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Hughlene Bostian Frank Visiting Writers Series: Neema Avashia

Neema Avashia

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Photo of Neema Avashia

When Neema Avashia tells people where she’s from, their response is nearly always a disbelieving: “There are Indian people in West Virginia?” A queer Asian American teacher and writer, Avashia fits few Appalachian stereotypes. But the lessons she learned in childhood about race and class, gender and sexuality continue to inform the way she moves through the world today: how she loves, how she teaches, how she advocates, how she struggles.

Neema Avashia was born and raised in southern West Virginia to parents who immigrated to the United States. She has been a middle school teacher in the Boston Public Schools since 2003. Her essays have appeared in the Bitter Southerner, Catapult, Kenyon Review Online, and elsewhere. Her memoir, Another Appalachia: Coming Up Queer and Indian in a Mountain Place, was published by West Virginia University Press in 2022.

Another Appalachia examines both the roots and the resonance of Avashia’s identity as a queer desi Appalachian woman, while encouraging readers to envision more complex versions of both Appalachia and the nation as a whole. With lyric and narrative explorations of foodways, religion, sports, standards of beauty, social media, gun culture, and more, Another Appalachia mixes nostalgia and humor, sadness and sweetness, personal reflection and universal questions.

“Readers may be Indian, Appalachian, and queer or they may be some or none of these things. No matter—Avashia’s beautifully rendered prose contains insights to which everyone can relate.”
--Still: The Journal

“Compelling and refreshing. . . . Appalachia needs more people like Neema Avashia.”

--Daily Yonder

A breath of fresh air, a work that the public is in dire need of reading. Wide and expansive as the land the author calls home, this essay collection subverts the mainstream’s hyperfocus on white male-dominated narratives from rural America and commands your attention from the first page to the last word.
--Morgan Jerkins, author of This Will Be My Undoing: Living at the Intersection of Black, Female, and Feminist in (White) America and Caul Baby

https://www.neemaavashia.com

 

Author Talk

FREE and open to the public

DATE
Thursday, September 29

SCHEDULE
Craft Talk: 3:30-4:45pm
Reading: 6-7:15pm
Book sales will follow each event.

LOCATION
Plemmons Student Union 201B, Table Rock Room

FOR MORE INFORMATION
Susan Weinberg at weinbergsc@appstate.edu

Library Holdings & Other Resources

Librarian

Profile Photo
Breanne Crumpton
She/her/hers