Picking out your AWP panels? Allow us to suggest one of the 20+ panels featuring our Faculty, alumni and students.
Stop by table #T5020 during the Book Fair and pick up a schedule of events featuring members of the Bennington community.
taylor price
No title available

tannertan36
One Nice Bug Per Day
No title available
YOU ARE THE REASON
Stranger Things
KIROKAZE
Jules of Nature

blake kathryn

Andulka

⁂
i don't do bad sauce passes
tumblr dot com

Discoholic 🪩
trying on a metaphor

Origami Around
Not today Justin
🪼

oozey mess
seen from United States
seen from Sweden

seen from United States
seen from India
seen from Canada
seen from India

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from France

seen from Canada
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
@benningtonwritingseminars
Picking out your AWP panels? Allow us to suggest one of the 20+ panels featuring our Faculty, alumni and students.
Stop by table #T5020 during the Book Fair and pick up a schedule of events featuring members of the Bennington community.
Jill McCorkle, MFA Faculty member in Fiction, recommends:
"Dorianne Laux’s 'Only As the Day is Long: New and Selected Poems' is a beauty. It is a chance to revisit her earlier masterful works as well as sink into the new poems under the umbrella of the title. These new poems focus on the life of Laux’s mother, a complex portrait that renders one unsure which way to run: into her arms or away from her sharp eyes. It is the journey of a daughter’s grief—the grief of her mother’s death coupled with a child’s longing for what was lost or missing in life. Along with sadness and loss, she finds grace and redemption and love, most notably in objects as simple as her mother’s slippers or her old colander: 'Bowl daylight fell through/ onto freckled faces, noon stars on the pavement…’
“Laux is a wonderful story teller, bringing scenes and images to life in ways you will never forget. This is a book I will go back to again and again."
Mark Wunderlich, Rilke Scholar and Director of Bennington Writing Seminars, will deliver a special seminar for LA friends of the program.
Bohemian-Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke is one of the most widely-read German-language poets; his poems speak to the eternal human conditions of grief and longing, of love and faithfulness, and his work meditates on a series of core poetic concerns which we will exploreI in this brief seminar. We will look at five poems from his collected work and discuss the central ideas that animated Rilke's poetry and prose over the course of his lifetime. No advance preparation is necessary for the seminar; texts will be provided for attendees. The seminar will conclude with a series of writing prompts based on Rilkean ideas for getting poems (and prose) started, and keeping them going.
For more information email [email protected]. Please RSVP by March 20, 2019.
Clifford Thompson, MFA Faculty member in Creative Nonfiction, recommends THE CHANEYSVILLE INCIDENT.
“David Bradley's 1981 novel ‘The Chaneysville Incident’ manages at once to be utterly devoid of sentimentality -- even harsh at times -- and to point ultimately toward hope for racial reconciliation. It is vivid, witty, and honest. I read it years ago and feel like I read it yesterday.”
“But there are times — especially after I have watched certain romantic movies — when I panic and think my life is all wrong because our last candlelight dinner consisted of cold leftovers during an electrical blackout...”
Judith Hertog (Creative Nonfiction ‘10) wrote the essay “Against Romance: An Un-Valentine” in The New York Times.
Donald Hall, former United States poet laureate, and longtime Bennington Writing Seminars writer-in-residence, was deeply involved in our program since the very beginning.
The Donald Hall Scholarship for Poets provides full tuition support to the top #poetry candidate, as identified by Bennington’s admissions committee. Apply today for the term beginning in June.
Applications are due Friday, March 1. For more info, visit our website.
SAVE THE DATE for LITinPDX, an off-site dance party during AWP19 ! Join us Friday, March 29, from 7-10pm at Friendly House Portland.
The best part? Your favorite writers will drop in on our MC, Patrick Boyle (Poetry ‘14), to guest DJ. PREPARE YOURSELF for playlists from Hanif Abdurraqib, Eloisa Amezcua, Alexander Chee, and Melissa Febos.
We’re thrilled to present this event along with our friends at Catapult, PEN America, and The Southampton Review.
To Be a Writer in America Today | Bennington College
“To be a writer in America today means living a life for which there’s not really a pattern. Writing is hard because one measure of our seriousness as writers is the extent to which we make ourselves vulnerable in those hours.”
We were honored to have novelist, poet, and literary critic Garth Greenwell deliver our 47th Commencement address in January.
Forthcoming books from the Bennington MFA community.
Bennington Writers Reading Series
Critically acclaimed, award-winning authors and faculty of the Bennington College Writing Seminars will offer an evening reading series during the MFA program's winter residency—Thursday, January 3 through Friday, January 11, 2019.
If you are in the area of North Bennington, please come! Or tune into our live stream on Friday, January 4.
SCHEDULE:
Douglas Bauer and Carmen Gimenez Smith 7PM on THURSDAY, JAN 3
Jenny Boully and David Gates 7PM - Live Stream on Facebook on FRIDAY, JAN 4
Benjamin Anastas and Lynne Sharon Schwartz 7PM on SATURDAY, JAN 5
Deirdre McNamer and Natalie Scenters-Zapico 7PM on SUNDAY, JAN 6
Jill McCorkle and Clifford Thompson 7 PM — followed by Alumni Fellows J. Mae Barizo, Hannah Howard, and Erin Kate Ryan 8 PM on MONDAY, JAN 7
Derek Palacio and Craig Morgan Teicher 7 PM on WEDNESDAY, JAN 9
Sarah Messer and Alice Mattison 7:30 PM on THURSDAY, JAN 10
Garth Greenwell and Mark Wunderlich 7 PM on FRIDAY, JAN 11
Tishman Lectur Hall
Bennington College
One College Drive
Bennington, VT 05201-6003
802-442-5401
Thank you, 2018, for another great year of literature — including these gems from the Bennington MFA community:
A Carnival Of Losses: Notes Nearing Ninety by Donald Hall, friend and longtime Writer-in-Residence
Changelings & Omen Birds by Claire Clube, Poetry ‘08
Patterns by Sandra Worsham, Fiction '06
Well-Read Black Girl with an essay by Morgan Jerkins, Fiction ‘06
We Begin in Gladness: How Poets Progress by Craig Morgan Teicher, Faculty
The Best American Essays 2018 with an essay by Clifford Thompson, Faculty
A quote from David Gates, MFA Faculty member in Fiction.