College of Arts and Sciences

Creative Writing Professor Cam Terwilliger Finishing Historical Novel as Starr Center Fellow  

Cam Terwilliger headshot x320Visiting Professor Cam Terwilliger is the 2018 Hodson Trust-John Carter Brown Library Fellow, a fellowship sponsored by Washington College and Brown University. The John Carter Brown Library at Brown University is one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious institutions for the study of early America. In residence at the Starr Center of Washington College, Professor Terwilliger is finishing his first historical novel exploring the 18th Century American Frontier.

An accomplished fiction writer, journalist, editor and teacher, Terwilliger is in residence this summer at Washington College's Starr Center for the Study of the American Experience. The Brooklyn-based writer's work has been published by literary magazines including Narrative, American Short Fiction, Gettysburg Review, and Post Road. Terwilliger is teaching creative writing here at Seton Hall and serves as associate fiction editor for Bucknell University's literary magazine, West Branch. He holds an MFA from Emerson College.

Set in New York and Quebec during the French and Indian War (also known as The Seven Years War), Terwilliger's book, Yet Wilderness Grew in My Heart, reimagines the mythology of the founding of America, exploring issues of race, religion, capitalism, disease, landscape, the psychology of power, and the dense web of cultures that gave rise to the world we live in today while depicting what life was like two centuries ago in the forested Iroquois country—a place where cultures met and frequently clashed.

The historical novel delves into this intermingling of cultures—Native American, European, and African—dramatizing the lives of the diverse characters who populate the story. The narrator is a wealthy physician who, suffering from disease, desperately seeks a natural cure in the fields and forests of the Hudson River valley. Then there's a counterfeiter who escaped from slavery in New York City and is hiding out in the wilderness — and his wife, an enigmatic Mohawk woman.

Evoking a sense of place is important to Terwilliger's writing. In the course of researching Yet Wilderness Grew in My Heart, Terwilliger spent time living in Montreal and upstate New York, where the story takes place. While visiting the Mohawk community of Kahnawà:ke outside Montreal, Terwilliger drew inspiration from the rich resources of KORLCC, the community's language and cultural center. By studying in the center's library, attending cultural events, and talking with members of the Mohawk community, Terwilliger worked to deepen the perspective of his narrative.

The Starr Center's Hodson Trust-John Carter Brown Library Fellowship supported two months of research at the John Carter Brown Library in Providence, R.I. Terwilliger took a deep dive into rare 18th-century documents, including accounts of colonists seeking possible Native American cures for disease, as well as an early bestseller by a counterfeiter who wrote about his crimes and adventures.

After finishing the research portion of his fellowship, Terwillger arrived at Washington College in June where—living in the circa 1735 Patrick Henry House on Queen Street and working at the circa-1746 Custom House—he is enthused to revise and refine his manuscript in the colonial surrounds of Chestertown's historical district.

"It's a beautiful place to write a novel about the 18th century," says Terwilliger. "The surroundings are peaceful, spacious, and inspirational. Fiction writers don't usually have a lot of support for archival research, and that combined with two months of writing time in a place like Chestertown, makes the Hodson Trust-John Carter Brown Library Fellowship unique and valuable."

The Starr Center cosponsors the fellowship with the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University, one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious institutions for the study of early America. Endowed with a major grant from The Hodson Trust, it supports work on significant projects related to the literature, history, culture, or art of the Americas before 1830. The fellowship welcomes submissions not only from traditional historians, but also from filmmakers, novelists, and creative and performing artists. For more information, please click here.

About Washington College
Founded in 1782, Washington College is the tenth oldest college in the nation and the first chartered under the new Republic. It enrolls approximately 1,450 undergraduates from more than 35 states and a dozen nations. With an emphasis on hands-on, experiential learning in the arts and sciences, and more than 40 multidisciplinary areas of study, the College is home to nationally recognized academic centers in the environment, history, and writing. Learn more at washcoll.edu.

For more information, please contact: