Faculty

Christine Sneed

Faculty Director

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Christine Sneed

Christine Sneed is the author of three novels, most recently Please Be Advised: A Novel in Memos and Paris, He Said, and three short story collections, Portraits of a Few of the People I've Made Cry, The Virginity of Famous Men, and Direct Sunlight. She is the editor of the short fiction anthology Love in the Time of Time's Up, and has received the Grace Paley Prize for Short Fiction, the Chicago Public Library Foundation's 21st Century Award, the Chicago Writers Association Book of the Year Award, twice, the Society of Midland Authors Award, Ploughshares' Zacharis Award, an O. Henry Prize, among other honors. She has also been a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and her novel Little Known Facts was a New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice selection. Her stories and essays have appeared in The Best American Short Stories, O. Henry Prize Stories, New England Review, The Southern Review, Boulevard, ZYZZYVA, Story, New York Times, Chicago Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, O Magazine, Electric Literature, and various other publications. www.christinesneed.com is her author website.

Education

Indiana University-Bloomington, MFA in Creative Writing
Georgetown University, B.S., French Language and Literature

Relevant Work

Faculty Director and Fiction Faculty, Northwestern University, School of Professional Studies, 2016 - present (Faculty Director); 2012 - present (Fiction Faculty)
Regis University, Fiction Faculty, Low-residency MFA in Creative Writing, 2017 - present University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign, Visiting Assistant Professor, 2015-2016
DePaul University, English Department, Visiting Assistant Professor (2009 - 2014)

Recognition

21st Century Award, Chicago Public Library Foundation
Grace Paley Prize in Short Fiction
Book of the Year Award (two-time recipient), Chicago Writers Association
Society of Midland Authors Award - Best Adult Fiction
Los Angeles Times Book Prize - First-fiction category, Finalist
O. Henry Prize in Short Fiction
Best New Book by a Local Author - Chicago Magazine
Chicago Review of Books - Fiction Prize, Finalist
Fiction Workshop, The Publishing Industry, Poetry for Prose Writers

Recent Courses

MCW 575-DL : The Publishing Industry - Book Publishers and Literary Journals

Paula Carter

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paula-carter.jpg

Paula Carter Carter is the author of the flash memoir collection No Relation. Her award-winning essays have appeared in The New York Times, USA Today, Kenyon Review, The Southern Review, Prairie Schooner, Creative Nonfiction, Fourth Genre, The Offing and elsewhere. She was an Administrative Staff Fellow at the Bread Loaf Environmental Conference in 2022 and 2023 and her work has been supported by Ragdale and the Shannaghe Artists Residency. She serves on the organizing committee for the Washington Island Literary Festival and holds an M.F.A. from Indiana University, Bloomington.

Recent Courses

MCW 490-0 : Special Topics: Writing About Migration — One's Own and That of Others

Gioia Diliberto

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Gioia Diliberto

Gioia Diliberto is the author of three novels, four biographies and a play. Her work, which centers on the lives of women, has been praised for combining rich storytelling with deep research to bring alive worlds as varied as Jazz Age Paris, nineteenth century Chicago, Belle Epoque Paris and disco era Manhattan. Gioia’s articles and reviews have appeared in many publications, including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, Smithsonian, and Vanity Fair. Her most recent novel, Coco at the Ritz, is inspired by the arrest and interrogation of Coco Chanel during World War II on charges of treason to France. In her eighth book, Firebrands, forthcoming in October, she returns to nonfiction with the story of four extraordinary women who warred over Prohibition.

Selected Publications

Coco at the Ritz, Paris Without End, I Am Madame X, The Collection, Debutante, A Useful Woman, DVF: A Life Unwrapped

Recent Courses

MCW 413-0 : Fiction Writing Workshop

Gina Frangello

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Gina Frangello

Gina Frangello’s fifth book, the memoir Blow Your House Down: A Story of Family, Feminism, and Treason (Counterpoint), has been selected as a New York Times Editor’s Choice, received starred reviews in Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, and BookPage, and has been included on numerous “Best of 2021” lists including at Lithub, BookPage, and The Chicago Review of Books. Her sixth book, on Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Quartet, is forthcoming from IG Publishing’s “Bookmarked” series. Gina is also the author of four books of fiction, including A Life in Men and Every Kind of Wanting, which was included on several “Best of 2016” lists, including at Chicago Magazine’s and The Chicago Review of Books. Now a lead editor at Row House Publishing, she also brings more than two decades of experience as an editor, having founded both the independent press Other Voices Books and the fiction section of the popular online literary community The Nervous Breakdown. She has also served as the Sunday editor for The Rumpus, the faculty editor for both TriQuarterly Online and The Coachella Review, and the Creative Nonfiction Editor for the Los Angeles Review of Books. Her column, “Not the Norm,” runs on the Psychology Today blog, and she runs Circe Consulting, a full-service company for writers, with the writer Emily Rapp Black. Gina can be found at www.ginafrangello.org.

