Mary Biddinger's Blog
August 6, 2025
New prose poem + July launch gratitude
It’s always a scary little thrill when a poem from a new project drops, so imagine my scare + thrill when Pithead Chapel (one of my favorite journals) published “Everyone Bowed Their Head and Prayed for God’s Blessing” in their latest issue (vol. 14, issue 8, August 2025). This prose poem is from my manuscript in progress, Latchkey. Thanks for taking a look!
Many thanks, too, to CLMP for including The Girl with the Black Lipstick in this list of books launching in July 2025. Such excellent company there, as well!
Gasp–I’m going to be on vacation for the next week. Maybe I’ll share some actual photos when I return.
July 16, 2025
Greetings from the Girl with the Black Lipstick
I’m no stranger to writing about the 90s, particularly the cusp-of-millennium 90s, but doing it in flash fiction was something new. The Girl with the Black Lipstick is a book about a time and a place and a friendship that encompasses both the mundane and the transcendent. I started out thinking about the odd adventures people would have back when the internet didn’t overshadow us yet. The characters in this novella are as likely to have their noses in a book as they are to be strutting down a fashionable block in white denim booty shorts. (Fun fact–I had to go back and eliminate some of the white denim in this book, having subconsciously dressed my cast in so much that it seemed borderline cultish).
The hardest parts of this book project: sitting with all of the compiled flashes and deciding which to keep, proofing the typeset pages and finding all kinds of new connections (interesting ones, not just excess white denim), and cutting open the box to retrieve my first ever book of fiction (this was hard in a good way–so many emotions slicing open that tape).

And here she is! I’d love it if you would consider ordering a copy of The Girl with the Black Lipstick directly from Black Lawrence Press, or requesting one from your library.
As Sarah Freligh so kindly states, “This is a story that feels perfectly suited to the novella-in-flash, a reach back to grab the fragments of who we were in the final year of the twentieth century, to hold them to the light in an attempt to understand what peculiar threads connected us.”
A bit about the book:
Against the backdrop of a boozy, restless late-90s Chicago, creative writing graduate student Mary Van Pelt and her eccentric roommate navigate the collision between party life, domestic harmony, and academic ambition in The Girl with the Black Lipstick. Mary Biddinger’s novella in linked flash stories conjures outrageous fashion and the oddest of odd jobs, sparing no detail when immersing readers in bedrooms, dancefloors, lakeshore beaches, and university seminars.

Set before smartphones filled every pocket, The Girl with the Black Lipstick chronicles a bygone era of performance and spectacle. Biddinger offers vivid, surreal vignettes told in the heat of the moment or recalled as we follow Van Pelt from her first days of graduate school into life as a tenured professor. Our heroine and her roommate overcome predicaments and deepen their bond while simultaneously ignoring and obsessing over the future, blissfully unaware of challenges ahead until those challenges arrive. The Girl with the Black Lipstick is a tale of deep creativity and found family, paying tribute to those who support our youthful selves in unexpected ways.
Perhaps you need a soundtrack to accompany these flashes? Please enjoy the official Spotify playlist for The Girl with the Black Lipstick.
Celebrating one year of A Mollusk Without a Shell: Essays on Self-Care for Writers
I always love a book birthday, and this past spring we celebrated one year of A Mollusk Without a Shell: Essays on Self-Care for Writers (University of Akron Press, 2024). It’s been wonderful hearing how this book has been a help for writers of various backgrounds and experience levels, as well as for artists working in other genres. When the first box of books arrived at the University of Akron Press office I had to text co-editor Julie Brooks Barbour right away, as it felt odd to be unboxing without her. Thanks to everyone who has read this book, given it as a gift to a friend, shared it with a student, or dropped us a line of gratitude. Also, major thanks to Rhye Pirie for the gorgeous artwork on the cover!

Everyone has a complicated relationship with art, right?
A few journal publication updates to share! I’m grateful to Unbroken for including my prose poem “Everyone Has a Complicated Relationship with Art” in their latest issue (#46).
I am also honored to have my flash fiction piece “Everyone Loves an Old House with Character” in a recent issue of Villain Era. Sincere thanks to the editors of these journals, and to the fellow contributors.

