Paterson Literary Review, and her essay
“Cops” will be published in the next issue of Florida Review as a finalist
for their 2009 Editors’ Award in Creative Nonfiction. Her next book
of
poems, Appetite for the Divine, is forthcoming in April from Ashland
Poetry Press.
Advisory Board Member Colum McCann’s novel, Let the Great World
Spin, has been shortlisted for the fiction prize for this year’s National
Book Awards.
Nancy McKinley’s story, “Yellow Tape,” will appear in the 2010 Main
Street Rag Short Fiction Anthology: Coming HomeTheme, and her story,
“Goat Meat,” will appear in the 2010 Main Street Rag Short Fiction
Anthology: Commute Theme.
David Poyer’s novel, The Crisis, will be published on Nov. 8 by St.
Martin’s/Macmillian, and his novel, The Weapon, will be published as a
soft cover edition on Dec. 1.
Neil Shepard has four poems forthcoming in literary journals. “Physician
in the Dark” will be published
in the Harvard Review, “Pleasant Weather
in Cornwall” in North American Review, “If I have to Die, and I Have To”
in Notre Dame Review, and “Iced Tea in Deer Isle” in Chautauqua
Literary Review.
Little Theatre Players will present "Imagine," a short one-act and a
triology of new
mini-plays by playwright Jan Quackenbush at Broome
Community College's Little Theatre, November 20, 21 at 7 p.m.
Student/Alumni Notes
M.F.A. student Richard Fellinger’s story, “Flashbacks,” has been

�accepted for publication by Audience Magazine. It will be the eighth story
published from his rust-belt themed collection.
M.A. student Patricia Florio’s story, “My Coney Island Baby,” was
published by Word Fountain, a literary magazine run out of Ousterhout
Free Library in Wilkes-Barre.
Alum Andrea Janov, M.A. student Carol MacAllister, and M.F.A.
student Brian Fanelli have poems forthcoming in the December issue of
Chiron Review.
Alum Dawn Leas’ poetry chapbook, I Know When to Keep Quiet, was
accepted for publication by Finishing Line Press.
M.A. student Gale Martin received a Pushcart Prize nomination from The
Greensilk Journal for a short story published in spring of 2009 entitled
“On Hens and Elephants and
Being like Them.”
M.A. student Dara Morowa Yejide Madzimoyo’s story, “Agnes,” was
published in the September issue of Adiorondack Review, and her poem,
“Your Grave,” will be published in the autumn/winter edition of Zócalo
Press’ "Age" chapbook series.

 
 
 
 
 

Quick Links
Career Development
Campus Safety


and Internships




Centers &amp; Institutes


Online Programs




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Make A Gift

�Programs


E.S. Farley Library




Human Resources


Jobs at Wilkes




Offices &amp; Administration
Accessibility Statement 

Financial Aid


Adobe Acrobat® Reader


Registrar's Office


Finance Office





Investor Relations




Student Work Study
Jobs
Veterans Services

Visit Quick Links
Schedule a Visit
Parking Information
Virtual Tour
Campus Map

Wilkes University
84 West South Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18766
1-800-WILKES-U
Contact Us
Wilkes University ©

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Revise This - April 2010

Revise This!

2017
2018
Revise This! REVISE THIS ARCHIVES
Contents:
Colum McCann Wins National Book Award |
Marlon James Named Finalist for National Book Critics Circle Award
Cecilia Galante Joins Creative Writing Faculty | Page To Stage
Faculty Notes | Student Notes 

Colum McCann Wins National Book Award

Colum McCann, winner National Book Award

November 2019

Revise This! Archives

n


 2010

n
n

�Colum McCann, a member of the advisory board for the Wilkes
University Graduate Creative
Writing Program, has won the National
Book Award for his novel Let the Great World Spin. The award was
presented on Nov. 18 in New York City. The award – considered one
of
literature’s most prestigious – is presented in the categories of fiction,
nonfiction,
poetry and young people’s literature.
As a member of the Wilkes creative writing program’s advisory board,
McCann has provided
input on course content and curriculum, performed
readings from his work at its residencies,
and been a thesis reader for
degree candidates in the program.
Let The Great World Spin takes place in August 1974, when a mysterious
tightrope walker is running, dancing,
leaping between the Twin Towers, a
quarter mile above the ground. It chronicles the
lives of a group of New
Yorkers, weaving their separate stories against the backdrop
of the
tightrope walker’s feat.
Some of McCann’s other novels include Zoli, Dancer, and This Side of
Brightness. His fiction has been published in 30 languages and has
appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, GQ, Paris Review,
Bomb and other places. He has written for numerous publications
including The Irish Times, Die Zeit, La Republicca, Paris Match, The New
York Times, the Guardian and the Independent.
In 2003 he was named Esquire magazine's "Writer of the Year." Other
awards and honors
include a Pushcart Prize, the Rooney Prize, the
Hennessy Award for Irish Literature,
the Irish Independent Hughes and
Hughes/Sunday Independent Novel of the Year 2003,
and the 2002
Ireland Fund of Monaco Princess Grace Memorial Literary Award. His
short
film, “Everything in this Country Must,” directed by Gary McKendry,
was nominated
for a 2005 Academy Award.
McCann lives in New York City, where he teaches creative writing at
Hunter College.
The mission of the National Book Foundation and the National Book
Awards is to celebrate
the best of American literature, expand its
audience, and to enhance the cultural
value of good writing in America.
Marlon James Named Finalist for National Book Critics Circle Award

�Marlon James, Finalist for National Book Critics Circle Award in
fiction

Marlon James’ novel The Book of Night Women was a finalist for a
National Book Critics
Circle Award in fiction by the National Book Critics
Circle.
The finalists were announced in January, and the winners were
announced on March 11. 
Other finalists included memoir writer Mary
Karr, former U.S. poet laureate Louise
Glück, and former National Book
Award winner William T. Vollmann. The other fiction
nominees included
Hilary Mantel, Jayne Anne Phillips, and Michelle Huneven. Mantel
won
the fiction category for her novel Wolf Hall.
The National Book Critics Circle, founded in 1974, is a nonprofit
organization with
around 600 members, "book reviewers who are
interested in honoring quality writing
and communicating with one
another about common concerns."
James worked on The Book of Night Women while he was enrolled in the
creative writing program. He also teaches at Macalester
College in
Minnesota.
Cecilia Galante Joins Creative Writing Faculty

Cecilia Galante, newest member of Creative Writing Faculty
Young adult novelist Cecilia Galante has joined the faculty of the
Graduate Creative
Writing Program.
She is the author of five young adult novels. Her first, The Patron Saint of
Butterflies, was selected as a Young Adult Book of the Year by the
Northeast Independent Booksellers
Association, a Top Ten Pick for 2008
by Amazon, and a Recommended Read for Teens on
Oprah's website.
Another one of her books, Hershey Herself, will be translated into
Polish
in 2010. Her other novels include Willowood, and The Sweetness of Salt,
which will be published in 2011. She has BA from King’s College and an
MFA in Creative
Writing from Goddard College.

�Her first interactions with the faculty and students came in January when
she attended
the residency. “It was thrilling. I had no idea that I was
going to be among such
a crowd of intellectuals and have peers that are
so successful,” she said.
Galante is no stranger to teaching. She spent years teaching high school
English in
the Wilkes-Barre area, though she is currently on sabbatical.
But when it comes to
teaching in the Graduate Creative Writing Program,
she plans to use what she learned
as a graduate student at Goddard.
“I’m trying to borrow more from my experience as a student. My teachers
at Goddard
were incredibly supportive and astute,” she said.  “I’ve been
able to draw from that
experience and insert criticism in a way that
doesn’t kill the spirit.”
Besides teaching, Galante is also hard at work on her first adult novel,
and the process
has not always been easy. “It’s been incredibly daunting.
For young adult, you’re
allowed to write more simply and straightforward,”
she said. “So, I was getting caught
up in sounding like an adult and 
sounding smart enough.”
Galante added that the process has been easier lately, and she’s
confident the book
will stand on its own. She has to submit a manuscript
by the end of April.
Though this will be Galante’s first adult novel, she admitted that she was
not initially
attracted to the young adult genre.
“I wasn’t even familiar there was a YA genre when I wrote my first book,
The Patron Saint of Butterflies. My agent said we were going to market it
as young adult, and I was devastated. I
didn’t think it was young adult,”
she said. “I sat back and waited, and she was right.
It became a
successful young adult book and a crossover book. It appeals to adults
and young adults at the same time.”

Bonnie Culver Helps Area High
School Students Take Writen
Work from "Page to Stage"

�Bonnie Culver
Students in four northeast Pennsylvania school districts have a chance to
become playwrights
in a special program being piloted by Bonnie Culver,
director of the Graduate Creative
Writing Program. Culver worked with
two graduate students, Sarah Pugh and Cory Brin,
on a master of fine
arts project developing a pilot program, “Page to Stage.” Culver
is
working as guest artist in four high schools – Hanover Area, Hazleton,
Tunkhannock
and Wyoming Valley West  – to teach basic elements of
playwriting to students.
Culver was in the schools Tuesdays and Wednesdays from Feb. 2 to
March 25. Each student
presented a 10-minute play. One or two plays
from each school will be chosen to be
presented at the Fine Arts Fiesta in
May.
Wilkes University’s long-term goal is to replicate this with fiction, poetry,
film,
and nonfiction with creative writing students and faculty serving as
guest artists
in area schools with a final arts festival on campus.
Faculty/Staff Notes
Christine Gelineau’s essay “Cops” was published in the winter issue of
The Florida Review as a runner
up in their Editors’ Award in Nonfiction.
Rashidah Ismaili Abu-Bakr’s poetry was published in Bending the Bow,
a collection of love poems from Africa, published by Southern Illinois
Press.
Sara Pritchard's story "Sip the Wine" was published in Vol. 76, No. 1 of
New Letters (Dec. 2009).
Her story "Two Studies in Entropy" won a
Pushcart Prize and is included in the 2010
PUSHCART PRIZE XXXIV
BEST OF THE SMALL PRESSES anthology, and her story "Help
Wanted:
Female" is forthcoming in Vol. 6 (2010) of The Tusculum
Review. Sara will be reading
at the River Festival of Books in Huntington,
West Virginia, on Friday, April 16,
2010.
Student/Alumni Notes
M.A. student Amy Archer had part of her memoir entitled “Bad

�Connection” published in the December issue
of the Journal of Truth and
Consequences.
M.A. student Cindy Dlugolecki’s play, “Violet Oakley Unveiled,” was
showcased at Villanova University on Thursday,
March 18. The onewoman show helped celebrate Women’s History Month. Violet Oakley
was the first woman in art history to paint murals in a public building, and
her home
and studio were only a few miles from Villanova’s campus,
according to Dlugolecki.
Dlugolecki, the actress, director, and tech team
were also the guest of five different
departments at Villanova, including
Women and Gender Studies, History, and Art.
M.F.A. student Brian Fanelli’s poem “Freshman Year” was published in
the February issue of My Favorite Bullet.
http://www.interiornoisepress.com/0010_FANELLI_FreshmanYear.html,
and his poems “In a Club’s Cracked Mirror” and “Why I Said No” were
published in
the March issue of Word Riot
http://www.wordriot.org/archives/976.
Alum Pete Kaszyk’s short story, “You’re Not My Father,” was accepted
for publication by Kerlak Publishing
for inclusion in its WTF Anthologies
edition. Publication date is pending.
M.A. student Kimberly Loomis-Bennet’s poem, “It Is Sweet and
Decorous To Be Poor in One’s Country,” was published in the
Winter
2010 issue of The November 3rd Club.
http://www.november3rdclub.com/2010/02-2010/poetry/loomisbennett.html
 

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Campus Safety


and Internships




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Online Programs




Programs


E.S. Farley Library




Human Resources


Jobs at Wilkes




Online Nursing

Offices &amp; Administration
Accessibility Statement 

Financial Aid


Adobe Acrobat® Reader


Make A Gift

�Registrar's Office


Finance Office





Investor Relations




Student Work Study
Jobs
Veterans Services

Visit Quick Links
Schedule a Visit
Parking Information
Virtual Tour
Campus Map

Wilkes University
84 West South Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18766
1-800-WILKES-U
Contact Us
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                    <text>Revise This - October 2010 - Wilkes University

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Revise This - October 2010
 

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REVISE THIS ARCHIVES
Contents:

Revise This! Archives

Colum McCann Wins National Book Award |
Marlon James Named Finalist for National Book Critics Circle Award
Cecilia Galante Joins Creative Writing Faculty | Page To Stage
Faculty Notes | Student Notes 

Colum McCann Wins National Book Award

https://www.wilkes.edu/...masters-programs/creative-writing-ma-mfa/about-our-students/revise-this/archives/2010/revise-this-october-2010.aspx[3/2/21, 9:54:32 AM]

�Revise This - October 2010 - Wilkes University

Colum McCann, winner National Book Award
Colum McCann, a member of the advisory board for the Wilkes
University Graduate Creative
Writing Program, has won the National
Book Award for his novel Let the Great World Spin. The award was
presented on Nov. 18 in New York City. The award – considered one
of
literature’s most prestigious – is presented in the categories of fiction,
nonfiction,
poetry and young people’s literature.
As a member of the Wilkes creative writing program’s advisory board,
McCann has provided
input on course content and curriculum, performed
readings from his work at its residencies,
and been a thesis reader for
degree candidates in the program.
Let The Great World Spin takes place in August 1974, when a mysterious
tightrope walker is running, dancing,
leaping between the Twin Towers, a
quarter mile above the ground. It chronicles the
lives of a group of New
Yorkers, weaving their separate stories against the backdrop
of the
tightrope walker’s feat.
Some of McCann’s other novels include Zoli, Dancer, and This Side of
Brightness. His fiction has been published in 30 languages and has
appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, GQ, Paris Review,
Bomb and other places. He has written for numerous publications
including The Irish Times, Die Zeit, La Republicca, Paris Match, The New
York Times, the Guardian and the Independent.
In 2003 he was named Esquire magazine's "Writer of the Year." Other
awards and honors
include a Pushcart Prize, the Rooney Prize, the
Hennessy Award for Irish Literature,
the Irish Independent Hughes and
Hughes/Sunday Independent Novel of the Year 2003,
and the 2002
Ireland Fund of Monaco Princess Grace Memorial Literary Award. His
short
film, “Everything in this Country Must,” directed by Gary McKendry,
was nominated
for a 2005 Academy Award.
McCann lives in New York City, where he teaches creative writing at
Hunter College.
The mission of the National Book Foundation and the National Book
Awards is to celebrate
the best of American literature, expand its
audience, and to enhance the cultural
value of good writing in America.

