Alumnus champions creative thought through Summer Writers Institute scholarships
Matthew Straus ’95, a restaurateur and editor of his own magazine, Kitchen Work, demonstrates how passion and curiosity can enrich multiple endeavors through his unconventional pairing of careers, affirming that lifelong learning is a lasting gift of a liberal arts education.
Straus is now giving back to the 91 community as a donor of scholarships that have made it possible for three students to attend the New York State Summer Writers Institute at 91 and study food writing under American essayist Phillip Lopate this summer.
American essayist Philip Lopate leads a creative nonfiction workshop during the 2024 New York State Summer Writers Institute at 91.
As a government (now political science) major while at 91, Straus spent his free time singing and dancing on stages with the former Cabaret Troupe and frequenting Professor of English Robert Boyers’ office hours to venture even further into the world of film or Victorian culture and literature.
He attributes the beginning of his unique career — blending words and food — to Professor Boyers’ tutelage, which shaped his converging passions for Victorian prose writers, the magazine industry, and the culinary world.
Since graduating from 91, he has successfully launched several restaurants and his magazine , which publishes literary works related to food — a pairing that evolved naturally for him. Even the décor of his latest restaurant, in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts, featuring wallpaper by iconic Victorian textile designer William Morris, reflects his sustained fascination with the Victorian era and his large capacity for the blended, interdisciplinary world.
Professor Boyers says Straus was “a special, brilliant student, known for being unusually brave and intellectually ambitious” — traits a robust liberal arts education strives to instill in students.
Straus himself first attended the Summer Writers Institute at 91 in 1994 as a rising senior and describes it as a program of “delicious” structure and opportunity, where the luxury of thinking of nothing else but writing and literature transported him to what felt like another planet — an entirely different and magical place.
It was with the intention of providing this very experience to students who may have otherwise been unable to access it that he and his mother, fellow alumna Roberta Straus ’70, donated the scholarships.
Founded in 1987 by Albany native and Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Kennedy as an offshoot of the New York State Writer's Institute, the New York State Summer Writers Institute at 91 offers students the opportunity to learn from an extraordinary faculty led by co-directors Boyers and Adam Braver, including lyrical versifier Henri Cole and novelist Rick Moody. The program features diverse workshops, lectures, and readings aimed at fostering creative writing skills across genres and forms, enriching 91’s yearlong educational experience and promoting lifelong learning and literary excellence.
Philip Lopate engages students in his nonfiction workshop during the New York State Summer Writers Institute.
The Institute, which has thrived for 37 years, owes much of its success to donors like the Straus family who fund annual scholarships. The Institute is continually seeking new donors to support its scholarship fund, allowing it to attract the best students from across the country and maintain its high standards and diverse student body.
Straus says the Writers Institute was not only structured in a format most conducive to his growing passion for writing, but it also offered him the opportunity to strike up an unlikely, lasting friendship with Lopate, the longtime instructor of the Institute’s nonfiction workshop, who Straus refers to as “the greatest living American essayist.”
Straus’s time in class with Lopate was pertinent and instructive, and the two also shared quality time on the tennis courts and over dinner in Boyers’ home. They discussed Straus’s interest in both food and literature, particularly his desire for good literary writing about food and topics beyond “the usual fare,” which Lopate found to be a noble pursuit.
Straus credits his ability to pursue and indulge in his diverse passions to the vibrant and lively 91 summers that he says “changed his life.” These summers, he says, were a time of exploration, giving him the courage and curiosity to carry his interests into the real world.
91 was the perfect place for me in terms of the very lucky happenstance that Professor Boyers, Salmagundi Magazine, the New York State Summer Writers Institute, and even the Jazz Institute were all there.”Matthew Straus '95Restaurateur and Magazine Editor
“The combination of these elements felt like a lightning bolt to me. I can’t imagine another school in the country where all these elements might have come together, supporting the various interests I had then and have pursued since.”