Joni B. Cole

The Dipper - November 2020

"The Dipper" is our monthly newsletter, where we highlight readings, events, calls for submission, and other literary-related news for the coming month. If you have news or events to share, let us know

November News

Thank you to everyone who attended Sierra Crane Murdoch’s talk in October. What a wonderful night! A huge thanks to Allie Levy of Still North Books for hosting via Crowdcast and to Angela Evancie of Brave Little State for interviewing Sierra. If you missed the event, you can still catch the replay. Don’t forget to pick up your copy of Sierra’s fantastic book, Yellow Bird.

 
Angela Evancie and Sierrra Crane

Angela Evancie and Sierrra Crane

 

In case you missed them, in October we added three new interviews to our blog with writers whose recently released books we really love.

FieldMusic.jpg
  • First, we welcomed a guest interviewer: poet, teacher and bookstore owner, Rena Mosteirin, who interviewed poet Alexandria Hall about her evocative debut poetry collection, Field Music (Ecco, October 6), which won the 2019 National Poetry Series award selected by Rosanna Warren. In their discussion, Alexandria and Rena talk about the musical quality of the poems in Field Music, the influence of writing in Vermont, and the best writing advice Alexandria’s ever gotten in a workshop.

Beneficence.jpg
  • We also interviewed writer Meredith Hall about her first novel, Beneficence (Godine, October 20), a quiet, unputdownable novel that focuses on the Senters, a farming family in rural Maine over the course of many years. Reminiscent of Wendell Berry and Marilynne Robinson, Hall’s writing is truly beautiful. Read our interview with Meredith to learn how the Senter family came into being, the role of light in her book, and what books she’s really loved recently.

Atomizer.jpg
  • And we interviewed Elizabeth Powell about her latest collection of poetry, Atomizer (LSU Press, September 9), an expansive, honest, and often very funny exploration of life and love in the digital age. Whether she’s writing about the perils and humor of online dating, the insidious workings of capitalism in our cultural and political lives, or her childhood memories of perfume and fashion, these poems are intelligent, accessible, and riveting. Read our interview with Liz to learn how her posh Parisian stepmother provided her early education in perfume, and the connection between her grandfather and Robert Frost.

p.s. Did you know that you can see a list of everything we’ve ever published on our blog on our handy Blog Post Directory? You can easily find back issues of The Dipper, all of our interview posts, reading lists, Friday Reads suggestions, and more!

After a very busy several months of virtual events and other projects, we’re looking forward to having a quiet end to the year. Among other things, fewer projects means we’ll have more time to spend reading our final Slow Club Book Club selection, Dionne Brand’s The Blue Clerk.

But never fear! We are busy making plans for next year. In fact, we’re getting ready to announce a new Constellation community writing project in early 2021. Newsletter subscribers will be the first to find out the details.

As this newsletter goes to press, our thoughts, of course, are turning to the events of early November (please tell us you all have voted or have a voting plan), the imminent winter, and the coming holiday season, which, like the rest of 2020 will be oh-so-strange.

One thing we know we can do for ourselves, our loved ones, and our local community is to give each other beautiful, meaningful (and sometimes distracting) books we purchase from independent bookstores. In the coming weeks, we’ll be highlighting some of our favorite books by local authors, our favorite books of 2020, and some favorites of our local independent booksellers. Watch our Twitter and Instagram feeds in November to see these special holiday book shopping suggestions.


November’s Shooting Stars

A cool literary find from each of us to help light up your month!

Star.png
  • If you haven’t seen the new Sundog Poetry Center website, I encourage you to take a look. The redesign is wonderful. While there, you can check out their new virtual event series, Two Poets, Two Books, and read more about the Vermont Book Award. —Shari

  • Do you know Emergence Magazine? I landed there accidentally by way of a series of links that led me to this magical multimedia poem by Forrest Gander and Katie Holten. And then the “Language Keepers” podcast series about the struggle for indigenous language survival in California caught my little linguistic eye, and, yeah, I think I’ll be spending some time there. —Rebecca


November Highlights

Christa Parravani will be in conversation virtually with author Merritt Tierce to discuss Parravani’s new memoir, Loved and Wanted, via Northshire Live on November 10 at 6:00 pm.

Terese Mailhot

Terese Mailhot

Poets Elizabeth Powell and Anna Maria Hong will read as part of the new Sundog Poetry virtual series, “Two Poets, Two Books,” on November 11 at 7:00 pm.

On November 12 at 4:45 pm, join poets Forrest Gander and Nicole Sealey for an online reading and Q&A via Dartmouth College’s Leslie Center for the Humanities.

Terese Mailhot is giving a virtual reading and craft talk through Vermont Studio Center on November 13 and 14, respectively. The reading will begin at 7:00 pm and the craft talk starts at 10:00 am. (Slow Club Book Club members, take note!)

Poets Chen Chen and Jennifer Militello read as part of the virtual Loom Poetry Series via Toadstool Bookshop on November 15 at 4:30 pm.

Chen Chen

Chen Chen

On November 19 at 7:00 pm, François S. Clemmons, who played Officer Clemmons on Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, reads from his memoir as part of Virtual Bookstock 2020.

Shawn Wong and Miciah Bay Gault will participate in the Vermont College of Fine Arts Fall Reading Series on November 20 at 5:30 pm. The event includes a round-table discussion on publishing with several agents from Folio Literary Management.

Visit our calendar for detailed information about these events and more!


Worth a Listen

  • What a treat to hear Ocean Vuong read a new poem (“Beautiful Short Loser”) and talk about his writing practice on In the Studio.

  • Rumaan Alam talks to Christopher and Drew of So Many Damn Books about his latest novel, Leave the World Behind.

  • Ali Smith talks with Linn Ullmann about her seasonal quartet of novels on the How to Proceed podcast.


We're Looking Forward to These November Releases

Aphasia.jpg
  • Theorem, by Elizabeth Bradfield and Antonia Contro (Poetry Northwest Editions, November 1)

  • Aphasia, by Mauro Javier Cardenas (FSG, November 3)

  • To Be a Man, by Nicole Krauss (Harper, November 3)

  • The Office of Historical Corrections, by Danielle Evans (Riverhead, November 10)

  • Loved and Wanted, by Christa Parravani (Henry Holt & Co, November 10)

  • Self-Portrait, by Celia Paul (NYRB, November 10)

  • The Sun Collective, by Charles Baxter (Pantheon, November 17)


Calls For Submission and Upcoming Deadlines

Bennington Unbound
November 15 to December 15

This four-week intensive online courses in fiction and nonfiction is geared toward current college and college-ready students considering an academic gap year or looking to supplement their current coursework. The courses are taught by Bennington’s award-winning graduate and undergraduate writing and literature faculty. Weekly live video class meetings foster an intimate seminar experience. Web-based discussion forums and unique multimedia resources extend the classroom community. All students will write both creatively and critically. Students earn one college credit per course.
Deadline: November 8 | Cost: $600/course | Details

New England Review
New England Review is open for nonfiction submissions and for their digital “Confluences” series. For nonfiction, NER accepts a broad range, including dramatic works, essays in translation, interpretive and personal essays, critical reassessments, cultural criticism, travel writing, and environmental writing. The word limit is 20,000. For “Confluences,” they are seeking brief essays (500 to 100 words) in response to a book, play, poem, film, painting, sculpture, building, or other work of art.
Deadline: November 15 | Details

Sunken Garden Chapbook Poetry Prize
Open to anyone writing in the English language, the Sunken Garden prize includes includes a cash award of $1,000 in addition to publication by Tupelo Press, 25 copies of the winning title, a book launch, and national distribution with energetic publicity and promotion. Manuscripts are judged anonymously and all finalists will be considered for publication. This year’s final judge is Mark Bibbins.
Deadline: November 30 | Details

Bloodroot Literary Magazine
Bloodroot is now accepting new, unpublished poetry, fiction, and essays for its spring 2021 issue. Send a Word document including 3 to 5 pages of poetry or 10 to 12 pages of fiction and nonfiction. For anything outside that scope, like an experimental form or digital project, please send a one-page proposal and they will be in touch if we want to see more.
Deadline: December 15 | Details

The Dorset Prize for Poetry
Tupelo Press is seeking submissions of previously unpublished, full-length poetry manuscripts. The prize is open to anyone writing in the English language. This year’s judge is Tyehimba Jess. The winner receives a $3000 cash prize and a week-long residency at MASS MoCA, in addition to publication by Tupelo Press, 20 copies of the winning title, a book launch, and national distribution with energetic publicity and promotion.
Deadline: December 31 | Details

Vermont Writers’ Prize
The Vermont Writers’ Prize is accepting essays, short stories, plays, or poems on the subject of Vermont: its people, its places, its history, or its values—the choice is yours! Entries must be unpublished and 1,500 words or less. The Writers' Prize is open to all Vermont residents and students except for employees of Green Mountain Power and Vermont Magazine. Please submit only one entry.
Deadline: January 1 | Details

The Frost Place Chapbook Competition
The competition is open to any poet writing in English. The selected winner’s chapbook will be published by Bull City Press in the summer following the competition. The winner receives 10 complimentary copies (from a print run of 300), a $250 prize, full scholarship to attend the Poetry Seminar at The Frost Place, including room and board, and gives a featured reading from the chapbook at the Seminar. $28 entry fee.
Deadline: January 5 | Details

Zig Zag Lit Mag Issue.10
Submissions are open for Issue.10 for those who live, labor, or loiter in Addison County, Vermont. Zig Zag accepts submissions in any genre and topic, including fiction, nonfiction, dramatic forms, and poetry. They also accept art. You can submit up to three pieces of writing and/or art.
Deadline: January 5 | Details

Crossroads Magazine
The independent, student-run magazine based out of Burlington, Vermont, accepts very short fiction and poetry, 300 words or fewer. Submissions should be in Word or typed directly into an email. No PDFs, please.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details

Dartmouth Poet in Residence
The Frost Place’s Dartmouth Poet in Residence program is a six-to-eight-week residency in poet Robert Frost’s former farmhouse. The residency begins July 1 and ends August 15, and includes an award of $1,000 from The Frost Place and an award of $1,000 from Dartmouth College. The recipient of the Dartmouth Poet in Residence will have an opportunity to give a series of public readings across the region, including at Dartmouth College and The Frost Place.
Deadline: none given | Details

Green Mountains Review
GMR is accepting fiction and experimental and hybrid poems. The editors are open to a wide range of styles and subject matter. Please submit a cover letter and include up to 25 pages of prose or up to five poems. $3 submission fee.
Deadline: none given | Details

The Hopper
The environmental literary magazine from Green Writers Press, is accepting submissions of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. They are interested in work that offers new and different articulations of the human experience in nature, specifically nature writing that is psychologically honest about the environmental crisis and the impacts of mechanical modernity.
Deadline: none given | Details

Isele Magazine
Isele Magazine is seeking submissions of essays, fiction, poetry, art, and photography. You may submit up to 8,000 words of prose, six pages of poetry, or one long poem.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details