Recent Courses

MCW 461-0 : Nonfiction Writing Workshop

Rebecca Morgan Frank

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Rebecca Morgan Frank

Rebecca Morgan Frank is the author of four collections of poems, including Oh You Robot Saints! (Carnegie Mellon UP, 2021), one of New York Public Library's Best Books of 2021, and Little Murders Everywhere (Salmon Poetry, 2012), a finalist for the Kate Tufts Discovery Award. Her poems and stories have appeared in such places as The New Yorker, American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, Ploughshares, Catapult, Joyland, and the Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day, and her collaborations with composers have been exhibited and performed widely. She is the recipient of such honors as a Meier Achievement Award and the Poetry Society of America's Alice Fay di Castagnola Award. She received her PhD from the University of Cincinnati and her MFA from Emerson College, and her recent teaching positions include Jacob Ziskind Poet-in-Residence at Brandeis University, Distinguished Visiting Writer at Bowling Green State University, and Visiting Poet in the graduate program at UC Irvine. She is co-founder and editor of the online magazine Memorious and a reviewer for the Poetry Foundation's Harriet Books. She serves on the board of the National Book Critics Circle.

Education

PhD University of Cincinnati
MFA Emerson College
BA Vassar College

Relevant Work

Distinguished Visiting Writer, OSU Cascades low-residency MFA Program
Distinguished Visiting Writer, Bowling Green State University
Jacob Ziskind Visiting Poet-in-Residence, Brandeis University
Assistant Professor, University of Southern Mississippi's Center for Writers

Selected Publications

Oh You Robot Saints! (Carnegie Mellon UP, 2021)
Sometimes We’re All Living in a Foreign Country (Carnegie Mellon, 2017)
The Spokes of Venus (Carnegie Mellon 2016)
Little Murders Everywhere (Salmon Poetry, 2012)

Recognition

Writer-in-Residence, Hemingway Foundation
Poetry Society of America's Alice Fay di Castagnola Award
Mississippi Arts Commission Poetry Fellowship
Residency, Ragdale Foundation R
esidency fellowship, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts
Residency fellowship, Catwalk
Tennessee Williams Fellow, Sewanee Writers' Conference
Theodore and Jane Norman Fund Award for Faculty Research, Brandeis University

Recent Courses

MCW 411-DL : Poetry Workshop

Kate Harding

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Kate HardingKate Harding (she/her/hers) is the author of Asking for It: The Alarming Rise of Rape Culture and the forthcoming Victim Complex: On Snowflakes, Witch Hunts, and the Cult of Personal Responsibility. She's taught creative writing at StoryStudio Chicago, The Loft Literary Center, and Cornell College, where she was Distinguished Visiting Writer in 2017. With Samhita Mukhopadhyay, she edited the anthology Nasty Women: Feminism, Resistance, and Revolution in Trump’s America and hosted the podcast “Feminasty.” She holds a PhD in nonfiction from Bath Spa University and an MFA in fiction from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She lives in Chicago and also manages events at Bookends & Beginnings in Evanston.

Current Research Interests

Creative Writing

Creative Nonfiction

Personal Essay

Educational Background

PhD, Creative Nonfiction, Bath Spa University, 2019

MFA, Fiction, Vermont College of Fine Arts, 2005

BA, English Literature, University of Toronto, 1997

Laurie Lawlor

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Laurie Lawlor

Laurie Lawlor is the author of 43 works of award-winning fiction and nonfiction for children and young adults. Environmental advocacy inspired 2023 nonfiction Restoring Prairie, Woods, and Pond: How a Small Trail Can Make a Big Difference (Holiday House), highlighted with Kirkus starred review and recipient of the 2023 Society of Midland Authors Honor Award for Children's Nonfiction. Other nonfiction includes What Music! The 50-Year Friendship between Beethoven and Nannette Streicher, Who Built His Pianos (2023) and Fearless World Traveler, Adventures of Marianne North, Botanical Artist (Holiday House, 2021), which received the Society of Midland Authors Honor Award for Nonfiction and was named Junior Guild Gold Standard Selection. Super Women: Six Scientists Who Changed the World (Holiday House), middle grade nonfiction, profiles remarkable pioneers in fields ranging from astronomy and mathematics to cartography and biochemistry. Published in 2017, Super Women received a Booklist starred review and was named 2018 Outstanding Science Trade Book by Children’s Book Council (CBC) and NSTA. Big Tree Down! (Holiday House), a lively picture book released in spring 2018, celebrates cooperation during a community emergency. Lawlor was awarded the 2012 John Burroughs Riverby Award for Excellence in Nature Writing for Rachel Carson and Her Book that Changed the World, featured on the ALA Amelia Bloomer Award List. She has taught creative writing at Northwestern University, and writing workshops throughout the Midwest.

