WWU alumni have accomplished incredible things this year. Our overview of alumni new features updates from former students who have graduated across six decades, from the 60s to the 20s.
From the 60s…
Carole Charlene Hanaway (BA, 1968)
I will be 80 years old this summer. I now have former students who are in their 60’s and have communicated with me to make sure I am still alive. My career as an educator has been one of the most satisfying elements of my life. Western challenged and prepared me for a long career in public education then overseas teaching in Istanbul, Muscat Oman, and Malaysia. I ended at Skagit Valley Community College guiding journalism students and GED migrant farm workers.
From the 70s…
Wayne Lee (BA, 1972; MA, 1975)
Wayne Lee’s collection Dining on Salt: Four Seasons of Septets was published by Cornerstone Press in April 2025 and his collection The Beautiful Foolishness is forthcoming from Casa Urraca Press in March 2026. Lee, who lives in Santa Fe, NM, is the founder and host of the online poetry-mediation community Tuesday Poetry Practice.
Scott Cairns (BA, 1977; MFA, 1981; PhD, 1990)
I’m an English grad from the class of 1977. I’m currently Curators’ Distinguished Professor of English, Emeritus at University of Missouri.
I’ve just signed the contract for Makarios, my 15th book (my 13th poetry collection). Recent other poetry collections include Anaphora (2019), Lacunae (2023), Correspondence with My Greeks (2024). This last was nominated for the Runciman Award, and will appear in French translation in 2026. I received a Guggenheim Fellowship in Poetry in 2006, and the Denise Levertov Award in 2014.
From the 80s…
Dian Lissner (BA, 1980)
Dian Lissner, nom de plume Dion O’Reilly, recently had a book published by Floating Bridge Press. The collection of poems, Limerence, was a finalist for the John Pierce Chapbook Competition for Washington State Poets. She also has recent publications in Tar River Poetry, Chicago Quarterly Review, and New Ohio Review. More info at dionoreilly.com.
S.J. Hodson (MA, 1984)
I received my M.A. degree in writing from WWU in 1984. My principal instructors — for whom I have felt a deepening sense of gratitude over the years — were Marjorie Donker, Bob Huff, Knute Skinner, and Annie Dillard.
One day in her short-fiction seminar, Annie Dillard observed that a good way to become a writer is to write what needs writing wherever we happen to be. That sounded like smart advice to me, and I made my living for a number of years as a technical writer, including fourteen years with an industrial safety consulting company of experts for whom I wrote three books, tens of trade publication articles, and sets of training manuals dedicated to keeping breadwinners uninjured and whole for their whole working lives.
I moved on from there to become an attorney, having discovered that the practice of Anglo-American law is a language art. For the last seventeen years of my working life I was a class-action labor-law litigator suing companies for the back wages and salaries of working people.
Throughout those years I made literature in the form of poetry and essays for myself and my circle of friends.
Since my retirement in 2019, I have turned my primary attention to music performance, and to writing poetry and a big prose project laying out a new theory of time, combining and advancing the insights of St. Augustine, Kant, Heidegger, and Krishnamurti.
In June 2025 my book of poetry “New Songs of Innocence” (cover art attached below) is being published by St. Augustine’s Press (www.staugustine.net). The book is also available on Amazon.com
I wrote a number of poems in the book while I was a graduate student in the WWU English Department.
Genet Simone (BA, 1984)
Genet published a memoir, Teaching in the Dark, about her first year as a teacher in the Arctic village of Shishmaref, Alaska. She is pleased to say that her book has won multiple awards, most recently First Prize, Hearten Book Award for Uplifting & Inspiring Non-fiction, and First Prize for (then Grand Prize) for the book cover! (Contest with Chanticleer Book Reviews in Bellingham, WA.) She is currently working on a sequel titled Teaching in the Light.
Kristin Uhrig (BA, 1985)
While some may consider teaching as the best use of an English department degree, it was never my intent. I hoped to become a more effective communicator because this is essential to many different career paths. I ended up becoming a business owner, Yeager’s Sporting Goods, right here in Bellingham, and I use my degree every single day. There is so much writing required in running a business. From inter-office emails and communicating with vendors, to negotiating contracts, setting policy, collaborating with city officials, making speeches, and writing advertising copy for radio, print and social media. I’d like to thank Dr. R.D. Brown at WWU for challenging me to hone my critical thinking skills, enlarge my vocabulary, and hammer away at the nit picky technical aspects of writing so that I could succeed in this pursuit.
From the 90s…
David Wallis (BA, 1991)
Since graduating from WWU in 1991, I’ve spent my career working in public service. I started at the local County Assessor’s Office working in mapping and appraisal management for 15 years. I was then appointed as the IT Director and served in that role for 8 years. WA State L&I recruited me away from the county to serve as Deputy Chief Information Officer (DCIO) for 3 years. I moved on to serve as the IT Director at Lower Columbia College. I was recently appointed as the Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Professional for the City of Battle Ground and will build their GIS mapping program from scratch. It has been a rewarding career in public service, and I have relied daily on my training from WWU. Go Vikings!
