Rebecca Levi wins Mick Imlah award

RebeccaLeviWe’re so proud of Rebecca Levi (Poetry ’18) who recently won third place in the Mick Imlah Poetry Prize!  The winning poem is called “December 31st” and was published in The Times Literary Supplement.

Rebecca says:

The thing about living in Colombia is that poems happen to you all the time. On December 31, 2017, they really did slaughter five pigs outside the apartment where I was staying, and the trash truck rounded the corner, and there was drama on my WhatsApp. All I had to do was write it down. It came out almost fully formed, and I trusted the strange stream of my consciousness.

Read “December 31st” here.

Congratulations, Rebecca!

Rebecca Levi is a musician, poet, and translator. She has lived and worked in Peru, Colombia, and the U.S. Her poetry has appeared in BorderSenses and No Tokens Journal, and her translations have been published by Princeton University Press. Her translations of Chilean poet Stella Díaz Varin won second place in Boston University’s Robert Fitzgerald Translation Prize and are forthcoming in Your Impossible Voice. If You’re Not Happy Now, an anthology of work by BU’s MFA poetry class of 2018, is forthcoming from Broadstone Books in Spring 2019. In December 2018, Rebecca won third place in the Mick Imlah Poetry Prize at the Times Literary Supplement for her poem, “December 31st.” Rebecca’s band is called Debarro, meaning made of mud and ever-changing, which also describes what she likes about poetry.

Dariel Suarez publishes story collection

A Kind of Solitude Full CoverWe're so happy to share that Dariel Suarez's story collection, A Kind of Solitude, is available for pre-order!  The book has received glowing reviews, and even made it onto the Kenyon Review's Holiday Recommended Reading list.

In addition, Red Hen Press will be publishing Dariel's debut novel, The Playwright's House!  We're looking forward to hearing more details about that soon.

Congratulations, Dariel!  We can't wait to read your work.

Dariel Suarez was born and raised in Havana, Cuba. He immigrated to the United States with his family in 1997, during the island’s economic crisis known as The Special Period. He is the author of the novel The Playwright’s House (forthcoming, Red Hen Press) and the story collection A Kind of Solitude (Willow Springs Books), winner of the 2017 Spokane Prize for Short Fiction.

Dariel is an inaugural City of Boston Artist Fellow and the Director of Core Programs and Faculty at GrubStreet, the country’s largest and leading independent creative writing center. His prose has appeared or is forthcoming in numerous publications, including The Kenyon Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Prairie Schooner, The Massachusetts Review, North American Review, Third Coast, Southern Humanities Review, WBUR’s Cognoscenti, and The Caribbean Writer, where his work was awarded the First Lady Cecile de Jongh Literary Prize. Dariel earned his M.F.A. in Fiction at Boston University and now resides in the Boston area with his wife and daughter.

Poet Caitlin Doyle Awarded Pushcart Prize Special Mention

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"The Dress Code," a poem by Caitlin Doyle (Poetry 2008), which originally appeared in The Yale Review, has been awarded a Pushcart Prize Special Mention in Pushcart Prize XLIII: Best of the Small Presses (W.W. Norton & Co, 2019).

The Pushcart Prize series honors the best literary work published each year by small presses around the country. Caitlin is in impressive company as the recipient of a 2019 Special Mention, along with Carolyn Forche, David Wojahn, Ilya Kaminski, Bob Hicock, and Patricia Smith, among other notable poets!

In Poetry Sunday last March, poet and critic Rebecca Foust highlighted Doyle's "The Dress Code," which is a villanelle, as an example of how "form can set you free in your writing and reading of poetry." According to Foust, the poem's "repetitions build an echo chamber resulting in sonic saturation that creates anxiety and urgency," a series of artful aural effects that "keep tension taut in the poem."

Click here to read Caitlin's poem "The Dress Code."

Congratulations, Caitlin!

Caitlin Doyle is currently completing a PhD in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Cincinnati, where she holds an Elliston Fellowship in Poetry and serves as an Associate Editor of The Cincinnati Review. Her poems, essays, and reviews have appeared in The Atlantic, The Guardian, The Threepenny Review, Boston Review, Best New Poets (University of Virginia Press), and elsewhere. Her work has also been featured through the PBS NewsHour Poetry Series, Poetry Daily, and the Poetry Foundation’s “Poem of the Day” series. She has received awards and fellowships through the James Merrill House, the Yaddo Colony, the MacDowell Colony, the Jack Kerouac House, The Frost Farm, the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, and the P.E.O. Scholar Foundation, among others.  She earned her MFA in Poetry from Boston University as the George Starbuck Fellow in Poetry.

Chris Amenta published in Redivider

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Chris Amenta (Fiction '13) has published his debut story in Redivider.  Hurray!  As his former workshop-mate, I'm especially excited to feature him on the CW blog, and hear more about his writing, his teaching, and his inspiring creative habits.

