Book of Joy Project
Sign up to join the School of Letters reading group with Jamie Quatro for the Sewanee Book of Joy Project, February - May 2020.
Every summer the School of Letters invites our acclaimed faculty and other prominent, nationally recognized writers and scholars to read their work and speak about the writing life.
Readings are held at Gailor Hall in the newly-named Naylor Auditorium at 4:30 PM unless otherwise noted, with a reception following in Gailor Atrium. We are pleased this summer to partner with Tower Community Bank, the Blake and Bailey Family Fund, and the Friends of the Library. Most readings are on Wednesday, but note that the event with Jill McCorkle is on a Thursday.
In the past few years, this list of prestigious visitors has included Alexander Chee, Danielle Evans, Kiese Laymon, Donika Kelly, Shruti Swamy, Lucy Alibar, Stephanie Pruitt, Caroline Randall Williams, Holly Goddard Jones, Patricia Smith, Ben Fountain, Kevin Wilson, and many others.
Join us as MFA candidates read from their poetry, prose, and fiction.
Ryan Chapman’s latest novel The Audacity released April 2. Described as “a bracing satire about the implosion of a Theranos-like company, a collapsing marriage, and a billionaire's philanthropy summit,’’’ this book is perfect for fans of Hari Kunzru and The White Lotus. School of Letters Director Justin Taylor’s new book, Reboot, released April 23. Pinned as, “a raucous and wickedly smart satire of Hollywood, toxic fandom, and our chronically online culture, following a washed-up actor on his quest to revive the cult TV drama that catapulted him to fame.” Join the School of Letters for a public book signing!
Adam O’Fallon Price the author of two novels: The Grand Tour (Doubleday, 2016) and The Hotel Neversink (Tin House Books, 2019). The Hotel Neversink won the 2020 Edgar Award for Best Paperback Original. His short fiction has appeared in the Paris Review, Granta, Harper’s, VICE, the Iowa Review, the Kenyon Review Online, LitHub, Joyland, and many others. He also writes essays and criticism, which appear in many places including Ploughshares, Electric Literature, Paris Review Daily, The Millions, where he is a staff writer, and many more. Meera Subramanian is an award-winning independent journalist whose work has been published in national and international publications including the New York Times, The New Yorker, Nature, Virginia Quarterly Review, and Orion, where she serves as a contributing editor. Her book A River Runs Again: India's Natural World in Crisis, from the Barren Cliffs of Rajasthan to the Farmlands of Karnataka was short-listed for the 2016 Orion Book Award.
The Sewanee School of Letters is proud to announce that our 2024 John Grammer Fellow will be Tracy O’Neill! The award, made possible by a gift from the Blake & Bailey Family Fund, brings a noted writer or scholar to Sewanee for an extended visit each summer during the School of Letters' academic term. The John Grammer Fellow is named in honor of founding School of Letters Director John Grammer and their reading is a part of the Summer Reading and Lecture Series. Tracy O’Neill is the author of the novels The Hopeful (Ig Publishing, 2015), and Quotients (Soho Press, 2020), a “stunning, and deeply disquieting, literary techno-thriller” (Lithub) infused with “the obsessive questing of early DeLillo” (Commonweal). “O’Neill’s sentences are expertly crafted marvels of economy. Her prose almost feels redacted, as if someone has cut out just the right bits to keep you guessing and thinking and feeling,” says Charles Yu. Her memoir, Woman of Interest (HarperOne, 2024) is “a compulsively readable, genre-bending story of finding her missing birth mother and, along the way, learning the priceless power of self-knowledge.”
Nickole Brown is the author of Sister, first published in 2007 with a new edition reissued in 2018. Her second book, Fanny Says (BOA Editions), won the Weatherford Award for Appalachian Poetry in 2015. To Those Who Were Our First Gods, a chapbook of these first nine poems, won the 2018 Rattle Prize, and her essay-in-poems, The Donkey Elegies, was published by Sibling Rivalry Press in 2020. She's also a fellow of the Black Earth Institute and is the President of the Hellbender Gathering of Poets, an annual environmental literary festival set to launch in Black Mountain, NC, in Oct. 2025. Lindsey Harding, L'11, directs the Writing Intensive Program at the University of Georgia, where she earned her PhD in English in 2015. She lives in Athens, Georgia, with her husband and four children. Her novel Pilgrims 2.0 follows four passengers on a luxury cruise line that promises complete reinvention through plastic surgery. Sponsored with The Friends of the duPont Library.
