Anisfield-Wolf Fellowship

Announcing the 2022–2024 Anisfield-Wolf Fellow in Writing & Publishing

Every two years, as applications open for the Anisfield-Wolf Fellowship in Writing and Publishing, we’re honored to hear from wonderfully impressive and engaged emerging writers—who are also teachers, editors, scholars, critics, organizers—from around the country and world. To encounter this breadth and depth of literary work is a source of hope.

We’re delighted to announce that in 2022–2024 we’ll be joined by the prose writer Joseph Earl Thomas, coming to us from Philadelphia, as the new Anisfield-Wolf Fellow in Writing & Publishing, hosted at Cleveland State. Thomas’s stunningly innovative, inimitable memoir of childhood, Sink, is forthcoming in 2023. He writes across genres, his work omnivorously informed—by the structures and insights of video games, Black Studies, fantasy and sci-fi, digital life, realities of race and economic inequality, the speculative building of new possible worlds—and committed to creating new forms. We’re thrilled to welcome his writing, teaching, editing, and community work to Cleveland.

—Hilary Plum, interim director, CSU Poetry Center

Joseph Earl Thomas is a writer from Frankford whose work has appeared or is forthcoming in VQRN+1Gulf CoastThe Offing, and The Kenyon Review. He has an MFA in prose from the University of Notre Dame and studies English in the PhD program at the University of Pennsylvania. His memoir Sink won the 2020 Chautauqua Janus Prize and he has received fellowships from Fulbright, VONA, Tin House, and Bread Loaf. He’s writing the novel God Bless You, Otis Spunkmeyer, and a collection of stories, Leviathan Beach, among other oddities.

photograph by Drake Masters

Announcing the 2020–2022 Anisfield-Wolf Fellow in Writing & Publishing

We’re thrilled to share the news that the poet Kamden Hilliard will be joining us as the next Anisfield-Wolf Fellow in Writing & Publishing

It’s been a terrific two years with Leila Chatti, our current & inaugural fellow. Warmest thanks to Leila for sharing her time and work with our press and with the city of Cleveland—and congratulations on Deluge, just out from Copper Canyon Press! 

For their support of this fellowship, we want to thank Karen Long and the Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards, the Cleveland Foundation, our advisory board (Hayan Charara, Kima Jones, Janice Lee, Adrian Matejka, and Prageeta Sharma), the CSU English department, and all the people & organizations who make Cleveland’s literary life so vibrant and inspiring. We’re delighted to welcome Kam. 

Kam is a Black, nonbinary settler from Hawai’i and author of three chapbooks, most recently henceforce: a travel poetic (Omnidawn Books, 2019). They are thankful for support from the Davidson Institute, Sarah Lawrence College, the UCROSS Foundation, Callaloo, and the University of Iowa. Kam earned a BA in American Studies from the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa and an MFA in Poetry from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. They study surveillance, race, queerness, and American politics. You can find Kam’s writing in West BranchBlack Warrior Review, and Tagvverk. Formerly, they are upset, a teacher, and a scholar. Currently, they are the 2020–2022 Anisfield-Wolf Fellow in Writing and Publishing. Forever? Find ’em on the internet at kamdenihilliard.com.

Hilliardphoto.jpeg