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The Principal of Fine Arts Program in Creative Writing at The Ohio Land University is designed to aid graduate students develop to the fullest their talents and abilities every bit writers of poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction. Artistic writing classes are conducted as workshops or tutorials, and there are numerous opportunities for related report both within and beyond the Department of English.  All students are fully funded for three years in a programme that is well known for its sense of community and a faculty that is as committed to teaching as to their own writing.

Approximately 36 graduate students are taught by tenure track, visiting and affiliated (Movie Studies) faculty, who also teach in the undergraduate plan. Graduate pupil TAs teach introductory and intermediate special topics undergraduate creative writing courses, undergraduate literary publishing, every bit well as first-twelvemonth and 2nd-year writing (required courses for all Ohio State undergraduates). TAs teach two classes a year, one in autumn and one in leap. In addition, they have the opportunity to work as editors of Ohio State's prize-winning, nationally distributed literary magazine, The Journal, and to serve on the editorial staff of our two almanac book prizes, 1 in verse and one in prose.

Course offerings are varied and numerous. Special topics graduate workshops (in the long poem, in characterization, in literary translation, in humor writing, and then on) ensure that, in addition to "regular" workshops, opportunities grow for experimentation. Our graduate programme includes coursework designed for "crossing over," such as, verse workshops for MFA fiction writers or essayists with little experience writing poems; and "forms" classes in prosody, the novel, the memoir, novellas, for example.

Screenwriting for MFAs is offered regularly, and many students also elect to report playwriting or writing for performance as an elective. Some MFAs choose to pursue the Graduate Interdisciplinary Specialization in the Fine Arts (GISFA), which allows them to take graduate courses in other arts disciplines. Indeed, Ohio State's size and breadth offer our students the take chances to explore many disciplines that enrich their study and exercise of creative writing.

Advanced

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Core faculty

Photograph of Kathy Fagan Grandinetti

Kathy Fagan Grandinetti is the director of the Creative Writing Program and writer of v books of poems:Sycamore(Milkweed Editions, 2017);The Raft, a National Poetry Series Laurels Winner;MOVING & ST RAGE, winner of the 1998 Vassar Miller Prize for Poetry;The Charm (2002); andLIP (2009). Her poems have been widely anthologized and her piece of work has appeared in such publications asPoetry,The Paris Review,FIELD,The Kenyon Review,Slate,Ploughshares,The New Republic andBlackbird. She is the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), the Ingram Merrill Foundation, The Frost Place and the Ohio Arts Quango. Director of the Creative Writing Plan, she continues to serve every bit advisor toThe Periodical, for which she and Michelle Herman were awarded the 2004 Ohioana Award for Editorial Excellence. Fagan is as well series editor for The Ohio State University Press/The Journal Wheeler Poesy Prize. Please visit Kathy Fagan'due south website.
E-mail:fagan.iii@osu.edu


Photograph of Michelle Herman

Michelle Herman is the author of the novelsMissing,Dog, andDevotion; the drove of novellasA New and Glorious Life; the essay collectionsThe Eye of Everything,Stories Nosotros Tell Ourselves, andLike A Song; and a book for children:A Girl's Guide to Life. Essays and curt fiction have appeared inConjunctions;American Scholar;O, the Oprah Magazine;The Southern Review;Creative Nonfiction;Redbook;Story Quarterly and many other journals. Her awards and honors include a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, a James Michener Fellowship, numerous individual artist's fellowships from the Ohio Arts Council and the Greater Columbus Arts Council, and 2 major teaching awards — the Academy Distinguished Teaching Award and the Rodica Botoman Award for Distinguished Undergraduate Instruction and Mentoring — both from Ohio State, where she has taught since 1988. Please visit Michelle Herman's website.
Electronic mail: herman.two@osu.edu


Photograph of Marcus Jackson

Marcus Jackson earned a BA from the University of Toledo and continued his poetry studies at New York Academy (NYU) and equally a Cavern Canem young man. His poems take appeared in such publications every bitThe American Poetry Review,The New Yorker andTin House. His showtime collection of verse,Neighborhood Register, was released in 2011, and his second collection,Pardon My Eye(Northwestern University Printing/TriQuarterly Books) came out in 2019. Delight visit Marcus Jackson'south website.
Email: jackson.2577@osu.edu


Photograph of Lee Martin

Lee Martin is the author of the novelsThe Bright Forever (a finalist for the 2006 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction);River of Heaven;Quakertown;Break the Skin; andLate 1 Night. He has also published 3 memoirs:From Our House,Turning Basic andSuch a Life. His first book was the brusque story collection,The Least Yous Need To Know, and a new collection,The Common UFO Network, was published in 2018. His craft book,Telling Stories: The Craft of Narrative and the Writing Life, came out in 2017. He is the co-editor ofPassing the Word: Writers on Their Mentors. His fiction and nonfiction accept appeared in such places asHarper's, Ms., Creative Nonfiction, The Georgia Review, The Kenyon Review, 4th Genre, River Teeth, The Southern Review, Prairie Schooner, Blink Train, The Best American Mystery Stories andThe Best American Essays. He is the winner of the Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Ohio Arts Quango. He was the winner of the 2006 Alumni Award for Distinguished Teaching from Ohio Land, where he is a College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of English. Please visit Lee Martin'south website.
Email: martin.1199@osu.edu


Photograph of Elissa Washuta

Elissa Washuta is a fellow member of the Cowlitz Indian Tribe and a writer of personal essays and memoir. She is the author of two books,Starvation Mode andMy Body Is a Volume of Rules, named a finalist for the Washington State Volume Accolade. With Theresa Warburton, she is co-editor of the albumExquisite Vessel: Shapes of Native Nonfiction,forthcoming from University of Washington Press. Her work has appeared inSalon,The Relate of College Education,BuzzFeed and elsewhere. She has received fellowships and awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, Artist Trust, 4Culture, Potlatch Fund and Hugo Business firm. Please visit Elissa Washuta'southward website.
Email: washuta.2@osu.edu


Image of Professor White

Nick White is the writer of the story collectionSweetness and Lowand the novelHow to Survive a Summer.His fiction and essays have appeared inThe Kenyon Review, The Literary Review, Indiana Review, Guernicaand elsewhere. A native of Mississippi, he earned a PhD in English and creative writing from The University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Delight visit Nick White's website.
Email: white.1615@osu.edu


