Sunday, December 9, 2007

MFA HOLIDAY PARTY



WHEN: Saturday, December 15 @ 4pm

WHERE: Heskin Contemporary Gallery in Manhattan
443 W. 37th Street, Ground Floor
Between 9th and 10th Aves in Hell's Kitchen

Any subway to Port Authority will do.
Get out on the 9th Ave side and walk down to 37th. Or Penn Station at 34th Street and walk up to 37th.

A brief student readings will also be held. Contact John Currie to sign up for the reading or to get more specific instructions to the site: reidpapers34@gmail.com

WHAT TO BRING: Something to drink or eat (dessert or appetizer)
& a wrapped used paperback book for the book exchange

RSVP to Professor Cooley at nicole.cooley@qc.cuny.edu

Hope to see everyone there!

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

TRENDS IN TRANSLATION, 3rd EVENT




Who?

Roger Sedarat, Iranian-American Queens College alumnus. His collection of poetry Dear Regime: Letters to the Islamic Republic, won the Hollins Summer Award from Ohio State University. He teaches English and Middle Eastern literature at Borough of Manhattan Community College.

What?

"Reading East/ Writing West: The Paradox of Translating Persian Poetry"

When?

Tuesday, November 27, 5:30 PM

Where?

Klapper Hall Faculty Lounge, 7th Floor

Q&A and reception after presentation!

Thursday, November 8, 2007

OPEN STUDIOS @ HUNTER COLLEGE


An annual event, full of merriment & creativity!

Free & open to the public!

Hunter College Visual Arts MFA Open Studios

Friday, 11/16 (6 - 10 PM)
Saturday, 11/17 (2 - 6 PM)

450 W 41st St. (btwn 9th & 10 aves.)

N, R, Q, A, C, E, 1, 2, 3, 7 subways to 42nd St/Times Sq.
Walk west on 41st. Studio Bldg is on South side.

(Thanks to MFA in writing candidate Pete Vandenberg, whose brother is an MFA in art candidate at Hunter--WHAT A TALENTED FAMILY!)

Saturday, November 3, 2007

On the Same Page + Town Meeting: Thursday November 8



Attention MFA candidates, this Thursday's event will be a double feature: we will have a 45-minute discussion on nonfiction, and following that talk we will be engaging in a conversation about all things MFA (Where are we so far? Where shall we go next? What should you be doing in the meantime?). First half will be moderated by Prof. Rigoberto Gonzalez and MFA candidate Jackie Pervizaj. Same place (Faculty lounge), same time (6-8 pm). BE THERE!

Thursday, October 25, 2007

PINK PONY WEST


Another innovative reading series:

Friday, November 2nd @ 6 pm

Ellen Bass, with guests Doug Goetsch, Stefanie Lipsey and others
The Cornelia St. Café in the Village
$7 includes one house drink

DID YOU KNOW...

CREATIVE WRITING AT CUNY has an official website?

Monday, October 22, 2007

Queens College MFA in Poets & Writers Magazine




Check out Professor Nicole Cooley (and her words about the program)! Doesn't she look fabulous?

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

ON THE SAME PAGE: FICTION



TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23

6 PM/ KLAPPER HALL 610 (THE FACULTY LOUNGE)


This is the second of three community discussions on literature. The text: THE ATLANTIC SPECIAL FICTION ISSUE 2007. Professor Weir will moderate this informal session and ALL MFA graduate students are strongly encouraged to attend. Bring your own munchies, we will provide the drinks!

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Earshot Reading Series in Brooklyn



Friday, October 26 @ 8 pm

Readers: John Reid Currie, Olivia Cerrone, Shanna Compton, Jennifer L. Knox, and Seamus Scanton.

Earshot readings series is dedicated to the work and presence of the most gifted and exciting emerging writers in the great New York City area and provides an opportunity for graduate writing students to share their work with an audience that reaches beyond the MFA community.

The Lucky Cat in Williamsburg
245 Grand Street (b/w Driggs & Roebling)
Brooklyn, NY 11211
(718) 782-0437

Nearby Train Stops: L (Bedford Ave), G (Metropolitan/Grand), J/M/Z (Marcy Ave)

Cost $5 (includes one free drink)

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Trends in Translation Series, 2nd of 3




Who?
Rigoberto Gonzalez, Visiting Faculty, Queens College

What?
"An Introduction to the (Fun) Art of Translation"

When?
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 17 @ 6 pm

Where?
KLAPPER HALL, Room 401

Reception after discussion. BRING SOMETHING TO WRITE WITH!!!

