Creative Writing

stanford creative writing faculty

Molly Antopol

stanford creative writing faculty

Caroline Bailey

stanford creative writing faculty

Lydia Burleson

stanford creative writing faculty

Sarah Coduto

stanford creative writing faculty

Aracelis Girmay

PHoto of Sara Houghteling

Sara Houghteling

Adam Johnson

Adam Johnson

stanford creative writing faculty

Amaud Jamaul Johnson

stanford creative writing faculty

A. Van Jordan

stanford creative writing faculty

Jesuseyi Osundeko

Patrick Phillips

Patrick Phillips

Elizabeth Tallent

Elizabeth Tallent

stanford creative writing faculty

Kirstin Valdez Quade

Tobias Wolff

Tobias Wolff

Stanford University

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With five new appointments, Creative Writing Program undergoing ‘amazing transformation’

Poets Louise Glück, A. Van Jordan, Amaud Jamaul Johnson, and Aracelis Girmay and fiction writer Kirstin Valdez Quade have been appointed to the faculty of the renowned program.

Five award-winning writers have been appointed to faculty positions in the Creative Writing Program . Three have already settled in at Stanford, and two more are set to arrive later this year.

“These new and incoming professors have distinguished themselves with the originality and quality of their work,” said Debra Satz , the Vernon R. and Lysbeth Warren Anderson Dean of the School of Humanities and Sciences . “Their poetry and prose are dazzling, and the diversity of their backgrounds will enrich the program’s teaching and creative production.”

The Creative Writing Program is part of the English Department . The majority of English majors at Stanford earn their degrees with an emphasis in creative writing, and the creative writing minor is one of the three most popular on campus. The program also offers two-year fellowships—the prestigious Wallace Stegner Fellowship —to emerging poets and fiction writers.

Louise Gluck  in a black-and-white image. She is in profile and looking down slightly, with sunlight illuminating the back of her hair.

Among the notable new appointments is Nobel laureate Louise Glück , who previously taught at Stanford as a visiting professor and a Mohr Visiting Poet . She joined the faculty in January and is teaching a Stegner workshop this quarter.

“Louise brings a high level of technical skill to the classroom as well as a deep, abiding sense of the importance of the space of the workshop,” said Austin Araujo , a Stegner fellow. “She asks us to listen to our poems and, by extension, ourselves, as closely as possible.”

Glück was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature in 2020. The Swedish Academy cited “her unmistakable poetic voice that with austere beauty makes individual existence universal.” She also has received the Pulitzer Prize for poetry for The Wild Iris (The Ecco Press, 1992) and the National Book Award for Poetry for Faithful and Virtuous Night (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014). She was awarded a National Humanities Medal by President Barack Obama in 2015 and served as U.S. poet laureate from 2003 to 2004.

Glück is the author of more than a dozen volumes of poetry. Most recently, she published a work of fiction, Marigold and Rose (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2022).

‘An amazing transformation’

“The program is going through an amazing transformation before our eyes,” said Nicholas Jenkins , interim director of the Creative Writing Program and an associate professor of English.

Nicholas Jenkins wearing a purple button-down shirt and a black sport coat standing under one of Stanford's arches in the Main Quad.

In addition to Glück, poet A. Van Jordan joined the creative writing faculty in the fall and is teaching an advanced poetry workshop to undergraduates this quarter. The poet Amaud Jamaul Johnson joined the faculty in January and will begin teaching in the spring. Fiction writer Kirstin Valdez Quade and poet Aracelis Girmay  are set to arrive at Stanford this summer.

H&S plans to introduce Jordan, Johnson, Valdez Quade, and Girmay in a series of Q&As throughout the year.

“We’re in a remarkable period of hiring during which we’re fortunate enough to be bringing to campus an extraordinarily talented array of significant artists and teachers,” Jenkins said.

