Each year, the Taos Summer Writers' Conference
awards various merit based scholarships. This year, the deadlines for
scholarship application materials is fast approaching: Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013.
The various scholarships available are:
LEO LOVE MERIT SCHOLARSHIP IN POETRY AND PROSE
The
two Leo Love Merit Scholarships—awarded in poetry and
fiction/nonfiction—are available to any potential Conference
participant. Each Merit Scholarship pays tuition for a weeklong workshop
or partial tuition for a master class (a value of $650). Each Merit
Scholarship recipient is responsible for her or his transportation
and/or lodging costs. Leo Love Merit Scholarship applicants must
register for the Conference (including paying the deposit) at the time
application is made for the scholarship. Application Procedure.
NATIVE WRITER AWARD
The
Native Writer Award, established in the memory of Native author and
former colleague Louis Owens, offers paid tuition for one weekend or
weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) as well as paid lodging to any
Native American who is resident of New Mexico. The award recognizes
excellence in fiction, poetry, or non-fiction. Applicants may apply in
more than one genre and are eligible for only one award. Unlike the
merit scholarships in poetry and fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the
Native Writer Award do not need to be registered for the Conference
before applying. Application Procedure.
HISPANIC WRITER AWARD
The
Hispanic Writer Award is open to any New Mexican resident of Hispanic,
Latino, or Spanish heritage. The award pays tuition for one weekend or
weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) in fiction, non-fiction, or
poetry as well as paid lodging. Applicants may apply in more than one
genre and are eligible for only one award. Unlike the merit scholarships
in poetry and fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the Hispanic Writer
Award do not need to be registered for the Conference before applying. Application Procedure.
TAOS RESIDENT AWARD
The
Taos Resident Writer Award offers paid tuition support for one weekend
or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) to a resident of Taos or the
Taos vicinity. The award recognizes excellence in fiction, poetry, or
non-fiction. Applicants may apply in more than one genre and are
eligible for only one award. Unlike the merit scholarships in poetry and
fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the Taos Resident Writer Award do
not need to be registered for the Conference before applying. Applicants
must be residents of Taos County. Application Procedure.
Friday, April 26, 2013
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Faculty Feature: Hilda Raz
Hilda Raz is Luschei Professor emerita at the University of Nebraska where she taught in the Ph.D. program in creative writing. She is a past president of the Association of Writers and Writing Programs and has taught at Stanford, Harvard, Goucher, and elsewhere, as well as at MFA programs and writers’ conferences including Bread Loaf, Writers at Work, Taos, and University of Nebraska. A poet, nonfiction writer, and editor, she has published thirteen books. A member of the national literary board for the PRAIRIE SCHOONER Book Prize, she is poetry editor for bosque (the magazine) and now is director of the Mary Burritt Christiansen Poetry Series for the University of New Mexico Press.
At the 15th annual Taos Summer Writers' Conference, Hilda will be co-teaching a weekend workshop in ekphrastic poetry with our featured artist Ouida Touchón. The class is called "Making visual art with poetry, making poetry with visual art: an ekphrastic workshop." In this weekend workshop, you'll have the opportunity to write about a work of art - using tempera paint, colored pencils, or scissors and paste - to create visual art in response to poems. Think of form, color, or collage and your own favorite poems. Or you could write poems in response to visual images. It is going to be a great workshop!
At the 15th annual Taos Summer Writers' Conference, Hilda will be co-teaching a weekend workshop in ekphrastic poetry with our featured artist Ouida Touchón. The class is called "Making visual art with poetry, making poetry with visual art: an ekphrastic workshop." In this weekend workshop, you'll have the opportunity to write about a work of art - using tempera paint, colored pencils, or scissors and paste - to create visual art in response to poems. Think of form, color, or collage and your own favorite poems. Or you could write poems in response to visual images. It is going to be a great workshop!
