Jessamyn
Smyth has been exploring the boundaries between literary forms since 2004, when
an agent suggested that sounded better than her previous self-description as a
'cross-genre writer,' and she found the tortured phrase both funny and accurate.
She is the past producer of Naked Theatre Northampton, for which she also wrote
and directed, and is executive director of Basilisk, an only partly-imaginary
production company creating occasional performance of theater, poetry, and
music as inspired. So far, Basilisk has arisen in Western Massachusetts and Southern Vermont, but it could happen anywhere, any time.
Her short story "A More Perfect Union" in American Letters and
Commentary Issue 17 (November 2005) was nominated for the Pushcart Prize and
won listing as one of the "100 Distinguished Stories of 2005" in Best
American Short Stories (2006).
In 2007, Jessamyn received a grant from the Successful Communities Fund of The
Vermont Community Foundation toward completion of her book "The Fierce, Bright
Clarity of the Dead." She is also a 2004 grant recipient of the Bread Loaf
Writer's Conference.
Her poetry and essays appear in various print and electronic journals,
including Nth Position, Abalone Moon, qarrtsiluni, SNReview. "The Sea
Rope," an excerpt from her book in progress KoanGarden,
was recently featured in The Women's Times 2007 Fiction Issue.
"Dancer" was released in For Here or To Go: Stories from the Service
Industry (Garrett County Press, 2004), and her prize-winning short story
"Blue Plastic Menorah" appeared in Jewish Education News, Spring
2004. Jessamyn's plays "Main Street Love Song," "Wolves,"
"Wake," "Paper Moon," "The Importance of Being
Wild," "Jenny Haniver," and "Hedda Gabler Has Left The
Building" have been produced by Naked Theatre, The Paul Alexander Gallery,
The Country Players, The Shea Theater, and Arena Civic Theater.
Jessamyn also directs other people's plays from time to time, and is presently
working on several boundary-exploring works blurring the lines between forms.
She continues her long involvement in work for social justice, violence
prevention and community health, and has taught literature, composition,
theater for social justice and creative writing at MiddleburyCollege, The University of
Pennsylvania, MiddleburyCollege, The University of Massachusetts, Keene State
College, GreenfieldCommunity College, and in
the community.
She earned her MFA in Writing at GoddardCollege, and thinks you
should, too.