Mount Island digital magazine

To focus on their mission of supporting rural LGBTQ+ and POC voices, most of the submission categories are open only to folks who identify as LGBTQ+ and/or POC and who currently live in or hail from a rural area. They do welcome “allies” who do not identify as LGBTQ+/POC/rural to submit in certain categories, such as interviews, reviews, and blog articles. When such categories are open for “ally submissions,” they are labeled clearly as such.
Deadline: open year-round | Details

Nightingale Review
Nightingale accepts and celebrate all types of literary creative expression from queer authors, including poetry, plays, general fiction, nonfiction essays, and book/movie/music reviews. Both established and unpublished authors welcome.
Deadline: none given | Details

Six-Word Quarantine Stories
Do you have a six-word story about your quarantine to share? Tell yours on social media with the hashtag #quarantinesix, and tag @vtartscouncil so they can share your story, too.
Deadline: none given | Details

Three By Five
Share a small moment—anonymously—that has altered the path of your life. Record it on a 3" x 5" card and mail it to PO Box 308, Etna, NH, 03750. Or, take a photo of your card and email it to .
Deadline: none | Details

Listening in Place Sound Archive
The Vermont Folklife Center invites you to send in recorded interviews and sounds of daily life in an effort to open hundreds of small windows into the experiences of Vermonters during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Vermont Folklife Center will make these recordings available on their website and social media to foster connection and sharing, and will also archive the recordings for posterity.
Deadline: none | Details

Writing the Land
Writing the Land is a collaboration between local land trusts and poets to help raise awareness for the preservation of land, ecosystems, and biodiversity. Poets and land trusts are being enrolled on a rolling basis. They are especially seeking under-represented poetic and environmental voices, but welcome all poets at any stage of their career and would like everyone to contribute to this project. If you are an interested poet, please fill out the information in the contact form on their website or email Lis McLaughlin at . You will need to submit a 50- to 75-word third-person bio, three pieces of work, and list which locations or regions you are willing to travel to.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details


Upcoming Workshops and Classes

Pioneer Valley Writers’ Workshop
Various dates and times

Pioneer Valley Writers’ Workshop offers a number of online creative writing workshops, including multi-week classes and one-day sessions. Among other workshops, they offer a free online gathering for writers of all levels and genres every first and third Friday of the month. These sessions are a great way to get back into the flow of your work in the supportive presence of other writers. Other workshops beginning in November are on topics that include fiction writing, creating characters, generative translation, memoir, narrative structure, hybrid forms, and much more.
Location: online | Cost: $30 to $275 | Details

Art Meets Expressive Writing Workshop with Vivian Ladd and Joni B. Cole
November 5, 5:30 to 7:00 pm

This workshop fuses explorations of works of art with fun and meaningful expressive writing exercises. No writing experience required, just a willing pen and curious mind.
Location: online | Cost: free | Details

Writing for Healing Workshop with Vicky Fish
Wednesdays, November 11 and 18, December 2, 9, and 16; 6:30 to 8:00 pm

This five-week workshop will create a safe and supportive environment for you to explore your healing through the written word. Through writing we discover and can recover parts of ourselves. Writing taps into our wise unconscious, where healing and hidden resources often reside. Through writing we have a chance to understand our stories and rewrite our stories. During each session, prompts will be offered as the springboard for in-session writing. Sharing will be encouraged but not required. Prompts will also be offered for your own writing between sessions. Preregister by contacting the instructor at .
Location: online | Cost: $165 |

The Fluidity of Memory: Finding Strength in Your Story
November 14, 9:30 am to 12:00 pm
Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Candidate Ruth Amara Okolo is offering a workshop that gives insights into the importance of creative nonfiction. Through an exploration of the elements of the genre, she presents an approach and technique to creating, writing memories that shows life in all its color, description, and realism.
Location: online | Cost: $25 to 65 | Details

Listening in Place - Thanksgiving Family Interviews
November 14: 10:00 am to 12:00 pm

Part of the Vermont Folklife Center’s Listening in Place initiative developed in response to COVID-19, this workshop covers the basics of recording interviews (online, over the phone or in person within your household if it’s safe to do so). It also introduces the VFC’s Sound Archive, where your interviews and documentary recordings may be submitted to be included in this open access, crowdsourced audio collection of Vermonters’ experiences of pandemic and 2020.
Location: online | Cost: by donation | Details

Everyday Poetry: Accessing the Poetry Within
November 15, 9:30 am to 12:00 pm
Enjoy the art of poetry with Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Candidate Sara Stancliffe as she unearths why poetry is a life force and examines poetry as an essence. Prepare to demystify poetry in this workshop by beginning with a low-key discussion on what we think poetry is, where it shows up in our everyday lives, and how we might access poetry to elevate our everyday existence. In this workshop, we’ll share music and collectively enjoy sounds of rhythm. This will be a “come as you are” workshop where no prior poetic experience or vocabulary or even passion is needed.
Location: online | Cost: $25 to 65 | Details

Listening in Place - Building Conversations for Civic Action
December 5, 2:00 to 4:30 pm

This workshop focuses on the crises of 2020 as an opportunity to reflect and learn from the social unrest, vulnerabilities and sacrifices experienced across the state and nation. This workshop will introduce and demonstrate the tools of Listening in Place, an initiative of the Vermont Folklife Center, that was launched at the early stages of the pandemic as a way to share our common experience and to create a record of how Vermonters are responding to this unprecedented time. Now calls to support Black Lives Matter and pledge greater commitments to eradicate racism in all its forms have propelled many of us out of lockdown and to re-evaluate how we stand for justice for our communities. This workshop is an open call for anyone who desires to prioritize these concerns.
Location: online | Cost: by donation | Details

Inner & Outer Weather: Character in Fiction
December 12, 9:30 am to 12:00 pm
Join Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Candidate Jonathan Calloway as he discusses how our stories’ characters, like ourselves, each carry a lifetime’s worth of experience, much of which the outer world is oblivious. Through generative writing exercises and close readings of excerpts from a wide range of fiction authors, you will investigate how perception can be used as a tool to shape evocative environments, sharpen focus, and redefine the boundary between the individual and the whole. You will have the opportunity to share and receive direct feedback from instructors and fellow participants, as well as acquire a set of tools to further your own unique explorations of the caverns of character development.
Location: online | Cost: $25 to 65 | Details

The Dipper - October 2020

"The Dipper" is our monthly newsletter, where we highlight readings, events, calls for submission, and other literary-related news for the coming month. If you have news or events to share, let us know

 

October News

YellowBird.jpg

We are so pleased to bring you another great virtual author event in partnership with Hanover’s Still North Books. On October 14 at 7:30 pm, Sierra Crane Murdoch will be in conversation with Angela Evancie of VPR’s Brave Little State to discuss Sierra’s compelling nonfiction book, Yellow Bird.

Yellow Bird tells the story of Lissa Yellow Bird as she obsessively hunts for clues to the disappearance of Kristopher “KC” Clark, a young white oil worker who worked on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in North Dakota. Drawing on eight years of immersive investigation, Sierra Crane Murdoch has produced a profound examination of the legacy of systematic violence inflicted on a tribal nation and a tale of extraordinary healing. Sierra and Angela’s conversation is bound to be riveting. Register today to attend!

FieldMusic.jpg

Alexandria Hall’s debut book of poetry, Field Music, will be published by Ecco on October 6. Alexandria is a poet and a musician from Vermont (and currently a PhD candidate in California). Publishers Weekly calls Field Music, “a striking debut…This atmospheric collection will transport readers to Hall’s layered landscapes.”

We are so fortunate that Alexandria agreed do to an interview with us, and we are equally fortunate that Rena J. Mosteirin enthusiastically agreed to pose the interview questions. The interview will be published on our site on Field Music’s publication day, October 6, so check our blog then.

In Slow Club Book Club news, we recently announced the last book in our year of reading books by Canadian authors: Dionne Brand's 2018 hybrid poetry collection, The Blue Clerk. In this intriguing book—an Ars Poetica in 59 versos—Dionne Brand stages a conversation and an argument between the poet and the Blue Clerk, who is the keeper of the poet's pages.

A sampling of The Blue Clerk reveals its mesmerizing power. Listen to Dionne Brand read two of the prose poem versos on the Griffin Poetry Prize website (the book was shortlisted for the 2019 prize) and fall under its liquid language spell. We hope you decide to join us in reading The Blue Clerk beginning on October 15. If you do, please let us know; it's nice to know you're out there.


October’s Shooting Stars

A cool literary find from each of us to help light up your month!

Star.png
  • First Wednesdays from Vermont Humanities are back, beginning October 7. This time around we are lucky to be able to listen to these lectures from our homes. I’m particularly excited to hear Jarvis Green’s lecture, “Atlantic Is a Sea of Bones” on November 7 We’ve posted the literary lectures from this series in our calendar of events. For the rest (including some really amazing topics from dance and Muhammad Ali to bird migration to food justice), please visit the Vermont Humanities website. —Shari

  • These days I often feel closed, tight, compressed into myself. I need reminders of expansiveness: drop the shoulders from my ears, breathe deeply. The other day I saw a link to a recording of Seamus Heaney reading “Postscript,” one of my favorites of his poems. Rereading it always blows me open, as the last line intends. Hearing Seamus’ own voice makes it even better.—Rebecca


October Highlights

Layli Long Soldier

Layli Long Soldier

Layli Long Soldier will read as part of the virtual Poetry at Bennington series on October 7 at 7:00 pm.

Samantha Kolber celebrates the release of her new chapbook, Birth of a Daughter, with a virtual event at Bear Pond Books on October 9 at 7:00 pm.

Sierra Crane Murdoch discusses her book Yellow Bird with Brave Little State’s Angela Evancie via Still North Books & Bar on October 14 at 7:30 pm.

The Brattleboro Literary Festival takes place virtually this year from October 16 to 18, featuring writers of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.

Jason Lutes

Jason Lutes

Jason Lutes appears as a part of Virtual Bookstock 2020 on October 15 at 7:00 pm.

Phil Klay will read and discuss his latest novel, Missionaries, on October 16 at 7:00 pm. This online event is presented by both The Norwich Bookstore and Still North Books & Bar.

603: The Writers’ Conferences is online this year on October 17 from 8:00 am to 5:30 pm, with featured speaker Brunonia Barry.

Charles Simic gives a virtual reading sponsored by the Poetry Society of New Hampshire and Gibson’s Bookstore on October 20 at 7:00 pm.

Visit our calendar for detailed information about these events and more!


Worth a Listen

Artwork by Sludge Thunder

Artwork by Sludge Thunder

  • Daniel Hornsby speaks about his debut, Via Negativa, on Marginalia. His new novel was recently recommended by Lauren Groff on Twitter.

  • On the Slow Stories podcast, Sanaë Lemoine discusses her writing process for her debut, The Margot Affair.

