Visiting Authors

The Faculty of Creative and Critical Studies invites accomplished novelists, essayists, poets, screenwriters, and playwrights present their work to students and the public on campus as well as other venues around the Okanagan. The Writer-in-Residence program promotes Canadian writing and literature to Okanagan residents and provides emerging writers with the opportunity to get feedback on their creative work. Each year faculty from the Creative Writing program host the Annual Sharon Thesen Lecture, the Nancy Holmes Conversation Series, and invite writers into their classrooms.

Nancy Holmes Conversation Series

The series is named in honour of Nancy Holmes, an internationally recognized artist, scholar, editor, community builder, and Professor Emerita in Creative Writing.

Each year an alum of the Faculty of Creative and Critical Studies working in the areas of ecological or socially engaged research is invited to present their work in conversation with current graduate students or faculty.

What: Inaugural Nancy Holmes Conversation Series Event featuring poet, Kelly Shepherd in conversation with Amy Wang, Tosh Sherkat, and Slava Bart
When: Tuesday, March 4, 7:30pm
Where: CCS 224, Creative and Critical Studies building, UBC Okanagan

This first iteration will happen the evening of Mar 4 and will feature Kelly Shepherd (MFA Alum 2014) who will be launching a new book, Dog and Moon, in conversation with second year MFA Creative Writing students, Amy Wang, Tosh Sherkat, and Slava Bart.

This event is free, accessible, and open to the public.

For more information: Matt Rader, matthew.rader@ubc.ca

Kelly Shepherd has been a construction worker in northern Alberta and a kindergarten teacher in South Korea. Dog and Moon, forthcoming in spring 2025 from Oskana Poetry & Poetics (University of Regina Press) is Kelly’s third poetry collection. He is currently part of The Land and Labour Poetry Collective, an editorial group currently working on the book I’ll Get Right On It: Poems on Working Life in the Climate Crisis (forthcoming from Fernwood Publishing). Kelly’s second poetry collection, Insomnia Bird (Thistledown Press, 2018) won the 2019 Robert Kroetsch City of Edmonton Book Prize. He has written eight chapbooks (most recently Sleep Is a Deep Pool with The Alfred Gustav Press, 2023), and he is a poetry editor for the environmental philosophy journal The Trumpeter. He has a Creative Writing MFA from UBC Okanagan (with a thesis on the intersections of ecopoetry and work poetry—supervised by Nancy Holmes), and an MA in Religious Studies from the University of Alberta (with a thesis on sacred geography). Originally from Smithers, BC, Kelly lives on Treaty 6 territory, in Edmonton, where he teaches in the English and Communications Department at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology.

Slava Bart is an international MFA student at UBCO whose poetry reaches across borders and disciplines, incorporating elements of scifi and the fantastic. His thesis reinterprets the Hebrew Bible in serial lyric and prose poems, combining English, Hebrew and Japanese, to tell a personal story of domestic violence, the loss of home, and the discovery of “the ark,” a mysterious new dimension. His multilingual assemblage is forthcoming in the anthology Ice from Caitlin Press.

Amy Wang is a second-year UBCO MFA student whose work focuses on intersectionality within Chinese-Canadian experience. Funded by SSHRC and the BC Arts Council, you can find Amy’s writing in That’s What [We] Said, Paper Shell, The Goose, and more.

Tosh Sherkat is a Persian-Doukhobor settler-of-colour born in Nelson, BC, Sinixt Territory. Tosh is a poetry candidate in the MFA program at the University of British Columbia (Okanagan) on occupied Sylix territory. Their writing most recently appears in EVENT, Grain, and filling Station.

About Nancy Holmes

Nancy Holmes is the author of six critically acclaimed collections of poetry, most recently, Arborophobia (University of Alberta Press 2022) and the editor of the groundbreaking anthology, Open Wide a Wilderness: Canadian Nature Poems (Wilfrid Laurier Press 2009). Holmes is highly regarded in the areas of research-creation and interdisciplinary collaborations including two large-scale, federally-funded projects, the Eco Art Incubator (with UBC Associate Professor, Denise Kenney) and Border Free Bees (with Dr. Cameron Cartiere Emily Carr University of Art + Design). She has been recognized for her writing by The Malahat Review and Arc, and is the past winner of the Robert Kroetsch National Teaching Award. Holmes served in many roles at UBC including Head of Creative Studies, MFA Program Coordinator, and Associate Dean of Research and Graduate Studies.

Annual Sharon Thesen Lecture

Sharon Thesen was the first full professor in the Department of Creative Studies and is now professor emerita here at UBC. She is also a renowned Canadian poet and editor. The Creative Writing program at UBC intends for the Sharon Thesen lecture to acknowledge her contributions to British Columbian and Canadian literature and to the Creative Writing Program at UBC Okanagan. In her honor, a different writer each year will give a lecture that tackles key issues of contemporary writing, poetics, and Canadian literature. By recording each lecture, we will create a wonderful resource of contemporary thinking by writers.

View past lectures below. 

Writer in Residence

Shelly Wood

Shelley Wood

The UBCO writer in residence program promotes Canadian writing and literature to Okanagan residents and provides emerging writers with the opportunity to get feedback on their creative work.  Shelley Wood was the 2024 Writer-in-Residence, and spent two weeks on campus in March 2024 offering feedback to students and local writers and offering a public talk.

Originally from Vancouver, BC, Shelley Wood did her undergraduate degree in English Literature at McGill and her graduate degree in Journalism at UBC. Her short stories and creative nonfiction have been published in Grain, Room, Causeway Lit, Canadian Notes & Queries, Phoebe, the Antigonish Review, The New Quarterly, Bath Flash Fiction, Freefall, and the Saturday Evening Post. Her debut novel, The Quintland Sisters (William Morrow, 2019), was an instant #1 Canadian bestsellerand her second novel, The Leap Year Gene, will be published in August 2024 by Harper Collins Canada and Union Square Press (US).  She divides her time between her home in Kelowna, BC, and her work as a medical journalist and editorial director for the Cardiovascular Research Foundation in New York, NY.

Stay tuned for details on the 2025 Writer-in-Residence.

Past Visiting Authors