Marlon James Named Finalist for National Book
Critics Circle Award

https://www.wilkes.edu/...masters-programs/creative-writing-ma-mfa/about-our-students/revise-this/archives/2010/revise-this-october-2010.aspx[3/2/21, 9:54:32 AM]

�Revise This - October 2010 - Wilkes University

Marlon James, Finalist for National Book Critics Circle Award in
fiction

Marlon James’ novel The Book of Night Women was a finalist for a
National Book Critics
Circle Award in fiction by the National Book Critics
Circle.
The finalists were announced in January, and the winners were
announced on March 11. 
Other finalists included memoir writer Mary
Karr, former U.S. poet laureate Louise
Glück, and former National Book
Award winner William T. Vollmann. The other fiction
nominees included
Hilary Mantel, Jayne Anne Phillips, and Michelle Huneven. Mantel
won
the fiction category for her novel Wolf Hall.
The National Book Critics Circle, founded in 1974, is a nonprofit
organization with
around 600 members, "book reviewers who are
interested in honoring quality writing
and communicating with one
another about common concerns."
James worked on The Book of Night Women while he was enrolled in the
creative writing program. He also teaches at Macalester
College in
Minnesota.

Cecilia Galante Joins Creative Writing Faculty

Cecilia Galante, newest member of Creative Writing Faculty
Young adult novelist Cecilia Galante has joined the faculty of the
Graduate Creative
Writing Program.
She is the author of five young adult novels. Her first, The Patron Saint of

https://www.wilkes.edu/...masters-programs/creative-writing-ma-mfa/about-our-students/revise-this/archives/2010/revise-this-october-2010.aspx[3/2/21, 9:54:32 AM]

�Revise This - October 2010 - Wilkes University

Butterflies, was selected as a Young Adult Book of the Year by the
Northeast Independent Booksellers
Association, a Top Ten Pick for 2008
by Amazon, and a Recommended Read for Teens on
Oprah's website.
Another one of her books, Hershey Herself, will be translated into
Polish
in 2010. Her other novels include Willowood, and The Sweetness of Salt,
which will be published in 2011. She has BA from King’s College and an
MFA in Creative
Writing from Goddard College.
Her first interactions with the faculty and students came in January when
she attended
the residency. “It was thrilling. I had no idea that I was
going to be among such
a crowd of intellectuals and have peers that are
so successful,” she said.
Galante is no stranger to teaching. She spent years teaching high school
English in
the Wilkes-Barre area, though she is currently on sabbatical.
But when it comes to
teaching in the Graduate Creative Writing Program,
she plans to use what she learned
as a graduate student at Goddard.
“I’m trying to borrow more from my experience as a student. My teachers
at Goddard
were incredibly supportive and astute,” she said.  “I’ve been
able to draw from that
experience and insert criticism in a way that
doesn’t kill the spirit.”
Besides teaching, Galante is also hard at work on her first adult novel,
and the process
has not always been easy. “It’s been incredibly daunting.
For young adult, you’re
allowed to write more simply and straightforward,”
she said. “So, I was getting caught
up in sounding like an adult and 
sounding smart enough.”
Galante added that the process has been easier lately, and she’s
confident the book
will stand on its own. She has to submit a manuscript
by the end of April.
Though this will be Galante’s first adult novel, she admitted that she was
not initially
attracted to the young adult genre.
“I wasn’t even familiar there was a YA genre when I wrote my first book,
The Patron Saint of Butterflies. My agent said we were going to market it
as young adult, and I was devastated. I
didn’t think it was young adult,”
she said. “I sat back and waited, and she was right.
It became a
successful young adult book and a crossover book. It appeals to adults
and young adults at the same time.”

Bonnie Culver Helps Area High School Students
Take Writen Work from "Page to Stage"

https://www.wilkes.edu/...masters-programs/creative-writing-ma-mfa/about-our-students/revise-this/archives/2010/revise-this-october-2010.aspx[3/2/21, 9:54:32 AM]

�Revise This - October 2010 - Wilkes University

Bonnie Culver
Students in four northeast Pennsylvania school districts have a chance to
become playwrights
in a special program being piloted by Bonnie Culver,
director of the Graduate Creative
Writing Program. Culver worked with
two graduate students, Sarah Pugh and Cory Brin,
on a master of fine
arts project developing a pilot program, “Page to Stage.” Culver
is
working as guest artist in four high schools – Hanover Area, Hazleton,
Tunkhannock
and Wyoming Valley West  – to teach basic elements of
playwriting to students.
Culver was in the schools Tuesdays and Wednesdays from Feb. 2 to
March 25. Each student
presented a 10-minute play. One or two plays
from each school will be chosen to be
presented at the Fine Arts Fiesta in
May.
Wilkes University’s long-term goal is to replicate this with fiction, poetry,
film,
and nonfiction with creative writing students and faculty serving as
guest artists
in area schools with a final arts festival on campus.
Faculty/Staff Notes
Christine Gelineau’s essay “Cops” was published in the winter issue of
The Florida Review as a runner
up in their Editors’ Award in Nonfiction.
Rashidah Ismaili Abu-Bakr’s poetry was published in Bending the Bow,
a collection of love poems from Africa, published by Southern Illinois
Press.
Sara Pritchard's story "Sip the Wine" was published in Vol. 76, No. 1 of
New Letters (Dec. 2009).
Her story "Two Studies in Entropy" won a
Pushcart Prize and is included in the 2010
PUSHCART PRIZE XXXIV
BEST OF THE SMALL PRESSES anthology, and her story "Help
Wanted:
Female" is forthcoming in Vol. 6 (2010) of The Tusculum
Review. Sara will be reading
at the River Festival of Books in Huntington,
West Virginia, on Friday, April 16,
2010.
 
Student/Alumni Notes
https://www.wilkes.edu/...masters-programs/creative-writing-ma-mfa/about-our-students/revise-this/archives/2010/revise-this-october-2010.aspx[3/2/21, 9:54:32 AM]

�Revise This - October 2010 - Wilkes University

M.A. student Amy Archer had part of her memoir entitled “Bad
Connection” published in the December issue
of the Journal of Truth and
Consequences.
M.A. student Cindy Dlugolecki’s play, “Violet Oakley Unveiled,” was
showcased at Villanova University on Thursday,
March 18. The onewoman show helped celebrate Women’s History Month. Violet Oakley
was the first woman in art history to paint murals in a public building, and
her home
and studio were only a few miles from Villanova’s campus,
according to Dlugolecki.
Dlugolecki, the actress, director, and tech team
were also the guest of five different
departments at Villanova, including
Women and Gender Studies, History, and Art.
M.F.A. student Brian Fanelli’s poem “Freshman Year” was published in
the February issue of My Favorite Bullet.
http://www.interiornoisepress.com/0010_FANELLI_FreshmanYear.html,
and his poems “In a Club’s Cracked Mirror” and “Why I Said No” were
published in
the March issue of Word Riot
http://www.wordriot.org/archives/976.
Alum Pete Kaszyk’s short story, “You’re Not My Father,” was accepted
for publication by Kerlak Publishing
for inclusion in its WTF Anthologies
edition. Publication date is pending.
M.A. student Kimberly Loomis-Bennet’s poem, “It Is Sweet and
Decorous To Be Poor in One’s Country,” was published in the
Winter
2010 issue of The November 3rd Club.
http://www.november3rdclub.com/2010/02-2010/poetry/loomisbennett.html
 
 

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Campus Safety


and Internships




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Online Programs





E.S. Farley Library




Make A Gift

Online Nursing
Programs

https://www.wilkes.edu/...masters-programs/creative-writing-ma-mfa/about-our-students/revise-this/archives/2010/revise-this-october-2010.aspx[3/2/21, 9:54:32 AM]

�Revise This - October 2010 - Wilkes University

Human Resources


Jobs at Wilkes




Offices &amp; Administration
Accessibility Statement 

Financial Aid


Adobe Acrobat® Reader


Registrar's Office


Finance Office





Investor Relations




Student Work Study
Jobs
Veterans Services

Visit Quick Links
Schedule a Visit
Parking Information
Virtual Tour
Campus Map

Wilkes University
84 West South Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18766
1-800-WILKES-U
Contact Us
Wilkes University ©

e

d

c

f

https://www.wilkes.edu/...masters-programs/creative-writing-ma-mfa/about-our-students/revise-this/archives/2010/revise-this-october-2010.aspx[3/2/21, 9:54:32 AM]

�Revise This - October 2010 - Wilkes University

©

https://www.wilkes.edu/...masters-programs/creative-writing-ma-mfa/about-our-students/revise-this/archives/2010/revise-this-october-2010.aspx[3/2/21, 9:54:32 AM]

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                    <text>About Wilkes

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Revise This - December 2010

Revise This!

2017
2018
Revise This! REVISE THIS ARCHIVES
Contents:
Susan Cartsonis Joins Advisory Board | James Jones Winner Announced
Colum McCann Wins National Book Award
Marlon James Named Finalist for National Book Critics Circle Award
Cecilia Galante Joins Creative Writing Faculty | Page To Stage
Faculty Notes | Student Notes

Susan Cartsonis Joins
Advisory Board
Film producer Susan Cartsonisjoins the Advisory Board of the
Graduate Creative Writing Program.
She is a Producer and President of Storefront Pictures. In 2000, The
Hollywood Reporter named her one of the top five grossing of the year
for her film What Women Want (starring Mel Gibson) and Where the
Heart Is (staring Natalie Portman, Ashley Judd, and Sally
Field). Cartsonis was an executive
for Twentieth Century Fox for nearly a

November 2019

Revise This! Archives

n


 2010

n
n

�decade before leaving to build two successful
film companies. During her
tenure at Fox, she helped develop and supervise Nell, The Truth About
Cats and Dogs, Buffy The Vampire Slayer, and many others, including a
film adaptation of Wilkes faculty member Beverly Donofrio’s
Riding in
Cars with Boys.
 
Prior to her career at Fox, Cartsonis was an instructor for New York
University's
Dramatic Writing Program. She received her M.F.A. in
Dramatic Writing from N.Y.U.
and a Bachelor of Arts in Theatre from
U.C.L.A. Cartsonis credits her degree as instrumental
in her development
as a producer, “When you work with writers, it's invaluable to be able to
speak to them as someone
who has written screenplays and plays and
respects the creative process, struggle,
and sheer challenge of creating
something and seeing it through to completion.”
Cartsonis is no stranger to teaching. She has taught at NYU as well as
been a speaker
and graduate critique professional at UCLA, USC, and
SCAD. With such a strong connection
to academics, she is a welcome
addition to our Creative Writing Community. “Mentoring
is part of being a
producer—with writers young and old,” says Cartsonis, “Creative
writing
programs are so important in generating the next batch of talented film
makers,
novelists, and story tellers.”

James Jones Winner
Announced!
Gina Ventre of Columbus, Ohio, was awarded first place and the
$10,000 prize in the 19th Annual James Jones First Novel Fellowship
contest for her novel Moon’s Extra Mile. The competition is co-sponsored
by the Graduate Creative Writing Program of Wilkes
University and the
James Jones Literary Society. Runners-up in the competition were
David
Kim of Costa Mesa, Calif., for his manuscript Serendipity; and Laura
Walter of Lakewood, Ohio, for her manuscript Finding Opal. They were
each awarded $750.

Colum McCann Wins National Book Award

�Colum McCann, winner National Book Award
Colum McCann, a member of the advisory board for the Wilkes
University
Graduate Creative Writing Program, has won the National
Book Award for his novel Let the Great World Spin. The award was
presented on Nov. 18 in New York City. The award – considered one
of
literature’s most prestigious – is presented in the categories of fiction,
nonfiction,
poetry and young people’s literature.

As a member of the Wilkes creative writing program’s advisory board,
McCann has provided
input on course content and curriculum, performed
readings from his work at its residencies,
and been a thesis reader for
degree candidates in the program.
Let The Great World Spin takes place in August 1974, when a mysterious
tightrope walker is running, dancing,
leaping between the Twin Towers, a
quarter mile above the ground. It chronicles the
lives of a group of New
Yorkers, weaving their separate stories against the backdrop
of the
tightrope walker’s feat.
Some of McCann’s other novels include Zoli, Dancer, and This Side of
Brightness. His fiction has been published in 30 languages and has
appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, GQ, Paris Review,
Bomb and other places. He has written for numerous publications
including The Irish Times, Die Zeit, La Republicca, Paris Match, The New
York Times, the Guardian and the Independent.
In 2003 he was named Esquire magazine's "Writer of the Year." Other
awards and honors
include a Pushcart Prize, the Rooney Prize, the
Hennessy Award for Irish Literature,
the Irish Independent Hughes and
Hughes/Sunday Independent Novel of the Year 2003,
and the 2002
Ireland Fund of Monaco Princess Grace Memorial Literary Award. His
short
film, “Everything in this Country Must,” directed by Gary McKendry,
was nominated
for a 2005 Academy Award.
McCann lives in New York City, where he teaches creative writing at
Hunter College.

�The mission of the National Book Foundation and the National Book
Awards is to celebrate
the best of American literature, expand its
audience, and to enhance the cultural
value of good writing in America.

Marlon James Named Finalist for National Book
Critics Circle Award

Marlon James, Finalist for National Book Critics Circle Award in
fiction

Marlon James’ novel The Book of Night Women was a finalist for a
National Book
Critics Circle Award in fiction by the National Book Critics
Circle.
The finalists were announced in January, and the winners were
announced on March 11. 
Other finalists included memoir writer Mary
Karr, former U.S. poet laureate Louise
Glück, and former National Book
Award winner William T. Vollmann. The other fiction
nominees included
Hilary Mantel, Jayne Anne Phillips, and Michelle Huneven. Mantel
won
the fiction category for her novel Wolf Hall.
The National Book Critics Circle, founded in 1974, is a nonprofit
organization with
around 600 members, "book reviewers who are
interested in honoring quality writing
and communicating with one
another about common concerns."
James worked on The Book of Night Women while he was enrolled in the
creative writing program. He also teaches at Macalester
College in
Minnesota.