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Faculty Feature: Valerie Martinez
Valerie Martínez is a poet, translator, teacher, playwright, librettist, and collaborative artist. Her books include Absence, Luminescent, World to World, A Flock of Scarlet Doves, Each and Her, And They Called It Horizon and This is How It Began. Her most recent book, Each and Her (winner of the 2012 Arizona Book Award), was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the PEN Open Book Award, the William Carlos William Award, and the Ron Ridenhour Prize. Her work has been widely published in journals, magazines, anthologies and media outlets including The Best American Poetry, the Washington Post, and the Poetry Foundation’s Poetry Everywhere series. Valerie has more than twenty years of experience as a teacher, primarily at the college level. For over fifteen years, she has also worked with children, young adults, adults, teachers, and seniors in a wide range of community outreach and educational programs. She is Executive Director of Littleglobe, Inc., a non-profit collaborative of artists who work in community. Valerie has a B.A. from Vassar College and an MFA from the University of Arizona. She was the Poet Laureate of Santa Fe, New Mexico for 2008-2010. Learn more about Valerie at her website: www.valeriemartinez.net
At the 15th annual Taos Summer Writers' Conference, Valerie will be teaching a weekend workshop called "Why Write: Living the Writing Life Regardless of Publication, Recognition, Money and Fame."
"I can't express my gratitude to Valerie enough for assisting me with "picking the bones clean." She was an invaluable asset in whittling down the manuscript to its essence--and reminding me that my work was "certainly" deserving. I am eternally grateful for the experience." - Raquel Flowers Rivera
Friday, April 19, 2013
April 23 is World Book Night US in Albuquerque!
How it Works:
Each year, 30 books are chosen by an independent panel of librarians and booksellers. The authors of the books waive their royalties and the publishers agree to pay the costs of producing the specially-printed World Book Night U.S. editions. Bookstores and libraries sign up to be community host locations for the volunteer book givers.
After the book titles are announced, members of the public apply to personally hand out 20 copies of a particular title in their community. The selected givers choose a local participating bookstore or library from which to pick up the 20 copies of their book, and World Book Night U.S. delivers the books to these host locations.
Givers pick up their books in the week before World Book Night. On April 23rd, they give their books to those who don’t regularly read and/or people who don’t normally have access to printed books, for reasons of means or access.
What it Means for NM:
Book-loving volunteers will fan out across central New Mexico on April 23, 2013 to take 20 free copies of generously donated books to someone or someplace that needs it!
The goal is to give books to new readers, to encourage reading, and to share your passion for a great book. The entire publishing, bookstore, library, author, printing, and paper community is behind this effort with donated services and time. Several Albuquerque bookstores — including Alamosa Books, Bookworks and Page One — and a couple ABC Library branches — Cherry Hills and Taylor Ranch — are also pick-up locations.
One such volutneer, Beth Humphreys, said, "I love WBN. And I love that I am giving away The House on Mango Street." Beth took the novella workshop with TSWC Director, Sharon Oard Warner, in which they read The House on Mango Street.
Find Out More: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTfoEUaybNQ
Each year, 30 books are chosen by an independent panel of librarians and booksellers. The authors of the books waive their royalties and the publishers agree to pay the costs of producing the specially-printed World Book Night U.S. editions. Bookstores and libraries sign up to be community host locations for the volunteer book givers.
After the book titles are announced, members of the public apply to personally hand out 20 copies of a particular title in their community. The selected givers choose a local participating bookstore or library from which to pick up the 20 copies of their book, and World Book Night U.S. delivers the books to these host locations.
Givers pick up their books in the week before World Book Night. On April 23rd, they give their books to those who don’t regularly read and/or people who don’t normally have access to printed books, for reasons of means or access.
What it Means for NM:
Book-loving volunteers will fan out across central New Mexico on April 23, 2013 to take 20 free copies of generously donated books to someone or someplace that needs it!
The goal is to give books to new readers, to encourage reading, and to share your passion for a great book. The entire publishing, bookstore, library, author, printing, and paper community is behind this effort with donated services and time. Several Albuquerque bookstores — including Alamosa Books, Bookworks and Page One — and a couple ABC Library branches — Cherry Hills and Taylor Ranch — are also pick-up locations.
