Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Reading Series 2013

NMSU's Nelson/Boswell Distinguished Writers Series this year features all graduates of our program who have gone to publish books, edit magazines and presses, and labor in the fields of literature. For the season finale, author David Shields (not an NMSU graduate) will be reading from his new book, How Literature Saved My Life. Faculty members Carmen Smith and Rus Bradburd also will read from their new books. Smith from Goodbye, Flicker, on September 7th, and Bradburd from Make It, Take It on February 15th. All readings feature a graduate student reader and begin at 7:30 in 106 Hardman Hall unless otherwise indicated.



Darlin Neal September 28th

Darlin’ Neal is a native New Mexican and author of the story collections Elegant Punk (Press 53, 2012) and Rattlesnakes & The Moon (Press 53, 2010). She is the 2011 winner of DH Lawrence Fellowship from the Taos Summer Writers Conference, their highest honor. Her short stories, essays, poems, and reviews have appeared in numerous journals, magazines, and anthologies, including The Southern Review, Shenandoah, Eleven Eleven, The Mississippi Review, Puerto del Sol, and Best Of The Web. Neal is a Mississippi Arts Commission awardee in the Literary Arts, and a winner of the Henfield Prize. As a graduate student at NMSU, she was a Frank Waters Fiction Fellowship recipient. Her first collection, Rattlesnakes & The Moon, was nominated for numerous awards including The Story Prize and The Pen Faulkner Award. Her short stories and nonfiction have been nominated over a dozen times for the Pushcart Prize. She serves as faculty advisor for The University of Central Florida’s award winning undergraduate literary magazine The Cypress Dome, and for The Writers In The Sun Reading Series for which she brings in writers of national caliber each semester. She is Fiction Editor of The Florida Review.


Richard Yañez--October 18th


Richard Yañez was born and raised on the U.S.-Mexico border. He is the author of Cross Over
Water: A Novel and El Paso del Norte: Stories on the Border, both published by the University
of Nevada Press. Named a 2012 Top Ten “New Latino Author” by Latino Stories, both books
were cited as “Notable Books” by Southwest Books of the Year. El Paso del Norte was a finalist
for the Steven Turner Book Award from the Texas Institute of Letters, and Cross Over Water
is a finalist for a ForeWord Book of the Year Award (multicultural fiction) and an International
Latino Book Award (Best Novel-adventure/drama in English).
His stories and essays are anthologized in Mirrors Beneath The Earth: Short Fiction by Chicano Writers, Our Working Lives: Stories of People and Work, Hecho en Tejas: An Anthology of
Texas Mexican Literature, Literary El Paso, U.S. Latino Literature Today, and New Border.
Gary Soto selected his story, “Sacred Heart,” for the Chicano Chapbook Series.
He has served as editor for Puerto del Sol, Colorado Review, Hayden’s Ferry Review,
BorderSenses, Momotombo Press, and the Writer’s Chronicle. His service work includes
contributions to the Border Book Festival, Con Tinta: A Chicano/Latino Writers’ Collective, El
Paso Literary Fiesta, and RIPPLES Literary/Cultural Series.
A graduate of New Mexico State University and Arizona State University, he earned a Riley
Scholar Fellowship from Colorado College and a Center for InterCultural Leadership Fellowship
from Saint Mary’s College (IN). Currently, he is an associate professor of English at El Paso
Community College, where he received the Minnie Stevens Piper Professor Award and a state
teaching award from The National Institute for Staff and Organizational Development.
He lives in El Paso with his wife, Chicana writer Carolina Monsiváis, and their son.