Jill McCorkle has six novels published—most recently published is Hieroglyphics (2020, Algonquin Books)—and five collections of short stories (Old Crimes, 2024). Five of her books have been named New York Times notable books and four of her stories have appeared in Best American Short Stories. An essay, “Cuss Time,” originally published in The American Scholar, was selected for Best American Essays. Sponsored with Tower Community Bank.
Tiana Clark is the author of the poetry collection, I Can’t Talk About the Trees Without the Blood (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2018), winner of the 2017 Agnes Lynch Starrett Prize, and Equilibrium (Bull City Press, 2016), selected by Afaa Michael Weaver for the 2016 Frost Place Chapbook Competition. Her new poetry collection, Scorched Earth, will be published next year (March 2025). Clark is currently working on, Begging to be Saved, a memoir-in-essays reckoning with Black burnout, millennial divorce, faith, art making, and what lies on the other side of survival, which sold to Jenny Xu at Washington Square Press/Simon & Schuster. Ryan Chapman’s most recent publication, The Audacity (Penguin Random House), came out in April 2024. A satiric and laugh out loud evisceration of the 1%, it is The White Lotus meets the real-life Theranos travesty. Vanity Fair called it a “delicious satire,” and fellow author Kevin Nguyen described the novel as “a satire that hits on the line level, sparing none of its characters or observation from its skewering wit.” Chapman's previous work includes Riots I Have Known (Simon & Schuster), which was longlisted for The Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize and named a best book of 2019 by Electric Literature and The Marshall Project. He's published criticism and short humor pieces at The New Yorker, The Guardian, GQ, Bookforum, The Sewanee Review, BOMB, McSweeney’s, and The Believer, and interviewed writers and visual artists for Guernica, Esquire, Frieze, and elsewhere. Jamie Quatro's debut novel, Fire Sermon, published in 2018. Selected as one of the Top Seven Novels of 2018 by The Economist, and named a Book of the Year by the San Francisco Chronicle, LitHub, Bloomberg, and the Times Literary Supplement, Fire Sermon was a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers Book, Indie Next pick, and New York Times Editors’ Choice. Quatro's story collection, I Want to Show you More, was a New York Times Notable Book, NPR Best Book of 2013, and was chosen as a favorite book of 2013 by Dwight Garner in the New York Times and James Wood in The New Yorker. Grove Press will publish Quatro’s new novel, Two-Step Devil, in September 2024, followed by her story collection, Next Time I’ll Be Louder, in 2025.
Justin Taylor's latest novel Reboot released in April. A review by author Joshua Ferris made the cover of the New York Times Book Review, where he called Reboot a “performance full of wit and rigor freed of the familiar polarizing semantics." Taylor, who directs the Sewanee School of Letters, is also the author of the memoir Riding with the Ghost, published by Random House in 2020. Lauren Groff said the memoir was "gorgeously layered and deeply felt." He is also the author of three books of fiction: the story collections Everything Here Is the Best Thing Ever (2010), Flings (2014), and the novel The Gospel of Anarchy (2011). His work has appeared in the New Yorker, Harper's, BOMB, the Sewanee Review, and Bookforum, as well as many others. Emily Adrian is the author of the novels Everything Here Is Under Control and The Second Season, a novel about a former women’s college basketball star who becomes the first female NBA announcer, which Kareem Abdul-Jabaar called “riveting, insightful, and touching.” Her memoir, Daughterhood, will be published by Autofocus Press in 2024. She is also the author of two critically acclaimed novels for young adults, Like It Never Happened and The Foreseeable Future. She has published short fiction in Granta, Joyland, and Epoch. She is a co-founder and senior editor at Great Place Books, where she also runs a popular series of seminars and workshops for writers of all ages.
Come join us to celebrate the class of 2023! Reception following at the McGriff Alumni House.
David Haskell is a two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist author. His latest book, Sounds Wild and Broken: Sonic Marvels, Evolution's Creativity, and the Crisis of Sensory Extinction (2022), is an Editor’s Choice at the New York Times and explores the story of sound on Earth. His other books include The Song of Trees and The Forest Unseen.
