Claude Atcho (BA 2009, MA 2011)

Claude Atcho’s Reading Black Books: How African American Literature Can Make Our Faith More Whole and Just was published this year by Brazos Press. Claude is a teacher and the pastor of Church of the Resurrection in Charlottesville, VA. Each chapter of his book takes up a theological category for inquiry through a close literary reading and theological reflection on a primary literary text, from Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man and Richard Wright’s Native Son to Zora Neale Hurston’s Moses, Man of the Mountain and James Baldwin’s Go Tell It on the Mountain.

Katie Mather (BA 1997)

Since its publication in 2020, Katie Mather’s young-adult novel Rage is a Wolf has received a good deal of attention including a starred review from Kirkus, which called it “a work of unusual depth and ambition. It is a climate change novel, yes, but it’s a book about so much more: angst, idealism, self-discovery, and reclaiming the world by reclaiming the narrative. A bold and inventive environmental tale with a striking protagonist.”

Anastasia Bruckner (BA 2021)

Anastasia Bruckner has been accepted into the prestigious Modern and Contemporary Literary Studies MPhil program at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland. Since graduating last year, Anastasia moved to Vail, Colorado, where she worked two freelance grant-writing jobs along with a job at a high-end bistro and also learned to ski. After moving to Dublin in the summer of 2022, she will continue the grant-writing work remotely until graduate studies become too much. She is thrilled!

Yousef Abu-Ulbeh (BA 2016)

Yousef Abu-Ulbeh was selected to participate in the March 2022 Cinephilia Film Development Workroom. Cinephilia is a New York-based film production company, talent incubator, and consulting agency that champions the next generation of Middle Eastern and African storytellers and filmmakers. Yousef is a Palestinian American writer and public-school educator and currently teaches middle school language arts in Tacoma.

Angie Griffin (MA 2003) and Julie Marie Wade (MA 2003)

Angie Griffin and Julie Marie Wade met in September 2001 when they were both beginning our MA program in English. Angie now works as Technical Services and Systems Librarian for the Appalachian College Association, and Julie is an Associate Professor of English at Florida International University. They married legally in Bellingham in 2014. In June of this year, they will celebrate twenty years together.