Wells College Visiting Writers Series

Wells College Visiting Writers Series Wells College invites exceptional poets, prose writers, and editors to give free public readings and engage in small groups with our students.

Wells College's Visiting Writers Series was established in 1973. Under the auspices of the Series, which is supported by Wells College, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Virginia Kent Cummins Fund (for poets), the Mildred Walker Fund (for fiction writers), and gifts from friends and alumnae, the college brings to campus each academic term an average of three or four writers who have dist

inguished themselves in poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and drama. These writers not only give public readings of their work; they also conduct writing workshops, participate in classes and discussions, and often hold individual conferences with interested student writers. Among the hundreds of writers Wells has hosted over the years, many have been top figures in their field who have won such prestigious awards as the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. One (the Russian poet Joseph Brodsky) was even a Nobel Prize winner. Yet, the Visiting Writers Series selects only those writers who can bring something special to the close-knit Wells community, which has had its continuously growing share of ambitious and committed undergraduate writers. Visiting writers are frequently editors and publishers, or are involved in graduate writing programs, and all have wide publishing experience, so they can help students learn about practical matters relating to the literary scene and publishing in addition to providing hands-on advice and criticism. Sometimes there are group readings by editors and writers representing journals, such as THE HEALING MUSE and STONE CANOE, and by publishers, such as Michael Czarnecki of FootHills Publishing, enabling students to gain exposure to the vital work being done all over the country by small presses and literary magazines.

Hi friends -- if you miss talking about Sappho and Paul Celan (among others) with me, or if you just want an opportunity...
03/27/2026

Hi friends -- if you miss talking about Sappho and Paul Celan (among others) with me, or if you just want an opportunity to write in a supportive virtual space together, there's an online workshop coming up next month focused on "poetry of the fragment." It'd be lovely to see some Wellsian faces in the mix! -Dan

In this generative workshop, we will explore the power of poems that we receive as fragmentary or broken. The subjects of our discussions will range from the unwitting matriarch of the fragment, Sappho, to the violently lapidary short lyrics of Paul Celan, to the contemporary explosion of erasure po...

The final issue of the Wells Chronicle, a lit mag that lasted almost as long as the school, has arrived. The prescient e...
04/30/2024

The final issue of the Wells Chronicle, a lit mag that lasted almost as long as the school, has arrived. The prescient editors chose this epigraph.

Initially inspired by a photograph of one of Saddam Hussein’s demolished palaces printed on the cover of a newspaper Sim...
04/08/2024

Initially inspired by a photograph of one of Saddam Hussein’s demolished palaces printed on the cover of a newspaper Simone found discarded on a café table during the fall of Baghdad in 2003, Palace of Rubble has since evolved into an accumulation of texts invoked by a historical moment spanning the eras of Bush, Obama, Trump, and into the present day. Offering surreal glimpses of what might be identified as echoes of a post-Republic America, an imagined Middle East, and some other unnamed and unreachable world, it chronicles a vivid landscape of crumbling towers and heart-broken animals, eclipses, comets, and lovers in abandoned rooms, still searching for beauty amidst the ruins of the catastrophe bequeathed to them.

Come hear more about this collection of short stories from our next visiting writer, Kyra Simone, beginning with her master class at 5 PM tomorrow in the faculty parlors! Simone is is a Tunisian-American writer from Los Angeles, now based in Brooklyn. Her fiction and poetry have appeared in a variety of literary journals, including Conjunctions, The Brooklyn Rail, BOMB, Entropy, The Anthology of Best American Experimental Writing, and elsewhere. Simone is a member of the publishing collective Ugly Duckling Presse and part of a two-woman team running the editorial office of Zone Books, both of which will have publications by them at the Pop-Up Shop at 6 PM in the AER following the master class and finally the reading at 7 PM. All are welcome!

The Wells College Visiting Writers Series welcomes author Kyra Simone on April 9th! Come join us for her master class en...
04/05/2024

The Wells College Visiting Writers Series welcomes author Kyra Simone on April 9th! Come join us for her master class entitled “Experimental Forms in Small-Press Publishing and Innovative Writing” at 5 PM at the Faculty Parlors followed by a joint pop-up shop, which will be joined by Book Arts Director Mary Tasillo. Come explore publications from the Wells College Press, Ugly Duckling Presse, Zone Books, and more! Spend time reading with the opportunity to discuss editing and publishing with Simone and the others. Lastly, the reading of her nonfiction book will be at 7 PM immediately following at the AER in Macmillan. All are welcome!

