2013 Squire Summer Writing Residency
will be July 11–14 on the campus of Western Carolina University in
Cullowhee.
The
Squire Summer Writing Residency is the Network’s smallest and most intensive
conference. Admission is limited to the first fifty registrants who sign up for
one of three three-day workshops:
- Poetry with Kathryn
     Stripling Byer, North Carolina’s first woman Poet Laureate. Byer has
     published six full-length collections of poetry, including Descent
     (LSU Press, 2012), her most recent. A re-print of her first, the AWP
     Award-winning The Girl in the Midst of the Harvest, is forthcoming
     from Press 53. Her work has appeared in many journals and newspapers,
     including The Atlantic, Hudson Review, Boston Globe,
     and Georgia Review.
- Fiction with
     Elizabeth Lutyens. Lutyens returned to her native North Carolina after a
     career in the Boston area as a journalist in print and television. Her
     novel-in-progress, Medicine Island, was a semi-finalist in the 2011
     William Faulkner – Wisdom Competition. A faculty member of the Great
     Smokies Writing Program at UNC Asheville since 2006, she currently teaches
     its by-invitation Prose Master Class and is editor-in-chief of its online
     literary magazine, The Great Smokies Review.
- Creative
     Nonfiction with Catherine Reid. Reid is the author of Coyote:
     Seeking the Hunter in Our Midst (Houghton Mifflin) and Falling into
     Place (forthcoming from Beacon Press); she has also edited two
     anthologies and served as editor of nonfiction for a literary journal. Her
     essays have appeared in such journals as Georgia Review, Massachusetts
     Review, Fourth Genre, and Bellevue Literary Review. She
     is currently the director of creative writing at Warren Wilson College,
     where she specializes in literary nonfiction and environmental writing.
The
Residency will begin on Thursday evening, July 11, with registration and
check-in. Workshops begin on Friday morning, July 12, and continue until the
early afternoon of July 14. The Residency will also feature panel discussions
and readings by faculty and attendees.
Registrants
also will enjoy meals together and have the option of staying overnight in
on-campus accommodations. 
“The
small class sizes and extended, intensive format of the Squire Summer Writing
Residency makes it especially safe for writers to share their work, get to know
other writers, and find inspiration,” NCWN executive director Ed Southern said.
Registration
is available online at www.ncwriters.org or by
calling 336-293-8844.
The nonprofit North Carolina Writers’ Network is the state’s oldest and largest literary arts services organization devoted to writers at all stages of development. For additional information, visit www.ncwriters.org.
The nonprofit North Carolina Writers’ Network is the state’s oldest and largest literary arts services organization devoted to writers at all stages of development. For additional information, visit www.ncwriters.org.
 
