Kai Coggin (she/her) is the inaugural Poet Laureate of the City of
Hot Springs, and author of four collections, most recently Mother of Other Kingdoms (Harbor Editions, 2024). She is a Certified Master
Naturalist, a K-12 Teaching Artist in poetry with the Arkansas Arts Council, a CATALYZE Grant Fellow with the Mid-America Arts Alliance, and host of the
longest running consecutive weekly open mic series in the country—Wednesday Night Poetry.
Coggin was awarded the Don Munro Leadership in
the Arts Award, and the 2021 Governor’s Arts Award. She was twice named “Best Poet in
Arkansas” by the Arkansas Times, and
nominated for Arkansas State Poet Laureate and Hot Springs Woman of the Year. Her poetry has been nominated six times for The Pushcart
Prize, aand Best of the Net in 2022. Ten of Kai’s poems are going to the moon with the Lunar Codex project, and on earth
they have been publishedin POETRY, Prairie Schooner, Best
of the Net, SWWIM, Lavender Review, About Place Journal, and elsewhere. She lives with her wife
in a peaceful valley where they tend to wild ones and each other.
Quraysh Ali Lansana is author of twenty books in poetry, nonfiction and children's literature. Lansana is currently a Tulsa Artist Fellow and a Visiting Associate Professor of English/Creative Writing at the University of Tulsa. He was formerly a Lecturer in Africana Studies at Oklahoma State University-Tulsa where he also served as Director of the Center for Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation. Lansana is Executive Producer of KOSU/NPR's "Focus: Black Oklahoma" monthly radio program, which is a recipient of a 2022 duPont-Columbia Award, a 2022 NAACP Image Award, a 2022 Oklahoma Society of Professional Journalists Award and was a Peabody nominee. Lansana is also the recipient of a 2022 Emmy Award, a 2022 Oklahoma Association of Broadcasters Award and a 2022 National Educational Telecommunications Association Public Media Award for his roles as host and consultant for the OETA (PBS) documentary film "Tulsa Race Massacre: 100 Years Later." Lansana is a three-time International Regional Magazine Award-winning Contributing Editor for Oklahoma Today magazine. A former faculty member of both the the Writing Program of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and the Drama Division of The Julliard School, Lansana served as Director of the Gwendolyn Brooks Center for Black Literature and Creative Writing at Chicago State University from 2002-2012 and was Associate Professor of English/Creative Writing there until 2014. His most recent books include, Opa's Greenwood Oasis, the skin of dreams; new and collected poems, 1994-2018, The Whiskey of Our Discontent: Gwendolyn Brooks as Conscience & Change Agent, and The BreakBeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip Hop. Forthcoming titles include Killing the Negative: A Conversation in Art & Verse, with Joel Daniel Phillips, a children's biography of Ralph Ellison, and a series of books on The Black Rodeo. Lansana's work appears in Best American Poetry 2019. He is a founding member of Tri-City Collective and serves on the Board of Directors of the Philbrook Museum of Art and Oklahoma Humanities, is a Curatorial Scholar for The Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art and a Curatorial Board Co-Chair for the Ragdale Foundation. He is a Cave Canem Fellow and a member of the first cohort of the Culture of Health Leadership for Racial Healing Fellowship.
Steve Yarbrough is the author of twelve books,
most recently the novel Stay Gone Days. His
other books are the nonfiction title Bookmarked:
Larry McMurtry’s The Last Picture Show,
the novels The Unmade World, The Realm of Last Chances, Safe from
the Neighbors, The End of California, Prisoners of War, Visible Spirits and The Oxygen Man, and the short story collections Veneer, Mississippi History and Family Men. His work has been published
in several foreign languages, including Dutch, Italian, Japanese and Polish,
and it has also appeared in Ireland, Canada, and the U.K. He is the recipient
of numerous awards, including the Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters
Award for Fiction, the California Book Award, the Richard Wright Award and the
Robert Penn Warren Award. He has been a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award and
is a member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers. The Unmade World won the 2019 Massachusetts Book Award for Fiction.
The son of Mississippi Delta cotton farmers, Steve is currently a professor in the Department of Writing, Literature and Publishing at Emerson College. He has two daughters – Lena Yarbrough and Antonina Parris – and is married to the Polish writer Ewa Hryniewicz-Yarbrough. They divide their time between Boston and Krakow.
Steve is an aficionado of jazz and bluegrass music, which he plays on guitar, mandolin and banjo, often after midnight.
No comments:
Post a Comment