Kathleen Flenniken is an American writer, poet, editor, and educator.
Background
Kathleen (née Dillon) Flenniken was born on October 30, 1960 in Richland, Washington. She is the daughter of Robert and Kathleen (née Melville) Dillon. Her father was a Doctor of Philosophy Chemist, working at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in southeastern Washington state.
Education
In 1978, she graduated from Columbia High School. In 1983, she earned a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering from Washington State University. In 1986, she moved to Seattle, where she earned a Master of Science in Civil Engineering in 1988 from the University of Washington.
Career
In 2012, she was named the poet laureate of Washington state. Her following work, Plume, was honored with the 2013 Washington State Book Award. In 2007, she earned a Masters of Fine Arts degree in Creative Writing from Pacific Lutheran University.
They have three children.
Writing In 2007, the work was named a Notable Book by the American Library Association. In 2012, the University of Washington Press published her second book of poetry, titled Plume.
The work was honored with the 2013 Washington State Book Award. In 2012, she was named one of Seattle Magazine"s Spotlight Award winners, while the following year, she was named a Distinguished Visiting Poet at Seattle University.
As poet laureate, she reaches out to students throughout the state.
She teaches poetry through an affiliation with arts agencies, including Writers in the Schools and the Jack Straw Foundation. In addition to her writing, Flenniken has worked as an engineer and hydrologist (three of them on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation). As of 2013, she lives in the Seattle area, where she is the president and editor of the Floating Bridge Press, which focuses on publishing the creative works of Washington State poets.
She is also the president of a nonprofit media arts studio and cultural center known as Jack Straw Foundation.
2003: Artist Trust (Washington State Arts Commission) Literature Fellowship.