Among the very few perks of being a small press publisher is that I get to make Pushcart nominations from the books I publish. This year, I'm pleased to nominate Robyn Groth's "The Magnificent Marjorie Nuhn" from Passion for Beauty: Marjorie Nuhn, Water Colorist.
Tuesday, 23 November 2021
Pushcart Prize Nomination
Among the very few perks of being a small press publisher is that I get to make Pushcart nominations from the books I publish. This year, I'm pleased to nominate Robyn Groth's "The Magnificent Marjorie Nuhn" from Passion for Beauty: Marjorie Nuhn, Water Colorist.
Friday, 12 November 2021
An Interview with Gary Kelley
Gary Kelley is an artist and illustrator who has recently published his first graphic novel, The Moon of the Snow-Blind (Ice Cube Press) about the event known as the 1857 Spirit Lake massacre. Kelley will be the featured reader at the Final Thursday Reading Series on November 18 (**one week early due to Thanksgiving) at the Hearst Center for the Arts. The in-person event starts off with a creative writing open mic at 7:00. Gary Kelley takes the stage at 7:30. The 7:30 featured reading will also be live Zoomcast. Click HERE to register for the live Zoomcast.
Thursday, 11 November 2021
Maribeth Boelts Zoomcast
If you didn't get a chance to see Maribeth Boelts's Final Thursday Reading Series presentation, the Zoomcast is now available for streaming.
Sunday, 17 October 2021
An Interview with Maribeth Boelts
The event takes place in the Mae Latta room in the Hearst Center for the Arts. A creative writing open mic starts at 7:00 p.m. (sign up to read your best five minutes of original work), and Boelts's featured reading will begin at 7:30 p.m. The featured reading will be Zoomcast live at 7:30 Central time. You can register for that HERE.
The following interview with Maribeth Boelts, detailing her work in children's literature and her approach to writing, was conducted by Alexus Williams.
AW: Looking at the books you have written, you have certainly covered a wide variety of topics, settings, and characters. With that being said, where do you draw your inspiration from for these stories? Do you find your stories come from a place of necessity? (i.e. trying to explain certain concepts to your grandkids (or your kids when they were younger).
AW: Have you considered writing other literature, like young adult literature? If so, what kind of literature crosses your mind? If not, could you explain why you would rather focus on children’s literature?
AW: Looking back at when you first started writing children’s stories, what is one thing you would tell your younger self?
Wednesday, 13 October 2021
Zoomcast of Hoing & Hileman
If you didn't get to attend last month's FTRS reading with Dave Hoing & Roger Hileman (and musical guests), you can now watch the Zoomcast.
Sunday, 26 September 2021
An Interview with Dave Hoing & Roger Hileman
Dave Hoing and Roger Hileman will be the featured readers at the Final Thursday Reading Series on Sept. 30 where they will read from their novel about the jazz scene in a fictionalized 1940s Waterloo, In the Blood. They will also be performing music with some guest musicians.
Friday, 24 September 2021
Monday, 20 September 2021
Passion for Beauty Celebrates and Life and Work of Marjorie Nuhn
Passion for Beauty:
Marjorie Nuhn, Water Colorist
Editor Heather Skeens, who also serves as director for the Hearst Center for the Arts, which holds the largest single collection of Nuhn’s work, says of the collection that “The writings that follow tell a complicated story with its beginning in the traditional midwestern community of Cedar Falls, a community that, perhaps urged along by the university it houses and a cast of progressive civic leaders, embraced literature and the arts. This embrace provided support for Marjorie throughout her life. And yet, she struggled against the societal norms of the time.”
This collection features the previously unpublished biography written by Marjorie Nuhn's brother, Ferner Nuhn, as well as essays by Robyn Groth and Barbara Lounsberry that provide context for the life and work of Marjorie Nuhn. Also included in the collection is a selection of 19 full-color plates reproducing some of Marjorie Nuhn's most significant watercolors as well as a list of her extant works.
Final Thursday Press is an award-winning literary press that focuses on work by Cedar Valley writers. Recent publications include Winsome/Bend of the Sun by Grant Tracey and Circumference by Anne Myles. Support for this publication was provided by the Cedar Falls Community Foundation’s Saul and Joan Diamond Arts & History Fund.
Thursday, 26 August 2021
Tuesday, 4 May 2021
20th FTRS Season Concludes with Doug Shaw & Thomas Hockey
The 20th season ended where it began, in the Outdoor Sculpture Garden at the Hearst Center for the Arts. This event featured mathematician Doug Shaw and astronomer Thomas Hockey, and just for good measure it was simulcast on Zoom. If you didn't get to attend in person or online, you can now stream it below.
Thanks to the UNI Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President for making the 20th season possible and to the Hearst Center for being onboard for an array of outdoors and Zoomcast events this year. Looking forward to season 21, which will start at the end of August.
Sunday, 28 March 2021
Now Streaming: Ukamaka Olisakwe @ FTRS
If you didn't get to attend March's FTRS reading featuring novelist and poet Ukamaka Olisakwe, you can now stream it online. Thanks to the UNI Women's and Gender Studies program for co-sponsoring and to Rifat Siddiqui, WGS graduate student, for introducing Ukamaka Olisakwe and for helping to coordinate the book group that read Olisakwe's novel, Ogadinma: Or, Everything Will Be All Right.
In April, FTRS goes hybrid with a socially-distanced reading in the Hearst Center for the Arts outdoor sculpture garden (weather permitting) that will be Zoom simulcast. Follow FTRS on Facebook for more details. April's featured readers are Doug Shaw and Thomas Hockey.
Saturday, 20 March 2021
Ukamaka Olisakwe at Final Thursday Reading Series
March’s Final Thursday Reading Series takes place on Thursday, March 25 at 7 p.m via Zoom with a reading by Ukamaka Olisakwe from her new novel, Ogadinma: Or, Everything Will Be All Right (The Indigo Press). Also, the FTRS Open Mic returns this month. This free event will be happening via Zoom. Register at: https://uni.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_k0Y1Q1BxQLSV1nQcYzmKmA.
Ukamaka Olisakwe’s Ogadinma: Or, Everything Will Be All Right is a story of departure, loss and adaptation that has been celebrated as “a stirring, unflinching novel that further cements Olisakwe as an important feminist voice.” Olisakwe is also the author of the 2012 novel, Eyes of a Goddess. In 2014, she was named one of Africa’s most promising writers under the age of 40 by the UNESCO World Book Capital for the Africa39 project.
Prior to Olisakwe’s reading, the FTRS open mic will be back. Email jim.oloughlin@uni.edu before the event if you’d like to share your best five minutes of original creative work. Limited slots are available.
The Final Thursday Reading Series is a collaboration of Final Thursday Press, the Hearst Center for the Arts, and the University of Northern Iowa College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences with support from Sidecar Coffee Roasters and Hansen’s Farm Fresh Dairy. Funding is provided by the UNI Office of the Provost and Executive Vice-President. This event is co-sponsored by the UNI Women’s and Gender Studies Program as part of Women’s History Month.
FTRS will be back outdoors in the Hearst Center Outdoor Sculpture Garden for a reading by Doug Shaw and Thomas Hockey.