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Instructors
Fields End prides itself on the
quality of our instructors, award-winning authors with proven ability to teach their craft. They are listed here in alphabetical order.
Kathleen
Alcalá
Kathleen Alcalá is the author of a short story collection, Mrs. Vargas and the Dead Naturalist (Calyx), and three novels set in 19th Century Mexico: Spirits of the Ordinary, The Flower in the Skull(Chronicle/Harcourt) and Treasures in Heaven (Chronicle/Northwestern University). Her work has received the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award, the Governors Writers Award, the Western States Book Award for Fiction, and the Washington State Book Award. She is a co-founder of and contributing editor to The Raven Chronicles, and was recently a writer in residence at the Richard Hugo House. A member of Los Norteños, a group of writers and performers, Kathleen co-wrote a play with director Olga Sanchez based on Kathleens first novel, Spirits of the Ordinary, which was produced at The Miracle Theatre in Portland, Oregon.
For more about Kathleen
Alcalá, click
here.
Judith
Barrington
Judith Barringtons most recent book, Lifesaving: A Memoir, was the winner of the Lambda Book Award and finalist for the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for the Art of the Memoir. Her third volume of poetry, Horses and the Human Soul, was published by Story Line Press in May, 2004.
Barrington has taught at conferences and workshops around the U.S. and in Britain and is the recipient of the Stuart Holbrook Award for services to the literary community from Oregons Literary Arts Inc.
For more
about Judith Barrington,
click
here.
Linda
Bierds
Linda Bierds sixth book of poetry,
The Seconds, was published in November, 2001, by Putnams. Her
prizes include the PEN/West Poetry Award, the Washington State Governors
Writers Award, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Ingram
Merrill Foundation, and the Guggenheim Foundation. In 1998, she was named a
fellow of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. She teaches
creative writing at the University of Washington.
Michael
Byers
Michael Byers is the author of the
Coast of Good Intentions, which was a finalist for the Pen/Hemingway
Award and which received the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction from the
American Academy of Arts and Letters. His stories have appeared in Best
American Short Stories and The O. Henry Awards, and he is the
recipient of a Whiting Writers Award. A novel, Long for this
World, was published in 2003. He lives in Seattle.
Michael
Collins
Michael Collins earned a Doctorate in
English from the University of Illinois and is the author of four novels and
two collections of short stories. His work has received international acclaim
and awards. His most recent award is novel of the year from the Pacific
Northwest Booksellers Association (PNBA) for 2003 for The
Resurrectionists. His novel The Keepers of Truth was shortlisted for
The Booker Prize in 2000 and won the IMPAC Prize. Two of his works have been
cited as New York Times Notable Books of the Year. His fiction has been
translated into 22 languages.
Sharon Cumberland
Sharon
Cumberland, author of two chapbooks, The Arithmetic of Mourning and Sharon Cumberland: Greatest Hits 1985-2000, has published in a wide variety of magazines and journals, including Ploughshares, The Iowa Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, and Verse. Her poems have been nominated for Pushcart Prizes, and she was awarded the Sue Saniel Elkind Award by Kalliope: A Journal of Women's Arts. Cumberland has given many readings in Seattle at the Seattle Slam, Frye Art Museum, Bumbershoot, and the Red Sky Poetry Theater. Cumberland is an Associate Professor at Seattle University where she teaches English and poetry writing. Robin Desser
Robin Desser is a Vice President and senior editor at Alfred A. Knopf Publishers. She was born in Brooklyn, New York, and attended Yale University. She began her publishing career in 1985 as an editorial assistant and joined Random House in 1988, first as an associate editor at Pantheon, then as an editor at Vintage. She joined Knopf in 1996. Desser has worked with Anne Carson, A.S. Byatt, Sandra
Cisneros, Stephen Carter, Edwidge Danticat, Rita Dove, Mary
Gaitskill, Kaye Gibbons, Arthur Golden, David Guterson, Pico
Iyer, Susanna Kaysen , Anne Lamott, Barry Lopez, Daniel
Mason, W.S. Merwin, Gloria Naylor, Richard Price, Mark
Salzman, James Salter, Esmeralda Santiago, and Jane Smiley.