Long a central reference point in the university’s creative landscape thanks to the presence of writers such as Adam Johnson , Chang-rae Lee , Patrick Phillips , and Elizabeth Tallent , the Creative Writing Program’s metamorphosis follows the unexpected death in 2020 of Eavan Boland , the program’s director and a beloved figure at the university, and the pandemic, which thwarted readings and other in-person gatherings. Both were blows to the creative writing community, Jenkins said.

Now, with pandemic restrictions lifted and the spate of new faculty members, Jenkins said the program is reinvigorated and developing in new and dynamic ways.

In addition to the new hires, the program’s footprint itself has expanded into Mariposa House. This multipurpose space provides offices for lecturers and meeting rooms, but it is meant to cater especially to undergraduate students, who can organize study groups, pop-up readings, and informal discussions there.

“The Creative Writing Program has been an absolute jewel of the university for many years, and we’re looking toward burnishing its brilliance into the future,” Jenkins said.

The writer and environmentalist Wallace Stegner founded the program in 1946 and established the fellowship, which later were named in his honor. Notable former Stegner fellows include Raymond Carver, Lan Samantha Chang, Philip Levine, ZZ Packer, Robert Pinsky, Vikram Seth, Scott Turow, and Tobias Wolff.

Two of the new faculty members, Johnson and Valdez Quade, were also fellows.

Some former Stegner fellows are appointed Jones Lecturers in the program. There are 24 Jones Lecturers, and they teach some of the most sought-after undergraduate classes at Stanford.

In high demand

The growth of the Creative Writing Program is especially welcome because the demand for its courses regularly outpaces supply.

“We have a large number of fully enrolled classes, many with significant waitlists and some where the waitlists are longer than the enrollment roster,” Jenkins said. He noted that the popularity of the program attests to how multitalented Stanford students are and to their hunger for creative outlets.  

“Creative writing draws many students from outside the humanities,” Jenkins said. “Until I started directing, I hadn’t realized how widely the roots of the program spread out across campus. We attract passionate, talented students from computer science, mathematics, political science, engineering, and economics. They want to nourish another part of their souls—the expressive, aesthetic side. And to allow them to do that is a huge source of pride for us.”

Jenkins said that many students today have grown up communicating via text messaging, chat rooms, and social media posts—in other words, primarily through writing. “In that sense, creativity has been emancipated by the digital revolution,” he said. “And one thing Stanford is about is embracing creativity.”

Jenkins added: “With a galaxy of great, dedicated writers on campus—both those who have been inspiring us for years now and those who are just joining us—the Creative Writing Program is now beginning a new chapter in its own exhilarating story.”

This is the first in a series of articles highlighting new faculty in the Creative Writing Program.

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How to Apply

The 2024-2026 Wallace Stegner Fellowship application is now closed. The application for the 2025-2027 fellowship will open on September 1, 2024 and will close on November 1, 2024. 

To apply for the fellowship, please prepare the following information and materials:

  • Personal background information
  • Contact information for 2 recommenders who can speak to your suitability as a workshop participant (please do not submit letters of recommendation)
  • A statement of plans in which you briefly explain your writing plans for the two years of the Stegner Fellowship (1000 words maximum)
  • A description of what you hope to get out of the workshops in your genre and how you intend to contribute to the development of other Fellows’ work (300 words maximum)
  • A writing sample (9000 words maximum for fiction, 15 pages maximum for poetry)

The application fee is $55 , payable by credit or debit card. A fee waiver is available for those who qualify; the fee waiver request form is integrated into the online application.

Apply online

For application or selection process questions, visit our  Application FAQ page .

For all other inquiries, email stegnerfellowship [at] stanford.edu .

Peer Advisor position available

stanford creative writing faculty

We have an open position for a new Creative Writing Peer Advisor!

The new Peer Advisor will be selected this Spring, with an expected start date of Fall 2024. Position available to matriculated Stanford undergraduate students only.

This is a wonderful opportunity to build community on campus around writing and the arts. We highly recommend applying if you love hosting events, chatting with people, and have a lot of personal experience with/love for our program.

