GrubStreet, Inc. is a non-profit creative writing center located in Boston, Massachusetts that hosts workshops, seminars, consultations, and similar events. It also offer scholarships. [1]
In October 2021, several members of GrubStreet leadership were involved in a controversy surrounding the alleged plagiarism of the work of a former student and instructor by Sonya Larson, then-director of the center's annual Muse Conference. [2]
GrubStreet was founded in 1997 in Boston, Massachusetts by Eve Bridburg. At first, GrubStreet had two instructors (Bridburg one of them), teaching eight students in workshops centered on fiction. By 2001 GrubStreet had nearly 100 students, more than a dozen instructors, and courses in poetry, screenwriting, nonfiction, and playwriting. GrubStreet became a nonprofit in 2002. [3]
Beginning in 2012, GrubStreet led a coalition promoting a "Literary Cultural District," which would include "some 80 literary landmarks in downtown Boston, Back Bay, and Beacon Hill," according to Boston Magazine. [4] The coalition was led by GrubStreet but included other partners, including the Boston Public Library, the Boston Book Festival, and Emerson College. In October 2014, the Massachusetts Cultural Council officially recognized Boston's Literary Cultural District. [5]
In 2018, GrubStreet was chosen by the Boston Planning & Development Agency to get construction funding and below-market rent for moving from its 3,500-square-foot headquarters in Boston's Back Bay to a 13,000-square-foot space in a luxury condo building in the Seaport District. GrubStreet, which had already received a $2 million grant from the Calderwood Charitable Foundation for the transition, said that it would still need to raise "substantial funds" for the move. [6] In 2019, after successfully raising $8 million, GrubStreet relocated to the Seaport District. [1] [7]
In October 2021, GrubStreet came under scrutiny after journalist Robert Kolker wrote a piece for The New York Times magazine detailing the multi-year ongoing litigation between two Grubstreet employees: Muse & Marketplace director Sonya Larson and former Grubstreet student Dawn Dorland. Dorland had accused Larson of plagiarism based on her use of a letter, written by Dorland, in a published short story; this accusation prompted Larson to sue Dorland for defamation. [2] Kolker's piece brought new attention to text messages and emails exchanged by GrubStreet employees and leader who were close friends and colleagues of Larson's, including GrubStreet's artistic director Christopher Castellani. [8]
In response to concerns expressed by its members, GrubStreet launched an investigation. [9] On October 29, 2021, GrubStreet announced that, based on a third party review, it had asked not only Sonya Larson but also Director of Online Learning Alison Murphy and board member Jennifer De Leon to step down from their leadership roles. [10] Castellani, who stayed on, posted a letter on the official GrubStreet website, expressing regret for causing Dawn Dorland personal hurt. [11]
The Muse and the Marketplace, is an annual weekend-long writer's symposium hosted by GrubStreet. [12] In 2010, it was attended by over 900 writers and publishing professionals. [13]
Many authors, agents, and editors have been involved with GrubStreet's Muse and the Marketplace. In 2010, Chuck Palahniuk was the keynote speaker. [14] In 2013, the keynote speaker was Amanda Palmer. [15]
Muse and the Marketplace was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVD-19 pandemic, but was held virtually in 2021, with panelists including Alexander Chee, Vievee Francis, and Nick Flynn. [16]
Between 2007 and 2015, GrubStreet awarded prizes to a writer publishing his/her second book or beyond. As the goal of the prize was to bring writers to Boston, only writers whose primary residence was not Massachusetts, Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire, Connecticut, or Rhode Island were eligible. The award was discontinued in 2015. [17]
Previous Book Prize winners include:
New Zealand literature is literature, both oral and written, produced by the people of New Zealand. It often deals with New Zealand themes, people or places, is written predominantly in New Zealand English, and features Māori culture and the use of the Māori language. Before the arrival and settlement of Europeans in New Zealand in the 19th century, Māori culture had a strong oral tradition. Early European settlers wrote about their experiences travelling and exploring New Zealand. The concept of a "New Zealand literature", as distinct from English literature, did not originate until the 20th century, when authors began exploring themes of landscape, isolation, and the emerging New Zealand national identity. Māori writers became more prominent in the latter half of the 20th century, and Māori language and culture have become an increasingly important part of New Zealand literature.
The Paris Review is a quarterly English-language literary magazine established in Paris in 1953 by Harold L. Humes, Peter Matthiessen, and George Plimpton. In its first five years, The Paris Review published works by Jack Kerouac, Philip Larkin, V. S. Naipaul, Philip Roth, Terry Southern, Adrienne Rich, Italo Calvino, Samuel Beckett, Nadine Gordimer, Jean Genet, and Robert Bly.
Overland is an Australian literary and cultural magazine, established in 1954 and as of April 2020 published quarterly in print as well as online.
Sonya Taaffe is an American author of short fiction and poetry based out of Massachusetts. She grew up in Arlington and Lexington, Massachusetts and graduated from Brandeis University in 2003 where she received a B.A. and M.A. in Classical Studies. She also received an M.A. in Classical Studies from Yale University in 2008.
Dinty W. Moore is an American essayist and writer of both fiction and non-fiction books. He received the Grub Street National Book Prize for Non-Fiction for his memoir, Between Panic and Desire, in 2008 and is also author of the memoir To Hell With It: Of Sin and Sex, Chicken Wings, and Dante’s Entirely Ridiculous, Needlessly Guilt-Inducing Inferno, the writing guides The Story Cure,Crafting the Personal Essay, and The Mindful Writer, and many other books and edited anthologies.
Boston Review is an American quarterly political and literary magazine. It publishes political, social, and historical analysis, literary and cultural criticism, book reviews, fiction, and poetry, both online and in print. Its signature form is a "forum", featuring a lead essay and several responses. Boston Review also publishes an imprint of books with MIT Press.
Christopher David Castellani is the author of four novels and artistic director of the creative writing non-profit GrubStreet.
Pat Schneider was an American writer, poet, writing teacher and editor.
The Massachusetts Review is a literary quarterly founded in 1959 by a group of professors from Amherst College, Mount Holyoke College, Smith College, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst. It receives financial support from Five Colleges, Inc., a consortium which includes Amherst College and four other educational institutions in a short geographical radius.
Red Hen Press is an American non-profit press located in Pasadena, California, and specializing in the publication of poetry, literary fiction, and nonfiction. The press is a member of the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses, and was a finalist for the 2013 AWP Small Press Publisher Award. The press has been featured in Publishers Weekly,Kirkus Reviews, and Independent Publisher.
Dzvinia Orlowsky is a Ukrainian American poet, translator, editor, and teacher. She received her BA from Oberlin College and her MFA from the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers. She is author of six poetry collections including Convertible Night, Flurry of Stones for which she received a Sheila Motton Book Award, and Silvertone (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2013) for which she was named Ohio Poetry Day Association's 2014 Co-Poet of the Year. Her first collection, A Handful of Bees, was reprinted in 2009 as a Carnegie Mellon University Classic Contemporary. Her sixth, Bad Harvest, was published in fall of 2018 and was named a 2019 Massachusetts Book Awards “Must Read” in Poetry. Her co-translations with Ali Kinsella from the Ukrainian of selected poems by Natalka Bilotserkivets, "Eccentric Days of Hope and Sorrow" was published by Lost Horse Press in fall, 2021 and short-listed for the 2022 Griffin International Poetry Prize, the Derek Walcott Poetry Prize the ALTA National Translation Award, and awarded the 2022 AAUS Translation Prize.
Ethan Gilsdorf is an American writer, poet, performer, editor, critic, teacher and journalist.
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Robert Kolker is an American journalist who worked as a contributing editor at New York Magazine and a former projects and investigations reporter for Bloomberg News and Bloomberg Businessweek.
Michelle Hoover is an American writer and college instructor. She is the author of The Quickening, a 2010 novel.
Askold Melnyczuk is an American writer whose publications include novels, essays, poems, memoir, and translations. Among his works are the novels What Is Told, Ambassador of the Dead, House of Widows and Excerpt from Smedley's Secret Guide to World Literature. His work has been translated into German, Polish, Russian, and Ukrainian. Melnyczuk also founded the journal AGNI and Arrowsmith Press (2006).
Danielle Legros Georges is a Haitian-born American poet, essayist and academic. She is a professor of creative writing in the Lesley University MFA Program in Creative Writing. Her areas of focus include contemporary American poetry, African-American poetry, Caribbean literature and studies, literary translation, and the arts in education. She is the creative editor of sx salon, a digital forum for innovative critical and creative explorations of Caribbean literature.
Daniel Zomparelli is a Canadian writer from Vancouver, British Columbia. He is married to American screenwriter Gabe Liedman.
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"Who Is the Bad Art Friend?" is a 2021 New York Times Magazine feature story by Robert Kolker about a feud between two writers, Dawn Dorland and Sonya Larson. The piece focused on accusations that GrubStreet employee Sonya Larson had included a letter written by former GrubStreet instructor Dawn Dorland in her short story The Kindest. Though Dorland and Larson had been involved in ongoing lawsuits since 2018 and the story of their feud had been covered by the media before, Kolker's piece went viral and led to ongoing scrutiny of the case.
She started a private Facebook group, inviting family and friends, including some fellow writers from GrubStreet, the Boston writing center where Dorland had spent many years learning her craft.
The story goes that two years ago, GrubStreet founder and executive director Eve Bridburg was talking with Anita Walker, executive director of the Massachusetts Cultural Council, lamenting about the lack of a spotlight on Boston's literary events.
The campaign for an 'LCD [Boston Literary Cultural District] was spearheaded by GrubStreet, helmed by founder executive director Eve Bridburg, and several other local organizations including the BPL, the Boston Book Festival, Emerson College, Suffolk University, and more.
The new 13,000-square-foot space, which GrubStreet will lease for a substantially below-market rate, will include a bookstore, cafe, podcast studio, classrooms, and an area for readings and storytelling events. City officials hope its year-round programs will draw a more diverse crowd to the predominantly white, wealthy neighborhood.
Following a multi-year $8 million capital campaign, Grub recently relocated to a 13,000 sq. ft. location in Boston's Seaport district.
In another, GrubStreet artistic director Christopher Castellani writes of Dorland, 'my mission in life is going to be to exact revenge on this pestilence of a person.'
'Bluntly, we are appalled by the disconnect between GrubStreet's stated values and the alleged behavior by some that has come to light,' the statement read.
At the annual event, Boston's writers flocked to the Park Plaza to learn how to become a successful, published writer. Grappling with the future of authorship was the running concern of the conference.
This year's panelists include (from top left): Alexander Chee, Laura Van den Berg, Jennifer De Leon, Vievee Francis, and Nick Flynn.