Melanie Conroy-Goldman (fiction)
Professor of English and Creative Writing
Melanie Conroy-Goldman is the author of The Likely World, a novel from Red Hen Press, and her fiction has been published in Southern Review, StoryQuarterly, in anthologies from Morrow and St. Martin’s and online at venues such as McSweeneys.net. She has volunteered as a teacher at a maximum-security men’s prison with the Cornell Prison Education Program.
Kathryn Cowles (poetry)
Associate Professor of English and Creative Writing
Her second book of poems is Maps and Transcripts of the Ordinary World (Milkweed Editions). Her first book, Eleanor, Eleanor, not your real name (Bear Star Press), won the Dorothy Brunsman Poetry Prize. Her poems and multi-media work have appeared in such places as Best American Experimental Writing, Boston Review, Colorado Review, DIAGRAM, Georgia Review, Gulf Coast, New American Writing, Verse, and the Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day, and have been awarded the Larry Levis Academy of American Poets Prize and the Poetry Society of America’s Alice Fay di Castagnola Award for a manuscript in progress. She earned her doctorate from the University of Utah.
Geoffrey Babbitt (nonfiction)
Associate Professor of English and Creative Writing
Geoffrey Babbitt is the author of Appendices Pulled from a Study on Light. His poems and essays have appeared in North American Review, Pleiades, Colorado Review, DIAGRAM, Notre Dame Review, TYPO, Ben Jonson Journal, Cincinnati Review, and elsewhere. Babbitt holds a Ph.D. from the University of Utah and serves as Editor-in-Chief of Seneca Review & Seneca Review Books.
Ben Ristow
Associate Professor of Writing and Rhetoric
Ben Ristow’s fiction has been published in BOMB, AMBIT, Indiana Review, Southwest Review, Gray's Sporting Journal and has been noted in Best American Nonrequired Reading and podcasted for Fiction for Driving Across America (BOMB).
Daniel Schonning
Director of HWS Debate
Daniel Schonning’s writing has appeared in Orion Magazine, Poetry Magazine, The Yale Review, Poetry Daily, and elsewhere. He is the winner of Crazyhorse’s 2020 Lynda Hull Memorial Prize, judged by Cyrus Cassells, and winner of Omnidawn’s 2023 Single Poem Broadside Contest, judged by Nathalie Khankan. He lives in Geneva, New York, where he serves as the Director of Debate at Hobart and William Smith Colleges.