Patrick Donnelley October 18th


Patrick Donnelley is a native New Mexican and the author of The Charge (Ausable Press, 2003, since 2009 part of Copper Canyon Press) and Nocturnes of the Brothel of Ruin (Four Way Books, 2012). Donnelly is director of the Advanced Seminar, one of three summer programs at The Frost Place, a poetry conference center at Robert Frost’s old homestead in Franconia, NH. He is an associate editor of Poetry International, a contributing editor of Trans-Portal (www.transtudies.org), has taught writing at Colby College, the Lesley University MFA Program, and the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference. In the 2012-2013 academic year he will teach a semester each at Smith College and George Washington University. He was Thornton writer-in-residence at Lynchburg College in 2006, is a 2008 recipient of an Artist Fellowship from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, is a member of the Massachusetts Poetry Outreach Project Advisory Board. His poetry has appeared in many journals, including American Poetry Review, Ploughshares, The Yale Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and Hayden’s Ferry Review, and has been anthologized in the Four Way Reader #2, The Book of Irish American Poetry from the 18th Century to the Present, and elsewhere. From the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, he received a scholarship in 2003 and a fellowship in 2004, and grants from the PEN Fund for Writers in 2000 and 2001. With Stephen D. Miller, Donnelly is co-translator of the Japanese poems in The Wind from Vulture Peak: The Buddhification of Japanese Waka in the Heian Period, a scholarly history and analysis forthcoming from Cornell East Asia Series in fall 2012. Donnelly and Miller’s translations have appeared or are forthcoming in Bateau, Cha: An Asian Literary Journal, Circumference, thedrunkenboat.com, eXchanges, Inquiring Mind, Kyoto Journal, Mead, Metamorphoses, New Plains Review, Noon: The Journal of the Short Poem, Poetry International and Like Clouds or Mists: Studies and Translations of Nō Plays of the Genpei War. Donnelly, in previous years, has performed as an actor and opera singer, worked as a professional chef and food writer, helped to coordinate a meal program for people with AIDS, cancer and heart disease, and taught health-supportive cooking and eating to senior citizens and people recovering from drug and alcohol addiction. His spiritual curiosity has led him, at different times, to study for the Roman Catholic priesthood and to live as a Buddhist and a Muslim. Website: http://web.me.com/patricksdonnelly

Krystal Languel November 5th

Krystal Languell is the author of the poetry collection Call the Catastrophists (BlazeVox, 2011), the poems of which began as her MFA thesis at New Mexico State University. Her poems have appeared in Barn Owl Review, DIAGRAM, esque and elsewhere, and her reviews and interviews have been published online at NewPages and Coldfront. Founder of the feminist literary journal Bone Bouquet, she is part of the Belladonna Collaborative in Brooklyn and teaches writing at the Borough of Manhattan Community College and Pratt Institute.


Andrew Scott November 30th

Andrew Scott is the author of Naked Summer, a story collection, and the editor of a forthcoming anthology, 24 Bar Blues: Two Dozen Tales of Bars, Booze, and the Blues. He holds writing degrees from Purdue University and New Mexico State University, where he was twice awarded a Frank Waters Fiction Fellowship. His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in EsquireNinth LetterThe Cincinnati ReviewMid-American ReviewGlimmer Train StoriesThe Writer’s Chronicle, and other publications, and have been awarded grants from the state of Indiana and Ball State University, where he teaches. With his wife, writer Victoria Barrett, he edits Freight Stories, an online fiction journal. He lives in Indianapolis.


Carrie Murphy January 18th

Carrie Murphy is the author of a full-length collection of poetry, PRETTY TILT (Keyhole Press, 2012) and a chapbook, MEET THE LAVENDERS (Birds of Lace, 2011). She received her MFA from New Mexico State University and her BA from the University of Maryland. Her work has appeared in Columbia Poetry Review, JMWW, PANK, and other journals and has also been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. An essay was chosen as an Editor's Choice for Best of the Net 2011. Murphy also leads workshops at Washington D.C. area conferences on post-confessional poetry. She is also an active food writer on the web.

Valerie Fioravanti February 1st


The stories in Valerie Fioravanti’s Garbage Night at the Opera are grouped around an extended Italian-American family sharing one apartment building in Brooklyn as their neighborhood experiences a swift and financially devastating deindustrialization. The collection examines the consequences the loss of factory jobs has on individual, family, and community life. The stories move forward in time and across generations as the neighborhood rapidly deteriorates, languishes for a generation, then gentrifies.

