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Poetry in the Woods: Application Deadline

September 15 @ 11:59 pm

Applications for the October 2024 Poetry in the Woods Workshop are open through September 15. Work on your poetry with award-winning faculty in inspiring outdoor locations around St. Louis!

Poetry in the Woods takes place on October 4, 5 & 6 at Castlewood State Park, Forest Park, Endangered Wolf Center, & Wildlife Rescue Center. 2024 faculty includes James Kimbrell, Jason Vasser-Elong, Elizabeth Hoover, Kerry James Evans, Andrea Scarpino and Shane Seely.

APPLICATION INFO

Application takes only a minute or two and is free!
Financial aid and scholarships available.
Only 20 seats available.

Early submission is recommended. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis.

ABOUT THE WORKSHOP

NEW IN 2024

  • Working on a Chapbook or a section of a larger book? PITW participants in 2024 have the option to get focused feedback from faculty on up to 10 pages of poetry.
  • A mix of new and returning faculty members.
  • Small group workshop sessions with at least two faculty members per six participants.
  • New locations including: Forest Park, Castlewood State Park, and Wildlife Rescue Center.
  • More opportunities for organic interaction for faculty and participants.
  • New hiking locations! Enhanced rideshare options! And a campfire poetry reading/wolf howl!​
ABOUT THE FACULTY

JAMES KIMBRELL directs the Creative Writing Program at Florida State University. His poems have appeared in anthologies including the Best American Poetry and the Pushcart Prize Anthology. The recipient of a Ruth Lilly Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, His most recent collection is Smote (2015, Sarabande Books) and his forthcoming collection The Law of Truly Large Numbers is due out with the University of Pittsburgh Press in 2025.

JASON VASSER-ELONG is a professor of English and African American Studies in the Pierre Laclede Honors College at the University of Missouri – St. Louis (UMSL), where he recently earned a Doctorate of Education with a focus in Educational Practice. He is an applied – anthropologist with a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing and Bachelor of Arts in Cultural Anthropology with a concentration in African Diaspora studies. He is the author of Shrimp (2Leaf Press, 2018), a collection of poetry that analyzes identity in a post-colonial context.

ELIZABETH HOOVER is an Assistant Professor at Webster University in Saint Louis where she teaches classes like Archival Poetics, Genderqueer Frankenstein, and LGBTQ+ Literature. She is a poet, essayist, and critic. Her first collection of poetry, the archive is all in present tense, received the 2021 Barrow Street Book Prize and her creative nonfiction has appeared in Southeast ReviewNorth American Review, and StoryQuarterly. The recipient of the 2024 Pat Holt Prize for Critical Art Writing from Lambda Literary, Elizabeth has writing about art, film, and books for such publications as PaperThe Art Newspaper, and the Washington Post.

KERRY JAMES EVANS is a professor in the MFA program at Georgia College & State University and serves as the poetry editor for Arts & Letters. He is the author of Bangalore (Copper Canyon), a Lannan Literary Selection. He earned a PhD in English from Florida State University, an MFA in creative writing from Southern Illinois University-Carbondale, and a BA in English from Missouri State University. His forthcoming collection, Nine Persimmons, is due out in 2026 with University of Nebraska Press under its imprint, The Backwaters Press.

ANDREA SCARPINO has published the poetry collections Once Upon Wing Lake, What the Willow Said as it Fell, and Once, Then, and the co-edited anthology Undocumented: Great Lakes Poets Laureate on Social Justice. She received a PhD in Creative Writing from Bath Spa University, and an MFA from The Ohio State University. She is also co-editor of Nine Mile Magazine and served as Poet Laureate of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula 2015-2017. She teaches at St. Louis University High School. 

SHANE SEELY directs the MFA program at the University of Missouri–St. Louis. His poems have appeared in journals nationwide, including The Southern ReviewPrairie SchoonerNotre Dame Review, and Antioch Review, and have been featured on Poetry Daily and Verse Daily. He is the author of three previous books of poetry, The First Echo (LSU Press, 2019), The Surface of the Lit World (Ohio University Press, 2015 – Winner of the Hollis Summer Poetry Prize) and The Snowbound House (Anhinga Press, 2008 – Winner of the Philip Levine Prize in Poetry).

PRESENTED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH