By Jonah Grinkewitz

Update: Oct. 3 events are canceled due to weather and will be rescheduled for later in the semester.

will host its 45th annual Literary Festival from Oct. 2 to 6, with in-person and virtual events that feature writers whose work explores how literature plays a role in "Sustaining Community."

Molly McCully Brown, assistant professor of English and creative nonfiction, and Kent Wascom, assistant professor of English and creative writing, are co-directors of this year's festival.

They said they wanted the programming to complement the University's wider theme of "Sustainability" for the fall 2022 semester.

"When we discuss sustainability, we often think in deeply important environmental and economic terms, but social sustainability - choices that help build and maintain inclusive, resilient, diverse societies - is another crucial facet of the practice, one we believe literature is uniquely positioned to help cultivate," the organizers said.

The festival's lineup features writers with deep ties to Southeastern Virginia and the broader American and Global South, they said.

It includes several current and former faculty members, with styles ranging from historical narrative to crime fiction, poetry, family saga and more.

Remica Bingham-Risher, Director of Quality Enhancement Plan Initiatives at , and Alicia DeFonzo, senior lecturer at , are both promoting new books.

"We invited writers whose work is deeply engaged - across genres, themes and styles - in thinking about the ways we live in relationship to one another; how we're shaped by the communities we come from, and how we shape those around us in turn."

For the first time since 2019, all events will be in-person, with the .

Readings will take place at either the University Theatre or the Barry Art Museum, with an opening reception at The Green Onion Restaurant and a closing reception at Elation Brewing Co.

"We're so excited for folks to be able to engage in the kinds of conversations - before and after events, over meals and at receptions - that really build connections and cultivate curiosity and imagination," Brown and Wascom said. "We're thrilled that this year's readings will continue to be available via live stream in addition to in-person, and we hope this makes our Lit Fest community as wide-ranging and inclusive as possible, which is core to our values, and to sustainability."

Brown and Wascom gave special thanks to the following people and organizations for their contributions to the festival:

  • President Brian Hemphill, Ph.D., and the Office of the President
  • Cullen Strawn, Sarah Glaser and Arts@
  • Michael Khandelwal and The Muse Writers Center
  • Charlotte Potter Kasic and the Barry Art Museum
  • Tosca Moore and the University Village Bookstore
  • The Edith White and Forrest P. White Endowment
  • Dean Laura Delbrugge and the Office of the Dean, College of Arts and Letters
  • Renée Olander and Virginia Beach
  • Otha Nowlin and the Office of University Design and Publications
  • SuperCompStudios, logo design

A full schedule of events and instructions can be found here.


Related News Stories

New Exhibition at Baron and Ellin Gordon Art Galleries Showcases Self-Taught Artists

“ALLiGATER HELLHOUND” includes 50 artworks accompanied by folk and traditional music that reflects the communities where the artists have lived and worked. (More)

Alumna Inspires Schoolkids to Understand Learning Styles

Courtney Burkett '12 self-published a book to help elementary-aged children understand that everyone learns differently. (More)

Hispanic Heritage Month Includes Celebration of New Program Aimed at Assisting Incoming Latinx Students

The !Sigue Adelante! initiative will provide academic mentoring and emotional and social support to first-year Latinx students. (More)