Creative Writing, M.F.A | Brooklyn College
Creative Writing, M.F.A
School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Program Overview
This small, highly personal two-year program confers Master of Fine Arts degrees in fiction, playwriting, and poetry. It offers single-discipline and inter-genre workshops, literature seminars, small-group reading tutorials, and one-on-one tutorials, all of which emphasize relationships between students and eminent faculty. Additionally, students have the opportunity to work on our literary journal,
The Brooklyn Review
, and give public readings and performances in Brooklyn and Manhattan. The program offers fellowships and prizes. Students may also teach undergraduate courses for the English Department.
Where You'll Go
Our graduates have had their work published widely and have won competitions sponsored by the
Iowa Review
, the
Colorado Review
, the
Mississippi Review
, and Zoetrope, among many others. They have had books published, received major prizes, founded presses and literary journals, and been included in numerous anthologies, including
The Best New Young Poets
Best American Short Stories
Best American Nonrequired Reading
O. Henry
, and
Pushcart
. Our playwrights have won Obie Awards, Guggenheim Fellowships, and the Pulitzer Prize; started theater companies; and had their plays produced in the United States and abroad.
Program Details
The program information listed here reflects the approved curriculum for the 2025–26 academic year per the Brooklyn College Bulletin. Bulletins from past academic years can be found
here
Program Description
NYSED Program Code: 02056
Our small, highly personal two-year program confers a Master of Fine Arts degree in creative writing in fiction, poetry, or playwriting. The program offers single-discipline and inter-genre workshops, literature seminars, small-group reading tutorials, and one-on-one tutorials, which all emphasize relationships between eminent faculty members and students. Additionally, students have the opportunity to work on
The Brooklyn Review
and give public readings/performances in Brooklyn and Manhattan. The program offers some fellowships as well as prizes and a winter writing residency at the Espy Foundation in Oysterville, Washington. Students may also teach undergraduate courses for the English Department.
Our graduates have had their work published widely and have won competitions sponsored by the
Iowa Review, the Colorado Review, the Mississippi Review
, and Zoetrope. They have been included in
The Best New Young Poets
anthology and
The Best American Short Stories
. Our playwrights have won Obies, started theater companies, and had their plays produced here and abroad.
Matriculation Requirements
Applicants who have completed a bachelor’s degree with a minimum GPA of 3.00 satisfy the undergraduate requirements of this program.
Fiction and Poetry: Thirty pages of original fiction or 20 pages of original poetry must be submitted for evaluation.
Playwriting: One original full-length play or two or more original one-act plays must be submitted for evaluation.
Applicants who did not major in English or creative writing as undergraduates but whose manuscripts show unusual talent are considered for admission. Manuscripts should be submitted with other application documents via the online application website at the time of application. Applications are not considered for spring semester admission.
Foreign applicants for whom English is a second language are required to pass the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a score of 650 on the paper-based test or 280 on the computer-based test or 114 on the internet-based test before being considered for admission.
General matriculation and admission requirements of Graduate Studies are in the chapter “Admission.”
Program Requirements (36 Credits)
Thirty-six credits are required for the degree: 24 credits in the respective creative writing specialization, plus 12 credits in literature courses.
Students choose a specialization in one of the following:
Fiction
Playwriting
Poetry
Students may substitute for no more than two such courses any two 7000-level courses from the departments of Art, History, Global Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, Philosophy, Speech, Television, Radio and Emerging Media, or Theater, the Conservatory of Music, the School of Cinema, or another department with the approval of the deputy chairperson for graduate studies (these courses may also be taken through e-permits at other CUNY branches, including the Graduate Center, or through individual or small group tutorials).
Permission to register for any of these substitute courses may be required from the graduate deputy chairperson of the appropriate department.
A substantial manuscript must be submitted and filed according to instructions available from the deputy chairperson. Students concentrating in fiction or poetry must submit original creative writing, in publishable form, such as a novel or collection of stories or poems. Students concentrating in playwriting must submit a full-length play or a number of one-act plays, in producible form, that would constitute a theatrical production. In cooperation with the Theater Department, efforts are made to produce the student’s major work.
