BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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X-WR-CALNAME:2023 Spring Literary Festival set for March 29-30
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Eastern Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260518T061037Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42033047145376
DTSTART:20230329T230000Z
DTEND:20230330T020000Z
DESCRIPTION:The 2023 Spring Literary Festival is set for March 29-30 in the
  Walter Hall Rotunda on the Athens Campus of Ohio University.\n\n \n\nWedn
 esday\, March 29\n\n7:30 p.m. Barrie Jean Borich lecture\n\n8:30 p.m. Deni
 se Duhamel reading\n\nThursday\, March 30\n\n10 a.m.: Megan Giddings lectu
 re\n\n11 a.m.: Denise Duhamel lecture\n\n5 p.m.: Barrie Jean Borich readin
 g\n\n6 p.m.: Megan Giddings reading\n\n \n\nThe festival\, hosted by the E
 nglish Department\, features authors Barrie Jean Borich\, Denise Duhamel\,
  and Megan Giddings.\n\n \n\nBarrie Jean Borich\n\nBorich is the author of
  Apocalypse\, Darling (Ohio State University Press: Mad Creek Books/Machet
 e Series in Literary Nonfiction 2018)\, which was shortlisted for a Lambda
  Literary Award. Her memoir Body Geographic (University of Nebraska Press/
 American Lives Series 2013) won the Lambda Literary Award in Memoir. Boric
 h’s book\, My Lesbian Husband (Graywolf 1999\, 2000)\, an LGBTQ classic\
 , won the American Library Association Stonewall Book Award\, according to
  her website profile.\n\nBorich’s essays have been anthologized in: Crit
 ical Creative Writing\; Waveform: Twenty-First Century Essays by Women\; a
 nd in After Montaigne: Contemporary Essayists Cover the Essays\, and have 
 been cited in Best American Essays and Best American Non-Required Reading.
  She is the recipient of The Florida Review Editor’s Prize in the Essay 
 and the Crab Orchard Review Literary Nonfiction Prize\, and her work has a
 ppeared in Ecotone\, The Seneca Review\, Hotel Amerika\, Indiana Review\, 
 TriQuarterly\, Passages North\, The Washington Post\, The Rumpus\, and man
 y other literary journals.\n\nBorich is an associate professor in the Engl
 ish Department and M.A. in Writing and Publishing Program at DePaul Univer
 sity in Chicago.\n\nDenise Duhamel\n\nDuhamel has published numerous colle
 ctions of poetry\, including Second Story (2021)\,  Scald (2017)\, Blowout
  (2013)\, which was a finalist for a National Books Critics Circle Award\,
  Ka-Ching! (2009)\, Queen for a Day: Selected and New Poems (2001)\, and K
 inky (1997). She coedited\, with Nick Carbo\, Sweet Jesus: Poems about the
  Ultimate Icon (2002)\, and\, with Maureen Seaton and David Trinidad\, Sai
 nts of Hysteria: A Half-Century of Collaborative American Poetry (2007). D
 uhamel has also collaborated with Seaton on several poetry collections\, i
 ncluding Little Novels (2002)\, Oyl (2000)\, and Exquisite Politics (1997)
 \, according to her website profile.\n\nDuhamel’s honors include a fello
 wship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Her work has been included
  in several volumes of Best American Poetry. It has also been featured on 
 National Public Radio’s All Things Considered and Bill Moyers’s PBS po
 etry special Fooling with Words. She is a professor at Florida Internation
 al University.\n\nMegan Giddings\n\nGiddings has degrees from University o
 f Michigan and Indiana University. In 2018\, she was a recipient of a Barb
 ara Deming Memorial fund grant for feminist fiction. Her novel\, Lakewood\
 , was published by Amistad in 2020. It was one of New York Magazine’s 10
  best books of 2020\, one of NPR’s best books of 2020\, a Michigan Notab
 le book for 2021\, was a nominee for two NAACP Image Awards\, and a finali
 st for a 2020 LA Times Book Prize in the Ray Bradbury Prize for Science Fi
 ction\, Fantasy\, and Speculative Fiction category\, according to her webs
 ite profile.\n\nIn 2021\, she was named one of Indiana University’s 20 u
 nder 40. Her second novel\, The Women Could Fly (Amistad 2022)\, was named
  one of The Washington Post’s Best Science Fiction and Fantasy novels of
  2022\, one of Vulture’s Best Fantasy books of 2022\, and was a New York
  Times Editors’ Choice.\n\nShe lives in Minneapolis and teaches at the U
 niversity of Minnesota.\n\nAbout the Spring Literary Festival\n\nSince 198
 6\, the Spring Literary Festival has featured some of the world's finest\,
  most distinguished writers of poetry\, fiction and non-fiction. The festi
 val is sponsored by the Creative Writing program in the English Department
  and is generously funded by the College of Arts & Sciences. All readings 
 and lectures are free and open to the public.\n\n \n\nThe visiting writers
  are present throughout the festival\, lecturing and reading from their wo
 rk\, and books by the authors are available for purchase after each progra
 m\, and at Little Professor Book Center in Athens.\n\n \n\nFor more inform
 ation\, contact David Wanczyk\, Spring Literary Festival Coordinator.
