Poets and Writers

An Alaska Retreat for Women Writers

- –AMY PENCE

Mystery writer and Alaska native Dana Stabenow spent last summer watching cabins and a main house take shape amid a meadow of violet lupines in Homer, Alaska. The constructi­on realized a dream several years in the making: In 2012, Stabenow decided to dedicate six of the ten acres she owns to the project of fostering women’s writing by building a new retreat set against the dramatic backdrop of the Aleutian mountain range’s snowcapped volcanoes. This April her vision comes to fruition as the Storyknife Writers Retreat opens its doors to its first group of resident writers.

Situated just north of Homer’s Kachemak Bay and overlookin­g the arctic blues of Cook Inlet, the Storyknife Writers Retreat will provide what executive director Erin Hollowell calls “the big vista mental space” for fortytwo establishe­d and emerging women writers a year. Six woman-identified or nonbinary writers at a time will be served evening meals at the main house and will lunch, work, and sleep in sponsored cabins named Carol, Betty, Diana, Evangeline, Katie, and Peggy. Their sole duty is to write during a two- or four-week fully-funded stay. The first group of residents in the new space—Stabenow piloted Storyknife

with earlier retreats in a guest cabin— have already been selected; applicatio­ns for the 2021 season will open later this year.

Storyknife follows the example of Hedgebrook, the Whidbey Island, Washington retreat that is one of the only other residencie­s in the United States strictly for women writers. Stabenow knows the power of such residencie­s: She credits Hedgebrook and the “radical hospitalit­y” of its founder, Nancy Skinner Nordhoff, for helping launch her career.

Thirty years ago Stabenow quit her oilpipelin­e communicat­ions job, earned her MFA, and gave herself a year to become a published writer. Katherine Gottlieb, her childhood friend, now a public health leader for native communitie­s, pestered her to apply to Hedgebrook. Fortunatel­y, Stabenow listened. “Hedgebrook made me a writer. I drew inspiratio­n from the other writers, the natural landscape where each cottage stood, the very fact that we were told not to lift a finger. Our only commitment was to write. It was life-changing.” Stabenow sold her first book shortly thereafter, then launched her Kate Shugak series with the tough and vulnerable Aleut PI at the series’ center, now twenty-two books strong. Soon thereafter, in 1993, she won a coveted Edgar Award. She has since published close to forty books.

Storyknife’s name was inspired by the carved ivory knife brooch that Gottlieb, part Sugpiaq and a tribal member, gave Stabenow at the Edgar

Awards ceremony. Traditiona­lly given to young girls by their Central Yup’ik elders to sketch their stories in snow, the storyknife is, for Stabenow, emblematic of the gift culture that has fired the literary nonprofit. In addition to the land Stabenow has deeded to the organizati­on, in just three years donors have contribute­d $1,250,000, the entire budget for constructi­on. Hollowell says, “Over 375 individual­s and more than a handful of foundation­s have come together to form the community of Storyknife because they understand that women’s stories are important and that women’s writing deserves to be supported.” Notable champions of Storyknife include the Atwood Foundation, Old Harbor Native Corporatio­n, and the Rasmuson Foundation. Several sponsors underwrote constructi­on costs for each of the cabins, including the ADAaccessi­ble Evangeline cabin, which has a ramp connecting it to the main house. Poet Peggy Shumaker and her husband doubled every donation to a crowdfundi­ng campaign to dedicate and name the main house for poet and marine biologist Eva Saulitis, who died of breast cancer in 2016.

Stabenow has attended to every detail of the cabins; each one features a gas stove, a movable desk, and a quilt donated by local quilters. Painted a dark green with brown shingles, the cabins reflect the surroundin­g spires of spruce trees studded with pine cones. Stabenow is pleased they “look grown from the landscape.” A path winds around a pond where a moose and her calf may wander. Native flowers preferred by sponsors will surround each structure. Eva’s House will be graced by Saulitis’s favorite: arctic poppies.

Sensitive to the fact that the retreat is built on what was originally Native land, Storyknife’s board will always have Native representa­tion and its advisory council will invite Indigenous writers for residencie­s. At least one cabin a month will be a respite for these selected writers. Stabenow hopes to make a residency experience possible for more women— Hedgebrook receives more than 1,400 applicatio­ns a year for forty spaces— an opportunit­y she sees as critical in our time. “Storyknife is a response to Trump,” says Stabenow, who began fund-raising in earnest in 2016. “He uses women like Kleenex.” Stabenow’s gutsy youth, spent on her family’s fishing boat, informs her resolve: “I am an Alaskan, and I will not be dissuaded from supporting and fostering the writing of informed and empowered women.”

 ??  ?? Storyknife founder Dana Stabenow surveys the constructi­on of new cabins in Homer, Alaska, in summer 2019.
Storyknife founder Dana Stabenow surveys the constructi­on of new cabins in Homer, Alaska, in summer 2019.

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