Author Archives
Kelly Kerwin
Kelly Kerwin is a writer whose work explores how women endure, adapt, and remake themselves in response to inherited damage. Her fiction and poetry draw inspiration from her Midwestern roots, cross-country road trips, and her hobby of restoring vintage furniture—infusing her storytelling with a sense of place, grit, and reinvention. She is the author of SPIN CYCLE, a novel about a teen mother navigating the fallout of an open adoption, as well as the poetry collection HOME REPAIRS, the story collection TOWNIE, the YA novel THE BROWN BAGGERS, and a growing body of personal essays. Kelly’s professional background in securities litigation, merchandising, and nonprofit fundraising—spanning creative production and public engagement—has helped cultivate a disciplined, detail-oriented approach to her writing. She also co-founded Little Home Away From Home, a project with her son that provided handmade dollhouses to women’s shelters for use in play therapy—an experience that echoes the central themes of safe spaces and maternal bonds in her work. Kelly earned a BA in English from the University of Illinois at Chicago and is a graduate of StoryStudio Chicago’s Novel in a Year program.
Kelly Kerwin is a writer whose work explores how women endure, adapt, and remake themselves in response to inherited damage. Her fiction and poetry draw inspiration from her Midwestern roots, cross-country road trips, and her hobby of restoring vintage furniture—infusing her storytelling with a sense of place, grit, and reinvention. […]
In basketball terms, I am the Shane Battier of stay-at-home parents. You probably don’t know much about either of us; but we’re good at what we do. We are described […]
I bumped into an old acquaintance the other day. We were both in the midst of errands, grabbing a smoothie for an on-the-go lunch. “How’s it going?” I asked. “Fine,” she said in […]
As I move to the half century mark, I am witnessing the meltdown of more and more marriages. No matter what the reason, major bombshell or mere boredom, and […]
I am unplugging for the weekend and heading to Nashville. It will be a fifty-six hour, for-the-hell-of-it road trip in which I plan to set aside my preoccupation with politics […]