Otis Haschemeyer writes creative nonfiction, stories, and poems that have been published in The Sun, The Missouri Review, The Alaska Quarterly Review, Barrow Street, Southern Indian Review, and others. His work has been anthologized several times, twice in Best New American Voices: in 2003, edited by Joyce Carol Oates and in 2009, edited by Mary Gaitskill, and in Steve Elliott’s “Politically Inspired” anthologies. He has also published essays in the Rumpus.net and reviews. He received a B.A. from Binghamton University, an M.F.A. from the University of Arkansas, and a Ph.D. from the University of Tennessee. He’s taught creative writing at Stanford University, University of North Dakota (where he was also a guest editor for the North Dakota Quarterly), and the University of Tennessee.
Otis Haschemeyer
Studios
Phi Beta
Otis Haschemeyer worked in the Phi Beta studio.
Funded by the Phi Beta Fraternity, a national professional fraternity of music and speech founded in 1912, Phi Beta Studio was built between 1929–1931 of granite quarried on the MacDowell grounds. The small studio is a simple in design, but displays a pleasing combination of materials with its granite walls and colorful slate roofing. Inside is…