Jessy Randall

Jessy Randall (born 1969)[1] is the archivist and curator of special collections at Colorado College and a prolific writer. Her published poems, chapbooks, and novels have often focused on science and science fiction subjects. Her works have received multiple nominations and awards.

Childhood and education

Born in Hornell, New York and having grown up in Rochester, New York,[2] Randall frequented her elementary school library and read through their entire collection of biographies on women. The book Dr. Elizabeth: The Story of the First Woman Doctor by Patricia Clapp first inspired her to become a doctor, though her goals changed when she found she had no interest in anatomical dissection. Instead, she became focused on research itself, often integrating Elizabeth Blackwell into her work.[3] She attended Brighton High School in Rochester, New York, graduating in 1988.[4] Randall went on to earn a Bachelor's of Arts in 1992 from Columbia University, where she studied with poet Kenneth Koch,[5] and a Master's of Library Science from UNC-Chapel Hill in 1994, before becoming Colorado College's Curator of Special Collections for Tutt Library in 2001.[1]

Career

Randall began submitting science fiction related poems to Analog Science Fiction and Fact magazine in 2002, though the first piece ever selected for inclusion was Hertha Ayrton in 2019. This was created as the first poem in a series that was planned for book publication in the future.[6] This resulted in 2022 when she began publishing a poetry book series on women in science, starting with Mathematics for Ladies that year and continuing in 2025 with The Path of Most Resistance.[7] For Mathematics, the title was chosen as an English translation for a term used by the Soviet Union that referred to theoretical mathematics with no engineering involved. This was because engineering was considered a "masculine pursuit" and women were not allowed to practice it.[8]

During her archivist work in 2017, Randall identified material in the library archives on Colorado College president William F. Slocum who sexually harassed and assaulted multiple women until his retirement in 1917. Details on these events had been lost until Randall found women's testimonials and other evidence that she added to a university blog she titled The Slocum Affair, resulting in student effort to rename buildings and other campus titles named after Slocum.[9] She teaches the class The History and Future of the Book at Colorado College.[2]

Awards

Randall's 2007 book A Day in Boyland was a finalist in that year's Colorado Book Awards.[10] The poem Why I Had Children was chosen from her 2012 book Injecting Dreams Into Cows by the Sydney, Australia government to be featured as one of nineteen poems on the side of the city's sanitation vehicles in 2013.[11] For her poetry work, her piece Hertha Ayrton was a nominee for best poem in the 2019 Analog Science Fiction and Fact Analytical Laboratory awards[12] and won second place for best poem in the 2024 awards for the work Ada Lovelace.[13] In 2023, the British Science Fiction Association longlisted her book Mathematics for Ladies in the non-fiction category.[14] Her 2025 book The Path of Most Resistance was placed on the honor list of five awardees for the 2025 Otherwise Award[15] and was named one of the best works of poetry in 2025/2026 by Ms. Magazine.[16]

Bibliography

  • — (1994). A Collection Analysis of the Rare Book Collection at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. p. 120.
  • —; Horowitz, Glenn; Barnes, Laura (1996). James Joyce: Books & Manuscripts. G. Horowitz Bookseller. p. 134.[17]
  • — (1999). Dorothy Surrenders. 2River. p. 22.
  • — (2004). Slumber Party At The Aquarium. Unicorn Press. ISBN 9780877752530.[18]
  • — (2006). Because Mona Is In The Psychiatric Hospital. Pudding House Publications. p. 32. ISBN 9781589983793.[19]
  • — (2007). A Day in Boyland. Ghost Road Press. p. 86. ISBN 9780978945657.[20]
  • — (2007). Broken Heart Diet. Unicorn Press. ISBN 9780877752745.[2]
  • — (2009). The Wandora Unit. Ghost Road Press. p. 177. ISBN 9780981652580.[21]
  • —; Shapiro, Daniel M. (2014). What If You Were Happy for Just One Second: Instructional Diagrams. BOAAT Press. p. 36.
  • — (2015). There Was An Old Woman. Unicorn Press. p. 66. ISBN 9780877759416.[2]
  • — (2018). How to Tell If You Are Human: Diagram Poems. Pleiades Press. p. 74. ISBN 9780807169841.[25]
  • — (2022). Mathematics for Ladies: Poems on Women in Science. MIT Press. p. 144. ISBN 9781913380595.[26]
  • — (2025). The Path of Most Resistance: Poems on Women in Science. MIT Press. p. 128. ISBN 9781915983268.[27]