Affiliated kinesthesia

Photograph of Angus Fletcher

Angus Fletcher is the Blackness List and Nicholl award-winning screenwriter of Eye EARTH (produced by Bob Shaye and Michael Lynne, directed past Michel Apted), WEE FREE MEN (produced past Allison Thomas and Gary Ross, based on the novel by Terry Pratchett), and VARIABLE Man (produced by Isa Dick and Electric Shepherd, based on the novella by Philip K. Dick). He earned his PhD from Yale and has published articles on dramatic ideals and practise in Disquisitional Inquiry, New Literary History, The Journal of the History of Philosophy, and a dozen other academic journals. His book Evolving Hamlet appeared on Palgrave in 2011, and his inquiry and writing has been supported past grants from the National Endowment for the Humanties, the National Science Foundation, and the Mellon Foundation. Prior to coming to Ohio State, he taught at USC, Stanford and Teach for America.
Email: fletcher.300@osu.edu

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Alumni of the MFA Program in Creative Writing have had their fiction, verse and creative nonfiction appear inThe Best American Essays, The Best New American Voices, The Best American Travel Writing, Can Firm, Southern Review, Kenyon Review, Gettysburg Review, Glimmer Train, Creative Nonfiction, 4th Genre, River Teeth, The Yale Review, Poetry, American Poesy Review, New Criterion, Field, Iowa Review, The Paris Review, Prairie Schooner, N American Review, Ploughshares, The Washington Post Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Quarterly Westward, Epoch, Five Points, and other notable venues.

Below are but a few of these outstanding alumni poets and writers.

Maggie Smith

Maggie Smith is the author ofCry Up (Tupelo Printing, forthcoming 2018);The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison (Tupelo Press 2015), winner of the Dorset Prize and the 2016 Independent Publisher Volume Awards Gold Medal in PoetryLamp of the Torso (Cherry Hen Printing 2005), winner of the Benjamin Saltman Honor; and three prizewinning chapbooks. Her poems regularly appear in journals such equallyThe Paris Review, The Southern Review, The Gettysburg Review, Plume, Virginia Quarterly Review, andGuernica. The recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Ohio Arts Council, the Sustainable Arts Foundation, and elsewhere, Smith is a freelance writer and editor in Bexley, Ohio, and she serves equally a consulting editor to theKenyon Review. (MFA, 2003) Maggie Smith's website.

Photograph credit: Lauren Powell


Claire Vaye Watkins

Claire Vaye Watkins (MFA, 2011) is the author of the novelAureate, Fame, Citrus (2015) andBattleborn , a collection of stories (2012).Battleborn was awarded The Story Prize and the 2013 Dylan Thomas Prize and listed past theSan Francisco Chronicle as ane of the Best Books of 2012. Watkins was awarded an American Academy Arts & Messages Prize in 2012 and has received fellowships from the Writers' Conferences at Sewanee and Bread Loaf. Her stories and essays have appeared inGranta,One Story,The Paris Review,Ploughshares,Glimmer Railroad train,Best of the West 2011, andBest of the Southwest 2013.Watkins is an assistant professor at Bucknell Academy and the co-director, with Derek Palacio, of the Mojave School, a non-profit creative writing workshop for teenagers in rural Nevada.

For more data near Watkins, her piece of work, and the Mojave School, visit her website.

Photo credit: Heike Steinweg


Donald Ray Pollock

Donald Ray Pollock (MFA, 2009) is the author of the novelThe Devil All the Time (2011) andKnockemstiff (2008), a collection of stories. Pollock grew upwards in southern Ohio. At 17, He dropped out of loftier schoolhouse to work in a meatpacking plant then spent 32 years employed in a paper mill in Chillicothe, Ohio.Knockemstiffwon the 2009 PEN/Robert Bingham Fellowship, andThe De vil All the Time was listed past Esquire every bit one of the Three Books Every Man Should Read. Pollock'south work has appeared inTertiary Coast, The Journal,Sou'wester,Chiron Review,River Styx,Boulevard,Folio, Granta,The New York Times Volume Review,Washington Square, andThe Berkeley Fiction Review. He is the 2012 recipient of the M Prix de Littérature Policière, the about prestigious award for crime and detectives novels in France.

For more information about Pollock and his work, visit his website.


Picture of Yona Harvey

Yona Harvey (MFA, 2001) is a literary artist living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She is the author of the poetry collectionHemming the Water (Four Way Books: New York), which won the Kate Tufts Discovery Award from Claremont Graduate University.

She is too the recipient of an Individual Artist Grant in literary nonfiction from The Pittsburgh Foundation. Her poems can exist found injubilat, Gulf Declension, Callaloo, West Branch, and diverse journals and anthologies, includingA Poet'due south Craft: A Comprehensive Guide to Making and Sharing Your Poetry(Ed. Annie Finch). She lives non far from where jazz pianist and composer Mary Lou Williams grew upwards. Williams married the spiritual to the secular in her music, and is a regular muse in Yona's writing. She is an assistant professor in the Writing Programme at the University of Pittsburgh.


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2021-2022

Visiting Writer Laura van den Berg

Friday, October 1, 2021 at 4 p.grand. about. Register here.

Laura van den Berg was born and raised in Florida. Her nearly recent collection of stories, I Hold a Wolf by the Ears, was published by FSG in July and named a "best summer read" by The New York Times, Fourth dimension Magazine, Esquire, Harper's Boutique and Entertainment Weekly, amidst others. She is the author of two previous collections, The Isle of Youth (FSG, 2013) and What the World Will Look Like When All the Water Leaves Us (Dzanc Books, 2009) and the novels Discover Me (FSG, 2015) and The Third Hotel (FSG, 2018). The Third Hotel was a finalist for the Young Lions Fiction Award, an IndieNext Pick, a Powell'due south Books Indispensable Pick and named a "all-time book of 2018" past over a dozen publications. Laura'due south honors include the Rosenthal Family Foundation Honour from the American University of Arts & Messages, the Bard Fiction Prize, a MacDowell Colony Fellowship, a Civitella Ranieri Foundation Fellowship, a Pushcart Prize, an O. Henry Award and the Jeannette Haien Ballard Author'south Prize.

Visiting Writer LaTanya McQueen

Friday, November 5, 2021 at 4 p.m. in Denney Hall 311

McQueen'due south novelWhen the Reckoning Comeswas published with Harper Perennial, an imprint of HarperCollins. She'southward also the author ofAnd Information technology Begins Like This, an essay collection. She received her MFA from Emerson College, her PhD from the University of Missouri, was the 2017-2018 Robert P. Dana Emerging Writer Fellow at Cornell College and is currently an Assistant Professor of English language and Creative Writing at Coe College. She writes both fiction and nonfiction and has been published inCarve Mag, Passages North, Bennington Review, Fugue, 9th Letter of the alphabet, Grist, The Florida Review, Black Warrior Review, Fourteen Hills, New Orleans Review, Nimrod, New Due south and Booth. She's won the Ailment Literary Prize and the Walker Percy Prize in Fiction.