Education

MAT, National-Louis University 1992
BSJ, Northwestern University, Medill 1975

Relevant Work

Teacher, lecturer, writing workshop leader Northwestern University, Columbia College of Chicago, National-Louis University
Writer of published fiction and nonfiction since 1986
Environmental advocate and organizer, Wisconsin, Mukwonago River Initiative

Selected Publications

See website, www.laurielawlor.com for complete listing

Recognition

Carl Sandburg Award, Golden Kite Honor Book Award
John Burroughs Riverby Award for Excellence in Nature Writing

Recent Courses

MCW 417-DL : Popular Fiction Workshop

billy lombardo

Contact Information

Picture of billy lombardobilly lombardo (he/him/his) is a Nelson Algren Award winner and the founder of Polyphony Lit, an international literary magazine devoted to the development of young writers and editors. He is the author of three books of fiction: The Logic of a Rose: Chicago Stories, The Man with Two Arms, and Morning Will Come. He is also the author of a book of poetry and prose, Meanwhile, Roxy Mourns. His most recent publication is the nonfiction book, The C.A.P.E. Crusade, Your Guide to a Great College Application Personal Essay. billy is also the founder of The Writing Pros/e, a writing and editing business. He holds an MFA in Fiction from Warren Wilson College and lives in Chicago's Albany Park neighborhood.

Rebecca Makkai

Contact Information

Photo of Rebecca MakkaiRebecca Makkai is the author of this year's New York Times bestselling I Have Some Questions for You, as well as the novels The Great Believers, The Borrower and The Hundred-Year House, and the collection Music for Wartime. The Great Believers was a finalist for both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award; it received the ALA Carnegie Medal and the LA Times Book Prize among other honors. A 2022 Guggenheim Fellow, Rebecca teaches graduate fiction writing at Northwestern University, the Bennington Writing Seminars, and Middlebury College's Bread Loaf School of English; and she is Artistic Director of StoryStudio Chicago. She lives in Chicago and Vermont.

Education

MA in English Literature, Middlebury College

Recent Courses

MCW 413-0 : Fiction Workshop

Juan Martinez

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Juan Martinez

Juan Martinez is the author of the collection Best Worst American (2017) and the novel Extended Stay (2023). His work has appeared in many literary journals and anthologies, including Ecotone, NIGHTMARE, The Morning Transport, Glimmer Train, Huizache, McSweeney's, TriQuarterly, Conjunctions, Small Odysseys, National Public Radio's Selected Shorts, Norton's Sudden Fiction Latino and Flash Fiction America, and elsewhere. He is an associate professor at Northwestern University and lives near Chicago.

Education

PhD, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Relevant Work

Associate Professor, 2020-current, Northwestern University
Assistant Professor, 2013-2020, Northwestern University
Assistant Professor, 2012-2013, Lebanon Valley College
Visiting Assistant Professor, 2011-2012, Whitman College

Selected Publications

Best Worst American (Small Beer Press)

Recent Courses

MCW 413-0 : Fiction Workshop

Faisal Mohyuddin

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Faisal Mohyuddin

Faisal Mohyuddin’s debut full-length poetry collection, The Displaced Children of Displaced Children (Eyewear 2018), won the 2017 Sexton Prize for Poetry, was selected as a 2018 Summer Recommendation of the Poetry Book Society, and was named a “highly commended” book of 2018 by the Forward Arts Foundation. Also the author of the chapbook The Riddle of Longing (Backbone 2017), he is the recipient of the Edward Stanley Award from Prairie Schooner and a Gwendolyn Brooks Poetry Award. He serves as an educator adviser to Narrative 4, a global not-for-profit dedicated to fostering empathy through the exchange of stories, and teaches English at Highland Park High School in Illinois. 