Cecilia Galante Joins Creative Writing Faculty

�Cecilia Galante, newest member of Creative Writing Faculty
Young adult novelist Cecilia Galante has joined the faculty of the
Graduate Creative
Writing Program.
She is the author of five young adult novels. Her first, The Patron Saint of
Butterflies, was selected as a Young Adult Book of the Year by the
Northeast Independent Booksellers
Association, a Top Ten Pick for 2008
by Amazon, and a Recommended Read for Teens on
Oprah's website.
Another one of her books, Hershey Herself, will be translated into
Polish
in 2010. Her other novels include Willowood, and The Sweetness of Salt,
which will be published in 2011. She has BA from King’s College and an
MFA in Creative
Writing from Goddard College.
Her first interactions with the faculty and students came in January when
she attended
the residency. “It was thrilling. I had no idea that I was
going to be among such
a crowd of intellectuals and have peers that are
so successful,” she said.
Galante is no stranger to teaching. She spent years teaching high school
English in
the Wilkes-Barre area, though she is currently on sabbatical.
But when it comes to
teaching in the Graduate Creative Writing Program,
she plans to use what she learned
as a graduate student at Goddard.
“I’m trying to borrow more from my experience as a student. My teachers
at Goddard
were incredibly supportive and astute,” she said.  “I’ve been
able to draw from that
experience and insert criticism in a way that
doesn’t kill the spirit.”
Besides teaching, Galante is also hard at work on her first adult novel,
and the process
has not always been easy. “It’s been incredibly daunting.
For young adult, you’re
allowed to write more simply and straightforward,”
she said. “So, I was getting caught
up in sounding like an adult and 
sounding smart enough.”
Galante added that the process has been easier lately, and she’s
confident the book
will stand on its own. She has to submit a manuscript
by the end of April.
Though this will be Galante’s first adult novel, she admitted that she was
not initially
attracted to the young adult genre.
“I wasn’t even familiar there was a YA genre when I wrote my first book,
The Patron Saint of Butterflies. My agent said we were going to market it
as young adult, and I was devastated. I
didn’t think it was young adult,”
she said. “I sat back and waited, and she was right.
It became a
successful young adult book and a crossover book. It appeals to adults

�and young adults at the same time.”

Bonnie Culver Helps Area High School Students
Take Writen Work from "Page to Stage"

Bonnie Culver
Students in four northeast Pennsylvania school districts have a chance to
become playwrights
in a special program being piloted by Bonnie Culver,
director of the Graduate Creative
Writing Program. Culver worked with
two graduate students, Sarah Pugh and Cory Brin,
on a master of fine
arts project developing a pilot program, “Page to Stage.” Culver
is
working as guest artist in four high schools – Hanover Area, Hazleton,
Tunkhannock
and Wyoming Valley West  – to teach basic elements of
playwriting to students.
Culver was in the schools Tuesdays and Wednesdays from Feb. 2 to
March 25. Each student
presented a 10-minute play. One or two plays
from each school will be chosen to be
presented at the Fine Arts Fiesta in
May.
Wilkes University’s long-term goal is to replicate this with fiction, poetry,
film,
and nonfiction with creative writing students and faculty serving as
guest artists
in area schools with a final arts festival on campus.
Faculty/Staff Notes
*Lenore Hart’s new novel The Raven’s Bride (named after the poem by
Edgar Allen Poe) will be published in both hardcover and
paperback by
St. Martin’s Press in February 2011.
*David Poyer’s latest novel Ghosting, a story of a dysfunctional family
threatened on a weeklong sailing excursion, will
be published by St.
Martin’s Press in November 2010.
 
*Bonnie Culver, Creative Writing Program Director; Advisory Board
member Column McCann; plus faculty members Mike Lennon, Lenore
Hart, and Kaylie Jones all served as workshop instructors at the August

�session of the Norman Mailer Writer’s
Colony in Provincetown, MA.
 
Bonnie Culver, Creative Writing Program Director, and Jean Klein,
playwrighting faculty member, each
had a ten-minute play included in
Shorts for All Seasons: America Revisited: An Evening of Short Plays at
the VENUE, Norfolk, VA November 12-20.
Christine Gelineau’s essay “Cops” was published in the winter issue of
The Florida Review as a runner
up in their Editors’ Award in Nonfiction.
Rashidah Ismaili Abu-Bakr’s poetry was published in Bending the Bow,
a collection of love poems from Africa, published by Southern Illinois
Press.
Sara Pritchard's story "Sip the Wine" was published in Vol. 76, No. 1 of
New Letters (Dec. 2009).
Her story "Two Studies in Entropy" won a
Pushcart Prize and is included in the 2010
PUSHCART PRIZE XXXIV
BEST OF THE SMALL PRESSES anthology, and her story "Help
Wanted:
Female" is forthcoming in Vol. 6 (2010) of The Tusculum
Review. Sara will be reading
at the River Festival of Books in Huntington,
West Virginia, on Friday, April 16,
2010.
Student/Alumni Notes
Morowa Yejide’s short story “Tokoyo Chocolate” appears in the Japanbased collection Yomimono, published in September, 2010. Her short
story “To Do List” was nominated for the
Dzanc Best Books of the Web
2011 by Jersey Devil Press.
Gale Martin’s opera blog (www.operatoonity.wordpress.com) has
received critical attention, and
she has been named an accredited
Bachtrack reviewer for the Metropolitan Opera.
 
Starr Troup attended a week-long workshop at the Norman Mailer
Writer’s Colony in Provincetown,
MA. She was awarded a summer
scholarship and spent the week at the center working
with and learning
from other professional writers.
M.A. student Amy Archer had part of her memoir entitled “Bad
Connection” published in the December issue
of the Journal of Truth and
Consequences.
M.A. student Cindy Dlugolecki’s play, “Violet Oakley Unveiled,” was
showcased at Villanova University on Thursday,
March 18. The onewoman show helped celebrate Women’s History Month. Violet Oakley
was the first woman in art history to paint murals in a public building, and
her home
and studio were only a few miles from Villanova’s campus,

�according to Dlugolecki.
Dlugolecki, the actress, director, and tech team
were also the guest of five different
departments at Villanova, including
Women and Gender Studies, History, and Art.
M.F.A. student Brian Fanelli’s poem “Freshman Year” was published in
the February issue of My Favorite Bullet.
http://www.interiornoisepress.com/0010_FANELLI_FreshmanYear.html,
and his poems “In a Club’s Cracked Mirror” and “Why I Said No” were
published in
the March issue of Word Riot
http://www.wordriot.org/archives/976.
M.A. student Kimberly Loomis-Bennet’s poem, “It Is Sweet and
Decorous To Be Poor in One’s Country,” was published in the
Winter
2010 issue of The November 3rd Club.
http://www.november3rdclub.com/2010/02-2010/poetry/loomisbennett.html
Alum Pete Kaszyk’s short story, “You’re Not My Father,” was accepted
for publication by Kerlak Publishing
for inclusion in its WTF Anthologies
edition. Publication date is pending.
Alumnus Brian Fanelli’s chapbook of punk rock poetry, entitled Front
Man is now available through Big Table Publishing. It was released in
October, 2010.
Alumna Dawn Leas will see the release of her first chapbook “I Know
When to Keep Quiet” by Finishing
Line Press in November. Leas
received her MFA in January 2009, and this chapbook is
26 pages of her
original thesis. Leas will be the featured reader at Anthology New
and
Used Books in Scranton on November 26th at 7 p.m.
 
Alums Maureen Hooker, Bill Lowenburg, and Matthew Hinton will all
appear in the fourth volume of the acclaimed Mailer Review, which was
released in November.
 
Alumni Jonathan Rocks, Bill Lowenburg, and Matthew Hinton each
attended week-long workshop at the Norman Mailer Writer’s Colony in
Provincetown,
MA. They were awarded summer scholarships and spent
their time at the center working
with and learning from other professional
writers.
 

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                    <text>About Wilkes

Home

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 Academics

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 Graduate Programs

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 Archives

Revise This - April 2011
Revise This!

Revise This!

2017
2018
Revise This! November 2019
REVISE THIS ARCHIVES
Revise This! Archives
Contents:
Major Film Producer Susan Cartsonis Joins Creative Writing Advisory
Board |
Lenore Hart's The Raven's Bride is Released to Positive Reviews |
Creative Writing Director Bonnie Culver Elected to AWP Board of
Directors |
Faculty/Staff Notes | Student/Alumni Notes

Major Film Producer Susan Cartisonis Joins
Creative Writing Advisory Board
Cartsonis is a producer and also serves as President
of Storefront Pictures. She is
known for producing
such blockbusters as What Women Want (starring
Mel Gibson) and Where the Heart is (starring Natalie
Portman, Ashley Judd, and Sally Field). Cartsonis
served as an
executive for Twentieth Century Fox for

n


 2011

n
n

�nearly a decade before leaving to build two
successful film companies. During her tenure at Fox,
she helped develop and supervise
Nell, The Truth
About Cats and Dogs, Buffy The Vampire Slayer, and many others,
including a film adaptation of Wilkes faculty member Beverly Donofrio’s
Riding in Cars with Boys. 
Prior to her career at Fox, Cartsonis was an instructor for New York
University's
Dramatic Writing Program. She received her M.F.A. in
Dramatic Writing from N.Y.U.
and a Bachelor of Arts in Theatre from
U.C.L.A. Cartsonis credits her degree as instrumental
in her development
as a producer, “When you work with writers, it's invaluable to
be able to
speak to them as someone who has written screenplays and plays and
respects
the creative process, struggle, and sheer challenge of creating
something and seeing
it through to completion.” Throughout her career,
Cartsonis has always stayed connected
to teaching, serving as a speaker
and graduate critique professional at UCLA, USC,
and SCAD. With such
strong professional and academic records, she is a welcome addition
to
our Creative Writing Community. “Mentoring is part of being a producer—
with writers
young and old,” says Cartsonis, “Creative writing programs
are so important in generating
the next batch of talented film makers,
novelists, and story tellers.”
Cartsonis's latest project, Beastly, is in theaters now.

Lenore Hart's The Raven's Bride is released to
Positive Reviews
Author and Creative Writing Faculty Member, Lenore
Hart, has released her much-anticipated new novel, The
Raven's Bride. The book chronicles the courtship and
eventual marriage of Edgar Allen Poe and his
thirteenyear-old cousin, Virginia Clem. The book has been
called "an impressive,
original work that illuminates its
subject," by Publisher's Weekly. 
Hart is no stranger to success, her break out novel, Becky, chronicling
the life of Mark Twain's heroine Becky Thatcher, was also very wellreceived
by the literary community. When asked what draws her to
stories in which she gives
voice to women who are largely considered

�supporting figures, Hart said "I like the challenge of rendering what it
must’ve been like to be a woman living in
a different era (probably a lot
more than I’d actually enjoy the reality of it!) It’s
fascinating to immerse
oneself in the food, clothes, manners, and customs of different
eras and
places."
The Raven's Bride was a labor of love for Hart, requiring much research
that meant spending two and
a half years (figuratively) in Poe's 19th
century world.   One of Hart's biggest challenges
was keeping up with the
Poes. "They moved all the time! I had to leave out some of their abodes
or it would have
been incredibly confusing. They were in Baltimore,
Richmond, Philadelphia, and New
York City (twice)".  Look for The
Raven's Bride, published by St. Martin's Press, online or at an
independent bookseller near you.

Creative Writing Director Bonnie Culver Elected to
AWP Board of Directors
Bonnie Culver was elected to the board of
directors for the Association of Writers and
Writing
Programs. Culver is only the second
low-residency director to hold such an
honor.  The program was founded in 1967 as
the Associated Writing Programs. Created to
support
the growing presence of literary writers in higher education, the
mission of AWP is
to promote literary talent and achievement, to advance
the art of writing as necessary
for quality education, and to serve the
makers, teachers, students, and readers of
contemporary writing. 
Culver looks forward to the possibilities her AWP position may provide for
the Wilkes
Creative Writing Program. "Our inclusion means that the
issues, concerns of low-residency programs are being
heard directly by
AWP and its membership. Grants, awards for emerging writers, arts
support such as NEA (and its future), setting standards of assessment
and quality
of all successful programs are part and parcel of what is
addressed by the Board and
the AWP membership.  Wilkes is now there
at the table, being a part of that national
conversation."
Culver's appointment allowed her a unique perspective at this year's
AWP conference,
held in Washington, D.C. She arrived two days earlier
than attendees for board meetings,
and things only got busier once the
crowds started filing in. "Board members are expected to attend
sessions, meet and greet and thank sponsors,
go to receptions, special
dinners, host writer guests at dinners, and even introduce
writers at open
sessions." But, the busy week paid off, says Culver, "Because Wilkes
was a major sponsor of the conference, I had the honor of introducing

�Mary Gaitskill
this year; Jim [Warner, Assistant Director,] introduced
poet/memoirist Sapphire!"

Faculty/Staff Notes
David Poyer’s latest novel Ghosting, a story of a dysfunctional family
threatened on a weeklong sailing excursion, was
published by St.
Martin’s Press in November, 2010.
Faculty members Tony Morris, Beverly Donofrio, and Lenore Hart,
were among the visiting writers included in the first Ossabaw Island
Writer's Retreat,
organized by Morris himself. Ossabaw Island is a
secluded retreat just off of Savannah
Georgia. “Participants were strongly
affected by the beauty and serenity of the island,”
says Morris. “They
commented on the spirit, tone and mood of the retreat—particularly
the
near-magical presence and sense of natural and human history locked
into a place
‘that time forgot.’” 
Nancy McKinley's short story, Glue, has been accepted by Gulf Coast.
 
Juanita Rockwell's short play, Language Monkey, was accepted for
production in this summer's Source Festival, Washington D.C. Rockwell
also directed Jennifer Nelson's play, 24, 7, 365, which toured to The
Atlas Theater (DC), Hylton Performing Arts Center (Manassas,
VA) and
The Harris Theater (Fairfax, VA). Finally, Juanita's full-length play,
Between Trains, was included in Philadelphia Fringe Festival, Fall 2010.
 
Neil Shepard has placed poems in the current issues of the Harvard
Review, Hunger Mountain Review, NOR (New Ohio Review) and online
at Fogged Clarity.   He also has a Jazz poem due out soon in the jazz
magazine Brilliant Corners.
 
Jim Warner, Nancy McKinley, Alum Joseph Nalbone and Alum Starr
Troup presented a panel session "Virtual Mentoring Made Real: The
Evolving Tech of a Low-Residency
Program" at the AWP Conference,
2011. 
Bonnie Culver, Jean Klein, and Ross Klavan presented a panel
session “Playwriting and Screenwriting: Our Business in the Academy”
at
the AWP Conference, 2011.