Jenny Gwinn McGlothern (BA, 1991)
Owner of Life Coaching and Retreat business, Mama Needs a Refill, LLC, Jenny Gwinn McGlothern’s first book was published in 2023. This tool for all care givers, Mama Needs a Refill: Finding Light in the Midst of Madness, can not only be purchased from your favorite local bookstore or on Amazon, the audio version, narrated by the author will be available on Spotify and numerous downloadable locations, on May 2, 2025.
Kathren Whitham (BA, 1992; MA)
Kathren has just finished her 20th year as a full time tenured English instructor at South Seattle College after teaching part-time for 10+ years at Seattle Central College. She is currently illustrating and co-writing an historical nonfiction graphic memoir about Japanese war brides in the United States. Here’s a drawing of her mom in Tokyo, 1957.
Jayne Entwistle (BA, 1995)
Jayne moved back to Bellingham from L.A and she is so glad to once again be in the beautiful PNW. She is still working in film and television, most recently acting in four episodes of a new TV show starring Melissa McCarthy, Clive Owen, and Margo Martindale. She narrates audiobooks from her lovely little studio downtown and has a monthly show at New Prospect Theatre called, To Whom It May Concern, where folks read their letters on stage. She has a children’s book and a narrative non-fiction memoir in the works. She misses the structure and deadlines of classes to keep herself on track!
Joanna Nesbit (MA, 1995)
Joanna continues to live and work in Bellingham as a freelance writer for publications like US News, Wall Street Journal, Money, AARP, and college magazines. She’d love to hear from others who graduated with her.
Catherine (Cate) Perry (BA, 1996; MA, 2002)
Cate Perry just released her debut novel, Before the Next Mistake. She currently enjoys teaching English and Multilingual Learners in the Stanwood-Camano School District, as well as freelance editing. www.cperry.com
From the 00s…
Lizz Holm (BA, 2000)
In May of 2023, Lizz graduated from CU Denver with a Master of Arts in Early Childhood Education. She is now the Education Coordinator at Mountain Sprouts Academy at Copper Mountain in Colorado.
Jeremy Voigt (BA, 2001)
Jeremy will complete his viva PhD in English Literature from the University of Birmingham this spring. His thesis is titled: Gerard Manley Hopkins and the Ecological Self. Additionally, his first full-length book of poems Something to Carry Home and Not Kill should come out sometime in the next several months from Elixir Press.
Cynthia J. Hollenbeck (BA, 2002)
Cynthia “Cindy” Hollenbeck took a job as the Marketing and Communications Coordinator for the new Public Health degree at Washington State University (WSU) in Pullman. This year, Cindy celebrates 13 years of service at WSU. In addition, she’s been accepted into the Master of Social Work program at Eastern Washington University in Spokane.
Carol Hansen (BA, 2003; MA)
Carol retired in 2024 after 20 years as a high school ELA teacher. She began art business, Broken for You, in 2024. She won Best of Show award for 2D Art at Skagit Tulip Festival Street Fair in 2025. She also had a poem published in Elder Voices 2025.
Deborah Gallaher (BA, 2004)
After 34+ years in K-12 education, Deborah is now Director of Libraries for Bastyr University in Kenmore, Washington and San Diego, California. The small pink building, the English Department then, provided her an indelibly rich experience when she thinks back to Meredith Cary who peeled away some of the most powerful themes in Women’s Literature, Knute Skinner who coaxed her inner poet (Jeopardy, Volume 21), and Bonnie Barthold who opened her world to African History and Black Authors. There are many more worthy of mention, but as an educator she can appreciate the phenomenal care they gave her and attention to their craft.
Audra Rundle (BA, 2005)
Audra is now working as an ASL/English educational interpreter in Spokane, WA. She is married with two kids. She is also an ultra runner.
Ken Edward Rutkowski (BA, 2005)
Well, a lot has happened since graduation. I’ve been living in Vietnam for the past 11 years, currently in Vung Tau on the southern coast. I am an English teacher for VUS and contribute writing/ art to various publications. I am a featured writer with Mad Swirl and Unlikely Stories. While in Asia, I have travelled around Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Borneo (which is 3 countries) and Thailand. I will be 50 this year! and am still active outdoors surfing, swimming, mountain running, traveling and generally keeping my mind and body active and alert! Cheers to Western and the time I spent there…particularly encouraged by Katherine Trueblood, Carol Guess and Bruce Beasley. Thank you. https://madswirl.com/author/kerutkowski/ https://unlikelystories.org/creators/ken-edward-rutkowski
Joanne Granger (BA, 2008)
April of 2025 marks my 15-year anniversary of Federal Service with the US Department of Veterans Affairs, Benefits Administration. My English Literature degree from WWU was critical in getting my foot in the door as a claims processor. My emphasis in secondary education gave me the edge I needed to work my way up and find my niche there as a Training Consultant.
