Susanna Daniel
Susanna Daniel’s debut novel, Stiltsville, was awarded the PEN/Bingham prize, and her second novel, Sea Creatures, was a Target Book Club pick. Both novels were published by HarperCollins and Harper Perennial. Her latest novel, Girlfriending, is represented by Emily Forland of the Brandt Hochman agency.
Susanna Daniel’s debut novel, Stiltsville, was awarded the PEN/Bingham prize, and her second novel, Sea Creatures, was a Target Book Club pick. Both novels were published by HarperCollins and Harper Perennial. Her latest novel, Girlfriending, is represented by Emily Forland of the Brandt Hochman agency.
In 2013, Susanna founded the Madison Writers’ Studio with author Michelle Wildgen. She’s a graduate of Columbia University and the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and was a Teaching-Writing Fellow at the Writers’ Workshop and a Carl Djerassi Fiction Fellow at the UW Institute for Creative Writing. She’s been awarded residencies at UCross and MacDowell, and her writing has been published in Sewanee Review, Newsweek, Slate, One Story, Wisconsin People & Ideas, Significant Objects, Epoch, and elsewhere. Before co-founding MWS, she taught creative writing at universities for ten years.
You can learn more about Susanna at her website, and you can contact her via email.
Michelle Wildgen
Michelle Wildgen is the author of the novels Wine People, Bread and Butter, But Not For Long, and You’re Not You, and is the editor of an anthology, Food & Booze: A Tin House Literary Feast (Tin House Books).
Michelle Wildgen is the author of the novels Wine People, Bread and Butter, But Not For Long, and You’re Not You (both available in paperback from Picador), and is the editor of an anthology, Food & Booze: A Tin House Literary Feast (Tin House Books). You’re Not You has been adapted for film, starring Hilary Swank and Emmy Rossum.
Michelle received her MFA in fiction from Sarah Lawrence College and has taught fiction and nonfiction at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the Iowa Summer Writing Festival, and the Tin House Writers’ Workshop. She was a long-time executive editor at Tin House Magazine and former books editor with Tin House Books. Michelle’s nonfiction has included a weekly column on food television as well as individual essays on a wide range of topics: from American Girl doll Rebecca Rubin, Burt Reynolds’ 1970s fan mail, and obscure Wisconsin card games to the craft of writing, fresh mozzarella, deer-hunting for the neophyte, and the number of times one must endure anaphylactic shock before giving up shellfish for good.
Her fiction, personal essays, and food writing have appeared in publications including The New York Times Book Review and “Modern Love” column, O, the Oprah Magazine, RealSimple.com, LitHub, and anthologies such as Naming the World and Other Exercises for the Creative Writer, Dirty Words, Best New American Voices 2004, Best Food Writing 2004 and 2009, Death by Pad Thai and Other Unforgettable Meals, and journals including StoryQuarterly, TriQuarterly, Prairie Schooner, and elsewhere. Awards and honors include a scholarship to Bread Loaf, residency at the Hall Farm Center in Vermont, and the Virginia Faulkner Award for Excellence in Writing from Prairie Schooner.
You can learn more about Michelle’s work at her website, and you can contact her via email.
Christopher Chambers
Christopher Chambers is the author of two books of fiction, Delta 88 and Kind of Blue, and former editor of Wisconsin People & Ideas, Midwest Review, Black Warrior Review and New Orleans Review. His work has appeared in Best American Mystery Stories and been noted in Best American Essays.
Christopher Chambers is the author of two books of fiction, Delta 88 and Kind of Blue, and former editor of Wisconsin People & Ideas, Midwest Review, Black Warrior Review and New Orleans Review. His work has appeared in Best American Mystery Stories and been noted in Best American Essays.