Tell us about the process of writing "Catch and Release."  How did it start, where did it come from, and what changes did it undergo from first draft to polished story?

"Catch and Release" was the first story I wrote for the MFA program. I’d recently been on vacation in Seattle, and I walked to the Ballard Locks to watch salmon climb the fish ladder. Among the tourists were two teenagers who were crossing the bridge just to get to wherever they were going. I thought they looked interesting.

The version of this story that I turned in was a mess. Leslie Epstein returned a copy to me that looked as though his pen had exploded onto the pages. But he and the cohort seemed to like these two characters, and I did, too. I revised, and drafts later—with clearer characterization, action, and dialog—it started to come together.

What was the biggest challenge you faced in writing it?

This story has a complex plot that's advanced by Prete, who isn’t the point of view character. He orchestrates a turn of events which occurs to the narrator almost as an epiphany.

But, really, this story is about these two young guys. Prete’s grief has driven him to act badly. Tom is tired of looking after Prete, of cleaning up the kid’s messes. The plot—what Prete does—forces this tension to a climax, but what happens is actually a little dense and can be difficult to piece together. I put a lot of work into revealing the plot delicately so that the story can still be about the dynamic between these two friends and not about this unexpected turn.

You have a spare and direct style -- short sentences, short exchanges between characters, lots of verbs.  Who would you say are your biggest influences?

I’m always trying to gobble up whatever I can. I had formative reading experiences with Dostoevsky, Joseph Heller, and the detective fiction of Dashiell Hammett, George V. Higgins, and Raymond Chandler. I find myself returning often to writers like Denis Johnson, J.M. Coetzee, and Jim Shepard. I also try to remember the architects: Mies van der Rohe (less is more); Louis Sullivan (form follows function).

What are your writing habits like?  Any rituals?

I have a day job, and I teach at Boston University, and I write for Boston College and the College of the Holy Cross. Not writing fiction seems a terrifically easy thing to do. So I keep a routine. I get up at five or so and make coffee. I do some online window shopping—handmade shoes, for some reason, have become a fascination—then, I block the internet and work until I’m about five minutes late. I swim laps, hoping that the quiet might help solve whatever problem I’m toiling with. Then to work and all else.

You also have a novel on submission.  Do you prefer writing one genre over the other, and why?

I don’t know that I prefer any one genre over another. I try to find characters that interest me. Lately, I’ve been looking for them in some of this country's stranger corners. The novel on submission is set in a man camp in fracking country in North Dakota. I’m currently working on something new which is about men and women in a modern, American militia. I’m interested in those characters and settings where realism can sidle up to the surreal.

What's something that you tell your students in every class?

I hope that I’ve made it clear that you can get away with whatever you can get away with. We spend a lot of time reading published fiction and essays about craft. And they have to listen to me go on about my ideas about how fiction works. Craft matters, technique matters, but I try to caveat everything we study by reminding my students that there’s no wrong way to write, so long as the story works.

Congratulations, Chris!

Christopher Amenta is a writer living in Boston, MA. He is a graduate of the Boston University MFA Fiction Writing program, where he received the Saul Bellow Award and was named a Leslie Epstein Global Fellow. He completed his undergraduate degree at The College of the Holy Cross, where his fiction was recognized with the James H. Reilly Memorial Purse. He teaches creative writing at Boston University, and his writing has appeared in Redivider, Boston College Magazine, and Holy Cross Magazine. His first novel, These Bodies Become Oil is currently on submission.

Tara Skurtu gives TED talk

Big news from Tara Skurtu (Poetry '13), who gave a TEDx Talk in Romania earlier this summer!  Entitled "Unlearning Uncreativity," the lecture took place at TEDxEroilor in Cluj, a city in the Transylvania region of Romania.

In addition, the Romanian translation of Tara's book The Amoeba Game was recently published by one of Romania's main publishing houses, Nemira.  Tiberiu Neacșu and Radu Vancu translated her work.

Below, we're excited to share her summer reading list, complete with blurbs from Tara herself.  Many thanks, Tara, and hearty congratulations!

Tara Skurtu's Summer Reading List

Stay With Me by Ayobami Adebayo
This debut novel, set in Nigeria, tells the journey of a marriage from both perspectives, navigating love, loyalty, betrayal, despair, and political tumult. I got so sucked into this novel I finished it in two sittings, and I read the last ten or so pages as slowly as I could because I didn't want the story to to end.

Turtle Diary by Russell Hoban
This was recommended to me by the manager of my favorite English bookshop in Bucharest, Carturesti & Friends (formerly Anthony Frost). It's a beautifully introspective, poetic novel revolving around the thoughts of two characters who feel the need to free some sea turtles from the zoo.