  • Middlebury grad Bianca Giaever has a wonderful new podcast for The Believer called Constellation Prize. Five episodes about strangers, religion, poetry, and art are available now.

  • Dustin Schell and Alexander Chee (curators of the Still Queer reading series) were featured on Christine Lee’s podcast, Front Yard Politics, talking about gardening during the pandemic.


We're Looking Forward to These October Releases

TheHole.jpg
  • Mantel Pieces, by Hilary Mantel (Fourth Estate, October 1)

  • Leave the World Behind, by Rumaan Alam (Ecco, October 6)

  • The Hole, by Hiroko Oyamada, translated by David Boyd (New Directions, October 6)

  • The Superationals, by Stephanie La Cava (Semiotext(e)/Native Agents, October 13)

  • Kant’s Little Prussian Head and Other Reasons Why I write, by Claire Messud (W.W. Norton & Company, October 13)

  • The Century, by Éireann Lorung (Milkweed Editions, October 13)

  • The Silence, by Don DeLillo (Scribner, October 20)

  • Divorcing, by Susan Taubes (NYRB Classics, October 27)

  • Memorial, by Bryan Washington (Riverhead, October 27)


Calls For Submission and Upcoming Deadlines

Hunger Mountain Issue 25: Art Saves
Send your manifestos and rhetoric, your stories and poems, your essays and forays into justifying art as an answer to—and escape from?—these trying times: pandemics, forest fires, catastrophe, white-supremacy, murder, burning buildings as the only way to be heard, and fascism. Please submit prose of no more than 8,000 words, or up to three flash pieces all in one document; for poetry, 1 to 5 poems all in one file.
Deadline: October 15 | Details

Sundog Poetry Center’s First or Second Book Award Prize for a Vermont Poet
Sundog Poetry Center is pleased to announce the inaugural book award for a first or second poetry manuscript, in partnership with Green Writers Press, who will design, print and distribute the book nationwide. The final judge is Vermont Poet Laureate Mary Ruefle. A cash prize of $500 will be awarded along with 50 copies. Manuscripts should be between 48 and 64 pages. All submissions must be authored by a poet who resides in Vermont; proof of residency will be requested along with a $20 application fee.
Deadline: October 31 | Details

Sunken Garden Chapbook Prize for Poetry
Tupelo Press’ Sunken Garden Prize seeks submissions of previously unpublished, chapbook-length poetry manuscripts. The prize is open to anyone writing in the English language. This year’s judge is Mark Bibbins. The winner receives a $1000 cash prize, in addition to publication by Tupelo Press, 25 copies of the winning title, a book launch, and national distribution with energetic publicity and promotion.
Deadline: October 31 | Details

New England Review
New England Review is open for nonfiction submissions and for their digital “Confluences” series. For nonfiction, NER accepts a broad range, including dramatic works, essays in translation, interpretive and personal essays, critical reassessments, cultural criticism, travel writing, and environmental writing. The word limit is 20,000. For “Confluences,” they are seeking brief essays (500 to 100 words) in response to a book, play, poem, film, painting, sculpture, building, or other work of art.
Deadline: November 15 | Details

Bennington Unbound
October 15 to December 15

These four-week intensive online courses in fiction and nonfiction (October 15 to November 15, and November 15 to December 15) are geared toward current college and college-ready students considering an academic gap year or looking to supplement their current coursework. The courses are taught by Bennington’s award-winning graduate and undergraduate writing and literature faculty. Weekly live video class meetings foster an intimate seminar experience. Web-based discussion forums and unique multimedia resources extend the classroom community. All students will write both creatively and critically. Students earn one college credit per course.
Deadline: one week prior to the beginning of each course | Cost: $600/course | Details

Bloodroot Literary Magazine
Bloodroot is now accepting new, unpublished poetry, fiction, and essays for its spring 2021 issue. Send a Word document including 3 to 5 pages of poetry or 10 to 12 pages of fiction and nonfiction. For anything outside that scope, like an experimental form or digital project, please send a one-page proposal and they will be in touch if we want to see more.
Deadline: December 15 | Details

The Dorset Prize for Poetry
Tupelo Press’ Dorset Prize is seeking submissions of previously unpublished, full-length poetry manuscripts. The prize is open to anyone writing in the English language. This year’s judge is Tyehimba Jess. The winner receives at $3000 cash prize and a week-long residency at MASS MoCA, in addition to publication by Tupelo Press, 20 copies of the winning title, a book launch, and national distribution with energetic publicity and promotion.
Deadline: December 31 | Details

Vermont Writers’ Prize
The Vermont Writers’ Prize is accepting essays, short stories, plays, or poems on the subject of Vermont: its people, its places, its history, or its values—the choice is yours! Entries must be unpublished and 1,500 words or less. The Writers' Prize is open to all Vermont residents and students except for employees of Green Mountain Power and Vermont Magazine. Please submit only one entry.
Deadline: January 1 | Details

The Frost Place Chapbook Competition
The competition is open to any poet writing in English. The selected winner’s chapbook will be published by Bull City Press in the summer following the competition. The winner receives 10 complimentary copies (from a print run of 300), a $250 prize, full scholarship to attend the Poetry Seminar at The Frost Place, including room and board, and gives a featured reading from the chapbook at the Seminar. $28 entry fee.
Deadline: January 5 | Details

Zig Zag Lit Mag Issue.10
Submissions are open for Issue.10 for those who live, labor, or loiter in Addison County, Vermont. Zig Zag accepts submissions in any genre and topic, including fiction, nonfiction, dramatic forms, and poetry. They also accept art. You can submit up to three pieces of writing and/or art.
Deadline: January 5 | Details

Crossroads Magazine
The independent, student-run magazine based out of Burlington, Vermont, accepts very short fiction and poetry, 300 words or fewer. Submissions should be in Word or typed directly into an email. No PDFs, please.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details

Dartmouth Poet in Residence
The Frost Place’s Dartmouth Poet in Residence program is a six-to-eight-week residency in poet Robert Frost’s former farmhouse. The residency begins July 1 and ends August 15, and includes an award of $1,000 from The Frost Place and an award of $1,000 from Dartmouth College. The recipient of the Dartmouth Poet in Residence will have an opportunity to give a series of public readings across the region, including at Dartmouth College and The Frost Place.
Deadline: none given | Details

Green Mountains Review
GMR is accepting fiction and experimental and hybrid poems. The editors are open to a wide range of styles and subject matter. Please submit a cover letter and include up to 25 pages of prose or up to five poems. $3 submission fee.
Deadline: none given | Details

The Hopper
The environmental literary magazine from Green Writers Press, is accepting submissions of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. They are interested in work that offers new and different articulations of the human experience in nature, specifically nature writing that is psychologically honest about the environmental crisis and the impacts of mechanical modernity.
Deadline: none given | Details

Isele Magazine
Isele Magazine is seeking submissions of essays, fiction, poetry, art, and photography. You may submit up to 8,000 words of prose, six pages of poetry, or one long poem.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details

Junction Magazine Editorial Board
If you're passionate about the vibrant community of the Upper Valley, and showcasing the myriad cultures that exist here, consider joining the Junction Magazine Editorial Board. Their areas of coverage are Arts and Culture, Food and Farm, People, and the Wild. Editors meet bi-weekly, and share pitching, writing, editing, and layout duties, as well as the (small) financial cost of the website and hosting.
Deadline: none given |

Mount Island digital magazine

To focus on their mission of supporting rural LGBTQ+ and POC voices, most of the submission categories are open only to folks who identify as LGBTQ+ and/or POC and who currently live in or hail from a rural area. They do welcome “allies” who do not identify as LGBTQ+/POC/rural to submit in certain categories, such as interviews, reviews, and blog articles. When such categories are open for “ally submissions,” they are labeled clearly as such.
Deadline: open year-round | Details

Nightingale Review
Nightingale accepts and celebrate all types of literary creative expression from queer authors, including poetry, plays, general fiction, nonfiction essays, and book/movie/music reviews. Both established and unpublished authors welcome.
Deadline: none given | Details

Six-Word Quarantine Stories
Do you have a six-word story about your quarantine to share? Tell yours on social media with the hashtag #quarantinesix, and tag @vtartscouncil so they can share your story, too.
Deadline: none given | Details

Three By Five
Share a small moment—anonymously—that has altered the path of your life. Record it on a 3" x 5" card and mail it to PO Box 308, Etna, NH, 03750. Or, take a photo of your card and email it to .
Deadline: none | Details

Listening in Place Sound Archive
The Vermont Folklife Center invites you to send in recorded interviews and sounds of daily life in an effort to open hundreds of small windows into the experiences of Vermonters during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Vermont Folklife Center will make these recordings available on their website and social media to foster connection and sharing, and will also archive the recordings for posterity.
Deadline: none | Details

Writing the Land
Writing the Land is a collaboration between local land trusts and poets to help raise awareness for the preservation of land, ecosystems, and biodiversity. Poets and land trusts are being enrolled on a rolling basis. They are especially seeking under-represented poetic and environmental voices, but welcome all poets at any stage of their career and would like everyone to contribute to this project. If you are an interested poet, please fill out the information in the contact form on their website or email Lis McLaughlin at . You will need to submit a 50- to 75-word third-person bio, three pieces of work, and list which locations or regions you are willing to travel to.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details


Upcoming Workshops and Classes

Horace Greeley Writers’ Symposium
October 17, 10:00 am to 3:00 pm
Aspiring writers, published authors welcome. Writing workshops, networking, Q&A, and more.  Location: United Baptist Church, East Poultney | Cost: $65 adults; $20 students | Details

Expressive Writing with Vivian Ladd and Joni B. Cole
November 5, 5:30 to 7:00 pm

This workshop fuses explorations of works of art with fun and meaningful expressive writing exercises. No writing experience required, just a willing pen and curious mind.
Location: online | Cost: free | Details

The Fluidity of Memory: Finding Strength in Your Story
November 14, 9:30 am to 12:00 pm
Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Candidate Ruth Amara Okolo is offering a workshop that gives insights into the importance of creative nonfiction. Through an exploration of the elements of the genre, she presents an approach and technique to creating, writing memories that shows life in all its color, description, and realism.
Location: online | Cost: $25 to 65 | Details

Everyday Poetry: Accessing the Poetry Within
November 15, 9:30 am to 12:00 pm
Enjoy the art of poetry with Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Candidate Sara Stancliffe as she unearths why poetry is a life force and examines poetry as an essence. Prepare to demystify poetry in this workshop by beginning with a low-key discussion on what we think poetry is, where it shows up in our everyday lives, and how we might access poetry to elevate our everyday existence. In this workshop, we’ll share music and collectively enjoy sounds of rhythm. This will be a “come as you are” workshop where no prior poetic experience or vocabulary or even passion is needed.
Location: online | Cost: $25 to 65 | Details

Inner & Outer Weather: Character in Fiction
December 12, 9:30 am to 12:00 pm
Join Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Candidate Jonathan Calloway as he discusses how our stories’ characters, like ourselves, each carry a lifetime’s worth of experience, much of which the outer world is oblivious. Through generative writing exercises and close readings of excerpts from a wide range of fiction authors, you will investigate how perception can be used as a tool to shape evocative environments, sharpen focus, and redefine the boundary between the individual and the whole. You will have the opportunity to share and receive direct feedback from instructors and fellow participants, as well as acquire a set of tools to further your own unique explorations of the caverns of character development.
Location: online | Cost: $25 to 65 | Details

The Dipper - July 2020

"The Dipper" is our monthly newsletter, where we highlight readings, events, calls for submission, and other literary-related news for the coming month. If you have news or events to share, let us know

 

July News

We’re so happy to announce that our rescheduled Poetry & Prose Community Open Mic with Still North Books & Bar is happening on Sunday, July 12 at 4:00 pm. We’ll begin the event with readings by Megan Buchanan, Dede Cummings, Emily Arnason Casey, and Taylor Mardis Katz and then open up the screen to you. Writers of all stripes—poetry or prose—are welcome to sign up to read one original, brief selection (no longer than three minutes). Find all of the details and rsvp today!