Though the future of my federal career now seems at an impasse, I am grateful for the time I’ve had to learn, contribute, and grow. I’m fulfilled having served my mission helping hundreds of thousands of Veterans obtain the benefits they are entitled to and so greatly deserve. I am proud of the thousands of VA employees that I’ve trained and how they continue to serve our Veterans, especially in these disparaging times. I am proud of myself for all that I’ve accomplished. It’s really not the worst way to go out, but it does make it all so bittersweet.
When we all chose our schools and educational programs, many of us had a pretty clear idea of how we would apply our learning when it came time to pursue a career path. I will say mine didn’t turn out at all as I planned or expected – it turned out even better. Sometimes we have to take a chance on the unexpected to achieve greatness. And then other times we have to accept what is lost to us to achieve growth.
Though our country is facing perilous times, I remain hopeful that there are some more unexpected opportunities awaiting me. I just need to keep my eyes open and be brave enough to seize them when they present themselves.
From the 10s…
Jeff Dodge (BA, 2011)
In 2024, I was a delegate to the Washington State Democratic Convention. Aside from volunteering for political campaigns and organizations, I wrote a short story called Harriett, which was published this year in the 2025 Whatcom Writes anthology book The Book That Changed My Life, which is available to buy at Village Books. This is my second published short story; my first, You Gotta Give Em Hope, appears in the 2024 Whatcom Writes anthology, Legacies.
David Beaumier (BA, 2013; MA, 2020)
David is the Communications and Marketing Manager at Chanticleer Book Reviews and Media https://www.chantireviews.com/
He has also joined the editorial staff at HamLit, a PNWA online literary journal for fiction and poetry! Check out their website and sign up for our newsletter: https://hamlit.org/
Finally, he has his first book, The Mourning Fields, coming out in September of 2025! It’s a collection of Greek myths retold as dark fictions in the modern day.
Zoë Wise (BA, 2013)
Zoë graduated in May 2025 with a Juris Doctor and certificate in Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy from the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law. Zoë received her B.A. in English from Western Washington University and her M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. During law school, Zoë interned at the Alaska Native Justice Center and worked as a Summer Associate at Sonosky, Chambers, Sachse, Endreson & Perry. Additionally, she clerked at the Tohono O’odham Nation Judicial Branch. Zoë also served as Editor-in-Chief of the Arizona Journal of Environmental Law & Policy and was recognized by the Native & Indigenous Law Students Association as a standout graduating member for her advocacy and commitment to Indian Country. After graduation, Zoë will work as a Law Clerk for Chief Justice Carney of the Alaska Supreme Court. Zoë is an enrolled member of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation.
Jocelyn Marshall (MA, 2015)
Jocelyn has accepted a tenure-track position at the University of South Florida as an Assistant Professor of Contemporary Art History. Jocelyn recently won the 2024 First Book Prize from the National Women’s Studies Association and University of Illinois Press, which honors the best dissertation or first book manuscript in the field that year. Entitled “Dissent Nearby: Diasporic Feminism and US Imperialism,” here is how the awards committee described Marshall’s project: “… a very strong, well-researched, timely and creative manuscript on U.S.-based immigrant and exiled women artists and their late-20th-century art works. Using a transnational feminist approach, and combining disciplinary insights from trauma, art, migration and gender studies, the study proposes an intertextual reading of diasporic women’s
expressions and experiences of trauma, placing these firmly within the histories of institutionalized racism, patriarchy and violence of US imperialism. A truly interdisciplinary study that engages a large set of sources ranging from the art works, archival sources, oral histories and interviews to scholarship drawn skillfully from different disciplines, this timely and innovative manuscript is set to make important contributions to feminist inquiry.” After graduating from WWU, Jocelyn attended the University at Buffalo where she received her PhD in English with emphases in Gender Studies and Visual Art. She has since held a Postdoctoral Fellowship from the American Association of University Women and was a Dissertation Scholar at Brandeis University’s Women’s Studies Research Center, as well as teaching at Emerson College.
Madison Price Zender (BA Accounting, 2015; MPAcc, 2016)
BELLINGHAM, WA January 1, 2025 – VSH CPAs, a renowned accounting and consulting firm with offices in Whatcom and Skagit counties, is excited to announce the promotion of Madison Price Zender, CPA, MPAcc, to Principal, effective January 1, 2025. This milestone recognizes her impactful contributions and leadership within VSH and the greater business community.
