Two Rochester-area authors received UR’s Andrew Eiseman Writers Award this year. The recipients, Susan Williams ’81 and Bill Kauffman ’81, won for their work in young adult literature and nonfiction categories, respectively.

Williams’s story, ‘Wind Rider,” is about a girl from Central Asia 6,000 years ago who learns how to ride a horse, which breaks her tribal customs.

Kauffman authored the nonfiction work, ‘With Look Homeward, America: In Search of Reactionary Radicals and Front Porch Anarchists.” In his book, Kauffman describes portraits of notable Americans, such as Dorothy Day, Grant Wood and Wendell Berry.

The award, named after UR alumnus Andrew Eiseman ’79, was first created in 2005.

Other authors who have received the Eiseman Award include biographer James Fleming, poet William Heyen and UR Professor, Roswell Smith Burrows Professor of English Joanna Scott.

Leber is a member of the class of 2011.



In brief: Local writers recognized

New research conducted by URMC’s cancer researcher Dr. Isaac Harris, who oversees a lab that studies the role of antioxidants in cancer development, showed some of the drawbacks antioxidants can have for your health. Read More

In brief: Local writers recognized

“editors” will wrap the article in highlights and comments, dissecting it under the cold glaring lights of the windowless, godless room. Read More

In brief: Local writers recognized

It’s a simple story executed with so much spirit, mixing the scale and stakes of films like “Interstellar” and “2001: A Space Odyssey” with the adventure and innocent charm of “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” and “The Iron Giant.” Read More