Meet Our Students

MFA Students

Sarah Brockhaus is an MFA candidate in poetry at LSU. She grew up in Omaha, Nebraska, and graduated from Salisbury University in Maryland with a B.A. in English. She is a co-editor for The Shore Poetry and a reader for Poet Lore. She is a two-time Best of the Net nominee and her poems can be found in places such as Sugar House Review, North American Review, Tupelo Quarterly, Jabberwock Review, and Cider Press Review.
Sarah Brockhaus

 


Kyler Patrick Carter (he/him) is a writer, director, and producer from modest New Jersey. A spinner of stories from the moment he could string together sentences, Kyler's writing investigates bodies, religion, transition, and what we do with the passage of time. He graduated from Pace University with his BA in Sociology-Anthropology, and is now pursuing his MFA in Creative Writing from Louisiana State University. When he isn't on the phone with family or scribbling in a notebook, he can be found curled up with thick socks and a good book. 
Kyler Carter

 

Šari Dale is a second-year MFA candidate from a resource town in Northern Canada. She received her BA in English & Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia Okanagan and has been copywriting + creating websites since. Her interests include moose, monster trucks, and reality TV. Šari's work has been published in Event, The Malahat Review, and Grain among others. Her first collection of poetry, Para-Social Butterfly, was released with Metatron Press in 2022.
Sari Dale

 

Xavier Hawkins is a MFA candidate hailing from Hampton University, born in Memphis, TN. He is a poet with an affinity for flash fiction who focuses on relatability and capturing moments. He is a recipient of the United Negro College Fund’s Mellon-Mays Research Fellowship and studies the relationship between music and literature (particularly within August Wilson’s Pittsburgh Cycle plays). As a trombonist and melody enthusiast, he enjoys making music and playing with words. A few of his poems can be found in the Hampton Renaissance Literary Journal, and much more remains to come!
Xavier Hawkins

 

A second-year MFA candidate at LSU, Caldwell Holden is a writer, bartender, and social artist from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He received his BA in Literature from Bennington College where he studied “Immersion Based Storytelling.” He has also studied in Siena, Italy, completed a writing residency in Oatmeal Creek, TX, and traveled the US living out of his jeep. His fiction has appeared in SHANTIH Journal and Atticus Review. His journalism has appeared in 90.5 WESA and Stylo24. You can learn more about him and his work here.
Caldwell Holden

 

Dalton Wayne Hoover is a first-year MFA candidate at LSU, where he specializes in creative nonfiction. He is an Army Infantry veteran, a culinary school dropout, an amateur outdoorsman, and a professional troublemaker. Not surprisingly, he writes about food, conservation, music, the veteran experience, and the conversation between all of these things. When not behind the keyboard, he can be found wrangling his wild pack of hunting dogs, attempting to be a worthwhile husband and father, and kicking out the jams with his band, Dalton Wayne and the Warmadillos. Find him on Spotify/iTunes/Amazon Music and at [email protected].
Dalton Hoover
Justin Howerton is a first-year MFA candidate primarily interested in poetry. Born and raised in Memphis, he received his BA from Lewis & Clark College in Oregon and promptly returned to the South. He writes about the pull of memory, the lies we wish were true, and the magic of cars. His recent work can be found in The West Trade Review among other places.
Justin Howerton

 

Brett Hymel Jr. has "that dog" in him. Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! Woof! He prefers cats. Read him in The Emerson Review and Hunger Mountain, and add him on Instagram: @bretthymel.
Brett Hymel

 

Kayla Jackson is a multi-medium visual artist, classically trained vocalist, emcee, writer, spoken word poet, and educator from New Orleans, Louisiana. Kayla received her Master’s degree in English Literature from Tulane University, where she was the co-Founder and co-Captain of their slam poetry team, Rhyme Verses Rhythm, who placed 7th in the International Collegiate Union Poetry Slam Invitational (CUPSI) competition. Currently, Kayla is working toward her first music EP, her second collection of poetry and is attending Louisiana State University as a Creative Writing MFA candidate.
headshot of kayla jackson

 

A native of Louisiana, Matty Carville Joel is a MFA candidate at LSU, with a focus on creative nonfiction. A graduate of Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Matty has worked for the Seneca Review, LSU Press, and The Southern Review and served as a speechwriter in the Mayor's Office at New Orleans City Hall. Since 2018, Matty has also served nationwide as a certified full spectrum doula, childbirth educator, and advocate for accessible, comprehensive reproductive healthcare for all. In her free time, Matty is an avid aquarist and lives with her husband, two dogs and cat in Baton Rouge. You can reach her anytime at [email protected].
matty carville joel standing next to a tree

 

Jalen Giovanni Jones is a Creole, Black and Filipino writer from Los Angeles. Like all Angelenos, Jalen has had his fair share of celebrity sightings. He has worked for the Oscars, directed an Emmy Award winning PSA, and once, Emma Stone generously stepped on his foot. Jalen serves as the fiction editor for the New Delta Review, was the director of the 2024 Delta Mouth Literary Festival, and is a staff writer and editor for Mixed Asian Media. Jalen’s creative work has been published in The Offing, has won the David Madden MFA Award for Fiction, and has been supported by the Tin House Workshop and the Lambda Literary Retreat. You can contact him through email at [email protected].
Jalen Jones

 

Milagro Jones is a formerly incarcerated, formerly homeless single father. He is an alumni of the AmeriCorps program Public Allies and the National Youth Forum on Homelessness. Milagro Jones received his Associates degree in English from Los Angeles Trade Technical College. He transferred to UCLA where he earned his Bachelor’s Degree in English with a concentration in Creative Writing. Milagro Jones’ work has appeared in Kweli Journal.
Milagro Jones

