Dariel Suarez’s short fiction to be taught at Brown

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Exciting news from Dariel Suarez (Fiction 2012): One of Dariel’s stories, “Marching Men,” is being taught at Brown University this semester through the Latina/o Studies Department! Dariel wrote and workshopped “Marching Men” in Leslie Epstein’s class here at BU. The story was published in Prairie Schooner‘s summer 2014 issue.

In addition, Dariel has been invited to speak at Brown by faculty in the American and Ethnic Studies Department. He’ll be visiting on March 1 to co-teach a class on his story, give a public reading, and have dinner with faculty and students.

Congratulations, Dariel! What an honor. We wish you the best at Brown!

Dariel Suarez is the author of the chapbook In The Land of Tropical Martyrs, available from Backbone Press. He earned his M.F.A. in fiction at Boston University and is one of the founding editors of Middle Gray Magazine. He has taught creative writing at Boston University, the Boston Arts Academy, and Boston University’s Metropolitan College. Dariel’s writing has appeared or is forthcoming in numerous journals and magazines, including Michigan Quarterly Review, Prairie Schooner, The Florida Review, Southern Humanities Review, and The Caribbean Writer, as well as several anthologies. Dariel is currently finishing revisions on a novel about a Cuban political prisoner, titled The Playwright’s House.

Tara Skurtu is guest author on The Best American Poetry Blog

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Wonderful news from Tara Skurtu (Poetry '13)! Tara has been featured as the guest author on The Best American Poetry Blog. Her conversational and thought-provoking series of posts cover a variety of topics, including teaching writing, fear and writing, and growing to love poetry (again). One of the posts features the BU Prison Education Program, where Tara taught. Read her posts below:

On the Impossibility of Teaching Creative Writing
The Committees in our Heads: on Fear and Writing
Poetry at Stake
Thoreau’s Nephew: Romania’s Literary Slaughterhouse
I Don’t Like Poetry, I’m Not a Poetry Person

Congratulations, Tara!

Tara Skurtu teaches incarcerated college students through Boston University’s Prison Education Program. She is the recipient of a 2015-16 Fulbright, a Robert Pinsky Global Fellowship, and two Academy of American Poets prizes. Tara’s poems have been translated into Romanian and Hungarian, and her recent work appears or is forthcoming in The Kenyon Review, Poetry Review, Poetry Wales, Plume, Memorious, DMQ Review, The Common, and Tahoma Literary Review.

 

Dammy Aderibigbe publishes chapbook

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Michael "Dammy" Aderibigbe (Poetry '16) has just published his chapbook, In Praise of Our Absent Father, with Akashik Books!

About Dammy, Tsitsi Jaji says, "Here is a poet whose vision and empathy reach into the intimate corners of family history, bearing witness to generations of tenderness, violence, generosity, survival and imagination with rare precision."

You can purchase a copy by writing to Dammy directly at dammyg1989 [at] gmail dot com.

Here is the title poem:

On the 5th day of a month
made of harmattan and cold sun,
my mother washed dirt off grains of rice,

chopped carrots, onions, pepper
and liver on a slab into rings ---
beating our stomachs to music.

My older sister slit open
the belly of a huge Eja Kote ---
packed out its intestine as one offloads

clothes from a bag. Beads of sweat slipped
down their faces like rain on windshields.
The sitting-room: strands of Juju

melody streamed out of the stereo ---
the house covered with music.
From the kitchen: my mother's efforts smelled

delicious. My mother wore
aso-oke --- she danced, and we ate ---
raising cups in praise of her loneliness.

Congratulations, Dammy!

D.M. Aderibigbe is from Nigeria. His chapbook, In Praise of Our Absent Father,is an APBF New Generation African Poets Chapbook Series selection. He is a recipient of 2015 Honours from Dickinson House and The Entrekin Foundation. His poems appear in Alaska Quarterly Review, Colorado Review, cream city review, DIAGRAM, Normal School, Notre Dame Review, Poet Lore, Prairie Schooner, RATTLE, and Spillway, which nominated him for the 2017 Puschcart Prize. He’s been featured on Verse Daily. His first manuscript received a special mention in the 2015 Sillerman First Book Prize for African Poets.

Emma Duffy-Comparone published in NER and The Sun

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We're excited to share that Emma Duffy-Comparone has recently published two short stories!  "The Devil's Triangle" appears in the current issue of New England Review and "Plagiarism" is in the November 2015 issue of The Sun.  We're also happy to welcome Emma back to BU as  our instructor of Fiction Writing at MET College next semester.

Congratulations, Emma!

Emma Duffy-Comparone's fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in Ploughshares, New England Review, One Story, The Pushcart Prize XXXIX and elsewhere. Recently a guest prose editor of The Pushcart Prize XL, she teaches at Tufts University.

Shubha Sunder Wins Crazyhorse Fiction Prize

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We're happy to announce that Shubha Sunder (Fiction 2012) has won the 2015 Crazyhorse Fiction Prize for her short story!  She began writing the story, "Jungleman," while in Leslie Epstein's fiction workshop here at BU.  It was released in Crazyhorse just this week.  You can read an interview with Shubha on the Crazyhorse blog, here.

