Priscilla Long is a Seattle-based writer of poetry, essays, creative nonfiction, fiction, and history.

She is author of Where the Sun Never Shines: a History of America's Bloody Coal Industry (1989). Her work appears in The Southern Review, Raven Chronicles, North Dakota Quarterly, The American Scholar, Ontario Review, Seattle Review, Chattahoochee Review, Passages North, Painted Bride Quarterly, Under The Sun, Michigan Quarterly Review, and elsewhere.

In 2006 her work "Genome Tome" received a National Magazine Award (an "Ellie") for Best Feature. It appeared in The American Scholar, edited by Robert Wilson. Her awards also include the Richard Hugo House Founder's Award and awards from the Seattle Arts Commission and the Los Angeles Arts Commission.

She reads her poetry and prose widely, and performed with the Seattle Five Plus One poets during most of the group's existence in the 1990s.

She serves as Senior Editor of www.HistoryLink.org, the online encyclopedia of Washington state history.

She has an MFA degree from the University of Washington and teaches writing (see Upcoming Courses Offered).

She was born in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and grew up on a dairy farm on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. She attended Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio.

Her grandparents on her mother's side were Pennsylvania Dutch. Her paternal grandmother was Scottish, and her paternal grandfather, Walter Long, was descended from the Winslow family, English farmers who migrated to New England in the 1600s.

Walter Long was a reporter for the Philadelpia Bulletin and his grandfather, Stephen Winslow (1826-1907), edited the Philadelphia Commercial List and was known as “the grand old man in the newspaper life of Philadelphia.”

Priscilla Long lives in Seattle
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Upcoming Talks and Readings

Curriculum Vita


Philosophy of Teaching


Upcoming Courses Offered


Work Sample: Poem


Work Sample: Short Story


Work Sample: Creative Nonfiction


Work Sample: Essay


Contact Me:PriscillaLong@comcast.net