References

  1. ^ a b "Randall, Jessy". ppld.org. Pikes Peak Library District. 2026. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  2. ^ a b c d "Jessy Randall". pw.org. Poets & Writers. October 4, 2023. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  3. ^ Fife, Dustin (September 21, 2022). "Curating Creativity: Jessy Randall Finds Inspiration in the Archives". Library Journal. Retrieved May 30, 2026.
  4. ^ "Rochester roots". Democrat and Chronicle. July 13, 2008. Retrieved May 27, 2026.
  5. ^ "10 Questions with Jessy Randall, Curator of Special Collections". The Catalyst. February 22, 2013. Retrieved June 17, 2026.
  6. ^ Hockaday, Emily (November 5, 2019). "Q&A With Jessy Randall". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  7. ^ Siebrase, Jamie (May 15, 2025). "Lost (and found) in the lab". Rocky Mountain Reader. Retrieved May 28, 2026.
  8. ^ Keyfitz, Barbara. "Book Review: Mathematics for Ladies: Poems on Women in Science" (PDF). Association for Women in Science Newsletter. Vol. 55, no. 1. p. 7. Retrieved May 30, 2026.
  9. ^ Kelley, Debbie (December 3, 2017). "Tackling 'Slocum Affair' at CC". The Gazette. pp. 1, 4. Retrieved June 14, 2026. {{cite news}}: Wikipedia Library link in |url= (help)
  10. ^ Kelter, Stuart (November 13, 2022). "DELVING IN: Jessy Randall on her Poems about Women in Science". KTAL-LP. Retrieved May 31, 2026.
  11. ^ Byrnes, Jesse (July 1, 2013). "Poet's motherhood ode goes mobile Down Under". The Gazette. p. B5. Retrieved June 14, 2026. {{cite news}}: Wikipedia Library link in |url= (help)
  12. ^ "2019 Analog AnLab and Asimov's Readers' Awards". Locus. June 15, 2020. Retrieved May 28, 2026.
  13. ^ "2024 Analog AnLab Awards and Asimov's Readers' Award Winners". Locus. January 15, 2026. Retrieved May 28, 2026.
  14. ^ "The British Science Fiction Association Awards". bsfa.co.uk. January 12, 2023. Retrieved May 30, 2026.
  15. ^ "2025 Otherwise Award Winner". Locus. March 25, 2026. Retrieved May 28, 2026.
  16. ^ Strand, Karla J.; Pandya, Violet (April 24, 2026). "Reads for the Rest of Us: The Best Poetry of 2025 and 2026". Ms. Magazine. Retrieved May 30, 2026.
  17. ^ Crowley, Ronan; Schäuble, Joshua (February 12, 2020). "Modernism on the Punch Tape: Editing the 1984 Ulysses". Modernist Cultures. 15 (1). Edinburgh University Press: 29–47. doi:10.3366/mod.2020.0278. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  18. ^ Brilliant, Alan (Spring 2004). "Ex Cathedra" (PDF). Verbatim. Vol. 29, no. 1. p. 30. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  19. ^ Moir, Lyn (2007). "Because Mona is in the Psychiatric Hospital". Sphinx Review. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  20. ^ Newitz, Annalee (November 12, 2007). "The Only Good Science Fiction Poems Ever Written Are By Jessy Randall". Gizmodo. Retrieved May 30, 2026.
  21. ^ Reviews for The Wandora Unit:
  22. ^ Collins, Kristofer (December 28, 2011). "Undercover: 'Divorcer' by Gary Lutz: Plus, Jessy Randall and Daniel Shapiro's 'Interruptions' takes poetry back for the masses". Pittsburgh Magazine. Retrieved June 1, 2026.
  23. ^ Reviews for Injecting Dreams Into Cows:
  24. ^ Cohen, Hannah (September 28, 2016). "Suicide Hotline Hold Music by Jessy Randall". Motherhood, Literature & Art. Retrieved May 31, 2026.
  25. ^ Reviews for How to Tell If You Are Human:
  26. ^ Reviews for Mathematics for Ladies:
  27. ^ "New Poetry Titles (3/25/25)". Philly Chapbook Review. March 25, 2025. Retrieved May 30, 2026.

Further reading