Willamette Writers is the largest writers organization in the Pacific Northwest. Writers of all genres and at all stages of their careers come to our meetings, annual conference, and workshops to connect with their community, develop their craft, and advance their career.
Across the state of Oregon, you will find a tightly knit community of writers who love working together to tell our stories and build our scenes: on paper, on the screen, and in front of the mic.
Need help writing a novel or short story, memoir or screenplay? Sharing expertise? Meeting other writers? Join us today. Be a Willamette Writer.
Willamette Writers was founded by Portland writer Kay Snow a half century ago with the goal of bringing published and unpublished writers together for mutual help and support. Our mission is to provide and make available opportunities, tools, information, and resources for writers and aspiring writers in the Pacific Northwest to connect with their writing community, to improve their craft, and to advance their writing career.
Willamette Writers has chapters offering year-round programming in Portland, Southern Oregon (Central Point), Eugene, Salem, Corvallis, and the Newport (Oregon Coast). Additional programming includes an annual writers conference, Kay Snow writing contest, FiLMLaB, Young Willamette Writers, workshops, and The Timberline Review. Membership provides a number of benefits.
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Willamette Writers is 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization committed to increasing transparency in its operations and management. EIN: 93-0758252.
Our Board
Orit Ofri, President and Board Chairperson
Orit Ofri is the president and chair of the board of Willamette Writers where she leads the organization’s strategic planning, manages the organization’s digital media, and oversees programs and operations, including the conference.
A software engineer and an MBA, Orit is also a marketing and business coach for small businesses, nonprofits, writers, and creative professionals.
When working with writers, Orit focuses on building effective and personalized Author Platforms that enhance each writer’s career path and fit the writer’s skill-set and passions.
Find out more: on her website oritofri.com; on Facebook: @oritofrionline; on Twitter: @oritofri; on Instagram @oritofri.
Gail Pasternack, Vice President and Membership & Chapters Director
Gail Pasternack is a writer and professional photographer. Her contemporary fiction focuses on characters in the arts who are at a crossroad in their life. These stories revolve around the relationships her characters make with others and how these relationships drive their journey. As a photographer, she helps clients get that perfect headshot, a photo that captures their inner self and fits their professional brand.
Gail has been the Secretary of Willamette Writers since 2015. In 2018, she will transition to the Membership and Chapters director position and will work to connect with our members and expand our membership base. She will remain in her leadership role for the Annual conference and will continue to serve as Willamette Writers’s VP.
Gail received her bachelor’s degree from Cornell University and masters from Columbia University. For twenty years, she dedicated herself to teaching, yet always took time to embrace her love of the culinary arts, painting, photography, dance, and music. Today, writing and photography are her full-time jobs. She currently lives in Portland with her husband. Her short story “Asmodai in Portland” was published by Reclaiming Judaism Press in the anthology New Mitzvah Stories for the Whole Family in the fall of 2014.
Find out more: on her website gailpasternack.com; on Facebook; on Twitter: @GailPasternack.
Heather Ransom, Board Treasurer
As Willamette Writers’ Treasurer Heather has the overall responsibility for all corporate funds and serves as the financial officer of Willamette Writers.
A science teacher for twenty-five years, Heather has worked with thousands of young adults. In class, studying current innovations, they imagine together what their futures might hold, telling stories about world-changing advances in science and technology. This has been the birthplace for Heather’s YA science fiction novels, Going Green (3/2017), Greener (7/2018), and Back to Green (2019).
But Heather’s love of storytelling began much earlier with her mother describing incredible, fanciful adventures. Here, Heather became the character. She fell in love with being immersed in a world feeling so real she never wanted to leave. This is what Heather hopes to bring to her readers.
Besides teaching and writing, Heather enjoys spending time with her dream man, Marv, and their two amazing kids, Danielle and Marvin. Living in Grants Pass, Oregon, she loves playing in the beautiful outdoors and helping at their local businesses, a pizza pub and cigar shop. Find out more: on her website heathersransom.ink; on Facebook; on Twitter: @heatherransom.
John Miller, Board Secretary
John Miller is the founder and facilitator of Portland Ars Poetica, an ongoing literary poetry workshop located in Portland, Oregon. His poetry has been published by 9Bridges and by Glass Facets of Poetry. His short fiction has appeared in Tethered by Letters. John was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. He has a BA in English from Amherst College.
Find out more: on his website; on Meetup; on Facebook.
Photo Credit: Gail Pasternack
Matthew Swihart, Editor in Chief of The Timberline Review
Matthew Swihart, JD, MFA, is the author of “Christianity Simplified: The Basics of the Christian Faith for New Believers and Curious Nonbelievers.” During the day, he works as an attorney, mediator, and arbitrator. He also teaches Chito-Ryu Karate-Do and Yi Jin Jing Qigong. Matthew holds a Juris Doctor from Stetson University College of Law, a Master of Fine Arts in Writing from Goddard College, and a Bachelor of Arts in Creative Writing from the University of South Florida. Matthew spent most of his life in Florida, but now lives in Oregon with his wife and their two furry monsters.
