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Visiting Writers Series: Writing Workshop with Huascar Medina

  • University of Nebraska-Kearney, Thomas Hall Atrium 2404 11th Avenue Kearney, NE, 68849 United States (map)

Join us for an exciting opportunity! Kansas Poet Laureate Emeritus Huascar Medina will lead a free, all-ages writing workshop at the Kearney Public Library on Saturday, February 1, from 1-2:30 p.m.

Whether you're a seasoned writer or just starting out, all are welcome to participate! (Recommended for ages 16+.)

Space is limited to 30 participants.

Register now to secure your spot: https://bit.ly/nwc-register

This workshop is part of the Nebraska Writers Collective’s Visiting Writers Series and supported by Humanities Nebraska and the Nebraska Cultural Endowment.

ABOUT THE WRITER

Kansas Poet Laureate emeritus (2019-2022) and Academy of American Poets Laureate Fellow, Huascar Medina has authored two books of poetry: Un Mango Grows in Kansas and How to Hang the Moon. He is the Lit editor for seveneightfive magazine, a staff editor at South Broadway Press in Denver, CO, an op-ed writer at Kansas Reflector, a founding member and former Chair of TopekaUnited.org, the founder of wordssavelives.org, and co-founder of latinidad.us.

Huascar was born in Killeen, TX, and has lived artfully in Kansas for over two decades. He considers himself a special kind of Kansan—a helianthus. Huascar took roots in Kansas, grew there, and blossomed.

As a second-generation immigrant living in the Heartland, Huascar pushes the boundaries between identity and location, focusing on cultural empathy, social cohesion, class structures, first-generation trauma, minority mental health, and internalized diasporic longing and belonging.

His work has appeared in the Flint Hills Review, Gasconade Review, Green Mountains Review, Kansas Magazine, Latino Book Review, The New York Times, and elsewhere.

Read his poems and profile at poets.org

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January 30

Featured Performance: Huascar Medina

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February 8

Omaha Poetry Slam