Friday, September 28, 2007

On the Same Page


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3

6 PM/ KLAPPER 610 (NOTE CHANGE IN ROOM!)

Attention MFA candidates, the first of three community discussions on literature will focus on Tory Dent’s poetry book HIV, Mon Amour. Professors Cooley and Hahn will co-moderate this informal session and ALL MFA graduate students are strongly encouraged to attend. Bring your own munchies, we will provide the drinks!

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

LOOKING AHEAD--


Center Broadsides Reading Series
Friday, October 26th , 6:30pm
With Poets Jennifer Kwon Dobbs and Nicole Cooley.
Organized by Kimiko Hahn
Suggested Donation $5 CBA members/ $10 non-members

ADVANCE NOTICE: Friday, December 7th , 6:30 pm
Poets Rigoberto Gonzalez and Nicole Walker read. Organized by Peter Covino.

The Center for Book Arts 
28 West 27th Street, 3rd Floor 
info@centerforbookarts.org

Sunday, September 23, 2007

WORTH THE TRAIN RIDE--



TEACHERS & WRITERS COLLABORATIVE NYC
T&W events @ the Center for Imaginative Writing
520 Eighth Avenue (between 36th and 37th Streets), Suite 2020.
Free, unless otherwise indicated.
212-691-6590

2020 Visions: Patrick Rosal and R.A. Villanueva
October 18 – 7:00 PM

Patrick Rosal is the author of My American Kundiman and Uprock Headspin Scramble and Dive, winner of the Asian American Writers Worskhop Members’ Choice Award.

R.A. Villanueva, a two-time recipient of a Geraldine R. Dodge Educator scholarship to the Fine Arts Work Center. His poetry has appeared in RATTLE and is forthcominmg in Crab Orchard Review, and his songwriting has been featured at the Bowery Poetry Club and the Nuyorican Poets Cafe.


STRAND LITERARY & ARTS FESTIVAL
Strand Books
Saturday, October 13 11:00AM - 06:00PM
Day long celebration of Strand's 80th birthday with QC prof Harold Schechter.
Other authors include Dan Brown (not of DaVinci Code fame), Sigrid Nunez, and Edmund White.
Subway to Union Square, NYC.
Walk two blocks South to 12th Street.
828 Broadway
(at 12th St.)
212-473-1452

Friday, September 21, 2007

Special Notice Re: AWP Conference in NYC!


FROM PROFESSOR HAHN:

By now, everyone should have a copy of The Writer’s Chronicle and know why the Association of Writers & Writing Programs is relevant to our writing community. As part of my project to organize the CUNY MFA programs, Queens College will receive 14 complimentary student registration passes for the conference, held Jan. 30-Feb. 2 at the Midtown Hilton Hotel.

In return, students will be asked to sign up for a few hours of volunteer work, like stuffing envelopes or sitting in the CUNY booth at the Bookfair. Otherwise, the cost of student registration is $40. If more than 14 of you are interested in attending, I will hold a lottery.

Please contact me by October 1: kimiko.hahn@qc.cuny.edu.

Talks on Translation Series, 1st of 3


Who?
LAZARE BITOUN, Professor at The University of Paris 8 (St. Denis),
translator of Philip Roth, and other American writers.

What?
"On Translation: The Cultural Stakes"

When?
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 6 PM

Where?
KLAPPER HALL, ROOM 401
Q & A and a reception after discussion. All welcomed.

Monday, September 17, 2007

THE QUETZAL QUILL @ CORNELIA STREET CAFE



Saturday, September 22 @ 6 pm

Readers

EDUARDO C. CORRAL
ARACELIS GIRMAY author of Teeth
CATHY PARK HONG author of Dance Dance Revolution

Curator & Host: QC Prof RIGOBERTO GONZÁLEZ

$7 admission (includes a free drink)
A/C/E/F/V/B/D trains to W. 4th St. Stop in the Village
29 Cornelia St. 212-989-9319
Cornelia Street Cafe

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Fantastic Fiction Reading Series


Wednesday, September 19

@ the KGB BAR

w/ QC Professor VERONICA L. SCHANOES
plus writers Karen Russell, Jeffrey Ford & Geoffrey Goodwin

Location: E. 4th Street between 2nd Ave & Bowery
in the East Village!

