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CT State Middlesex English Professor’s Poems Published in National Publications

February 10, 2026 - Richard Hubbard - News Release
Campus: Middlesex
Christine Ruggiero

Two poems by Connecticut State Community College (CT State) Middlesex English professor Christine Ruggiero have recently been published in national outlets.

Ruggiero’s poem “Remembering When it Began” appears in the 2025 Paterson Literary Review, founded in 1979 and recognized as one of the nation’s most respected poetry publications, featuring writers such as Allen Ginsberg, Philip Levine and Sonia Sanchez. In celebration of the publication of the latest issue, Ruggiero gave a reading of her work in November at the Poetry Center at Passaic County Community College in Patterson, NJ.

Ruggiero also learned that her poem “Death Education” was accepted for publication in Issue 13 of Molecule—A Tiny Lit Mag (2025), an online journal publishing poetry, prose, plays, interviews, reviews and visual art twice annually.

A longtime advocate for creative writing, Ruggiero revived and expandedcreative writing offerings at the Middlesex campus more than 20 years ago, after discovering the subject had not been taught since the 1970s.

Over two decades, she founded and served as editor of Pegasus, a student literary journal which she published for seven years, advised a creative writing club for 12 years, arranged for student poetry readings on and off campus, and helped bring noted authors, such as Richard Blanco, Andre Dubus III and Maria Maziotti Gillan to campus. She works closely with the Connecticut Poetry Circuit, continuing to organize yearly author events.

Among her proudest achievements, though, are mentoring student poets, several of whom have earned publication, won awards, and have written and read original poems for commencement ceremonies, a yearly traditionwhich began at Middlesex in 2013.

“Over the years, I've had a handful of student poets named ConnecticutPoetry Circuit contest winners who received publication in the Connecticut Review and enjoyed the unique experience of reading their poetry across the state of Connecticut, including at Sunken Garden Poetry Festival,” said Ruggiero.

Ruggiero has served as the program chair of English and foreign languages since 2024, and before that as discipline coordinator of English, from 2018–2024. Her courses include Creative Writing, Composition, Literature, College and Career Success, and Public Speaking.

Remembering When It Began

 
I must have told you a thousand times
I needed to buy the table and chair
set for the lower patio before it sold out.
Didn't consider that the umbrella
ould barely fit, stretch the length
of the truck, lay on the console between us.
Didn't know the amyloid plaques had moved in,
not even when halfway home, you blurted out,
“didn't you want to get that table and chairs.”
“We did, mom,” I say, “the umbrella is here,”
patting the large brown box. “Oh, that's right,” you
quipped, laughed off in you fashion,
saying "oh, who gives a shit," like when you
drove to New Hampshire instead of Connecticut,
asked a stranger for directions back home.
That was you, we said, everyone said. I think it
registered at Horton Hears a Who! when
four times you asked our friend's mom
where she was living, and I apologized for you.
There's shame in that apology which knocks
on the door of my youth, when I wish you were
more poised, refined, cultured; not Italian,
boisterous, with your “3 nuns in a bar” joke;
you cheer loudly from the bleachers, your voice
carries above all the other parents; at Christmas
you sing “Dominick the Donkey” at the top of your
lungs swinging me around the living room. You taught
me to dance, to love and support fiercely, to lead. 
I taught you that sometimes daughters
will disappoint you, will need to say they're sorry.

 

Death Education

Unconscious for two days blood transfusions keeping you alive during your month-long stay you did not feel the cold breeze that woke me from slumber which I took as a sign to add a funeral dress to my cart.

Updated: February 12, 2026