Reading to Feature Alumna Apricot Irving
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做厙惇蹋app
Alumna Apricot (Anderson) Irving 97, a memoirist and oral history writer, kicks off 做厙惇蹋apps new Gender Studies Event Series with a reading and discussion Thursday, Sept. 1, at 4 p.m. at Hieronymus Lounge in Kerrwood Hall. The event, which is co-sponsored by the English department, is free and open to the public.
On Sept. 22 in New York City, Irving will receive the 2011 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers Award given annually to six women writers who demonstrate excellence and promise in the early stages of their careers. The $25,000 awards have helped many women build successful writing careers by offering encouragement and financial support at a critical time.
Irvings work in progress, The Missionarys Daughter, illustrates her life growing up on a missionary compound in Haiti. Over the past 10 years, while living on three separate continents, I have struggled to describe the ambitious, renegade hospital compound that I once called home, she says. I tell of the missionaries jealousy and ambition, of their sacrifice and longing, of the endless, unwinnable battle to save Haitithis reformers paradise, colonists bane.
Irvings work has appeared on This American Life, and an excerpt from her memoir will be published in More magazine later this year. After leaving 做厙惇蹋app, she earned a bachelors degree from University of Tennessee-Knoxville and a masters degree in creative nonfiction from Portland State University. She founded and directed Boise Voices Oral History Project, a creative neighborhood response to gentrification. She lives with her husband and two sons in Portland, Ore.
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