Madison began her career with VSH in 2015 as an intern while earning her Master of Professional Accounting at Western Washington University. She has spent her entire professional accounting journey with VSH, advancing through various roles and earning her CPA designation.
Madison is known for her hands-on approach, specializing in tax strategies for privately held businesses in industries such as construction, trucking, timber, real estate, and hospitality. She works closely with client teams and visits their sites to gain a deep understanding of their operations, enabling them to make confident and informed financial decisions.
Madison’s commitment to our values putting people first, striving for excellence, and continuous improvements have been instrumental in driving our firm forward, said Chris Sullivan, Managing Partner of VSH. This promotion is a well-deserved recognition of Madison’s leadership and contributions, and we look forward to seeing her continue to excel in her new role, said Chris.
As a lifelong resident of Whatcom County, Madison takes pride in giving back to the community where she lives and works. She proudly serves on the Bellingham Chamber of Commerce board, supporting local businesses and strengthening community connections. Madison is also a Washington Society of Certified Public Accountants (WSCPA) member.
About VSH: Rooted in decades of excellence, VSH CPAs is a full-service accounting and consulting firm committed to empowering businesses and their owners to grow and thrive. Guided by the core values of putting people first and unwavering pursuit of excellence, VSH delivers value-added accounting and consulting services with a personal touch. From offices in Bellingham and Burlington, Washington, the firm serves clients locally and internationally, offering expertise in cross-border and international taxation, strategic business consulting, and innovative financial solutions.
Tanner Abernathy (BA, 2017)
Tanner continues to chair the English Department at Decatur High School. He’s recently had several pieces published, including jokes and an essay in Points in Case, as well as a memoir piece, “Tall Genes”, in an international literary magazine. With the help of a staff of student editors, The Swamp Review, Decatur High School’s preeminent creative journal, has entered its second year. You can read more on theswampreview.com
Christopher Lovegreen (BA, 2019; MA, 2021)
Christopher Lovgreen is currently a PhD student at Miami University (Oxford, OH) and serves as the Assistant Director of Composition. He was recently awarded the English Department’s Outstanding Teacher Award.
Hal McAbee (BA, 2019)
Hal McAbee graduated with their MA in Secondary Education and Teaching from Seattle Pacific University.
Leslie Cogley (BA, 2019)
Since graduating, Leslie has worked in the nonprofit sector in a variety of roles that align with their English degree including technical writing, editing, and grant writing. They currently serve as the Sponsorships Manager for the Spokane Hoopfest Association, which hosts the largest 3-on-3 basketball tournament in the world. Outside of work, they’ve had four poems published, which they are very proud of.
From the 20s…
Destiny Brugman (MA, 2020)
Destiny Brugman graduated with her PhD in Composition and Rhetoric from Miami University (Oxford, OH). This fall, she will join the faculty at the University of Indianapolis as an Assistant Professor of English.
Elinor Serumgard (BA, 2022)
Elinor is delighted to announce that their debut chapbook is now out with Bottlecap Press! They have worked hard to piece together poems that would work as a cohesive collection and are excited to share the result with you now.
These poems are slivers of different seasons in their life. From summer to winter to summer again, Elinor notes their desire for captivating sensations and self-creation. It features the natural world, something they are constantly coming back to in their work. Thank you to everyone who has supported their writing! You can order Analogous Annum today at this link: https://bottlecap.press/products/analogous
Caylee Caldwell (BA, 2024)
Caylee is currently serving as an English Teaching and Youth Engagement volunteer in the Peace Corps Georgia. She teaches English to grades 3rd through 9th and will be receiving her final placement site in June. Her service continues into 2027.
Larissa Gomez Capella (BA, 2024; BS,2024)
Since graduating, Larissa has been working as a freelance science writer. She is happy to share that she has got some stories published with Space.com and EOS. She recently started working with Science News Explores (she will soon publish her first story there)!
Here are the links to her Space.com and EOS stories so far :)
https://eos.org/author/larissa-g-capella
https://www.space.com/author/larissa-g-capella
She also plans to publish a fiction book in the future, but for now, she loves how she can put both of her degrees together into a fulfilling career.
Mystery Graduation Dates…
Avery Araya
Avery is currently in the MFA program, won first place in the “Rotten 2025” contest at marrow magazine (Issue 12) for the short story “The Bend in the Road,” available at this link. The Bend in the Road – marrow magazine
Sophie Hall
Sophie’s chapbook Greenhouse was published in 2024. greenhouse – FIRST MATTER PRESS
Keegan Lawler
Keegan’s chapbook My Own Private Idaho was published in 2025. My Own Private Idaho by Keegan Lawler — Red Bird Chapbooks
Tanya Young
Tanya is currently a PhD student at The University of Rhode Island. Her writing has been featured in Salt Hill, Santa Clara Review, New York Quarterly, and others. She also is a VONA fellow.