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Creative Writing

Creative writing is the artistic practice of composing and refining fiction, poetry and creative nonfiction. It is an area of study very different from others within English. Creative writing students generally take workshop courses in which they submit their own work for constructive critique by their classmates, as well as by faculty with a strong national profile in publication.

The creative writing faculty at the University of ÁùºÏ±¦µä, Reno specialize primarily in fiction and poetry, though we offer periodic courses in other areas such as creative nonfiction and screenwriting. Our fiction writers create and are familiar with a wide range of approaches (including YA fiction and work written within commercial genres such as fantasy, mystery, horror and so on). Our poets write in a broad spectrum of poetic styles and have published books in narrative, lyric and experimental modes.

Tablet, keyboard, plant, open blank book, coffee closed notebook and pencils sit on a marble desk

Interested in exploring creative writing more? Consider applying for our Master's program.

Major in writingMFA in creative writing

Opportunities for students

A range of resources and opportunities are available for students to become involved in publishing and professional experience and to teach writing to the community. Many of our graduate students have presented their work at local readings and events.

Faculty in creative writing

Casey Bell

Casey Bell

I’m a fiction writer with a passion for helping students discover and hone their unique voices. My writing is sometimes literary, sometimes slipstream, and always feminist. I primarily write short stories, and my work has appeared in Sequestrum, Cream City Review, New South, The Boiler, Reed Magazine, The New Limestone Review, Timber and elsewhere. My short-story collection, Little Fury, is forthcoming from Metatron Press in spring of 2023. I also co-direct a summer music camp for self-identified girls, trans and gender-expansive kids called Girls Rock Reno. Currently, a novel is very hard at work on me.

Chris Coake

Christopher Coake

I’m a fiction writer; I’ve published two story collections—We’re in Trouble and You Would Have Told Me Not To—and a novel, You Came Back, which was adapted into a feature-length, Italian-language film in 2020. My work is literary, and often edges into genre territory; I’ve had stories published in mystery, horror and fantasy anthologies (including Best American Mystery Stories and The Best American Noir of the Century), and I’m working on a fantasy novel, as well as a realist love story.

Linzy Garcia

Linzy Garcia

I am a fiction writer who fell in love with both (very) short-form and long-form literary fiction. My fiction explores female pleasure, shame, experience, and memory. My flash fiction appears in The Dollhouse (print), Lady/Liberty/Lit, Thin Air Magazine, NV Humanities, and The Normal School. I am currently working on a novel about a young woman who revisits her hometown and her past, unsure if they know the dark secret she ran away from: a secret affair with her high school teacher. Now, as an adult, she is forced to return and grapple with the lasting and interwoven threads of trauma and love. 

Frandsen Humanities

Steven Gehrke

As a poet, my interests include ekphrastic poetry, elegiac poetry, poetry about illness and recovery, poetry about fatherhood, and poetry about faith and religion. I am currently working on a new collection, tentatively titled Football in America, that touches on many of these interests. I look for expansiveness and inclusiveness in poetry and am drawn to poetry that is able to tell a story while maintaining the intensity and linguistic invention of the lyric. I’ve also written several full-length screenplays, the latest of which details the life of the inventor of the dialysis machine.

Ann Keniston

Ann Keniston

I’m a poet, essayist, and scholar of contemporary North American poetry, with a particular interest in hybrid forms that combine research with introspection. I’m at work on a collection of poems about art forgery, the art market, and the self-portrait genre, and on a collection of hybrid personal-researched essays topics including collecting, the autopsy form, and more.

Joanne Mallari

Joanne Mallari

I write poetry, and I am currently working on a full-length collection. My debut chapbook, Daughter Tongue, was published by Kelsay Books. As a teacher, I believe in making arts education more accessible, because I discovered my love of language through public programs like the Southern ÁùºÏ±¦µä Writing Project. Outside the classroom, I enjoy collaborating with fellow readers, writers, and artists in the Reno community.

Jared Stanley

Jared Stanley

My poems explore the ways spiritual traditions help us navigate the profound, ongoing weirdness of climate change. I’ve written four books of poetry, most recently So Tough, winner of the 2022 Saturnalia Books Poetry Prize. I'm always looking for ways to present poetry outside of books, so I often collaborate with visual artists, making artworks that play with museums, archives, and monuments, which take various forms including billboards, decks of cards, ceramics and prints. I’m currently working on my fifth collection of poems as well as a novel, Leave Here Satisfied.