 

Jasmine Knowles is a poet and multidisciplinary learning artist originally from Chicago, IL, raised in Northwest Indiana. She has received support from the Hurston/Wright Foundation, Voices of Our Nations Arts (VONA), and the Periplus Collective. Her work can be found in Obsidian, Honey Literary Magazine, and the V is for Voices! campaign and performance project curated by Aja Monet. She writes to free her voice.
Jasmine Knowles

 

Sirong (Dahlia) Li is a writer from Xishuangbanna in Southern China. Having received her BA in Philosophy from UC Berkeley, she is now pursuing an MFA in Creative Writing at LSU. She was the recipient of the 2022 AARC-PACH Creative Project Award, and her short stories were double finalists for the Tobias Wolff Award in 2022. In her free time, she likes to hike, play the harp, and dance (jazz-funk and classical Chinese).
Dahlia Li

 

Jenna Mark is a first-year MFA candidate from Houston, Texas. She earned her B.S. in Plant and Environmental Soil Science with an emphasis in Soil and Water from Texas A&M University. Her work focuses on the intersection between fantasy and science fiction with environmental science and agriculture. She aims to write stories that not only entertain but also educate readers of all ages on topics of environmental importance while inspiring people to be more environmentally conscious. She is combining her dreams of writing and sustainability into one with eco-storytelling. When she isn’t writing or having fun with soils, Jenna can be found either with a book in hand or at a concert.
Jenna Mark
Manuela Silvestre Martínez has trouble sticking to a single genre or language. Originally from Dominican Republic, she’s held 25 addresses in the last 23 years, and done work for almost as many industries. She graduated with honors from New York University, earning a B.A. in English Literature despite spending most of her time on Latino Studies and Creative Writing. Her obsessions include loops, conviviality, and redemption.

Manuela Silverstre

 

Halley McArn is an MFA candidate at Louisiana State University with a focus on creative nonfiction. Originally from the northeast, she worked for several years as a caseworker and database designer for education nonprofits. She’s served as the Nonfiction Editor for the New Delta Review and as an editorial assistant at Speculative Nonfiction. You can find her work in Bright Wall/Dark Room.
Bunny Morris

 

Bunny / Teddy Morris is a tired fetishist and an MFA candidate in poetry at LSU. He has served as both a visual art and a poetry editor for New Delta Review and as an experimental/hybrid works editor with Miracle Monocle in his hometown of Louisville, KY. Its work revolves around the disintegrating boundaries between suffering and the erotic, sexy cyborgs after disease & disability, and being trans or whatever. His recent work can be found in The Spectacle, Death Rattle Literary, and is forthcoming in Bayou Magazine. Check out his other work & collabs & say hi esp if ur a weirdo @ https://bunnymorris.wixsite.com/poetry.
Bunny Morris

 

Carolina Murriel is a writer, ceramic artist, journalist, educator and death doula in New Orleans. She navigates her experience with immigration and mental illness through essays, poetry and sculpture. Through her art and deathcare practice Barro y Luna, she works with clay and storytelling as transformative mediums and is currently recording Latin elders' oral histories for community preservation. Caro came to ceramics and death work through her reporting on immigration, criminal justice and prison abolition, which led her to study with the Trauma Research Foundation. Her work is informed by 10+ years in local and international radio, print and digital newsrooms. She is the lead story editor for Pizza Shark, her award-winning podcast studio that works toward radical inclusivity in media through traumainformed storytelling. Their work has won Webbys, Shortys, iHeartRadio Podcast Awards, and nominations for Peabody Awards, Ambies, People’s Choice Podcast Awards and more.
Carolina Murriel
Carter Rekoske (he/him) is an incoming MFA candidate from southeast Tennessee focused primarily on poetry. He is grateful for all that disentangles him from linear time, including, but not limited to, late night baja blasts, looking up at the sky, playing basketball, poems, and long dreamy naps. He won the Dan Veach prize in the Atlanta Review, Bryan College's poetry award twice and their philological award once, and has been published in Common Ground Review, Sinking City, Listening, and elsewhere.
Carter Rekoske

 

Sunny Rosen (she/her) is your friendly neighborhood bisexual anticapitalist and an LSU MFA student in fiction. Originally from Newark, Delaware, she lived in New Zealand and Florida before landing in Baton Rouge. Her most recent publication with Taco Bell Quarterly is a nominee for this year's Best of the Net awards, and she has won a David Madden MFA Award for Fiction and an Elda Wollaeger Gregory Poetry Award. Sunny also works as a copywriter and publicity coordinator for LSU Press and The Southern Review, and she served as the fiction editor of New Delta Review. You can find her on Twitter @sunnyraeanna.
Sunny Rosen

 

 

Brooke Stanish is a writer from Sunrise, Florida and an MFA candidate at Louisiana State University. She writes poetry and fiction that engage with the terrains of memory, philosophy, and the inner life, exploring the ways in which language and art can provide embodied encounters with meaning. Her poems, stories, and essays can be found in America, The Windhover, Time of Singing, Cantos, Living Waters Review, and other publications. 
Brooke Stanish

 

Rose Marie Torres is a third-year MFA candidate at LSU with a focus on everything and nothing. A graduate of the University of Texas at Austin, Rose has previously worked at UT's University Writing Center and a frozen yogurt shop. Her writing hopes to slow time and explore how it feels to be a young Latina who yearns for home within any space she persists. She enjoys green tea.
Rose Torres

 

Alejandra Vansant is from the Eastern Shore of Virginia, but currently lives and walks around in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. She has served as a poetry editor for New Delta Review, and her work can be found in Tilted House, Volume Poetry, Alabama Literary Review, and many homemade books and zines.
Alejandra Vansant