Visiting Writer Ilya Kaminsky

Friday, March four, 2022 at 5:30 p.m. in Denney Hall 311

Ilya Kaminsky was born in Odessa, quondam Soviet Union in 1977, and arrived to the United States in 1993, when his family unit was granted asylum past the American regime. He is the author ofDeaf Commonwealth(Graywolf Press) andDancing In Odessa(Tupelo Press) and co-editor and co-translated many other books, includingEcco Anthology of International Poetry(Harper Collins) andDark Elderberry Branch: Poems of Marina Tsvetaeva(Alice James Books). His piece of work won The Los Angeles Times Book Award, The Anisfield-Wolf Book Award, The National Jewish Book Award, the Guggenheim Fellowship, The Whiting Honour, the American Academy of Arts and Letters' Metcalf Honour, Lannan Fellowship, Academy of American Poets' Fellowship, NEA Fellowship,Poetry magazine's Levinson Prize, and was as well shortlisted for the National Book Honour, National Volume Critics Circle Award, Neustadt International Literature Prize and T.S. Eliot Prize (UK).

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2020-2021

Event flyer with picture of Aimee Nezhukumatathil

Visiting Writer Aimee Nezhukumatathil

Friday, March 26, 2021, at 4 p.m. on Zoom

Aimee Nezhukumatathil is the author of the New York Times best selling illustrated collection of nature essays and Kirkus Prize finalist, World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments (2020, Milkweed Editions), which was called as Barnes and Noble'south Book of the Year. She has four previous poetry collections: Oceanic (Copper Canyon Press, 2018), Lucky Fish (2011), At the Drive-In Volcano (2007) and Miracle Fruit (2003), the last iii from Tupelo Press. Her nearly recent chapbook is Lace & Pyrite, a collaboration of garden poems with the poet Ross Gay. Her writing appears twice in the All-time American Verse Series, The New York Times Magazine, ESPN, Ploughshares, American Poetry Review and Can House.

2019-2020

Visiting Author Liza Wieland

Fri, September xiii, 2019 at 4 p.chiliad. in Denney Hall 311

Liza Wieland is the author of eight works of fiction and a volume of poems. She has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Christopher Isherwood Foundation and the Northward Carolina Arts Quango. She is the 2017 winner of the Robert Penn Warren Prize from the Fellowship of Southern Writers. Her novel,A Watch of Nightingales, won the 2008 Michigan Literary Fiction Honor and her previous novel,Land of Enchantment, was a longlist finalist for the 2016 Chautauqua Prize. She lives in Oriental, Northward Carolina, and she teaches at E Carolina University.

Native Craft Reading Series presents Billy-Ray Belcourt

Midweek, September 18, 2019 at 4 p.m. in Denney Hall 311

Billy-Ray Belcourt (he/him) is a author and academic from the Driftpile Cree nation. He is a PhD candidate and 2018 Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholar in the Department of English language and Film Studies at the University of Alberta; his doctoral projection is a creative-theoretical ane called "The Conspiracy of NDN Joy." He is as well a 2016 Rhodes Scholar and holds an MSt in women'south studies from the University of Oxford and Wadham College. In the First Nations Youth category, Belcourt was awarded a 2019 Indspire Award, which is the highest honor the Indigenous community bestows on its ain leaders. In January 2020, he will exist an assistant professor of Indigenous artistic writing at the Academy of British Columbia.

Visiting Writer Nicole Sealey

Friday, October 18, 2019 at four p.m. in Denney Hall 311
MFA Workshop: Sabbatum, October 19 in Denney Hall 311

Born in St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands and raised in Apopka, Florida, Nicole Sealey is the author ofOrdinary Beast, finalist for the PEN Open Book and Hurston/Wright Legacy Awards, andThe Animal Afterward Whom Other Animals Are Named, winner of the Drinking Gourd Chapbook Verse Prize. Her other honors include a 2019 Rome Prize, the Stanley Kunitz Memorial Prize from The American Poesy Review, the Poetry International Prize and a Daniel Varoujan Award, grants from the Elizabeth George and Jerome Foundations, too equally fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, CantoMundo, Cave Canem, MacDowell Colony and the Poetry Project. Her work has appeared inThe New Yorker and elsewhere. Sealey holds an MLA in Africana studies from the Academy of Southward Florida and an MFA in creative writing from New York Academy. Formerly the executive managing director at Cave Canem Foundation, she is a 2019-2020 Hodder Beau at Princeton University.

Visiting Writer Robert Fieseler

Friday, January ten, 2020 at 4 p.m. in Denney Hall 311

Robert W. Fieseler is the 2019 National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association "Journalist of the Yr" and the acclaimed debut author ofTinderbox: The Untold Story of the Upward Stairs Lounge Fire and the Rising of Gay Liberation, winner of the Edgar Laurels in Best Fact Crime and Lambda Literary'southward Judith A. Markowitz Award for Emerging Writers. He graduated co-valedictorian from the Columbia Journalism School and lives with his husband and dog in New Orleans.

Visiting Author Dan Kois

Friday, January 24, 2020 at iv p.m. in Denney Hall 311
MFA Workshop: Saturday, January 25 in Denney Hall 311

Dan Kois is the author ofHow to Be a Family unit and the co-writer ofThe Earth Just Spins Forward.

2018-2019

Amy Fusselman-Idiophone

Visiting Writer Amy Fusselman

Wednesday, September 12 at 4:thirty p.m. at the Wexner Centre for the Arts Bookstore

Amy Fusselman is a author, artist and publisher based in New York City. She is the author of three books of nonfiction:Brutal Park: A Meditation on Play, Space and Run a risk for Americans Who Are Nervous, Distracted and Afraid to Die (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015);The Pharmacist's Mate (McSweeney'due south, 2013); andeight(McSweeney's, 2013). Her new book,Idiophone, was released from Coffee House Printing on July 3rd, 2018. Her writing has appeared inARTnews, Ms., The New York Times, Artnet, The Believer, McSweeney'south Internet Tendency, andThe Atlantic, among other places. Fusselman is the publisher atOhio Edit, a digital fine art and literary journal that offers 99-cent downloadable essays  on idea-provoking topics.

Danez Smith

Visiting Writer Danez Smith

Reading: Friday, September 14 at 4:30 p.thou. in 311 Denney Hall.
MFA Student Workshop: Saturday, September 15.

