Even though we’re situated in the middle of the country, the Nonfiction Writing Program has a distinctly international flavor. The program has been home to students from Poland, New Zealand, Cuba, South Korea, Turkey, The Philippines, Norway, Guam, Russia, Mexico, France, Columbia, India, Canada, and the U.K., as well as Kansas, New Mexico, Minnesota, New York, Kentucky, Los Angeles, Oregon, Alabama, and Washington, DC.
Sometimes our students come to the program right out of college, and sometimes they’ve had careers in other fields for a number of years, such as journalism, law, education, and science. We aim to bring in as diverse a group of students with as many different life experiences as possible. We think it helps enrich our discussions in and out of the classroom.
If you’d like to chat with some of our students about their experiences in the program, feel free to write to these folks who have volunteered to field your questions.
Spencer Jones
Spencer Jones is an MFA candidate in the Nonfiction Writing Program. She currently serves as an instructor in the Rhetoric department and as a graduate co-leader in that department's Professional Development Program. She is a member of the Iowa City Chamber Singers. From 2015-2022, Spencer taught History, English, and Theology at Cristo Rey Boston High School in Dorchester, MA and Christ Church Episcopal School in Greenville, SC. Her writing has appeared in Porter House Review and Relief: A Journal of Art and Faith and is forthcoming in The Other Journal, Arts & Letters, Black Warrior Review, and The Los Angeles Review of Books.
Liv Kane
Liv Kane is a nonfiction writer and filmmaker interested in exploring the intersections between community storytelling and ecology. She served as the inaugural Writer-in-Residence at the San Antonio Public Library and received the New York Life Award for her work in 2019. A graduate of Kenyon College in English and Film, she worked as a Kenyon Review intern under Nicole Terez-Dutton. Kane published her first essay collection, Gulfwater: some aftermaths, with Sunset Press in 2021.
She is currently pursuing her MFA in Nonfiction at the University of Iowa, where she was an Iowa Arts Fellow.
Grace Morse
Grace Morse is a bilingual essay writer and current student in the Nonfiction Writing Program. Originally from New Orleans, Grace has traveled the world as a student of the essay; she is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she was awarded the Thomas Wolfe Scholarship for creative writing, and she has also studied literature and the essay form at the National University of Ireland, Galway and La Universidad San Francisco de Quito. Grace's writing explores her relationship to her Black identity, her experience as a southern, U.S. woman, educational equity, and romantic and platonic love. She is also passionate about translation and interpretation.