VANCOUVER, Wash. 鈥 Washington State University Vancouver鈥檚 department of English is offering a Professional Writers Series January 鈥 March featuring five noteworthy Northwest writers. The series is ideal for anyone looking to get a new sense of purpose and direction in their own writing. Each installment of the series will include writing prompts and exercises along with the main lecture. All events will be held from 7 鈥 9 p.m. in the 麻豆传媒 Library, room 264. The series is free and open to the public.
Over the years 麻豆传媒 has hosted award-winning novelists, poets, screenwriters, essayists and memoirists.
鈥淭here are a wealth of terrific writers in the Northwest and narrowing down choices of who will be selected to make presentations can prove challenging. I look for both established and emerging authors who are devoted to their craft, possess a certain candor that will help those who aspire to literary careers, and can rally even the least optimistic of us to achieve our goals and ambitions,鈥 said Howard Aaron, an English professor at 麻豆传媒 and coordinator of the Professional Writers Series for the last five years.
Jan. 18, Lidia Yuknavitch, 鈥淢oving Outside the Margins鈥
Lidia Yuknavitch is the author of the celebrated memoir, 鈥淭he Chronology of Water,鈥 described by author Rebecca Brown as the 鈥渒ind of book Janis Joplin might have written had she made it through the fire.鈥 Yuknavitch has also published three works of short fiction: 鈥淗er Other Mouths,鈥 鈥淟iberty's Excess,鈥 and 鈥淩eal to Reel,鈥 as well as a book of literary criticism, 鈥淎llegories of Violence.鈥 Her work has appeared in Ms., The Iowa Review, Exquisite Corpse, Fiction International, Zyzzyva, and elsewhere. Her book 鈥淩eal to Reel鈥 was is a finalist for the Oregon Book Award, and she is the recipient of awards and fellowships from Poets and Writers and Literary Arts, Inc. She teaches writing, literature, film and women's studies in Oregon.
Feb. 1, Jelly Helm 鈥淗ey Mister, That鈥檚 me up on the Billboard (and on TV, in Print, on the Web, etc.)鈥
Jelly Helm spent many years as executive creative director at Wieden+Kennedy in Portland and Amsterdam working on campaigns for Nike, Coke and Microsoft and was founder/director of W+K 12, Wieden+Kennedy鈥檚 experimental in-house school. He now heads Jelly Helm Studio whose clients include the Portland Timbers, Nike, Forest Ethics, Warner Brothers/DC Comics, Oregon Humanities, Wikipedia, Imperial Woodpecker, Infectious Diseases Research Institute, Red Hat, Dell, and other for profit and non-profit agencies. He has been featured in The New York Times, Mavericks at Work, and Adbusters. Helm says, 鈥淚鈥檓 interested in story, artisan values, and the open/free/shared knowledge movement. I鈥檓 interested in the role of story in the emerging culture.鈥
Feb. 15, Brian Doyle, 鈥淣oticing What Goes Unnoticed鈥
Brian Doyle is an award-winning novelist, essayist and editor of the University of Portland鈥檚 Portland Magazine, ranked one of the 10 best American university publications. About his new novel, 鈥淢ink River,鈥 The Oregonian said, 鈥淭he greatest gift of 鈥楳ink River鈥 is that it provides every reason in the world to see your own village, neighborhood and life in a deeper, more nuanced and connected way.鈥 The author of numerous collections of essays, Doyle's other books include 鈥淪aints Passionate & Peculiar,鈥 鈥淐redo,鈥 and 鈥淭wo Voices,鈥 which won a Christopher Award and a Catholic Press Association Book Award. Doyle鈥檚 work has appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, Harper鈥檚, American Scholar, Orion and in the Best American Essays anthologies of 1998, 1999, 2003 and 2005.
Feb. 29, Cai Emmons, 鈥淲eaving the Well-Woven Story鈥
Cai Emmons鈥檚 debut novel, 鈥淗is Mother's Son,鈥 won the Ken Kesey Award for the Novel in 2003 and has been translated into French, Italian and German. Her second novel, 鈥淭he Stylist,鈥 was published by Harper Collins. Booklist said of this work, "With family relations twisted as a French braid and language as vivid as a platinum dye job, Emmons' potent novel features magnetic characters and complex and compelling secrets." Also a noted playwright, editor, director and screenwriter, she is a graduate of Yale University, received an MFA in cinema from New York University and an MFA in creative writing from the University of Oregon where she now teaches. Her short works have appeared in Arts and Letters, Narrative Magazine, The New York Post, and Portland Monthly and elsewhere.
March 21, Randy Gragg, 鈥淢aking Your Pitch鈥
Randy Gragg is editor-in-chief of Portland Monthly, the city鈥檚 premiere arts and culture magazine. Prior, he was the architecture and urban design critic for The Oregonian where he also wrote on the culture wars, visual art, film and performance. He has written for wide range of national journals, among them, Metropolis, Architectural Record, Landscape Architecture, Harper's, and The New York Times Magazine. He is a recipient of fellowships from the National Arts Journalism Program at Columbia University and Harvard University鈥檚 Graduate Program in design. What makes a cultural magazine cohesive and what is the current market for freelance articles are among the topics of Gragg鈥檚 presentation.
麻豆传媒 is located at 14204 N.E. Salmon Creek Ave., east of the 134th Street exit from either I-5 or I-205 and is accessible via C-Tran bus service. Parking is free after 7 p.m.
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MEDIA CONTACTS
Howard Aaron, College of Liberal Arts, 503-816-2742, howard823@comcast.net
Brenda Alling, Office of Marketing and Communications, 360-546-9601, brenda_alling@vancouver.wsu.edu