The Summer Writers Institute at Skidmore in Saratoga will run from July 29 through July 24.
All readings are at 8PM in Davis Auditorium, Palamountain Hall, Skidmore College, 815 N. Broadway, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866.
For more information: 518-580-5000, info@skidmore.edu
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
2015 NYS Summer Writers Institute Reading Series
Thursday, June 5, 2014
"Roscoe" Opera at Skidmore this Sunday
From today's Times Union:
Opera troupe workshops adaptation of William Kennedy's 'Roscoe'
By Amy BiancolliUpdated 11:29 am, Thursday, June 5, 2014
The souls peopling William Kennedy novels have always had an operatic streak about them: tragically flawed, larger than life, haunted by death (or dead already). And they have issues If, as W.H. Auden observed, opera is "an imitation of human willfulness," then the classic Kennedy protagonist is prime meat for operatic adaptation.Consider Roscoe Conway, the complex and fleshy political insider at the heart of "Roscoe," a new opera scheduled for an Opera Saratoga workshop performance at 2 p.m. Sunday at Skidmore College. Adapted from the Kennedy novel by Albany composer Evan Mack and Tennessee-based librettist Joshua McGuire, the opera is about half-written: Only the 80-minute Act I will be performed in Sunday's unstaged concert rendering, sung by members of the company's Young Artist Program. "It's quite wonderful. It's thrilling to listen to it, and to hear these voices when they start taking off," Kennedy said. Opera struck him as a "very good form for Roscoe himself. As an individual, he has kind of an operatic life, and he is a creature of extreme habits and proclivities. And he reaches great heights as a politician and as a human being, and he has a great rise and fall of his emotions."
More in the Times Union: http://www.timesunion.com/entertainment/article/Singing-his-praises-5528362.php Read More......
Monday, June 2, 2014
Hollis Seamon wins "Ippy" Gold Medal
Hollis Seamon, this year's featured guest author at the New York State Summer Young Writers Institute for high school-aged writers, tied for the 2014 Independent Publisher Book Award ("Ippy") Gold Medal for Short Fiction for her story collection, Corporeality.
More 2014 "Ippy" results here: http://www.independentpublisher.com/article.php?page=1791
Students at the Young Writers Institute will read Seamon's 2013 young adult novel, Somebody Up There Hates You, about a 17-year-old battling cancer.
Booklist said, "Seamon’s first young-adult novel is a tender, insightful, and unsentimental look
at teens in extremis. It brings light to a very dark place, and in so doing,
does its readers a generous service."
More about Hollis Seamon: http://www.skidmore.edu/youngwriters/guest-author.php
More about the New York State Summer Young Writers Institute: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/nyssywi.html
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Free Events in Saratoga This Summer
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Jamaica Kincaid |
Jamaica Kincaid! Joyce Carol Oates! William Kennedy! Robert Pinsky! Marilynne Robinson! Russell Banks! And many more….
You are invited to attend the NYS Summer Writers Institute’s
free public readings at Skidmore in Saratoga this summer, every weekday from
June 30th to July 25th, cosponsored by Skidmore College and the New York State Writers
Institute.
SUMMER PUBLIC READING LIST 2014
All Readings are at 8:00 p.m. in Davis Auditorium, Palamountain Hall
815 North Broadway, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
Free and open to the public
JUNE 30
Fiction reading by Elizabeth Benedict and poetry reading by Campbell McGrath.
JULY 1
Fiction reading by Francine Prose and non-fiction reading by Nicholas Delbanco.
JULY 2
Poetry reading by Frank Bidart and fiction reading by Jim Shepard.
JULY 3
Fiction reading by Russell Banks and poetry reading by Chase Twichell.
JULY 4
Fiction reading by Howard Norman and poetry reading by Jane Shore.
JULY 7
Poetry reading by Rosanna Warren and fiction reading by Cristina Garcia.
JULY 8
Non-Fiction reading by Phillip Lopate and fiction reading by Victoria Redel.
JULY 9
Poetry reading by James Longenbach and fiction reading by Joanna Scott.
JULY 10
Poetry reading by Louise Gluck and fiction reading by Caryl Phillips.
JULY 11
Fiction reading by Joyce Carol Oates.
JULY 14
Poetry reading by Carolyn Forche and fiction reading by Amy Hempel.
JULY 15
Fiction reading by Marilynne Robinson and poetry reading by Peg Boyers.