Recommendations
Students are urged to take one workshop, one tutorial, and one literature course each semester in order to complete the program in four semesters. A reading knowledge of a foreign language is strongly recommended.
Student Learning Outcomes
Department Goal 1: Read and think critically.
Program Objective 1: Learn to read literature with a focus on the ways in which form serves content.
Program Objective 2: Use close reading effectively to identify literary techniques, styles, and themes.
Program Objective 3: Learn to read and comment constructively and critically on the creative writing of peers in the workshop context.
Department Goal 2: Understand how language operates.
Program Objective 1: Demonstrate knowledge of literary tropes and techniques (for example: metaphor, simile, metonymy, synecdoche, word play, and sonic effects such as alliteration, assonance, consonance, and rhythm, etc.)
Department Goal 3: Express ideas–both orally and in writing–correctly, cogently, persuasively, and in conformity with the conventions of the discipline.
Program Objective 1: Create original examples of creative writing that demonstrate complexity through attention to rhetoric, syntax and tone.
Program Objective 2: Comment and write cogently and persuasively about classmates’ writing in the workshop context.
Program Objective 3: Demonstrate the ability to respond to constructive criticism from instructor and peers by effectively revising writing assignments.
Program Objective 4: Demonstrate the ability to use the currently accepted conventions of standard English mechanics and grammar, with an eye toward how those standards can be stretched in order to achieve innovative modes of expression.
Department Goal 4: Conduct research.
Program Objective 1: Learn how to research and seek out historical and contemporary literary voices relevant to their individual voice.
Program Objective 2: Make use of the opportunities that Brooklyn College and New York City afford by attending readings, plays, literary panel discussions, and submitting to literary magazines.
Outcomes for demonstrating achievement of objectives
Written work (including poems/stories/plays, in-class writing exercises, short written reflections on literary techniques used by published writers, workshop responses for peers, revised writing samples, etc.)
Contributions to class discussions and workshops
Attendance at readings, panels, performances or a related research project (such as researching literary magazines/submitting one’s work); documented via written summary of the activity handed into instructor
Admissions Requirements
Fall Application Deadline—January 15
Spring Application Deadline—The program does not accept applications for spring
Supporting Documents for Matriculation
Submit the following documents to the Office of Graduate Admissions:
Transcripts from all colleges and universities attended. Applicants who earned a bachelor’s degree outside the United States need to submit a course-by-course international transcript evaluation. See
Graduate Admissions
for more information.
Two letters of recommendation.
A manuscript of original work in your intended genre (for fiction, about 30 pages; for poetry, about 20 pages; for playwriting, one full-length play, or two or more one-act plays).
A personal statement (one–two pages).
Required Tests
F-1 or J-1 international students must submit English Proficiency Exam. TOEFL—79, IELTS—6.5, PTE—58–63, Duolingo—105–160.
I-20 Submission Deadlines
F-1 students who are not currently in the country should submit their I-20 by the following date to allow sufficient time for visa processing and to meet the semester start date.
July 15 for fall admission
More Information
Refer to the instructions at
Graduate Admissions
Contact
Geoffrey Minter
3149 Boylan Hall
E:
P: 718.951.5000 ext. 3651
Or contact:
Office of Graduate Admissions
222 West Quad Center
2900 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11210
E:
P: 718.951.4536
Office Hours
Mondays–Fridays, 9 a.m.–5 p.m.
Schedule an appointment with a graduate admissions counselor.
Specializations
Fiction
7910X
to be taken in the first semester. English
7912X
to be taken four times, but not more than once in any semester; English
7911X
once in the second semester; English
7913X
to be taken two times in the second year, but not more than once in any semester.
Joshua Henkin, Coordinator
The M.F.A. fiction specialization at Brooklyn College is a two-year course that maintains an enrollment of 30 students. While every member of the ongoing and visiting faculty works according to their methods, we are united in our conviction that newer writers need a balance of encouragement and serious, thoroughly considered feedback.