 
Student/Alumni Notes
M.F.A. studentAmye Archer, has placed an excerpt from her memoir,

�Fat Girl Skinny, with PANK Magazine, as part of their This Modern Writer
Series. 
 
M.F.A. student Ally Bishop, director of the Lit Outloud Reading Series,
hosted another successful event this
past February. Readers included
Bishop, Alum Rick Fellinger, Alum Brian Fanelli, M.F.A student Amye
Archer, Alum Lori Meyers, and M.F.A. student William Prystauk.
 
To celebrate Women’s History Month, Violet Oakley Unveiled, a onewoman play written by MA Student Cindy Dlugolecki, was performed at
the Harrisburg Area Community College (HACC) Rose Lehrman Arts
Center. 
 
M.F.A. Alum Brian Fanelli's poem "Dive" was published in March by the
journal Young American Poets. In addition, Erika Funke of WVIA Radio
interviewed Fanelli regarding his poetry
chapbook, Front Man, for her
ArtScene program.
 
M.F.A. Alum Patricia Florio hasentered into a contract with Sue Richter
at Sera Publishing.  The two will be
presenting, East Meets West,
American Writers Review.  
 
M.A. Alum Jennifer Diskinhas published a chapbook, Wear White and
Grieve, with Naissance Chapbooks by chapbookpublisher.com.
 
M.F.A. Alum Rick Fellinger's novel, Memoirs of a Little League Dad,
has been named a quarter-finalist in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel
Award contest.
M.F.A. Alum Joseph Giomboni's screenplay, Ripple, was a
quarterfinalist in the Scriptapalooza 2010 International Screenwriting
Competition.
The script made the cut of 377 from more than 3500 entries.
M.A. student Tyler Grimm had an article published in Celebrate
Gettysburg Magazine, and has since become a
contributing writer for the
publication.
 
M.F.A. Alum Matthew Hinton's play, Quiet Cowboy, was produced by
The Gaslight Theater Company in Scranton, PA in January.
 
In November 2010, Finishing Line Press released M.F.A. Alum Dawn
Leas's first chapbook, I Know When to Keep Quiet.  Leas has also led a
workshop and reading at the West Pittston Library.
 
M.A. student Kimberly Loomis-Bennett has placed poems from her
MA thesis, Soiled Doves, in The Legendary, and The Copperfield
Review.
 

�M.A. Alum Gale Martin's novel, Deviled by Don, advanced to the
second round of the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award contest.
 
M.A. student Laura Moran had two poems accepted from her MA mss,
a novel in verse called Jump the Snake, by the journal Redactions (Issue
14) due out this summer.
 
Cinderella and the Lone Prince, book and lyrics by M.A. Alum, Lori
Myers, was staged last summer by Gretna Theatre, Mt. Gretna,
PA. Also, Lori's short story,
Stranger on a Train, was published by Dark
Fire Fiction.
 
M.F.A. Alum Taylor M. Polites' book, A Red and Dying Evening, has
been picked up by Simon &amp; Schuster. Look for it in February of 2012.
M.F.A. student William Prystauk's screenplay, Risen, has won first
place in the Horror Screenplay Contest, and was a semi-finalist in
Shriekfest.  His screenplay, The Darwin Witch, was selected as a top-ten
finalist in Shiver’s First Short Horror Screenplay Competition. In addition,
Prystauk's short screenplay, Catalyst, has also placed second at
WILDsounds, and was recently picked up by an up and coming
production company, and expanded to a ten-minute film.
M.A. studentAnastasia Savage's YA novel, Any Witch Way, is being
published by JournalStone Publications. The novel is available for
presale
on Barnes&amp;Noble.com.
 
M.F.A. Alum Donna Talarico was hired as web content editor in the
office of marketing and communications at
Elizabethtown College in
Elizabethtown, Pa.
 
M.F.A. Alum Starr Troup was named Managing Editor of Etruscan
Press, following a successful internship with
the press, which is housed
at Wilkes University.
 

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Wilkes University
84 West South Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18766
1-800-WILKES-U
Contact Us
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                    <text>About Wilkes

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Revise This - September 2011
Revise This!

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2017
2018
Revise This! November 2019
Revise This Archives
SenArt Films Partners with Wilkes Creative Writing | International Win for
Advisory Board Member Colum McCann | Announcements | Faculty/Staff
Notes | Student Alumni Notes | Program Notes
SenArt Films Partners with Wilkes Creative Writing
New York-based SenArt Films has found a new
home in the Wilkes University Creative Writing
building. The independent
production company was
founded by producer Robert May, who is also an
advisory board
member for the low-residency
creative writing program
In 2004, SenArt Films received an Academy Award
for Best Feature Documentary for
The Fog of War:
Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara. In 2003, The
Station Agent won the Audience Award at the Sundance Film Festival
and the British Academy of Film
and Television Arts award for Best
Original Screenplay.

Revise This! Archives

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 2011

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n

�SenArt Films is providing student internships inclusive of research and
production
assistance. Students in the master’s in screenwriting have
immediate access to producers
and SenArt’s staff, providing an
enhanced academic—and practical—experience. 
“Having worked with Wilkes for several years now, I’ve been impressed
with the creative
writing program, and we’re excited to give qualified
students the chance to get actively,
creatively involved with our ongoing
film projects. It’s hard work, but for students
with the right attitude, we
offer the opportunity to experience what the film business
is all about,”
said producer and founder Robert May.
“We are delighted to host SenArt Films on campus and offer our students
the opportunity
to work with a top shelf independent film company,”
offered program director, Bonnie
Culver. “This partnership underscores
the Wilkes mission of real life learning.”
Other acclaimed SenArt Film projects include The War Tapes, winner of
Best Documentary at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival and Best
International
Documentary at BritDoc 2006, and the feature film
Bonneville, starring Jessica Lange, Kathy Bates and Joan Allen.

International Win for Advisory Board Member Colum McCann
Wilkes creative writing program advisory board
member Colum McCann has received international
recognition for his novel, Let The Great World Spin
(Random House). The International IMPAC Dublin
Literary Award is the largest and most
international

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prize of its kind. McCann’s was selected from a
shortlist of ten nominees
and brings home a literary

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More than
160 titles were nominated by 166 libraries
worldwide.
Let The Great World Spin opens with a true-to-life historical event, when
Philippe Petit walks a tightrope
nestled between the twin towers of the
World Trade Center in 1974. It is the life
happening beneath the tightrope
that McCann explores, using the shared experience
to branch out into an
homage to the city and its people within it.
In The New York Times Sunday Book Review, Jonathan Mahler credits
Let The Great World Spin as “one of the most electric, profound novels”
he has read in years. USA Today praised McCann’s novel, calling it
“Stunning… [an] elegiac glimpse of hope…It’s a
novel rooted firmly in
time and place. It vividly captures New York at its worst and
best. But it

�transcends all that. In the end, it’s a novel about families – the ones
we’re
born into and the ones we make for ourselves.”
 
McCann is a contributor to The New Yorker, The New York Times
Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, and The Paris Review. His short film
Everything in This Country Must, directed by Gary McKendry, was
nominated for an Oscar in 2005. McCann’s other works
include the
bestsellers Zoli, This Side of Brightness, and Dancer.
 

Announcements
In January, 2012, the Wilkes University Graduate Creative Writing
program hopes to
launch a pilot program for a certificate in
publishing. The certificate will be available
as a four credit course or a
non-credit course. It is designed to introduce perspective
editors, agents,
or publishers to the business, life, and world of publishing from
the
traditional to the e-world. Currently, the proposal is under consideration
by
Wilkes University faculty committees. Look for an announcement in
October!
The M.A./M.F.A. Wilkes programs are once again major sponsors for
AWP’s (Association
of Writers and Writing Programs) national
conference to be held in Chicago, IL February
29-March 3, 2012! That
means Wilkes will have 45 FREE registrations for students and
faculty
wishing to attend the conference.   As in years past, Wilkes will have a
booth
shared with Etruscan Press in the Book Fair.   We need a handful
of student volunteers
to work the booth during the conference; those
students attending will receive transportation,
a shared room, and
registration. Please call Dr. Culver to volunteer no later than
October 1!
November, 9-12, 2011, the James Jones and Norman Mailer Societies
will host a joint
conference at the Harry Ransom Center on the University
of Texas campus. A wide variety
of events from paper presentations to
readings to roundtable discussions are planned. Several
Wilkes faculty
and students will be involved—Kaylie Jones, J. Michael Lennon, Ross
Klavan, Ken Vose, Laura Moran, Michael Mailer, Larry Heinemann,
Matthew Wilkie, Nina
Solomon, James Warner, Laurie Moyer thus far will
be attending and participating in
this event. To attend or to know more
about either society, go to www.normanmailersociety.com or
www.jamesjonesliterarysociety.org.

Faculty/Staff Notes

�Bonnie Culver's play SNIPER ran for a month at the Villagers
Playhouse, Somerset NJ. The production
has been nominated for 7 New
Jersey Perry Awards. Thde ceremony announcing winners
is September
18th in NJ.
In July, Gregory Fletcher left his job of four years as director of theatre
at Niagara University and, once
again, became a full time resident of
NYC. In August, he directed the new musical
Destinations by Dawn
Eaton and RS Rodkin for the New York International Fringe Festival, and
in
September, he directed a staged reading of The Fairy Hoax by Tom
Diggs and Jay D’Amico for WorkShop Theater Company.
Christine Gelineau has been invited to read at Oberlin College in
October. She will be reading with
Lee Upton.
David Poyer’s 13th Dan Lenson novel The Towers was published this
August by St. Martin’s Press.
Sara Pritchard’s story “A Forever Home” (the one with the cats named
Helvetica and Times) was published
in the premier issue of Spittoon. “A
Forever Home” is part of Sara’s story collection Help Wanted: Female,
which will be published next year by Etruscan Press. In July, Sara gave a
reading
at the West Virginia Wesleyan Literary Festival in Buckhannon,
West Virginia, and
in September she gave a reading at the TustenCochecton Branch of the Western Sullivan
Library in Narrowsburg, New
York, as part of the First Fridays series run by MFA/Poetry
candidate
Laura Moran.
Neil Shepard has two new books this fall: a full book
(TRAVEL/UNTRAVEL, Mid-List Press) and a chapbook (VERMONT
EXIT RAMPS, Pudding House Press). New poems are due in three
literary magazines, North American Review, Southern Poetry Review,
and Chautauqua Literary Review, as well as in two anthologies, Nature
Writing: The Wildness Beyond; and 40th Anniversary Anthology for the
Virginia Center for thde Creative Arts. His commendation on John Keats’
poem “To Autumn” will appear in Poetry East, and his interview on editing
Green Mountains Review for a quarter-century recently appeared in the
online journal Portal del Sol.
Jeff Talarigo has a Gaza story, “The Night Guardian of the Goat,” in the
fall issue of Agni.
James Warner’s poem “cue” was just accepted by the North American
Review for an upcoming issue.
Thom Ward’s new poetry book, Etcetera’s Mistress, has been published
by Accents Publishing.

�Student/Alumni Notes
M.F.A. alum Amye Archer’s chapbook, A Shotgun Life, has been
published by Big Table Publishing Company. She has also been made
the Reviews
Editor at PANK Magazine.
M.A. studentRandee Bretherick came in second in the Spring/Summer
2011 East Meets West, American Writers Review
Contest for her
personal essay, “Plum Creek.”
M.A studentKait Burrier’s 10-minute play “The Fire” received a reading
as part of Scranton’s Vintage Theater’s
‘Early Stages’ play reading
series. Kait’s poem “Buzzing” was selected as a finalist
in Ruminate
magazine’s Janet McCabe Poetry Prize.
M.F.A. alumTara Caimi’s short story “Chicken Divan” was accepted for
publication in Fire &amp; Knives. Her craft article “Privileged Perspective in
Memoir: Building the Bridge of Trust
by Trusting the Reader” was
accepted for publication in The Writer’s Chronicle. “My Rare Disease,” an
excerpt from Tara’s memoir, was published on The National
Foundation
for Celiac Awareness website in honor of celiac disease awareness
month
in May.
M.A. alumCindy Dlugolecki had a 10-minute play, All Hands on Deck,
included in Sonnet Inspirations, a Harrisburg production at Gamut
Theatre that featured three
other original plays, music, and dance all
based on the sonnets of William Shakespeare.
All Hands on Deck began
as an assignment for Ross Klavan’s Screenwriting Foundation and
became a play
in Jean Klein’s Playwriting Foundation. Cindy had another
10-minute comedy, Here Comes the Bride’s Mother, performed at Mt.
Gretna in August.
M.A. alumBrian Fanelli’s poem “How She Hides Her Age” is
forthcoming in the fall issue of San Pedo River Review. He also has three
other poems, “Remembering Names,” “Late Night Stop,” and “What They
Forgot by Morning,” forthcoming in the October issue of Yes, Poetry.
M.F.A. alum Patricia Florio had three short stories published by Phyllis
Scott Publishing: “All in the Game,”
“In the Secret Service,” and
“Chosen.” Her memoir-thesis, My Two Mothers, will also soon be
published by Phyllis Scott Publishing.
M.A. alum Gale Martin's opera novel will be released by Booktrope
Publishing in December.
M.A. student Lori A. May’s poem “Hindsight” will be published in the
forthcoming Accents Publishing anthology
of short poems. Lori will also

�be speaking this October at the Rochester Writers Conference
hosted at
Oakland University.
M.F.A. alum William D. Prystaukwas the Producer and Still
Photographer for the short-film, STABLE directed by Paul
Williams. His
dramatic horror, Ravencraft, was the Third Place Winner in the AWS
Screenwriting Contest. Crime Class Review will be publishing his short
story, “Mara,” later this year. William was also interviewed
by Lindsey
Michelle at Screenplay Scribes for his conversion of his screenplay
“Bloodletting”
to a novel. His award-winning screenplay, Risen, was
recently reviewed by Horrorphilia.com. PANK published his review of the
novel “Pittsburgh Noir.”
M.F.A. student Joseph Schwartzburt’s poem “Climbing Tree” was
published in the summer issue of the Seersucker Rag: A Quarterly Zine.
He will also be reading at a Seersucker Live event in September, in front
of a few hundred people because Seersucker has been
asked to open for
a charity jazz concert. Joseph was also recently named to the
Seersucker
Live board of directors.
Hippocampus Magazine, a literary journal published by M.F.A
alumDonna Talarico, was featured in the September issue of Poets &amp;
Writers.
M.F.A. student Sandee Gertz Umbach had a poem, “History of
Epilepsy; 500 B.C. to the Renaissance” accepted for the summer
2012
issue of Gargoyle Magazine.  
 
