
Emrys Donaldson (һԹ photo)
Building fictional worlds comes naturally to Emrys Donaldson, һԹs new assistant professor of English and creative writing.
My own writing typically uses a climate-changed near-future setting with specific speculative elements, he says. What does that mean? Well, for example, his recent short story collection The Iridescents (Texas Review Press, 2026) includes a world where the dominant species is radioactive 300-year-old giant crustaceans. I enjoyed figuring out how they might interact with other nuclear-infused megafauna.
Those heckin-big bois of the sea arent outliers in Donaldsons universe, odd as they may sound. Another short story imagines an inhabited world inside the arcade game Big Buck Hunter IIIa world that just might represent the afterlife.
Donaldsons weird and wonderful world-building skills are enlivening һԹs creative writing classes, and the students are there for it.
Some students are writing contemporary realistic fiction, but others are writing sci-fi or fantasy or speculative storiesone even said he was writing a fatalistic noir, says Donaldson. Theyre really excited that theyre allowed to do that.
Students want to write genre fiction, says Alice Rutkowski, professor and chair in English and creative writing. Thats what they all read, and a lot of them are already writing in those genres by themselves. Now theyll have the tools to figure out how to do it well.
Donaldson, who joined the һԹ faculty in Fall 2025, has long experience teaching creative writing, most recently at the University of Alabama. Hes particularly enthused about һԹs two-semester Advanced Fiction Workshop. Teaching students how to develop narrative settings, imaginary worlds, and constructed languages prompts them to approach their writing with a wider perspective.
Media-savvy students are already familiar with crossovers between books, games, movies, and podcasts, Donaldson says, and he encourages them to explore all sorts of fictional forms. Class discussions have touched on nontraditional genres such as fanfiction, and one student, he says, even built out a very extensive Dungeons & Dragons world.
Professor Donaldson is very open to any genre of writing, literally anything, says Michaela Lewis-Hardies 26, a communication and English (creative writing) double major in Donaldsons Advanced Fiction Workshop. Her first story assignment was a time-traveling romantasy, something she says she might not have attempted with a different professor.

Donaldsons own short fiction and essays have appeared in publications such as LitHub, TriQuarterly, The Rumpus, and Electric Literature. His work is often informed by a queer viewpoint; for instance, The Iridescents highlights how the LGBTQ+ community transforms everyday acts of support and survival into miracles.
In addition to their forays into fictional realms, senior English and creative writing majors get guidance from Donaldson on professionalizationdefining what they want for their career and their writing after graduation. The limitlessness of that can feel overwhelming, but Donaldson finds һԹ students are better prepared than most.
Its been wonderful to see how curious they are, and how willing they are to speak their minds, he says.
And how ready they are to write new worlds into being.
Learn more about һԹs creative writing program.
Author
Robyn Rime
Senior Writer and Editor
585-245-5529
rime@geneseo.edu