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Teachers

Meet Our Teachers

Hugo House teachers are at the core of our goal to help writers become better writers. Our teachers are writers; they are selected on the basis of their active engagement in the literary world as well as their love of teaching.

  • Headshot of Grace Bialecki

    Grace Bialecki

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    Chelsea Biondolillo

  • Headshot of Courtney Bird

    Courtney Bird

  • Headshot of Alan Birkelbach

    Alan Birkelbach

  • Hugo House logo

    Sven Birkerts

  • Headshot of Liza Birnbaum

    Liza Birnbaum

  • Headshot of Chris Bishop

    Chris Bishop

  • Headshot of Elisabeth Blair

    Elisabeth Blair

  • Headshot of Megan Boatright

    Megan Boatright

  • Headshot of Nicholas Boggs

    Nicholas Boggs

  • Hugo House logo

    Jerrod Bohn

  • Headshot of Melika Bokaie

    Melika Bokaie

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    Michelle Boland

  • Hugo House logo

    Alice Bolin

  • Hugo House logo

    Michele Bombardier

  • Headshot of Katherine Grace Bond

    Katherine Grace Bond

  • Hugo House logo

    Shlagha Borah

  • Hugo House logo

    Margarita Borrero

  • Headshot of s.c. bostwick

    s.c. bostwick

  • Headshot of Portia Botchway

    Portia Botchway

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    Ryan Boudinot

  • Headshot of Amy Bowers

    Amy Bowers

  • Headshot of Sabra Boyd

    Sabra Boyd

  • Headshot of Mateo Bracken

    Mateo Bracken

Headshot of Grace Bialecki

Grace Bialecki

Pronouns: she/her

Grace Bialecki is a writer, spoken word poet, and workshop facilitator. She has performed at KGB Bar and as the featured poet at Paris Lit Up, and her work has appeared in various publications including Catapult and Epiphany Magazine. Bialecki is the co-founder of the storytelling series Thirst, and the author of the novel Purple Gold (ANTIBOOKCLUB). 

For more information check out Grace's website (www.graciebialecki.com) or Twitter (www.twitter.com/graciebialecki).

Describe your teaching style.

I feel myself as a facilitator more than a teacher. Although I'll be discussing my practice, I'll also be engaging with the students and asking about their process. My goal is to empower attendees to try new techniques they can then adapt to their own needs.

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Chelsea Biondolillo

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Courtney Bird

Born in New Jersey, Courtney holds an MFA in Fiction from the University of Montana and a BA in Art History from Princeton. Her work has appeared in The Fairy Tale Review, The Masters Review, The Indiana Review, Barrelhouse, and The Los Angeles Review, among others. When Courtney's not writing, she can be found coaching lacrosse, hiking with her baby on her back, or looking for weird little pockets of wonder in the world. Courtney lives in Seattle, where she was a Hugo House Fellow in 2018-2019.

Headshot of Alan Birkelbach

Alan Birkelbach

2005 Texas Poet Laureate Alan Birkelbach is a Texas native and 4th generation German-American. He is a member of the Texas Institute of Letters, Western Writers of America, National Park Foundation, and The Academy of American Poets.

He is a Spur Award Winner, two-time international Indie Book Award Finalist, winner of North Texas Book Festival Award, Pushcart Prize Nominee, editor for several editions of the TCU Press Texas Poet Laureate Series, winner of the Pat Stodghill Book Publication Award and winner of the Edwin M. Eakin Memorial Book Publication Award.

One of eight co-authors (all from the Southwest) of the anthology book 8 Voices: Contemporary Poetry from the American Southwest from Baskerville Publishers, Inc. This book is now part of the teaching curriculum for SMU University, Dallas, Texas. 

His twelfth book, “The National Parks: A Century of Grace”, with fellow Texas Poet Laureate Karla K. Morton, is from TCU Press. The poets visited all 62 National Parks, wrote poetry and took photos, with a percentage of the sales from the book going back to the Parks System. This is to help culturally preserve our greatest treasures – our National Parks for the next 100 years. 

Alan Birkelbach currently lives in Raton, New Mexico in the shadow of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. 

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Sven Birkerts

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Liza Birnbaum

Pronouns: she/her/hers

Liza Birnbaum's writing has appeared in Web Conjunctions, jubilat, Tammy, Open Letters Monthly, and other publications. She holds an MFA in fiction from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and teaches at Hugo House, Cornish College of the Arts, and the University of Washington's Robinson Center. She's been awarded residencies from Pine Meadow Ranch Center for Arts and Agriculture and Fishtrap. For more of Liza go to lizabirnbaum.com

Headshot of Chris Bishop

Chris Bishop

Headshot of Elisabeth Blair

Elisabeth Blair

Pronouns: she/her
Headshot of Megan Boatright

Megan Boatright

Pronouns: she/they

Megan Boatright is a writer and editor from rural Florida, now living in Seattle, WA. She has an MA in Comparative Literature from the University of Chicago, where she was a writing instructor before transitioning into TTRPG development and editing.