Roger
Fanning
Roger Fannings first book of
poems was a National Poetry Series selection. His second book, Homesick, was recently published by Viking-Penguin. He currently teaches in the low-residency MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College, and lives in Seattle with his wife and son.
Carole
Glickfeld
 Photo
credit: Susan Rothschild |
Carole L. Glickfeld is the
author of a novel, Swimming Toward the Ocean (Knopf/Anchor), which won the 2002 Washington State Book Award, and a collection of short stories, Useful Gifts, which won the Flannery OConnor Award for Fiction. She has been the recipient of an NEA Literary Fellowship, the Governors
Arts Award (Washington State), and has taught creative writing at the University of Washington, at Interlochen Arts Academy, and at various fiction workshops.
For more about Carole
Glickfeld, click here.
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David
Guterson
David
Guterson is the author of Snow Falling on Cedars, winner of the
Pen/Faulkner Award and a Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award, among others. A contributing editor to Harpers Magazine, his published works include the novels Our Lady of the Forest and East of the Mountains, the short-story collection The Country Ahead of Us, the Country Behind, and nonfiction articles.
Sam
Hamill
Sam Hamill is the author of thirteen
volumes of poetry, including Dumb Luck, Gratitude, and Destination Zero: Poems 1970-1995, which won a Pushcart Prize. He is also the author of three collections of essays and two dozen volumes translated from ancient Greek, Latin, Estonian, Japanese and Chinese. Hamill has taught in prisons, in artist-in-residency programs, and worked extensively with battered women and children. He has been the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Lily Wallace-Readers Digest Fund, the U.S.-Japan Friendship Commission, and two Washington Governors Arts Awards.
Laura Kalpakian
Laura Kalpakian is the author of eight novels and three prize-winning collections of short fiction. Delinquent Virgin was selected by the American Library Association as one of the Top 25 Books of the Year for 2000. Her work has been awarded an NEA Fellowship in Fiction, a Pushcart Prize, and other literary accolades. She has lived in Washington for over 20 years. Two recent novels, both set on the fictional Isadora Island in the San Juans, are Harper Perennial paperbacks, Steps and Exiles (2000) and Educating Waverly (2003). The Memoir Club, was published by St. Martins Press in 2004. Educated on both the East Coast and the West Coast, Kalpakian has backgrounds in history and literature. She has taught fiction, nonfiction, and memoir in many visiting venues.
Richard L.
Kenney
Richard Kenney is a professor at the
University of Washington, and the author of three books: The Evolution of the Flightless Bird, a collection of poems; Orrery, a collection of poems; and The Invention of the Zero. He has contributed to numerous anthologies and been the recipient of numerous awards and grants, most recently the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship, a Pushcart Prize nomination,
the Oscar Blumenthal Prize, a Lannan Literary Award, honorable mention for U.W.Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award, and Royal Research Fund.
David
Long
David Longs novels include
The Daughters of Simon Lamoreaux and The Falling Boy. He has published three collections of short stories. He has written for The New Yorker, GQ, Poets and Writers Magazine, and many others. His writing has been awarded the Rosenthal Award for Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship, and an O. Henry Award.
Priscilla
Long
Priscilla Long, author of Where the Sun Never Shines: A History of Americas Bloody Coal Industry, has published numerous essays, creative nonfictions, poetry, and short fictions in venues such as The Southern Review,Passages North, The Womens Review of Books, and First Intensity. Her essay Genome Tome published in The American Scholar won the 2006 National Magazine Award in the category of Feature Writing. She also has awards from the Seattle Arts Commission and the Los Angeles Arts Commission, among others, and serves as senior editor of historylink.org and as a writing instructor for the University of Washington Extension.
For a complete
bio of Priscilla Long,
click
here.
Colleen J.
McElroy
Colleen J. McElroy is a gifted writer
of prose, creative non-fiction and poetry. She is a professor of English and creative writing at the University of Washington. Her publications include fiction, Jesus and Fat Tuesday and Driving Under the Cardboard Pines; and poetry, What Madness Brought Me Here -New and Selected Poems 1968-1988, Queen of the Ebony Isles (winner of the American Book Award), and Travelling Music. She is also the author of a travel memoir, A Long Way From St. Louie, and most recently, Over the Lip of the World: Among the Storytellers of Madagascar. McElroy has been the recipient of two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, two Fulbright Fellowships,
a Dupont Visiting Scholar Fellowship, and a Rockefeller
Fellowship.
