Matthew Dicks (born February 15, 1971) is an American novelist, storyteller, columnist, playwright, blogger, and teacher.
His first novel, Something Missing, [1] was published in 2009. He has since published Unexpectedly, Milo (2010), Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend (2012), The Perfect Comeback of Caroline Jacobs (2014), Twenty-one Truths About Love (2019), and The Other Mother (2020). Dicks' novels have been translated into 26 different languages. He publishes in the UK under the pseudonym Matthew Green.
Dicks has also published two books of nonfiction: Storyworthy: Engage, Teach, Persuade, and Change Your Life Through the Power of Storytelling [2] (2018) and Someday Is Today: 22 Simple, Actionable Ways to Propel Your Creative Life (2022).
Dicks is the humor columnist for Seasons magazine and writes the Ask a Teacher column for Slate magazine. His work has also appeared in The Hartford Courant, Reader's Digest, Parents magazine and The Christian Science Monitor. [3] [4] He is the creator and cohost of the weekly podcasts Speak Up Storytelling and Boy vs. Girl. He blogs at matthewdicks.com.
Dicks began competing in live storytelling events in New York City 2011. He is a frequent participant in The Moth in New York City and Boston and has also told stories for the This American Life, The Story Collider, Literary Death Match, The Liar Show, and more. He is a record 58-time Moth StorySLAM winner and 9-time GrandSLAM champion. [5] [6] His stories have been featured multiple times on The Moth podcast and The Moth Radio Hour.
In 2013, Dicks and his wife, Elysha Dicks, founded Speak Up, a Hartford-Based storytelling organization producing more than a dozen shows each year at Real Art Ways, Connecticut Historical Society, and Infinity Hall in Hartford, CT as well as a variety of partner venues. [7] Dicks also teaches and consults on storytelling, marketing, and advertising with individuals, nonprofits, corporations, and religious institutions. He has consulted and taught at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Connecticut School of Law, Yale University, Harvard University, Purdue University, Yale New Haven Hospital, Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health in Stockbridge, MA, Graded School in São Paulo, Brazil, and many more.
Dicks has worked as an elementary school teacher since 1999. In 2005 he was named the West Hartford Teacher of the Year and was named as one of three finalists for Connecticut's Teacher of the Year. [8]
Dicks's third novel, Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend, won the 2014 Dolly Gray Award for Children's Literature. [9]
The Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists awarded him first prize in opinion/humor writing in 2015, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2020, and 2021.
Dicks was raised in the small town of Blackstone, Massachusetts. At age 16, he began working for McDonald's restaurants. At 17 he was promoted to manager. On December 23, 1988, Dicks was in a head-on car accident. Upon arriving at the scene, paramedics found him without respiration or pulse and began CPR. He was ultimately revived before arriving at the hospital. This is one of two near death experiences to which Dicks credits much of his drive for success. Dicks left home at age 18 and continued working in the restaurant business, including McDonald's, for several years.
In 1993 Dicks was robbed at gunpoint while managing a McDonald's restaurant in Brockton, MA. [10] The incident left him suffering from post traumatic stress disorder for more than a decade. Dicks thinks this incident was the impetus that sent him to college and launched his writing career.
Associate degree in 1996 at Manchester Community College in Manchester, Connecticut.
Bachelor's degree in English in 1999 at Trinity College in Hartford, CT.
Teaching certificate from St. Joseph's University in West Hartford, CT in 1999.
Master's degree in Educational Technology at American Intercontinental University in 2009.
Dicks has been working as an elementary school teacher at Henry A. Wolcott School in West Hartford, CT since 1999. [10] He also owns and operates the Connecticut-based DJ company Jam Packed Dance Floor DJs. He has been entertaining at weddings since 1997. [11] Dicks also works as a speaking coach, leadership coach, and marketing and communications consultant. Dicks also works as a minister of the Universal Life Church. [11]
Dicks is married to fellow teacher Elysha Green. They have two children. [11]
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The Park River is a tributary of the Connecticut River in Hartford, Connecticut. It was officially named the Park River in 1892 after Bushnell Park, through which it flowed in downtown Hartford. A local newspaper had advocated for that name rather than the “’Hog River’” name which was then in use.Between 1940 and the 1980s, the 2.3-mile (3.7 km) river was buried by the Army Corps of Engineers to prevent the spring floods regularly caused by increased surface runoff from urban development.
Richard Nelson "Oz" Griebel was an American banker, lawyer, and political candidate. He ran as a Republican primary candidate in the 2010 Connecticut gubernatorial election, and as an independent in the 2018 gubernatorial election.
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The 2018 Connecticut gubernatorial election took place on November 6, 2018, to elect the next governor and lieutenant governor of Connecticut, concurrently with the election of Connecticut's Class I U.S. Senate seat, as well as other elections to the United States Senate in other states, elections to the United States House of Representatives, and various state and local elections. This race's Democratic margin of victory was the closest to the national average of 3.1 points.
Shawn T. Wooden is an American attorney and politician who has been serving as the state treasurer of Connecticut since January 2019. Wooden previously served as a member of the Hartford City Council. He is not seeking reelection as state treasurer in 2022.
Lisa Wilson-Foley is an American entrepreneur, former political candidate, and white collar criminal. She owns the rehabilitation company Allstar Therapy, the family entertainment business Blue Fox Enterprises, and the medical testing company Swallowing Diagnostics. She was a co-owner of the Hartford FoxForce from 1999-2007.
The first confirmed case of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. state of Connecticut was confirmed on March 8, although there had previously been multiple people suspected of having COVID-19, all of which eventually tested negative. As of January 19, 2022, there were 599,028 confirmed cases, 68,202 suspected cases, and 9,683 COVID-associated deaths in the state.
The 2018 Connecticut Senate election was held on November 6, 2018, concurrently with the elections for the Connecticut House of Representatives, to elect members to the Connecticut General Assembly. All 36 seats in the Connecticut Senate were up for election. The election resulted in Democrats expanding control in both chambers of the Connecticut General Assembly, ending the split control in the Senate, that had been in place since the 2016 elections. Primary elections were held on August 14, 2018.
James Mars was an American slave narrative author and political activist. Born into slavery in Canaan, Connecticut, he gained his freedom in 1811. In 1864, he published his memoir A Life of James Mars, a Slave Born and Sold in Connecticut, Written by Himself—a notable example of the slave narrative genre. His grave is a stop on the Connecticut Freedom Trail. In 2021, Governor Ned Lamont declared May 1 to be James Mars Day in Connecticut.
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