visiting writer

Cruz kicks off Spring VWS

cruzPuerto Rican poet Victor Hernández Cruz has made a habit of being ahead of his time.

At age 17, Cruz self-published his first book of poetry (Papo Got His Gun) on a mimeograph machine — well before the internet made book-minting something anyone can accomplish with a few clicks.

At age 18, he eschewed his senior year of high school to co-found a collective of writers and actors in Harlem and assume an editor position with Umbra magazine, still remembered today as a literary beacon for the Black Arts Movement. 

At age 20, he became the first Hispanic author published by a major printing house when Random House released his collection Snaps in 1969.

At age 32, he was named one of America’s greatest poets by Life Magazine.

At the risk of continuing on and leaving every writer reading this feeling inadequate (or at least jealous), I’ll note only one more of Cruz’s firsts: that he will be the first up during Butler’s Vivian S. Delbrook Visiting Writers Series for the spring semester–7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 28, at the Eidson-Duckwall Recital Hall.

Cruz once dubbed his verse “linguistic stereo,” referencing his inclusion of both English and Spanish phrases in his poetry. But don’t confuse this for butchered Spanglish. The poet deftly fuses dual languages to trumpet a new American music, taking cues from Octavio Paz and Tito Puente alike.

In his 1991 poem “Problems with Hurricanes,” Cruz muses on the true fear of campesinos before the storm hits, a phobia that poetically echoes Lorca’s famous “New York (Office and Denunciation)” — “This is not hell, but the street / Not death, but the fruit stand.” Cruz puts a new spin on the adage by adding heavy winds to the equation:

Death by drowning has honor
If the wind picked you up
and slammed you
Against a mountain boulder
This would not carry shame
But
to suffer a mango smashing
Your skull
or a plantain hitting your
Temple at 70 miles per hour
is the ultimate disgrace.

Cruz’s tragicomic rhapsodizing eventually dies down, and he is left with merely one nugget of profound advice for the world: that we should quit fretting over acts of God, and should instead “beware of mangoes / And all such beautiful / sweet things.”

So don’t fear the polar vortex that could bring us snow or subzero temps during Cruz’s visit (note: I am not a meteorologist and in fact have no idea about the five-day forecast). And to reassure those firmly in Cruz’s camp, fresh produce will not be served.

Without any valid excuses, you only risk shame by staying home.

Butler to become Russellandia!

swamplandia vampires lemon grove pulitzer butler mfaThe penultimate member of this fall’s Visiting Writers Series is Karen Russell, author of two collections of short stories and the Pulitzer-nominated, Orange Prize-long-listed novel Swamplandia! On Monday, November 4, Russell will be reading in the Krannert room of Clowes Hall at 7:30 PM. Currently serving as Bard College’s writer-in-residence, Russell has been published in Best American Short Stories, Conjunctions, Granta, The New Yorker, and Zoetrope. Not to mention her debut short story collection St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves won the Bard Fiction Prize in 2011. Not to mention that, just recently, Russell became one of the youngest recipients of a MacArthur grant. Continue reading

Butler to become Russellandia!

swamplandia vampires lemon grove pulitzer butler mfaThe penultimate member of this fall’s Visiting Writers Series is Karen Russell, author of two collections of short stories and the Pulitzer-nominated, Orange Prize-long-listed novel Swamplandia! On Monday, November 4, Russell will be reading in the Krannert room of Clowes Hall at 7:30 PM. Currently serving as Bard College’s writer-in-residence, Russell has been published in Best American Short Stories, Conjunctions, Granta, The New Yorker, and Zoetrope. Not to mention her debut short story collection St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves won the Bard Fiction Prize in 2011. Not to mention that, just recently, Russell became one of the youngest recipients of a MacArthur grant. Continue reading

Zuravleff next visiting writer

Mary Kay Zuravleff visits Butler University as part of the Vivian Delbrook Visiting Writer's series.Butler’s next visiting writer is author Mary Kay Zuravleff. She’ll be giving a reading Wednesday, October 23 at 7:30 PM in the Eidson-Duckwall recital hall. Zuravleff has taught at Johns Hopkins, George Mason, and American University, and serves on the PEN/Faulkner Foundation board. She has been nominated for an Orange Prize, received the American Academy’s Rosenthal Award, and won the James Jones First Novel Award for The Frequency of Souls.

Yeah, that’s all impressive, but I’m really here to tell you about how awesome Zuravleff’s new novel Man Alive! is. Ready for it? It’s a novel about a struggling family. Are you sold? Continue reading

‘Fiercely honest’ poet visits Tuesday

Visiting Writer Alicia OstrikerAmerican poet and scholar Alicia Ostriker is Butler’s next visiting writer. The woman once called “America’s most fiercely honest poet” by Joel Brouwer of Progressive will be giving a reading as part of the Visiting Writers Series October 8 at 7:30 p.m. in the Clowes Hall Krannert Room. Amongst an almost innumerable list of honors and awards, Ostriker is a two-time National Book Award finalist, a Guggenheim fellow, and her 2010 book of poetry The Book of Seventy won the National Jewish Book Award in poetry as well as the Paterson Award for Sustained Literary Achievement.

Ostriker’s poetry and nonfiction are most deeply entrenched in her Jewish roots and feminist leanings, but she is unafraid to tackle war, politics and environmental issues. Her fourth book The Mother-Child Papers juxtaposes the birth of her son during the Vietnam War with the Kent State shootings that happened only weeks later, and her recent poem published in Poets for Living Waters, “Gaia Regards Her Children,” opens with the line, “Ingratitude after all I have done for them ingratitude.” Continue reading

‘Fiercely honest’ poet visits Tuesday

Visiting Writer Alicia OstrikerAmerican poet and scholar Alicia Ostriker is Butler’s next visiting writer. The woman once called “America’s most fiercely honest poet” by Joel Brouwer of Progressive will be giving a reading as part of the Visiting Writers Series October 8 at 7:30 p.m. in the Clowes Hall Krannert Room. Amongst an almost innumerable list of honors and awards, Ostriker is a two-time National Book Award finalist, a Guggenheim fellow, and her 2010 book of poetry The Book of Seventy won the National Jewish Book Award in poetry as well as the Paterson Award for Sustained Literary Achievement.

Ostriker’s poetry and nonfiction are most deeply entrenched in her Jewish roots and feminist leanings, but she is unafraid to tackle war, politics and environmental issues. Her fourth book The Mother-Child Papers juxtaposes the birth of her son during the Vietnam War with the Kent State shootings that happened only weeks later, and her recent poem published in Poets for Living Waters, “Gaia Regards Her Children,” opens with the line, “Ingratitude after all I have done for them ingratitude.” Continue reading