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| Jesse Lee Kercheval |
The Bankhead Visiting Writers Series welcomes Jesse Lee Kercheval
to The University of Alabama on Feb. 3 for a reading from her latest
work at 7:30 p.m. in 205 Smith Hall.
She will serve as a Coal Royalty Chairholder and be in residence
Jan. 31-Feb.2, teaching a one-hour class, “The Whole Truth
and Nothing But?”
Kercheval is the author of six books. Her work includes two collections
of poems, “World as Dictionary” and “Dog Angel;” a
novel, “The Museum of Happiness;” a short story collection, “The
Dogeater;” and a textbook on writing, “Building Fiction.” Her
memoir “Space” won the 1999 Alex Award from the American
Library Association.
She is a recipient of the Richard Hugo Prize, the James Michener
Fellowship for the First Novel and a grant from the National Endowment
for the Arts. Her work has appeared in “Ploughshares,” “Poetry
Northwest,” and “Iowa Review” and has been widely
acquired in literary collections.
Kercheval was born in Fontainbleau, France and raised in Florida.
She received a bachelor’s degree in history from Florida
State University, where she studied writing with Janet Burroway,
David Kirby and Jerome Stern, among others. She received her Master
of Fine Arts degree in creative writing from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop
where she was a teaching-writing fellow.
After teaching a year as an assistant professor at DePauw University,
she joined the writing faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
where she is currently the Sally Mead Hands Bascom Professor of
English and the director of the Wisconsin Institute for Creative
Writing.
Her current projects include a third collection of poems, “Cinema
Muto,” about silent film, and a novel, “Mosjoukine’s
Eyes,” about the Russian silent film actor Ivan Mosjoukine.
The Bankhead Visiting Writers Series is made possible by an endowment
from the Bankhead Foundation, The University of Alabama’s
Program in Creative Writing, the department
of English and the College
of Arts and Sciences. For more information, please visit www.bama.ua.edu/~writing or
contact the creative writing program at 205/348-0766.
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