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Entries Tagged as 'Emerson Connect'

Alum Laura van den Berg Reads This Weekend!

November 12th, 2009 No Comments

Want to see one of our very own MFA Alums, who has nabbed that elusive book deal and published her first collection of short stories to critical acclaim?  Well, you’re in luck, because this weekend you can meet Laura van den Berg in the flesh, and ask her about her inspiration, writing process, or the [...]

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The Worst of Times: A Guest Post by Alum TJ Dietderich

November 4th, 2009 No Comments

I came to New York about a year and a half ago to start working at Planned Television Arts, an independent PR firm specializing in books. In that short time, we’ve seen a lot of changes. The economy has gone from bad to worse. The publishing industry has been hemorrhaging jobs. We all know someone [...]

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Meet Emerson Alum Allison Trzop at Book Signing!

November 2nd, 2009 No Comments

Ever wonder what role editors play in the development, production, and publicity of the books they work on?  Well, find out first hand on Wednesday evening, when Emerson alumni Allison Trzop will be plugging her newest editorial project with author Frederick S. Lane:
A Knock at the Door: Three Centuries of Governmental Search and Seizure
Wednesday, November [...]

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Announcing Alumni Month at Vernacular!

November 1st, 2009 No Comments

Happy November, folks! Is your head still pounding from last night’s Halloween revelries? We hope so.  Today at Vernacular, we’re celebrating the fact that our clocks are one hour earlier, and that our Alums of the WLP’s grad programs in Publishing and Writing and Creative Writing have found professional, personal, and/or critical success.  Have you [...]

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Pablo Medina and Steve Yarbrough

October 4th, 2009 No Comments

Above photo courtesy of Monica Arellano-Ongpin from Flickr Creative Commons.
The Department of Writing, Literature and Publishing at Emerson College invites you to an evening with Emerson Faculty.
Pablo Medina (The Cigar Roller; Points of Balance / Puntos de Apoyo) and Steve Yarbrough (The End of California; Prisoners of War) will read from their work at the Barnes & [...]

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Ploughshares Event

September 29th, 2009 1 Comment

Above photo courtesy of guldfisken from Flickr Creative Commons
Kathryn Harrison, author of the novels Envy, The Seal Wife, and Exposure and the memoir The Kiss, will be reading from her work on Thursday, Oct. 1, at 7:30 pm at the Semel Theater. Harrison will also participate in an informal Q&A session at the Bordy Auditorium from 4 [...]

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Guest Post: Anne Gray Fischer Presents A History of “The Combat Zone”

September 29th, 2009 1 Comment

I’m sure (or at least I hope) we’ve all had a chance to titter at the twin stripclubs located one block down from the Little Building: the Glass Slipper and, for the high rollers in our midst, Centerfolds. Which you prefer is as much a matter of personal taste as it is of personal finance, [...]

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Breaking News: Emerson the #1 MOST DANGEROUS School. Ever.
(Guest post by Claire Blechman)

September 23rd, 2009 3 Comments

I’ll tell you, I am proud to be an Emersonian. We pioneered the controversial Unisex Bathroom, our football team is undefeated this season (and in our entire school history for that matter), and on September 18th, The Daily Beast declared us “The Most Dangerous College in the Country.” WOOOO! USA! USA! Go Lions!
There are over [...]

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Got the end-of-the-professor-profile blues?

September 20th, 2009 No Comments

Here’s where to get your fix, with links to last year’s professor “reviews”:
John Rodzvilla: Mad scientist of electronic publishing
Ben Brooks and Maria Flook: Fiction firecrackers
Doug Whynott, Megan Marshall and Richard Hoffman: Nonfiction behemoths.
Bill Donoghue, John Trimbur and Karen English: A cross-genre mix of moxie
John Skoyles, Lissa Warren and Lisa Diercks: poetry and publishing potpourri
Jeff Seglin [...]

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Professor Profile: Doug Whynott

September 19th, 2009 No Comments

Here is Doug Whynott in twelve parts:
1) You know how you read those author biographies of writers who have done all sorts of bizarre jobs before breaking into writing? Doug Whynott is one of those writers. Bee inspector. Dolphin trainer. Piano tuner. And, oh yes, nonfiction professor.

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