Danez Smith is a Blackness, queer, poz author and performer from St. Paul, MN. Danez is the author ofDon't Telephone call United states of america Dead(Graywolf Printing, 2017), a finalist for the National Book Accolade, and [insert] boy(YesYes Books, 2014), winner of the Kate Tufts Discovery Award and the Lambda Literary Honor for Gay Poetry. Danez is besides the author of two chapbooks,hands on your knees (2013, Penmanship Books) andblack picture show (2015, Button Poetry), winner of the Push button Poetry Prize. They are the recipient of fellowships from the Verse Foundation, the McKnight Foundation, and is a 2017 National Endowment for the Arts Fellow. Danez'southward work has been featured widely including in/onBuzzfeed, The New York Times, PBS NewsHour, Best American Poetry, Verse Magazine, and on the Tardily Testify with Stephen Colbert. Danez is a member of the Night Dissonance Collective and is the co-host of VS with Franny Choi, a podcast sponsored by the Verse Foundation and Postloudness.

Alice McDermott

Visiting Author Alice McDermott

Reading: Friday, September 28 at 4:xxx p.m. in 311 Denney Hall.
MFA Student Workshop: Sat, September 29.

Alice McDermott's first novel,A Bigamists' Daughter, was published to broad acclaim in 1982.That Nighttime (1987), her second novel, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and for theLos Angeles Times Book Prize.At Weddings and Wakes (1992), her 3rd novel, became aNew York Timesbestseller.Charming Billy (1998), won the National Book Accolade. Ms. McDermott'south other books includeChild of My HeartandAfter This.  Ms. McDermott received her BA from the State University of New York at Oswego, and her MA from the Academy of New Hampshire. She has taught at the University of California at San Diego and American Academy, has been a writer-in-residence at Lynchburg and Hollins Colleges in Virginia, and was lecturer in English at the University of New Hampshire. Her curt stories have appeared inMs., Redbook, Mademoiselle andSeventeen. The recipient of a Whiting Writers Laurels, Ms. McDermott is currently writer-in-residence at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Melissa Febos

Visiting Writer Melissa Febos

Reading: Friday, March 1 in 311 Denney Hall. Time: 4 p.m.
MFA Student Workshop: Saturday, March 2.

Melissa Febos is the author of the critically acclaimed memoir,Whip Smart (St. Martin'southward Press 2010) and the essay collection,Abandon Me (Bloomsbury 2017), whichThe New Yorker called "mesmerizing," and was an Indie Next Option and named a All-time Book of 2017 byEsquire, Volume Riot, The Cutting, Electric Literature, The Brooklyn Rail, Hurry, Refinery29, Salon, andThe Rumpus. The recipient of an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College, she is currently Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Monmouth University. She serves on the Board of Directors of VIDA: Women in Literary Arts, the PEN America Membership Commission, and co-curated the Manhattan reading and music serial, Mixer, for ten years. She curates literary events, teaches workshops, and speaks widely. The daughter of a bounding main captain and a psychotherapist, she was raised on Greatcoat Cod and lives in Brooklyn.

2017-2018

Tommy Pico

Native Craft Reading Serial presents Tommy Pico

Friday, April 13, 2018 at 4 p.grand. in Denney 311

Tommy "Teebs" Pico is the founder and editor-in-chief of birdsong, an antiracist/queer-positive collective, small printing and zine that publishes art and writing. The author of absentMINDR (VERBALVISUAL, 2014)—the first chapbook APP published for iOS mobile/tablet devices—Pico was a Queer/Fine art/Mentors countdown fellow and a 2013 Lambda Literary fellow in poetry and has published poems in Bomb, Guernica, [PANK] and elsewhere. Originally from the Viejas Indian reservation of the Kumeyaay nation, he at present lives in Brooklyn, where he co-curates the reading series Poets With Attitude (PWA) with Morgan Parker.

Gabe Habash Stephen Florida

Visiting Writer Gabe Habash

Friday, April 6, 2018 at 4 p.m. in Denney 238

Columbus native Gabe Habash comes back to read from his debut novel,Stephen Florida.  Hanya Yanagihara, author ofA Niggling Life, says, "InStephen Florida, Gabe Habash has created a coming-of-age story with its own, oft explosive, rhythm and velocity. Habash has a canny sense of how young men speak and carry, and in Stephen, he'south created a singular character: funny, aggressive, affecting, but likewise securely troubled, vulnerable and compellingly foreign. This is a shape-shifter of a volume, both a dark ode to the mysteries and landscapes of the American West and a complex and convincing character study."  Gabe is currently the fiction reviews editor forPublishers Weekly. He holds an MFA from New York University.

Lina María Ferreira Cabeza-Vanegas

Visiting Writer Lina María Ferreira Cabeza-Vanegas (creative nonfiction)

Friday, February 23, 2018 at 4 p.m. in Denney 311
MFA Pupil Workshop: Saturday, February 24

Lina María Ferreira Cabeza-Vanegas received a 2016 Writer'due south Award from the Rona Jaffe Foundation. Her nonfiction book,Don't Come up Back, was released in 2017 from Mad River Books, an imprint of the Ohio State Press. She has MFA degrees in both creative nonfiction and literary translation, both from the University of Iowa. She is also the author ofDrown Sever Sing.

Toni Jensen

Native Craft Reading Series presents Toni Jensen

Reading:  Mon, Nov 13, 2017 at 4:30 p.grand. in 311 Denney Hall

Toni Jensen'due south first story collection,From the Hilltop, was published through the Native Storiers Series at the Academy of Nebraska Press. Her stories have been published in journals such asEcotone,Denver Quarterly, andFiction International and accept been anthologized inNew Stories from the South,Best of the Southwest, andBest of the West: Stories from the Broad Side of the Missouri. She's working on a collection-in-progress, chosenCowboyistan, nearly fracking and the sex activity trafficking of Indigenous women. She teaches in the Programs in Artistic Writing and Translation at the University of Arkansas. She is Métis.

Garth Greenwell

Visiting Author Garth Greenwell (fiction)

Reading:  Sat, November 4, 2017 at v p.k. in 311 Denney Hall
MFA Pupil Workshop:  Sabbatum, November 4, 2017

Garth Greenwell is the author ofWhat Belongs to You, which won the British Book Award for Debut of the Year, was longlisted for the National Volume Award, and was a finalist for six other awards, including the PEN/Faulkner Laurels, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, and theLos Angeles Times Volume Prize. ANew York Times Book Review Editors' Choice, it was named a Best Book of 2016 by over 50 publications in ix countries, and is beingness translated into eleven languages. His short fiction has appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review,A Public Space, andVICE, and he has written criticism forThe New Yorker, theLondon Review of Books, and theNew York Times Book Review, amongst others. He lives in Iowa Urban center.

