Saturday Schedule

Nov.6 10 am – 11:15 am CDT

LITERATURE OF PLACE – OUR OWN WISCONSIN

Three authors who use Wisconsin in a big way in their work discuss the importance place plays in literature, both fiction and nonfiction. Patricia Skalka, Amy Reichert, and Anna Lardinois will talk and answer questions about how the state of Wisconsin itself can change the way a story is presented.

MODERATOR: Larry Nelson

SIMON J. BRONNER

Simon J. Bronner is the Dean of the College of General Studies and Distinguished Professor of Social Sciences at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. He was also distinguished professor of American Studies and Folklore at the Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg, USA. He previously taught at Harvard University, Leiden University, Osaka University and the University of California at Davis. He is the editor-in-chief of the Encyclopedia of American Studies online for Johns Hopkins University Press, Material Worlds Book Series for the University Press of Kentucky; and the Jewish Cultural Studies for Littman. He serves as president of the Fellows of the American Folklore Society.

JAMES P. LEARY

James P. Leary is the Birgit Baldwin Professor of Scandinavian Studies, a professor in the Department of Comparative Literature and Folklore Studies, and a co-founder of the Center for the Study of Upper Midwestern Cultures at UW–Madison. Recipient of the Governor’s Award for Excellence in Public Humanities Scholarship, Leary is a fellow of the American Folklore Society and co-editor of Journal of American Folklore.

His books include: Yodeling in Dairyland: A History of Swiss Music in Wisconsin; Wisconsin Folklore; So Ole Says to Lena: Folk Humor of the Upper Midwest; Down Home Dairyland (with Richard March); Polkabilly: How the Goose Island Ramblers Redefined American Folk Music; and a new edition of Richard Dorson’s Bloodstoppers and Bearwalkers: Folk Traditions of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. His current projects are an ethnography of Ironworkers (with Bucky Halker) and a 5 CD/DVD/book production, Folksongs of Another America: Field Recordings from the Upper Midwest, 1937–1946 (UW Press).

COLLEEN NEHMER (C.L. Nehmer)

Colleen Nehmer is the author of The Alchemy of Planes: Amelia Earhart’s Life in Verse. Her poetry has been published in Southern Poetry Review, Bacopa Literary Review, Pedestal Magazine, Southword, The Sunlight Press, An Ariel Anthology 2018, and other journals. Colleen won the 2019 Kay Saunders Memorial Emerging Poet Award and was a 2019 Best of the Net nominee. She writes everything from fairy tales to creative nonfiction to poems about body love and world history.

WILLA C. RICHARDS

Willa C. Richards is the author of The Comfort of Monsters. She is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop where she was a Truman Capote Fellow. Her work has appeared in The Paris Review and she is the recipient of a PEN/Robert J. Dau Prize for Emerging Writers.

Nov.6 1:30 pm – 2:45 pm CDT

PASSPORT TO LITERATURETRAVELING WITH WORDS AS YOUR TICKET

Reading is often called a way to travel the world without ever leaving your chair. Authors BJ Hollars, Kristine Hansen, Barrett Swanson and Deborah Douglas share their maps and their journeys in many different ways through their writing.

MODERATOR: Carol Cannon

DEBORAH D. DOUGLAS

Deborah D. Douglas, an award-winning journalist, is the Eugene S. Pulliam Distinguished Visiting Professor of Journalism at DePauw University and a senior leader with The OpEd Project, leading fellowships and programs that include the University of Texas at Austin, Dartmouth, Yale, Columbia, University of Illinois, Northwestern, University of Kansas, Urgent Action Fund in South Africa and Kenya, and Youth Narrating Our World (YNOW).

Douglas is author of U.S. Civil Rights Trail: A Traveler’s Guide to the People, Places and Events That Made the Movement. (Moon Travel, 2021). She is among 90 writers and thought leaders who contributed to 400 Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619-2019.

KRISTINE HANSEN

Kristine Hansen is a journalist covering food/drink, art/design and travel. Her stories have appeared on ArchitecturalDigest.com, Fodors.com, Vogue.com, Hunker.com and Islands.com, as well as Midwest Living Magazine and Milwaukee Magazine. She’s also written for TIME Magazine, Wine Enthusiast Magazine, Today.com, CountryLiving.com, FoodNetwork.com and the  Travel + Leisure and Conde Nast Traveler websites. Occasionally, she pens content for brands, including Timberland and Meijer.