Vievee Francis is the author of The Shared World: Poems (2023), Forest Primeval (2015), Horse in the Dark: Poems (2011), and Blue-tai fly (2006). She is the associate editor of Callaloo. In 2021, she was awarded the Sewanee Review's Aiken Taylor Prize for Modern American Poetry. Justin Taylor is the author of Riding with the Ghost (2020), Flings (2014), The Gospel of Anarchy (2011), Everything Here Is the Best Thing Ever (2010), and the forthcoming REBOOT (2024). His work has appeared in the New Yorker, the Sewanee Review, Harper's and more. He currently serves as the director for the Sewanee School of Letters.
Meera Subramanian is the author of A River Runs Again (2015). She is a National Geographic Explorer and a contributing editor for Orion Magazine. Her work has appeared in Nature, the New Yorker, the New York Times, as well as many anthologies including Best American Science and Nature Writing 2021 and 2022. Ryan Chapman is the author of Riots I Have Known (2019) and the forthcoming The Audacity (2024). His work has appeared in Literary Hub, BOMB, the New Yorker Daily Shouts, and more. Co-sponsored with Friends of the Library.
Kevin Wilson is the author of the recently-released Now Is Not the Time to Panic (2022), as well as Nothing to See Here (2019), Baby, You're Gonna Be Mine (2018), Perfect Little World (2017), The Family Fang (2011), and Tunneling to the Center of the Earth (2009). In partnership with Tower Community Bank.
Matthew Olzmann is the author of Constellation Route (2022), as well as two previous collections of poetry: Mezzanines (2013), which won a Kundiman Poetry Prize, and Contradictions in the Design (2016). He is the poetry editor of the Collagist. His work has appeared in the New York Times, Best American Poetry, The Pushcart Prizes, Kenyon Review, and elsewhere. Sponsored by the Blake & Bailey Family Fund.
Join Veranda at Sewanee and the School of Letters for a conversation with Rachel Martin, author of Hot, Hot, Chicken, and Lokelani Alabanza, creator of Saturated Ice Cream. This event is free and open to the public.
Nickole Brown's first poetry collection, Sister, a novel-in-poems, was first published in 2007 and was recently reissued for print. She has since released autobiography-in-poems called Fanny Says (2015), two poetry collections called To Those Who Were Our First Gods (2018) and The Donkey Elegies (2020), and a book of poetry writing prompts called Write-It! (2020), co-authored with her wife and poet Jessica Jacobs. Adam O'Fallon Price is the author of two novels: The Hotel Neversink (2019) and The Grand Tour (2016). He works as a staff writer for the Millions, and his short fiction has been published in the Paris Review, VICE, Glimmer Train, and more.
Patrick Dean is the author of "A Window to Heaven" (2021) and "Nature's Messenger" (2023). Rachel Louise Martin is the author of "Hot, Hot Chicken" (2021) and "A Most Tolerant Little Town" (2023).
Sponsored by the Indigenous Engagement Initiative, The Division of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, the Office of Inclusive Excellence, the Lectures Committee, the School of Letters, the Department of English and Creative Writing, the Department of Psychology, and the Sewanee Review.
To celebrate the Classes of 2020, 2021, and 2022
Sponsored by the Blake & Bailey Family Fund. University Mask Policy in effect.
Co-sponsored with Friends of the Library
We end the academic term by celebrating our students and all the work they've created in their time at the School of Letters.
We conclude this summer's School of Letters faculty events with a joint reading with Justin Taylor and Tiana Clark. Taylor is the director of the School of Letters and the author of EVERYTHING HERE IS THE BEST THING EVER, FLINGS, THE GOSPEL OF ANARCHY, and RIDING WITH THE GHOST. Clark is the author of EQUILIBRIUM and I CAN'T TALK ABOUT THE TREES WITHOUT THE BLOOD.
Please join us as we host this year's Grammer Fellow, Alexander Chee. This reading was made possible by a generous donation from the Blake & Bailey Family Fund, the award brings a noted writer or scholar to Sewanee for an extended visit each summer during the School of Letter's academic term.
We are so excited to host a joint faculty reading with 2021 School of Letters faculty members Jessica Goudeau and Chris Bachelder. Goudeau is the author of AFTER THE LAST BORDER: TWO FAMILIES AND THE STORY OF REFUGE IN AMERICA and a forthcoming book titled WE WERE ILLEGAL. Bachelder is the author of THE THROWBACK SPECIAL, ABBOTT AWAITS, U.S.!, BEAR V. SHARK, and LESSONS IN VIRTUAL PHOTOGRAPHY.