We are truly bowled over by the enthusiasm you showed for Constellation: Ekphrasis, our first community writing project. We received so many thoughtful submissions inspired by works of art of all kinds. Submissions are closed now, but we invite you to continue exploring this Constellation and we look forward to creating a new Constellation in the future. We give heartfelt thanks to everyone who has trusted us with their writing!

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While the pandemic has forced many cancellations and postponements, we’re delighted to announce that our next Little Dipper publication—Mary Kane’s gorgeous collection of short fiction titled On Tuesday, Elizabeth—is on track for release on July 18 (which would have been the date of this year’s Poetry & Pie event).

Although we’re unable to get into the print studio right now to print covers for our hand-stitched books, we’ve worked with Mary to come up with a virtual launch, where the free digital download versions of the book will be available. Our subscribers will get a full announcement via email on July 18. If you’re not already subscribed to our newsletter, you might want to take care of that today!

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Scudder Parker’s new book of poetry, Safe as Lightning, was recently released by Rootstock Publishing and has been praised by Sydney Lea and Chard deNiord. We invited Scudder to create a Summer Reading List for our readers. Be sure to head over to our blog to see which books Scudder recommends.

Have you downloaded your Summer Reading & Writing Bingo card yet? If not, you still have plenty of time to start reading and winning prizes. If you are in need of some recommendations for your summer reading, we’ve got you covered. We’ve been asking members of the local literary community to make suggestions, and we’ll be posting these to our blog all summer long. So far, we have recommendations from Dustin Schell of the Still Queer reading series, with many more to follow in the days to come.

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We’ve been quiet lately about the Slow Club Book Club because we’ve been busy with, oh, you know, a lot of other things, but we’re so happy to let you know that we’ve announced the second pick of the year to our SCBC subscribers: Reproduction, the debut novel by Ian Williams.

Reproduction won the 2019 Scotiabank Giller Prize and was CBC’s Best Novel of the Year in 2019. Ian Williams is a poet and novelist, whose poetry has been shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize. We hope you’ll join us in slowly reading this novel this summer. If you’re not already a SCBC member, find out more and sign up today!

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Those who attended our Summer Reading & Writing Kick Off in May were treated to Makenna Goodman’s preview of her gorgeous, funny, and thought-provoking debut novel, The Shame. We’re thrilled to announce that we’re partnering with Still North Books & Bar for a virtual launch celebration of The Shame on Thursday, August 11. Makenna will be in conversation with author Lauren Groff, which is super exciting! We’ll send our subscribers a brief email on August 1 with the full details.

Finally, as in past years, we’re taking August off from publishing The Dipper so that we can rest up and generate fresh ideas for the fall. Keep an eye on our blog, though, as we’ll be featuring more Bingo picks and August new releases that we’re eager to read. We hope you all have a good, peaceful month, and we can’t wait to talk to you again on September 1.

—Shari and Rebecca


July’s Shooting Stars

A cool literary find from each of us to help light up your month!

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  • During the pandemic, Cave Canem has been offering Literary Balms on their Instagram feed. Literary Balms are prompts written by many of the Cave Canem fellows—up to 18 prompts so far. If you are a writer, I think you’ll find these prompts inspiring. Visit the Cave Canem Instagram page and give these writing exercises a try.
    —Shari

  • On February 18, 1965, the Cambridge Union hosted James Baldwin and William F. Buckley, Jr. to debate the question, “Is the American Dream at the expense of the American Negro?” Baldwin is riveting. The ovation he receives is overwhelming. If you’ve been paying any attention at all, nothing he says will be new to you, but it bears repeating until everyone really listens.—Rebecca


July Highlights

Mamta Chaudhry. Photo by Daniel Fryer

Mamta Chaudhry. Photo by Daniel Fryer

Northshire Bookstore in Manchester Center, Vermont, has been holding Northshire Live events for the past few months and these virtual events continue this month. You can catch novelist Mamta Chaudry in conversation with writer, Jim Shepard, on July 7; Alice Miller will be in conversation with Christopher Castellani on July 9; and Lisa Alther will be in conversation with Madeleine Kunin on July 14. And for all you mystery fans, tune in on July 23 to hear Sarah Stewart Taylor and Paul Doiron in conversation. All events begin at 5:00 pm.

On Sunday, July 12, join Literary North and Still North Books & Bar for a Poetry & Prose Community Open Mic, from 4:00 to 5:30 pm on Zoom. The event features headliners Megan Buchanan, Dede Cummings, Emily Arnason Casey, and Taylor Mardis Katz. Sign up now to read or listen. We’d love to hear your original work!

Dede Cummings

Dede Cummings

Joni B. Cole leads an Expressive Writing workshop with Vivian Ladd of the Hood Museum of Art in Hanover, New Hampshire, via Zoom on Thursday, July 23 at 5:30 pm. Registration is required.

Beginning on Thursday, July 23, Green Mountain Academy for Lifelong Learning hosts the “Armchair Journeys Real and Imagined” reading and writing workshop. Led by Elayne Clift. The workshop run for five consecutive Thursdays afternoons.

For more information about these events and to find out about other online events, please visit our calendar.

In support of Vermont’s Black organizations

This month we’re highlighting some organizations in Vermont that are doing vital work. If you are able to donate to these organizations, please do so. If not, please visit their websites and familiarize yourself with the wonderful work they’re doing, volunteer to help them, or spread the word about what they offer our community. These organizations inspire us. We are so lucky to have them in Vermont!

  • Clemmons Family Farm is a 148-acre African-American working farm in Charlotte, Vermont, and is one of 22 official landmarks on the State of Vermont’s African-American Heritage Trail. Clemmons Family Farm hosts a range of arts and culture programs with the aims of building quality relationships and fostering an appreciation of the heritage and cultures of all people. Past events have included storytelling sessions, readings, art exhibits, and programs that focus on African-American and African culinary heritage.

  • JAG Productions is a Black theater company in White River Junction, Vermont, led by Jarvis Green. JAG Productions needs no introduction from us as we’ve sung their praises from the very beginning. We love the work that Jarvis Green and JAG Productions bring to our area. We need Black voices, Black art, and Black perspectives!

  • Mount Island is a Black-run small press and literary magazine dedicated to rural LGBTQ+ and POC voices. Based in Brattleboro, Vermont, Mount Island publishes a quarterly digital magazine, an annual print anthology, and special letterpress projects. Mount Island is also the home of the Lucy Terry Prince Prize, a new award that recognizes exceptional work by rural poets of color. The prize honors the life of Lucy Terry Prince, a free, landowning Black woman who is the first known African-American poet in English literature. We are so lucky to have Mount Island in Vermont. Please check them out and support them if you can.

  • SUSU Healing Collective is a Brattleboro-based group with the mission of providing an affirming place to practice community reciprocity. SUSU offers classes, workshops, community gatherings, and other services to support Black, Indigenous, and People of Color by creating safer spaces for people to release trauma patterns of white supremacy, oppression, colonization, and westernized disconnection. They currently have a Go Fund Me campaign running with a goal of $400,000 to buy land for Black and brown farmers in Vermont.

More help for authors affected by COVID-19

Independent Publishers of New England (IPNE) has recently announced a new grant to support independent publishers and authors who have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Grant applicants are eligible for up to $500 in cash from IPNE or in editorial, marketing, or other services of equivalent value. Applicants must have published at least one book and live in New England. For full details about grant eligibility and how to apply, please visit the IPNE Pandemic Grant page.

 Worth a Listen

  • The YourShelf podcast episode with New Hampshire author Rebecca Dinerstein Knight

  • The Conversations podcast episode with author Sheila Heti on Tove Jansson’s letters


We're Looking Forward to These July Releases

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  • Desert Notebooks, by Ben Ehrenreich (Counterpoint, July 7)

  • After the Body, by Cleopatra Mathis (Sarabande, July 7)

  • The Sirens of Mars, by Sarah Stewart Johnson (Crown, July 7)

  • Riding with the Ghost, by Justin Taylor (Random House, July 7)

  • The Son of Good Fortune, by Lysley Tenorio (Ecco, July 7)

  • Pew, by Catherine Lacey (FSG, July 21)

  • Hamnet, by Maggie O’Farrell (Knopf, July 21)

  • It is Wood, It is Stone, by Gabriella Burnham (One World, July 28)

  • Fathoms, by Rebecca Giggs (Simon & Schuster, July 28)

  • Intimations, by Zadie Smith (Penguin Press, July 28)

  • Memorial Drive, by Natasha Trethewey (Ecco, July 28)

  • I Hold a Wolf by the Ears, by Laura van den Berg (FSG, July 28)


Calls For Submission and Upcoming Deadlines

Zig Zag Lit Mag
Zig Zag Lit Mag has extended its submission window for issue 9 through July 5. They accept fiction, nonfiction, dramatic forms, poetry, and art. Submissions are open to those who live, labor, or loiter in Addison County, Vermont.
Deadline: July 5 | Details

2020 Hopper Poetry Prize
This contest is open to poets with an identified interest in the natural world and whose work explores issues tied to our ever-changing environment. The winning poetry manuscript will be selected by Lisa Kwong and will be published by Green Writers Press as a collection in 2021. The winning poet will also receive $500 in prize money.
Deadline: July 31 | Details

Pandemic in 25
The Howe Library in Hanover, New Hampshire, wants to hear your pandemic stories. Write about your pandemic experience in 25 words or fewer and you could win a 32GB iPad. Entries will be judged by Literary North and Three by Five. Selected stories will be shared on social media and/or during a virtual event.
Deadline
: July 31 | Details

The MudZoom: Change
The AVA Gallery is calling for storytellers to submit their story ideas for their next online MudZoom event (September 10) on the theme of “Change.” To submit, send a summary of your true, personal story in fewer than 300 words and a brief biography of fewer than 100 words. Selected storytellers will be expected to attend a rehearsal held on the afternoon of Sunday, August 30, via Zoom.
Deadline: August 21 | Details