Congratulations, Shubha!

Shubha Sunder is a 2012 graduate of the BU Creative Writing Program, which awarded her the Florence Engell Randall Graduate Fiction Award and a Leslie Epstein Fellowship for travel to Russia. Her fiction has most recently appeared in Michigan Quarterly Review, The Bangalore Review, and Narrative Magazine, where it was a winner of "30 Below." She has won scholarships to Sewanee and Breadloaf and currently lives in Boston, where she is at work on her first novel, set in her hometown of Bangalore, India.

Tara Skurtu to read in Literary Death Match

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Fun recent news from poet and world traveler Tara Skurtu (Poetry 2013), who is currently on a Fulbright in Romania!  Tara has been invited to read at the 8th International Festival of Literature in Bucharest (FILB), one of Romania's most celebrated literary festivals, and will be participating in a fast and exciting Literary Death Match. Adrian Todd Zuniga, the creator of Literary Death Match, will be in Bucharest ​to host. Read about the event here.

Good luck and congratulations, Tara!

Tara Skurtu teaches incarcerated college students through Boston University’s Prison Education Program. She is the recipient of a 2015-16 Fulbright, a Robert Pinsky Global Fellowship, and two Academy of American Poets prizes. Tara’s poems have been translated into Romanian and Hungarian, and her recent work appears or is forthcoming in The Kenyon Review, Poetry Review, Poetry Wales, Plume, Memorious, DMQ Review, The Common, and Tahoma Literary Review.

 

Dammy Aderibigbe’s poem in RATTLE

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We're pleased to announce that Michael "Dammy" Aderibigbe's poem "The Origin of Kindness" is forthcoming in RATTLE issue 50!  Dammy is currently in the MFA program for poetry at Boston University, where he studies with Robert Pinsky and Karl Kirchwey.

Congrats, Dammy!

D.M. Aderibigbe is from Nigeria. His chapbook, In Praise of Our Absent Father, is an APBF New Generation African Poets Chapbook Series selection. He is a recipient of 2015 Honours from Dickinson House and The Entrekin Foundation. His poems appear in Alaska Quarterly Review, Colorado Review, cream city review, DIAGRAM, Normal School, Notre Dame Review, Poet Lore, Prairie Schooner, RATTLE, and Spillway, which nominated him for the 2017 Puschcart Prize. He's been featured on Verse Daily. His first manuscript received a special mention in the 2015 Sillerman First Book Prize for African Poets.

Lisa Hiton published in Word Riot

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Lisa Hiton (Poetry 2011) has published two poems on Word Riotwhich you can read and listen to here!

Lisa's poem “Dream of My Father’s Shiva, McCoy Park, 1976” is read by poet Richie Hofmann, who holds a BA from BU.  Richie recently published his first book of poetry.  At BU, he studied with Rosanna Warren.

Congratulations, Lisa and Richie!

Lisa Hiton holds an M.F.A in Poetry from Boston University and an M.Ed. in Arts in Education from Harvard University. Her poems have been published or are forthcoming in The Literary Review, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Linebreak, and The Cortland Review, among others. She has received the Esther B. Kahn Scholarship from 24Pearl Street at the Fine Arts Work Center, and a nomination for the Pushcart Prize.

Micah Nathan in the Paris Review and Glimmer Train

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We're excited to share that an excerpt from Micah Nathan's (Fiction 2010) novel In Search of Absolutely Nothing is forthcoming in Glimmer Train's latest issue!  In addition, Micah recently published this entertaining piece on Satanism and growing up in the suburbs of Los Angeles in the Paris Review's Halloween edition.

Congrats, Micah!

Micah Nathan has written several novels, some ignored, most well-received. His short stories have appeared in The Gettysburg Review, Bellingham Review, Glimmer Train, and others. He Tweets frequently, but not so often as to be annoying. Find him @micahnathan.

Sasenarine Persaud shortlisted for Guyana Prize for Literature

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by Denise Noone

We're pleased to share that Sasenarine Persaud's (Fiction '06) poetry collection, Love in a Time of Technology, was shortlisted for the Guyana Prize in Literature!  You can also see the announcement in the Guyana Chronicle, here.

The judges had this to say about the book: "A fine collection of brief, succinct poems. The imagery is emotionally charged and reverberates with cultural memories: the references to the language, traditions and cultures of India are particularly poignant and interesting."

Sasenarine Persaud is the author of twelve books of fiction and poetry. His awards include: The KM Hunter Foundation Award (Toronto) and fellowships from the University of Miami and Boston University. Persaud initiated the term Yogic Realism to define his literary aesthetics. His most recent books are Love in a Time of Technology (TSAR Books, Toronto, 2014), Lantana Strangling Ixora (TSAR Books, Toronto, 2011), Unclosed Entrances: Selected Poems (Caribbean Press, Warwick & Georgetown, 2011) and In a Boston Night (TSAR, Toronto, 2008).  Persaud was born in Guyana and has lived in Canada for several years. He tarries in Florida.