Kilian McDonnell Writer-In-Residence

Each year the Collegeville Institute selects a skilled writer as the Kilian McDonnell Writer-in-Residence.  The goals of such a residency are to support specific writing projects of authors; to honor and raise the profile of such writers, and writing, both within the academy and among the wider church-going public, and beyond; and to provide the opportunity for a prolonged interchange among academics and an accomplished religious writer whose intellectual work is ordered to an audience beyond the borders of the academy.

For the 2011 - 2012 academic year, the Collegeville Institute is proud to recognize Kathleen Norris as the Kilian McDonnell Writer-in-Residence.

Kathleen Norris was born on July 27, 1947 in Washington, D.C. She grew up in Honolulu, Hawaii, as well as on her maternal grandparents' farm in Lemmon, South Dakota.

A more detailed biography of Kathleen can be found on http://www.barclayagency.com/norris.html

"Norris . . . is one of history's writing pilgrims but also a contemporary American one, boldly willing to forsake any number of cultural fads, trends and preoccupations in favor . . . [of a] searching expedition within herself. . . ."
- The New York Times Book Review

Kathleen discovered her desire for poetry when she began attending Bennington College in Vermont, and to date, has published seven books of poetry. Her first book of poems was entitled Falling Off and was the 1971 winner of the Big Table Younger Poets Award. In 1993, Kathleen finished writing her first nonfiction book, Dakota: A Spiritual Journey, while she was a Resident Scholar at the Collegeville Institute. Dakota stayed on the New York Times bestseller list for 17 weeks. She started writing both The Cloister Walk (1996) and Amazing Grace: A Vocabulary of Faith (1999), during her second residency at the Institute.   The Virgin of Bennington, which appeared in 2002, is a continuous narrative in which she shares the period from her sheltered youth to her entrance into the New York art world.  Other books include The Quotidian Mysteries (1998), Holy Twins (2001), Mother (2000),  Journey: New and Selected Poems (2001), and Little Girls in Church (1995). Her latest book, Acedia & Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life, was published in September 2008. Kathleen is also the coauthor of several other books. Kathleen's work has been compared to that of Thomas Merton and she's been described as a "Midwestern, late-20th century mystic."

Individuals selected for the Kilian McDonnell Writer-in-Residence are persons who have demonstrated a commitment to writing that serves the purposes of the church, a record of producing writing that appeals to a broad audience, and a willingness to speak with and educate others about the importance and practice of such writing. The Kilian McDonnell residency is made possible through a grant from the Lilly Endowment Inc.

Kathleen is the third Killian McDonnell Writer-in-Residence following, Michael Dennis Browne (2007/08) and William Placher (2008/09).