Garbage Night at the Opera won the 2011 G.S. Sharat Chandra Prize for Short Fiction and is forthcoming from BkMk Press (University of Missouri-Kansas City) in October 2012. Garbage Night at the Opera was also a two-time finalist for the Flannery O’Connor Award. Stories from the collection have received four Pushcart Prize and one Million Writers Award nominations. These stories have appeared in North American Review, Cimarron Review, Hunger Mountain, Night Train, and other literary journalsThe title story, “Garbage Night at the Opera,” was awarded Special Mention in Pushcart Prize XXVIII, and has been anthologized twice more. A first-generation college student, Valerie received a Fulbright Fellowship to Italy to work on her novel-in-progress, Bel Casino, and won both the Fiction & Poetry Prizes as an MFA candidate at New Mexico State University.

Valerie also writes poems and essays. Her first published poem, “Letter Ghost,” received a Pushcart Prize nomination. Her essays and poems have appeared in Eclectica, Silk Road, Jelly Bucket, and other literary journals. Valerie teaches for the UCLA Writers Program online and lives in Sacramento, where she promotes the work of other writers via the Stories on Stage reading series.


John Chávez March 15th

John Chávez grew up in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and spent a significant amount of time in southern Colorado and Northern New Mexico, the inspiration for his early poetry. He received his bachelors degree in Creative Writing from Colorado State University, and later received his Master of Arts at Central Michigan University and Master of Fine Arts at New Mexico State. He completed his Doctorate degree in Poetry under the supervision of Hilda Raz. At the University of Nebraska Lincoln, Chávez served as an editorial assistant for Ted Kooser's "American Life in Poetry," a syndicated newspaper column publishing contemporary poetry nationwide, and as one of two Senior Poetry Readers for Prairie Schooner. Awarded a month-long residency at the Anderson Center in Red Wing, Minnesota, Chávez was the Letras Latinas Residency Fellow, cosponsored by the Anderson Center for Interdisciplinary Studies and the Institute for Latino Studies at the University of Notre Dame. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Conduit, Portland Review, Puerto del Sol, Grist: The Journal for Writers, The Laurel Review, Palabra, Great River Review, Diode and Copper Nickel among others. He is the author of the chapbook Heterotopia, published by Noemi Press in 2004, and co-author of the chapbook I,NE: Iterations of the Junco, published by Small Fires Press in 2009. His first full-length poetry collection, City of Slow Dissolve, will be released fall 2012 by University of New Mexico Press.

Joey Nicoletti April 5th

Joey Nicoletti is the author of three poetry collections: Borrowed Dust, Earthquake Weather (NightBallet Press, 2012), and Cannoli Gangster, which was selected as a finalist for the Steel Toe Books Poetry Prize by Denise Duhamel (Word Tech, September 2012). His poems, reviews, and nonfiction essays have appeared in many magazines and anthologies, including Italian Americana, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Waccamaw, Aethlon, Gradiva: International Journal of Italian Poetry, Tulane Review, PIF, Green Hills Literary Lantern, The Bitter Oleander, Stymie Magazine, and The City of Big Shoulders: An Anthology of Chicago Poetry. A short film, "Blue Train,” based on his poem of the same name, will be screened with five other short films inspired by poems from the new anthology Token Entry: Poems of the New York City Subway later this year as part of Jack Feldstein’s Subway Series. A graduate of the Sarah Lawrence College MFA program, the University of Iowa, and New Mexico State University, he is a former poetry editor of Puerto del Sol and currently teaches creative writing and English literature at Niagara University.


David Shields April 19th


David Shields is the author of thirteen books, the most recent being How Literature Saved My Life, forthcoming in February 2013 by Knopf. His other books include Jeff, One Lonely Guy, which was co-written by Jeff Ragsdale and Michael Logan (forthcoming from Amazon Publishing NYC on March 20, 2012); Reality Hunger: A Manifesto (Knopf, 2010), named one of the best books of the year by more than thirty publications; The Thing About Life Is That One Day You'll Be Dead (Knopf, 2008), a New York Times bestseller; Black Planet: Facing Race during an NBA Season, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award; Remote: Reflections on Life in the Shadow of Celebrity, winner of the PEN/Revson Award; and Dead Languages: A Novel, winner of the PEN Syndicated Fiction Award. His essays and stories have appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Harper’s, Esquire,Yale Review, Village Voice, Salon, Slate, McSweeney’s, and Utne Reader; he’s written reviews for the New York Times Book Review, Los Angeles Times Book Review, Boston Globe, and Philadelphia Inquirer. His work has been translated into fifteen languages.

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