One such volutneer, Beth Humphreys, said, "I love WBN. And I love that I am giving away The House on Mango Street." Beth took the novella workshop with TSWC Director, Sharon Oard Warner, in which they read The House on Mango Street.
Find Out More: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTfoEUaybNQ
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Faculty Feature: Brent Spencer
Brent Spencer is the author of the novel The Lost Son and the collection Are We Not Men?, chosen by the editors of The Village Voice as the best book of its year. His most recent book, a memoir about his father’s mysterious life and death, is Rattlesnake Daddy: A Son’s Search for His Father, winner of the Little Bluestem Award and the Nebraska Book Award. The recipient of the Stegner Fellowship, the Jones Lectureship from Stanford, the Michener Award from Iowa, and the Distinguished Artist Award from the Nebraska Arts Council, his work has appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, GQ, River Teeth, Best American Mystery Stories, McSweeney's Online, and elsewhere. He is the Director of Creative Writing and Coordinator of Film Studies at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska.
Brent is teaching a Weeklong Memoir Workshop at this year's conference called, Life Writing: A Workshop on Memoir. "Artists sometimes take "Life Drawing," a course that has students draw the human figure based on a live model. In "Life Writing" we'll focus on writing about life--yours or someone else's."
Brent is teaching a Weeklong Memoir Workshop at this year's conference called, Life Writing: A Workshop on Memoir. "Artists sometimes take "Life Drawing," a course that has students draw the human figure based on a live model. In "Life Writing" we'll focus on writing about life--yours or someone else's."
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Faculty Feature: Trey Ellis
Trey Ellis is a novelist, screenwriter, playwright, essayist and professor. He is the author of Bedtime Stories: Adventures in the Land of Single-Fatherhood. His acclaimed first novel, Platitudes, was reissued by Northeastern University Press along with his influential essay, “The New Black Aesthetic.” He is also the author of Home Repairs and Right Here, Right Now which was a recipient of the American Book Award. His work for the screen includes the Emmy nominated Tuskegee Airmen, and Good Fences starring Danny Glover and Whoopi Goldberg which was shortlisted for the PEN award for Best Teleplay of the year. His essays have appeared in The New York Times, Playboy, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, GQ and Vanity Fair, among others and he has contributed audio commentary to NPR’s All Things Considered. His first play, Fly, was performed at the Lincoln Center Institute, The Vineyard Playhouse and Washington, D.C.’s historic Ford’s Theater where the First Lady and her family were in attendance. He is a regular blogger on the HuffingtonPost.com and an Associate Professor in the Graduate School of the Arts at Columbia University. He is a 2012 Fletcher Fellow and non-resident fellow at Harvard University.
Trey is teaching a Weeklong Screenwriting Workshop at this summer's conference. "This is a course designed for anyone interested in tackling storytelling for film and television. You have a story to tell and you've decided that the best way to express it is through film or television. In this workshop we will explore the peculiar demands of the screenplay form; the pacing, characterizations and physical constraints to writing the blueprint for a filmed story."
Trey is teaching a Weeklong Screenwriting Workshop at this summer's conference. "This is a course designed for anyone interested in tackling storytelling for film and television. You have a story to tell and you've decided that the best way to express it is through film or television. In this workshop we will explore the peculiar demands of the screenplay form; the pacing, characterizations and physical constraints to writing the blueprint for a filmed story."
Tuesday, April 09, 2013
Don't Forget to Apply for TSWC Scholarships!