GEO:39.322732;-82.10287
LOCATION:Walter Hall\, Rotunda
SUMMARY:2023 Spring Literary Festival set for March 29-30
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.ohio.edu/event/2023_spring_literary_festival
 _set_for_march_29-30
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260518T061037Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42051590012004
DTSTART:20230330T150000Z
DTEND:20230330T170000Z
DESCRIPTION:The 2023 Spring Literary Festival is set for March 29-30 in the
  Walter Hall Rotunda on the Athens Campus of Ohio University.\n\n \n\nWedn
 esday\, March 29\n\n7:30 p.m. Barrie Jean Borich lecture\n\n8:30 p.m. Deni
 se Duhamel reading\n\nThursday\, March 30\n\n10 a.m.: Megan Giddings lectu
 re\n\n11 a.m.: Denise Duhamel lecture\n\n5 p.m.: Barrie Jean Borich readin
 g\n\n6 p.m.: Megan Giddings reading\n\n \n\nThe festival\, hosted by the E
 nglish Department\, features authors Barrie Jean Borich\, Denise Duhamel\,
  and Megan Giddings.\n\n \n\nBarrie Jean Borich\n\nBorich is the author of
  Apocalypse\, Darling (Ohio State University Press: Mad Creek Books/Machet
 e Series in Literary Nonfiction 2018)\, which was shortlisted for a Lambda
  Literary Award. Her memoir Body Geographic (University of Nebraska Press/
 American Lives Series 2013) won the Lambda Literary Award in Memoir. Boric
 h’s book\, My Lesbian Husband (Graywolf 1999\, 2000)\, an LGBTQ classic\
 , won the American Library Association Stonewall Book Award\, according to
  her website profile.\n\nBorich’s essays have been anthologized in: Crit
 ical Creative Writing\; Waveform: Twenty-First Century Essays by Women\; a
 nd in After Montaigne: Contemporary Essayists Cover the Essays\, and have 
 been cited in Best American Essays and Best American Non-Required Reading.
