Writers at the Rock: Poetry and Fiction Series at Simon's Rock

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass.—The Poetry & Fiction Series at Bard College at Simon's Rock returns to campus this spring and is open to the public, beginning on March 7.
 
The Writers at the Rock: Poetry & Fiction Series readings will take place in-person on Thursdays at 7:00 p.m. in Blodgett House on the campus of Simon's Rock. All readings are free and open to the public. The first reading in the series will take place on Thursday, March 7 with author Tiana Clark. 
 
"We've had Pulitzer Prize winners, National Book Award winners, Guggenheim Fellows, MacArthur genius grant winners, and rising literary stars whose work just continues to find new readers around the world. And this doesn't happen in a big auditorium—the readings take place in the Blodgett House living room, where we can have real conversations with the writers. The students always ask great questions, and the writers often tell me that they're blown away by how deeply engaged the students are with the writers' work," said Dean of Faculty and Curriculum Development and Associate Professor of Creative Writing and Literature Brendan Mathews, who is a coordinator for the Poetry & Fiction Series. Authors in the 2024 Poetry & Fiction Series include Tiana Clark, Alexis Schaitkin, Ama Codjoe, and Paul Yoon.
 
For more information about the Poetry & Fiction Series, visit the Simon's Rock Events Calendar.
 
Tiana Clark: March 7
Tiana Clark is the author of "I Can't Talk About the Trees Without the Blood," winner of the Agnes Lynch Starret Prize. She has received the Kate Tufts Discovery Award, an NEA Literature Fellowship, the Amy Lowell Poetry Traveling Scholarship, and a Pushcart Prize.
 
Alexis Schaitkin: March 28
Alexis Schaitkin is the author of the novel "Elsewhere," named a New York Times Editors' Choice, and ALA Notable Book, and longlisted for the Carol Shields Prize. Her previous novel "Saint X" was a New York Times Notable Book and was adapted into a limited series for Hulu.
 
Ama Codjoe: April 4
Ama Codjoe is the author of "Bluest Nude," winner of the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize and finalist for both the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Poetry and the Paterson Poetry Prize. She has received an NEA Literature Fellowship and a Whiting Award. 
 
Paul Yoon: April 18
Paul Yoon is the author of five works of fiction, most recently "The Hive and the Honey," a finalist for the 2024 Story Prize. He is the recipient of the New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award and a Guggenheim Fellowship.
 
For over thirty years, the Poetry & Fiction Series has hosted prominent and upcoming poets and fiction writers, including Seamus Heaney, Annie Prolux, Derek Walcott, John Edgar Wideman, Susan Sontag, Rita Dove, and many more. Open to the community, the readings are preceded by a conversation with Simon's Rock students and followed by a Q&A with the attending audience. Coordinated by Brendan Matthews, the series consists of four readings over the course of the spring semester.
 
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South County Celebrates 250th Anniversary of the Knox Trail

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

State Sen. Paul Mark carries the ceremonial linstock, a device used to light artillery. With him are New York state Sen. Michelle Hinchey and state Sen. Nick Collins of Suffolk County.
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. —The 250th celebration of American independence began in the tiny town of Alford on Saturday morning. 
 
Later that afternoon, a small contingent of re-enactors, community members and officials marched from the Great Barrington Historical Society to the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center to recognize the Berkshire towns that were part of that significant event in the nation's history.
 
State Sen. Paul Mark, as the highest ranking Massachusetts governmental official at the Alford crossing, was presented a ceremonial linstock flying the ribbons representing every New York State county that Henry Knox and his team passed through on their 300-mile journey from Fort Ticonderoga to Boston in the winter of 1775-76. 
 
"The New York contingent came to the border. We had a speaking program, and they officially handed over the linstock, transferring control of the train to Massachusetts," said Mark, co-chair of Massachusetts' special commission for the semiquincentennial. "It was a great melding of both states, a kind of coming together."
 
State Rep. Leigh Davis called Knox "an unlikely hero, he was someone that rose up to the occasion. ... this is really honoring someone that stepped into a role because he was called to serve, and that is something that resonates."
 
Gen. George Washington charged 25-year-old bookseller Knox with bringing artillery from the recently captured fort on Lake Champlain to the beleaugured and occupied by Boston. It took 80 teams of horses and oxen to carry the nearly 60 tons of cannon through snow and over mountains. 
 
Knox wrote to Washington that "the difficulties were inconceivable yet surmountable" and left the fort in December. He crossed the Hudson River in early January near Albany, crossing into Massachusetts on what is now Route 71 on Jan. 10, 1776. By late January, he was in Framingham and in the weeks to follow the artillery was positioned on Dorchester Heights. 
 
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