The curriculum is designed sequentially. Students take a workshop every semester. The specialization typically offers two traditional short fiction workshops and one novel-writing workshop in the fall and three short fiction  workshops in the spring. The novel-writing workshop is meant to address the particular needs of students who are writing novels and who would prefer to receive input on longer sections than a traditional workshop allows.
First-year students take a craft course in the short story in the fall and a reading seminar in the spring. The reading seminars, led by faculty members, discuss classic and contemporary literature from a writer’s point of view. If a traditional literature course is devoted, for instance, to understanding why Faulkner and García Márquez are considered great writers, the reading seminars are more concerned with how writers like Faulkner and García Márquez achieved their effects.
Second-year students take, along with their workshops, a one-on-one revisions/thesis tutorial in the fall and in the spring. The first is devoted to helping students with work that has already been discussed in their workshops, the second to helping them look over what they’ve done during their time at Brooklyn College, toward the completion of their theses. Both represent the specialization’s desire to give each student individual attention outside of the workshops.
We who teach in the fiction-writing specialization do so in part because we want not only to be useful to younger writers but to know them. We care about each student we admit. We are trying, to the best of our abilities, to maintain the M.F.A. program we wish had been available to us.
Over the course of the last decade, our graduates have published more than 50 books, including Helen Phillips’s
The Need
(Longlisted for the National Book Award); R.O. Kwon’s
The Incendaries
(National Bestseller and finalist for the National Book Critics Circle John Leonard Award for Best First Book and finalist for the
Los Angeles Times
Best First Book Prize); Garrard Conley’s
Boy Erased
New York Times
Bestseller; adapted for film starring Russell Crowe, Nicole Kidman, and Lucas Hedges); Jai Chakrabarti’s
A Play for the End of the World
(Longlisted for the PEN Faulkner Award, winner of the National Jewish Book Award); Thomas Grattan’s
The Recent East
(Longlisted for the PEN Hemingway Award) and Robert Jones Jr.’s
The Prophets
(National Book Award Finalist and
New
York Times
Bestseller).
Playwriting
7932X
to be taken four times, but not more than once in any semester; English
7933X
to be taken four times, but not more than once in any semester.
The playwriting specialization at Brooklyn College was started over 30 years ago by Jack Gelber, one of America’s most important experimental writers. Mac Wellman and Erin Courtney continued that tradition for a 20 year period, while seeking to embrace the widest definition of that concept. Now, Dennis A. Allen II and Sibyl Kempson are serving as interim leaders of this innovative course of study.
The playwriting specialization is dedicated to the proposition that writing for the theater is not a business of finished thought and dead rules. Rather, we endeavor to pursue kinds of writing that involve an ongoing conversation with theater of the past and (hopefully) the future. To this end, we encourage our M.F.A. playwrights to become students of the theater in every sense: to follow the current scene as well as study the classics from as many traditions as possible; to study the techniques of making theater as well as theory; and lastly, to become as well-read as possible in all the written arts, with special emphasis on what is most contemporary, most challenging, most alive. It is our conviction that each generation must reinvent a theater appropriate to the time; a theater the time deserves; a theater that refuses to settle for the merely tendentious, and the dreary dead hand of the already known.
We are looking for aspiring writers who follow the theater because they love theater and all that pertains to theatricality. Theatricality diversely considered, rotated in four-dimensional space. We are looking for writers unwilling to settle for less. We believe the gathering of diverse people, ideas, and cultures strengthens both our insights into the work we present on stage and our relationships with each other.
Poetry
7922X
to be taken four times, but not more than once in any semester; English
7923X
to be taken four times, but not more than once in any semester.
Julie Agoos, Coordinator
Since its inception, the Brooklyn College Master of Fine Arts specialization in poetry has balanced a firm grounding in the history and tradition of the craft with cutting-edge experimental writing. Moderately priced and highly selective, this two-year specialization offers intensive workshops (limited to 10 students), private tutorials, and courses in the history and craft of the genre.
