Terrier Volume 81, Number 1 | Page 13

St. Francis College $50,000 Literary Prize Awarded to Dana Spiotta S E P T E M B E R 1 6 — With the gift of $50,000 for winning the 2017 St. Francis College Literary Prize, Dana Spiotta (Innocents and Others, Scribner) now has one of the most important gifts of all, the gift of more time to work on new projects. T hat encouragement and freedom to write Others raises important questions about is precisely why St. Francis College created technology, film, friendship, and justice. It’s the Literary Prize, which is awarded every ultimately a bold examination of the motiva- two years to a mid-career author. The college tions and ethics behind the making of art.” wants to focus attention on writers as they Innocents and Others was chosen from continue to find their voice, while supporting the 187 entries submitted for the award, giving them in producing their next great work. Jury Prize members; a herculean task in Spiotta echoed that philosophy in her picking a winner. acceptance speech at the Brooklyn Book Spiotta thanked the jury and St. Francis Festival Gala, held at the College. for fulfilling two important needs for a writer, “Debuts tend to get the most attention, “To continue working you need courage and Literary Prize Winner Dana Spiotta with but to me, a writer’s later books are always you need support. Recognition by a panel of Jonathan Dee (2011 Prize Winner) and Jury Member René Steinke. more interesting,” said Spiotta. “The early fellow writers is deeply encouraging and money influences fall away. The writer hits a stride is a gift of time to a writer. Less time St. Francis College Literary Prize Short List in which possibilities expand, abilities peak, making ends meet equals more time Amina Gautier, The Loss of All Lost Things (Elixir Press) and energy has not yet diminished. Ideally, writing. There is never enough time.” Mohsin Hamid, Exit West (Riverhead Books) experience allows you to take bigger artistic Following up on the award Spiotta Adam Haslett, Imagine Me Gone (Little, Brown and Company) risks and you become engaged in creating attended a panel at the Book Festival with Selah Saterstrom, Slab (Coffee House Press) a whole body of work.” two of the other Short List authors, Adam Dana Spiotta, Innocents and Others (Scribner) Deb Olin Unferth, Wait Till You See Me Dance (Graywolf Press) St. Francis College Provost and Chair of Haslett and Deb Olin Unferth, as well as the 12th Annual Brooklyn Book Festival the three jury prize members. They read Timothy J. Houlihan announced the prize winner, reading a citation from their books and talked about the inspiration for their writing about Innocents and Others from the jury, which featured; Ellen Litman Spiotta summed up one of the lasting effects of winning the award, (The Last Chicken in America), Jeffery Renard Allen (Song of the “Prizes put a little pressure on you to do better and reach further, which Shank), and René Steinke (Friendswood). is a good thing.” ● “Dana Spiotta’s masterful novel Innocents and Others tells a unique More on the $50,000 Literary Prize can be found at sfc.edu/literaryprize. story of a friendship between two filmmakers through an ingenious arrangement of fragmented narratives and invented sources; biographi-  Watch the Literary Prize Acceptance Speech— cal essays, video transcripts, diary entries, online chats. With luminous, https://youtu.be/0I7CGuclXrc compelling prose Spiotta has created a cast of characters whose flaws are as fascinating and poignant as their ambitions. Innocence and René Steinke, Ellen Lipman, Dana Spiotta, St. Francis College Interim President Timothy J. Houlihan, Deb Olin Unferth, and Director of Literary Prize and St. Francis College English Professor Ian Maloney at the Brooklyn Book Festival Gala. Jury members René Steinke, Ellen Lipman, and Jeffrey Renard Allen with Short List authors Deb Olin Unferth, Dana Spiotta, and Adam Haslett. Walt Whitman Writers Series Chad Harbach (MFA vs NYC, n+1) read from his best-selling novel, The Art of Fielding on November 10, 2016. Afterwards he talked about the benefits of MFA programs with English Professor and Director of the College’s MFA program Theo Gangi. ●  https://youtu.be/SqzVp3K3TPw Brooklyn-based, rising star Tanwi Nandini Islam shared passages from her novel, Bright Lines, and discussed her creative process on April 20, 2017. ●  https://youtu.be/6Qd_GeXR1vA Professors Theo Gangi and Ian Maloney with Chad Harbach (center). Tanwi Nandini Islam. S T . F R A N C I S C O L L E G E T E R R I E R   |   F A L L 2 0 1 7   |   V O L U M E 8 1 , N U M B E R 1   1 1