Current MFA students Alison Miller, Will Alford, Sierra Williams, and Stephanie Paladino read short narrative essays composed during their low-residency coursework over the past year. Their stories introduce us to fascinating characters and take us to communities across the US and Global South. We'll meet independent wrestlers, awkward roommates, stifling small towns, and almost romances.
This episode is the second Hear-Tell episode produced from the safety of the homes of our guests and host. Considering the health of our contributors, the show will continue in this fashion for the near future.
To learn more about Hear-Tell, visit https://grady.uga.edu/graduate_studies/hear-tell/.
Follow us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook at @heartellpodcast.
Nick Chiles
Emily Strasser
KaToya Ellis Fleming, "Bigger Than Bravery"
Brandon P. Fleming, ”MisEducated”
James Murdock, ”Orange is the New Peach”
Moni Basu, ”In Search of Spirits in Cassadaga”
Shannon McCaffrey and Jan Winburn, ”Sanctuary”
Paul Kix and John T. Edge
The Art of Micro-Memoir: Imagine Writing Hummingbirds
Martin Padgett, ”Underneath the Sweet Gum Tree”
REVISED: MFA Writers Honor Mother's Day
Max Blau, ”How Jim White Helped His Bluebird Spread Her Wings”
Jasmin Pittman Morrell, ”Is That Your Mother?”
Kristin Lowe, ”The Orchard on a Cloud”
Jeremy Redmon, ”December 21 and What Came After
MFA Students Read Short Narrative Essays
Karen Thomas, ”Traveling Graces”
Samantha Bresnahan, ”In the Blood, Flowers Bloom”
John T Edge, ”My Mother’s Catfish Stew”
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