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WRITERS SERIES
The Salem State Writers Series invites noted authors of short stories, biography, poetry, memoir and essays to share their work at free readings throughout the academic year. These events also include annual student and faculty readings.
All Writers Series events are free and open to the public.
Writers Series: Colleen Michaels and P. Djèlí Clark
Thursday, March 30, 2023
7:30 – 9 pm | Classroom Building, Central Campus
Colleen Michaels is a poet and educator living on Massachusetts’ North Shore. She directs the Writing Studio at Montserrat College of Art in Beverly, Massachusetts, where she hosts the Improbable Places Poetry Tour, bringing poetry to unlikely places like tattoo parlors, laundromats, and swimming pools. Yes, in the swimming pool. Her poems have been published, anthologized, and commissioned as installations for The Massachusetts Poetry Festival, The Peabody Essex Museum, and The Trustees of Reservations. She serves on the board of trustees for the Beverly Public Library. Prize Wheel, her debut collection, will be published by Small Bites Press early in 2023.
Phenderson Djéli Clark is the award winning and Hugo, Nebula, Sturgeon, and World Fantasy nominated author of the novel A Master of Djinn, and the novellas Ring Shout, The Black God’s Drums and The Haunting of Tram Car 015. His stories have appeared in online venues such as Tor.com, Daily Science Fiction, Heroic Fantasy Quarterly, Apex, Lightspeed, Fireside Fiction, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, and in print anthologies including, Griots, Hidden Youth and Clockwork Cairo. He is a founding member of FIYAH Literary Magazine and an infrequent reviewer at Strange Horizons.
Born in New York and raised mostly in Houston, Texas, he spent the early formative years of his life in the homeland of his parents, Trinidad and Tobago. When not writing speculative fiction, P. Djèlí Clark works as an academic historian whose research spans comparative slavery and emancipation in the Atlantic World. He melds this interest in history and the social world with speculative fiction and has written articles on issues ranging from racism and H.P. Lovecraft to critiques of George Schuyler’s Black Empire, and has been a panelist and lecturer at conventions, workshops and other genre events. At current time, he resides in a small Edwardian castle in New England with his wife, daughters, and pet dragon (who suspiciously resembles a Boston Terrier). When so inclined he rambles on issues of speculative fiction, politics, and diversity at his aptly named blog The Disgruntled Haradrim.
Writers Series: Lulu Miller
Thursday, April 27, 2023
7:30 – 9 pm | Ellison Campus Center
Lulu Miller is the co-host of Radiolab (a podcast about science and curiosity), host of Terrestrials (an occasionally musical podcast about nature), co-creator of NPR’s Invisibilia (a podcast about psychology) and author of national bestseller Why Fish Don’t Exist. Her writing has been published in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, VQR, Orion, and beyond. She has won honors from the Peabody Awards, the Associated Press, and the National Center on Disability and Journalism. She lives in Chicago with her wife and two sons.