Please join us for a reading with 2021 School of Letters faculty members Jamie Quatro and Mark Rasmussen. Quatro is the author of FIRE SERMON and I WANT TO SHOW YOU MORE. Rasmussen is the Charles J. Luellen Professor of English at Centre College and a specialist on on Medieval and Renaissance literature.
You are invited to a joint reading with 2021 School of Letters faculty members Nickole Brown and Ryan Chapman. Brown is the author of FANNY SAYS, SISTER, and THE DONKEY ELEGIES. Chapman is the author of RIOTS I HAVE KNOWN.
Sign up to join the School of Letters reading group with Jamie Quatro for the Sewanee Book of Joy Project, February - May 2020.
We were enthralled by not one but two LIVE online performances from the ASC, thanks to our leadership consortium: OTHELLO on Friday, Sept. 25 and 12th NIGHT on Friday, Oct. 16 (John Harrell and Jessika D. Williams. Photo by Lauren Parker.)
Events in Summer 2020 went virtual after it was announced that classes would be taught remotely. We held zoom readings with faculty and invited guests and also hosted coffee breaks, happy hours, and other informal readings so our students and faculty could spend some time together. Take a look at our Wednesday reading schedule: 6/10 Faculty reading with Tiana Clark and John Jeremiah Sullivan; 6/17 Faculty reading with director Justin Taylor, Virginia Craighill, and Chris Bachelder; 6/24 Scholarly presentation of new edition of Olive Schreiner’s Dreams by editors Dr. Barbara Black, Carly Nations, L’20, and current MA student Anna Spydell; 7/1 John Grammer Fellow reading with author Kiese Laymon; 7/8 Sewanee Review panel with editor Adam Ross and contributors Danielle Evans, Ben Fountain, and Donika Kelly; 7/15 Senior MA/MFA reading.
The American Shakespeare Center performs A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM. Live music by the actors begins at 7:00 p.m. and the performance begins at 7:30 p.m. There will also be a "Talkback" with the actors following the performance.
The American Shakespeare Center performs IMOGEN, a reimagining of CYMBELINE. Live music by the actors begins at 7:00 p.m. and the performance begins at 7:30 p.m. There will also be a "Talkback" with the actors following the performance.
Please join us for a reading with Kiese Laymon, the 2020 John Grammer Fellow at the School of Letters. Made possible by a generous donation from the Blake & Bailey Family Fund, the award brings a noted writer or scholar to Sewanee for an extended visit each summer during the School's academic term.
Please join us for a reading with Jessica Jacobs, the 2019 John Grammer Fellow at the School of Letters. Made possible by a generous donation from the Blake & Bailey Family Fund, the award brings a noted writer or scholar to Sewanee for an extended visit each summer during the School’s academic term.
You are invited to a joint reading by our fiction faculty, Lee Conell and Chris Bachelder, on Wednesday, June 26 at 4:30 pm in Gailor Auditorium. Lee is the author of the short story collection Subcortical and Chris is the author of the novels The Throwback Special, Abbott Awaits, U.S.!, Bear v. Shark, and Lessons in Virtual Photography.
Please join us for a poetry reading from faculty member Tiana Clark. Tiana is the author of the poetry collection I Can't Talk About the Trees Without the Blood, winner of the 2017 Agnes Lynch Starrett Prize, and Equilibrium, winner of the 2016 Frost Place Chapbook Competition.
Please join us for a reading by Meera Subramanian and a conversation on environmental writing, sponsored in conjunction with the Friends of duPont Library. Meera is an award-winning independent journalist whose work has been published in national and international publications. Her book A River Runs Again: India's Natural World in Crisis was a finalist for the 2016 Orion Book Award.
Join the American Shakespeare Center and students from Dr. Macdonald's Shakespeare class as they engage the acting techniques from Shakespeare's time, with help from actors-in-residency.
Please kick off the Summer 2019 School of Letters Reading and Lecture Series with a lecture entitled "Poetry at the Edge of Silence" with poet and professor Dr. Jennifer Michael on Wednesday, June 5, at 4:30 pm in Gailor Auditorium. The lecture is co-sponsored by St. Mary's Sewanee: The Ayres Center for Spiritual Development.
