Earth Day Reading: CMarie Fuhrman, Derek Sheffield, Lauren Camp + Sean Hill
Event Details
Join Terrain.org for our annual Earth Day reading featuring award-winning writers CMarie Fuhrman, Derek Sheffield, Lauren Camp, and Sean Hill. The reading, which is hosted by Terrain.org editor-in-chief Simmons Buntin,
Event Details
Join Terrain.org for our annual Earth Day reading featuring award-winning writers CMarie Fuhrman, Derek Sheffield, Lauren Camp, and Sean Hill. The reading, which is hosted by Terrain.org editor-in-chief Simmons Buntin, will be followed by a Q&A.
Registration for this online event is required. Zoom hosting generously provided by the University of Arizona.
Monday, April 27, 2026
5 p.m. PT / 6 MT / 7 CT / 8 ET
CMarie Fuhrman is the author of Salmon Weather and I Took You With Me, and the founder of the Confluence Writing Community. A seasonal fire lookout and director of the Elk River Writers Workshop, her work at the seams of Indigenous understanding and Western landscape explores the mirrored persistence of land and body. She is a former Idaho Writer in Residence and writes from the Salmon River Mountains of Idaho.
Derek Sheffield is the 8th poet laureate of Washington State (2025-2027). His books include Cascadia Field Guide: Art, Ecology, Poetry, Not for Luck, selected by Mark Doty for the Wheelbarrow Books Poetry Prize, Through the Second Skin, and Dear America: Letters of Hope, Habitat, Defiance, and Democracy. He teaches at Wenatchee Valley College and Western Colorado University, edits poetry for Terrain.org, and can often be found in the woods along the eastern slopes of the Cascade Range near Leavenworth, Washington.
Lauren Camp is the author of nine books, including Is Is Enough (Texas Review Press, 2026) and In Old Sky (Grand Canyon Conservancy, 2024), which grew out of her experience as Astronomer-in-Residence at Grand Canyon National Park. She served as the second New Mexico Poet Laureate.
Sean Hill is the author of mixed-genre collection The Negroes Send Their Love, and the poetry collections Dangerous Goods and Blood Ties & Brown Liquor. A widely published poet, he has also received numerous awards, including fellowships from the Cave Canem Foundation, Stanford University, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Sean lives in southwestern Montana with his family and is an associate professor of creative writing at the University of Montana.





