1,486 research outputs found

    Jill Mellick, August 29, 1948 - December 20, 2022

    No full text
    Jill Mellick, Ph.D. author, multi-media artist, Jungian psychologist and Professor Emerita, passed away December 20, 2022

    Jill McCorkle, 30th Annual ODU Literary Festival

    No full text
    Jill McCorkle is the author of five novels and three story collections including Creatures of Habit, The Cheerleader, and Ferris Beach. Her work has appeared in Atlantic Monthly, Ploughshares, Best American Short Stories, The Southern Review, and New Stories from the South, among other publications. She has received the New England Book Award, the John Dos Passos Prize, and the North Carolina Award for Literature. Currently, McCorkle is on the faculty at North Carolina State University as the Lee Smith Writer in Residence

    Author Meets Critics: Jill North, Physics, Structure and Reality

    No full text
    Commentary and responses from 2022 Eastern APA book symposium for Jill North's Physics, Structure and Reality

    Things long forgotten: a collection

    No full text
    Collection of various fictional short works.M.A.by Jill ProtokowiczWilling sacrifice -- Another goddamn deal with the devil -- All around you -- Fanning the flames -- Marble suitors -- Frozen live

    Jill Falconer

    No full text
    Photograph - Jill Falconer standing beside a Christmas Tree, Athabasca, Albert

    Public Reading & Conversation with Jill Talbot

    No full text
    Jill Talbot is the author of The Last Year: Essays (Winner of Wandering Aengus Press Editor’s Prize, August 2023), as well as The Way We Weren’t: A Memoir and Loaded: Women and Addiction, a collection of personal essays. Her writing has appeared in literary journals such as AGNI, Brevity, Colorado Review, Diagram, Gulf Coast, Hotel Amerika, Lit Mag, River Teeth: A Journal of Narrative Nonfiction, and The Paris Review Daily and has been recognized seven times in TheBest American Essays annual series. She is Associate Professor of Creative Writing and a University Distinguished Teaching Professor at the University of North Texas

    Kitty & Jill

    No full text
    Kitty & Jill is a lesbian romance dramedy musical adapted from the novel Jill by Elizabeth Amy Dillwyn, an openly-lesbian author in the 19th century. Set in 1884 industrial Victorian England, Kitty & Jill follows dual protagonists: Jill Trecastle, who runs away from her home in high society in order to forge a new life and identity for herself; and Kitty Mervyn, another young high society woman who decides to go on a sketching trip and hires Jill to be her traveling-maid, leading to the two of them falling in love. Throughout their chaotic adventure, Kitty and Jill must learn how to be honest with themselves in the face of high society façades. The score is inspired by Victorian era music, classic Broadway, and modern musical theatre; and the tone of the show combines historical Victorian-era high society language with pepperings of modern-day jargon, as a tool of emphasis upon the fact that this is a piece of classical literature being revitalized in the present day. Instrumentally, the music is strings-and-piano-heavy, along with various pitched and unpitched percussion instruments.https://remix.berklee.edu/graduate-studies-cmat/1005/thumbnail.jp

    LAI Craft Talk: Literary Arts Institute Writer in Residence, Jill Talbot

    No full text
    Jill Talbot is the author of The Last Year: Essays (Winner of Wandering Aengus Press Editor’s Prize, August 2023), as well as The Way We Weren’t: A Memoir and Loaded: Women and Addiction, a collection of personal essays. Her writing has appeared in literary journals such as AGNI, Brevity, Colorado Review, Diagram, Gulf Coast, Hotel Amerika, Lit Mag, River Teeth: A Journal of Narrative Nonfiction, and The Paris Review Daily and has been recognized seven times in TheBest American Essays annual series. She is Associate Professor of Creative Writing and a University Distinguished Teaching Professor at the University of North Texas

    Review of author Jill Ker Conway\u27s talk at Portland\u27s First Parish Church, in on

    No full text
    Review of author Jill Ker Conway\u27s talk at Portland\u27s First Parish Church, in one of Portland Public Library\u27s Brown Bag Lectures. She spoke of the memoir craze by way of her latest book, When Memory Speaks: Reflections on Autobiography

    Interview with Jill Christman

    No full text
    Writer, editor, and activist Jill Christman is the author of If This Were Fiction: A Love Story in Essays, and two memoirs. She currently resides in Muncie, Indiana, where she teaches creative nonfiction writing and literary editing and Ball State University
    corecore