Please join us as we celebrate our students and the work they have been producing in their time at the School of Letters!
Please join us for a reading with Lucy Alibar, the 2018 John Grammer Fellow at the School of Letters. Lucy Alibar is an American screenwriter and playwright who has been nominated for an Academy Award, a BAFTA award, and the Scripter Award for the film Beasts of the Southern Wild. The film was an adaptation written with Benh Zeitlin based on Lucy's play, Juicy and Delicious. Beasts of the Southern Wild also earned the Sundance Grand Jury Prize and the Cannes Film Festival Camera D’Or.
Roger Hodge is the author, most recently, of Texas Blood: Seven Generations Among the Outlaws, Ranchers, Indians, Missionaries, Soldiers, and Smugglers of the Borderlands. He is deputy editor of The Intercept, an online news magazine devoted to investigative journalism, and his writings have appeared in many publications, including the Sewanee Review, Texas Monthly, Oxford American, The New Republic, and Harper’s Magazine. He was formerly the editor of Harper's Magazine 2006 - 2010, and the editor of the Oxford American from 2012-2015.
Jamie Quatro's debut novel, Fire Sermon, was just published in 2018 with Grove Press in the U.S., Picador in the U.K., and Anansi International in Canada. The highly anticipated, provocative debut novel charts with bold intimacy and immersive sensuality the life of a married woman in the grip of a magnetic affair. Anthony Domestico of Commonweal writes of Fire Sermon, “Quatro is a true cartographer of desire, showing that the longings of the body and the soul aren’t two autonomous states but constitute a singularly vast and singularly wild territory. Her fiction is sexy, it’s theological, and it’s consistently and surprisingly both at the same time.” Fire Sermon is an Indie Next pick and a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers pick. In the U.K. the novel is a “Foyles Five” title, as well as one of W.H. Smith's 2018 Fresh Talent picks. Fire Sermon is forthcoming in translation in The Netherlands, Spain, Italy, and Poland.
Please join us for Maha Jafri's lecture entitled Reading for Pleasure, Reading for Spite: Gossip and Victorian Literature. Jafri is an Assistant Professor of English at Sewanee. She specializes in Victorian literature, with research and teaching interests in the history of the novel and narrative, psychology, ethics, and intellectual history. She received her Ph.D. from Northwestern University and her B.A. from Johns Hopkins University. Her work has appeared in the Oxford Forum for Modern Language Studies and The Henry James Review. She is currently completing a book manuscript entitled Between Us: Gossip, Sociability, and the Victorian Novel.
Nickole Brown's first collection of poetry, Sister, a novel-in-poems, was first published in 2007 by Red Hen Press and a new edition will be reissued by Sibling Rivalry Press in 2018. Her second book, a biography-in-poems called Fanny Says, came out from BOA Editions in 2015 and won the Weatherford Award for Appalachian Poetry. The audio book of that collection became available in 2017. Nickole received her MFA from the Vermont College, studied literature at Oxford University, and was the editorial assistant for the late Hunter S. Thompson. She worked at Sarabande Books for ten years. She was an Assistant Professor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock for four years until she gave up her beloved position there to write full time. She has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Kentucky Foundation for Women, and the Kentucky Arts Council. Currently, she is the Editor for the Marie Alexander Poetry Series and teaches periodically at a number of places in addition to the Sewanee School of Letters MFA Program, including the Great Smokies Writing Program at UNCA and the Hindman Settlement School.
The Sewanee School of Letters invites you to a performance of Shakespeare's Macbeth in honor of faculty member Ann Jennalie Cook on Thursday, February 15 by the American Shakespeare Center, in Guerry Auditorium at 7:00 p.m. Doors will open at 6:30 pm, with period music from the company beginning at that time.
You are invited to attend “Literary Manhattan, the Modern Press, and Southern Literature,” a lecture by Professor Sarah Gardner, Director of The Center for Southern Studies and Distinguished University Professor of History, Mercer University.
We're excited to welcome author Kiese Laymon to Sewanee on Monday, Nov. 13 for Heavy: An American Memoir, a reading and conversation in Convocation Hall at 7 pm. Laymon is currently a Professor of English and African American Studies at the University of Mississippi and a Distinguished Visiting Professor of Nonfiction at the University of Iowa.