Recent Courses

MCW 490-0 : Special Topics: Writing About Migration — One's Own and That of Others

Natalie Moore

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Natalie Moore

Natalie Moore is WBEZ's South Side Reporter where she covers segregation and inequality.

Her enterprise reporting has tackled race, housing, economic development, food injustice and violence. Natalie’s work has been broadcast on the BBC, Marketplace and NPR’s Morning Edition, All Things Considered and Weekend Edition. Natalie is the author of The South Side: A Portrait of Chicago and American Segregation, winner of the 2016 Chicago Review of Books award for nonfiction and a Buzzfeed best nonfiction book of 2016. She is also co-author of The Almighty Black P Stone Nation: The Rise, Fall and Resurgence of an American Gang and Deconstructing Tyrone: A New Look at Black Masculinity in the Hip-Hop Generation

Natalie writes a monthly column for the Chicago Sun-Times. Her work has been published in Essence, Ebony, the Chicago Reporter, Bitch, In These Times, the Chicago Tribune, the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Guardian. She is the 2017 recipient of Chicago Library Foundation’s 21st Century Award. In 2010, she received the Studs Terkel Community Media Award for reporting on Chicago’s diverse neighborhoods. In 2009, she was a fellow at Columbia College’s Ellen Stone Belic Institute for the Study of Women and Gender in the Arts and Media, which allowed her to take a reporting trip to Libya. Natalie has won several journalism awards, including a Casey Medal for Meritorious Journalism. Other honors are from the Radio Television Digital News Association (Edward R. Murrow), Public Radio News Directors Incorporated, National Association of Black Journalists, Illinois Associated Press and Chicago Headline Club. The Chicago Reader named her best journalist in 2017.

Prior to joining WBEZ staff in 2007, Natalie was a city hall reporter for the Detroit News. She has also been an education reporter for the St. Paul Pioneer Press and a reporter for the Associated Press in Jerusalem.

Natalie has an M.S.J. in Newspaper Management from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University and a B.A. in Journalism from Howard University. She has taught at Columbia College and Medill. Natalie and her husband Rodney live in Hyde Park with their four daughters.

Recent Courses

MCW 461-0 : Nonfiction Writing Workshop

Simone Muench

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Simone Muench

Simone Muench is the recipient of an NEA Poetry Fellowship and the Meier Foundation for the Arts Award as well as residency fellowships to Yaddo, Artsmith, VCCA, and VSC. She is the author of seven full-length books including Wolf Centos and Orange Crush from Sarabande. She also co-edited They Said: A Multi-Genre Anthology of Contemporary Collaborative Writing (Black Lawrence, 2018), and her recent collection, The Under Hum, co-written with Jackie K. White, is forthcoming from Black Lawrence in 2024.

She serves as a poetry editor for Tupelo Quarterly, faculty advisor for Jet Fuel Review, and poetry editor for JackLeg Press, as well as being the creator of the Hungry Brain Sunday Reading Series. She received her PhD from the University of Illinois at Chicago and directs the writing program at Lewis University where she teaches creative writing and film studies.

Naeem Murr

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Naeem Murr

Naeem Murr is the author of three novels, The Boy, which won a Lambda Literary Award and was a New York Times Notable Book, The Genius of the Sea, and most recently The Perfect Man, which won The Commonwealth Writersʼ Prize for the Best Book of Europe and South Asia and was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize. His work has been translated into numerous languages. His other awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship and a PEN Beyond Margins Award. He has been a writer-in-residence at the University of Missouri and Western Michigan University, among others, and received a distinguished teaching award from Northwestern University School of Professional Studies in 2019.

Recent Courses

MCW 413-0 : Fiction Writing Workshop

Lori Rader-Day

Contact Information

Photo of Lori Rader-DayLori Rader-Day is the author of the crime novels The Death of Us, Death at Greenway, The Lucky One, Under a Dark Sky, The Day I Died, Little Pretty Things, and The Black Hour. Her books have won the Mary Higgins Clark Award, the Agatha Award, and three Anthony Awards, and have been nominated for several other crime fiction awards, including the Edgar Award from Mystery Writers of America. She is also a past recipient of the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana Author Award.

Rader-Day is co-chair of the crime fiction readers’ conference Midwest Mystery Conference and a former national president of Sisters in Crime, a 4,500-member writers’ and readers’ association. Rader-Day has previously taught at Ball State University, Roosevelt University, Yale University, Midwest Writers Workshop, and StoryStudio Chicago, among others. She received an MA in creative nonfiction from Ball State University and an MFA in creative writing from Roosevelt University.

