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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
November
U. of I. Creative Writing
Program inaugurates reading program, craft talk
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
11/4/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— The Creative Writing Program at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign is creating some new traditions.
On Monday (Nov. 7), two new members of the faculty, novelist and documentary-maker
LeAnne Howe, and poet-slammer-author Tyehimba Jess, will kick off the
new Faculty Reading Program.
On Nov. 14, Jess and another faculty newcomer, Rigoberto González,
a California-born Chicano poet, children’s writer and novelist,
will inaugurate the Creative Writing Craft Talk with a discussion of
each other’s National Poetry Series-winning book.
Free and open to the public, the readings and the craft talk will begin
at 5 p.m. in the Author’s Corner of the Illini
Union Bookstore, 809 S. Wright St., Champaign.
Howe will read from
“Evidence of Red,” her recently published collection of
poems and stories, and from her first novel, “Shell Shaker”;
Jess will read from “leadbelly,” his first book of poetry.
“Shell Shaker” won an American Book Award in 2002 from the
Before Columbus Foundation. The French translation of that book, titled
“Equinoxes Rouges,” was the 2004 finalist for the Prix Medici,
one of France’s top literary awards.
Howe is a citizen of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. Born and educated
in Oklahoma, she writes fiction, creative nonfiction, plays, poetry
and screenplays that primarily deal with American Indian experiences.
She also is the founder and director of WagonBurner Theatre Troop; her
plays have been produced in Los Angeles and New York City, and in Colorado,
Maine, New Mexico and Texas.
Howe is the screenwriter and on-camera narrator for “Indian Country
Dairies: Spiral of Fire,” a 90-minute PBS documentary scheduled
to be broadcast this month.
Howe’s new novel, “Miko Kings,” about Indian baseball
and set in Ada, Okla., in 1903 and in 1969, is forthcoming.
Jess’ “leadbelly,” a winner of the 2004 National Poetry
Series, recently was published by Verse Press. A native of Detroit and
a Cave Canem poetry program and New York University alumni, Jess received
a literature fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in
2004 and was a 2004-05 Winter Fellow at the Provincetown Fine Arts Work
Center. He won the 2001 Gwendolyn Brooks Open Mic Poetry Award, an Illinois
Arts Council Artist Fellowship in Poetry for 2000-01, and the 2001 Chicago
Sun-Times Poetry Award.
Jess’ fiction and poetry have appeared in “Soulfires: Young
Black Men on Love and Violence”; “Slam: The Competitive
Art of Performance Poetry”; “Bum Rush the Page: A Def Poetry
Jam”; “Beyond the Frontier: African American Poetry for
the Twenty-first Century”; “Role Call: A Generational Anthology
of Social and Political Black Literature and Art”; and “Dark
Matter 2: Reading the Bones.” His first book of nonfiction, “African
American Pride: Celebrating Our Achievements, Contributions, and Legacy,”
was published in December 2003.
González is the author of four books: “So Often the Pitcher
Goes to Water Until It Breaks,” a 1998 National Poetry Series
selection; two bilingual children’s books, “Soledad Sigh-Sighs/Soledad
Suspiros” and “Antonio’s Card/La Tarjeta de Antonio”;
and a novel, “Crossing Vines,” which received ForeWord Magazine’s
Editor’s Choice for Fiction Book of the Year Award in 2004.
González is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and various
international artists’ residencies, including in Brazil, Costa
Rica, Scotland and Spain.
González is a member of PEN and of the National Book Critics
Circle. He reviews books by Latina/o authors for a Texas newspaper,
the El Paso Times, and he is a contributing editor to Poets and Writers
magazine.
The events are sponsored by the Creative Writing Program in the department
of English.
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