Stillpoint: A Center for the Humanities & Community

Stillpoint: A Center for the Humanities & Community is a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting a sense of community through the humanities. We work toward this through a small number of events each year, including poetry readings, writers workshops, author talks, music programs and other forums for experiencing and understanding the meaning of community in our lives.


Tuesday, June 1, 2010

A Summer Literary Series at Healing Tea


Local Authors Read Their Work

3216 Arapahoe Avenue

(free and open to the public)

June 15th, 4:00 - 6:00 p.m.

Laura Goodman Then As Now A personal essay dealing with battle fatigue/PTSD and its immediate and far-reaching effects on her father & family

Tim Hilmer and Lara Robinson Will You Read My Story? A teacher and student reconnect after 26 years and reflect on the year that changed their lives.

July 20th, 4:00 - 6:00 p.m.

Rachel Weaver Point of Direction A novel of nature and self-discovery

Priscilla Stuckey A Wider Circle of Friends: How a Scholar of Religion Learned Spirituality from Trees, Animals, and Rocks, a book-in-progress, which blends memoir and environmental philosophy to explore the wide-awake world of nature and the relationships possible with many kinds of friends.

Kate Krautkramer In the Garden A short story about the problem of being human trapped in human social systems and culture, but also being an animal interested in survival

August 17th, 4:00 - 6:00 p.m.

Tom Gilboy Bark Mice: The Lion and the Mouse Fable Expanded Here the mice have opposable thumbs and the lion is an Irish spirit, a pooka, who is fleeing human pursuers in the contemporary US.

Jennifer Wert Pattaya, Juarez, and San Sebastian Three short pieces exploring place and culture, Jennifer’s traveling the distance between the two, and her place in the larger world.

About the Authors

Tom Gilboy works on novels a couple of hours each morning before work, co-writes screenplays, and co-wrote and illustrated a couple of children's books. Bark Mice is in its fourth and final draft after more years than Tom cares to admit.

Laura Goodman is a Boulder-based writer of both nonfiction and fiction. Through the past thirty years her stories and short pieces have appeared in many national literary journals and anthologies, winning awards and grants along the way. She is also a freelance editor who specializes in clients working in fiction and memoir writing.

At present, Laura has two projects in the works. One is a novel. The other is a collection of personal essays which deals with battle fatigue/PTSD and its immediate and far-reaching effects on her own father and family. Her reading is an essay from this collection.

Tim Hillmer has been a teacher and mentor in the Boulder Valley School District for the past 26 years.

Lara Robinson was a 6th grade student in Tim's class during his first year of teaching in 1985-1986. She is now a working mom and writer with two children who lives in Louisville.

Lara became the basis for one of the main characters in Tim's second novel, Ravenhill (University of New Mexico Press). They are now working on a book about the powerful relationship that can occur between teacher and student.

Kate Krautkramer holds an MFA in poetics from the Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado. She has been a columnist for The Denver Post and High Country News and currently lives with her husband and children in rural, Northwest Colorado, where she teaches writing at South Routt Elementary School.

Krautkramer’s work has appeared or is forthcoming in such publications as Blue Mesa Review, Colorado Review, Creative Nonfiction, Fiction, The High Plains Literary Review, National Geographic, The New York Times, The North American Review, Zone 3, So To Speak, The Seattle Review, Mississippi Review, South Dakota Review, Front Range Review, Washington Square and Weber: The Contemporary West, as well as in the anthologies The Beacon Best and The Best American Nonrequired Reading. She has also been featured on National Public Radio’s Morning Edition and Day to Day.

Priscilla Stuckey, PhD, teaches nature spirituality in the graduate programs of Prescott College in Prescott, AZ. She is a longtime book editor and writing coach as well as an avid hiker, native plant gardener, and birdwatcher in and around her home in Boulder.

Rachel Weaver: A writer and teacher, Rachel has taught creative writing classes in a variety of settings including schools, libraries, as part of a glacier backpacking trip in Alaska, and at the Hospice Center for Grief Education. Rachel formerly worked as a wildlife biologist in Alaska studying songbirds, raptors, and black and brown bears.

Excerpts from both Nineteen-foot Tide, and Point of Direction were chosen to represent Naropa University in 2006, 2007, and 2008 in the Harcourt Brace Best New Voices in American Fiction contest. In 2006, she was awarded the Katie O’Brien Scholarship for Fiction and a position as the Writer-in-Residence at the Footpaths to Creativity Center in Portugal. Her work has appeared in The Ontario Review, Fly Fishing New England, Alaska Women Speak, Bombay Gin, The Blue Mesa Review, and is forthcoming in The Gettysburg Review. In June 2009, Rachel was awarded an honorary mention in the New Millennium Fiction Contest.

Jennifer Wert: A Boulder resident for 15 years, she works as a birth doula and yoga instructor. She is also at work on a memoir that chronicles her journey towards becoming a mother and the woman she wants to be.

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