Molly Patterson

MFA Alumna Molly Patterson

Reading:  Tuesday, October 24, 2017 at 4 p.m. in 311 Denney Hall

Molly Patterson was born in St. Louis and lived in China for several years. Her work has appeared in several magazines, includingThe Atlantic Monthly andThe Iowa Review. She was the 2012-2013 Author-in-Residence at St. Albans School in Washington, D.C., and is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize. Her debut novel,Rebellion, was published by Harper (HarperCollins) in August 2017.

Tarfia Faizullah

Visiting Poet Tarfia Faizullah

Reading:  Friday, October twenty, 2017 at 4:xxx p.m. in 311 Denney Hall
MFA Pupil Workshop:  Saturday, October 21, 2017

Bangladeshi American poetTarfia Faizullah grew upwardly in Midland, Texas. She earned an MFA from the Virginia Commonwealth University program in artistic writing. Her first book,Seam(2014), won the Crab Orchard Series in Poetry First Book Honour. Faizullah's honors and awards include an Associated Writers Plan Intro Journals Award, a Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Prize, a Copper Nickel Poetry Prize, a Ploughshares'Cohen Honour, and a Staff of life Loaf Writers' Briefing Margaret Bridgman Scholarship in Poetry. A Kundiman fellow, she lives in Detroit where she teaches at the University of Michigan and is an editor for the Asian American Literary Review and Organic Weapon Arts Chapbook Serial. Her second book isRegisters of Illuminated Villages (Graywolf Press, 2018).

Camille Dungy and book cover

Visiting Writer Camille Dungy

co-sponsored by Project Narrative

Console Word "A Conversation well-nigh Camille Dungy'due south Writing": Tuesday, September 19 at 4 p.m. in 311 Denney Hall
Reading:  Wednesday, September 20, 2017 at 11 a.grand. in 311 Denney Hall

Camille T. Dungy is the author of iv collections of verse:Trophic Cascade (Wesleyan Upwards, 2017),Smith Bluish (Southern Illinois Upwardly, 2011),Suck on the Marrow (Cherry-red Hen Press, 2010), andWhat to Swallow, What to Drink, What to Leave for Poison (Ruby Hen Press, 2006). Her debut drove of personal essays isGuidebook to Relative Strangers (Due west. W. Norton, 2017). Dungy'south honors include an American Book Award, two Northern California Volume Awards, two NAACP Image Award nominations, and a California Book Honor silver medal. Her poems and essays have been published in Best American Poesy, The 100 Best African American Poems, most 30 other anthologies, and over ane hundred print and online journals.

2016-2017

Lia Purpura and books

Lia Purpura

April seven-9, 2017

Lia Purpura is the author of three collections of essays (Crude Likeness, On Looking,andIncrease) in addition to a collection of translations and three books of poems. A Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Honour (forOn Looking), she has also been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, an NEA Fellowship, a Fulbright Foundation Fellowship (Translation, Warsaw, Poland), and three Pushcart Prizes. Lia Purpura is Writer in Residence at the Academy of Maryland, Baltimore County, in Baltimore, Doc and teaches at the Rainier Writing Workshop  in Tacoma, WA. Recently, she has served as Bedell Visiting Author at the University of Iowa's MFA Plan in Nonfiction. www.liapurpura.com

Carl Phillips and books

Carl Phillips

October 22-23, 2016

Carl Phillips is the author of numerous books of poetry, includingReconnaissance,Silverchest,Double Shadow,Quiver of Arrows: Selected Poems 1986-2006, andRiding West. His honors include the 2006 University of American Poets Fellowship, an Honor in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Messages, the Pushcart Prize, the Academy of American Poets Prize, induction into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the Library of Congress. Phillips served as a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets from 2006 to 2012. He is Professor of English and of African and African American Studies at Washington University in St. Louis, where he likewise teaches in the Creative Writing Program.

Benjamin Percy and books

Benjamin Percy

September 23-25, 2016

Benjamin Percy is the author of three novels, the most recent among themThe Dead Lands  (Grand Central/Hachette, April 2015), a post apocalyptic reimagining of the Lewis and Clark saga. He is too the author ofRuby Moon (Grand Central/Hachette, May 2013) andThe Wilding (Graywolf Press, 2010), besides every bit two books of short stories,Refresh, Refresh (Graywolf Press, 2007) andThe Linguistic communication of Elk (Grand Fundamental/Hachette, 2012; Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2006).  His craft volume —Thrill Me: Essays on Fiction — volition be published by Graywolf Press in October of 2016. And his next novel,The Dark Net, is due out in 2017 with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. He too writes the Light-green Arrow and Teen Titans series at DC Comics.  His honors include a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Whiting Writers' Award, ii Pushcart Prizes, the Plimpton Prize, and inclusion in Best American Short Stories and Best American Comics. He is a fellow member of the WGA screenwriters' guild and has sold scripts to FOX and Starz. He currently has several picture show and Television projects in evolution.

2015-2016

Stuart Dybek

Stuart Dybek

November 20-22, 2015

Stuart Dybek is the author of iii books of fiction: I Sailed With Magellan, The Declension of Chicago, and Babyhood and Other Neighborhoods. Both I Sailed With Magellan and The Declension of Chicago were New York Times Notable Books, and The Coast of Chicago was a One Book Ane Chicago option.  Among Dybek's numerous awards are a PEN/Malamud Prize "for distinguished achievement in the short story," a Lannan Award, a Whiting Writers Award, an Honour from the Academy of Arts and Letters, several O.Henry Prizes, and fellowships from the NEA and the Guggenheim Foundation.

Meghan Daum

Meghan Daum

January 29-31, 2016

Meghan Daum is the writer of four books, well-nigh recently the collection of original essays The Unspeakable: And Other Subjects of Discussion. She is as well the editor of Selfish, Shallow and Self-Captivated: 16 Writers on the Conclusion Non To Have Kids. Her other books include the essay collection My Misspent Youth, the novel The Quality of Life Report, and Life Would Be Perfect If I Lived In That Firm, a memoir. Since 2005, Meghan has been an opinion columnist at The Los Angeles Times, covering cultural and political topics. She is the recipient of a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship and is currently an adjunct associate professor in the K.F.A. Writing Program at Columbia Academy's School of the Arts.