Program Note
The Write Life blog welcomes guest posts from faculty, students, and
alumni. Email
lori.may1@live.wilkes.edu for details. Weekly interviews
and literary news are shared online at
http://wilkeswritelife.wordpress.com.

Quick Links
Career Development
Campus Safety


and Internships




Centers &amp; Institutes


Online Programs





E.S. Farley Library




Online Nursing
Programs

Make A Gift

�Human Resources


Jobs at Wilkes




Offices &amp; Administration
Accessibility Statement 

Financial Aid


Adobe Acrobat® Reader


Registrar's Office


Finance Office





Investor Relations




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Jobs
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Schedule a Visit
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Virtual Tour
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Wilkes University
84 West South Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18766
1-800-WILKES-U
Contact Us
Wilkes University ©

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Revise This - December 2011
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2017
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High Praise for Advisory Board Member William J. Kennedy's Latest
Book | Alum Lori Myers' Essay Nominated for a Pushcart Prize |
Faculty/Staff Notes | Student Alumni Notes

High Praise for Advisory Board Member William J. Kennedy's Latest
Book
William J. Kennedy, author of the Pulitzer Prize winning
novel Ironweed, has seen
glowing reviews for his
recent book, Chango Beads and Two-Tone Shoes. The
New York Times, Paris Review, and many more media
outlets are praising Kennedy’s latest publication, with
USA
Today calling this an “ambitious, mature work.” In
Chango Beads and Two-Tone Shoes we see
Hemmingway make chatter with Castro, and a witty
reporter, Quinn, settle into
Cuba because it’s “closer than Paris.”
“The Cuban element in my book had its origin in personal experience,”

Revise This! Archives

n


 2011

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�Kennedy said
in a recent interview. “I covered the Cuban revolution in
Miami and later in San Juan,
PR, in the 1950s as a newsman, first on the
Miami Herald, then on the San Juan Star, and as a correspondent for
Time-Life. The experience nagged me for years, and eventually I took up
the challenge.” While
the personal angle may have prompted the book’s
creation, it did not make the journey
any easier. “I witnessed much
suffering and heroic behavior among people in the movement;
also much
repression and virulent racism, and that became central to the new novel.
The book in progress turned into a story of two revolutions; and what
then loomed
was the reimagining of both, and fitting them into my story
about a journalist and
a revolutionary debutante. And nine years later I
finished it.”
Wilkes writing students were honored with a featured reading at a recent
residency,
wherein Kennedy shared a few scenes from Chango Beads
and Two-Tone Shoes. For students wishing to merge nonfiction elements
with fiction, Kennedy has this
advice. “The novel usually wants to be as
true as possible to historical reality,
but not at the expense of the story.
The writer is getting at the truth of what he/she
knows and wants to put
on the page; but the reimagining of history, or even our own
past, is
necessary if this work aspires to be literature,” Kennedy said, “for such
work is not the transcription of history but is experience that has passed
through
the center of our being, and been transformed into a story, play,
novel that never
was—a work created from the argument that the
creative element in the writer’s brain
is having with imagination, memory,
and the implacable drive to be authentic.” This
can prove to be a
challenge for writers, young and experienced. “History is always
malleable to the novelist. Being scrupulously, morally faithful to it can
involve
distorting or even eliminating what was actual. The writer’s quest
is to be true to
what is more important: the literary synthesis of all that
internal torsion—the truly
new story.”
With all the media and publicity, Kennedy is settling in to getting back to
what matters
most. “I just finished my book tour about two weeks ago
and am still not quite settled
into the next phase of my life, which is to get
back to writing,” Kennedy said in
a recent interview. “Hemingway said
that after you finish a novel you have to let
the well fill up again; and
that’s what I’m doing. But I have resumed something I
started years ago
and never finished—a play. I will finish it this time, and I will
be satisfied, I
think. I’m never satisfied with anything, but at least this time I
will not
consider what I write to be a provisional draft. This will be it, and I’ll
have
a staged reading. Then, of course, I’ll start the rewriting.”

Alum Lori Myers' Essay Nominated for a Pushcart Prize
When Hippocampus Magazine published Lori Myer’s
essay, “Word,” in September 2011, the author and

�Wilkes alum
would have never guessed so much
attention would come her way. “I am beyond thrilled
to receive a Pushcart nomination and be part of this
select group of writers,” Myers
said recently. From the
year’s submissions, Hippocampus selected six pieces of non-fiction,
including Myers’ essay exploring the power of
word play. “Words can
affect us, cut like a knife, or perhaps even change our lives,
our
philosophies, our paths,” Myers says in her essay.
An award-winning writer of creative nonfiction, fiction, essays, and plays,
Myers
has seen her work published in more than 40 national and regional
publications. A
graduate of the Creative Writing masters program at
Wilkes University, she is now
part of the writing faculty at York College of
Pennsylvania. Even with her continued
stream of success, this author is
modest and appreciative of the attention she is
earning for her writing—
and for the genre as a whole. “Honestly, I have no idea when
the winners
will be announced. Just being nominated has meant so much! Besides,
these
types of awards place the literary arts center stage!”
In her reflection on words and their weighty meaning, Myers has this to
say in her
essay: “Like a rock thrown into the literary pool, words cause
the waters to ripple;
they have power and weight, which is why writers
ache and moan and starve and revise,
revise, revise to make certain they
use just the right words in a scene, in dialogue,
in verse.”
To read the full essay, visit Hippocampus Magazine at
http://www.hippocampusmagazine.com.
More information about the Pushcart Prize may be found online at
http://www.pushcartprize.com/index.htm.

Faculty/Staff Notes
Robert P. Arthur has again been nominated for Poet Laureate of
Virginia. He was a runner up for the
post in both 2008 and 2010.
Taschen Press has just published a new, revised edition of Norman
Mailer’s 1973 biography, conceived by Advisory Board member Larry
Schiller, and edited by J. Michael Lennon,
who also contributed a
biographical note on Mailer. The new edition contains heretofore
unseen
photographs by the great photographer, Bert Stern, from the last sitting
with
Monroe just before she died in 1962. The oversize, clamshell-boxed,
limited edition
of 125 copies sells for $1,000. A trade edition is six
languages for a much lower
price will appear in a few months. Go to

�Taschen.com for details. Lennon reports that he is six months from
completing a draft of the
authorized biography of Mailer, to be published
by Simon &amp; Schuster next year (or
maybe early 2013).
Nancy McKinley’s short story “Navidad” appears in Issue 53 of The
Cortland Review.
Thom Ward has given a number of readings around the country, and has
scheduled more for 2012,
for his new poetry book, Etcetera’s Mistress,
published by Accents Publishing. A review
written by Brian Fanelli is
available at pankmagazine.com.

Student/Alumni Notes
M.F.A. alum Chris Bullard’s second poetry chapbook, O Brilliant Kids,
was recently released by Big Table Publishing. His poem “Miss Ross”
was selected
for inclusion in the poetry anthology, Best of the Barefoot
Muse. His poems currently appear in 32 Poems, Plainsongs, Pleiades
and Think Journal, and have been selected for future publication by River
Styx, New York Quarterly, Unsplendid, fourteen magazine and Blue
Unicorn.
M.A. student Kait Burrier’s poem, “The Angler’s Gaze,” was accepted
into Dionne’s Story: An Anthology of Poetry and Prose for the Awareness
of Relationship Violence, Volume 2. Proceeds from anthology sales
benefit Dionne’s Project for Safe Relationships.
M.A. student Christopher Campion had two short stories, “Debt” and
“Opened,” accepted by www.fiction365.com for 2012 publication.
M.F.A. alum Craig Czury has been named Laureate and Honorary
Member of the largest Albanian celebration of
poetry in the world, the XV
“Days of Naim” International Poetry Festival in Tetovë,
Macedonia. Czury
is the first poet from the United States to be awarded this laureateship.
M.A. alum Alessandra Djordjevic has two poems, “Love’s
Androgynous” and “Poetic Countenance” published on the website
wordathering.com. He also has a short story, “Black Agate,” published in
an anthology
of short stories, The Smartest Kid in the Bronx.
M.F.A. alum Brian Fanelli’s poem “After Work” has been accepted for
publication in the winter issue of Harpur Palate, and his poem “How I
Remember Her” is forthcoming in the next issue of Evening Street
Review.
M.F.A. alum Patricia Florio’s memoir, My Two Mothers, is now

�available. She is working on a follow-up, with the working title Sundays
with My Father. Her short story, “The Blonde I Loved to Hate,” has also
been recently published.
M.A. student Lori A. May was a guest presenter at the fall College
Student Literary Magazine Conference in
Danville IL. She also had a
recent poetry reading at the University of Michigan, Dearborn,
during the
Michigan College English Association conference.
M.F.A student Vicki Mayk’s essay “Verismo” was awarded third prize in
Hippocampus Magazine’s “Remember in November” contest.
M.A. alum Lori Myers’ short story “Maneuvers” was published in the
anthology Off Season. Her children’s
musical GLEE-ful Rapunzel was
staged at Gretna Theatre, Mt. Gretna, PA, and her short
play Sight
Unseen was staged at Gamut Theatre, Harrisburg, PA as part of Sonnet
Inspirations.
She also had sketch-plays Miss Information and No Way
staged at The Academy Theater, Meadville, PA.
M.F.A. alum Taylor Polite’s The Rebel Wife has been named one of the
best southern reads for 2012 by The Atlanta Journal – Constitution.
M.F.A. alum William D. Prystauk’s dramatic horror Ravencraft was a
Top-20 Finalist at Shriekfest in Hollywood and a review of his screenplay
Risen appeared on Horrorphilia.com. He has also recently published
reviews in Hippocampus Magazine and PANK Magazine, and presented
the paper, “The Kids Aren’t All Right: Horror Movies Remind Us that
Protecting Our Children in the Home is a Delusion” at the Mid-Atlantic
Popular/American
Culture Association’s Annual Conference this past
November in Philadelphia.
M.A. student Joseph Schwartzburt’s literary group Seersucker Live ran
a successful event that brought out more than
110 literary lovers to Kevin
Barry’s Bar in Savannah, GA. Featured writers were novelist
Daniel
Handler (a.k.a. Lemony Snicket), poet Patricia Lockwood, novelist
Jonathan
Raab, and poet/memoirist Chad Faries.
M.F.A. student Sandee Umbach’s full-length poetry collection, The
Pattern Maker’s Daughter, is being released in February of 2012 by
Bottom Dog Press

Program Note
The Write Life blog welcomes guest posts from faculty, students, and
alumni. Email lori.may1@wilkes.edu for details. Weekly interviews and
literary news are shared online at http://wilkeswritelife.wordpress.com.

� 
 

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Revise This - April 2012
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The Rebel Wife by Taylor Polites – Best Southern Read | New LowResidency Representation on AWP Board | Announcements |
Faculty/Staff Notes | Student Alumni Notes
The Rebel Wife by Taylor Polites – Best Southern Read
Since graduating in June 2010 with his MFA in Creative
Writing from Wilkes University,
Taylor Polites has been
busy! His debut novel, The Rebel Wife, was published
in February 2012 by Simon &amp; Schuster. The debut has
been named one
of the Best Southern Reads for 2012
by The Atlanta Journal – Constitution. Taylor has also
received glowing reviews from BookPage, O Magazine,
and The Southern Independent Booksellers
Association.
“I am really amazed at the amount of great coverage and response the
book has received,”
Taylor said. “It is truly a dream come true. I really
appreciate the support and guidance
that the Wilkes MFA community,

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�students, alumni and faculty, has given me. You don't
make these things
happen on your own. I feel so lucky to be a part of a community
that
extends way beyond graduation.”
Taylor was on the road for almost four weeks in February. “I toured 14
cities in five
states. It was amazing to be able to go out, book in hand,
and talk to people about
writing and history and the South. It is an
absolute dream come true.” He is now embarking
on a series of
promotional events ranging from the Virginia Festival of the Book to
the
Alabama Book Festival. Dates and locations for the tour are available on
Taylor’s
website: http://taylormpolites.com
In 2009, Taylor was awarded the Norris Church Mailer Scholarship. He
lives in Providence,
Rhode Island, where he is currently working on the
research for a second book, another
one set in Albion, Alabama.
New Low-Residency Representation on AWP Board
At the recent AWP Conference in Chicago IL, two low-residency program
directors were
elected to serve as officers on the AWP Board. Wilkes’
own Bonnie Culver is now serving
as Treasurer and Steve Heller, director
of the Antioch University Los Angeles program,
is serving as President.
Steve was elected in 2010 and Bonnie Culver in 2011; each
will serve a
four year term.
“This is the first time two low-res program directors are on the Board,”
Culver said,
“and it’s the first time two are acting as Officers. It’s very
exciting.” This is
great news for low-residency programs. Congratulations
to Steve and Bonnie.
Announcements
The June Residency is scheduled to take place June 15-23, 2012.
Applications for June
admission are due May 15 for regular admission or
May 1 to be considered for Graduate
Assistantships.
Jack Scovil, long-time Advisory Board Member, passed away February
23, 2012. Jack
was a literary agent for more than 40 years and a
principal agent at Scovil Galen
Ghosh in New York City. He worked with
Norman Mailer, Margaret Truman, Larry Smith,
and many others. Jack
was a founding Advisory Board Member of the low-residency MFA
program at Wilkes. “‘Uncle Jack’ was a wonderful supporter, friend, and
advisor to
the entire program,” said Bonnie Culver. “He will be dearly
missed.”
A Memorial Celebration for Norris Church Mailer will take place in April.
This is
a closed event by invitation only. Wilkes faculty, alum, and

�students wishing to share
a few words about Norris should contact the
Program Director, Bonnie Culver or Dr.
Michael Lennon for more
information. They will attend the event and represent Wilkes.
Faculty members who include students on AWP 2013 panel discussions
are eligible to
apply for student funding support from the Wilkes
University Mentoring Committee.
Involvement of current students is
encouraged. Please contact Program Director Bonnie
Culver for more
details.
Alums George Kraynak and Julia Steier have good news: Many
nonsensical things occur with your cohort during the grueling
eight days
of the January and June residencies that brings your group closer. But
during the work semesters and the hours spent on the program formally
known as WebCT,
an unlikely friendship can ignite then twist into
companionship. George Kraynak (MFA
2010) and Julia Steier (MA 2010)
met in 501 during the January residency in 2008.
In 2009, their Wilkes
friendship moved into real time and the writing relationship
quickly
derailed into something more. They co-founded a scrumptious online
food blog
titled George and Julia Eat Manhattan
(http://www.georgeandjuliaeatmanhattan.com). They began documenting
their culinary adventures, and for two and a half years
these two
delectable delights couldn’t deny their uncanny connection and attraction.
On an unseasonably
warm February
afternoon in Central
Park, George and
Julia were
laying
side-by-side holding
hands when
suddenly George
began pouring his
heart out
about their
future together.
Several times before
they've hypothetically discussed
the greatness of getting married and
moving in together, but nothing more. But like
a colt learning to stand,
George nervously got on one knee and gazed into her eyes.
Julia sat up
so bewildered by his actions and couldn't fathom what was unraveling
right in front of her. So instead of shutting up and listening, she hollered
at his
practical joke. But George tuned her out—a tactic he’s acquired
over their time spent
together— and pulled a small velvet brown box from
his breast coat pocket. When he
creaked the box open, the daylight
glinted off the diamond like meteor showers at
midnight. Without
hesitation, Julia lunged for the ring. George smiled and said, “So
you’ll
marry me?” and Julia emphatically nodded yes.