  She is the recipient of The Florida Review Editor’s Prize in the Essay 
 and the Crab Orchard Review Literary Nonfiction Prize\, and her work has a
 ppeared in Ecotone\, The Seneca Review\, Hotel Amerika\, Indiana Review\, 
 TriQuarterly\, Passages North\, The Washington Post\, The Rumpus\, and man
 y other literary journals.\n\nBorich is an associate professor in the Engl
 ish Department and M.A. in Writing and Publishing Program at DePaul Univer
 sity in Chicago.\n\nDenise Duhamel\n\nDuhamel has published numerous colle
 ctions of poetry\, including Second Story (2021)\,  Scald (2017)\, Blowout
  (2013)\, which was a finalist for a National Books Critics Circle Award\,
  Ka-Ching! (2009)\, Queen for a Day: Selected and New Poems (2001)\, and K
 inky (1997). She coedited\, with Nick Carbo\, Sweet Jesus: Poems about the
  Ultimate Icon (2002)\, and\, with Maureen Seaton and David Trinidad\, Sai
 nts of Hysteria: A Half-Century of Collaborative American Poetry (2007). D
 uhamel has also collaborated with Seaton on several poetry collections\, i
 ncluding Little Novels (2002)\, Oyl (2000)\, and Exquisite Politics (1997)
 \, according to her website profile.\n\nDuhamel’s honors include a fello
 wship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Her work has been included
  in several volumes of Best American Poetry. It has also been featured on 
 National Public Radio’s All Things Considered and Bill Moyers’s PBS po
 etry special Fooling with Words. She is a professor at Florida Internation
 al University.\n\nMegan Giddings\n\nGiddings has degrees from University o
 f Michigan and Indiana University. In 2018\, she was a recipient of a Barb
 ara Deming Memorial fund grant for feminist fiction. Her novel\, Lakewood\
 , was published by Amistad in 2020. It was one of New York Magazine’s 10
  best books of 2020\, one of NPR’s best books of 2020\, a Michigan Notab
 le book for 2021\, was a nominee for two NAACP Image Awards\, and a finali
 st for a 2020 LA Times Book Prize in the Ray Bradbury Prize for Science Fi
 ction\, Fantasy\, and Speculative Fiction category\, according to her webs
 ite profile.\n\nIn 2021\, she was named one of Indiana University’s 20 u
 nder 40. Her second novel\, The Women Could Fly (Amistad 2022)\, was named
  one of The Washington Post’s Best Science Fiction and Fantasy novels of
  2022\, one of Vulture’s Best Fantasy books of 2022\, and was a New York
  Times Editors’ Choice.\n\nShe lives in Minneapolis and teaches at the U
 niversity of Minnesota.\n\nAbout the Spring Literary Festival\n\nSince 198
 6\, the Spring Literary Festival has featured some of the world's finest\,
  most distinguished writers of poetry\, fiction and non-fiction. The festi
 val is sponsored by the Creative Writing program in the English Department
  and is generously funded by the College of Arts & Sciences. All readings 
 and lectures are free and open to the public.\n\n \n\nThe visiting writers
  are present throughout the festival\, lecturing and reading from their wo
 rk\, and books by the authors are available for purchase after each progra
 m\, and at Little Professor Book Center in Athens.\n\n \n\nFor more inform
 ation\, contact David Wanczyk\, Spring Literary Festival Coordinator.
GEO:39.322732;-82.10287
LOCATION:Walter Hall\, Rotunda
SUMMARY:2023 Spring Literary Festival set for March 29-30
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.ohio.edu/event/2023_spring_literary_festival
 _set_for_march_29-30
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260518T061037Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_42033047147425
DTSTART:20230330T230000Z
DTEND:20230331T020000Z
DESCRIPTION:The 2023 Spring Literary Festival is set for March 29-30 in the
  Walter Hall Rotunda on the Athens Campus of Ohio University.\n\n \n\nWedn
 esday\, March 29\n\n7:30 p.m. Barrie Jean Borich lecture\n\n8:30 p.m. Deni
 se Duhamel reading\n\nThursday\, March 30\n\n10 a.m.: Megan Giddings lectu
 re\n\n11 a.m.: Denise Duhamel lecture\n\n5 p.m.: Barrie Jean Borich readin
 g\n\n6 p.m.: Megan Giddings reading\n\n \n\nThe festival\, hosted by the E
 nglish Department\, features authors Barrie Jean Borich\, Denise Duhamel\,
  and Megan Giddings.\n\n \n\nBarrie Jean Borich\n\nBorich is the author of
  Apocalypse\, Darling (Ohio State University Press: Mad Creek Books/Machet
 e Series in Literary Nonfiction 2018)\, which was shortlisted for a Lambda
  Literary Award. Her memoir Body Geographic (University of Nebraska Press/
 American Lives Series 2013) won the Lambda Literary Award in Memoir. Boric
 h’s book\, My Lesbian Husband (Graywolf 1999\, 2000)\, an LGBTQ classic\
 , won the American Library Association Stonewall Book Award\, according to
  her website profile.\n\nBorich’s essays have been anthologized in: Crit
 ical Creative Writing\; Waveform: Twenty-First Century Essays by Women\; a
 nd in After Montaigne: Contemporary Essayists Cover the Essays\, and have 
 been cited in Best American Essays and Best American Non-Required Reading.