Education

MFA, Roosevelt University
MA, Ball State University
BS, Ball State University

Relevant Work

National President, Sisters in Crime, Inc.
Director of Communications, Northwestern University School of Communication

Selected Publications

Death at Greenway
The Lucky One
Under a Dark Sky
The Day I Died
Little Pretty Things
The Black Hour

Recognition

2019 Edgar Award nominee
2021 Mary Higgins Clark Award nominee
2021 Agatha Award nominee
2021 Anthony Award nominee
2017 Indiana Author Award recipient

Recent Courses

MCW 417-DL : Popular Fiction Workshop

Ed Roberson

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Roberson Aquarium Works

Ed Roberson is the author of seven volumes of poetry, including Voices Cast Out to Talk Us In, winner of the Iowa Poetry Prize; Just In: Word of Navigational Change: New and Selected Work; Atmosphere Conditions, a National Poetry Series winner; and his most recent, City Eclogue. Roberson received the 2008 Shelley Memorial Award from the Poetry Society of America. He has also received a Lila Wallace Reader's Digest Writer's Award.

Donna Seaman

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Donna Seaman

Donna Seaman is the Editor for Adult Books at Booklist; a member of the Content Leadership Team and National Advisory Council for the American Writers Museum, and a recipient of the James Friend Memorial Award for Literary Criticism and the Studs Terkel Humanities Service Award. Seaman has written for the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, and other publications, and contributed biocritical essays to the Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature and American Writers. Seaman has been a writer-in-residence for Columbia College Chicago and has taught at Northwestern University and the University of Chicago. She created the anthology In Our Nature: Stories of Wildness; her author interviews are collected in Writers on the Air: Conversations about Books, and she is the author of Identity Unknown: Rediscovering Seven American Women Artists.

Recent Courses

MCW 461-0 : Nonfiction Writing Workshop

Shauna Seliy

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Shauna Seliy

Shauna Seliy is the author of the novel When We Get There, published in the UK under the title The Trials and Tribulations of Lucas Lessar. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Kenyon Review, Jubilat, Other Voices, and elsewhere. She has received fellowships from Yaddo and the MacDowell Colony. Her MFA is from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

Megan Stielstra

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Megan Stielstra

Megan Stielstrais the author of three collections: Everyone Remain Calm, Once I Was Cool, and The Wrong Way to Save Your Life. Her work appears in Best American Essays, New York Times, Poets & Writers, The Believer, Longreads, Tin House, and elsewhere. A longtime company member with 2nd Story, she has told stories for National Public Radio, Museum of Contemporary Art, Goodman Theatre, and regularly with the Paper Machete live news magazine at the Green Mill. She serves as the Senior Editor of Regional Titles at Northwestern University Press, where she acquires literary work that centers the Midwest in all its complexities.

Education

MFA in Creative Writing, Columbia College

Relevant Work

Creative Nonfiction faculty at Northwestern University; MFA in Prose & Poetry and the The Litowitz Creative Writing Graduate Program.
Creative Nonfiction faculty at Catapult.
Creative Nonfiction faculty at StoryStudio.
Mentor Editor at The Op Ed Project.
Associate Director of the Center for Innovation in Teaching Excellence at Columbia College Director of Story Development at 2nd Story.

Selected Publications

"The Wrong Way to Save Your Life, essay collection, 2017 Nonfiction Book of the Year Award from the Chicago Review of Books, Harper Perennial

Once I Was Cool, essay collection, rereleased from Northwestern University Press, August 2021

Everyone Remain Calm, story collection, rereleased from Northwestern University Press, August 2021

""An Axe for the Frozen Sea,"" The Believer, 2019 Story of the Year Award from the Chicago Review of Books

""Channel B,"" The Rumpus, included in the Best American Essays 2013 and recorded for National Public Radio

""Here is My Heart,"" Longreads

""We Make Homes,"" Gay Magazine

""On Awareness,"" Tin House

""What Would You Grab in a Fire?,"" New York Times"

Recognition

2021-2022 Senior Media Fellow/2020-2021 Civic Media Fellow, MacArthur Foundation via the Annenberg Innovation lab at the University of Southern California
2021-2022 Senior Media Fellow/2020-2021 Civic Media Fellow, MacArthur Foundation via the Annenberg Innovation lab at the University of Southern California2020 Shearing Fellow in Creative Nonfiction, Black Mountain Institute
Lit 50 list of “movers & shakers in Chicago Literature,” Newcity Magazine, 2020, 2018, 2016, 2014, 2011
Faculty Honor Roll as selected by the undergraduate student body, Northwestern University, 2019-2020 2019 Story of the Year Award, Chicago Review of Books, December 2019
Ragdale Arts Foundation Fellow, 2019, 2015 & 2012
2017 Book of the Year Award in Nonfiction, Chicago Review of Books, December 2017
Selected, Best American Essays 2013, ed. Cheryl Strayed, October 2013

