I am thrilled to
announce that Teresa Carson will be the new associate director of the 2013
Frost Place Conference on Poetry and Teaching!
Teresa is an accomplished
poet and a stellar teacher with a long relationship to the Frost Place. She
brings to the Conference both her tremendous talent as a writer, teacher,
reader, and facilitator and her strong background in administration and
development. Teresa will be working closely with Baron Wormser (director of educational outreach at the Frost Place) and me (director of the Frost Place Conference on Poetry and Teaching) as we deepen and expand our educational programs, and everyone is very excited about her new role.
Teresa grew up in
Jersey City, New Jersey, the youngest of ten children in a blue-collar
family. Currently she is associate
publisher and development director at CavanKerry Press, but at the age of
eighteen she was one of the first women hired to work in a
non-traditional-for-women technical job at the local phone company. For more
than thirty years she held various union and administrative positions before
retiring in 2003. Meanwhile, she managed to acquire not one but two MFA
degrees—one in poetry, the other in theater, both from Sarah Lawrence College.
Teresa’s
extraordinary first collection, Elegy for the Floater, was published in 2008. “Though these poems can be
harrowing,” writes Tom Lux, they are also filled with “relentless honesty,
clarity, understatement, humor, and skill.” She has since finished a second collection, The
Congress of Human Oddities, which tells the
story of a circus sideshow traveling through Ohio during the Civil War. She has
adapted this book into a full-length play, Mister V.’s Congress
of Human Oddities, which was produced at
Sarah Lawrence College as part of the theater department’s spring 2009 season.
4 comments:
...and I am so excited that Teresa is part of the FP family!!
Hurrah!
I am so so so happy to be part of this amazing conference. I keep pinching myself to make sure it's not a dream!
Such good news about the Frost Place Conference on Poetry and Teaching -- I second Carlene's "Hurrah!"
Splendiferous!!!
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