Natalie Diaz

Natalie Diaz

February 19-21, 2016

Natalie Diaz was built-in in the Fort Mojave Indian Village in Needles, California. She is Mojave and an enrolled member of the Gila River Indian customs. She is the author of the poetry collection When My Brother Was an Aztec (2012). Her honors and awards include the Nimrod/Hardman Pablo Neruda Prize for Poetry, the Louis Untermeyer Scholarship in Poesy from Bread Loaf, the Narrative Poetry Prize, and a Lannan Literary Fellowship. Diaz lives in Mohave Valley, Arizona, where she works with the last speakers of Mojave and directs a language revitalization program.

2014-2015

Books that Cook bookcover.

BOOKS THAT COOK: The Making of a Literary Meal, A Food Writing Caricature

Thursday, March 26, 2015, Denney Hall 311
Food Writing Panel at 3 p.1000.
Reading at 4 p.m.
Cooking Class (off-campus) at 6 p.one thousand.

(more details below and on this flyer [pdf])

Organized like a cookbook, Books that Cook:  The Making of a Literary Meal is a collection of American literature written on the theme of nutrient.  The literary works within each department are an extension of these cookbooks, while the cookbook excerpts in turn get pieces of literature — forms of storytelling and memory-making all their own.  Each section offers a delectable assortment of poetry, prose and essays, and the selections all include at least i tempting recipe to entice readers to cook this volume.    Edited past OSU alumniJennifer Cognard-Blackness andMelissa A. Goldthwaite, and including work by OSU artistic writing professorKathy Fagan.

Food Writing Console from 3-4 p.chiliad. featuring:

Melissa Goldthwaite, Editor,Books that Cook
Jennifer Cognard-Black, Editor,Books that Melt
Colleen Leonardi, Managing Editor,Edible Columbus
Mike Bierschenk, Food Writer,Optional Kitchen
Nancy Yan, Lecturer, The Ohio State University Newark
Jonathan Buehl, Associate Professor, Ohio State English

Literary Reading from four-v p.thou. featuring:

Jennifer Cognard-Blackness, Editor,Books that Cook
Melissa Goldthwaite, Editor,Books that Melt
Kathy Fagan, Poet and Professor, MFA Faculty, OSU

Cooking Course (Hors d'Oeuvres) from 6-8 p.m.

withSarah Lagrotteria, Cooking Instructor and Recipe Editor forEdible Columbus at The Seasoned Farmhouse Cooking School in Clintonville

Gail Caldwell.

Gail Caldwell

Saturday, November 8, 2014 at 8 p.m.
OSU Bookstore - Barnes & Noble
Event Infinite, Second Floor
1598 N. Loftier Street

Gail Caldwell was the main book critic for The Boston Globe and the winner of the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. Her work was noted for "her insightful observations on gimmicky life and literature." She wroteA Stiff West Wind: A Memoir (2006) nearly her native Texas, and Permit'south Take the Long Way Dwelling (2010), a memoir of her friendship with author Caroline Knapp. Her latest book, New Life, No Instructions, was released in April 2014.  She has a Samoyed named Tula.

Zadie Smith.

Zadie Smith

Th, November 13, 2014
Mershon Auditorium/Wexner Center for the Arts
1871 North. Loftier Street
five p.g.

As of 2012, Zadie Smith has published four novels, all of which have received substantial disquisitional praise. In 2003, she was included on Granta'southward list of 20 all-time young authors, and was also included in the 2013 list.[ She joined New York Academy'south Creative Writing Programme as a tenured professor on September one, 2010. Smith has won the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2006 and her novelWhite Teeth was included in Fourth dimension magazine's Fourth dimension:  100 Best English language-language Novels from 1923 to 2005 list.

Presented by the President and Provost'due south Diversity Lecture and Cultural Arts Series, with co-host The Humanities Institute.

Jamaal May.

Jamaal May

Fri, January xvi, 2015 at 7 p.thousand.
OSU Bookstore - Barnes & Noble
Result Space, Second Floor
1598 N. Loftier Street

Jamaal May is a poet, editor and educator from Detroit, where he taught verse in public schools and worked every bit a freelance audio engineer and touring performer. He is the author ofHum (2013), winner of the Beatrice Hawley Award, and two poetry chapbooks (The God Engine andThe Whetting of Teeth). A graduate of Warren Wilson'due south MFA program for writers, Jamaal teaches in the Vermont Higher of Fine Arts MFA programme.

Photo of Sarah Shun-lien Bynum

Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum

Fri, February 6, 2015 at eight p.one thousand.
OSU Bookstore - Barnes & Noble
Effect Space, 2nd Floor
1598 N. High Street

Sarah Shun-lien Bynum is the author of two novels,Ms. Hempel Chronicles, a finalist for the 2009 PEN/Faulkner Award, andMadeleine Is Sleeping, a finalist for the 2004 National Book Award and winner of the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize. The recipient of a Whiting Writers' Award and an NEA Fellowship, she was named one of "20 Under 40" fiction writers by the New Yorker. She lives in Los Angeles and teaches in the Graduate Writing Program at Otis College of Art and Blueprint.

2013-2014

Dan Chaon.

Dan Chaon

January 25, 2014
OSU Bookstore - Barnes & Noble
Event Space, 2d Floor
1598 N. High Street
8 p.m.

Dan Chaon is the acclaimed author ofAmidst the Missing, which was a finalist for the National Book Award, andYou Remind Me of Me, which was named one of the best books of the year pastThe Washington Postal service,Chicago Tribune,San Francisco Chronicle,The Christian Scientific discipline Monitor, andEntertainment Weekly, among other publications. Chaon's fiction has appeared in many journals and anthologies, includingThe Best American Brusk Stories,Pushcart Prize, andThe O. Henry Prize Stories. He has been a finalist for the National Magazine Honor in Fiction, and he was the recipient of the 2006 University Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Chaon lives in Cleveland, Ohio, and teaches at Oberlin College, where he is the Pauline Thousand. Delaney Professor of Creative Writing.

Joy Castro.

Joy Castro

November 25, 2013
311 Denney Hall
164 W. 17th Avenue
iii p.m.

Born in Miami,Joy Castro is the author of the novel Hell or High Water and the memoir The Truth Volume. She teaches literature, creative writing, and Latino studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and her work has appeared in 4th Genre, Seneca Review and The New York Times Magazine.

Terrance Hayes.

Terrance Hayes

November 16, 2013
OSU Bookstore - Barnes & Noble
Event Space, 2d Floor
1598 Due north. Loftier Street
seven:xxx p.m.

