
Joshua Bird (BA 2014)

Madelynn Romano (formerly Esteb) works as an Associate in Creative Enterprise at WONGDOODY, an international human experience company driven by insights and forged in creativity. Her interdisciplinary work spans creative, user experience, and marketing to craft relevant and intuitive digital experiences that drive revenue and loyalty. She is currently living and working out of Munich, Germany, as a part of the company’s European operation. Her background in liberal arts allows her to stand apart as a critical thinker, researcher, and empathetic individual. She uses the skills she learned during her time at Western to cross cultures, languages, and abilities in order to create engaging and delightful digital experiences for all.
Eight years after retiring as an English teacher at the Milwaukee Technical College, Thomas Martinsen still enjoys reading. Most recently, he finished and enjoyed The Sunday Philosophy Club by Alexander McCall Smith.
In 2018, Paul Lindholdt published his book Making Landfall: Poems with Encircle Publications in Maine, and edited and co-wrote The Spokane River with the University of Washington Press. He also published the essays “Hawk Watching” in Kenyon Review in 2018; “Swaddled in Rose Silk” in Tampa Review in 2019; “Making Landfall,” which was nominated for the John Burroughs Essay Award, on terrain.org in 2019; and “The Rime of the Modern Mariner” in Green Theory and Praxis in 2020.
Emily Reynolds was recently hired as a writer and editor for the video game review site, gameravenreview.com. Marrying her passions for writing and video games, the job is a dream come true!
In a non-traditional use of an English degree, Susan Connelly Maury, with her husband Matthew Maury (1989 WWU business school graduate) spent nearly twenty years living and working in Africa, most of that time with Habitat for Humanity. Through her work with national entities, Susan specialized in organizational development and evaluation and earned a master’s in science in organizational behavior from the University of London. Through this study, Susan became fascinated with research and went on to earn a Ph.D. in psychology at Monash University (awarded 2021). Now living in Melbourne, Australia, Susan conducts research in the overlay of music, social group participation, and well-being, as well as exploring the gendered effects of government policy in her role as a researcher with a community services organization. The writing degree has provided an important foundation across all these endeavors, including most recently writing reports, peer-reviewed journal articles, mainstream articles, and blogs. Susan and Matthew have two teenage sons.