�Faculty/Staff Notes
Nancy McKinley’s essay “Title IX and Me” appears in the anthology
Becoming: What Makes a Woman, published by the University of
Nebraska, February, 2012. Her short story “Signed
Sealed Delivered”
has been accepted by the Main Street Rag Short Fiction Anthology
for
the TATTOOS theme to be published in Fall of 2012.Nancy was a reader
at the February
Prose in Pubs event. On May 4, 2012 she will be reading
at MulberryArt Studio, First
Friday in Lancaster City, 6-8 p.m. for the
Elizabethtown Writers Group, with Wilkes
Alumni Gale Martin and Rick
Fellinger, as well as Mary Beth Matteo and Jesse Waters.
Gregory Fletcher’s play Cow-Tipping and Other Signs of Stress is a
national finalist for the Reva Shiner Comedy Award from the Bloomington
Playwrights
Project.
Neil Shepard has given poetry readings in a half-dozen states to
celebrate his new poetry book,
(T)ravel/Un(t)ravel. Upcoming readings
include the KGB Bar in New York City in April, Vermont Poetry
Society in
May, Saratoga Arts Festival in June, and Chautauqua Writers Institute in
July. Shepard will teach a Poetry Workshop at Poets House in Manhattan
(April-May)
and an Advanced Poetry Workshop at the Chautauqua
Writers Institute in July. New poems
are forthcoming in Per Contra
(online) and the Chautauqua Literary Review. Three book reviews of
Travel/Untravel appear in PANK (online), Fogged Clarity (online), and
Provincetown Arts.
Student/Alumni Notes
M.F.A. alum Amye Archer has a piece, “Found,” accepted by H_ngm_n
for the April issue. She has also been selected as a guest editor for a
special Parenting
issue of PANK Magazine. The issue is scheduled for
June.
M.F.A. alum Christopher Bullard’s full-length book of poetry, Back, has
been selected by WordTech Communications for publication by their CW
Books imprint
in November of 2013.
M.A. student Kait Burrier’s poem, “To the Little Boy in the White Gown,”
will be published in the Carlow University
Press anthology, Voices in the
Attic, Vol. XVIII.
M.F.A. alum Brian Fanelli has a poem entitled “After Work” in the
current issue of Harpur Palate. He also has poems forthcoming in the fall
issue of Inkwell Journal and the spring/summer issue of Solstice Literary
Magazine.

�M.F.A. alum Richard Fellinger’s short story collection, They Hover Over
Us, has been published by Snake Nation Press. This collection of 13
stories about people
from PA’s Rust Belt won the 2011 Serena McDonald
Kennedy Fiction Award and is available
now at readings and signings
hosted by the author. The publisher will make the book
available soon at
its Web site, snakenationpress.org, and on Amazon.
M.F.A. alum Patricia Florio is working with Literary Adventure, a reading
series. This month The Jersey Shore
Writers will be sharing the stage at
the Belmar Arts Council with three Wilkes Alums.
M.A. alum Jerry Gurka wrote and directed a play, The Prodigal Sons:
Passion Play 2012, performed in Larksville
PA, in March.
M.F.A. alum Bill Lowenburg’s novel, The Zorki Chronicles, is a quarter
finalist in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Contest. Finals take place
in
June. He also recently published a photography article on the Australian
Website,
Lucida.
M.A. alum Gale Martin will be reading at MulberryArt Studio, May 4, for
the Elizabethtown Writers Group.
M.A. student Lori A. May has an article, “Bypass obstacles to traditional
publication,” in the March 2012
edition online at WriterMag.com. She is
scheduled to speak at the Canadian Creative
Writers and Writing
Programs Conference hosted at Humber College in Toronto, May 2012.
M.A. alum Lori Myers will be teaching a workshop entitled “Acting the
Book: Putting Pizazz into Your Literary
Readings” at the Pennwriters
Conference, Lancaster, PA. She will also be doing a fiction
reading and
teaching a writing workshop at the Chautauqua Institute in New York this
summer.
M.F.A. alum William D. Prystauk’s academic paper, “The Kids Aren’t All
Right: Horror Movies Remind Us that Protecting
Children at Home is an
Illusion” was just published in the Mid-Atlantic Popular American
Culture
Association “Gazette” (2012 Winter Edition). His short crime story, “Mara”
will appear in the upcoming issue of “Criminal Class Review.” The
academic paper he
prepared for his MFA critical paper at Wilkes has
been accepted for publication by
the peer reviewed “Studies in Gothic
Fiction.” Bill has also begun pre-production
of his short dramatic horror,
Too Many Predators, to be filmed in late August.
M.A. alum Dania Ramos’ bilingual co-creation MI CASA TU CASA was
produced at Luna Stage as part of its
2011-2012 mainstage season. In
December, her play ROOM 30 received a staged reading
as part of
Playwrights Theatre of New Jersey’s FORUM Series at Fairleigh

�Dickinson
University. She was also selected for Playwrights Theatre of
New Jersey’s 2011-12
New Jersey Emerging Women Playwrights
Project, a ten-month play development program.
M.A. student Michael Soloway will have a memoir excerpt published in
the May issue of Brevity magazine. The piece
is called “Introducing
Mother Nature.”
M.F.A. student Sandee Umbach’s full-length poetry collection, The
Pattern Maker’s Daughter, was released in February of 2012 by Bottom
Dog Press. Jim Daniels, author and editor,
calls the collection “a
remarkable debut … full of honesty, wisdom, and heart.”
Program Note
The Write Life blog welcomes guest posts from faculty, students, and
alumni. Email
lori.may1@wilkes.edu for details. Weekly interviews and
literary news are shared online at http://wilkeswritelife.wordpress.com.
 
 

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 2012

Revise This - July 2012
 Revise This!

Revise This!

2017
2018
Revise This! November 2019
Revise This Archives
Revise This! Archives
Writing Program Welcomes Dawn Leas as Associate Director | Jim
Warner Roast Boosts Jennifer Diskin Memorial Scholarship |
Announcements | Faculty/Staff Notes | Student/Alumni Notes
Writing Program Welcomes Dawn Leas as Associate Director
The Wilkes Creative Writing program is growing and with progress comes
change. The
position of Associate Director was recently added and in a
national call for applicants,
Dawn Leas rose to the top and was selected
to join the Wilkes team. As a Wilkes M.F.A
alum, Leas is no stranger to
the program and she admits her personal experience will
influence her
new administrative role.
“This new position will give me the opportunity to talk
about the strengths of the
programs,” Leas said, “to
share my own personal experiences as a student and
alum;
to provide support in terms of navigating LIVE,
our online platform; to assist Dr.
Culver in building new
programs as well as managing daily office operations;

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�and to
nurture a growing writing community.”
In her past lives, Leas has worked in PR and marketing, actively using
social media
and community events to engage audiences. Leas said, “I
will take this experience
and apply it to my new position working closely
with University Relations on marketing
and social media, and with Dr.
Culver, Joyce Anzalone and the graduate admission office
on
admissions. I am also learning the tech side of LIVE so that I can help
guide faculty
and students through its terrain.”
In her role as Associate Director, Leas will build on the current strengths
of the
Wilkes program “while also looking at other avenues to best reach
these groups to
bring them together as a vibrant, dynamic writing
community that interacts not only
within itself, but also with the larger
literary world,” Leas said. “I see the Wilkes
Creative Writing programs as
a place where we can all communicate about craft, trends
in publishing,
continued learning experiences, successes and milestones to help
support
one another in what is otherwise a rather solitary pursuit.”
Jim Warner Roast Boosts Jennifer Diskin Memorial Scholarship
The summer 2012 residency kicked off with a night of
celebration, memories, and philanthropy.
M.F.A. Alum
Amye Archer planned an evening to honor the departure
of one of its admins,
but the night soon became more
than a simple send-off. “The roast was initially conceived
as a unique way to say goodbye to Assistant Director Jim
Warner,” Archer said. “It
was Jim’s very generous decision to donate all
funds raised to a scholarship honoring
Jennifer Diskin, Jim's friend and
program alum who passed away in December 2011.”
News of the fundraiser garnered huge support and the party was wellattended by faculty,
alums, current students, and advisory board
members. In addition to straight-up donations,
a number of items—such
as gift baskets and signed books—were donated for a silent
auction.
Archer said the goal of the evening was to raise $2,000, but the event
brought
in well over $4,000 in honor of Jennifer Diskin.
“Jennifer was a bright light in our community,” Archer said, “and with the
help of
those who generously donated their time and money for the roast,
as well as with the
support from Jennifer's family and friends, it is a light
that will continue to glow.”
Announcements
Faculty members who included students on AWP 2013 panel discussions
are eligible to
apply for student funding support from the Wilkes

�University Mentoring Committee.
Please contact Program Director
Bonnie Culver for more details.
Faculty/Staff Notes
Gregory Fletcher’s new play, Uploaded, was read in New York this July.
The play was read by Michael Learned, June Gable,
and Phil Mills.
Christine M Gelineau’s poem “Sockanosset,” published by The
Paterson Literary Review, has been selected for the 2012 Pushcart Prize
anthology. The anthology will be available
in November.
William Heyen, Advisory Board member, has just released Straight’s
Suite for Craig Cotter &amp; Frank O’Hara from Mayapple Press and
Hiroshima Suite from Nine Point Publishing. A third title, The Football
Corporations, is available
from Etruscan Press this summer. Also, The
Cabin: Journal 1964-1984 will be out from H_NGM_N Press by the end
of the year.
Ross Klavan’s film Tigerland is being remastered on blu-ray and
includes an interview with Ross.
Jan Quackenbush had a play performed in Germany this summer.
Student/Alumni Notes
M.F.A. alum Christopher Bullard has new poems accepted by Rattle,
Waccamaw, Trincaria and Slipstream. One of his poems was chosen for
the anthology The Best of the Barefoot Muse, edited by Anna M. Evans.
M.A. student Kait Burrier will premiere a ten-minute play this
September at Dionysia 12, the second-annual
Jason Miller Playwrights
Project Invitational. She will also be collaborating with
The Pop Up Studio
this October to introduce a theatrical component to Scranton’s Harvest
Festival.
M.A. student Christopher J. Campion’s short story, “Angel,” was
selected as a finalist for East Meets West, American
Writers Review
Spring/Summer 2012 contest.
M.A. alum Cindy Dlugolecki was the featured speaker in May for
Sunday at Museum Square in Mechanicsburg PA.
She presented a
series of vignettes dramatizing the town’s colorful history and just
as
colorful citizens. Cindy’s M.A. thesis/play SNAP! was produced as a
staged reading at the Little Theatre of Mechanicsburg in July.
M.F.A. alum Jaclyn Fowler won first place in the East Meets West

�Spring 2012 contest for her short story, “Swing
Topping and Red Shoes.”
She was also invited to attend this summer’s Norman Mailer
Writers
Colony workshop on Historical Fiction.
M.F.A. alum Wendy Garfinkles’ poem “Stronger Than You Think” was
selected as a Finalist in the East Meets West,
American Writers contest
and will be published in the Spring/Summer 2012 issue.
M.A. alum Jerry Gurka’s play The Prodigal Sons was performed at Saint
John the Baptist Church, Larksville PA this past spring. He
has an article
forthcoming in Celebration Magazine and Scripts Works Press will be
publishing a second collection of his Passion Plays
in 2013. Also, his play
Murder at the Pierogie Wedding will be performed this August.
M.F.A. alum Matthew S. Hinton developed PLAYROOM: An Evening of
One-Act Plays by Regional Authors. The program
ran this June at Kings
College Theater, Wilkes-Barre.
M.A. student Lori A. May has new creative nonfiction in Passages
North, Hippocampus Magazine, and The Smoking Poet. New poetry has
been published at Lansing Online News and she has new reviews
published in Rattle, Los Angeles Review, and Northern Poetry Review.
M.A. alum David McDonald’s short film, Choker, was a finalist in the
2012 Beverly Hills Film Festival. This piece was inspired
by his work in
the Wilkes Creative Writing/Screenwriting Program. Janis Productions
is
currently budgeting the project and several more producers in Texas and
California
are reading it.
M.A. alum Lori M. Myers’ play The Serpents Egg will be produced by
fellow alum Matthew Hinton at Gaslight Theatre in Wilkes-Barre.
Her
short story “Smoke” was recently published by Sunbury Press in the
anthology A Community of Writers.
M.A. alum Dania Ramos’ play Frozen War was read at the Arts on
Division Festival this past May at the PCNJ Pop-Up Art Gallery,
Somerville NJ. This was Playwrights Theatre of New Jersey’s second
round of readings
for the New Jersey Emerging Women’s Playwrights
Project.
M.F.A. alum Jonathan Rocks’ screenplay Luke Whimsey, which was his
capstone for the Wilkes program, has been optioned by Triboro Pictures,
and they are currently representing it at the 2012 Cannes Film Market in
France.
Program Note

�The Write Life blog welcomes guest posts from faculty, students, and
alumni. Email
lori.may1@wilkes.edu for details.
 