Recent Courses

MCW 461-0 : Creative Nonfiction Workshop

Rachel Jamison Webster

Contact Information

Photo of Rachel WebsterRachel Jamison Webster is the author of four books of poetry in addition to her debut book of nonfiction, Benjamin Banneker and Us, which was chosen as a Best Book of 2023 by The New Yorker and Editor's Pick by The New York Times. Publisher’s Weekly hailed the book as “a stunning meditation on race, identity, and achievement” and Booklist called it an “engrossing, multifaceted, profoundly thoughtful, and beautifully rendered inquiry that forms a clarifying lens on America’s ongoing struggles against racism and endemic injustice.” Rachel has taught at Northwestern for the last 17 years. She has been a Kaplan Fellow in the Humanities, an Op Ed Public Voices Fellow, a winner of the Culture-Light Award by the Sri Chinmoy Foundation, and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Rachel’s essays, poems, and stories are frequently anthologized and published in outlets including Poetry, Tin House, and the Yale Review.

Education

MFA, Warren Wilson Program for Writers

Relevant Work

Associate Professor of Instruction, Northwestern University

Selected Publications

Reunion, a book of Creative Nonfiction forthcoming from Henry Holt, 2023
September: Poems. Northwestern University Press, 2013.
The Endless Unbegun. Twelve Winters Press, 2015.
Mary is a River, Kelsay Books, 2017.
The Sea Came Up & Drowned, Raw Books, 2020.

Selected Essays:
https://yalereview.yale.edu/history-another-word-trauma
https://tinhouse.com/to-vanquish-the-patriarchy/
https://parhelionliterary.com/rachel-jamison-webster/

Selected Poetry:
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/rachel-webster
https://poets.org/poet/rachel-jamison-webster"

Recent Courses

Reinventing the Memoir
Cross-Genre Experiments
Poetry Independent Studies
Literature of Coming Out

Michael Zapata

Contact Information

Michael Zapata

Michael Zapata is a founding editor of MAKE Literary Magazine and the author of the novel The Lost Book of Adana Moreau, winner of the 2020 Chicago Review of Books Award for Fiction, finalist for the 2020 Heartland Booksellers Award in Fiction, and a Best Book of the Year for NPR, the A.V. Club, Los Angeles Public Library, and BookPage, among others. He is the recipient of an Illinois Arts Council Award for Fiction and the City of Chicago DCASE Individual Artist Program Award. He is on the core faculty of StoryStudio Chicago and the MFA faculty of Northwestern University. As a public-school educator, he taught literature and writing in high schools servicing drop out students. He currently lives in Chicago with his family.

Relevant Work

Core Faculty at StoryStudio Chicago

Co-Founder and Co-Publisher (est. 2004), Fiction Editor (2004 –2009), President of the Board (2009–2017), Member of the Board (current) MAKE Literary Magazine & MAKE Literary Productions NFP

Selected Publications

The Lost Book of Adana Moreau (Hanover Square Press/HarperCollins)

"Unstable Reality: Latin America’s Genre-Bending Traditions,” Tor.com

“10 Books That Were Almost Lost to History,” Electric Literature

Recognition

The Lost Book of Adana Moreau: Winner of the 2020 Chicago Review of Books Award for Fiction, finalist for the 2020 Heartland Booksellers Award in Fiction, and a Best Book of the Year for NPR, the A.V. Club, Los Angeles Public Library, and BookPage, among others.


The Lost Book of Adana Moreau: Reviews in The New York Times Book Review, NPR, The Washington Post, the Chicago Tribune, Publisher’s Weekly, Kirkus Review, BookPage (Starred), Booklist (Starred), Library Journal (Starred), Salon, Jewish Book Council, Literary Hub, Newcity, Tor, Somos en Escrito, among others.


Newcity’s Lit 50, 2020


Latino Stories 2020 Top Ten "New" Latinx Authors


2021 Instructor of the Year Award: StoryStudio


Illinois Arts Council Individual Artist Support Grant, 2020


City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events Individual Artists Program Grant, 2019

Recent Courses

MCW 413-0 : Fiction Writing Workshop

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