Find out more: on his website matthewswihart.com; on Facebook @authormatthewswihart; on Twitter: @matthewswihart.
Photo Credit: Jesseelee Kahaloa.
Debby Dodds, Outreach Programs Director
Debby Dodds is the author of the novel Amish Guys Don’t Call (Blue Moon, 2017), has stories in many anthologies, including the NY Times best-selling My Little Red Book (Hachette) and The Things That You Would Have Said (Penguin) The Sun, Salon, xoJane, Portland Family Magazine,Manifest-Station.com, and Hip Mama.
Find out more: on her website DebbyDodds.com; on Facebook: @debby.dodds.tutor; on Twitter: @DoddsDebby; on Instagram @debbydodds and on Goodreads.
Jill Kelly, Literary Programs Director
Jill Kelly is a writer, painter, editor, and coach. Her first memoir, Sober Truths: The Making of an Honest Woman, was a finalist for the Oregon Book Award. She is the author of a second memoir, Candy Girl: How I Gave up Sugar and Created a Sweeter Life between Meals (2016) and a series of e-books on self-editing for writers. Her published fiction includes two thrillers, an unconventional romance, and two literary novels. She is at work on a third thriller and a first poetry collection. Three of her books have been purchased by Audible for audio books for which she did the reading. She writes two blogs and publishes a monthly newsletter on creativity. Jill lives in Portland, Oregon, with four cats, many books, and two easels.
Find out more: on her website jillkellyauthor.com ; on Facebook @jillkellycreative; on Twitter: @jillkellyauthor.
Photo Credit: Pamela Stringer.
John Dover, Visual Media Programs Director
John Dover is the writer and creator of Johnny Scotch, a comic book series and series of novellas. He is also a contributor to several anthologies and a regular contributor to Mythmachine.com. Along with being an author, John is an accomplished musician and music educator for Conn-Selmer Inc., and Bach trumpets.
Find out more: on his website johnnyscotchjustice.com; on Facebook @johndoverauthor; on Twitter: @jscotchjustice.
Photo Credit: Cambrae Chipman.
Willamette Writers Office
Kate Ristau, Business Manager
Kate Ristau is an author and folklorist who writes young adult and middle grade fiction. Her novel, Shadow Girl is available from Not a Pipe Publishing, her novel Clockbreakers is avable from Hope Well Books, and her essays are available at The New York Times and The Washington Post. In her ideal world, magic and myth combine to create memorable stories with unforgettable characters. Until she finds that world, she’ll live in a house in Oregon where she found a sword behind the water heater and fairies in the backyard.
Find out more: on her website kateristau.com; on Facebook @ristawesome; on Twitter: @kateristau.
Photo Credit: Adrienne Barnett
Meg Currell, Office Manager
No straight lines exist in Meg Currell’s work or life. From crop circles in her garden to circles of fifths on the piano, her life turns persistently around the hub of writing. A creative writing degree took her to work in print journalism, first at the university and later at a trade magazine, then to work in education publishing as a content editor, then to the perpetual grinding wheel of marketing. Briefly a Portland theatre critic with Edge Media, Meg’s central love of short fiction brought her to the welcoming community of writers in Oregon. She’s happy for the opportunity to work with and serve writers through Willamette Writers.
Find out more: on her website megcurrell.com/.
Willamette Writers Office
Kate Ristau, Business Manager
Kate Ristau is an author and folklorist who writes young adult and middle grade fiction. Her novel, Shadow Girl is available from Not a Pipe Publishing, her novel Clockbreakers is avable from Hope Well Books, and her essays are available at The New York Times and The Washington Post. In her ideal world, magic and myth combine to create memorable stories with unforgettable characters. Until she finds that world, she’ll live in a house in Oregon where she found a sword behind the water heater and fairies in the backyard.
Our History
Founder Kay Snow, who had active Multiple Sclerosis when she founded the “Willamette Writers Club” in 1965, called upon her love of writing and help from her friends Leila Hasmann and Kate Herzog.
They served as president, membership chair and bookkeeper during the early years as the club became an incorporated non-profit.
By the time the organization grew to holding member meetings at the Imperial Hotel in downtown Portland (on the first Tuesday of every month – the same schedule the Portland meetings follow to this day), Kay Snow was confined to a wheelchair. However, she remained vitally involved until her death in 1976, also helping to establish the popular Willamette Writers Conference. Her friend, co-founder, and active member Kate Herzog died in 2010.
Since those early days with Kay Snow, Willamette Writers has provided meeting places for the exchange of ideas and information, and has initiated programs des