O’Brien a Success at Cole 2025

Writer Paul O’Brien met with the Cole Summer Writers Institute writers on the morning of July 16, 2025. The students, despite the hot and sticky conditions, wrote, listened, and shared their writing with O’Brien as he led them through a morning filled with poetry, anecdotes, and writing. The students shared their happiness at the visit, stating that they particularly appreciated the personal connection he made with their writing, actually doing the assignments he assigned and laughing and talking with them as they read their work. The only complaint: not enough time in a packed morning to ask all of the questions they had for him!

Paul is the author of seven books of poetry and nonfiction. He taught for 47 years at Norte Dame-Bishop Gibbons high school in Schenectady, New York, where he guided thousands of students through the complexities of AP English Literature and Senior English. As a side note, he was also my first department chair, and being so gave me my initial break into teaching, a debt I still owe him. His kind, gentle, erudite leadership was something I have tried to emulate in my own experience as a department chair here at Clayton A. Bouton High School.

Enjoy the pictures of Paul’s morning with us. He left us with a reading of Richard Wilbur’s poem, “The Writer,” which sums up a lot for both of us. In that poem the narrator describes his thinking about the importance of writing. Here is the final stanza of that poem:

“It is always a matter, my darling,

Of life or death, as I had forgotten.  I wish

What I wished you before, but harder.”

Jennifer Roy Featured Guest Writer for Cole 2019

Jennifer Roy, author of over fifty books, will be the featured writer at Cole this year! Ms. Roy will conduct a morning workshop for Cole participants on Wednesday, July 10. Cole is partnering once again with the Voorheesville Public Library on the event.

Ms. Roy is the author of over fifty books, ranging from young adult fiction to early reader and picture books. Her latest, Playing Atari with Saddam Hussein (at left), was released in 2018 and tells the story of Ali and his family in the wreckage of Basra during the Gulf War. Based on a true story, this YA novel is timely and important.

She is best known for fiction including Yellow Star, which won a Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Award (2006), Sydney Taylor Honor Award, The William Allen White Children’s Book Award (2009), a New York Public L Book, an ALA Notable Book, National Jewish Book Honor Award, and received starred reviews in Publishers Weekly, School Library Journal, VOYA and Booklist. She has written 35 educational books for children ages 5–16, including the “You Can Write” series. (Wikipedia)

More information about Ms. Roy can be found on her website.

Author Tom Swyers to Join Cole 2017

Swyers and BooksNiskayuna writer Tom Swyers has agreed to join the writers at the Cole Summer Writers Institute 2017! Mr. Swyers, a local attorney and judge, is the author of two novels.

From his website: “Winner of two Benjamin Franklin Book Awards including “Best First Book: Fiction” in 2015,  his debut novel, Saving Babe Ruth, has won acclaim from both critics and readers alike and has created a nationwide dialogue over the state of youth sports today.

His upcoming legal thriller, The Killdeer Connection, is set against the backdrop of the oil fracking industry.”

Mr. Swyers latest novel, The Killdeer Connection, was recently named a winner in the 2017 Kindle Scout competition sponsored by Amazon. Only 2-3% of the books submitted are selected.

On top of his Law career and his writing, Mr. Swyers has studied at the Skidmore Summer Writers Institute.

More information can be found on his website, http://www.tomswyers.com/, or on his Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/TomSwyers/.

Cole Writers Published!

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Note: this article was reprinted from the Blackbird Review website.

What do Blackbird Review staff members do in the summer for fun? They write, of course, and, this summer, two staffers saw their hard work come to fruition by having that work published! BBR Editor-in-Chief Sara Gannon and BBR Fiction Editor Lindsey Odorizzi put their writing on the line and submitted work to two prominent magazines this July, and both had their work accepted. Lindsey’s story, “Ripping the Sky,” was published on the Teen Ink Magazine website (http://www.teenink.com/fiction/action_adventure/article/912715/Ripping-the-Sky/), and Sara’s poem, “Pragmatic Musings,” was published in the September 2016 issue of Chronogram Magazine (https://issuu.com/chronogram/docs/chronogram-0916).

Odorizzi’s story is an action-adventure sea yarn that comes with a speculative punch at the end. She was inspired by a song she heard on the radio. Gannon’s poem is a form-challenging rumination on what it is to be teenager in today’s world. She found her inspiration in reading other literary magazines. “I stumbled onto DIAGRAM, an electronic journal of text and art. Every single work they published was unique and contained such innovation that the more I read, the more inspired I became. That night, I wrote “Pragmatic Musings,” a piece that challenged the usual diction and form of my work.”

While both have had pieces published on the Blackbird Review website and in the magazine’s print editions, the publication of  BBR writers in  commercial magazines is a first, and very difficult. “It’s a very competitive field,” says BBR advisor Brian Stumbaugh. “Most magazines receive hundreds if not thousands of submissions a month, so being selected and being published so quickly is a great honor.”

But these students are no strangers to writing.  Sara and Lindsey both have been writing for at least five years, and are multi-year veterans of the Cole Summer Writers Institute, a one-week, writing intensive workshop that allows students in grades 6-12 to focus on their writing. Both writers credit Cole for helping them strive to push their work beyond a high school audience. “[Cole] has made me take writing more seriously and helped me realize that I can actually get my writing out there for others to read. That never was something I thought I could do before going to this camp,” says Odorizzi, and Gannon adds that “the Cole Summer Writers Institute … inspired me to send out my work to magazines without fear of being rejected. In addition, the overall experience has pushed me out of my writing comfort zone and made me try new styles and techniques that helped to improve my writing as a whole.”

