This coming fall semester looks like it will be as close to “normal” as it’s been in some time. I’m teaching some familiar creative writing classes that I usually teach in the fall (syllabi below), and filling in for the first half of the semester in our ENGL 101 Writing Tutorial class (syllabus not included). I will again also be teaching our methods course for senior theses in creative writing (ENGL 489).
Month: August 2022
The 2022–23 Visiting Writers Series at Hartwick College
This year, Hartwick College and the Department of Literature, Media, and Writing will present four readings in the 2022–23 Visiting Writers Series. Readings take place at 7:00 or 7:30 p.m. in Eaton Lounge, Bresee Hall at Hartwick College in Oneonta, New York.
All campus visitors, including attendees at campus-based public events, must have up to date vaccinations for COVID-19. The College reserves the right to require masks on an event-by-event basis.
Poet Raena Shirali will read on Thursday, October 27, 2022 at 7:30 p.m., including from her new book summonings (Black Lawrence, forthcoming 2022).
Fiction writer Tessa Yang will read from her brand new collection, The Runaway Restaurant (7.13, forthcoming October 2022) on Wednesday, November 16, 2022 at 7:00 p.m.
Fiction writer, poet, and game designer Julian K. Jarboe will read from their work on Wednesday, March 15, 2023 at 7:00 p.m.
And poet and nonfiction writer Sten Carlson will read from his work on Friday, April 28, 2023 at 7:00 p.m.
For more information, visit the Visiting Writers Series webpage.
Collected Links in the Time of Coronavirus, Volumes 1–29, March 11, 2020–August 15, 2022
You can view all twenty-nine entries in the “Links in the Time of Coronavirus” series (March 11, 2020–August 15, 2022) under “Categories” or by visiting this link: https://bradleyjfest.com/category/links-in-the-time-of-coronavirus/.
Links in the Time of Coronavirus, Vol. 29: July 16–August 15, 2022
This is the last volume in my “Links in the Time of Coronavirus” series. This is for a few reasons. First and foremost, a new academic year is about to start, and I know I’m going to be busy (especially this coming semester), will again fall behind with posting regularly, and would like to return to putting up just four(ish) link posts per year (one each season: e.g., “Fall 2022 Links”). This will also allow me to be more selective and less encyclopedic in my links and to worry less about capturing the full “fabric” of events as I perceive them (from my obviously limited and privileged subject position). Second, as the CDC has just (quite controversially) considerably reduced COVID-19 guidelines—with the Center for Disease Control’s (CDC) Greta Massetti saying: “‘This guidance acknowledges that the pandemic is not over, but also helps us move to a point where COVID-19 no longer severely disrupts our daily lives,'” adding later that: ‘”We know that COVID 19 is here to stay,'”—it seems as good a point as ever, considering these links began on the occasion of an official body (the World Health Organization) declaring a global pandemic, to stop this series.
For no matter how much we may disagree with the CDC’s decision, Massetti’s latter point seems pretty clearly the case at this point, that COVID-19 is here to stay, and it is this point in particular that has made me to decide to cease grouping my links as part of the “time of coronavirus” series. It appears that there will never now not be a time of coronavirus; from here on out any links I post will always be “in the time of coronavirus.” (When I imagine keeping this series going until we might say it is “not” the time of coronavirus—such a prospect is dauntingly disheartening.) Let me be clear, however: my decision to discontinue this series has nothing to do with thinking that the pandemic is “over,” only that it appears to have made a shift to something that—woefully, unfortunately, perhaps criminally—is just part of the fabric of being human in the twenty-first century; it has become a fact of our lives no matter how much we wish it had all gone differently, wish that we lived in a world/country with a functioning healthcare system and a greater agreement about scientific facts, with a greater capacity to care for each other, to wear masks, to get vaccinated, etc. But we didn’t, we don’t. The current point the pandemic has reached, this point of ubiquity, of defeatism, of “normalization,” of the fact that COVID-19 rarely dominates headlines in this time of search warrants and climate bills, means that it is now time, at least for my practice of putting up links, to move them to another position, another standpoint. See you in “Fall 2022 Links.”
Nuclear and Environmental
Emily Cochrane, “Senate Passes Climate, Health and Tax Bill, with All Republicans Opposed.”
Jack Ewing and Ivan Penn, “Climate Bill ‘Transformative’ for Auto and Energy Industries.”
Kate Aronoff, “Congress Is about to Pass a Historic Climate Bill. So Why Are Oil Companies Pleased?”
Paul Krugman, “Did Democrats Just Save Civilization?”
Links in the Time of Coronavirus, Vol. 28: June 16–July 15, 2022

Nuclear and Environmental
Eric Schlosser, “What If Russia Uses Nuclear Weapons in Ukraine?”
Adam Liptak, “Supreme Court Strips Federal Government of Crucial Tool to Control Pollution.”
Zach St. George, “Can Planting a Trillion New Trees Save the World?”
Neelan Bohra, “Arizona Wildfire Destroys Observatory Buildings.”
Christopher Flavelle and Julie Tate, “How Joe Manchin Aided Coal, and Earned Millions.”
Politics
Max Fisher, “Is the World Really Falling Apart, or Does It Just Feel That Way?”
Carl Hulse, “Mitch McConnell’s Court Delivers.”
Charlie Savage, “Decades Ago, Alito Laid Out Methodical Strategy to Eventually Overrule Roe.”
Ezra Klein, “Dobbs Is Not the Only Reason to Question the Legitimacy of the Supreme Court.”
Katherine Stewart, “Christian Nationalists Are Excited about What Comes Next.”
Links in the Time of Coronavirus, Vol. 27: May 16–June 15, 2022
Nuclear and Environmental
Mitt Romney, “We Must Prepare for Putin’s Worst Weapons.”
United Nations Environment Programme, “In South Asia, Record Heat Threatens Future of Farming.”
Margaret Renkl, “One Way to Do More for the Environment: Do Less With Your Yard.”
Christopher Flavelle, “As the Great Salt Lake Dries Up, Utah Faces an ‘Environmental Nuclear Bomb.’”
Jonathon Catlin, “Why We Love Disaster Films.”
Coronavirus
Noah Weiland, “White House Outlines Coronavirus Vaccine Plan for Children under Five.”
Sharon LaFraniere and Noah Weiland, “FDA Panel Recommends Pfizer and Moderna Vaccines for Youngest Children.”
Ukraine
Anton Troianovski, “‘They Basically Got Everything Wrong’: A Russian Diplomat Speaks Out on the War.”