JULY 16
Fiction reading by Danzy Senna and nonfiction reading by Honor Moore.
JULY 17
Fiction reading by William Kennedy.
JULY 18
Poetry reading by Robert Pinsky.
JULY 21
Poetry reading by Mark Strand and fiction reading by Binnie Kirshenbaum.
JULY 22
Poetry reading by Charles Simic and fiction reading by Adam Braver.
JULY 23
Fiction reading by Rick Moody and poetry reading by Tom Healy.
JULY 24
Fiction reading by Jamaica Kincaid and poetry reading by Henri Cole.
JULY 25
Fiction reading by Paul Harding and poetry reading by Carl Dennis.
Office of the Dean of Special Programs
518-580-5593
NYS Summer Writers Institute
Office of the Dean of Special Programs
Skidmore College
815 North Broadway
Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Sasha Weiss on Henri Cole
Sasha Weiss of the New Yorker's Culture Desk gave a boost last summer to poet Henri Cole (who shares the stage tonight with Jamaica Kincaid in Saratoga).
In the "What We're Reading" feature she talked about Cole's 2011 book, Touch:
His latest book... is a collection of poems (mostly sonnets) that take up a mother’s slow death and a son’s mourning her, a cruel relationship with an addict and his subsequent overdose, sexual longing and degradation, family dysfunction, the killing of soldiers, loneliness, and the desire to escape from one’s life. Yet these are poems of inveterate gentleness (the word “soft” is repeated again and again) and “Touch” is a book one reads with dream-like urgency, as if “drinking water right out of the tap … lips on the faucet” as Cole writes in the poem “Shrike.” Why do we want to linger here, in Cole’s unsettled world? From what source do these poems draw their magnetic power?
More: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2012/06/what-were-reading-henri-cole.html
Full schedule of readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Jamaica Kincaid Reads Tonight
Jamaica Kincaids presents her new novel tonight in Saratoga.
Full schedule of readings here: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Elizabeth Floyd Mair interviewed Kincaid about the novel, See Now Then, in Sunday's Times Union:
Q: The long sentences that are a trademark of your style — is that just the way that it first comes to you?
A: When I'm writing about the family in this book, for instance, I tend to condense all of the feelings of the ups and downs into one moment. I write out of that moment, and it seems to come in one sentence, or in one series of sentences that unfurl and refurl into themselves. The poet Derek Walcott once said to me that each of my sentences holds within it its own contradiction. When he said that, I was amazed, because it is true.
More: http://www.timesunion.com/living/article/See-Now-Then-hits-close-to-home-4673216.php
Friday, July 19, 2013
William Kennedy Reads Outtakes from "Legs" Tonight
William Kennedy will present a reading of portions of his landmark Albany novel Legs tonight, featuring a variety of scenes that did not make it into the final draft.
The free reading is at 8:00 p.m., Friday, 7/19, in Davis Auditorium in Palamountain Hall, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY.
Free and open to the public. For directions to Skidmore, call 518-580-5590.
Full series of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
More about Legs, a novel about Albany crime boss "Legs" Diamond, http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/wjk/legs.html
More about Pulitzer Prize winning novelist and Writers Institute Executive Director William Kennedy: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/wjk/biography.html
Friday, July 12, 2013
On Horror: Stephen King reviews Joyce Carol Oates
Stephen King reviewed The Accursed by Joyce Carol Oates (who reads tonight in Saratoga) this past May in the New York Times Book Review:
“Joyce Carol Oates has written what may be the world’s first postmodern Gothic novel: E. L. Doctorow’s ‘Ragtime’ set in Dracula’s castle. It’s dense, challenging, problematic, horrifying, funny, prolix and full of crazy people. You should read it. I wish I could tell you more.”
More: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/17/books/review/the-accursed-by-joyce-carol-oates.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
Full schedule of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Angry, female and refreshingly believable-- Claire Messud

More of the review: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2013/may/25/woman-upstairs-claire-messud-review
Full schedule of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html Read More......
Poet Jorie Graham: Imagining the Unimaginable
Pulitzer-winning poet Jorie Graham, who presents a free reading tomorrow in Saratoga Springs, talks to an interviewer about the purpose of art:
"And what is art for then? What is dreaming for? What is the imagination supposed
to do with its capacity to 'imagine' the end? Is the imagination of the
unimaginable possible, and, perhaps, as I have come to believe, might it be one
of the most central roles the human gift of imagination is being called upon to
enact? Perhaps if we use it to summon the imagination of where we are
headed— what that will feel like— what it will feel like to look back at this
juncture— maybe we will wake up in time?"