Bookstock 2021 Coordinator
Woodstock's Bookstock Committee is planning its 2021 annual literary festival and is seeking an overall coordinator to oversee and coordinate a range of activities from logistics and publicity to fundraising. In addition to hosting some 40 authors and poets as speakers, this free weekend event includes a substantial book sale as well as vendors and exhibit tables under tents on the Woodstock Village Green.
Deadline: until position is filled |

Center for Cartoon Studies, MFA Degree and Certificate Programs
CCS is accepting applications for the MFA, and one- and two-year certificate programs. Learn all you need to know about making comics and self-publishing in a prolific and dynamic environment and community. $50 application fee.
Deadline: rolling admissions until programs are filled | Details

Crossroads Magazine
The independent, student-run magazine based out of Burlington, Vermont, accepts very short fiction and poetry, 300 words or fewer. Submissions should be in Word or typed directly into an email. No PDFs, please.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details

Tupelo Press Manuscript Conferences
These advanced Tupelo conferences (August 14 to 17, and September 11 to 14) are for poets who have published widely and have in hand a full-length or chapbook-length manuscript. Using Zoom, you will meet as a group for Q&A sessions, poetry readings, and “happy hours” to socialize, in addition to daily break-out sessions for manuscript reviews. Over the four days of the conference, Tupelo faculty will make individually tailored suggestions about where to send your manuscript, as well as the placement of individual poems in magazines and journals. Tuition is $950.
Deadline: rolling until programs are filled | Details

Listening in Place Sound Archive
The Vermont Folklife Center invites you to send in recorded interviews and sounds of daily life in an effort to open hundreds of small windows into the experiences of Vermonters during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Vermont Folklife Center will make these recordings available on their website and social media to foster connection and sharing, and will also archive the recordings for posterity.
Deadline: none | Details


Upcoming Workshops and Classes

Fiction Writing Workshop with Daly Walker
July 6 to August 3, 9:00 to 11:30 am

This workshop will help participants fictionalize an autobiographical piece about a meaningful event in their lives. During the course of the workshop, the elements of fiction, character, dialogue, point of view, voice, and plot will be discussed. Stories by well-known writers that illustrate the various elements of fiction will be required reading. The main focus of each session will be to workshop the stories submitted by the students. Other literary topics that will be woven into the course include getting published, finding an agent, where to find the best literary fiction, creative writing workshops, MFA programs, and self-publishing.
Location: online | Cost: $60 (OSHER membership required) | Details

Online Workshop Pods with Joni B. Cole
July 8 to 29, 6:30 to 8:00 pm; July 13 to August 3, 10:00 to 11:30 am or 6:30 to 8:00 pm

This small-group writing workshop is open to writers of creative nonfiction and fiction of all levels. It offers participants motivation, personalized instruction on craft, and a small supportive community. Come to the first meeting (and every meeting) with three to four pages of something brand new or revised to read aloud for verbal feedback. Our goal is to meet every draft where it is at, and help you write forward productively and with confidence. You’ll also receive weekly prompts you can use to inspire new ideas, scenes, or just keep the flow flowing! Preregistration is required.
Location: online | Cost: $135 | Details

Armchair Journeys Real and Imagined Reading and Writing Workshop with Elayne Clift
July 23, 30, August 6, 13, and 20, 1:00 to 3:30 pm

This workshop offers suggestions and techniques for writing fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction that derives from travel and journeys, real and imagined. Prompts will bring out the writer in you and will be shared voluntarily. We will also read and discuss selected readings that combine travel with memoir. Come prepared to wish, wonder, remember, and write!
Location: online | Cost: $90 | Details

Pioneer Valley Writers’ Workshop
Various dates and times

Pioneer Valley Writers’ Workshop is offering a number of online workshops, including $5 online writing sessions, through the summer. The workshops are on a range of topics, including advanced fiction, lyric poetry, memoir, flash fiction, and more.
Location: online | Cost: $5+ | Details

WriterSpace “Kindest Space” with Sparrow Alden
Mondays and Wednesdays at 6:00 pm, Fridays at 9:00 am

Sparrow Alden of WriterSpace at River Valley is hosting an ongoing series of virtual drop-in writing sessions. “Kindest Space” is full of supportive words and gentle writing prompts. Drop in for a few minutes or a couple of hours. For more information, email .
Location: online | Cost: free |

The Dipper - May 2020

"The Dipper" is our monthly newsletter, where we highlight readings, events, calls for submission, and other literary-related news for the coming month. If you have news or events to share, let us know

 

May News

In case you missed them in April, we have two interviews up on our blog with poets Sarah Wolfson and Susan Barba. In Sarah Wolfson’s interview, we discuss her 2019 book, A Common Name for Everything, language and the act of naming, and why mammoths keep appearing in her poems. In our interview with Susan Barba, we talk about how she structured her recently published book, geode, as a sphere in a linear form and the way artists convey the global by getting personal. We hope you enjoy the interviews and are inspired to read both of these outstanding books.

 
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If you haven’t heard the name Makenna Goodman yet, you will be hearing it soon. Makenna has a fabulous debut novel, The Shame, out in August 2020 from Milkweed Editions that’s been garnering a ton of praise from writers like Sheila Heti and Jenny Offill. (Psst! You can preorder it now!) To get a sense of her reading taste, check out Makenna’s reading list, which she’s titled, “10 Books To Read if You Are Interested in How the Human Condition Has Long Been One of Anguish and Exuberance.”


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We’re completely delighted with the response we’ve gotten so far to Constellation: Ekphrasis, our first community writing project. We asked you to contribute writing inspired by artwork, music, and sounds, and you’ve really delivered. You’ve sent us pieces inspired by paintings, sculpture, songs, dance, and film. It’s a joy to receive each contribution. A huge thank you to everyone who’s contributed. If you haven’t sent us something already, what are you waiting for? We’ll leave submissions open at least through May.

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It was only a matter of time until Literary North dipped its toe into the vast ocean of virtual events. How nice to be able to venture into the unknown with our friends at Still North Books & Bar at our side! Our Poetry Open Mic night on April 26 in celebration of National Poetry Month was great fun.

Poets Laura Jean Binkley, Vievee Francis, Kristin Maffei, April Ossmann, and Rena J. Mosteirin headlined the event, and more than 20 of our amazing community members read their original work to the crowd. Thank you for supporting the literary arts in our community and for sharing your poems with us!

We have some other virtual events in the works in collaboration with Still North and others. As soon as we have firm details, we’ll share them with you here.

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April 30 marked the 4th annual Hartland Poetry Fest. This year’s Fest was held on Zoom with a supporting page here on Literary North, including bios and a poem from each participant. If you missed the Zoom event, you can still pop on over and read all about these wonderful local poets. James Crews, Rob Foote, Hatsy McGraw, Rena J. Mosteirin, April Ossmann, and Ruth Antoinette Rodriguez read beautifully, and it was a lovely end to National Poetry Month.

After long thought and discussion with this year’s poets, we’ve decided to postpone this year’s Poetry & Pie event to the summer of 2021. It’s not an easy decision to postpone something that brings us such happiness, but we know it’s the only sensible thing to do. The good news is that we have an incredible slate of poets to bring you next summer, and we plan to make the event even more special than it usually is. We’ll unveil the details next year. In the meantime, on July 18 this year, we’ll eat a slice of pie in your honor, and hope you’ll be doing the same.

Even though many events are canceled, several bookstores and venues are trying their hand at virtual events and we’re including any we find out about on our calendar. For example, Vermont College of Fine Arts, Northshire Bookstore, and Gibson’s Book Store all have online events in May. If your organization is holding virtual literary events in the coming weeks and months, please let us know and we’ll spread the word!

Finally, a reminder that the Literary North URL officially changes to literarynorth.org in June 2020. If you haven’t already done so, please update your bookmarks.


May’s Shooting Stars

A cool literary find from each of us to help light up your month!

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  • I’m grateful that there are bookstores and arts organizations all over the country welcoming us to their virtual events at little to no cost. I’ve enjoyed events at the 92 Y, Greenlight Bookstore and the Newburyport Literary Festival, and look forward to events at Harvard Book Store in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Books are Magic in Brooklyn, and City Arts and Lectures, based in San Francisco. It’s been amazing. If you attend an event for free, consider making a donation or buying a book. —Shari

  • I couldn’t decide between two wonderful things this month, so you get two. First, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner Big Read (from The Arts Institute at the University of Plymouth, the fine folks who brought us the Moby-Dick Big Read), which is still in the process of being revealed to us day by day. Second, “Carrying Food Home in Winter,” by Margaret Atwood, which sings to me particulary right now as we cherish our paper bags of precious groceries, our onions and our grapefruits. —Rebecca

 
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Resources for Artist Relief

We’re all aware that writers and other artists are among those who are financially struggling at this time. Here are a few resources we’re aware of that provide financial relief and other support to artists. If you know of others we should share, please let us know.

Please note that several of these resources and grants have application deadlines in May.

  • Artist Relief will distribute $5,000 grants to artists facing dire financial emergencies due to COVID-19.

  • The Bookstore at the End of the World is donating 30% of the purchase price of books you buy from them to sustain booksellers who have lost their livelihoods due to the pandemic. You can also buy their awesome t-shirts to support the cause.

  • Burlington City Arts has started the BCA Artist Relief fund to provide grants of up to $500 for Burlington-based artists.

  • COVID-19 Freelance Artist Resources, created by the Freelance Artist Resource Producing Collective, provides a list of resources for artists.

  • The Creator Fund is a $50,000 fund launched to help creators pay for medical expenses, groceries, child care, rent, or mortgage.

  • The MacDowell Colony is compiling a growing list of links and resources for artists, including funds and grants.

  • A Mighty Blaze is a new initiative to support authors whose tours have been canceled by COVID-19. Visit their site every Tuesday to see whose new books are coming out and meet the authors.

  • The New England Foundation for the Arts has a page of resources, including links to New England state relief funds for artists.

  • New Hampshire Humanities provides information about applying for CARES Act funding for New Hampshire nonprofits as well as links for more New Hampshire arts resources.

  • New Hampshire State Council on the Arts has an Artist Emergency Grant program, which provides $500 grants to professional artists whose livelihoods have been affected by COVID-19.

  • PEN America is expanding their Writers’ Emergency fund, a streamlined way of getting needed cash to published writers who face acute financial need.

  • The Vermont Arts Council has established a Vermont Rapid Response Artist Relief fund, which provides grants up to $500 to artists who have lost income because of COVID-19.

  • The Vermont COVID-19 Cultural Relief Grant Program, a partnership between the Vermont Arts Council and Vermont Humanities, provides rapid-response funding to arts and humanities organizations facing financial hardship as a results of COVID-19.

