AWP Offsite Reading
Like many of you, the Epiphany team is gearing up for AWP. Make sure to visit us at Booth T328, get a copy of our newest issue, and chat with our team of editors and readers. We look forward to seeing you!
We know the book fair overwhelm is real, so join us offsite at Peter’s Pour House on Friday, March 6th from 7-9PM. We’re excited to team up with Cream City Review and Baltimore Review for a spirited night of literature. Read on for some past Epiphany contributors who will read their work:
Kyoko Mori’s award-winning first novel, Shizuko’s Daughter, was hailed by The New York Times as “a jewel of a book, one of those rarities that shine out only a few times in a generation.” Her many critically acclaimed books include Yarn, Polite Lies, The Dream of Water, and Stone Field True Arrow and One Bird. Her essays and short stories have appeared in The American Scholar, the Harvard Review, the Kenyon Review, and Best American Essays, among other publications. She has taught at Harvard University and Goucher College and is currently on the faculty of George Mason University and Lesley University’s Low-Residency MFA Program in Creative Writing. She lives in Washington, DC.
D.E. Hardy's work has been twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize and anthologized in Best Small Fictions, Best Microfiction, and the Fractured Lit Anthology Series, vol. 3. She is the founder and EIC of Claudine and on staff at Chestnut Review and The Offing. D.E. earned a dual MFA in fiction and nonfiction from Antioch University. Originally from the midwest, D.E. lives in the SF Bay Area with her spouse, two daughters, two cats, and her dog. Her works in progress include a novel and a memoir.
Audrey Obuobisa-Darko is a Ghanaian writer and graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop. She was a finalist for the Epiphany Breakout! Prize, and the winner of the Dream Foundry Contest for Speculative Fiction. She teaches Creative Writing at the University of Iowa, and is hard at work on her debut novel.
Ivan Suazo is a Dominican American fiction writer from New York City. He teaches creative writing at the Johns Hopkins Writing Seminars, where he is an MFA candidate in fiction. His work has been supported by the Kenyon Writers Workshop and has appeared in Epiphany, Salamander, Hayden’s Ferry Review, The Pinch, and elsewhere.