Weekly interviews and literary news are shared online at
http://wilkeswritelife.wordpress.com.

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�Wilkes University
84 West South Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA 18766
1-800-WILKES-U
Contact Us
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Revise This - September 2012
Revise This!

Revise This!

2017
2018
Revise This! November 2019
Revise This!   |   September 2012                                          Revise
This Archives

Revise This! Archives

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Gale Martin Ranks #1 | Wilkes Panels, Readings, and More at AWP
Boston 2013
Announcements | Faculty/Staff Notes | Student/Alumni Notes | Program
Notes

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Gale Martin Ranks #1
Recent graduate Gale Martin has been enjoying incredible success for
not one, but
two recent book releases. Her debut with Don Juan in
Hankey, PA (Booktrope 2011) keeps climbing the sales ranks, but it’s her
latest book Grace Unexpected that has drawn even more attention,
recently rising to #1 on Amazon’s list of Movers
and Shakers.
“Movers &amp; Shakers allows readers to keep
track of what books are popular on

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�Amazon,”
Martin explains. “It measures
books that obtain the biggest gains in
Amazon sales
ranks over the past 24
hours.”
 
Grace Unexpected
by Gale Martin
As part of a marketing strategy, Grace Unexpected was offered for free
Kindle download for a limited three day period. Martin’s publisher
aimed
for the freebie to attract readers and everything fell into place as planned.
“It received loads more visibility,” Martin says. In fact, during those three
days
not only was Grace Unexpected downloaded more than 38,000
times, the book sold more than 400 copies in the following
36 hours when
the book returned to its retail price. In turn, buyers have been adding
Don
Juan in Hankey, PA to their online shopping cart as well.
Martin credits the Wilkes writing program for steering her in the right
direction.
The author states that Wilkes helps “prepare authors to present
their writing,” both
through public reading experience and preparing for
the publication market. This hands-on
‘training’ has helped Martin across
the board. She says, “I would say my Wilkes preparation
was invaluable
to my feeling confident and projecting a professional writer’s image.”
Riding high on her past two releases, Martin is already at work on her
next book.

 
Wilkes Panels, Readings, and More at AWP Boston 2013
If you plan on attending the annual AWP Conference and Bookfair, taking
place in Boston
MA, March 6-9, 2013, you’ll find ample Wilkes
representation. Also, Jim Warner, alum
and former assistant program
director, will once again host the All-Collegiate Poetry
Slam and Open
Mic every night of the Boston conference.
Bonnie Culver, program director, is on the AWP national Board of
Trustees and was
a member of the Boston Conference committee. She
noted, “There are more presentations
this year than any other year in
AWP history. It promises to be another fantastic
conference.” Next year’s
conference will be held in Seattle, Washington. Proposals
for the Seattle
conference are due no later than May 1, 2013. Watch the AWP website
for more information.

�The following panel discussions include members from the Wilkes
community:
“The Ten-Minute Play: the Essential Ingredients”
Panelists: Gregory Fletcher, Jean Klein, and L. Elizabeth Powers
For both playwrights and non-playwrights who may want to try their hand
at a shorter
genre, the ingredients of the ten-minute play will be
compared and contrasted to the
full-length play and sketch writing. Also,
exploration will be given to finding the
right size of a story and cast, as
well as to the art of economy, how it looks on
paper, and the production
and publishing opportunities that could follow.
“Second Sex, Second Shelf? Women, Writing, and the Literary
Marketplace”
Panelists: Christine Gelineau, Erin Belieu, Julia Glass, Tayari
Jones, and Meg Wolitzer
Statistics suggest a gap still exits but is there a problem and if there is,
what
is its nature? What changes/ remedies/ metamorphoses can/ should
be imagined? Do you
think about this issue differently in terms of your
writing vs. in terms of your career?
Accomplished writers, who happen to
be women, theorize and report out of their own
experiences and analysis
of the current literary scene.
“International Women’s Day Reading from Becoming: What Makes
a Woman”
Panelists: Jill McCabe Johnson, Dinah Lenney, Nancy McKinley,
Bibi Wein, Nadine Pinede
Authors read from what Dinty W. Moore describes as an astonishing
array of gifted
writers who explore intimacy, doubt, love, joy, and sorrow
to form this exhilarating
anthology. Edited by Jill McCabe Johnson,
Becoming: What Makes a Woman (University of Nebraska Gender
Programs, 2012) features essays of pivotal life experience.
For more information about AWP and the conference schedule, visit
www.awpwriter.org. And, don’t forget to stop by Wilkes/ Etruscan Press
booth in the Bookfair!
 

 
Announcements
 
Bonnie Culver, program director, is on a special job in Mesa, AZ for
Wilkes that is
starting a branch campus at the invitation of the city of

�Mesa. In mid-August, she
drove the Winnebago and da boyz—Elkhounds
Brody and Bernie—across country. She remains
the program director
and will return each residency and continue recruiting and advising.
She
leaves the program in the capable hands of Dawn Leas, Joyce Anzalone,
Graduate
assistants Dawn Zera and Erin Miele, and Etruscan Press
editor Starr Troup. Of Mesa
so far? “It’s hot!” On the creative writing front
in the west? Students wishing to
take CW 501 and begin the west in
January should call Dr. Culver 570.408.4527.
The M.A./M.F.A. Wilkes programs are once again sponsors for the AWP
(Association of
Writers and Writing Programs) national conference to be
held in Boston MA, March 6-9,
2013. That means Wilkes will have 45
FREE registrations for students and faculty wishing
to attend the
conference. As in years past, Wilkes will have a booth shared with
Etruscan
Press in the Book Fair. We need a handful of student
volunteers to work the booth
during the conference. Please call Dawn
Leas to claim a registration and/or volunteer!
The 10th annual International Conference of the Norman Mailer Society
takes place
in Provincetown MA this October 10-13, 2012. From the
Wilkes community, Michael Mailer
is participating on a roundtable
discussion, “Mailer and Boxing,” and J. Michael Lennon
is moderating a
discussion on “Mailer and Women.” And as in years past, the Wilkes
M.A./M.F.A. program will present the Wilkes University
Reader’s Theatre
that is comprised of students and faculty. This year’s readers include
Ross Klavan, Ken Vose, Bonnie Culver, and Dawn Zera. Other Wilkes
alums and faculty
presenters include Nicole DePolo. You must be a
member of The Norman Mailer Society to attend the conference;
however, student memberships are only $20. To attend or find out more
about the society, visit www.normanmailersociety.com.
The M.A./M.F.A. Wilkes programs are currently working through the
approval process
to add a publishing track. Please check out this New
York Times video about small presses that highlights Akashic Books and
its founder and publisher,
Johnny Temple, who is one of our publishing
faculty members.
 

 
Faculty/Staff Notes
 
Gregory Fletcher’s play, Uploaded, was included in the Whitley-Mosier
Foundation Summer Readings 2012 series in New
York City. The lead
roles were read by Michael Learned and June Gable. In September,
Greg began a new job with CUNY - Kingsborough Community College as
Director of Theatre
Arts.  

�Cecilia Galante’s sixth book, about a girl who unknowingly gets involved
with an exorcism, was recently
acquired by Random House. It is
scheduled to be released in fall 2013.
Dawn Leas will have two poems, “Hibernia” and “East West” included in
the anthology, Forever Families, being published by Mandinam Press in
late 2012.
J. Michael Lennon reports that a book he edited was recently published
by Taschen Books:Norman Mailer/Bert Stern: Marilyn Monroe. He edited
and condensed the text of Mailer’s 1973 biography to accompany a new
selection
of photographs by fashion photographer Bert Stern. He is now
working on a new edition
of Mailer’s The Fight (1975), with new
photographs of the Ali-Foreman 1974 championship bout in Zaire,
also to
be published by Taschen Books. He has also just submitted the
manuscript of
the authorized Mailer biography to be published next year
by Simon and Schuster.
Kevin Oderman will have a new novel, White Vespa, available in
November from Etruscan Press.
Neil Shepard has a new poetry chapbook, Vermont Exit Ramps,
available from Big Table Publishing.

 
Student/Alumni Notes
 
M.F.A. alum Amye Archer’s first play is being produced as part of
Dyonisia ‘12: Apocalypse.  This is a series
of short plays written by local
playwrights and is produced by the Jason Miller Playwright
Project.
M.F.A. alum Tara Caimi’s short story “Chicken Divan” was published in
Fire &amp; Knives and her memoir excerpt “Sled Team” was published in Oh
Comely magazine.
M.F.A. alum Craig Czury was featured in Reading Eagle recently,
discussing his role as Berks County poet laureate.
M.F.A. alum Brian Fanelli recently signed a contract with the publisher
Unbound Content to release his first
full-length book of poems.
M.A. student Donna Ferrara has had an essay, “Wrestling with Rain
Barrels,” accepted for publication by Green Prints. This is the second
piece Donna has sold to the magazine.

�M.F.A. student Tyler Grimm has signed with Union Literary Agency,
won the 2012 Norris Church-Mailer Scholarship,
and has just begun
teaching undergraduate writing courses at Elizabethtown College. 
M.F.A. alumni Ginger Marcinkowski had her thesis, Run, River
Currents (women’s fiction) published by Booktrope in August 2012. It was
a semi-finalist in
the ACFW (American Christian Fiction Writer’s) Genesis
Contest as well. She is also
a new adjunct professor for Ashland
University.
M.A. student Lori A. May will be reading from her poetry collection at
Grand Valley State University in Grand
Rapids MI. She will also be a
panel guest at the Michigan College English Association
this fall and a
guest presenter at the Rochester Writers’ Conference at Oakland
University.
In addition to three new poetry journal acceptances, Lori has
new reviews published
in Los Angeles Review.
M.F.A. alum William Prystauk’s critical paper he worked on for his
degree, “Home Is Where the Horror Is,” will
be published by the end of
this year, and will appear in the academic journal Studies in Gothic
Fiction. Also, his short story “Food” will be published by Fantastic Horror
in the fall.
M.F.A. alum MorowaYejidé’s novel manuscript, Time of the Locust, was
a 2012 finalist for the PEN/Bellwether Prize and also received First
Honorable
mention in the 2011 Dana Awards.
M.A. alum and current M.F.A. student Dawn Zera’s one-act play,
Contemporary Saints, was staged in September as part of the Second
Annual Jason Miller Playwrights’ Invitational
in Scranton PA.

 
Program Notes
 
The Write Life blog welcomes guest posts from faculty, students, and
alumni. Email
lori.may1@wilkes.edu for details. Weekly interviews,
literary news, and calls for
submissions are shared online at
http://wilkeswritelife.wordpress.com.

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Revise This - December 2012
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Revise This! Archives

Etruscan’s Tim Seibles a National Book Award Finalist | Morowa Yejidé
Signs Book Contract | New Michael Mailer Production Stars Alec Baldwin
| Persistence Pays Off for Alum Tara Caimi | Announcements |
Faculty/Staff Notes | Student/Alumni Notes | Program Notes

Features
Etruscan’s Tim Seibles a National
Book Award Finalist
It’s been another busy year for Etruscan
Press! The press was honored with the
National
Book Award Finalist nod for Fast

excitement in the following Q&amp;A.

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�Q. Fast Animal already had so much positive response. What has the
National Book Award
Finalist nod done for the book?
A. This is the strongest collection yet from an important American poet at
the height
of his powers. Being chosen as one of five finalists for this
prestigious award focuses
attention on the book, on the press, and on the
poet’s body of work so far.
Q. What about for Etruscan? Has anything changed or is it just another
day in publishing?

A. This is a huge thrill and an important milestone for us. Etruscan seeks
not only
to encourage a dialogue among genres, but also to nurture a
dialogue among writers
at different stages of their careers. We have
published work by some of America’s
best known poets and writers, and
we have also introduced first books by the next
generation of writers.
Having another National Book Award finalist is a boost for
all our writers,
and an encouragement of the dialogue which they conduct.
Q. How has the designation influenced any post-publication activity?
A. Because of the award, we’re in the process of doing a large reprint of
Fast Animal.
Seibles is already a much sought-after performer and
advocate for poetry; his schedule
will only get busier as he promotes his
latest book.
Q. Now, this isn’t the first time Etruscan has received such an honor, is
it?
A. This is our third National Book Award Finalist, following William
Heyen’s Shoah Train
in 2004 and H.L.Hix’s Chromatic in 2006. To put
this in context, only one other independent
press in the country has
placed three NBA finalists in the last eight years; and no
other press has
ever had three in their first eleven years of existence.
Q. Any other comments?
A. We’re delighted to share this celebration with Wilkes M.F.A. Program,
whose continued
support helps Etruscan thrive. The partnership with
Wilkes has blossomed in many ways:
this year we are publishing two
books by Wilkes faculty, Kevin Oderman’s novel White
Vespa and Sarah
Pritchard’s short story collection, Help Wanted: Female. Two Etruscan
authors, H.L. Hix and William Heyen, serve on the Wilkes Advisory
Board; our co-founding
Editors, Phil Brady and Bob Mooney, serve on
the faculty. Our Managing Editor, Starr
Troup, is a Wilkes M.F.A. alumna.
Over twenty Wilkes graduates have interned for Etruscan,
gaining
professional experience and credential in all aspects of publishing, from
editing to educational outreach to design to production to fund-raising;
many more
students have learned about publishing with our Literary
Publishing class. With Akashic
Books’ Johnny Temple, we are launching
a new branch of the M.A. in Literary Publishing.
Entering our seventh
year, The Wilkes-Etruscan partnership is stronger than ever.