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Nicholas Boggs

Nicholas Boggs was an undergraduate when he discovered James Baldwin’s out-of-print children’s book, Little Man, Little Man: A Story of Childhood, in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. After he tracked down its illustrator, the French artist Yoran Cazac, he went on to coedit an acclaimed new edition of the book in 2018. His writing has also been anthologized in The Cambridge Companion to James Baldwin, James Baldwin Now, and Speculative Light: The Arts of Beauford Delaney and James Baldwin. He is the recipient of a 2023 Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Beinecke Library and Gilder Lehrman Center at Yale, the Schomburg Center Scholars-in-Residence Program, and the National Humanities Center, as well as residencies at Yaddo and MacDowell. He received his BA in English from Yale, his MFA in creative writing from American University, and his PhD in English from Columbia. Born and raised in Washington, DC, he lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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Jerrod Bohn

Pronouns: he/him/his
Headshot of Melika Bokaie

Melika Bokaie

Melika Bokaie was born in December 1997 in Tehran. She studied dramatic arts and has spent several years teaching English to children. Passionate about travel, performance, and storytelling, Melika has spent the past seven years living and adventuring through various Latin American countries. She currently resides in Mexico. Her writing is deeply inspired by her experiences of travel, volunteering and the pursuit of personal transformation.

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Michelle Boland

Pronouns: She/her
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Alice Bolin

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Michele Bombardier

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Katherine Grace Bond

Katherine Grace Bond is a poet, novelist, and developmental editor whose work explores family, history, and the rifts in our culture and ourselves. She is the author of seven books, including the YA novel The Summer of No Regrets (Sourcebooks), the children’s book The Legend of the Valentine (Zondervan), and, most recently, the Twentieth Anniversary Edition of Considering Flight (Goldfish Press).

She has taught writing for more than three decades and has held residencies at Jack Straw Cultural Center and Camac Centre d’Art in Marnay-sur-Seine, France. She is the founder of Labyrinth: A Writers’ Haven, providing community, craft, and coaching to writers at all stages.

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Shlagha Borah

Pronouns: she/her
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Margarita Borrero

Doctora en literatura europea, Universidad Autónoma, Madrid, Spain

Margarita Borrero es novelista, premiada y publicada en España, y escritora de relatos, género en el que ha ganado media docena de primeros lugares en distintos certámenes en España, Estados Unidos y Canadá. Durante más de una década se ha desempeñado como docente de Escuela de escritores, una de las instituciones privadas de escritura creativa más grandes del mundo hispanohablante, miembro de la Asociación Europea de programas de escritura creativa. También ha trabajado como profesora asociada en Mount Saint Mary University, en Los Ángeles.

PhD European Literature, Universidad Autónoma, Madrid, Spain

Margarita Borrero is an award-winning novelist from Colombia. She has received numerous short story awards in Spain, Canada and the United States. She teaches at Madrid’s Escuela de Escritores, one of the top private creative writing institutions of the Hispanic world and a member of the European Association of Creative Writing Programs. She has also worked as an associate professor at Mount Saint Mary University in Los Angeles.

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s.c. bostwick

Pronouns: they/them

s.c.bostwick (they/them) is a nonbinary trans poet born and raised on the traditional lands of the Puyallup people (Tacoma, WA). They received their BA in English from Western Washington University and their MFA in Poetry from the University of Notre Dame. s.c.bostwick was a recipient of the Hugo Fellowship in 2021-22 and their work can be found in Homology Lit, Dream Pop Journal, and DELUGE. They are currently working on projects that are concerned with family, transness, migration, power, and the construction industry. Find them on socials: @s.c.bostwick  

Headshot of Portia Botchway

Portia Botchway

Portia Botchway is a Halfrican and a lifelong learner, athlete, and explorer. She immersed herself in writing while attending a public, boarding, arts high school in South Carolina; and takes inspiration from the lyricism of Taiye Selasi, Khadijah Queen, Ken Liu, Colleen McCullough, and Pat Conroy. She collects clouds.

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Ryan Boudinot

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Amy Bowers

Pronouns: she/her

Amy Bowers is a Florida native currently living in Connecticut with her family. Her writing explores art, domestic culture, the insect and natural worlds, and manufactured places and spaces. She is currently working on an essay collection about growing up in central Florida among amusement parks, alligators, and hurricanes. She holds an MFA in CNF from Bennington and has work published or forthcoming in [PANK], Washington Square Review, West Trade Review, OxMag, Farm-ish, Assay, and LA Review of Books. Her essay Manual is published (fall 2021) in A Harp in the Stars: An Anthology of Lyric Essays, edited by Randon Billings Noble and published by the University of Nebraska Press.

Headshot of Sabra Boyd

Sabra Boyd

Pronouns: she/they

Sabra Boyd is a writer, editor, journalist, and public speaker whose work has been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Eater, Vice, IndieWire, Psychology Today, HuffPost, The Seattle Times, and more. From personal essays to investigative journalism, Sabra enjoys helping others build their own successful writing careers.

Headshot of Mateo Bracken

Mateo Bracken

Mateo Bracken is a poet, librettist, and actor who splits his time between Auburn and Seattle, Washington. He was the 2023-2024 Seattle Youth Poet Laureate and currently serves as the 2024-2026 Auburn Poet Laureate. His works have appeared or are forthcoming in the Gay & Lesbian Review, EchoX, The Washington State Queer Poetry Anthology, Abya Yala: Indigenous Connections in Latin America, Creative Colloquy, Bird Brains: A Lyrical Guide to the Birds of Washington State, and more. As a librettist in the Seattle Opera Creation Lab, he developed the twenty-minute chamber opera Blood Dawn of the Inti Sun in collaboration with composer Mina Pariseau. His first chapbook, Dear Spanish, was published in 2024 through Poetry Northwest and explores the languages of identity, heritage, and belonging. He is currently working on a manuscript about the settler colonial history of Auburn in verse.