December 27, 2023
New poems, old year
Before 2023 ends I wanted to share some newly published poems, as well as this photo of grasses on campus, which startled me with their texture (you can’t hear them in the photo, but trust me, their woosh was a delight).
I’m honored to have two prose poems appearing in the new issue of Under a Warm Green Linden, with such brilliant company (including Diane Seuss, James Allen Hall, Jennifer Militello, and so many other stars). I’m tempted to use this issue as a free textbook for my upcoming advanced undergrad workshop–what a collection of poems under one roof. Big thanks to guest editor Simeon Berry.
Recent dream come true moment: a poem published in HAD, “Everyone Rise, the Gavel’s Coming Down.” Gratitude to Evan Nicholls, guest editor for this prose-poem-friendly submission period.
Extreme thanks, as well, to Indianapolis Review for publishing two of my prose poems in their latest issue: “Everyone Hopes Death Will Be Nothing Like a Drawbridge” and “Everyone Knows Beauty is its Own Blank Slate.” In case it’s not already apparent from the above, I’m working on a new book of prose poems that all have “Everyone” as the first word in the title.
Most of my new year’s resolutions involve making more lists and getting organized, but I’ll add updating this blog to that batch of goals for 2024. In the meantime, happiest new year wishes to all!

May 3, 2022
Praise for Department of Elegy
I’m so grateful to Nicole Yurcaba for the kind words about Department of Elegy over at Sage Cigarettes. Here’s a snippet:
“Savoring sadness but never giving in to it completely, the poems in Mary Biddinger’s seventh poetry collection Department of Elegy transport readers into the cracks and crevices of youth’s hot insanity and adulthood’s mundanity. Eager for experience and hungry for life, the poem’s speaker consistently examines the fine line between adolescence and adulthood and how those few years we spend standing on the cusp of adulting truly do shape us for the rest of our lives. That’s not to say the speaker doesn’t allow wiggle room for change—they do, but, if anything, the poems remind readers that there’s absolutely nothing wrong with quietly standing for a moment, breathing, and reminding oneself why those late nights in clubs with fake IDs are worth remembering.”
Thank you so much, Nicole!
Big thanks to Jeannine Hall Gailey, as well, for the kind words in her latest blog post. Jeannine describes Department of Elegy as, “a wonderfully nostalgic/anti-nostalgic, goth, reminiscence on a Gen-X childhood and young adulthood punctuated by midwestern vacant lot landscapes and marvelously bad decisions. I am loving it – it might be my favorite book of hers yet, so if you are on the fence, get it.”

If you would like a review copy of Department of Elegy, Black Lawrence Press would be happy to provide one–check out this page.
December 18, 2021
Trailer & Playlist for Department of Elegy
I’m finally getting around to some long overdue updates on this website, including creating a page for Department of Elegy, which is forthcoming in January from Black Lawrence Press. Pre-orders are still in effect via Black Lawrence Press, with a nice discount. I have a number of events on the horizon, and will keep you posted on those.
Here’s the official book trailer for Department of Elegy, thanks to Upside Down Dog Productions.
Here’s the official Spotify soundtrack for Department of Elegy, too. At first I was going to try to make this all covers, but I would have to leave too many important cuts out, so it’s a mix. If possible, listen in order. Enjoy!
December 10, 2021
David Has Zoom Pro Reading Series #3


Much thanks to Verse Daily for featuring my poem “Heaven and Its Orange Flowers,” originally published at Bennington Review and forthcoming in Department of Elegy.
I’m also so excited to be reading for the David Has Zoom Pro Reading Series tonight, Friday, 12/10, at 7:30 pm EST. Registration link here!
This website is overdue for some updates, which will be coming soon. Happy end of semester to all who are end-of-semestering!
biddinger-david-has-zoom-pro-reading-12-10-21Downloadlarge-print-biddinger-david-has-zoom-pro-reading-12-10-21DownloadNovember 8, 2021
Fall Back in Love with Poems: A Black Lawrence Press Workshop

I’m excited to be offering a workshop for Black Lawrence Press on Tuesday, 11/9/21. This event is free, but registration is required. Full information here! I’ll be sharing some approaches for reconnecting with poetry, and with your own work.
In this workshop we will ponder our relationship with poems in general, and with our own poems in particular, discussing strategies for approaching difficult subjects, as well as new ways to direct inspiration. We will also talk about a gentle approach to writerly goal-setting, especially as it relates to growing a series of poems into a collection. Q&A will be an important part of the conversation.
Recommended reading for the workshop:
1) “Dear Sugar, The Rumpus Advice Column #72: The Future Has an Ancient Heart” by Cheryl Strayed
2) “Twenty-Two Poem Hacks” by Carmen Giménez Smith
July 20, 2021
“Photos We Didn’t Take in 1998” in West Trestle Review
Much gratitude to West Trestle Review for including my flash fiction piece “Photos We Didn’t Take in 1998” in their new issue, with such excellent company. This issue also features encaustic art by Chizu Omori. Absolutely stunning!
This story is from my current project, a flash novella about the adventures of two (wild, gothy) grad school roommates in late-1990s Chicago.
Thank you for taking a look!
