Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UCA to host author as artist-in-residence

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CONWAY — The University of Central Arkansas College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences will host author Kiese Laymon as an artist-in-residence on Tuesday and Wednesday.

At 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Laymon will host a public reading, an interview and a Q&A via Zoom, with meeting ID number 831 0260 1516 and passcode 992840. Earlier that afternoon, Laymon will instruct a masterclas­s with UCA Master of Fine Arts students and participat­e in an informal Q&A with faculty, both via Zoom.

On Wednesday, Laymon will host a craft talk and a Q&A with students via Zoom.

Laymon is a Black Southern writer from Jackson, Mississipp­i, who is known for his observant, often humorous work that delves into issues such as race and family, body and shame, poverty and place. He is the author of the award-winning “Heavy: An American Memoir,” the essay collection “How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America” and the novel “Long Division.”

“I honestly don’t know if there is another writer in the U.S. who speaks as relevantly and urgently to the social, cultural and political issues of the day as Kiese Laymon,” said Tom Williams, dean of CAHSS. “In his fiction and memoir, he has staked out an unmatched honesty and originalit­y. Plus, he knows all the secrets to break your heart and leave you laughing. We’re so lucky to welcome Kiese Laymon to campus via Zoom.”

In addition to authoring several books, Laymon is a contributi­ng editor for Vanity Fair, and his work has appeared in numerous other publicatio­ns, including The New York Times, Esquire, Colorlines, The Lost Angeles Times, The Guardian, Ebony, Lit Hub and The Oxford American, which is a quarterly literary magazine published by UCA.

A member of Black Artists for Freedom, Laymon was named to the Ebony Magazine Power 100 in 2015 and selected as a member of the Root 100 in 2013 and 2014. Laymon’s bestsellin­g memoir, “Heavy: An American Memoir” won the 2019 Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction and the 2018 Isherwood Prize for Autobiogra­phical Prose and was named one of the 50 Best Memoirs of the Past 50 Years by The New York Times.

Laymon holds a Master of Fine Arts degree in creative writing from Indiana University and is currently the Hubert H. McAlexande­r Chair of English at the University of Mississipp­i, where he founded the Catherine Coleman Initiative for the Arts and Social Justice.

For more informatio­n about Laymon, visit

kieselaymo­n.com. For more informatio­n about the residency, contact M. Shelly Conner, assistant professor of creative writing, at (501) 420-4749 or mconner3@uca.edu.

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