Both wish to continue writing well into the future.  Odorizzi plans on studying writing in college and one day pursuing a writing career while Gannon wishes to continue writing in college as a hobby. They both will continue submitting their work to magazines in the future, in part because the aforementioned desire to get their work out to a wider audience. Says Gannon, “I started submitting because I wanted to share my work with a larger community. I don’t write regularly, but often when I do, it’s because I feel an urgency to put my words on paper at that exact moment. I work hard to capture my inspiration or thoughts and then at another point I edit and revise. Because of this, my writing ends up expressing some of the more influential experiences and feelings in my life, and the ability to share this with others who might be able to relate is an opportunity too good to pass up.”

When asked what advice each writer had for aspiring writers, both agreed that getting the words down on paper was the first big hurdle, followed by  finding the right journal that fits the writer’s own personal style. There are lots of journals out there, so both stressed the need to find the right place for the work. Then it comes down to being persistent and continually sending your work out. Says Odorizzi, “It’s also important to not get discouraged if you get rejected. Just keep sending your stuff out and eventually someone will want to publish it.” Gannon echoes that sentiment. “All in all, it’s important to remember that even though you will face rejection, you will never achieve publication if you don’t submit.”

Sara and Lindsey’s previous work, along with work from other Voorheesville writers, can be found on the Blackbird Review website at http://blackbirdreview.org/.

Poet Barbara Ungar Joined Us Today!

Poet Barbara Ungar joined us today to talk poetry and all things writing! We were uprooted from our normal spot in the library and moved to the Performing Arts Center, where the thirteen of us crammed into the front rows to listen to Dr. Ungar and work with her. The students asked great questions, and were rewarded with an invitation to Dr. Ungar’s reading and open mic poetry night at Arthur’s Market & Cafe in Schenectady!

Open-Mic & Featured Poet this coming Wednesday, July 13th.
Arthur’s Market & Cafe, 35 N. Ferry St., Schenectady NY 12305.
Sign-up 7-7:30, readings begin 7:30. Featured Poet : BARBARA UNGAR.
Hosted by Catherine Norr
Here are some pics of the day!
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Poet Barbara Ungar to Join Cole 2016

fullsizerender-2Poet Barbara Ungar , author of four books of poetry, English professor, and coordinator of the MFA program at The College of Saint Rose, will be joining Cole this summer to deliver a one-day workshop for writers! Ms. Ungar, a native of Worcester, Massachusetts and Minneapolis, Minnesota, has degrees from Stanford (BA) and CUNY (MA, PhD), and has travelled extensively.

Praise for Ms. Ungar’s work has been glowing. Samples of the critical reception to her work include:

(Immortal Medusa) “Like any great seeker, Ungar pursues the truth beneath surfaces available to the naked eye. Reading these poems, we are seized by the worlds she reveals. It is the feeling we call ravishment.” —Greg Pardlo

(Charlotte Brontë, You Ruined My Life) “‘I who undulated like an eel now mince on knife-point’: with what glittering myths our culture hooks and reels in its women. In poems at once nightmarishly excoriating and redemptively witty, BLU plunges us into deep waters where these myths are seen joyously refracted.”  —Nathalie F. Anderson

(The Origin of the Milky Way) “. . . a fearless, unflinching collection about birth and motherhood, the transformation of bodies. Ungar’s poems are honestly brutal, candidly tender. Their primal immediacy and intense intimacy are realized through her dazzling sense of craft. Ungar delivers a wonderful, sensuous, visceral poetry.” —Denise Duhamel

(Thrift) “Barbara Ungar’s poems embody, with piercing authority, the ebullience of dissolution. She is a master of sudden pathos (see ‘Garment’ or ‘For the Town Clerk’) as well as joy pulled from ‘the used, the worn, the broken in’ (see ‘To My First Address’ or ‘The Thrift Shop of My Dreams’). Ungar’s formal panache offers abundant pleasures, and manages also to be wise.”—Frank Bidart

More information about Ms. Ungar and her work can be found on her website here. The bio on her website is provided below:

Barbara Ungar has published four books of poetry, most recently Immortal Medusa and Charlotte Brontë, You Ruined My Life, both Hilary Tham selections from The Word Works. Her prior books are Thrift and The Origin of the Milky Way, which won the Gival Press Poetry Award, a silver Independent Publishers award, a Hoffer award, and the Adirondack Center for Writing poetry award. She is also the author of several chapbooks and Haiku in English. She has published poems in Salmagundi, Rattle, The Nervous Breakdown, and many other journals. A professor of English at the College of Saint Rose in Albany, she coordinates their new MFA program.

Cole Alum Elizabeth Brundage Publishes New Novel, Review by Cole Alum Jack Richtmyer

ebwebCole guest writer alum Elizabeth Brundage (Cole 2010) has written and released her fourth novel, All Things Cease to Appear (Alfred A. Knopf, 395 pages, $25.95). Ms. Brundage’s fourth book “explores what it’s like to live in a rural town in disarray, what it’s like to be a struggling dairy farmer and it also explores marriage, the world of art and academia, and the gentrification of our upstate rural farm areas” (taken from the Times Union’s review of 03/06/16 written by Cole 2008 alum Jack Richtmyer). Her work at Cole was an exciting blend of writing exercises and stories about publishing and writing professionally. She connected with our students on a very personal level.

Ms. Brundage’s website can be found at http://elizabethbrundage.com/.

The Albany Times Union’s review (found here) was written by Cole guest writer alum Jack Rightmyer (Cole 2008). His latest book, It’s Not About Winning, was released in 2011. His website can be found at http://jackrightmyer.com/.