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鈥楪enre and global Hollywood鈥 talk at Whatcom Museum鈥檚 Old City Hall

Never really confined within its own national borders, Hollywood became the largest national film industry by absorbing foreign talent and promoting its products overseas. Kaveh Askari, associate professor in the Department of English at Western Washington University, shares highlights of well-鈥

The Rumpus Late Nite Poetry Show #6: Oliver de la Paz

Oliver de la Paz is the author of four collections of poetry: Names Above Houses, Furious Lullaby, Requiem for the Orchard, and the recently published Post Subject: A Fable. He co-edited A Face to Meet the Faces: An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry, and serves as the co-chair of the鈥

Faculty, artist conversation set for Oct. 14
Future of state, higher ed on table at Munro Seminar
Two poets share new works Oct. 2 at Village Books

Oliver de la Paz, who teaches English at Western Washington University and is a recipient of grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the Artist Trust, reads from his new book of prose poems, 鈥淧ost Subject: A Fable,鈥 at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 2, Village Books, 1200 11th St.

From giant fleas to railway crashes to 'Blanket Bill,' enjoy summer reading with ties to Whatcom County

If you're looking for some quick summer reading, several new articles with ties to Whatcom County just came out.

In The New York Times, Bellingham resident Carol Kaesuk Yoon provides a fascinating and hilarious account of her and her husband's endeavor to鈥

From Window magazine: 'Make Me a Writer'
Askari has essay published in new collection on silent cinema
Trueblood has new book published
Backyard breeder: Retired Bellingham professor develops promising variety of spring wheat

As an English professor, Merrill Lewis read books.

As a retired English professor, he reads wheat.

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