July News

I thought I’d take a quick break from the wonderful quiet of my writer’s residency at Prairie Center of the Arts, which I luckily was able to extend into August by the generous founders of PCA. Upon arrival, I realized, unexpectedly, that I had some research opportunities in the area. Though it’s too soon to tell what I’m working on, it is too much fun! In other PCA news, fantastic artist Kate Johnson has been posting interviews of other residents, such as Allison Lacher and Lauren Scanlon. More interviews to follow.

This month Poet Lore, The Adroit Journal, and Insolent Aardvark accepted new poems of mine. A big thanks to the editors! I have a funny story about Poet Lore that I thought I’d pass along. Since finishing my dissertation on Matilda Fletcher, I’ve been doing research on other ancestors. One of them was a Jessie Wiseman Gibbs, Matilda’s stepdaughter, who published the collection of poetry OVERTONES in 1913. In looking at her acknowledgements page, Jessie lists Poet Lore. I thought that was great! In the 1910s Poet Lore published my great-great-great-aunt and a hundred years later in the 2010s Poet Lore has published my poems.

In teaching news, I’ll be teaching classes this year in the English Department at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Future students, you’re in for some fun essay assignments and great texts to read. Speaking of teaching, in uber-smart husband news, there’s a piece on UNL news on his Distinguished Educator Award and an article in his hometown newspaper the Bloomfield Democrat. Here’s his video.

Apple Distinguished Educator from adam wagler on Vimeo.

a reading, a fellowship, and a publication or two

This past Saturday, April 9 at 9 a.m., I read from my dissertation at the Rawley Conference. Dr. Jeannette Jones was the commenter for my panel. She gave me the best critical reading of and offered the most astute questions for my work on the suffragist, lecturer, and poet, Matilda Fletcher, that I’ve yet to have at a conference. It was so nice to be asked such smart questions from such a great scholar. Wow. Thanks, Dr. Jones!

Upcoming reading-wise, I’ve been awarded the Susan Atefact Peckham Fellowship in poetry for UNL. Yeah! There’s an award reading in Bailey Library (228 Andrews Hall) on April 27 from 3-4 p.m. I’ll be reading more on Matilda Fletcher. The award ceremony is April 29 at 3 p.m. I hope you’ll be there!

Finally, I have a poem in the current issue of Blue Collar Review and a poem in the anthology Knocking at the Door, edited by Lisa Sisler and Lea C. Deschenes (Birch Bench Press, 2011).

Whoever said April was the cruelest month? That guy, something Prufrock, he’s wrong.

panels, pubs, references, oh my

I wanted to take a minute to thank those I had the privillege to join in a panel earlier this month entitled, “The Art, Craft, and Ethics of Biography and Autobiography.” We had a great conversation.

Also, since this is a new blog, here are some links to online short stories. of mine in Blackbird and 42opus.The Blackbird piece was nominated for Million Writers Award Notable Stories of 2007 by Story South.

Honestly, if you’ve never googled or searched your name on the internet, I’d suggest trying. You’ll learn all kinds of untrue stuff: races you’ve entered, alter service you’ve signed up for, honor rolls you’re named in, etc. And then, you’ll find something astonishing as I’ve just done: a paper I wrote “Carnivalesque and Bifurcated Labels” is referenced on page 43 in Theory for Performance Studies (Routeldge, 2007) by Professor Philip Auslander. Wow.