� 
Morowa Yejidé Signs Book
Contract
“When you work so hard at
something and constantly dream
and strategize about it
and then you
finally do get a YES, it’s hard to
believe it,” Morowa Yejidé said.
“That
was my initial reaction to
hearing that my novel, Time of the
Locust, was going to
be published
by Atria/Simon &amp; Schuster.
Disbelief.” The Wilkes alum said the premise
of her novel had been
floating around her mind for several years before she even put
pen to
paper. It’s the story of an autistic boy living in the universe of his mind
and his supernatural relationship with his incarcerated father.
Prior to focusing on her thesis, Morowa had a few sample chapters that
were published
as short stories. With that early success and
encouragement, she took the project
further. “I decided to give a
complete manuscript a serious effort through the Wilkes
M.F.A. The
faculty really seemed to be in the trenches as working writers—which
was
what attracted me to the program,” she said. “I listened to Robert
Mooney read one
of his powerful, visually-driven narratives and knew
right away I wanted to work with
him as my Faculty Mentor.”
Morowa was determined to strengthen the story, but she was also eager
to have an audience.
“I continued revisions along the way, working with
Mooney, sending the manuscript
out, sort of building the plane while I
was flying it. After many rejections from
various agents and publishing
houses large and small, I decided to try some national
competitions.”
That’s when she began making headway. “Time of the Locust placed as
a finalist in the 2012 PEN/Bellwether Prize and the Dana Awards.”
The Wilkes alum had already seen success in other venues. Her short
stories have appeared
in the Istanbul Literary Review, Ascent Aspirations
Magazine, Underground Voices,
the Adirondack Review, and others. One
of her stories had been nominated for a Pushcart
Prize, too, but she still
wanted the book manuscript to strike a chord with publishers.
Once she
had the selling point as a finalist for the PEN/Bellwether Prize and the
Dana Awards, Morowa took another chance. “I sent out more queries.
The rest is, as
they say, history. Time of the Locust is forthcoming Spring
2014.” More about Morowa
Yejidé can be found on her website at
http://morowayejide.com.

� 
New Michael Mailer Production Stars Alec
Baldwin
Faculty member Michael Mailer has produced more
than twenty features and leads Michael
Mailer Films.
He has been busy with a new project, starring Alec
Baldwin and James
Toback, and we were pleased to
find out more about this unique production.
Q. Can you tell us about Seduced and Abandoned?
A. Seduced and Abandoned is a non-fiction film, part
mediation on film and the filmmaking
process consisting of interviews of
film legends such as Polanski, Bertolucci, Scorcese,
Copola, and part
adventure tale following the ups and downs of Alec Baldwin and James
Toback as they attempt to set up a remake of Last Tango in Paris (but
this one is
set in Iraq called Last Tango in Tikrit) at the Cannes Film
Festival.
Q. What was the reaction to the process while filming at Cannes?
A. Shooting a film about the making of a film at a filmmakers festival was
highly stimulating
both for all of those involved but for the denizens of
Cannes as well. We had great
support from the head of the festival
himself, Thierry Fermaux.
Q. Would you say the project was a success—either in terms of the
project itself or
in raising money for the ‘undisclosed future film’?
A. So far yes. The film we shot turned out well. It’s compelling and will be
of interest
to anyone interested in film and the filmmaking process.
Q. When and where can audiences see the film?
A. We’re in post production. The movie will be finished at the end of
January, then hopefully
viewable in theaters initially, followed by VOD,
and other ancillaries.

 
Persistence Pays Off for Alum Tara Caimi
M.F.A alum Tara Caimi has a craft essay in the
December 2012 issue of The Writer’s
Chronicle
(AWP). It took time and patience to see
“Privileged Perspective in Memoir:
Building the
Bridge of Trust by Trusting the Reader” in print,
but Tara was determined
and persistent in her
submission process.

�“I think it was fourteen months after I submitted the article before I heard
from
The Writer’s Chronicle. By that time I assumed the article had been
rejected and that
the letter had somehow gotten lost in the mail,” Tara
said. That’s when she received
an email from the editor requesting a few
verbiage adjustments. Tara sent in the edited
essay and then waited
another eight months to hear back from the magazine. This time,
they
accepted her piece but not for immediate publication. “It didn’t seem real,
but
the wait was not yet over. Another full year passed before the editors
found a place
for it in the journal. It took three years total from submission
to publication. I
can say now with confidence, it was well worth the wait.”
On the topic of patience, Tara says “being impatient doesn’t change most
outcomes.”
She considers the revision process and waiting game part of
the job, acknowledging
that much of the editorial side of things is out of a
writer’s control. “I think we,
as writers, do best to focus on the parts we
can control—the writing, the submitting,
the querying—and we should try
not to worry about those parts of the process that
depend on others. Of
course, this is easier said than done.”
The Wilkes alum also believes perseverance is a necessity for writers.
“We can’t know
with any degree of certainty how the work will be
received by others, and we get far
more rejections than acceptances.
Without perseverance, we would not be writers.”
Tara’s professional
attitude has netted positive results. The alum has also had success
with
placing excerpts from her memoir in literary journals.
Tara credits her Wilkes education and experience for developing her
skills as a professional
writer. “Being among this community of supremely
talented writers with the students,
alum, and faculty provides both
support and inspiration and helps me to continue moving
forward. Writing
can be a lonely endeavor, and I’m encouraged by reading about the
work
that others are doing. I continue to learn from this community through
reading
the newsletter and following discussions on various social media
platforms on a regular
basis. It is part of my ‘writerly’ life and I’m happy to
be able to give back by sharing
my experiences as well.”

�Announcements
The Wilkes Creative Writing Program is thrilled to again receive a grant
from the
Maslow Foundation. The grant is $17,000, which helps
underwrite the costs of our visiting
writers and public evening readings,
aptly titled, the Maslow Evening Reading Series.
This is the seventh year
in a row the Maslow Foundation has supported our program
and we are
grateful and honored for their continued support and enthusiasm for what
we’re doing here at Wilkes.
The Wilkes program will again offer a one-week in-depth literary
publishing seminar.
The Art and Science of Literary Publishing will take
place from 9 am to 5 pm, Monday,
Jan. 7 through Friday, Jan 13, 2013
on the Wilkes University campus. The course includes
information about
the current publishing environment from large to small presses,
including
corporate, independent, non-profit, university, multi-media and selfpublishing
models. There will be discussions about editorial policies,
book design, distribution,
business models, marketing, sales of
manuscripts, legal issues, author events, and
much more. Instructors are
Phil Brady (executive director of Etruscan Press) and Johnny
Temple
(publisher and editor of Akashic Books). The course may be taken for
four graduate
credits in conjunction with Wilkes’ creative writing degree
programs. Those not taking
the course for graduate credit will receive a
certificate of completion following
receipt of their final portfolio of written
work. For more information, or to register,
call the Wilkes University
graduate creative writing program at (570) 408-4547 or
email
cwriting@wilkes.edu.
If you plan on attending the annual AWP Conference and Bookfair, taking
place in Boston
MA, March 6-9, 2013, you’ll find ample Wilkes
representation. Faculty Gregory Fletcher
and Jean Klein, and alum
Laurie Powers are on the panel “The Ten-Minute Play: the
Essential
Ingredients,” Nancy McKinley is presenting on the panel “International
Women’s
Day Reading from Becoming: What Makes a Woman,” and
Christine Gelineau will present
on the panel “Second Sex, Second Shelf?
Women, Writing, and the Literary Marketplace.”
Jim Warner, alum and
former assistant program director, will once again host the All-Collegiate
Poetry Slam and Open Mic every night of the conference. Bonnie Culver,
program director,
is on the AWP national Board of Trustees and was a
member of the Boston Conference
committee. She noted, “There are
more presentations this year than any other year
in AWP history. It
promises to be another fantastic conference.” For more information
about
AWP and the conference schedule, visit www.awpwriter.org. Don’t forget
to stop
by Wilkes/ Etruscan Press booth in the Bookfair!

Faculty/Staff Notes

�Bonnie Culver’s 10-minute play GPS was recently produced at The
Venue, Norfolk VA.
Cecilia Galante’s sixth book, about a girl who unknowingly gets involved
with an exorcism, was recently
acquired by Random House. It is
scheduled to be released in fall 2013.
Christine Gelineau’s poem, “List for a Blue Day,” was published in
Women’s Voices for Change.
Dawn Leas has two poems, “Hibernia” and “East West,” included in the
anthology Forever Families
(Mandinam Press).
Nick Mamatas has several short pieces in various recently released
anthologies: the novelette
“Arbeitskraft” appears in Steampunk:
Revolutions (Tachyon Publications); the short
story “Avant-n00b” can be
found in Bloody Fabulous (Prime Books), which collects short
fantasies
about fashion; the suspense story “Willow Tests Well” was published in
Psychos:
Serial Killers, Depraved Madmen, and the Criminally Insane
(Black Dog &amp; Leventhal);
and “The Big Blue Peacock” appears in Dark
Faith: Invocations (Apex Publications),
which collects horror stories on
religious themes.
Nancy McKinley’s short story, “Sweet the Sound,” has been accepted
by Blue Lake Review for publication
in February 2013.
Kevin Oderman has a new novel, White Vespa, available from Etruscan
Press.
David Poyer has increased his backlist. His novel Stepfather Bank is
now available on Kindle,
Nook, and Kobo readers.
Neil Shepard has seen a number of book reviews for his fourth collection
of poetry, Travel/Untravel.
These appear in the American Book Review,
Colorado Review, Rain Taxi Review, Rattle,
Provincetown Arts, The
Journal (Ohio State U), and PANK. Shepard’s radio interview
with the
SUNY-Binghamton radio program, Eggshell Parade, was recorded in
October.
He has new poems in two online literary magazines Mead and
Per Contra, as well as
in an upcoming anthology of TV poems. His poetry
readings in the coming months include
gigs at the University of Vermont,
The Vermont Studio Center, The Writers Place (Kansas
City MO), The
Cosmopolitan Club (NYC), and Barnes &amp; Noble (Burlington VT). He will
be teaching poetry workshops at The Writers Place in Kansas City MO
and at the Ossabaw
Writers’ Retreat in Savannah GA.

�Richard Uhlig’s novel, Mystery at Snake River Bridge, was recently
acquired by Wild Child Publishing
and is set for a 2014 release.

Student/Alumni Notes
M.A. student Kait Burrier’s short one act play, Patient/Fracture, was
recently staged during the 2nd annual JMPP
invitational, Dyonisia ‘12.
She also wrote and directed three site-specific monologues
for
Scranton’s 2nd annual Bonfire at the Iron Furnaces. She continues to
review arts
and entertainment for NEPA’s Weekender. Kait’s poetry will
appear in forthcoming issues
of Ruminate Magazine, Word Fountain, and
NAP lit mag’s e-chapbook, #GOODLitSwerveAutumn.
M.F.A. alum Tara Caimi has a craft essay, “Privileged Perspective in
Memoir: Building the Bridge of Trust
by Trusting the Reader,” in the
December issue of AWP’s The Writer’s Chronicle. Her
short story
“Chicken Divan,” which first appeared in Fire &amp; Knives, is forthcoming
in
Oh Comely magazine.
M.A. student Christopher J. Campion’s short story “That Familiar and
Dissonant Tune” has been accepted for publication
by Fiction365.com.
M.F.A. alum Brian Fanelli has three poems published in Foliate Oak. His
poem, “After Working Hours,” has been
nominated for a 2012 Pushcart
Prize. The poem first appeared in the fall 2012 issue
of Boston Literary
Magazine.
M.F.A. alum Patricia Florio’s story “Golden Boy” will appear in the
Spring 2013 edition of Newton Literary. “Golden
Boy” is based on a
family member who was a professional dancer in the 1940s, and the
rest
of the story bears a bit of truth and a lot of fiction.
M.F.A. alum Wendy Garfinkle’s debut novel, Serpent on a Cross, has
been e-published by Northampton House Press,
under the pseudonym
Darya Asch. It’s available on Nook, Kindle and Kobo.
M.F.A. alum John Koloski has e-published his first novel, Empyres:
Bloodblind. It is the first book in the
Empyres trilogy, with the next two to
follow in 2013 and 2014. The book is available
for Kindle, Nook, and
Kobo readers.
M.F.A. alum Carol MacAllister’s sci-fi e-book, Mayan Calendar Reveal,
is available on Kindle and scheduled for all
popular reading devices. Her
short story “Blood Pine” is part of the prestigious trade
collection The Call
of Lovecraft, from Evil Jester Press. “Under Nighttime Rainbows,”
an
erotic horror story, is part of the upcoming UK collection Peep Show

�Vol.2.edited
by Paul Fry. Several of her poems and a foreword are slated
for the collection of
inspirational work Light Within, from Ireland. A shared
poem with Adrian Spendlow,
official town bard of York England, will
appear with other work in Word Fountain.
M.A. student Lori A. May has new critical essays and reviews in New
Orleans Review, The Iowa Review, and Los
Angeles Review. Her poem
“Drinks Among Friends” was published in a special anthology
by Pirene’s
Fountain. Her personal essay “Out of a Suitcase and Into the Vortex” was
published by Passages North. Another essay, “The Stamp,” was
published by Connotation
Press.
M.F.A. alum William Prystauk presented a critical paper, “Disturbing
Cinema: Why We Watch,” at the EAPSU Fall
Conference. He is currently
filming his horror short, Too Many Predators. Also, Fantastic
Horror is
publishing his short story “Food” in the upcoming “Blood” issue.
M.A. alum Joseph Schwartzburt is working with Seersucker Live, a
Savannah Literary group. They will be putting
on a show in January
featuring writers from The Georgia Review: Liza Wieland, Alice
Friman,
and editor Stephen Corey.
M.F.A. alum Donna Talarico was one of seventeen higher ed
professionals contracted to write a chapter for the
forthcoming book from
mStoner, Social Works: How #HigherEd Uses #SocialMedia to Raise
Money, Build Awareness, Recruit Students and Get Results. Her chapter
is a case study
of a shared social media campaign/contest between MIT
and Cornell. She also presented
“No Such Thing as TMI: How to Create
a Culture of Content Sharing” at the 2012 Higher
Education Web
Professionals annual conference held in October in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin.
Talarico won Best of Track for the Marketing, Content and
Social Strategy track, which
allowed her to give her presentation two
more times during special “Red Stapler Sessions”
on the final day of the
conference. Talarico also gave this presentation at the eduWeb
conference in July and was asked to give an abbreviated version of it in
October for
the higher ed software company, OmniUpdate.
M.A. alum Kevin Voglino’s second novel, Tea Time Boys, will be
released by RoguePhoenix Publishing in January
2013.
M.F.A. alum Morowa Yejidé’s debut novel, Time of the Locust, which
tells the story of an autistic boy who lives
in a world of his own making
and his supernatural relationship with his incarcerated
father, will be
published by Atria/Simon &amp; Schuster in spring 2014.
 

� 
Program Notes
 
The Write Life blog welcomes guest posts from faculty, students, and
alumni. Email lori.may1@wilkes.edu for details. Weekly interviews,
literary news, and calls for submissions are shared
online at
http://wilkeswritelife.wordpress.com.

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