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Two Events on Sunday Sept. 16!!!


Readings on the Bowery
NAOMI GUTTMAN, JOSHUA WEINER, VICTORIA REDEL, TOM SLEIGH.

$8.00 admission includes $2.00 at the snack/drink bar.

The Bowery Poetry Club,
308 Bowery, New York City




Brooklyn Book Festival
An all-day event of authors and books, including KIMIKO HAHN!

Monday, September 3, 2007

A Reading in Manhattan



QC's MARIA TERRONE & MARTHA COLLINS
Sunday, September 9, 6 pm
@ The Cornelia Street Cafe

29 Cornelia Street in Greenwich Village
Admission is $7 (which includes a drink)
Hosted by Angelo Verga

Friday, August 3, 2007

SAVE THE DATE!



MFA GRADUATE STUDENT ORIENTATION

MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 2007

STUDENT GALLERY @ KLAPPER HALL

6-8 PM

Friday, July 20, 2007

Hey, Prof., What Are You Reading This Summer?


NICOLE COOLEY: I just finished Liza Mundy's Everything Conceivable: How Assisted Reproduction is Changing Men, Women and the World--a riveting account of new technologies of reproduction and pregnancy. (I love reading outside the field of literary studies and it always seems to inform my writing.) Also this summer I have been working through Maurice Blanchot's The Writing of the Disaster, since I have spent the past year writing a book of poems about Hurricane Katrina. And I've been enjoying some new books of poetry: Broken Land: Poems of Brooklyn (I'm thinking we need a book like this for Queens!), Tracy K. Smith's Duende, and a book from Alice James Books called Take What You Want by Henrietta Goodman, a poet I discovered on Poetry Daily.

RIGOBERTO GONZALEZ: I am currently reading two very controversial books for a lecture I'm preparing on writing about sensitive subject matter. The two books in question: White Dog by Romain Gary, an account of an encounter with a German shepherd that was trained to attack black people, and The Child by Sarah Schulman, a fictionalized account of the 1997 New Jersey case in which a 15-year-old boy sexually assaulted and murdered an 11-year-old boy. In poetry: Cathy Park Hong's Dance Dance Revolution and Aracelis Girmay's Teeth. For the long list of Chicano/Latino titles, check my website.

KIMIKO HAHN: I just finished reading Harold Schechter's galleys for his latest true crime book, The Devil’s Gentlemen: Privilege, Poison and the Trial that Ushered in the 20th Century (forthcoming October from Random House). It's an elegant and lurid read. Also, I have read about five of Ian McEwan's incredibly beautiful and twisted books. I began with a particularly disturbing one: The Cement Garden. Poetry? Justin Chin's Gutted and Dear Regime by a former Queens College student, Roger Sedarat.

RICHARD SCHOTTER: I just finished reading English playwright (of The History Boys fame) Alan Bennett's memoir/diary Untold Stories. Partly, an affecting, beautifully understated account of his mother's descent into depression, which captures both the horror of the event and the world of northern England in the fifties. I'm now beginning a new novel, How to Talk to a Widower, by a relatively young American novelist named Jonathan Tropper, whose previous novels, Everything Changes and The Book of Joe, I really enjoyed. He has a wonderfully open, deceptively easy, conversational style. And there's something about his voice and subject matter that moves me and makes me laugh as well.

JOHN WEIR: Last month I went to Germany to read from my first novel in its German translation at an international conference on AIDS. That was weird and overwhelming, given that I know maybe six words of German. As a result of that trip, I've been reading two books, one related to AIDS, and one to Germany: Marcia Angell's The Truth About the Drug Companies, and Gunter Grass' The Tin Drum. Grass' novel is long and plotless (unless "history" counts as plot). As for poetry, I recently bought A. R. Ammons' Collected Poems, mostly because I liked something he said in an interview: "I write to be included in a world I feel rejected by."

Summer Reading Assignment

Attention incoming MFA graduate students: to prepare for a series of literary conversations to take place in the fall, the faculty recommend you read the following texts by the beginning of the semester:

Best American Essays 2006
HIV, Mon Amour by Tory Dent
The Atlantic Monthly Fiction Issue 2007

Friday, July 13, 2007

Welcome MFA Students



Welcome to your blog--a communal bulletin board that will feature important announcements, news and events taking place at home and beyond. Please check back periodically and please contribute posts relevant to our new literary community here at Queens College.