Join us as we welcome back four UMass MFA alumni for a reading and conversation. A book signing and reception will follow.
Emily Hunt (MFA '13) is the author of the poetry collection
Dark Green, named a “standout debut” by
Publishers Weekly and a "Must-Read Poetry Debut" by Lit Hub, and the chapbook
Company. Claudia Rankine selected Hunt’s manuscript-in-progress
Stranger as an honorable mention in the 2020 Donald Hall Prize for Poetry competition. Hunt has also published two books of visual art:
Cousins and
This Always Happens. She lives and teaches in New York.
Robin McLean (MFA '11) was a lawyer and then a potter for 15 years in the woods of Alaska turning to writing at UMass Amherst. Her first short story collection
Reptile House, twice a finalist for the Flannery O’Connor Prize, won the BOA Editions Fiction Prize and was noted as a best book of 2015 in
Paris Review. Her debut novel
Pity the Beast was published in November 2021 and named a Best Book of Fiction in
The Guardian. Her collection of short fiction
Get 'em Young, Treat 'em Tough, Tell 'em Nothing will be published in October 2022. She now directs the Ike’s Canyon Writers Retreat in the high plain desert of central Nevada.
Wendy Xu (MFA '14) is most recently the author of the poetry collection
The Past, just published by Wesleyan in September 2021, and
Phrasis, named one of the 10 Best Poetry Books of 2017 by
The New York Times Book Review. Her work has appeared in
The Best American Poetry,
Granta,
Tin House,
Poetry,
American Poetry Review,
Conjunctions, and widely elsewhere. She is assistant professor of writing at The New School, where she teaches poetry.
Jung Yun (MFA '07) is the author of
O Beautiful (St. Martin’s Press, 2021), which was a
New York Times Editors’ Choice and Group Text selection, and
Shelter (Picador, 2016), which was long-listed for the Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize and a finalist for the Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers Award. Her work has appeared in
Tin House,
The Massachusetts Review,
The Indiana Review,
The Atlantic,
The Washington Post, and
The Los Angeles Review of Books, among others. Currently, she lives in Baltimore and serves as an Assistant Professor of English at the George Washington University. She also serves on the boards of directors at the PEN/Faulkner Foundation and the Alan Cheuse Center for International Writers.
The
2022 Juniper Literary Festival is a program of the University of Massachusetts Amherst MFA for Poets and Writers’ Juniper Initiative and made possible with generous support from
Mass Cultural Council;
UMass Arts Council;
College of Humanities & Fine Arts;
Department of English;
Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures;
Women of Color Leadership Network;
Arts Extension Service;
Office of the Provost and
Graduate School.