Attracting a diverse student body from all across the country, it has graduated such writers as John Yau, Sapphire, Paul Beatty, David Trinidad, Star Black, Karen Kelley, Tom Devaney, and Anselm Berrigan. Brooklyn’s “experimental tradition” is best exemplified by the late-modernist masters John Ashbery and Allen Ginsberg, both of whom taught in the specialization. Other teachers have included Mark Strand, William Matthews, Ann Lauterbach, Douglas Crase, David Shapiro, C. K. Williams, Susan Fromberg Schaeffer, Joan Larkin, and, more recently, Ron Padgett Joshua Clover, Marjorie Welish, and LaTasha N. Diggs.
At present, the permanent staff includes Julie Agoos, author of
Echo Systems
(2015),
Property
(2008),
Calendar Year
(1996), and
Above the Land
(1987), for which she won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award; Ben Lerner, author of
The Lichtenberg Figures
(winner of the Hayden Carruth Award from Copper Canyon Press, a Lannan Literary Selection, and one of 2004’s best books of poetry, according to
Library Journal
),
Angle of Yaw
(Copper Canyon, 2006, and a finalist for the National Book Award and the Northern California Book Award), and
Mean Free Path
(Copper Canyon, 2010); and Mónica de la Torre, author of
Repetition Nineteen
(Nightboat, 2020),
The Happy End/All Welcome
(Ugly Duckling Presse, 2017),
Public Domain
(Roof Books, 2009), and
Talk Shows
(Switchback Books, 2006).
Recent alumni of the M.F.A. poetry specialization have received such major recognitions as selection for The National Poetry Prize Series (
Courtney Bush
i love information
, selected by Brian Teare, NY:  Milkweeds, 2023), the Donald Hall Prize for Poetry (
Sahar Muradi
OCTOBERS
, selected by Naomi Shahib Nye, Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2023), and the 2022 APR/Honickman First Book Prize (
Chelsea Harlan
Bright Shade
, selected by Jericho Brown, Philadelphia: The American Poetry Review, 2022). Others have received international honors for poetry and journalism (
Mohammed El-Kurd,
RIFQA
, Haymarket Books, 2022, Winner of The Calgary Peace Prize); for translation
(Matthew Reeck
, winner of the 2020 Albertine Prize for
“Muslim”: A Novel
, by Zahia Rehmani, Deep Vellum, 2019); for YA fiction (
Victoria Bond
, winner of the 2020 John Steptoe/Coretta Scott King New Talent Author Award for
Zora and Me
(trilogy), with illustrator TR Simon, MA:  Candlewick Press, 2020, 2018, 2011); and for books on art (John Yau,
Please Wait by the Coatroom:  Reconsidering Race and Identity in American Art
, Black Sparrow Press, 2023, deemed a “revelatory volume” by Publishers Weekly, among other ravishing reviews). Our alumni currently occupy major Fellowships at the New York Public Library (Alexandra Kamerling, 2023 NYPL Dance Research Fellow), and the Library of America (Susana Plotts-Pineda, 2023 Latino Fellow), and have written, directed, and premiered feature film documentaries (
Jodie Childers
, with Dan Messina, director and cinematographer of
Down by the Riverside
, 2023 World Premiere, Woodstock Film Festival;
Tom Devaney
Bicentennial City
, Green House Media, 2020). Recent and forthcoming publications include
Claire DeVoogd
VIA
(Winter Editions, 2023),
Anselm Berrigan
Pregrets
(Black Square Editions, 2021),
Katherine Duckworth
Slow Violence
(NY:  Beautiful Days Press, 2023), Marcella Durand,
To Husband Is to Tender
(Black Square Editions, 2021),
Tom Devaney
Getting to Philadelphia
(Hanging Loose Press, 2020),
Tom Haviv
Flag of No Nation
(Jewish Currents, 2019),
Gracie Leavitt
Livingry
(Nightboat, 2018),
Kennia Lopez
The Exodus
(Tolson Books, 2020),
Chime Lama
Sphinxlike
(Finishing Line, 2023),
Sharon Mesmer
Greetings from My Girlies Leisure Place
(Bloof Books, 2015),
Jed Muson
Commentary on the Birds
(Rescue Press, 2023),
Joshua Wilkerson
, Meadowlands/Xanadu/American Dream, Beautiful Days Press, 2022),
John Yau
Tell It Slant
, Omnidawn, 2023);
Charles Theonia
Gay Heaven Is a Dance Floor but I Can’t Relax
, Archway Editions (March, 2024), and
Zohra Saed
with
Sahara Muradi
, eds.,
One Story, Thirty Stories: An Anthology of Contemporary Afghan American Literature
(AR: University of Arkansas Press, 2022).