Read more of Deidre Wengen's Phillyburbs.com interview on the Poets.org website: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/20176
Full schedule of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Bharati Mukherjee and Clark Blaise Tomorrow
"After a half-century and a winding continent-wide journey they never planned, Clark Blaise and Bharati Mukherjee are at the forefront of the new immigrant fiction"
"Closely chaperoned Bharati Mukherjee, 23, had never been alone in the same room with a man when she met Clark Blaise at the University of Iowa near the unanticipated end of the Kennedy presidency. Two weeks later, the two young writers were married."
"Almost 48 years after that, following dual careers in which the couple have published almost 30 books between them, two of them co-written and the latest two so intertwined they actually share some characters, the authors sit together in Toronto for their first-ever joint interview."
More in The Globe: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/books-and-media/clark-blaise-and-bharati-mukherjee-a-shared-literary-journey/article583203/
Complete schedule of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html Read More......
Monday, July 8, 2013
Poet Rosanna Warren in Saratoga Tomorrow
Rosanna Warren, daughter of poet and novelist Robert Penn Warren (All The King's Men), will read from her work tomorrow at Skidmore.
Full schedule of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Warren visited us in Albany in 2011 to present the volume, Ghost in a Red Hat (2011), a collection of poems that “contemplate wreckage and sorrow” in family life, Hurricane Katrina, the Civil War, and the Trojan War. To a large extent, the collection represents a conscious effort to internalize and articulate the pain experienced by other people, both real and imagined. Warren asserts in one poem, “as long as the danger lived outside / me I couldn’t write it.”
More: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/warren_rosanna11.html
This Week's Summer Reading Recommendations
3 out of 9 of Publishers Weekly's summer reading picks for the week of July 8th are new books by NYS Writers Institute visitors....
Chris Bohjalian, who brought out the Armenian community in droves this past April for The Sandcastle Girls:
"The Light in the Ruins by Chris Bohjalian (Doubleday) - An exploration of post-WWII Italy doubles as a murder mystery in this entertaining historical whodunit from Bohjalian (The Sandcastle Girls). In 1952 Florence, Francesca Rosati, a dress-shop worker, is brutally murdered by a killer who carves out her heart, and Detective Serafina Bettini is assigned to solve the homicide."
Howard Norman, regular visitor to the Summer Writers Institute, who reads again on July 25:
And Stacey D'Erasmo who visited us in 2009:
"The Art of Intimacy: The Space Between by Stacey D’Erasmo (Graywolf) - Part of Graywolf’s “Art of” series on the craft of writing, edited by Charles Baxter, this first work of nonfiction by novelist D’Erasmo (The Sky Below) examines the concept of intimacy and the ways this mysterious phenomenon has been conveyed by writers, visual artists, and filmmakers. D’Erasmo organizes the book into chapters based on the places where intimacy occurs, and the results are lucid and provocative."
More: http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/tip-sheet/article/58057-pw-picks-the-best-new-books-for-the-week-of-july-8-2013.html?utm_source=Publishers+Weekly&utm_campaign=27e6247d6a-UA-15906914-1&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_0bb2959cbb-27e6247d6a-304669825 Read More......
Historical Fiction Writer Adam Braver Today
Adam Braver, award-winning author of novels that reimagine the Kennedy assassination, the Lincoln presidency, and the lives of Marilyn Monroe and Sarah Bernhardt, will present a free reading tonight in Saratoga.
Full schedule of free events here: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
About the Kennedy novel, November 22, 1963, Publisher's Weekly said, "With a captivating mix of fact and fiction, Braver chronicles the events surrounding JFK’s assassination to moving effect . . . While the accumulation of small moments gives the book its weightiness, the stories of people peripherally associated with the assassination make the book sing . . . Braver reveals the tragedy of a national story that decades later can still be acutely felt."
Friday, July 5, 2013
Joyce Carol Oates in a New Yorker video interview
"I'm not sure that I really have a personality...."
Joyce Carol Oates, who presents a free reading in Saratoga on July 12, gives an intimate video interview to the New Yorker on June 23, 2013.
