
Renée E. Corvin is a writer drawn to memory, myth, and nature. She often explores love and loss, inheritance and becoming, witness and silence. Much of her writing lives at the intersection of the personal and the imagined. Some pieces are rooted in lived experience; others are shaped by folklore, allegory, or fiction.
Recurring themes in her work include romantic exile, childhood and inheritance, the moral weight of silence, and the way land and environment hold stories of their own. The American South appears often, as do liminal spaces: balconies, forests, classrooms, quiet rooms at midnight.
Renée grew up in Mississippi and attended university in Alabama. Much of her childhood was spent in the woods, where she explored, wandered, and made stories about the trees and land around her — a relationship with place that continues to shape her work.
During her studies, she spent time abroad in France and later returned, where she now lives and works as a literature professor. Her love for travel, the unknown, and curiosity over the past can be found through her work as well.
“I write to express feelings I can no longer contain and to make sense of the world around me. I hope readers connect with these pieces — the characters, the moments, or the worlds — and feel seen, or find space to step outside the realities they may be facing. Either way, all work here is offered with care.”