  • The Vermont Community Foundation has a page where you can donate to many funds, including the Arts Recovery Fund.

 

Worth a Watch

  • The Vermont School and Green Mountains Review are hosting the Social Distance Reading Series, which features readings from poets whose book events have been canceled between January and May 2020. The series includes recent readings by Traci Brimhall, Terrance Hayes, Carol Ann Davis, Kathryn Nuernberger, and Felicia Zamora.

  • The Norwich Bookstore has a rich archive of their author readings recorded by CATV. You can find everything from fiction to poetry to nonfiction, with recordings ranging in time from Vicky Fish in July 2014 to Jeff Sharlet in February 2020.

  • The Kellogg-Hubbard library, host of PoemCity Montpelier, has a video library of past PoemCity readings.

     

Worth a Listen

  • Melissa Harrison, an author in the UK, has a wonderful new podcast, The Stubborn Light of Things, where she takes you with her on her walks in the English countryside. Very relaxing.

  • Hearing Adam Nicholson and Tom Harrick speak about The Making of Poetry: Coleridge, the Wordsworths, and Their Year of Marvels on the Spectator Book Club podcast was a delight.

  • Elizabeth Wetmore discussed her debut novel, Valentine, on How Writers Write.

  • Bookable is a new favorite. Listen in as writer Amanda Stern chats with authors about their books, writing habits, and more. I particularly enjoyed her conversations with Mira Jacob and Alexander Chee.

 

We're Looking Forward to These May Releases

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  • Little Eyes, by Samanta Schweblin (Riverhead, May 5)

  • The Shapeless Unease, by Samantha Harvey (Grove Atlantic, May 12)

  • Funny Weather, by Olivia Laing (W. W. Norton, May 12)

  • On Lighthouses, by Jazmina Barrera, translated by Christina MacSweeney (Two Lines Press, May 12)

  • A Children’s Bible, by Lydia Millet (W. W. Norton, May 12)

  • The Equivalents, by Maggie Doherty (Knopf, May 19)

  • Drifts, by Kate Zambreno (Riverhead, May 19)

  • Index Cards, by Moyra Davey (New Directions, May 26)


Calls For Submission and Upcoming Deadlines

603: Writers’ “Sit and Click” Teleconference
Registration is open for this year’s online conference (October 17). The day-long event features classes, panels, and inspiration for New Hampshire authors and writers. This year’s theme is “The Paths to Publishing.” The keynote speaker is Brunonia Barry. $125 for New Hampshire Writers’ Project members; $145 for non-members; $100 for teachers; $50 for students with valid ID.
Deadline: May 2 | Details

Tell It Slant Poetry Festival
The Emily Dickinson Museum in Amherst, Massachusetts, is accepting proposals for the Tell It Slant Poetry Festival (September 17 to 20)! Proposals for audience-centered workshops, panel discussions, and participatory programs are welcome.
Deadline: May 9 | Details

Ten-Minute Playwriting Contest
Sponsored by the Shaker Bridge Theatre (SBT) in Enfield, New Hampshire, write a play between one and ten minutes in length with two or three characters. Your play can be serious, it can be a comedy, can be realistic, can be absurdist, etc. There are no limits to or restrictions on the style. Plays will be placed (anonymously) on the theatre’s website for everyone to read. SBT will pick the best plays and they will be presented in public, staged readings at the theatre over one weekend next fall.
Deadline: May 15 | Details

The Mudzoom: Pulling Together
The AVA Gallery is calling for storytellers to submit their story ideas for their next online MudZoom event (June 11) on the theme of “Pulling Together.” To submit, send a summary of your true, personal story in fewer than 300 words and a brief biography of fewer than 100 words. Selected storytellers will be expected to attend a rehearsal held on the afternoon of Sunday, May 31, via Zoom.
Deadline: May 22 | Details

Tupelo Press Berkshire Prize
The deadline for The Berkshire Prize for a First or Second Book of Poetry has been extended to May 31. The prize includes a cash award of $3,000 in addition to publication by Tupelo Press, 20 copies of the winning title, a book launch, and national distribution with energetic publicity and promotion. Manuscripts are judged anonymously and all finalists will be considered for publication.
Deadline: May 31 | Details

Meetinghouse
Meetinghouse, a new literary journal from Dartmouth College, is accepting submissions for their inaugural issue. They accept up to three pieces of prose or six poems per submission, up to 7500 words. They prefer unpublished work.
Deadline: July 1 | Details

2020 Hopper Poetry Prize
This contest is open to poets with an identified interest in the natural world and whose work explores issues tied to our ever-changing environment. The winning poetry manuscript will be selected by Lisa Kwong and will be published by Green Writers Press as a collection in 2021. The winning poet will also receive $500 in prize money.
Deadline: July 31 | Details

Campground
Applications are open for Campground, a week-long poetry / poetry-hybrid intensive of workshops, crafts sessions, readings, and panels hosted by the Ruth Stone House (September 1 to 7) in Goshen, Vermont. The week’s events will be led by writers including Ariana Reines, CAConrad, Dorothea Lasky, Airea D. Matthews, and Bianca Stone. $35 application fee. Tuition from $1350 to $1750.
Deadline: August 1 | Details

Center for Cartoon Studies, MFA Degree and Certificate Programs
CCS is accepting applications for the MFA, and one- and two-year certificate programs. Learn all you need to know about making comics and self-publishing in a prolific and dynamic environment and community. $50 application fee.
Deadline: rolling admissions until programs are filled | Details

Constellation: Ekphrasis
Help us form an online Constellation by submitting your original piece of writing inspired by a piece of art, music, film, or a sound. Submit poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction, and hybrid pieces up to 500 words long. All submissions must include a link to your inspiration.
Deadline: none | Details

Crossroads Magazine
The independent, student-run magazine based out of Burlington, Vermont, accepts very short fiction and poetry, 300 words or fewer. Submissions should be in Word or typed directly into an email. No PDFs, please.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details

The Decameron: stories from the pandemic
This online project invites you to share your stories against the pandemic-born isolation and gloom and forge a few bright, shining, subversive connections in a new way. Submit stories or poems under 1000 words (even shorter is better). Photos accepted, too.
Deadline: none | Details

Gone in 150 Seconds
Stuck at home and/or looking for a diversion? Extempo Vermont suggests virtual storytelling! Prepare a two-and-a-half-minute, first-person, true story, and write that story out. Your story must be both prepared for telling smoothly without reading and written down verbatim.
Deadline: rolling | Details

Junction Magazine
Junction Magazine invites submissions about arts and culture, food and farm, people, the wild, photo essays, and events for their event calendar.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details

Listening in Place
In response to the COVID-19 emergency, the Vermont Folklife Center has initiated two new projects: the creation of a crowd-sourced Sound Archive to document our daily experiences during the pandemic, and a series of online Virtual Story Circles, where Vermonters can gather remotely to listen and share during these challenging times.
Deadline: none | Details

Phoenix Books Howard Frank Mosher Scholarship
Vermont College of Fine Arts and Phoenix Books offers an annual $10,000 scholarship to a Vermont fiction writer entering the MFA in Writing & Publishing program at VCFA. This award honors late author Howard Frank Mosher and is applied only to the student’s first year of study. The recipient must be a current Vermont resident at the time of their application.
Deadline: rolling | Details


Upcoming Online Workshops and Classes

Online Writing Workshop Pods with Joni B. Cole
May 5 to 26, 10:00 to 11:30 am OR 6:30 to 8:00 pm

Now more than ever it is important to connect with our creative selves, and to stay connected with each other through our stories and ideas. This small-group writing workshop is open to writers of creative nonfiction and fiction of all levels. It offers participants motivation, personalized instruction on craft, and a small supportive community. Come to each meeting with 3-4 pages of something brand new or revised to read aloud for verbal feedback. Preregistration is required.
Location: online | Cost: $135 | Details

Book Arts Workshop Digital Studio Hour
Tuesdays, 5:00 to 6:00 pm

The Dartmouth College Book Arts Workshop is hosting Digital Studio Hour every Tuesday evening! From working on a book arts project to trying your hand at upholstery, extreme baking, or learning ukulele, everyone is welcome to join, show work in progress, and get ideas. Although we can’t taste or touch what each other is making right now, we can admire and talk about it! To join the Digital Studio Hour, visit their Zoom room on Tuesday at 5:00 pm
Location: online | Cost: free | Details

Center for Cartoon Studies Summer Workshops
June 15 through August 14
The Center for Cartoon Studies has moved all of its 2020 summer workshops online. Workshops include, “Drawing and Writing Single Panel Comics,” with Hilary Price; “Graphic Memoirs,” with Melanie Gillman; “Creating Graphic Novels for the Young Adult Market,” with Jo Knowles and Glynnis Fawkes; “Graphic Novel Workshop,” with Paul Karasik; and “Playing Comics,” with Jason Lutes.
Location: online | Cost: $550+ | Details

Pioneer Valley Writers’ Workshop
Various dates and times

Pioneer Valley Writers’ Workshop is offering a number of online workshops, including $5 online writing sessions, through the end of May. The workshops are on a range of topics, including short stories, memoir, flash fiction, revision, Scrivener, and more.
Location: online | Cost: $5+ | Details

WriterSpace “Kindest Space” Fridays with Sparrow Alden
Fridays, 9:00 am

Sparrow Alden of WritrsSpace at River Valley is hosting an ongoing series of virtual drop-in writing sessions. “Kindest Space” is full of supportive words and gentle writing prompts. To join, visit their Zoom room on Friday at 9:00 am.
Location: online | Cost: free | Details

The Dipper - March 2020

"The Dipper" is our monthly newsletter, where we highlight readings, events, calls for submission, and other literary-related news for the coming month. If you have news or events to share, let us know

 

March News

What an evening! We’re still glowing from the warmth and community feeling from the (modest) grand opening of Still North Books & Bar & The Art of Lying with cartoonist Ricardo Siri (aka Liniers) and author Alexander Chee.

Tiny Top Hats

Tiny Top Hats

It can be a bit nerve-racking putting on an event in a new location (where do the chairs go? when will people arrive? should we do the book signing at the counter or at a table?), but Allie Levy and her crew made it all seem so easy. They mixed up brilliant mocktails and mulled wine drinks, put out a delicious spread of free snacks, and somehow managed to keep the bookstore and kitchen in operation during the whole evening.

Laura Jean Binkley and her trio, Tiny Top Hats, knocked us all out with their gorgeous songs and high energy. They played a full hour and left us wanting more!

Ricardo and Alexandar. Photo by Kata Sasvari

Ricardo and Alexandar. Photo by Kata Sasvari

And then Ricardo and Alexander read to us and talked with us and drew cartoons for us and made us think and laugh. They were brilliant and funny and we really didn’t want the evening to end. The only thing missing was Peter Orner, who was unable to join us due to a last-minute obligation. We all missed his presence (thank you to Alexander for reading one of Peter’s stories at the start of the evening) and we hope to plan another event with him later this year. Grateful thanks to everyone who made this evening possible!

