Official Website
NEWS: Lucinda Roy awarded
2009 Newsmaker of the Year Award
New article in the 2010
"The Write Way to Stay Connected"
Online Chat with USA Today
My commentary on race in America.
Read the Commentary
NEW: Read Lucinda's article in CARE's newsletter.
The primary international recipient of funds from No Right to Remain Silent is CARE, the humanitarian aid organization that does remarkable work in struggling countries like Sierra Leone. I visited with CARE recently in Atlanta and was greatly impressed by their commitment and dedication.
To find out more about CARE's programs, please click on their website below:
CARE's International Aid Programs
New from Lucinda Roy
Now available in a Kindle Edition
Available from Random House, online vendors and indepndent bookstores
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Lucinda Roy's Poetry
Hear Lucinda Roy read a poem from her collection The Humming Birds, published by Eighth Mountain Press:

Lucinda Roy is an alumni distinguished professor at Virginia Tech. She earned her B.A. from King’s College, London, and her M.F.A. in creative writing from the University of Arkansas. She has an honorary doctorate of letters from the University of Richmond. Roy has been at Virginia Tech since 1985, and has won a number of teaching and administration awards, including the college-wide Excellence in Administration Award, the university-wide Alumni Award for Teaching Excellence, and a SCHEV statewide Outstanding Faculty Award from the Commonwealth of Virginia. She directed Virginia Tech’s Creative Writing program for eight years, and served as Chair of English from 2002-2006.
Roy has published the novels Lady Moses and The Hotel Alleluia, and two collections of poetry. Lady Moses was selected by Barnes and Noble for their Discover Great New Writers series, and Roy won the Eighth Mountain Poetry Prize for The Humming Birds. She was awarded the Baxter Hathaway Poetry Prize for her long slave narrative poem “Needlework.” Roy’s memoir-critique, No Right to Remain Silent: The Tragedy at Virginia Tech, was published by Harmony/Random House this year. Her commentaries and articles have appeared in numerous newspapers and journals, including the New York Times, USA Today, the Richmond Times-Dispatch, and Newsweek’s 2009 college guide, and she has been a guest on many TV and radio shows including NPR’s Diane Rehm Show, the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, and Sunday Morning.
Recently, Roy was named by Virginia Press Women as 2009 Newsmaker of the Year. Roy teaches graduate and undergraduate classes in creative writing and literature at Virginia Tech, and gives keynotes and presentations in the U.S. and abroad on higher education reform, campus safety, race, women’s issues, and creativity.