Skye Moody
Writer, photographer, and former East Africa bush guide, Skye Moody is the author of seven mystery novels and three books of nonfiction, including the award-wininng Hillbilly
Women, which was adapted for the Off-Broadway stage. Moodys short stories have appeared in Penguins anthology, Wild Crimes; in Southern Lights; and in Double Dealer Redux, the Faulkner Societys literary journal. A member of PEN American Center in New York City, her most recent book, Washed Up: The Curious Journeys of Flotsam and Jetsam was published by Sasquatch in 2006.
Naomi Shihab
Nye
Naomi Shihab Nye is a poet, essayist,
childrens author and songwriter. She was born to a Palestinian father and an American mother and grew up in St. Louis, Jerusalem and San Antonio. Drawing on her Palestinian-American heritage, the cultural diversity of her home in Texas, and her experiences traveling in many parts of the world including Asia and the Middle East, Nye uses her writing to attest to our shared humanity.
Naomi Shihab Nye is the author and/or
editor of more than twenty volumes. Her books include 19 Varieties of
Gazelle: Poems of the Middle East , and Fuel (poems); Never in a Hurry (a collection of essays); Habibi (a novel for young readers); and Lullaby Raft (a picture book).
Nye has
worked for 28 years as a visiting writer in schools at all levels. A Lannan Fellow, she was a Guggenheim Fellow, and a Wittner Bynner Fellow (Library of Congress). She has received, among other honors, a Lavan Award from the Academy of American Poets, four Pushcart Prizes and numerous awards and citations for her childrens literature including two Jane Addams Childrens Book Awards.
She is a
regular columnist for Organica and poetry editor for The Texas Observer. Her work has been presented on NPR on such shows as A Prairie Home Companion and The Writers Almanac. She has been featured on two PBS poetry specials, The Language of Life with Bill Moyers and The United States of Poetry, as well as the PBS program NOW with Bill Moyers.
Nick
OConnell
Nicholas OConnell, M.F.A., Ph.D., has taught courses in Creative
Nonfiction at the University of Washington Extension Writers program for over ten years. Hes the author of the forthcoming On Sacred Ground: The Spirit of Place in Pacific Northwest Literature (U.W. Press, 2003),
Contemporary Ecofiction (Charles Scribners, 1996), Beyond Risk: Conversations with Climbers (Mountaineers, 1993), and At the Fields End: Interviews with 22 Pacific Northwest Writers (U.W. Press, 1998). In addition, hes published narrative nonfiction in Gourmet,Condé Nast Traveler, Outside, Saveur, Food & Wine, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal,Sierra, The Wine Spectator, Commonweal, Washington Journey, Alaska Airlines Magazine, and many other places.
For more about Nick OConnell,
click here.
Robert Michael
Pyle
Robert Michael Pyle has worked as an
independent writer and biologist for twenty-three years, writing essay, poetry, and fiction. His fourteen books include award-winning natural history titles such as Wintergreen, The Thunder Tree, Where Bigfoot Walks, Chasing Monarchs, and Walking the High Ridge, and a hatch of popular butterfly books such as The Butterflies of Cascadia. His column The Tangled Bank appears in Orion Magazine. Pyle resides along a tidal tributary of the Lower Columbia with his wife, Thea Linnaea Pyle.
George Shannon
After experience as a childrens librarian and professional storyteller, George Shannon published his first childrens book, Lizards Song (Greenwillow) in 1981. Since then, he has written 22 picture books (including Climbing Kansas Mountains, Tippy-toe Chick, Go, and Wise Acres), five collections of stories for older children, and one novel for young adults. Shannon has published essays on various aspects of childrens literature, and he continues to work with children around the country on their own creative writing.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, he taught courses in Childrens Literature at the University of Kentucky, University of Alaska-Keetchikan, and University of Wisconsin-Menomonie. Shannon also has taught workshops on writing for children in Kentucky, Wisconsin, and Alaska. He has spoken about storytelling at conferences and workshops around the world, from Maine to Washington and from Arkansas to Thailand.