Each year, the Taos Summer Writers' Conference awards various merit based scholarships. This year, the deadlines for scholarship and fellowship application materials is fast approaching. The various scholarships available are:
THE D. H. LAWRENCE FELLOWSHIP
The Fellowship is awarded to an emerging writer of fiction or poetry with one book in print or at press. The D. H. Lawrence Fellow will receive paid tuition for one weekend or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650), lodging at the Sagebrush Inn or Comfort Suites, and two meals a day (breakfast and lunch). In return, the Fellow contributes to Conference activities and gives a formal reading. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 12, 2013
LEO LOVE MERIT SCHOLARSHIP IN POETRY AND PROSE
The two Leo Love Merit Scholarships—awarded in poetry and fiction/nonfiction—are available to any potential Conference participant. Each Merit Scholarship pays tuition for a weeklong workshop or partial tuition for a master class (a value of $650). Each Merit Scholarship recipient is responsible for her or his transportation and/or lodging costs. Leo Love Merit Scholarship applicants must register for the Conference (including paying the deposit) at the time application is made for the scholarship. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013
NATIVE WRITER AWARD
The Native Writer Award, established in the memory of Native author and former colleague Louis Owens, offers paid tuition for one weekend or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) as well as paid lodging to any Native American who is resident of New Mexico. The award recognizes excellence in fiction, poetry, or non-fiction. Applicants may apply in more than one genre and are eligible for only one award. Unlike the merit scholarships in poetry and fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the Native Writer Award do not need to be registered for the Conference before applying. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013
HISPANIC WRITER AWARD
The Hispanic Writer Award is open to any New Mexican resident of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish heritage. The award pays tuition for one weekend or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) in fiction, non-fiction, or poetry as well as paid lodging. Applicants may apply in more than one genre and are eligible for only one award. Unlike the merit scholarships in poetry and fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the Hispanic Writer Award do not need to be registered for the Conference before applying. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013
TAOS RESIDENT AWARD
The Taos Resident Writer Award offers paid tuition support for one weekend or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) to a resident of Taos or the Taos vicinity. The award recognizes excellence in fiction, poetry, or non-fiction. Applicants may apply in more than one genre and are eligible for only one award. Unlike the merit scholarships in poetry and fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the Taos Resident Writer Award do not need to be registered for the Conference before applying. Applicants must be residents of Taos County. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013
THE D. H. LAWRENCE FELLOWSHIP
The Fellowship is awarded to an emerging writer of fiction or poetry with one book in print or at press. The D. H. Lawrence Fellow will receive paid tuition for one weekend or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650), lodging at the Sagebrush Inn or Comfort Suites, and two meals a day (breakfast and lunch). In return, the Fellow contributes to Conference activities and gives a formal reading. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 12, 2013
LEO LOVE MERIT SCHOLARSHIP IN POETRY AND PROSE
The two Leo Love Merit Scholarships—awarded in poetry and fiction/nonfiction—are available to any potential Conference participant. Each Merit Scholarship pays tuition for a weeklong workshop or partial tuition for a master class (a value of $650). Each Merit Scholarship recipient is responsible for her or his transportation and/or lodging costs. Leo Love Merit Scholarship applicants must register for the Conference (including paying the deposit) at the time application is made for the scholarship. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013
NATIVE WRITER AWARD
The Native Writer Award, established in the memory of Native author and former colleague Louis Owens, offers paid tuition for one weekend or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) as well as paid lodging to any Native American who is resident of New Mexico. The award recognizes excellence in fiction, poetry, or non-fiction. Applicants may apply in more than one genre and are eligible for only one award. Unlike the merit scholarships in poetry and fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the Native Writer Award do not need to be registered for the Conference before applying. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013
HISPANIC WRITER AWARD
The Hispanic Writer Award is open to any New Mexican resident of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish heritage. The award pays tuition for one weekend or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) in fiction, non-fiction, or poetry as well as paid lodging. Applicants may apply in more than one genre and are eligible for only one award. Unlike the merit scholarships in poetry and fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the Hispanic Writer Award do not need to be registered for the Conference before applying. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013
TAOS RESIDENT AWARD
The Taos Resident Writer Award offers paid tuition support for one weekend or weeklong workshop (a value up to $650) to a resident of Taos or the Taos vicinity. The award recognizes excellence in fiction, poetry, or non-fiction. Applicants may apply in more than one genre and are eligible for only one award. Unlike the merit scholarships in poetry and fiction/nonfiction, applicants for the Taos Resident Writer Award do not need to be registered for the Conference before applying. Applicants must be residents of Taos County. Application Procedure.