B.J. HOLLARS

B.J. Hollars is the author of several books, most recently Go West Young Man: A Father and Son Rediscover America on the Oregon Trail, Midwestern Strange: Hunting Monsters, Martians and the Weird in Flyover Country, The Road South: Personal Stories of the Freedom Riders,  Flock Together: A Love Affair With Extinct Birds, From the Mouths of Dogs: What Our Pets Teach Us About Life, Death, and Being Human, as well as a collection of essays, This Is Only A Test.  Additionally, he has also written Thirteen Loops: Race, Violence and the Last Lynching in America, Opening the Doors: The Desegregation of the University of Alabama and the Fight for Civil Rights in Tuscaloosa, Dispatches from the Drownings, and Sightings

Hollars is the recipient of the Truman Capote Prize for Literary Nonfiction, the Anne B. and James B. McMillan Prize, the Council of Wisconsin Writers’ Blei-Derleth Award, and the Society of Midland Authors Award.

He is the founder and executive director of the Chippewa Valley Writers Guild and the Midwest Artist Academy, as well as an associate professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, and a columnist for The Leader-Telegram.  He lives a simple existence with his family.

BARRETT SWANSON

Barrett Swanson is a contributing editor at Harper’s Magazine. He was the recipient of a 2015 Pushcart Prize, and his short fiction and essays have been distinguished as notable in Best American Short Stories (2019), Best American Nonrequired Reading (2014), Best American Essays (2014, 2015, 2017, 2019 and 2020) and Best American Sports Writing (2017). His work has appeared in many places, including Harper’s, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The New York Times Magazine, The Believer, American Short Fiction, The New Republic, The Atavist, Guernica, The Guardian, Best American Travel Writing 2018, and Best American Travel Writing 2020. His debut essay collection, Lost In Summerland, was released by Counterpoint Press in May 2021. He and his wife live in the Midwest.

Nov.6 3:15 pm -4:30 pm- CDT

Literature of Our Planet – Wrap Our World with Words

Three writers from different genres, poetry, nonfiction, and fiction, celebrate our world and our environment with their stories and poems. Martha Bergland, Jeff Nania, and Lisa Fishman will discuss how literature can be a part of showing our love and appreciation to the earth, and a way to get our climate back on track.

MODERATOR: Marlin Johnson

MARTHA BERGLAND

Martha Bergland is the author of two nonfiction books, The Birdman of Koshkonong; The Life of Naturalist Thure Kumlien and Studying Wisconsin – The Life Of Increase Lapham, and two novels, Idle Curiosity and A Farm Under A Lake. She taught for many years at Milwaukee Area Technical College. She lives in Glendale, Wisconsin.

JEFF NANIA

Jeff Nania writes for Wisconsin Outdoor News and other publications. In his Northern Lakes Mysteries, he draws upon careers in law enforcement, conservation, and his passion for our natural resources. Whether he’s cutting wood, sitting in a wetland, fishing muskies, or snorkeling Spider Lake for treasure, Jeff spends as much time as possible outdoors.

LISA FISHMAN

Lisa Fishman’s seventh book was recently released: Mad World, Mad Kings, Mad Composition. She is also the author of 24 Pages and other poems; F L O W E R  C A R T; Current; The Happiness Experiment; Dear, Read  and The Deep Heart’s Core is a Suitcase. Chapbooks include at the same time as scattering, Lining, KabbaLoom, and ‘The Holy Spirit does not deal in synonimes: a Transcription of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Marginalia in Her Greek and Hebrew Bibles. Fishman’s work has been published in many anthologies. She is Professor of English and Creative Writing at Columbia College Chicago. A Pushcart Prize nominee and PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers nominee, Fishman continues to live on the farm she and her husband started in 1999 in Orfordville, Wisconsin, dividing her time between Wisconsin, Chicago, and Nova Scotia. She is a dual US/Canadian and is a member of the Writers’ Union of Canada and the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia.