Heidi Julavits was born and raised in Portland, Maine, and moved to New York in 2003, where she’s lived ever since. Initially a novelist, who wrote a total of four novels, the best of which is probably THE VANISHERS, she’s since switched to nonfiction, and has published two memoirs—THE FOLDED CLOCK and DIRECTIONS TO MYSELF—as well as essays in magazines about topics such as avalanches, volcanoes, land art, and small town politics. She’s currently working on a book about a dead French actress’s estate she found on eBay, an art world scam artist, a “non-natural hill” in Berlin, and end-of-life care. She is a founding co-editor of THE BELIEVER magazine, co-editor of the book WOMEN IN CLOTHES, and a professor at Columbia University.

Literary Arts Live celebrates the diverse vitalities of contemporary literature.

Bates has a long tradition of welcoming poets and authors to read from their work. In 1932 William Butler Yeats read from his poetry in the Chapel. From the 50s through the 80s, Bates professor-poet John Tagliabue brought many distinguished writers to campus, including Allen Ginsberg and Gwendolyn Brooks. First established as Language Arts Live in 1991 by senior lecturer emeritus Robert Farnsworth, the series has now hosted readings, class visits, and residencies by over 100 authors, among them Nobel Laureates Seamus Heaney and Derek Walcott, and Pulitzer Prize winners Richard Ford, Tyehimba Jess, Donald Justice, Yusef Komunyakaa, Paul Muldoon, Richard Russo, Tracy K. Smith, Elizabeth Strout, and Colson Whitehead. Recent Bates alums have also returned to read from their prize-winning books: Jessica Anthony, Christian Barter, Christina Chiu, Gabriel Fried, and Craig Teicher.