Photo: Blue Flower Arts
Marcelo Hernández Castillo
Marcelo Hernandez Castillo is the author of Children of the Land: a Memoir (Harper Collins); Cenzontle (BOA Editions), winner of the A. Poulin, Jr. prize; Dulce (Northwestern University Press), winner of the Drinking Gourd Prize; and, most recently, he is the co-editor of the anthology Here to Stay: Poetry and Prose from the Undocumented Diaspora (Harper Perennial). He is the 2025 guest editor of the Michigan Quarterly Review and has also curated the Academy of American Poet’s Poem-A-Day Series. His work has been long listed for the California Book Award, the Foreword Indies Prize, and the Lambda Literary Award, among other recognitions. He was the first undocumented student to graduate from the Helen Zell Writers Program at the University of Michigan and co-founded the Undocupoets, which eliminated citizenship requirements from all major poetry book prizes in the U.S., and for which he was recognized with the Barnes and Noble Writers for Writers award. He served as distinguished fellow for the Marshall Project’s Art For Justice initiative from the University of Arizona which advocates for prison reform and is an inaugural recipient of the Writing Freedom Fellowship from Haymarket Books and the Mellon Foundation. He currently serves as faculty in the MFA program at St. Mary’s College of California and at Ashland University’s Low-Res MFA program.
Marcelo Hernández Castillo es autor de los libros Children of the Land: a Memoir (Ed. Harper Collins) y Cenzontle (Ed. BOA Editions) título con el que además fue merecedor del premio A. Poulin, Jr. También es autor de Dulce (Ed. Northwestern University Press), con el cual ganó el premio Drinking Gourd. Es coeditor de la antología Here to Stay: Poetry and Prose from the Undocumented Diáspora (Ed. Harper Perennial). Además ha sido el editor invitado 2025 del Michigan Quarterly Review (2025); y ha curado la serie Poem-A-Day de la Academia Americana de Poesía. Su obra ha competido por variados reconocimientos: el California Book Award, el Premio Foreword Indies, y el Premio Literario Lambda, entre otros. Fue el primer estudiante indocumentado en graduarse del Programa de Escritores Helen Zell de la Universidad de Michigan y co-fundó la organización Undocupoets, la cual logró eliminar los requisitos de ciudadanía para los premios de poesía más importantes en Estados Unidos, hecho que lo hizo merecedor el premio Writers for Writers de Barnes and Noble. Ha sido miembro distinguido de la iniciativa Marshall Project 's Art for Justice de la Universidad de Arizona, la cual aboga por reformas en el sistema penitenciario. Ha sido el primer merecedor de la Beca de Libertad de Escritura de Haymarket Books y la Fundación Mellon. Actualmente es profesor en el programa de la Maestría en Bellas Artes del St. Mary's College de California, así como del programa de Maestría de estancia corta en Bellas Artes de la Universidad de Ashland.