The 2008 Jack Straw Writers, selected by Curator Judith Roche, are Wendy Call, Janna Cawrse Esarey, Kevin Craft, Sharon Cumberland, Waverly Fitzgerald, Merna Ann Hecht, Rebecca Hoogs, Brian McGuigan, Jennifer D. Munro, Ghida Sinno, Judith Skillman, and Michael Spence.
Meet Our 2008 Jack Straw Writers
Wendy Call READ MORE >
Wendy Call is a recent writer-in-residence at Seattle University, New College of Florida, and Harborview Medical Center. She is the coeditor of Telling True Stories: A Nonfiction Writers’ Guide, author of numerous essays, and translator of Mexican poetry and short fiction.
Artist Support Program 2011 (with Irma Pineda): A trilingual (Zapotec-Spanish-English) audio collection of poems.
2008 Writers Program
Janna Cawrse Esarey READ MORE >
Janna Cawrse Esarey was born in 1971 in San Diego, California. She is the author of the Indie-bestselling travel memoir, The Motion of the Ocean: 1 Small Boat, 2 Average Lovers, and a Woman’s Search for the Meaning of Wife (Simon & Schuster), the humorous story of a woman who sails across the Pacific with her true love, only to find their relationship on the rocks. Janna writes for sailing magazines and travel anthologies, and was selected as a 2008 Jack Straw Writer. She blogs about work-life-love balance for the Seattle P-I at “Happily Even After.”
2008 Writers Program
Kevin Craft READ MORE >
Kevin Craft is a poet based in Seattle who directs both the Written Arts Program at Everett Community College and the University of Washington’s Summer Creative Writing in Rome Program. His books include Solar Prominence (Cloudbank Books, 2005), and five volumes of the anthology Mare Nostrum, an annual collection of Italian translation and Mediterranean-inspired writing (Writ in Water Press, 2004 – 2009). His poems, reviews, and essays have appeared in such places as Poetry, AGNI, Verse, Ninth Letter, Alaska Quarterly Review, Southwest Review, and West Branch. He was the curator of the 2015 Jack Straw Writers Program.
2008 Writers Program
Sharon Cumberland READ MORE >
Sharon Cumberland is an Associate Professor of English at Seattle University and will direct the Creative Writing Program starting in 2008-09. She has published two chapbooks, The Arithmetic of Mourning (Green Rock Press), and Sharon Cumberland: Greatest Hits 1985-2000 (Pudding House Press) as well as poems in Ploughshares, The Iowa Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, Kalliope, Verse, The Midwest Quarterly and Image, among many others. Twice nominated for Pushcart Prizes, she has won Kalliope’s Sue Saniel Elkind Award, Writer’s Haven Bright Side competition, and the Pacific Northwest Writer’s Association 2007 Zola Award for Poetry. She is a frequent artist-in-residence at Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, NY. She has recently turned to writing fiction and has completed her first novel.
Writers Program 2008
Waverly Fitzgerald READ MORE >
Waverly Fitzgerald was a writer and teacher, reader and student, author and publisher, passionate researcher and urban naturalist. She collaborated with her friend, Curt Colbert, on a series of humorous mystery novels about a talking Chihuahua. In 2007, Waverly published Slow Time: Reclaiming the Natural Rhythms of Life, which helps readers shift their relationship with time.
Waverly taught writing since the publication of her first novel. She taught writing classes online for Creative Nonfiction and throughout the Seattle area for organizations like Richard Hugo House. She presented at international, national and regional conferences, including the Sam Miguel de Allende Writing Conference, AWP, PNWA, Chuckanut, and Write on the Sound.
2010 Artist Support Program: Record an audio book of original essays.
2009 Writers Program
Merna Ann Hecht READ MORE >
Merna Ann Hecht is a nationally known storyteller, social justice educator and published poet and essayist. She has over twenty five years of experience as a teaching artist in diverse settings through the Washington State Arts Commission, the Tacoma Public Schools and the Seattle Arts and Lectures Writers in the Schools Program. For five years she was the Co-Director of the Richard Hugo House School Alliance Program. Her work as a poet with young people who have experienced trauma, loss, or difficult transitions includes residencies in King County and Seattle Juvenile Detention Centers, in the Orion Center for Homeless Teens and at the Fred Hutch Cancer Research School.
In 2008, Merna received a National Storytelling Network Brimstone Award for Applied Storytelling, through which she worked in a pilot program as a poet and storyteller at BRIDGES: A Center for Grieving Children in Tacoma. Based on that experience she went on to establish her work with young refugees and immigrants as founder and co-director of the Stories of Arrival: Refugee and Immigrant Youth Voices Poetry Project. Years of experience working with young people in major life transitions are reflected in Merna’s writing and teaching which focus on the necessity of bringing creative arts to settings for youth who have experienced trauma and loss. As a teaching artist, writer, conference and workshop presenter, Merna emphasizes the complex beauty and vulnerability that come forth when people are given the space for telling their stories. A recent mentor for the Afghan Women’s writing project she is honored to help Afghani women find and express their voices.
Merna also teaches Creative Writing, Poetry and Humanities for the University of WA, Tacoma including a course titled Art in Time of War, which explores the consequences of war on civilians through the art, literature and poetry created about and by young people living through violent conflict and forced migrations.
As a longtime passionate organic gardener and cook, Merna is honored to work with young refugees and immigrants and witness their thoughtful connections to the food and gardens of their homelands and their deep sense of knowing the importance of care-taking the earth and each other.