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Sean Prentiss, author of the 2015 non-fiction book Finding Abbey, has just released his first book of poems: Crosscut, a memoir of his time leading a crew of at-risk teens as they built trails in the forests of the Pacific Northwest. In his beautiful, spare, and arresting poems, we hear the language of the trail: the tools, the bruises, and the long nights. We get to know a group of individuals who eventually grow together to become their own community. Sean was kind of enough to talk with us about his experience on the trail and his writing process. Check out our interview with Sean on our blog. Thank you so much, Sean!

You can hear Sean read from Crosscut at The Galaxy Bookshop on March 10, at the Vermont College of Fine Arts on April 17, as part of PoemCity in Montpelier on April 20, and at the Woodbury Library on April 29. Our calendar has the details.

Well, friends, we did it! We finished the long (interrupted) sentence that is Ducks, Newburyport. We have many thoughts about this grand experiment of a novel, several of which we noted in comments to our read-along blog post. Did you read it, too? Did you start and give up? Did you speed through the way Shari did, or lope slowly along the way Rebecca did? We’re so curious to know what you thought. And now that we’re beyond the gravitational pull of Ducks, it’s time to start Slow Club Book Club 2020. Our first book of the year is Terese Marie Mailhot’s Heart Berries. Ready, steady, slow…

 
Ducks.jpg
HeartBerries.jpg
 

Did you know that we do Friday Reads posts from time to time? When the two of us get our act together, we post what we’re reading as the weekend begins. But we also like to invite friends to tell us what they’ve been reading lately. This month, we’re very happy to welcome Sierra Dickey back to give us her review of Isadora, by Amelia Gray. And Katherine Gibbel shares some of her favorite reads from February. Thank you, Sierra and Kate!

We want to hear from you! Thank you to everyone who has already given us feedback about The Dipper via our super short, anonymous online survey. If you haven’t filled it out yet, it’s not too late. Your opinion truly matters to us. After all, we do all of this for you, our literary community. As always, you can also contact us directly through our comment form.


March’s Shooting Stars

A cool literary find from each of us to help light up your month!

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  • Have you been to the Lit Club at the Light Club up at the Light Club Lamp Shop in Burlington, Vermont? It’s an ongoing open mic series every Monday night from 8:00 to 10:00 pm. Featured writers read in between open mic participants. Past writers have included Tim Mayo, Penelope Cray, GennaRose Nethercott, Sam Hughes and Julia Shipley. Plus, you can’t beat the atmosphere!—Shari

  • We’re both huge fans of Jeff Sharlet’s work (you may remember he joined us at our March 2017 Mud Season Salon). His new book of photographs and essays, This Brilliant Darkness, is really stunning. I love this David O’Neill interview with Jeff in in the February/March 2020 issue of Bookforum about photography, writing, compassion and, yes, hope.—Rebecca


March Highlights

Michelle Filgate. Photo by Sylvie Rosokoff

Michelle Filgate. Photo by Sylvie Rosokoff

Michelle Filgate, editor of the essay collection What My Mother and I Don’t Talk About, will be at Bookery Manchester, in Manchester, New Hampshire, on March 3 at 6:00 pm.

Poet G.C. Waldrep will be a visiting writer this month at the Vermont Studio Center in Johnson, Vermont, and will be giving a public reading from 8:00 to 9:00 pm on March 5.

March 5 also kicks off the first in a series of three AMP Nights for 2020. You’ll catch poet Stephen Cramer, artist Ryann Schofield, and musician Dan Greenleaf at River Arts in Morrisville, Vermont, from 6:00 to 8:00 pm.

On March 8, The Word Barn in Exeter, New Hampshire, presents “In Like a Lion,” a reading with poets Theresa Monteiro, Sally Ball, and Noah Burton. Doors open at 3:30 pm with beer, wine, cider, and other refreshments. The reading begins at 4:00 pm.

Noah Burton. Photo by Sadie Mae Brent

Noah Burton. Photo by Sadie Mae Brent

Celebrate the launch of Sean Prentiss’ debut poetry collection, Crosscut, at The Galaxy Bookshop in Hardwick, Vermont, on March 10, at 7:00 pm.

On March 11 at 7:00 pm, Anne Enright reads from her latest novel, Actress, at The Music Hall Loft in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

The Mudroom, AVA Gallery’s quarterly storytelling event in Lebanon, New Hampshire, returns on March 12, at 6:30 pm, with the theme of “The Worst Advice.” Grab your tickets early as these events usually sell out in advance.

Chris Bohjalian fans have multiple chances to hear him read from his new novel, The Red Lotus this month. He’ll be at Gibson’s Bookstore in Concord, New Hampshire, on March 15, at 2:00 pm; at the Fletcher Free Library in Burlington, Vermont, on March 16, at 6:30 pm; and at Northshire Bookstore in Manchester Center, Vermont, on March 28, at 6:00 pm.

The Eagle Pond Authors Series presents poet Jeff Oaks at the Silver Center for the Arts in Plymouth, New Hampshire, on March 17, at 7:00 pm.

Kenzie Allen

Kenzie Allen

Poets Catherine Barnett and Deborah Landau kick off Poetry Nights at Bennington College in Bennington, Vermont, on March 18 at 7:00 pm. Future events are planned in April and May.

On March 27, at 6:30 pm, a trio of terrific writers—Kenzie Allen, Erika T. Wurth, and David Heska Wanbli Weiden—share the evening at Cafe Anna on the campus of the Vermont College of Fine Arts in Montpelier, Vermont.

Sierra Crane Murdoch will be in conversation with Bill McKibben about her new book, Yellow Bird: Oil, Murder, and a Woman’s Search for Justice in Indian Country, on March 30, at 7:00 pm, at the Champlain Valley Unitarian Universalist Society in Middlebury, Vermont.

Visit our calendar for detailed information about these events and more!

 

Worth a Drive

  • Jenny Offill will be in conversation with Ocean Vuong about her latest novel, Weather, at the Odyssey Bookshop in Hadley, Massachusetts, on March 5, at 7:00 pm. The event is free and open to the public, but an RSVP is requested.

  • National Book Award winner, James McBride, will be at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York, on March 9, at 7:00 pm, for his new novel, Deacon King Kong. Tickets are required and space is limited.

  • Jericho Brown reads from his most recent collection, The Tradition at Smith College’s Weinstein Auditorium in Northampton, Massachusetts, on March 10 at 7:30 pm.

  • Fatimah Asghar and Franny Choi will read from their work and talk about poetry at Amherst Books in Amherst, Massachusetts, on March 11, at 8:00 pm. This event is free and open to the public.

  • Hilary Mantel has at last written The Mirror & The Light, the final book in her Cromwell trilogy that began with the unforgettable Wolf Hall. She’ll be reading at the Harvard Book Store in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on March 20 at 7:30 pm. This is a ticketed event and sure to sell out, so buy your tickets soon.

 

Worth a Listen

  • Camille Guthrie on Poetry Spoken Here

  • Brandon Taylor on Debutiful

  • Zadie Smith on Writers and Company

 

We're Looking Forward to These March Releases

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  • These Ghosts are Family, by Maisy Card (Simon & Schuster, March 3)

  • Thin Places, by Jordan Kisner (FSG, March 3)

  • The Exhibition of Persephone Q, by Jessi Jezewska Stevens (FSG, March 3)

  • Sharks in the Time of Saviors, by Kawai Strong Washburn (MCD, March 3)

  • At the Center of All Beauty, by Fenton Johnson (W.W. Norton, March 10)

  • The Mirror & The Light, by Hilary Mantel (Henry Holt & Co, March 10)

  • New Waves, by Kevin Nguyen (One World, March 10)

  • Later, by Paul Lisicky (Graywolf Press, March 17)

  • The Glass Hotel, by Emily St. John Mandel (Knopf, March 24)

  • Days of Distraction, by Alexandra Chang (Ecco, March 31)

  • Ledger, by Jane Hirshfield (Knopf, March 31)

  • Hurricane Season, by Fernanda Melchor translated by Sophie Hughes (New Directions, March 31)


Calls For Submission and Upcoming Deadlines

Hearsay Literary ‘Zine
Hearsay is a literary magazine re-started by Vermont Law School students who invite the whole community to offer their submissions. They seek submissions of poetry, prose, paintings, photographs, comics, pictures of sculptures, written music/lyrics… anything that can be reproduced in a publication. Please include your first and last name with your submission. If you want to remain anonymous please indicate that with your submission. or call/text (253) 363-7001 for more information.
Deadline: March 15 |

PoemTown Bradford
The Bradford Public Library in Bradford, Vermont, is hosting its annual town-wide event that displays poetry on local storefronts in celebration of National Poetry Month. They invite poets of all ages to submit their poems for display.
Deadline: March 16 | Details

Vermont Young Writers’ Conference
Applications are open for a space in three 2020 agri-literary conferences for high school writers (May 28 to 31, June 25 to 28, and July 23 to 26). The conferences offer three days of readings, improv, storytelling, poetry slams, intensive writing workships, manuscript critiques, and more. $20 submission fee.
Deadline: March 26 | Details

MacDowell Colony Fall Literature Residency
Applications are open for the 2020 MacDowell Colony Fall Literature Residency (October 1, 2020 to January 21, 2021). Writers of novels, short stories, graphic writing, journalism, essays, biography, creative nonfiction, memoir, poetry, and translation into English are accepted. A residency consists of exclusive use of a studio, accommodations, and three prepared meals a day for up to eight weeks. Application fee $30.
Deadline: April 15 | Details

Frost Place 2020 Gregory Pardlo Scholarship
Applications are open for the Gregory Pardlo Scholarship for Emerging African American Poets. The scholarship is open to African American poets writing in English who have published up to one book of poetry. The winner will receive a full scholarship to attend the Poetry Seminar (July 2020) at The Frost Place, including room and board, and will give a featured reading at the Seminar.
Deadline: April 24 | Details

Frost Place 2020 Latinx Scholarship
This scholarship is designed to encourage the LatinX voice in poetry and the literary arts, both at The Frost Place and in the broader literary community. The winner will receive a full fellowship to attend the Conference on Poetry at The Frost Place (July 2020), including tuition, room, board, and travel. The ideal applicant would self-identify as LatinX, would have a strong commitment to the Latin@ community, and be a minimum of 21 years of age.
Deadline: April 24 | Details

Tupelo Press Berkshire Prize
The Berkshire Prize for a First or Second Book of Poetry includes a cash award of $3,000 in addition to publication by Tupelo Press, 20 copies of the winning title, a book launch, and national distribution with energetic publicity and promotion. Manuscripts are judged anonymously and all finalists will be considered for publication. $30 reading fee.
Deadline: April 30 | Details

