When asked what’s currently going on at Hedgebrook, Executive Director Kimberly A.C. Wilson pauses to really consider the question. “Well, we just put the garden to bed,” she says, “so now the only color on the land is the glossy yellow-orange fruit of the persimmon tree. It’s actually my favorite time on the land. When the writers are here, they get more chances to go inward. Fewer distractions, like the beach or the birds flying overhead. It’s just you here with your thoughts, and other people here with their thoughts, and that’s really grounding.”
Hedgebrook, a 48-acre writing residency on Whidbey Island, was established by Nancy Nordhoff and Sheryl Feldman in 1988 – the same year, Kimberly notes, that Congress passed the Women’s Business Ownership Act, which allowed women to own and operate businesses without a male cosigner for the first time. “It was in that environment,” she says, “that this radical idea that women writers needed and deserved space and time and respite to write really came to life. It was radical then; it’s radical now. In some ways I would say it’s even more radical now, given the erasure and erosion of some of the rights and powers of woman-identified folks.” In the years since, Hedgebrook has matured into a global community of more than 2,000 poets, novelists, playwrights, screenwriters, songwriters, memoirists, and more who have come to stay in its six cottages, commune around the kitchen table in its farmhouse, and experience a level of physical, mental, and emotional safety that is rarely – if ever – made available to women, all free of charge. “Writers come, they connect with each other, they support each other,” says Kimberly. “They become each other’s readers and community, and they’re strengthened by that. They write more here than they’ve ever written anywhere. That’s extraordinary, but it’s normal here.”