2008 Writers Program
Rebecca Hoogs READ MORE >
Rebecca Hoogs is the author of a chapbook, Grenade (2005) and her poems have appeared in Poetry, AGNI, Crazyhorse, Zyzzyva, The Journal, Poetry Northwest, The Florida Review, and others. She is the recipient of fellowships from the MacDowell Colony (2004) and Artist Trust of Washington State (2005). She is the Director of Education Programs and the curator and host for the Poetry Series for Seattle Arts & Lectures.
2008 Writers Program
Brian McGuigan READ MORE >
Born in Queens, NY, Brian McGuigan is a poet, performer and raconteur, living in the Beacon Hill neighborhood of Seattle. His chapbook More Than I Left Behind, was published by Spankstra Press (2006), and he is currently at work on a full-length manuscript of poetry entitled Eat the Rich. His poems have appeared in Filter, Rivet Magazine, Nerve Cowboy, and LOCUSPOINT, among others, and he has performed at Bumbershoot, the Seattle Public Library, Seattle Poetry Festival, Burning Word, Annex Theater and many other venues. Brian works in marketing and programs at Richard Hugo House and is the co-founder and curator of Cheap Wine and Poetry Seattle’s ever-cool reading series.
2008 Writers Program
Jennifer Munro READ MORE >
Jennifer D. Munro is a freelance editor who loves to help writers achieve their writing and publishing goals. As a writer; she won First Place in the National Society of Newspaper Columnists blog contest (under 100k monthly visitors category). She was a Top Ten Finalist in the Erma Bombeck Global Humor writing contest and is a regular contributor to Full Grown People. Her essays and stories have been published in numerous publications, including Salon; Brain, Child; Best American Erotica; Literary Mama; and Seal press anthologies like The Bigger the Better the Tighter the Sweater: 21 Funny Women on Beauty and Body Image. Whether fiction or nonfiction, J.D. offers a candid, often humorous exploration of sex and the sexes, with a quirky take on women’s issues such as body image, infertility, gender roles, motherhood, and marriage.
J.D. grew up in Hawaii as a fourth-generation islander but now lives in Seattle. Although her grandfather slept through the bombing of Pearl Harbor not far from his bedroom window, she’s an insomniac who writes when she can’t sleep.
2008 Writers Program
Ghida Sinno READ MORE >
Ghida Sinno was born and raised in Beirut, Lebanon. She earned a B.A. in English Literature from UCLA and an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Washington. She has received grants from Artist Trust and the Barbara Deming Memorial Fund. She was a writer-in-residence at Hedgebrook and most recently at Casa Libre in Tucson, AZ. Her work has appeared in the Seattle Review, Many Mountains Moving, and Westwind Review.
2009 Writers Program
Judith Skillman READ MORE >
Judith Skillman is a poet, editor and translator. Her tenth book, Heat Lightning, New and Selected Poems 1986-2006, was published by Silverfish Review Press. The Carnival of All or Nothing was a finalist in the American Poetry Journal contest and is forthcoming from Cervéna Barva Press. Skillman is the recipient of awards from the Academy of American Poets, The King County Arts Commission, and the Washington State Arts Commission. Her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and she has completed residencies at Centrum and Hedgebrook. Her poems have appeared in Poetry, FIELD, The Iowa Review, and many other journals. An educator, editor, and translator, Judith lives with her husband in Kennydale, WA.
2010 Writers Program
2008 Writers Program
Michael Spence READ MORE >
Michael Spence’s poems have appeared in journals such as Poetry, Poetry Northwest, The New Republic, Antioch Review, Yale Review, Georgia Review, and Southern Review. He has published two poetry collections, The Spine (Purdue University Press) and Adam Chooses (Rose Alley Press), and has been included in the anthologies Poetry Comes Up Where It Can (University of Utah Press) and Limbs of the Pine, Peaks of the Range (Rose Alley Press). He lives in Tukwila, WA, with his wife, writer and teacher Sharon Hashimoto.
2008 Writers Program
2008 Writers Program Curator
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Judith Roche (1941-2019) is the author of three collections of poetry, the most recent of which, Wisdom of the Body, won an American Book Award. She edited a number of poetry anthologies and worked in collaboration with visual artists on several public art projects which are installed in the Northwest area. She worked as Literary Arts Director Emeritus for One Reel, and taught poetry workshops. Judith was Distinguished Northwest Writer in Residence at Seattle University in 2007 and a Fellow in the Black Earth Institute. She was a 2001 Jack Straw Writer and curated the 2008 Writers Program, and collaborated with Jack Straw on many other projects and programs over the years.
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Recent Posts About This Program
April 30, 2008
Here you’ll find out which writer has a certain fondness for three-letter words, who uses language as a central theme, and why poetry matters. The podcast features clips from in-studio readings by writers Kevin Craft, Rebecca Hoogs, and Brian McGuigan as well as selections from their interviews with curator Judith Roche (pictured right). Here’s the […]
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Categories: Writers Program
March 21, 2008
Jack Straw Productions is proud to announce the literary artists selected by curator Judith Roche for the 2008 Jack Straw Writers Program. They are Wendy Call, Janna Cawrse, Kevin Craft, Sharon Cumberland, Waverly Fitzgerald, Merna Ann Hecht, Rebecca Hoogs, Brian McGuigan, Jennifer D. Munro, Ghida Sinno, Judith Skillman, and Michael Spence. “There are too few […]
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Categories: Writers Program
January 9, 2008
Jack Straw Productions has selected award-winning poet Judith Roche as the curator of the 2008 Jack Straw Writers Program. As curator, Roche will select the 12 participants in the upcoming cycle of the annual Writers Program, who will be announced in February 2008, and she will participate in a variety of public events, development trainings, […]
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Categories: Writers Program
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