More Information
FAQ
Application Process
How do I apply?
For comprehensive application information and the link to the online application, visit the
Admissions page
What is your rate of acceptance?
In recent years, we have received approximately 500 applications for 15 spots in fiction, approximately 120 applications for 10 spots in poetry, and approximately 70 applications for five spots in playwriting.
When will I find out if I was accepted?
Though it varies year to year, we plan to notify applicants in March and early April. We appreciate your patience.
Do you require the GRE?
No.
I’m not sure if I have the 12 credits of advanced English requested on your Admissions page. What should I do?
As per our Admissions page, “Applicants who do not meet course requirements but whose manuscripts show unusual talent are considered for admission.”
May the 30-page fiction manuscript consist of multiple works?
Yes, your 30-page fiction manuscript may come in any form you wish (short stories, excerpt(s) from a novel, flash fiction, or any combination of the above, up to 30 pages). We simply recommend that you send in whatever you think is your very strongest work.
How should the 20-page poetry manuscript be formatted?
You may format your poetry as you see fit. Please do not exceed 20 pages.
What should be in the personal statement?
Your one- to two-page personal statement should serve as a way for us to get to know you and come to understand why you want to pursue an M.F.A. at Brooklyn College.
Who should write my recommendation letters?
Your two recommendation letters should come from people familiar with your writing, such as professors, mentors, and/or employers.
How should recommendation letters be submitted?
They should be submitted online (this will be an option when you’re completing the online application). For more information, refer to the
Supporting Documents
page.
Do I need to send in transcripts from all of the institutions where I took undergraduate classes?
We require transcripts from all colleges and universities that you attended.
What is an official transcript?
Transcripts must arrive in envelopes sealed by the institution’s registrar office. Your college institution should mail transcripts to the Brooklyn College Office of Admissions.
I am an international student. Is it true that I have to have my international transcripts evaluated before my application will be complete?
Yes (though please note that students who received degrees from universities in Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom are exempt from this requirement). For all other international applicants, see more information about the required international transcript evaluation.
Do international students with undergraduate degrees from U.S. universities need to take the TOEFL?
Once you have received a B.A. from a U.S. university, you no longer need to submit your TOEFL scores to apply to the M.F.A. program.
May I apply to two different genres?
No, you may only apply to one genre per year.
What are the program codes for Fiction, Playwriting, and Poetry?
Fiction—324
Playwriting—325
Poetry—327
I was not accepted to your program. Can you provide feedback on my application?
Because of the large number of qualified applicants, we may not be able to accept very strong candidates, nor can we offer specific feedback on individual applications. Note that the manuscript is by far the most important element of the application. We encourage interested applicants to reapply in the future.
How do I reapply?
As per the
Graduate Admissions Office website
, “To reapply, you need to complete and submit a new graduate degree application. You do not need to resubmit any supporting documents (i.e. transcripts, letters of recommendation) if you applied within the last two years.” The $125 application fee is waived for re-applicants for up to one year.  You must send a new personal statement and manuscript to the Department of English each time you reapply.
Getting to Know the Program
May I come and visit an M.F.A. class?
In most cases, prospective students are permitted to visit classes once they’ve been accepted into the program.
May I take a class in the Brooklyn College M.F.A. program as a nonmatriculated student?
Because of the small size of our program, only students matriculated in our M.F.A. program may take our graduate creative writing classes.
Where can I obtain information pertaining to international students?
The
Brooklyn College Office of International Student Services
will assist you with immigration issues, financial aid, and housing.
Financial Information
What is the cost of tuition?
Up-to-date tuition information is available on the
Bursar’s website
How many credits are required for the M.F.A. program?
Unlike other masters students, M.F.A. students take a nine-credit-per-semester load. Tuition should be calculated based on nine credits per semester.