Deadline: May 3 (Friday of Week 5)

For questions: contact the current Peer Advisors

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  1. Faculty

    Creative Writing Program 450 Jane Stanford Way, Bldg. 460 Stanford, CA 94305-2087

  2. Creative Writing Program

    Meet the faces of Creative Writing--the faculty, lecturers, staff, and visiting writers who guide and support our students and fellows. In the Spotlight. 2023-24 Creative Writing Undergraduate Prizes. ... Creative Writing Program 450 Jane Stanford Way, Bldg. 460 Stanford, CA 94305-2087.

  3. Creative Writing

    Creative Writing. Molly Antopol. Faculty. Caroline Bailey. Graduate Student. Lydia Burleson. Graduate Student. Sarah Coduto. Graduate Student. Aracelis Girmay. Faculty. Sara Houghteling. Adam Johnson. ... 450 Jane Stanford Way Building 460, Room 201 Stanford, CA 94305-2087 Main Office: (650) 723-2635

  4. How to Enroll

    To begin pursuing an Independent Study (English 198), students must find a Creative Writing lecturer or English faculty member (professor) to be their instructor. Once they connect with a lecturer or professor, approval from the program is required. ... Creative Writing Program 450 Jane Stanford Way, Bldg. 460 Stanford, CA 94305-2087. Connect ...

  5. With five new appointments, Creative Writing ...

    The majority of English majors at Stanford earn their degrees with an emphasis in creative writing, and the creative writing minor is one of the three most popular on campus. ... In addition to Glück, poet A. Van Jordan joined the creative writing faculty in the fall and is teaching an advanced poetry workshop to undergraduates this quarter.

  6. Opportunities for Undergraduate Writers

    Independent Study. An Independent Study (English 198) gives undergraduate students the opportunity to work one-on-one with Creative Writing lecturers or English faculty members (professors) to engage in a co-designed curriculum. Students can discuss readings, generate work, and revise drafts with mentorship and guidance from their instructors.

  7. Creative Writing Program

    Stegner Fellow Reading with Adedayo Agarau and Gahl Pratt Pardes. Wed, Feb 28, 2024 6:30pm to 8pm PT. Humanities Center, Levinthal Hall. Featured. Register Save. Offers undergraduate courses in fiction, poetry and creative nonfiction writing, and the Wallace Stegner Fellowship.

  8. How to Apply

    Creative Writing Program 450 Jane Stanford Way, Bldg. 460 Stanford, CA 94305-2087

  9. Peer Advisor position available

    Creative Writing Program 450 Jane Stanford Way, Bldg. 460 Stanford, CA 94305-2087

  10. Letovo School (Moscow)

    Letovo School (Moscow) A research-based professional learning experience (PLE) that focused on high quality instruction, coherent curriculum, and formative assessment given in August 2017. The PLE is supported by video-based coaching and a research program. It was designed to leverage the Letovo School's mission and build on the strengths of ...

  11. New Saint Andrews College

    View Full Report Card. New Saint Andrews is a private, Christian college located in Moscow, Idaho. It is a small institution with an enrollment of 218 undergraduate students. The New Saint Andrews acceptance rate is 86%. The only major offered is Liberal Arts and Humanities. New Saint Andrews graduates 63% of its students. nsa.edu. 405 S MAIN ST.

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  13. Online Courses: Creative Writing

    Online Courses: Creative Writing - Stanford University Online Courses offers a variety of classes for adults who want to improve their writing skills and explore their creativity. Whether you are interested in fiction, poetry, memoir, or personal essays, you can learn from experienced instructors and fellow writers in a supportive and flexible online environment.

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    The Moscow Government has allocated 100 million rubles for grants. The city supports creative industries not only financially, but also in promoting their products and services across the country and the world, providing market analytics, education, creating infrastructure for successful work, conditions for the formation of a creative community.