Cheryl Slean
Cheryl Slean began her career in Los Angeles theatre, where her genre-and-gender bending work inspired both critical acclaim and contempt, a few awards and not much money. She relocated to Seattle for a University of Washington MFA; her prose has since appeared in Lynx Eye, IT, Parabasis, LA., Under the Influence, A Women's Anthology, Swivel, Fiddlehead and others. Her short films have been screened at festivals across the country and in Europe. Cheryl has taught prose, screen- and playwriting at the University of Washington, Seattle University, Hugo House and UCLA.
Elizabeth Wales
Elizabeth Wales, co-founder of the Seattle-based Wales Literary Agency, Inc., has been in publishing and bookselling since 1980. Wales Literary represents 65 award-winning writers of narrative nonfiction, mainstream fiction, and literary fiction. Clients include Bruce Barcott, Rebecca Brown, Jean Hegland, Nancy Lord, David Masumoto, Farnoosh Moshiri, Dan Savage, Migael Scherer, Eric Scigliano, Robert Spector, and Duff Wilson. Agency titles have appeared on the New York Times, Publishers Weekly and other national bestseller lists.
Wales is a member of the Association of Authors Representatives, Authors Guild, Pacific Northwest Writers Association, and Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association. She worked at Oxford University Press, Viking Penguin, and the Strand Bookstore in New York City before moving to Seattle in 1983. She graduated with a degree in English and American literature from Smith College and did graduate studies in Literature at Columbia College.
Irene
Wanner
Irene Wanner
teaches fiction writing at Richard Hugo House and the University of Washington Womens Center. She reviews books for several periodicals, is a member of the Northwest Independent Editors Guild, and was a participant in the Jack Straw Productions 2004 Writers Program. In July 2005, she will teach one of the courses at Haystack Summer Program in the Arts at Cannon Beach, Oregon.
Amy
Wheeler
Amy
Wheeler�s plays �Two Birds and a Stone� and �Weeping
Woman� received world premiere productions in 2003/04 at
Seattle�s Capitol Hill Arts Center and Portland�s Stark
Raving Theatre. �Wizzer Pizzer� was developed in the Bay
Area Playwright�s Festival and will be produced at 7
Stages Theatre in Atlanta in 2005. Wheeler�s work has also
been produced in New York at the Greenwich Street Theatre
and the Guggenheim Museum. She is currently working on two
commissions: an adaptation of Paulo Coelho�s novel Veronika
Decides to Die for Freehold Theatre in Seattle, and a
new play for Stark Raving. Wheeler was a recipient of a
Yaddo residency, and she is on the Board of the Hedgebrook
Women Writer�s Retreat on Whidbey Island. She holds an MFA
from the Iowa Playwright�s Workshop and teaches
playwriting at Cornish College of the Arts, Freehold Theatre
Lab, and in ACT�s Young Playwright�s Program.
Susan
Wiggs
Susan
Wiggs is one of the nation�s foremost writers of
historical romance and contemporary women�s fiction, and a
frequent workshop leader and speaker at writers�
conferences. She has been published by Avon, Tor,
HarperCollins, Harlequin, Mira, and Warner Books and has
received numerous awards for her work, including two RITA
Awards. Wiggs was the national keynote speaker to the
Romance Writers of America in 2000, holds writing workshops
all over the country, and is a regular at the annual Maui
Writers Conference and Retreat. A widely respected
instructor of writing, she completed her teaching degree in
Texas and earned a master�s degree from Harvard.
Wiggs�
most recent novel�number 25�is The Ocean Between Us,
published by Mira Books in 2004.
John
Willson
John Willson is a recipient of the
Pushcart Prize and awards from the Academy of American Poets, the Pacific
Northwest Writers Conference, the Artist Trust of Washington, and the King
County Arts Commission. His chapbook, The Son We Had, was published by
Blue Begonia Press in 1999. An essay on one of his poems appears in
Spreading the Word: Editors on Poetry, a book published in April 2001. A
1995 finalist in the National Poetry Series, John lives on Bainbridge Island,
Washington, where he works as a poetry instructor and as a bookseller at Eagle
Harbor Book Company, an independent bookstore. |
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