Terrance Hayes was born in Columbia, Due south Carolina in 1971. He received a BA from Coker Higher in Hartsville, South Carolina, and an MFA from the University of Pittsburgh writing program. He is the author ofLighthead (Penguin, 2010), which won the National Book Award for Poetry;Air current in a Box (2006);Hip Logic (2002), which won the 2001 National Poetry Series and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Volume Award; andMuscular Music (1999), winner of the Kate Tufts Discovery Award. He has received many honors and awards, including a Whiting Writers Honor, a Pushcart Prize, three All-time American Poetry selections, besides as fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship and the Guggenheim Foundation. He is professor of creative writing at the University of Pittsburgh.

Hope Edelman.

Hope Edelman

October twenty, 2013
OSU Bookstore - Barnes & Noble
Event Space, Second Floor
1598 Due north. High Street
iv p.thousand.

Hope Edelman holds a bachelor's degree in journalism from Northwestern University and a master's degree in writing from the University of Iowa. She is the author of six nonfiction books: the international bestsellerMotherless Daughters (1994), which was published in sixteen countries and translated into eleven languages;Letters from Motherless Daughters (1995), an edited collection of letters from readers;Mother of My Mother (1999), which looks at the depth and influence of the grandmother-granddaughter relationship;Motherless Mothers (2006), nigh the experience of being a female parent when yous don't have one; andThe Possibility of Everything (2009), her showtime volume-length memoir, set in Topanga Coulee, California, and Belize. In 2012 she collaborated with actors and filmmakers Martin Sheen and Emilio Estevez to help them write their begetter-son memoir,Forth the Fashion.  

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To find dates, times and locations for these events, check the event agenda.

  • Alumni Writers Extravaganza
    The Alumni Writers Caricature is a celebration of Ohio State alumni creative writers and of creating writing at The Ohio State University. This major outcome takes place every 3 years. The adjacent AWE will exist in 2021. Please bank check back for more information as it becomes available.
  • Editors Panel
    This upshot, coordinated by the Author's Guild, provides MFA students, too as the greater university and Columbus customs, with the opportunity to get immediate advice from editors and, in some cases, literary agents. MCs ask questions provided to them by students.
  • Epilog

    Epilog is an annual public performance which showcases creative work by tertiary-year students in the MFA Plan in Creative Writing. Epilog is an opportunity for the public to detect the prose and poetry that is being created by current MFA students. Following brief introductions by artistic writing faculty, participating students give readings of their poesy, essays and stories in a formal, gala-like atmosphere. Chapbooks including selections from each of the presenting students are available at the consequence. This event is sponsored by the Writer's Guild.

  • Student-Faculty Readings
    Twice each semester, a faculty fellow member teams up with several MFA students to give a reading that is open to all. These events are a special showcase for the MFA students to read their work.
  • Female parent Tongue (MoTo)
    Female parent Tongue evenings offer MFA students an opportunity to read work to their peers in a spirited setting off campus. Students often dedicate much fourth dimension and creativity to their introductions of one another, fostering an entertaining evening rich with camaraderie. This outcome is coordinated by the Writer's Guild.
  • Native Craft Reading Series

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Writer's Guild

Each Ohio State University MFA candidate is a member of Writers Lodge, an organisation dedicated to enhancing student life and the university community through fundraisers, social activities, industry panels and recognition of graduating classmates. Its board serves equally a liaison betwixt graduate students and faculty to discuss developments and communicate news.

English Graduate System

The English Graduate System is a professional evolution, networking and advocacy group for all graduate students in the English department. EGO allows graduate students to have a tangible impact on departmental decisions and policies. Elected to specific committees, EGO officers coordinate academic and social events, serve on faculty committees and act equally liaisons betwixt graduate students and administration, providing a crucial phonation in discussions that impact students' day-to-day lives and hereafter careers. In improver to promoting the interests of a dynamic graduate student trunk, EGO offers a valuable opportunity for its officers to prepare for service responsibilities in a profession that thrives on self-governance. EGO officers can vote at monthly English language Department Council meetings, which all graduate students can attend.

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The honor-winning literary periodical of The Ohio State Academy,The Journal contributes significantly toward the literary mural of Ohio and the nation.The Journal seeks to identify and encourage emerging writers while likewise attracting the work of established writers to create a diverse and compelling mag.

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The Young Writers Workshop is a week-long summertime program for high school students in Columbus City Schools, charter schools in the Metropolis of Columbus, South-Western Metropolis Schools, and Reynoldsburg City Schools. Each year, the Ohio State creative writing faculty choose 30 students from the application pool to come live on campus and study writing with writers from around the country, including current students in and alumni of the Section of English's MFA Program in Creative Writing. Students are selected based on the promise of their writing — we don't ask for grades or letters of recommendation, just a statement of intent and writing samples. The plan is entirely funded by a generous donor, and all participating students receive full scholarships.

Students attend daily workshops and courses taught by Ohio State faculty, graduate alumni and graduate students and have time to work on their own writing every day likewise equally attend readings, sessions with visiting writers in various fields, and other events, and participate in an open mic reading of their own work. The program concludes with a capstone result honoring the students and their families.

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The borderline for all awards is Monday, February 28, 2022, at 11:59 pm EST. Open the zipper below for award information, submission links and instructions.


To view a list of award winners, visit the Graduate Student Awards page.

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Students in the MFA plan must complete 39 semester hours of graduate-level grade work, including:

  • Fifteen (fifteen) hours of graduate creative writing workshops (we encourage, but practise not crave, iii hours in a genre other than the student'south alleged major genre). Workshops are repeatable.  (Students may take more than the minimum number if they cull, and when working outside their "home" genres may take either the .01 or .02 sections.  The .02 sections are designed for writers with little feel in those genres.)  The workshops we offering are:
    • English language 6763.01 Graduate Workshop in Verse (3 credits)
    • English 6763.02 Graduate Workshop in Poesy for MFA Students in Fiction or Creative Nonfiction (iii credits)
    • English 6765.01 Graduate Workshop in Fiction (3 credits)
    • English 6765.02 Graduate Workshop in Fiction for MFA Students in Poetry or Creative Nonfiction (three credits)
    • English 6768 Graduate Workshop in Creative Nonfiction (3 credits)
    • English 6768.02 Graduate Workshop in Creative Nonfiction for MFA Students in Poetry or Fiction (three Credits)
    • English 6769 Graduate Workshop in Creative Writing - Special Topics (3 credits)
    • English 6764 Graduate Workshop in Screenwriting (3 credits)
  • Nine (9) hours of English language other than creative writing courses. A maximum of 3 hours of Independent Study may exist counted toward fulfilling this requirement.  English language 6781 (Introduction to the Instruction of Start-Yr English language) may be counted toward  this total. Students are encouraged, merely not required, to choose additional courses from OSU's wide offerings in literary studies, including the study of narrative, every bit well equally folklore, picture, linguistics and other areas.
  • Three (3) hours of a course in literary forms (English 7871). Forms of Poetry and Forms of Fiction or Nonfiction are offered every year.  Topics vary; this course may be repeated.
  • 3 (3) hours of electives in related areas (eastward.k., other fine art forms such as music, theater or the visual arts; philosophy; history; literature every bit offered past departments other than our ain, such as foreign language departments; comparative studies–or some other relevant course canonical by the student's advisor).  Courses must be taken at the graduate level (5000 level or above).  (Other elective courses, not counted toward credits required for graduation, may be taken at any level.)
  • Nine (9) hours of creative thesis tutorial (English 8998); and an approved artistic thesis, followed by an oral defence force.

