1)
Maranda
Cucchiara: Like each of the first four student writers here, Maranda is a
graduating senior in our English Studies department; her focus has been on
Professional Writing, and as that website and her soon-to-be released novel Vivian, Falling reflect, she’s already
well on her way to the professional part (having been working on the writing
part for a long time now).
2)
Tyler
Welsh: Tyler is many things—a very talented actor and director who has
been an integral part of our FSU Theater program throughout his time here, a
funny funny guy whose podcasts make excellent use of that sense of humor, a pop culture connoisseur and critic, and just a unique and compelling voice. I
expect big things!
3)
Kristina
Testagrossa: As is the case for a lot
of the talented young writers and artists I’ve met, Kristina’s creative writing
is developing alongside a number of other interests—her candlemaking company,
her journalistic work (such as the pieces for the Fitchburg State student
newspaper linked at her site), her blogging. Old-school writers might see that
as a description of someone focused too broadly—but I see it as a body of work
that she’ll carry forward into her future career, whatever it includes.
4)
Rob
Gosselin: Rob’s a seriously multi-talented guy too, as that website
reflects. But if I had to bet on what he’ll be most successful doing (while
still doing all these other things too, ‘cause that’s how he rolls), I’d go
with poet. He’s hugely talented, but most of all what I see is the passion he
has for it—for writing it, for reading it, for hearing it, for being around it.
Rob had another career before coming back to school, and I think his poetry feels
like a gift to him—and it does to me too!
5)
Jessica Gemmell Afshar: Jessica doesn’t have a
website yet, but we’re working on that (UPDATE: Now she does, and it's at the link!). She’s been a student in the Fitchburg
State MA in English program for a few years now, and is about ready to finish
her Master’s and figure out what’s next. I guarantee a couple things about that
answer-in-progress: it’ll include writing across many genres (short fiction,
creative non-fiction, literary and cultural analysis, poetry); and it’ll be
compelling and engaging and fresh and well worth your time. Watch this space
for more!
One of the
best things about being a teacher is feeling that America’s future is in very
good hands—and I’d say the same about American literature, thanks to folks like
these young writers.
More next
week,
Ben
PS. Any
writers, young or not, whose work or voice you’d highlight?
4/28
Memory Day nominee: Harper Lee, who only
published
one novel, but what a powerful
and significant American novel it is!
4/29 Memory Day nominee: Iwao Takamoto, the Japanese
American animator who went from a childhood
in the Manzanar internment camp to designing
Scooby-Doo and Fred Flintstone, directing Charlotte’s
Web, and positively
influencing the lives and imaginations of
countless millions of American children.
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