Alumni & Student Stories
Isabella Donohoe
Essay PublicationThe Bowdoin Journal of Cinema accepted ENGL Major Isabella Donahue's essay "Life is a Drag: Music in The Doom Generation and My Own Private Idaho" for publication in their 2025 issue (forthcoming).
Mazie McNamara, 2025
Poem PublicationMazie McNamara (鈥25) published her poem 鈥淓ating Oranges鈥 in the Summer 2024 issue of The Midwest Quarterly: A Journal of Contemporary Thought (Vol. 65, No. 4), published by Pittsburg State University. McNamara credits ENGL 306: How to Be a Writer for helping her take her writing seriously and envision a creative future. The course required submitting work to national publications鈥攁n assignment that led to the poem鈥檚 acceptance.
Meagan Graves, 2023
Poem PublicationMeagan Graves, class of 2023 original poem, Anadromus, was published in Sing the Salmon Homes: Poems from Washington State. She also is the recipient of the 2022 Michael and Gail Gurian Writing Award for Poetry.
Anders Greene-Crow, 2009
Book PublicationEnglish alumni, Anders Greene-Crow, '09, has published a new book in the field of Early Modern Studies. The book, Austerity Measures, is published by the University of Pennsylvania Press.
Haley Wilson, 2021
Starbucks Corporation, Seattle鈥淚n [our major classes] we discuss something, we nuance something, we complicate something, and then talk about it in smaller groups one-on-one鈥 [W]e鈥hallenge one another鈥攚e question one another, we鈥ay 鈥業 don鈥檛 know have that same reading鈥 or鈥︹榳hat do you think[?]鈥欌 that鈥檚 a huge skill鈥 鈥淲e鈥檙e a lot more likely to have questions of ethics, questions of morals, questions of social justice issues in my English classrooms鈥 and that鈥檚 top of mind everywhere. That is what people want in a company, and that鈥檚 a big value that you can bring to a company.鈥
Claire Topalian, 2011
Principal, The Cove Group, Seattle鈥淎nalyzing information, connecting the dots, and then鈥擨 think usually most interestingly, inserting new information into the gaps or overlaying new information on top of what you鈥檙e reading. I think that鈥檚 where some really magical stuff happens in English. And I actually think that that produces an ability to think so differently鈥攖hat allows you to do really endless things in your day-to-day professional interactions. The good news is that you can basically apply that to anything.鈥
