
Time: February 24, 2011 from 7pm to 8:30pm
Location: Warren Wilson College - Canon Lounge
City/Town: Swannanoa
Website or Map: http://jeffrbiggers.com
Event Type: clean energy, sustainable development
Organized By: WWC Environmental Leadership Series
Latest Activity: Feb 8, 2011
Author of Reckoning at Eagle Creek, The United States of Appalachia and In the Sierra Madre, Jeff Biggers has worked as a writer, educator, and radio correspondent across the United States, Europe, India, and Mexico. He served as co-editor of No Lonesome Road: Selected Prose and Poems of Don West. His award-winning stories have appeared on National Public Radio, Public Radio International, and Washington Post, The Nation, The Atlantic Monthly, and Salon, among many others newspapers, magazines and online journals. A contributing editor to The Bloomsbury Review, he regularly blogs for the Huffington Post and Grist. A member of the multimedia theatre performance company, Coal Free Future Project , Biggers is also a playwright, whose "4 1/2 Hours: Across the Stones of Fire" play has appeared on Off Broadway and at theatres around the country. Biggers is a frequent speaker and performer at festivals, conferences and educational institutions.
His work has received numerous honors, including an American Book Award, the David Brower Award for Environmental Reporting, a Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Award, a Lowell Thomas Award for Travel Journalism, a Plattner Award for Appalachian Literature, the Delta Award for Southern Illinois literature, a Field Foundation Fellowship and an Illinois Arts Council Creative Non-Fiction Award/Fellowship. He serves as a contributing editor to The Bloomsbury Review, and is a member of the PEN American Center. In the 1990s, as part of his work to develop literacy and literary programs in rural communities in the American Southwest, he founded the Northern Arizona Book Festival.
In the 1980s, Biggers served as an assistant to former Senator George McGovern in Washington, DC, and as a personal aide to Rev. William Sloane Coffin at the Riverside Church in New York City, where he co-founded the Interfaith Assembly on Homelessness and Housing.
Raised in Illinois and Arizona, he earned a B.A. in History and English at Hunter College in New York City. He also studied at the University of California in Berkeley, Columbia University and the University of Arizona. He presently divides his time between Tucson, Arizona and Illinois.
|
|
|
© 2013 Created by Matt Raker.