quadruvium: for Daniel Prude
Risë Kevalshar Collins is an emerging essayist, poet, and fiction short-story writer studying creative writing at Boise State University where she has served on the editorial staff of Idaho Review. Risë earned an MSW at the University of Houston. She holds a BFA in drama from Carnegie Mellon University and was a member of the original Broadway production of For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow is Enuf by Notzake Shange. Risë’s play, Incandescent Tones, has been produced off-Broadway and in repertory theatre. Her op-ed essays have been published in Idaho Statesman, The Blue Review, Boise Weekly, Arbiter, and elsewhere. Recently, she was featured on the Idaho PBS online series “The 180.” Her creative nonfiction was selected as a finalist for North American Review’s Terry Tempest Williams Prize. Risë’s creative nonfiction, fiction, and/or poetry appears or is forthcoming in The Indianapolis Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Minnesota Review, North American Review, Texas Review, and Tupelo Quarterly. Rise’s writing has been supported by a grant from The Alexa Rose Foundation.
Risë Kevalshar Collins; quadruvium: for Daniel Prude. the minnesota review 1 May 2022; 2022 (98): 42–43. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00265667-9563779
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