  She is the recipient of The Florida Review Editor’s Prize in the Essay 
 and the Crab Orchard Review Literary Nonfiction Prize\, and her work has a
 ppeared in Ecotone\, The Seneca Review\, Hotel Amerika\, Indiana Review\, 
 TriQuarterly\, Passages North\, The Washington Post\, The Rumpus\, and man
 y other literary journals.\n\nBorich is an associate professor in the Engl
 ish Department and M.A. in Writing and Publishing Program at DePaul Univer
 sity in Chicago.\n\nDenise Duhamel\n\nDuhamel has published numerous colle
 ctions of poetry\, including Second Story (2021)\,  Scald (2017)\, Blowout
  (2013)\, which was a finalist for a National Books Critics Circle Award\,
  Ka-Ching! (2009)\, Queen for a Day: Selected and New Poems (2001)\, and K
 inky (1997). She coedited\, with Nick Carbo\, Sweet Jesus: Poems about the
  Ultimate Icon (2002)\, and\, with Maureen Seaton and David Trinidad\, Sai
 nts of Hysteria: A Half-Century of Collaborative American Poetry (2007). D
 uhamel has also collaborated with Seaton on several poetry collections\, i
 ncluding Little Novels (2002)\, Oyl (2000)\, and Exquisite Politics (1997)
 \, according to her website profile.\n\nDuhamel’s honors include a fello
 wship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Her work has been included
  in several volumes of Best American Poetry. It has also been featured on 
 National Public Radio’s All Things Considered and Bill Moyers’s PBS po
 etry special Fooling with Words. She is a professor at Florida Internation
 al University.\n\nMegan Giddings\n\nGiddings has degrees from University o
 f Michigan and Indiana University. In 2018\, she was a recipient of a Barb
 ara Deming Memorial fund grant for feminist fiction. Her novel\, Lakewood\
 , was published by Amistad in 2020. It was one of New York Magazine’s 10
  best books of 2020\, one of NPR’s best books of 2020\, a Michigan Notab
 le book for 2021\, was a nominee for two NAACP Image Awards\, and a finali
 st for a 2020 LA Times Book Prize in the Ray Bradbury Prize for Science Fi
 ction\, Fantasy\, and Speculative Fiction category\, according to her webs
 ite profile.\n\nIn 2021\, she was named one of Indiana University’s 20 u
 nder 40. Her second novel\, The Women Could Fly (Amistad 2022)\, was named
  one of The Washington Post’s Best Science Fiction and Fantasy novels of
  2022\, one of Vulture’s Best Fantasy books of 2022\, and was a New York
  Times Editors’ Choice.\n\nShe lives in Minneapolis and teaches at the U
 niversity of Minnesota.\n\nAbout the Spring Literary Festival\n\nSince 198
 6\, the Spring Literary Festival has featured some of the world's finest\,
  most distinguished writers of poetry\, fiction and non-fiction. The festi
 val is sponsored by the Creative Writing program in the English Department
  and is generously funded by the College of Arts & Sciences. All readings 
 and lectures are free and open to the public.\n\n \n\nThe visiting writers
  are present throughout the festival\, lecturing and reading from their wo
 rk\, and books by the authors are available for purchase after each progra
 m\, and at Little Professor Book Center in Athens.\n\n \n\nFor more inform
 ation\, contact David Wanczyk\, Spring Literary Festival Coordinator.
GEO:39.322732;-82.10287
LOCATION:Walter Hall\, Rotunda
SUMMARY:2023 Spring Literary Festival set for March 29-30
URL;VALUE=URI:https://calendar.ohio.edu/event/2023_spring_literary_festival
 _set_for_march_29-30
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Presentations
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
