Jess was our guest on September 14, 2017. More information.
Read More......
An online diary of The New York State Writers Institute
The center for the literary arts in the State of New York
Thank you, Alice Green, for writing a very kind letter to the editor, published in the Times Union on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017.
For those of you visiting from out of town, Alice Green is the founder and executive director of The Center for Law and Justice, a not-for-profit community organization, and a longtime activist fighting against racism and issues of criminal justice.
We were pleased to see her at several of the Telling the Truth seminars earlier this month.
Headline: Grondahl's astute leadership a light
Congratulations to Joachim Frank for winning the Nobel Prize today! See story published in today's Times Union.
Frank was on the faculty at the University at Albany during his time at Wadsworth Center in Albany before moving to Columbia University in 2001.Joachim Frank on receiving the phone call from Stockholm today. Interview coming soon! pic.twitter.com/dXcIErqX2X— The Nobel Prize (@NobelPrize) October 4, 2017
![]() |
| Joachim Frank, of Columbia University, is hugged by his wife Carol Saginaw, in their New York City apartment, Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2017.(AP Photo/Richard Drew) |
Here is a nicely-produced video of Madeleine Thien speaking on her novel Do Not Say We Have Nothing.
Madeleine Thien and Peter Ho Davies will discuss their novel on Tuesday, October 3, at 8:00 p.m. in the Huxley Theatre, NYS Museum, Cultural Education Center, in downtown Albany. Earlier that same day at 4:15 p.m., Thien and Davies will lead an informal seminar in the Standish Room, Science Library on the UAlbany uptown campus.
Free and open to the public, the events are cosponsored by the NYS Writers Institute, NYS Office of Cultural Education, and the Friends of the New York State Library.
Video produced by John Kenney of the Montreal Gazette.
Author James Hart did not want to harm anyone else in the writing of his heartbreaking memoir "Lucky Jim," (Cleis Press, 238 pages, $17.95), which he will read from Thursday at the State Museum, part of the New York State Writers Institute fall programming.
"But I also knew I needed to be completely honest," said Hart, who grew up in Troy, "and that was going to be tricky. Many of the people in my story were famous. I love and care about a lot of them."
"I called her early on in the writing of the book," he said in an interview. "I was terrified that my words were going to hurt her and she said, 'I don't care. Just write the truth. That's all I wanted from you from day one.' "
“I took a chance, you know, and it worked out,” said comedic rapper, soon-to-be movie star, and University at Albany alum, Nora Lum, also known as “Awkwafina.”
Lum walked through the Science Library halls, reminiscing about being a student here. She remembered walking down Fuller Road, walking through Stuyvesant Plaza, and living on Empire Commons. This was Lum’s second time back on campus since she graduated.
She made her way to her meet-and-greet, where she signed autographs and took pictures with students, before having an on-stage interview with Steve Barnes, a journalism professor and senior writer at the Times Union.
Lum first gained fame after releasing a music video for her song “My Vag” on YouTube back in 2012. It gained almost two million views.
“I was sitting on it for quite a while,” said Lum. “I was 19 when I wrote it. I actually wrote it here.” She released the song after graduation. About six or seven years after writing it, her friend heard it and decided that they needed to make a music video.
“It took a while,” she said. “I was working in a full-time job at the time, so I was scared to put it out.”
But Lum took a chance. Read more in the Albany Student Press.
Meet award-winning filmmaker and MacArthur Genius Stanley
Nelson who will answer your questions following a screening of his acclaimed
film, The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, this Friday night, 7PM
start time, Page Hall, UAlbany Downtown campus.
"As a child I was unspeakably in love with books. My
dad had built two massive shelves that ran the width of our knotty pine-paneled
living room. These were laden with the many high quality volumes of great works
sent regularly to my mother by a man who either was or fancied himself to be
her suitor — an untold story unto itself. I was too young to appreciate either
the distinction between the two or the peculiarity of my father having built
the shelves for the books the supposed suitor sent."
The Writers Institute mourns the passing of poet and Nobel Laureate Derek Walcott who visited us in
1998.
See video from his Albany visit here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0tlWeaErcVE
See more about his Albany visit here: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/walcott.html
Read the New York Times obituary here: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/17/books/derek-walcott-dead-nobel-prize-literature.html?_r=0
Derek Walcott, whose intricately metaphorical poetry captured the physical beauty of the Caribbean, the harsh legacy of colonialism and the complexities of living and writing in two cultural worlds, bringing him a Nobel Prize in Literature, died early Friday morning at his home near Gros Islet in St. Lucia. He was 87.
Please note that Dael Orlandersmith, Obie-winning playwright
and Pulitzer Prize finalist in Drama, has rescheduled her appearances to
Monday, May 1st (she was originally scheduled to appear March 20th).
Paul Grondahl, the newly-named director of the Writers
Institute, will host his first events on Tuesday, March 7th. Please join us in
giving him a warm welcome.
Lydia Kulbida will join our pre-film discussion about His Girl Friday (1940) with leading
local journalists this coming Friday at Page Hall (newly added event). Lydia is
a prominent Capital Region broadcast journalist who co-anchors News10ABC at 4pm
with Elisa Streeter and Chief Meteorologist Steve Caporizzo, and also
co-anchors News10ABC at 6pm and FOX23 News at 10pm with John Gray.
Rosemary Armao, Marion Roach Smith and Casey Seiler will engage the
audience in conversation about women in journalism at our free upcoming
screening of His Girl Friday (this coming Friday, March 3rd).Unfortunately, today's events with Helen Czerski will be cancelled due to weather.
We have no information at this time about a rescheduled appearance.
Helen Czerski, the BBC's female face of science TV, talks about hyenas and their sense of smell, and what engineers can learn from them. Czerski visits Albany from London this coming Thursday.