Next week, our film series wraps up with an incredible event: Filmmaker Alison O'Daniel, who has been selecting our film...
04/04/2024

Next week, our film series wraps up with an incredible event: Filmmaker Alison O'Daniel, who has been selecting our films all year, will be on campus for a screening of her acclaimed THE TUBA THIEVES, followed by a panel discussion. Join us to see why the New York TImes called this film "somehow rigorous and abstract, serious and playful, and provocative in a way that makes us take in the world differently." Pre-register for free and share any accommodation needs here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd42Nzh4gpn-I1DM7gEyTEGxHMcQ3zArQZ-MJCa45t2hwlcgw/viewform

Coming up next week!!
04/02/2024

Coming up next week!!

"I’m not what they think I am. I’m no soft flesh to fold other bodies within, pressing them to my breast. I am neither c...
03/27/2024

"I’m not what they think I am. I’m no soft flesh to fold other bodies within, pressing them to my breast. I am neither comfort nor care, neither trouble nor tend. I am not a body that carries and holds. I am not a body that bends. I am not the hand for which smaller hands reach. I am not the leg to which they cling. I am not these lush valleys, these gentle rolling hills. I am rock and ridge and plain, a packed-down stretch of earth. I am not this fertile soil, but the hard red clay beneath. I am not the land that people claim. I am land that can’t be kept or named." - Melissa Faliveno, excerpt from Carry Me.

Come hear about similar works and more from our next visiting writer, Melissa Faliveno, beginning with her master class at 4:00 this Friday in the Faculty Parlors! Tomboyland, the selected book for the reading portion, was named Best Book of 2020 by NPR, New York Public Library, Oprah Magazine, Electric Literature, and Debutiful, and recipient of a 2021 Award for Outstanding Literary Achievement from the Wisconsin Library Association. She is currently an assistant professor of creative writing at Kenyon College, Denison University, Sarah Lawrence College, Catapult, and to incarcerated men, high school students, and adults in and around New York City. Learn more about her and her work at www.melissafaliveno.com

Coming up!!
03/20/2024

Coming up!!

Never miss a master class or reading again when you visit our YouTube channel! It will have all previous VWS events for ...
03/04/2024

Never miss a master class or reading again when you visit our YouTube channel! It will have all previous VWS events for you to watch in full. You can also sign up for exclusive emails about upcoming VWS events by scanning the second QR code! You will always be notified about upcoming master classes and readings by various authors that come on campus, just as a little reminder! Alternatively, you can also visit arts.wells.edu/

In Mountain Amnesia, the poems rebuild a new world—and self—in the wake of destruction and loss. Influenced by the lands...
02/29/2024

In Mountain Amnesia, the poems rebuild a new world—and self—in the wake of destruction and loss. Influenced by the landscape of rural Appalachia, these poems depict a nature relentlessly working on its own disappearance for survival. Decaying plants and animal remains are housed in the same world as ramps and bellflowers on the cusp of blooming.

These poems do not placate or cover up the inevitability of death, but rather use this knowledge to seek connection and make meaning: “how little and yet / how much it matters to count the dead.” Mountain Amnesia seeks a path through destruction, using ruin to clear the way for new beginnings; or, as Thompson writes, “the painful, florid bloom of passing forward.” This collection is a testament to survival and resilience, and animal encounters—the lonely fox, the folded fawn, the returning whale, the emerging voles—become new myths along the way.

Come hear how Gale Marie Thompson explores this further this Tuesday beginning with her master class at 5 PM in the Faculty Parlors! Thompson is the founding editor of Jellyfish Poetry and has received fellowships from the Vermont Studio Center and the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts. Her poems have received prizes including Best New Poets and Columbia: A Journal of Literature and Art. Learn more about her at www.galemariethompson.com/

Coming up next week!!
02/29/2024

Coming up next week!!

REBUILDING A NEW WORLD—AND SELF—IN THE WAKE OF DESTRUCTION AND LOSS

Join us on Tuesday, March 5th, as we welcome author Gale Marie Thompson to our Visiting Writers Series!

Gale will teach a master class on the ethics of the lyric “I” from 5 to 6 p.m. in Faculty Parlors, Main, and will then give a public reading from her new book, “Mountain Amnesia,” a winner of the Colorado Prize for Poetry, starting at 6:30 p.m. in the Art Exhibit Room (AER), Macmillan.

Gale’s research and teaching interests include Documentary Poetics, Poetry Sequences, Memory Studies, Trauma Studies, and Literature of the Holocaust. Her doctoral research considered issues of marginalization in structures of memory, including gender and racial/national identity, with a concentration on long poems and poem sequences, documentary poetics, and hybrid forms.

A winner of the Poetry Society of America’s 2022 Emily Dickinson Award, Gale has received fellowships from the Vermont Studio Center and Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts. She is founding editor of Jellyfish Poetry and an editor for YesYes Books. She lives in the mountains of North Georgia, where she directs the creative writing program at Young Harris College.

To read more about Gale and her work: https://galemariethompson.com/

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Aurora, NY
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