Postmark Deadline: April 29, 2013
Friday, April 05, 2013
'My Favorite Poem' Project
Luci Tapahonso
In this same spirit, community members of Santa Fe and Albuquerque will gather to share poems they love during National Poetry Month in April. The readings are hosted by the UNM English Department and the Institute of American Indian Arts and are directed by award-winning poet and UNM professor Luci Tapahonso. The readings begin at 6 p.m. on Friday evenings: UNM Zimmerman Library (Willard Room) on April 5 and in the Waters Room, also at Zimmerman on April 19, and at IAIA (CLE Commons) on April 12 and April 26. The events are free, open to the public and a reception will follow.
The “My Favorite Poem” Project is based on former US Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky’s initiative in 1998 that was held in major cities and featured thousands of readers from all walks of life including school children, business owners, civic leaders, teachers, college students, spiritual leaders, ranchers and media personalities.
Readers on April 5 (Willard Room) include: Monte Vista students Lily Rosano-Mueller and Arden Burkett, English Chair Gail Houston, Associate Dean Phillip Ganderton, Escuela del Sol student Samiyah Dezbah James, National Dance Institute Director Russell Baker, English Lecturer Kyle Fiore, UNM Accountant Misty Dawn Ortiz, Dr. Doris Fields, Librarian Maria Teresa Marquez, Poet Demetria Martinez. Novelist and IAIA Professor Evalina Zuni Lucero.
Readers on April 19 (Waters Room) include SIPI President Dr. Sherry Allison, Columnist David Steinberg, UNM Publicist Carolyn Gonzales, MFA students Adam Nunez and Natalie Scenters– Zapico, UNM Libraries Dean Martha Bedard, UNM Bookstore Events Coordinator Lani Taylor, West End Publisher John Crawford, and Associate Dean Kevin Malloy and NM Centennial Poet Levi Romero.
Tapahonso, who previously organized Favorite Poem projects in Lawrence, Kan. and Tucson, Ariz., said that the readings reveal the importance of poetry in our personal histories and how sharing poems can strengthen a community’s sense of culture and place. “We often turn to poetry in moments of elation, gratitude, loss or fear, and this is a wonderful opportunity to share with others the ways in which particular poems speak to us,” Tapahonso said.
At this year's conference, Luci Tapahonso is teaching a weeklong poetry workshop of which she says, "We will read poems, write in various poetic forms and most important of all, we will share our poetry in order to strengthen, and maybe discover, our poetic voices."
Thursday, April 04, 2013
Participant Accomplishments: Tamra Carraher's New Children's Book!
Congratulations to Tamra Carraher! Her new children's book, PICUTRE/BOOK, is now available. Tamra took Ana Baca's Children's Book Weekend Workshop at last summer's Taos Summer Writers' Conference.
Wednesday, April 03, 2013
Faculty Feature: Frank Huyler
Frank Huyler is the author of the nonfiction collection The Blood of Strangers (UC Press/Henry Holt/Picador), two novels--The Laws of Invisible Things, (Henry Holt/Picador) and Right of Thirst (HarperPerennial)—as well as the forthcoming Byliner Originals Boxing and Leukemia and the recently released The Castaway. His poems and essays have appeared in a variety of publications including The American Scholar, The Atlantic Monthly, Poetry, The Georgia Review, and Columbia Journal among others. He is a regular columnist on healthcare issues for The New York Daily News. His work has been optioned for film and translated widely.
At this year's conference Frank is teaching a weeklong beginning novel workshop. Be sure, if you didn't see it above, to check out Frank Huyler's new novella, The Castaway, a Byliner Original!
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