Find Your Vision*

2022 is the year of new vision for life and for work. Join us this spring as we explore what it means to deepen the work we’re already doing and reimagine what it means to be women writers and creatives. We’ll talk craft, explore new ways to gain inspiration and of course go in depth on the work of revision.

So come re-vision yourself (and your writing) this spring at the virtual 2022 conference.

 

Want to become a conference sponsor or financial supporter? Click here.

*Conference held on Zoom. All times are in CST.

 

Registration Opens February 1st

 

Advanced Critique

Want more out of your conference experience? We’re offering personal critiques from HerStry’s editors on (up to) any twenty pages of your manuscript. Beginning, middle, or end, we’ll help you though those tough spots, smooth out your prose, and help you get it publication ready. Advanced Critiques will be scheduled for the days leading up to and the days after the conference. Each one will come with a personal Zoom session to talk about your work. Critique spots are limited.

Schedule for the day*

10:00 AM - Hello & Welcome
10:05 AM - Poetry Workshop with Tiana Clark: Singing In the Dark
10:55 AM - Break
11:05 AM - Breakout Session One
Fiction Workshop with Julia Fine: Genre as Metaphor
Nonfiction Workshop with Laura Yan: Finding Your Narrative (Storytelling in Nonfiction)
11:55 AM - Lunch
12:35 PM - Eunice Williams Nonfiction Prize Winners Honored
1:00 PM - Breakout Session Two
Fiction Workshop with Sahar Mustafah: Bright Spots: Infusing Joy Into Our Characters Lives
Nonfiction workshop with Rachel Vorona Cote: Making Your Case: Crafting the Argument in Nonfiction Writing
1:50 PM - Break
2:00 PM - Panel Discussion with Rachel Vorona Cote, Laura Yan, Sahar Mustafah, and Julia Fine.

*Schedule is subject to change

 

Meet Our Speakers

 
 
 
 
 
 

Tiana Clark is the author of the poetry collection, I Can’t Talk About the Trees Without the Blood (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2018), winner of the 2017 Agnes Lynch Starrett Prize, and Equilibrium (Bull City Press, 2016), selected by Afaa Michael Weaver for the 2016 Frost Place Chapbook Competition. Clark is a winner for the 2020 Kate Tufts Discovery Award (Claremont Graduate University), a 2019 National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellow, and the 2015 Rattle Poetry Prize. She is a recipient of the 2021-2022 Amy Lowell Poetry Traveling Scholarship and 2019 Pushcart Prize. Clark is the 2017-2018 Jay C. and Ruth Halls Poetry Fellow at the Wisconsin Institute of Creative Writing. She is the recipient of scholarships and fellowships to the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, Sewanee Writers' Conference, and Kenyon Review Writers Workshop. Clark is a graduate of Vanderbilt University (M.F.A) and Tennessee State University (B.A.) where she studied Africana and Women's studies. Her writing has appeared in or is forthcoming from The New Yorker, Poetry Magazine, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, Virginia Quarterly Review, Tin House Online, Kenyon Review, BuzzFeed News, American Poetry Review, Oxford American, Best New Poets 2015, and elsewhere. She is the Grace Hazard Conkling Writer-in-Residence at Smith College.

 

Sahar Mustafah is the daughter of Palestinian immigrants, an inheritance she explores in her fiction. Her first novel The Beauty of Your Face was named a 2020 Notable Book and Editor’s Choice by the New York Times Book Review, one of Marie Claire magazine’s Best Fiction by Women in 2020, and has been featured in the Los Angeles Times United We Read. Her collection of short stories Code of the West won the 2016 Willow Books Fiction Prize. She lives, teaches, and writes outside of Chicago.

 

Julia Fine is the author of the novels The Upstairs House, which won the 2021 Chicago Review of Books Award, and What Should Be Wild, which was shortlisted for the Bram Stoker Superior First Novel Award. She teaches writing in Chicago, where she lives with her husband and children.

 

Rachel Vorona Cote is the author of Too Much: How Victorian Constraints Still Bind Women Today. She writes for a variety of venues, such as The Nation, Virginia Quarterly Review, Bookforum, Hazlitt, the Poetry Foundation, and Pitchfork and was previously a contributing writer at Jezebel. She also teaches a nonfiction writing course through Catapult. She lives in Takoma Park, Maryland with her husband and son.

 

Laura Yan is a freelance writer and teacher. Her stories have appeared in over 24 publications including Wired, Vogue, GQ, The Cut, Longreads, The Verge and elsewhere, and her features often appear on best-of lists. She teaches creative non-fiction at City College of New York and online at Catapult. She has a MFA from the University of British Columbia. She lives in Brooklyn and dreams about moving to a farm.

 

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