Do you offer funding?
Yes. In addition to the salary for teaching undergraduate composition, our graduate students are eligible to receive some departmental funding. There is no special application for this funding; all admitted students will be considered automatically. The
Office of Financial Aid
primarily helps students obtain federal student loans and, if they are eligible, Work-Study funding. All students must complete the
Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
, which can be submitted online.
Do you offer teaching opportunities?
Yes. Students who wish to teach while they are enrolled in the M.F.A. program, but who don’t have prior composition teaching experience at the college level, are required to take English 7506, Practicum in Teaching College-Level Composition (which counts toward the M.F.A. degree requirements as an elective). The course includes a tutor-internship in an instructor’s classroom. After completing 7506, students may be assigned to teach their own section of a composition course, English 1010 or English 1012.  Students may teach for up to three years, starting while they are students in the program and continuing after they graduate. There are also teaching opportunities at other CUNY schools.
I am an international student. How would this affect my employment opportunities at the university?
International students on F-1 Student Visas are permitted to work or teach up to 20 hours per week while they are in the program, and eligible to continue doing so, full-time, for one year after graduation, if the work is in the field for which they received the degree.
Do you offer a part-time, low-residency, or online option?
No.
Do you offer a health insurance plan?
Health insurance is available via the
New York State of Health Insurance Exchange
, as per the Affordable Care Act, where you can search for insurance plans.
Selected Student Publications
Greg Ames, M.F.A. Fiction 2002
Buffalo Lockjaw
, 2009
Mark Ari, M.F.A. Fiction 1985
The Shoemaker’s Tale
, 2000
Rilla Askew, M.F.A. Fiction 1989
Strange Business
, 1992
The Mercy Seat
, 1997
Fire in Beulah
, 2001
Harpsong
(Stories and Storytellers Series), 2007
Kind of Kin
, 2013
Paul Beatty, M.F.A. Poetry 1989
Big Bank Take Little Bank
, 1991
Joker Joker Deuce
, 1994
The White Boy Shuffle
, 1996
Tuff
, 2001
Slumberland
, 2008
The Sellout
, 2015
Lauren Belski, M.F.A. Fiction 2010
Whatever Used to Grow Around Here
, 2012
Adam Berlin, M.F.A. Fiction 1991
Headlock
, 2000
Belmondo Style
, 2004
Both Members of the Club
, 2013
The Number of Missing
, 2013
Anselm Berrigan, M.F.A. Poetry 1998
They Beat Me over the Head With a Sack
, 1998
Integrity & Dramatic Life
, 1999
Zero Star Hotel
, 2002
Some Notes on My Programming
, 2006
To Hell With Sleep
, 2009
Free Cell
, 2009
Notes from Irrelevance
, 2001
Loading
, 2013
Primitive State
, 2015
Come in Alone
, 2016
Marie-Helene Bertino, M.F.A. Fiction 2007
Short story: ‘North Of’, 2008
Safe As Houses
, 2012
2 A.M. at The Cat’s Pajamas
, 2014
Star Black, M.F.A. Poetry 1984
October for Idas
, 1997
Double Time
, 1997
Balefire
, 1999
Ghostwood
, 2003
Velleity’s Shade
, 2010
Victoria Bond, M.F.A. Poetry 2005
Zora and Me
(co-author), 2010
Thomas Bradshaw, M.F.A. Playwriting 2004
