Posts Tagged ‘profile’
Student Profiles: Cher Hendricks

Current Home: Carrollton, GA
Age: 40
Program: MFA
Year in the program: 2009 would by my 4th if I wasn’t so lame
Fill us in on your background. Schools attended, work situation, etc.
B.A. in Liberal Arts, Baylor University 1989
M.Ed. in Educational Psychology, University of Houston, 1992 (I think)
Ph.D. in Educational Research and Measurement, University of South Carolina, 1998
I teach graduate research courses at the University of West Georgia and am in my 11th year there. Also direct the doctoral program in School Improvement.
What led you to the School of Letters program?
A need to be in writing workshop with others serious about writing and who desire to better their craft. And it’s Sewanee. What else is there to say?
What writing/academic projects are you working on currently?
Creative work: creative non-fiction collection of stories; poetry chapbook; couple of short stories (fiction) that will never get to a final stage.
Professional work: ongoing revisions of a textbook on research (now in its 2nd ed) and a variety of research articles.
Favorite class so far at Sewanee:
Loved American Renaissance with Gatta and my writing workshops with Erin and Michael.
What would be your fantasy class or workshop at Sewanee, and who would teach?
Fantasy workshop would be Joyce Carol Oates teaching fiction via the drill sergeant instructional method…a survivor kind of thing where we compete not to get voted off the mountain.
What advice would you give to any prospective students?
Advice: get the reading lists in January and do all your reading before you come in June.
What are you reading these days?
Today I am reading To Kill a Mockingbird. The rest of the month will include some Gabriel García Márquez, Grace Paley, Kay Ryan, Seamus Heaney (Beowulf translation), and whatever else I bought at Atlanta Book Exchange last weekend.
Student Profiles: Victoria Williams
Current Home: Toccoa, GA
Age: 35
Program: MFA
Year in the program: 3rd year in summer of ‘09
Blog/website: loblollie.blogspot.com
Fill us in on your background. Schools attended, work situation, etc.
SUNY Albany ‘01, B.A. Spanish
Spanish teacher in a private high school in Anderson, SC
What led you to the School of Letters program?
Had been plagued to write seriously for years and needed structure ( i.e. a classroom) and flexibility (i.e. a summer program)
What writing/academic projects are you working on currently?
I have a few short stories I am polishing that revolve around mother-daughter relationships and/or the idea of home and what that means.
Favorite class so far at Sewanee:
Literature of the American South
What would be your fantasy class or workshop at Sewanee, and who would teach?
A creative non-fiction class taught by Lee Gutkind
What advice would you give to any prospective students?
Come devoted to your craft. Come green and humble enough to be taught to write better. Come with the willingness to put yourself on a serious schedule.
What are you reading these days?
I recently finished Two Kinds of Decay by Sarah Manguso. (It was in a stack of free books that John Jeremiah Sullivan gave away at the end of the semester.) Right now, I’m absorbing morsels from Letitia Baldrige’s New Manners for New Times. Next I’m leaning towards finishing Gilead and then Home, both by Marilynne Robinson.
Student Profiles: Hannah Palmer

Current home: East Point, GA
Age: 30
Program: MFA
Year in the program: Just finished my 2nd summer
Blog/website: strongsilent.com
Fill us in on your background. Schools attended, work situation, etc.
Graduated from Agnes Scott with a BA in English Lit/Creative Writing, spent a few years working in publishing in NYC, started experimenting with interactive media and printmaking, married, moved back to ATL, landed a job with an ad agency, established my garage printshop
What led you to the School of Letters program?
I’ve been kind of dreaming about an MFA since the last days of undergrad. An ad for the School of Letters in the Oxford American made me curious. My mom lives in Sewanee, so it was like puzzle pieces coming together.
What writing/academic projects are you working on currently?
I’m really getting into the history and landscape of the southside of Atlanta. I’m trying to archive vanishing bits of southernness around here. Also, I print all kinds of stuff in my garage and then write about artmaking.
Favorite class so far at Sewanee:
Creative Non-fiction with John Jeremiah Sullivan
What would be your fantasy class or workshop at Sewanee, and who would teach?
Screenwriting with Miranda July
What advice would you give to any prospective students?
Catch up on sleep when the program is over. And then look for ways to integrate the utopian Sewanee experience into your “other” life.
What are you reading these days?
Design blogs mostly. Cormac McCarthy’s Border Trilogy and American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld. (because Prep was so juicy.)
Student Profiles: Grier Kellett

Current home: Atlanta, Georgia
Age: why? 31
Program: MA
Year in the program: finished second year
Fill us in on your background. Schools attended, work situation, etc.
I graduated with my BA in English from the University of South Carolina in ‘99. I teach World Literature to the sophomores of The Galloway School and have begun my sixth year there. I taught freshmen English at Southside High School (Greenville, S.C.) when I first began. I can’t think of anything better than spending my days talking about books and grading essays.
What led you to the School of Letters program?
Fortuitously, I received the brochure for SOL in my mailbox at Galloway. Many of my colleagues graduated from Sewanee and encouraged me to attend. I could think of nothing better than attending a graduate school in the summers on such a beautiful campus.
What writing/academic projects are you working on currently?
Thanks to the efforts of Hannah Palmer, I am now involved in a continuation of a writing workshop that plans to meet over the year.
Favorite class so far at Sewanee:
1850s American Literature with John Ernest
What would be your fantasy class or workshop at Sewanee, and who would teach?
I would love to take a Modernist Lit. class taught by Ernest.
What advice would you give to any prospective students?
Bring quarters for the washing machine and be prepared to read. a lot.
What are you reading these days?
White Like Me by Tim Wise and my students’ essays
Student Profiles: Christine Doza
Current home: Nashville, TN
Age: 33
Program: MFA
Year in the program: Just finished first year
Blog/website: No, but if you find me on Goodreads.com we can have fun conversations about books!
Fill us in on your background. Schools attended, work situation, etc.
I graduated from Sarah Lawrence College and lived in New York City for 10 more years, writing, dancing, and performing. Eventually I got a Masters in Education, became a math teacher, and moved to Nashville, Tennessee. Now I teach mathematics and philosophy in a public high school and write poetry whenever I can.
What led you to the School of Letters program?
I had wanted to get an MFA for a long time, but doing a full-time two-year program was impractical for me. When I saw the ad for the Sewanee School of Letters in the Oxford American, there was no question. I knew I wanted to go.
What writing/academic projects are you working on currently?
My focus right now is getting more poems published, so I am researching journals and sending work out.
Favorite class so far at Sewanee:
I couldn’t possibly determine. I completely adored both classes I’ve taken as the School of Letters so far: a poetry workshop with Charles Martin and Jenn Lewin’s seminar in The Bible as Literature. My teachers were wonderfully intelligent and informed in their fields.
What would be your fantasy class or workshop at Sewanee, and who would teach?
A survey of modern literature with Charles Martin, perhaps? Honestly, he could teach anything he liked and I would sign up!
What advice would you give to any prospective students?
If you want to come, do whatever you need to make it happen. It is like a fantasy camp: nothing to do but read and write; no distractions but the beautiful Sewanee landscape and passionate conversations with classmates.
What are you reading these days?
Where to begin? I just finished Alan Moore’s graphic novel Watchmen and have begun An Arsonist’s Guide to Writers’ Homes in New England by Brock Clarke. Also Wodehouse’s Carry On, Jeeves is around here somewhere, probably under the copy of Hermione Lee’s biography of Virgina Woolf I’ve been reading for 6 months!