Half-Light: Collected Poems 1965-2016 by Frank Bidart
I've been revisiting some of Bidart's poems and discovering new ones in this gorgeous Pulitzer Prize-winning book of 650+ pages.

Bishop: Poems, Prose, and Letters (Library of America, edited by Robert Giroux & Lloyd Schwartz)
I bring this Elizabeth Bishop book with me everywhere I go (and it's a hardback!). It's like a little bible of sorts to me.

What I'm reading now:
The Order of Time by Carlo Rovelli (Translated by Simon Carnell and Erica Segre)
Italian theoretical physicist Rovelli attempts to unravel the mysteries and meanings of time in this charming, easy-to-read book.

On my desk to read next:
Cuz: The Life and Times of Michael A. by Danielle Allen
Another Language: A Selection of Poems by Eileen Chong
The African Trilogy: Things Fall Apart, No Longer at Ease, Arrow of God by Chinua Achebe
So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo

Poet Caitlin Doyle Receives Presidential Endowed Scholar Award

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Caitlin Doyle (Poetry ’08) has been selected as one of 100 doctoral students in the United States and Canada to receive the P.E.O Scholar Award! This prestigious prize recognizes Doyle’s artistic and scholarly achievements. Among the doctoral students chosen as P.E.O Scholars, Caitlin has been granted the further distinction of receiving one of the foundation’s specially endowed awards. She has been named the Presidential Endowed Scholar for 2018-2019, an honor given to a sole doctoral student in the United States and Canada every two years. According to the P.E.O Board of Trustees, this recognition is “reserved for our finest scholars.”

In a recent article in The Key Reporter about Doyle’s selection for the P.E.O Scholar Award, University of Cincinnati professor John Drury characterized Doyle as “an innovative master with elements of poetic form, such as rhyme and meter.” The article also quotes Rebecca Lindenberg, current Poetry Editor of The Cincinnati Review: “Doyle’s poetry,” Lindenberg says, “reads like Literature with a capital L.” Boston University’s own Robert Pinsky describes Doyle as “a poet of grace” and “formal ebullience” who possess a “gorgeous, original imagination.” 

We were lucky enough to hear from Caitlin herself about her summer reading lists.  She says: 

I've been studying all summer for my doctoral exams and one of my areas of concentration is diasporic literature, so I'm reading a variety of novels and poetry collections that touch on themes related to diaspora, immigration, and the creation of cultural identity. Highlights thus far include Bye Bye Blackbird by Anita Desai, The Nature of Blood by Caryl Phillips, Breath, Eyes, Memory by Edwidge Danticat, Engine Empire by Cathy Park Hong, Operation Shylock: A Confession by Philip Roth, and Brooklyn by Colm Tobin. If I have time to slip in some lighter beach reading before the fall semester starts, I'd love to scope out The President is Missing, a thriller co-written by Bill Clinton and James Paterson. Anthony Lane's hilarious review in The New Yorker made the book sound like an irresistibly fun indulgence, a perfect palate cleanser between exam study sessions. 

You can read more about Caitlin as a poet and scholar in this article in The Key Reporter.

Thanks, Caitlin, and congratulations!

Caitlin Doyle is currently pursuing a PhD in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Cincinnati, where she holds an Elliston Fellowship in Poetry and serves as an Assistant Editor at The Cincinnati Review.  Doyle’s poems, essays, and reviews have appeared innumerous journals, magazines, and anthologies, including The AtlanticThe GuardianThe Yale ReviewThe Threepenny ReviewBoston ReviewThe Black Warrior Review, and Best New Poets. Her work has also been featured through the PBS NewsHour Poetry Series and Poetry Daily. She has received awards and fellowships through the James Merrill House, the Yaddo Colony, the MacDowell Colony, and The Frost Farm, among others.

Jillian Jackson publishes story in the Iowa Review

Jillian Jackson

Jillian Jackson (Fiction '15) has published her story "A Leo, Like Jackie O" in the Spring 2018 issue of The Iowa Review!

We had a chance to hear from Jillian about her writing process.  Here's what she had to say:

When I write it usually takes me a long time to fumble through a story and figure out what it's really about. It's a VERY inefficient process, but it can be pleasantly surprising, and a lot of the time I end up far from where I started.

Where did the idea for the story come from?  How did it come together?

I'm very interested in the supernatural, and this was originally a ghost story: one of the main characters was being haunted. I quickly realized I was in above my head and really could not pull it off, and once I cut the ghost, the writing became much easier. The final version is still about death and loss and memory, but is now 100% realism.

What can you tell us about The Iowa Review?