All Readings are at 8:00 p.m. in Davis Audiorium, Palamountain Hall
Free and open to the public
Full schedule of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
New Yorker interview: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2013/06/video-joyce-carol-oates.html
Phillip Lopate on the Art of the Essay
Major American essayist Phillip Lopate, who presents a free reading in Saratoga on Monday 7/8, has published two new books in 2013-- the collection, Portrait Inside My Head: Essays, and the writer's guide, To Show and to Tell: The Craft of Literary Nonfiction.
Morris Dickstein reviewed both in the New York Times in March:
"His gods are Montaigne, the father of the essay, whose field of research was his own mind, and William Hazlitt, who, besides being an incomparable literary critic, sketched vehement novelistic impressions of what no one else thought worth noticing, from boxing matches and Indian jugglers to 'the pleasure of hating.'"
More: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/03/books/review/essays-and-a-writers-guide-by-phillip-lopate.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
Complete schedule of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Robert Pinsky on the PBS News Hour
A July 4, 2001 appearance by poet Robert Pinsky (who presents a free reading today 7/5 in Saratoga) on the PBS NewsHour was reshared yesterday on that program's website.
Pinsky read some astonishing lines from a poem by Walt Whitman ("By Blue Ontario's Shore") that emphasize the importance of self-criticism in any true expression of patriotism-- of recognizing our country's failings so that we may work to improve and perfect it.
Also featured is Pinsky's July 4, 2002 reading of poet John Hollander's poem about fireworks, "Sparklers."
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/art/blog/2013/07/from-the-newshour-archives-robert-pinsky-on-the-4th-of-july.html
For a full schedule of free readings at the New York State Summer Writers Institute in Skidmore:
http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Hillary Clinton's 1969 Commencement Speech at Wellesley
Robert Pinsky, former U.S. Poet Laureate, who reads July 5th at the New York State Summer
Writers Institute in Saratoga, remembers Hillary Clinton's commencement speech at Wellesley, which he attended as a young poetry professor. The piece appeared yesterday in Slate:
"What was amazing, and not standard, was the gift for rising to an occasion: a political gift and a matter of talent surging toward its realization. As part of the prepared part of her speech, Hillary Rodham read a poem by a classmate, a composition also touchingly of that era. On that day in May, in other words, the notes that were struck may have been unremarkable, but the occasion was like hearing a very young, uniquely gifted musician play: something in the sheer, expressive command—a word used about athletes, as well as musicians—was extraordinary, unmistakable, and already formed."
More: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/history/2013/07/hillary_clinton_wesleyan_commencement_speech_robert_pinsky_on_the_politician.html
Full schedule of free summer events:
http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Anti-sentimental romance fiction, tomorrow
Binnie Kirshenbaum, who reads at Skidmore tomorrow, July 4th, is celebrated for depictions of romantic love relationships in fiction that are never idealized and anything but sentimental.
Here's the Daily Beast on her most recent novel, The Scenic Route (2009):
“.... Binnie Kirshenbaum’s
clever, offbeat novel The Scenic Route is an antidote to all that soft-focus
sentiment. This is indeed a woman-has-midlife-crisis-and-finds-romance-in-Italy
story, but it is so resolutely unsentimental, even antisentimental, that you
won’t be dialing Alitalia anytime soon. Instead of escapist fantasy, narrator
Sylvia Landsman offers a reality check, sobering truths about family, regret,
loss, history—in fact, she provides commentary on all kinds of subjects.....
Just about the only thing she doesn’t serve up is a happy ending.”
—The Daily
Beast
Kirshenbaum shares the stage with award-winning poet, Frank Bidart.
Full schedule of free summer events: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html
Kirshenbaum also chairs the Writing Department at Columbia University School of the Arts: http://arts.columbia.edu/faculty/binnie-kirshenbaum
President of The Poetry Foundation Reads Today
Robert Polito, award-winning writer and poet, and new president of The Poetry Foundation (which boasts an astounding $200 million endowment from philanthropist Ruth Lilly), will present a free reading as part of the New York State Summer Writers Institute tonight. He will share the stage with novelist Ann Beattie.
Polito is also director of the writing program at The New School in Manhattan, and a past winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for his biography of pulp fiction writer Jim Thompson, Savage Art.
His latest book is the poetry-prose hybrid collection Hollywood and God (2013).
Here is the title poem, which starts "If only God would save me / I would know how to hurt you."
http://www.poetrysociety.org/psa/poetry/crossroads/own_words/page_1/
Full schedule of free readings: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/sumread.html