Kelly Grey Carlisle is a 1998 graduate of Sewanee, where she earned departmental honors in English and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Her personal essays have appeared in Salon, Ploughshares, New England Review, The Sun, Cherry Tree, The Rumpus, and The Touchstone Anthology of Contemporary Creative Nonfiction and have been listed as “notable” three times in Best American Essays. She earned the MA and PhD degrees at the University of Nebraska and teaches creative writing at Trinity University in San Antonio, where she also edits 1966: A Journal of Creative Nonfiction.
Alana Marie Levinson-LaBrosse is a translator, poet, and teacher who has lived and worked in Iraq for the last six years. She served as the founding chair of the English Department at the American University of Iraq, Sulaimani (AUIS). She received her MFA at Warren Wilson and MEd from the University of Virginia. Handful of Salt (The Word Works, 2016) introduced Kajal Ahmad’s poetry to English. A new and selected works of Abdulla Pashew is forthcoming from Phoneme Media in 2017. Poems, translations, and essays have appeared in Epiphany, The Iowa Review, Words Without Borders, and the Poetry Society of America. She is currently co-director at AUIS’ Kashkul and a PhD candidate at the University of Exeter’s Centre for Kurdish Studies.
David Haskell’s work integrates scientific, literary, and contemplative studies of the natural world. His latest book, The Songs of Trees: Stories from Nature’s Great Connectors (Viking, 2017), examines the many ways that trees and humans are connected.
Stephanie Pruitt appears as the inaugural John Grammer Fellow through the generosity of the Blake & Bailey Family Fund. Read more here: http://letters.sewanee.edu/programs/john-grammer-fellowship
Kevin Wilson is the author of the collection Tunneling to the Center of the Earth (Ecco/Harper Perennial, 2009), which received an Alex Award from the American Library Association and the Shirley Jackson Award, and two novels, The Family Fang (Ecco, 2011) and Perfect Little World (Ecco, 2017).
Wednesday, July 6, at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Reception and book signing following, Gailor Atrium.
Film screening of Take Shelter, in conjunction with the Film Studies course taught by Michael Dunaway.
Marshall Frady called it an “odd unchurched coupling between the novel and journalism.” Tom Wolfe gave it the name that stuck, “the New Journalism,” a designation John Sullivan glosses like this: “the long, weird, quasi-essayistic, documentary-infused magazine piece, a form older than the novel, despite a heritable instinct in critics to continually be calling it New.” New or old, the form experienced a remarkable flowering in the 1960’s and early ‘70’s, when writers like Frady and Wolfe—and Mailer and Talese and King and Morris—created a remarkable moment in American letters, one that continues to inspire writers like Sullivan. John Grammer, Director of the School of Letters, and Neil Shea, School of Letters faculty and National Geographic writer, discuss the moment and its influence on nonfiction writing today.
Film screening of Crimson Peak, in conjunction with the Gothic in Literature course taught by Kelly Malone.
Wednesday, June 22 at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Book signing following, Gailor Atrium.
Saturday, June 18 at 7:00 pm, McCrory Hall on the campus of St. Andrew's-Sewanee School.
Wednesday, June 15 at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Reception and book signing following, Gailor Atrium.
Friday, June 10 at 7:00 pm, Angel Park, Downtown Sewanee. Free and open to the public.
Wednesday, June 8 at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Reception and book signing following, Gailor Atrium.
Author Hank Lewis will read from his fiction on Wednesday, April 13, at 5:30 PM in Gailor Auditorium. Lewis is the spring semester Brown Foundation Fellow at the University of the South, and the reading is sponsored by the English Department, the School of Letters, and the Foundation.
Wednesday, September 30, at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Reception and book signing following, Gailor Atrium.
Screening of Beasts of the Southern Wild on Monday, July 6, at 8:00 pm, Sewanee Union Theater. Free and open to the public.
Reading by Lucy Alibar on Wednesday, July 8, 2015 at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Reception following, Gailor Atrium.
Wednesday, July 1, at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Reception following, Gailor Atrium.
Wednesday, June 24, 2015 at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Booksigning following the reading.
With Eliza Borné, Alice Randall, Caroline Randall Williams, and Kevin West.
Wednesday, June 17, at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Reception following, Gailor Atrium.
Wednesday, June 10, at 4:30 pm, Gailor Auditorium. Reception following, Gailor Atrium.