Play: ‘Strom Thurman is Not a Racist’, 1985
Play: ‘Cleansed’, 1985
Play: ‘Phophet’, 2006
Play: ‘Purity’, 2007
A new play for the anthology
, 2008
Play: ‘Southern Promises’, 2008
Play: ‘The Bereaved/Mary’, 2009
Play: ‘Intimacy’, 2014
Play: ‘Dawn’, 2010
Joanna Cantor, M.F.A. Fiction 2011
Alternative Remedies for Loss
, 2018
Maisy Card, M.F.A. Fiction 2010
These Ghosts Are Family
, 2020
Bryan Charles, M.F.A. Fiction 2003
Grab On To Me As Tightly As If I Knew The Way
, 2006
Pavement’s Wowee Zowee (33 1/3)
, 2010
There’s a Road to Everywhere Except Where You Came From: A Memoir
, 2010
Erin Courtney, M.F.A. Playwriting 2003
Play: ‘Demon Baby’, 2006
Play included in anthology of 7 edgy works, 2008
Amanda Davis, M.F.A. Fiction 1998
Circling the Drain
, 2000
Wonder When You’ll Miss Me
, 2003
Molly Dektar, M.F.A. Fiction 2015
The Ash Family
, 2019
Tom Devaney, M.F.A. Poetry 1998
The American Pragmatist Fell In Love
, 1999
Heidi Diehl, M.F.A. Fiction 2011
Lifelines
, 2019
Marcella Durand, M.F.A. Poetry 1995
Western Capital Rhapsodies
, 2001
Traffic & Weather
, 2008
Area
, 2008
Juliet Escoria, M.F.A. Fiction 2011
Black Cloud
, 2014
Witch Hunt
, 2016
Juliet the Maniac
, 2019
Amy Fox, M.F.A. 2005
Screenplay: ‘Heights’, 2005
Screenplay: ‘Equity’, 2016
James Franco, M.F.A. Fiction 2010
Palo Alto: Stories
, 2010
Strongest of the Litter
: (The Hollyridge Press Chapbook Series), 2012
113 Crickets: Summer 2012
, 2012
Actors Anonymous
, 2013
Directing Herbert White
: Poems, 2014
A California Childhood
, 2014
Straight James / Gay James
, 2016
Elizabeth Gaffney, M.F.A. Fiction 1997
Metropolis: A Novel
, 2005
When The World Was Young
, 2015
Sean Garritty, M.F.A. Poetry 2006
Lie Nearest Truth
, 2011
Thea Goodman, M.F.A. Fiction 1995
The Sunshine When She’s Gone
, 2013
CJ Hauser, M.F.A. Fiction 2009
The From-Aways
, 2014
Elliott Holt, M.F.A. Fiction 2006
Short story: ‘Fem Care’, 2011
You Are One of Them
, 2013
Andy Hunter and Scott Lindenbaum, M.F.A. Fiction 2008
Electric Literature (Founders)
, 2009
Tanwi Nandini Islam, M.F.A. Fiction 2009
Bright Lines
, 2015
Amelia Kahaney, M.F.A. Fiction 2006
The Brokenhearted
, 2013
Andrew Kaufman, M.F.A. Poetry 1986
Earth’s Ends
, 2004
Both Sides of the Niger
, 2013
John M. Keller, M.F.A. Fiction 2004
A Bald Man With No Hair and Other Stories
, 2012
Know Your Baker
, 2013
The Box and the Briefcase, the Moleque and the Old Man and the First Coming of the Second Son of God
, 2014
Abracadabrantesque
, 2015
Johnny Allan
, 2019
Stellar Kim, M.F.A. Fiction 2005
Short story: ‘Findings and Impressions’, 2007
Suki Kim, M.F.A. Fiction 1997
The Interpreter
, 2003
Without You, There Is No Us: My Time with the Sons of North Korea’s Elite
, 2014
Amy King, M.F.A. Poetry 2000
Antidotes for an Alibi
, 2006
I’m The Man Who Loves You
, 2007
Slaves to Do These Things
, 2009
I Want to Make You Safe
, 2011
Kristen Kosmas, M.F.A. Playwriting 2011
The Mayor of Baltimore and Anthem
, 2013
R.O. Kwon, M.F.A. Fiction 2008
The Incendiaries
, 2018
Gracie Leavitt, M.F.A. Poetry 2011
Monkeys, Minor Planet, Average Star
, 2014
Marlene Lee, M.F.A. Fiction 2010
The Absent Woman
, 2013
Halimah Marcus, M.F.A. Fiction 2012
Short story: ‘Swimming’, 2010
Sharon Mesmer, M.F.A. Poetry 1990
The Empty Quarter
, 2000
Half Angel Half Lunch