603: Writers’ Conference
Registration is open for this year’s conference (May 2). The day-long event features classes, panels, and inspiration for New Hampshire authors and writers. This year’s theme is “The Paths to Publishing.” The keynote speaker is Brunonia Barry. $165 for New Hampshire Writers’ Project members; $185 for non-members; $150 for teachers; $85 for students with valid ID.
Deadline: May 2 | Details

Juniper Summer Writing Institute
Applications are open for the 2020 Juniper Summer Writing Institute (June 14 to 20). The Juniper Summer Writing Institute is an inclusive literary space that welcomes adult poets and writers at all stages of their careers. Acceptance to the Institute is based upon the strength and promise of the writing sample. $40 non-refundable application fee.
Deadline: May 15 | Details

Center for Cartoon Studies, MFA Degree and Certificate Programs
CCS is accepting applications for the MFA, and one- and two-year certificate programs. Learn all you need to know about making comics and self-publishing in a prolific and dynamic environment and community. $50 application fee.
Deadline: rolling admissions until programs are filled | Details

Crossroads Magazine
The independent, student-run magazine based out of Burlington, Vermont, accepts very short fiction and poetry, 300 words or fewer. Submissions should be in Word or typed directly into an email. No PDFs, please.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details

Junction Magazine
Junction Magazine invites submissions about arts and culture, food and farm, people, the wild, photo essays, and events for their event calendar.
Deadline: rolling submissions | Details


Upcoming Workshops and Classes

Pioneer Valley Writers’ Workshop One-Day & Multi-Week Workshops and Classes
February through June

PVWW is out with a bounty of workshops to take you through spring. Workshops include topics such as “Generative & Community Building,” “8-Week Short Fiction Intensive,” “Writing Prose Poems that Sing,” “Hybrid Forms,” and many others.
Location: PVWW, Williamsburg, Massachusetts | Cost: $60+ | Details

Creative Writing Workshop with Stacey Goren
Mondays, March 2 to March 23, 2:00 to 4:00 pm
Stacey Goren, a second year Goddard MFA-W student, will share learning about craft elements such as: set up, characterization, dialogue, and scene writing. Discussion, examples, prompts, and varying short periods of silence will be offered. The goal is to foster a supportive environment for experimentation with these different aspects of craft.
Location: Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, Vermont | Cost: Free | Details

Just Move the Pen Workshop with Joni B. Cole
March 3, 6:30 to 8:00 pm
This everyone-is-welcome writing workshop is all about unleashing your creativity and tapping into your stories (real or imagined) without judgment or second guessing. You will be invited to write from a prompt and share aloud what you wrote for appreciation. Absolutely no writing experience is required, but if you are an aspiring author this workshop offers plenty of narrative techniques and tips to help you write more, write better, and be happier every draft of the way. Please bring a ready pen (or laptop) and an open mind.
Location: Howe Library, Hanover, New Hampshire | Cost: free | Details

Book Length Fiction Workshop with Dick Matheson
March 4, 6:30 to 8:30 pm (ongoing)

Have you been hungering for helpful feedback about a novella (20K words and up) or novel (of any genre) that you have begun writing, have completed, or are on the nth revision of? Welcome to our Book Length Fiction Workshop! Because we're looking at longer works, we may form a somewhat close-knit group of ongoing participants while always welcoming new writers joining us.
Location: Burlington Writers Workshop, Burlington, Vermont | Cost: free | Details

Poetry Workshop with Elisabeth Blair
March 5, 6:30 to 8:30 pm (ongoing)

This ongoing workshop begins with group workshopping three poems, continues with a themed discussion (this meeting’s theme is one-sentence poems), and ends by sharing poems inspired by the previous workshop.
Location: Burlington Writers Workshop, Burlington, Vermont | Cost: free | Details

Poetry Workshop with Deborah Brown
March 8, 2:00 to 3:00 pm

Join former UNH English professor Deborah Brown for a monthly poetry workshop. Bring a poem you like. For the novice to the published, 9 to 99 years.
Location: MainStreet BookEnds, Warner, New Hampshire | Cost: free | Details

Spring Poetry Studio with Kate Gibbel
March 10 to April 7
In this workshop series for poets of all experiences we’ll experiment with new poetic forms and techniques. Over the course of five weeks we will strengthen our work and take risks in our writing. Through a combination of in-class writing exercises, workshops, and discussion of outside poems, we will develop reading and writing practices that will make us more attentive, generative, and generous poets.
Location: Artistree, South Pomfret, Vermont | Cost: $100 | Details

Creative Nonfiction Workshop with Linda Ayer
March 11, 6:00 to 8:00 pm (ongoing)

Join us for a discussion of creative nonfiction submitted by BWW members. We’ll focus on specific elements of the craft and give honest responses to the work. In this workshop, you may submit essays, lyric essays, poetry, or journalism. All skill levels are welcome. Respect for each other is a must.
Location: Burlington Writers Workshop, Burlington, Vermont | Cost: free | Details

Prompt and Pinot with Joni B. Cole
March 13, 6:30 to 8:00 pm
We’ll use the time-tested device of a writing prompt to help you tap into your story ideas, play around on the page, and share your unique voice. You’ll also pick up some writing tips along the way. Open to anyone who wants to imbibe in the creative process. 
Location: Still North Books & Bar, Hanover, New Hampshire | Cost: free but donations welcome | Details

Poetry as a Bridge to Japan Workshop Series
March 14 through December 5

Please join us as we seek to build community with our sister city of Nichinan, Japan, all year long. There will be ways for everyone, non-poets and poets of all levels and ages, to be involved in this project. The Portsmouth Poet Laureate Program will offer three “Come Create!” workshops at the Portsmouth Public Library, where several instructors will guide us in experimenting with several traditional Japanese poetry forms and one visual art form. Attend one or all. At the end of the year we will celebrate with a broadside contest and art show/reception.
Location: Portsmouth Public Library, Portsmouth, New Hampshire | Cost: free | Details

Having Fun with Edits Workshop with Ana E. Ross
March 14, 10:00 am to 1:00 pm

Perhaps you’ve written the best story ever, and now you’re ready for the next step: Editing! It’s the most critical undertaking on the path to publication. In this workshop, you’ll learn the basics of editing your own work. Prior to the workshop, submit a maximum of five pages of your manuscript to Ana. Come, with pen and pencil in hand, and ready to have fun editing your own manuscript.
Location: The Ford House, SNHU, Manchester, New Hampshire | Cost: $65 to$85 | Details

Scrivener: Using Research Effectively Webinar with Alison Murphy
March 18, 7:00 to 8:00 pm

In this webinar, we’ll learn how to keep track of all of your research materials using Scrivener’s research section. We’ll learn how to import, categorize, and organize your research so that you can find them when you need them. We’ll also talk about how tools like bookmarks, keywords, and metadata can help you connect that research to the parts of your manuscript where you most need them. This class is appropriate for writers of all genres.
Location: Online webinar | Cost: $20 to $30 | Details

Walking with Mary Oliver Community Conversation and Workshop
March 19 and 21, 6:30 to 7:30 pm

Through reflective conversation, book-making, and writing inspired by Oliver’s art, participants will explore timeless questions about our relationship to nature and our responsibility for the environment.
Location: Rindge Meeting House, Rindge, New Hampshire | Cost: free | Details

Diversity in Writing Workshop with Loretta L. C. Brady
March 21, 1:30 to 4:30 pm

The New Hampshire Writers’ Project and Loretta L.C. Brady, PhD, a clinical psychologist, writer, and Professor of psychology at Saint Anselm College, present a workshop on diversity in writing.
Location: The Ford House, SNHU, Manchester, New Hampshire | Cost: $65 to $85 | Details

Montpelier Meeting of the Burlington Writers Workshop
March 26, 6:15 to 8:15 pm (ongoing)

Writers of all genres and skill levels are welcome to join us for this regular Montpelier meeting of BWW. We'll discuss the writing of two authors who have arranged to submit work in advance. All skill levels are welcome. Respect for each other is a must
Location: Montpelier Senior Activity Center, Montpelier, Vermont | Cost: free | Details

PoemCity Montpelier Workshops
April 4 to 22

This annual celebration of poetry in Montpelier, Vermont, is offering several poetry workshops by noted poets, including Richard Blanco, Sydney Lea, Geof Hewitte, Toussaint St. Negritude, Gahlord Dewald, Rebecca Jamieson, Losi Eby, Gody Gladding, and Martha Zweig.
Location: various locations in Montpelier, Vermont | Details

WriterSpace Weekend Workshop
April 3 to 5
Bring a work in progress or start your new major work! WriterSpace Workshop will provide writing prompts, skill challenges, and a room full of supportive colleagues for friendly feedback. Join Sparrow F. Alden for Friday evening creativity challenges, Saturday swathes of prompted writing, and Sunday revision and refinement.
Location: River Valley Community College, Lebanon, New Hampshire | Cost: $300 | Details

Storytelling for Community-Based Projects with the Vermont Folklife Center and Trish Denton
April 4, 10:00 am to 4:00 pm
Storytelling for Community-Based Projects combines discussion of the theories and methods that inform community-wide research with practical, hands-on training in interviewing and storytelling techniques, while also encouraging attendees to consider the challenges, possibilities and ethics of representation. A showcase of projects by both youth and adults will provide a foundation on which to build these ideas.
Location: Generator, Burlington, Vermont. | Cost: $95 ($55 students) | Details

Writing Memoir: The Art and Craft of Remembering via Creative Nonfiction with Elayne Clift
April 18, 10:30 am to 1:00 pm
In this writing workshop we will draw upon sensory memory to coax the writer in all of us out of hiding, recognizing that memory can be a writer’s best friend. Through prompts, readings, and constructive feedback in a safe environment, participants will sharpen their creative expression and explore the forces that have shaped each of us. Pre-registration required. Space is limited.
Location: The Writer’s Center, White River Junction, Vermont | Cost: $35 | Details

Storytelling for Social Change with the Vermont Folklife Center, Kathleen Haughey, and Trish Denton
May 16, 10:00 am to 4:00 pm
This workshop is intended for anyone interested in developing collaborative documentary or storytelling skills, including students, community members, and staff members of organizations doing cultural, community and social-service work. In addition to developing attendees’ collaborative research abilities, the workshop seeks to expand participants’ listening skills—and by extension, interviewing skills—while also encouraging attendees to consider the challenges, possibilities, and ethics of representation. The workshop will conclude with a discussion of participants’ project ideas.
Location: Vermont History Museum, Montpelier, Vermont | Cost: $95 ($55 for students) | Details

Center for Cartoon Studies 2020 Summer Workshops
June 15 through August 14

Once again, the CCS is offering a full slate of workshops for cartoonists and writers this summer, including “Graphic Memoirs” with Melanie Gillman; “Creating Graphic Novels for the Young Adult Market,” with Jo Knowles and Glynnis Fawkes; “Graphic Novel Workshop,” with Paul Karasik; and “Playing Comics,” with this year’s Vermont Book Award winner, Jason Lutes.
Location: CCS, White River Junction, Vermont | $600+ | Details