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All admitted students are fully funded for our three-year MFA program in Creative Writing. In addition, all students receive either a graduate education associateship, a Graduate School fellowship or a combination of the two. Funding is renewed on a yearly ground equally long as the educatee maintains satisfactory academic progress.

  • Graduate instruction associateships:Departmental funding is most frequently in the grade of a graduate teaching associateship, for which the student receives a stipend of at least $17,000 for the nine-month academic year. The Department of English language as well subsidizes 85% of student health insurance premiums and provides a tuition waiver for all GTAs. Students are responsible for COTA bus, student action, Pupil Spousal relationship and Recreation Center fees. Students on GTA appointments teach one course per term during the regular academic twelvemonth.
  • Graduate School fellowships: In addition to the funding provided by the Section of English, the Graduate Schoolhouse awardsUniversity and Enrichment Fellowships on a competitive basis to students who are new to graduate educational activity at Ohio State. The Department of English'southward admissions committee submits nominations to the Graduate School'due south competition, and a selection committee reviewing nominations from across all graduate programs in the university awards the fellowships. Students may not apply direct for fellowship support. Each graduate program has a limited number of students who may be nominated for fellowship consideration. All Graduate School fellowships provide a monthly stipend, bookish tuition and fees and a subsidy of 85% of the educatee health insurance premiums. These fellowships are nonrenewable and may non be deferred.

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The Graduate Admissions Committee for the Section of English volition take applications to the MFA program from students with an undergraduate degree from an accredited higher or university.

The Graduate School requires that those admitted have an undergraduate form point average of at least 3.0 on a scale of 4 (where iv.0=A) and at least a 3.0 on all previous graduate work. Our departmental criteria are college: A GPA of at least three.2 overall is preferred. Coursework in a foreign language is not required for admission.

If you have already earned an MFA in creative writing or are in the procedure of completing an MFA program in creative writing, you are non eligible for admission to our programme.

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Submit all following items through theGraduate Admissions Office:

  • Application form and fee: If you are interested in a fee waiver, please visitthis Graduate and Professional Admissions webpage.
  • Three letters of recommendation: Please have your recommenders submit letters electronically using the link that will be provided when you select this option in the online application. Our preference is that your recommenders be faculty who accept taught you or writers familiar with your piece of work, as these are probable to exist most useful to us.  But we understand that for those who have been out of school for some time and those who have non participated in writing workshops or conferences, this may be incommunicable. You will non exist penalized for this, but nosotros do ask that you choose your recommenders advisedly from among the options you do accept — those who have had the opportunity to piece of work with you or supervise your work, for example.
  • Transcripts or record of marks for each university-level school attended:Visitthis Graduate and Professional person Admissions foliofor detailed information about transcript submission. Ship transcripts to the Part of Graduate and Professional Admissions; practice not send transcripts to the Department of English language. Include English translation of each of any strange documents. Delight do non send transcripts of course work taken at Ohio Country as the Office of Graduate and Professional Admissions will obtain them directly from the Office of the Academy Registrar (at no cost to you).
  • Personal statement (one to two unmarried-spaced pages): that describes your background as a author and your purpose in pursuing this caste; this statement should address your writing interests and can also briefly draw your involvement and/or experience in education.
  • Creative writing sample: 15 to 25 pages of poetry; or twenty to forty double-spaced pages of fiction; or 20 to 40 double-spaced pages of nonfiction. On the application uploader, upload your creative writing sample to the "Writing Sample" option. The writing sample is the most important part of your awarding. Please note that admission is to a single genre, so applicants should choose advisedly the genre in which they wish to be considered.
  • Curriculum vitae/resume of no more than two pages.

Delight note: As of autumn 2018, the Department of English at Ohio State no longer requires GRE scores for applications to its PhD or MFA programs.

Incomplete applications volition not be considered.

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If your native language is non English:

  • 600 Paper-based TOEFL
  • 100 Internet-based TOEFL (IBT)
  • 86 MELAB
  • eight.0 IELTS

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All admissions to the MFA program are made for the autumn semester just; the application portal for autumn 2022 will open up September ane, 2021. The application deadline for domestic applicants is December vi, 2021, and for the application borderline for international applicants is November 29, 2021.

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  • Practice you accept applications for genre fiction?
    While nosotros don't in whatever fashion dislike or discourage genre fiction, our program is known for its literary fiction, nonfiction and verse instructors and graduates. Familiarizing yourself with them and their work might be your best and near productive research as you consider to which programs you volition apply.
  • Tin can I talk to current students and/or faculty at Ohio State?
    We very much capeesh your involvement in our program, and we wish that all prospective students had the opportunity to speak with current students and/or faculty. With the volume of applications nosotros receive each year, nevertheless, we are unfortunately unable to accommodate these requests. Admitted students are invited to attend our open business firm in the spring and meet current students and faculty members at that time.
  • I don't have the required amount of English language coursework listed on this folio. What should I do?
    We would encourage you to employ. If your writing sample and application materials match what the committee is looking for, the credit requirement will be waived. It will not negatively bear upon your application in whatsoever fashion.
  • Can I use for a fee waiver?
    If you are interested in applying for a fee waiver, please visitthis webpage. Delight note that the "PGD Program" option is unavailable to students applying for admission to the Section of English.
  • What if my recommenders don't know me in a creative writing chapters?
    Our preference is that your recommenders exist faculty who take taught you or writers familiar with your work, equally these are probable to be most useful to us. However, we empathize that for those who have been out of schoolhouse for some time, and those who accept not participated in writing workshops or conferences, this may be impossible. You will not be penalized for this, but we do ask that you lot choose your recommenders carefully from among the options yous do have — those who have had the opportunity to work with you lot or supervise your work, for case.

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For questions that can't exist answered by the information above, the Creative Writing Program tin can be reached past email.

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[pdf] - Some links on this page are to Adobe .pdf files requiring the utilise of Adobe Reader. If you need these files in a more accessible format, please contact english.communications@osu.edu.