, 2002
In Ordinary Time
, 2005
The Virgin Formica
, 2008
Emily Mitchell, M.F.A. Fiction 2005
The Last Summer of the World
, 2007
Viral: Stories
, 2015
Cristina Moracho, M.F.A. Fiction 2008
Althea & Oliver
, 2014
Stephen Motika, M.F.A. Poetry 2010
Western Practice
, 2012
Christina Olivares, M.F.A. Poetry 2010
No Map of the Earth Includes Stars
, 2015
Jeffrey Oliver, M.F.A. Fiction 2002
Failure to Thrive
, 2011
Helen Phillips, M.F.A. Fiction 2007
Short story: ‘Twenty Tales of Natural Disaster’, 2010
And Yet They Were Happy
, 2011
Here Where the Sunbeams Are Green
, 2012
The Beautiful Bureaucrat
, 2015
Some Possible Solutions
, 2016
The Need
, 2019
Sapphire, M.F.A. Poetry 1995
American Dreams
, 1996
Push
, 1997
Black Wings & Blind Angels
, 2000
The Kid: A Novel
, 2012
Sara Shepard, M.F.A. Fiction 2005
The Visibles
, 2009
Everything We Ever Wanted
, 2011
The Perfectionists Series
, 2014-2015
Pretty Little Liars Series
, 2006-2014
The Lying Game Series
, 2010-2013
The Heiresses
, 2014
The Amateurs
, 2016
Mohan Sikka, M.F.A. Fiction 2006
Short story: ‘Uncle Musto Takes A Mistress’, 2007
Short story: ‘The Railway Aunty’, 2009
Lysette Simmons, M.F.A. Poetry 2013
Dear Robert
, 2013
David Trinidad, M.F.A. Poetry 1990
Monday, Monday
, 1985
November
, 1986
Hand Over Heart
, 1994
Three Stories
, 1998
Plasticville
, 2000
Phoebe 2002: An Essay in Verse
, 2003
The Late Show
, 2007
Saints of Hysteria: A Half-Century of Collaborative American Poetry
, 2007
By Myself, An Autobiography
, 2009
Dear Prudence: New and Selected Poems
, 2011
Peyton Place: A Haiku Soap Opera
, 2013
Notes of a Past Life
, 2016
Jenny Williams, M.F.A. Fiction 2011
Short story in Battle Runes: Writings on War
, 2011
The Atlas of Forgotten Places
, 2017
John Yau, M.F.A. Poetry 1978
Radiant Silhouette: New and Selected Work
, 1974-1988, 1989
Forbidden Entries
, 1992
Edificio Sayonara
, 1992
A.R. Penck
, 1993
In the Realm of Appearances: The Art of Andy Warhol
, 1993
Hawaiian Cowboys
, 1994
Berlin Diptychon: Poems
, 1995
The United States of Jasper Johns
, 1997
My Symptoms
, 1998
Randy Hayes: The World Reveiled
, 2000
Borrowed Love Poems
, 2002
My Heart Is That Eternal Rose Tattoo
, 2002
Ing Grish
, 2005
Paradiso Diaspora
, 2006
The Passionate Spectator: Essays on Art and Poetry
, 2006
A Thing Among Things: The Art of Jasper Johns
, 2008
Further Adventures in Monochrome
, 2012
Young Jean Lee, M.F.A. Playwriting 2005
Play: ‘The Appeal’, 2006
The Support You’ll Find
Brooklyn College is an integral part of the cultural and artistic energy of New York City. Our faculty members in the Department of English offer incomparable expertise and tremendous talent, and each brings a unique perspective to their teaching and mentoring in and out of the classroom.
Eric Alterman
Sophia Bamert
Matthew Burgess
Monica De La Torre
Joseph Entin
Nicola Masciandaro
Roni Natov
Jonathan Nissenbaum
Helen Phillips
Tanya L. Pollard
Karl T. Steel
Dorell Thomas
Ellen Tremper
Internships and Employers
Brooklyn College creative writing alumni have found employment with many organizations, including:
BET
BRIC (Arts and Media in Brooklyn)
Columbia University
New York City Department of Education
New York University
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