Before applying to BU and while I was working on my application I started binge-reading short story anthologies (mostly The Best American Short Stories) and I discovered that a lot of the stories I liked the most were from The Iowa Review. One of those stories is an all-time favorite of mine: "Lawns" by Mona Simpson. I love the narrator's voice in "Lawns," and I reread it a few times while I was working on this. It can be really difficult figuring out where to send something, but I took a chance and thought that it might make sense to send it to The Iowa Review. I was obviously beyond thrilled when they accepted it.

Congrats, Jillian!  We're looking forward to reading your story!

Jillian Jackson is a graduate of the MFA program in Fiction at Boston University and the recipient of a St. Botolph Club Foundation’s Emerging Artist Grant. Her work appears or is forthcoming in the Iowa Review, Smokelong Quarterly, and others. She lives in Boston, MA, where she teaches writing at Emmanuel College and is at work on a novel.

Madelyn Rosenberg co-authors award-winning middle-grade novel

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Madelyn Rosenberg (Fiction '02) and her friend and co-author Wendy Wan-Long Shang, are finalists for two awards for their middle-grade novel This Is Just a Test (Scholastic)! The book, which was also a Sydney Taylor honor winner, is a finalist for the Children's and Teen Choice Book Awards and the New-York Historical Society's Children's Book Prize. Set in the 1980s, This Is Just a Test is the humorous tale of David Da-Wei Horowitz, a Chinese-American-Jewish kid trying to juggle friendships and cultural identities while studying for his bar mitzvah against Cold War fears of nuclear annihilation.

Congrats, Madelyn and Wendy!

Madelyn Rosenberg and Wendy Wan-Long Shang have been friends for about a decade.  They met through the Society for Children's Book Writers and Illustrators and got to know each other in a critique group in Northern Virginia, where they both live.

Wendy grew up in Northern Virginia, the only Asian kid at her elementary school. Madelyn grew up in Southwest Virginia and was one of the only Jewish kids in hers. They fused their "only" backgrounds in their Chinese-American-Jewish main character, David Da-Wei Horowitz.
madwendybrickWendy is also the author of The Great Wall of Lucy Wu and The Way Home Looks Now. A lawyer by training, she is a research and communications associate with the Pretrial Justice Institute. Madelyn is a freelance writer and the author of ten books for children including How to Behave at a Tea Party, Nanny X, and Take Care.

April 28th: International Women’s Writing Guild Retreat!

The International Women’s Writing Guild is offering a reduced rate for students to participate in its upcoming annual writer’s retreat.

On April 28th, The International Women’s Writing Guild (IWWG) will host its 3rd Annual daylong writing retreat. Entitled Writing From Your Life, this immersive experience invites writers of all stages to discover how to unlock the power of their own life story toward realizing their writing goals. Through three workshops, participants will explore how to weave the autobiographical into memoir, myth and monologue. The event also provides networking opportunities, a book fair, and a catered lunch. The retreat will be held in the center of Medfield, at The Montrose School, 29 North Street, Medfield, MA from 9:30 a.m. – 5:15 p.m.

Kelly DuMar, author, poet, playwright and Sherborn native-describes the day’s three workshops as distinctly ‘writer generative’. This is a chance to create original work in collaboration with a vibrant, creative community, guided by three outstanding facilitators that are accomplished writers in their own right. DuMar is joined by fellow workshop facilitators Susan Tiberghien, author of “The Zen of Writing: Clear Seeing, Clear Writing Toward Wholeness” and the newly published “Writing Toward Wholeness: Lessons Inspired by C.G. Jung” and Maureen Murdock, author of “The Heroine's Journey, Spinning Inward.”

Marisa Moks-Unger, Poet Laureate of Erie County, Pennsylvania attended the retreat last year and describes it as “a fantastic opportunity for writers of all genres to deepen their craft. I found all three of the workshop leaders' presentations to be valuable in developing literary images which I have applied to my poet laureate project, as well as a lecture I gave on the ‘The Power of Poetry; The Persistence of Prose’ at The Jefferson Education Society. Also, a number of my published poems were incubated at this workshop. I highly recommend attending the entire day to experience the brilliance of Susan Tiberghien, Maureen Murdock, and Kelly Du Mar.”

IWWG has served as a support system for women writers in over 60 countries. Members of the Guild have published over thousands of books, and the organization provides one of the longest running literary conferences in the country.

To learn more and to register online, see here.

Reedsy Short Story Contest

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We've partnered with Reedsy for a short story contest! The three best submissions will win an editorial assessment from editor Laura Mae Isaacman, who has worked with T.C. Boyle, Lara Vapnyar, Joyce Carol Oates, Noam Chomsky, and many others. Read more about her here.

To submit, write a short story that begins with the following sentence: “First place isn't always where you want to be.”

15,000 words max

Email your submission to bu@reedsy.com.  The Reedsy Short Story Contest runs from today (February 5th) through March 5, 2018.  Open to BU MFA students and program alumni.

Good luck!