Sunday, December 21, 2008
ELIZABETH ALEXANDER, AMERICAN SUBLIME!
CONGRATULATIONS FROM QUEENS COLLEGE
MFA FACULTY AND STUDENTS!
Elizabeth Alexander, poet and professor of African American studies at Yale University, has been commissioned by President-elect Barack Obama to compose and read a poem for his inauguration. This honor makes her the fourth poet in American history to read at one and—to quote today’s N. Y. Times article—“[elevates] the art to unaccustomed prominence in the national psyche, at least for a day.” Ms. Alexander commented that Mr. Obama is attuned to the value of poetry: “He has said the precise and distilled and mindful language of poetry is perhaps something that can create a moment of meditation for us.” Answering Wall St. Journal interviewer’s question on what this occasion means in terms of the national literary life, she replied, “It says culture matters, that it’s transforming and not merely stirring, that it’s fundamental to ways in which we can think about moving forward.” And how far along is the poem? “I have bits and pieces. It’s a process that doesn’t come sharply into the clear until a little further down the line. When I compose poetry, I don’t think themes, I begin with language. I do believe that form and function are united, that they go together. But I don’t start with an idea that I wish to express in poetry.” And will this honor change her life? “If it means those things that I’m trained to talk about will get more hearing, that would be fantastic.”
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Saturday, December 6, 2008
CIRCUMFERENCE, translation journal
Thursday, December 11 at 7pm
A reading featuring translators and poets
Jennifer Hayashida and Jeffrey Yang
Hayashida reads from her translation of Swedish poet Fredrik Nyberg's dark and intimate A Different Practice. Yang reads from his translation of classical Chinese poet Su Shi's East Slope and his own debut collection of poems An Aquarium.
@ The Asian American Writers' Workshop, 16 West 32nd Street, 10th Floor (between Broadway & 5th Avenue)
$5 suggested donation; open to the public
A reading featuring translators and poets
Jennifer Hayashida and Jeffrey Yang
Hayashida reads from her translation of Swedish poet Fredrik Nyberg's dark and intimate A Different Practice. Yang reads from his translation of classical Chinese poet Su Shi's East Slope and his own debut collection of poems An Aquarium.
@ The Asian American Writers' Workshop, 16 West 32nd Street, 10th Floor (between Broadway & 5th Avenue)
$5 suggested donation; open to the public
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Come early and stay late...
Tyler opens at 7pm, so show up a little early!
DECEMBER 12
@ The National Underground
159 E. Houston Street
between Allen and Eldridge
$10 cover
The other acts are as follows:
8 Sparrow Season
9 Alec Town
10 Daria
11 Feral Hounds
DECEMBER 12
@ The National Underground
159 E. Houston Street
between Allen and Eldridge
$10 cover
The other acts are as follows:
8 Sparrow Season
9 Alec Town
10 Daria
11 Feral Hounds
You'd be crazy to miss hearing Yusef Komunyakaa!
Thursday, December 11th @ 7:00PM
Pacific Standard Poetry Reading Series presents:
Yusef Komunyakaa, Idra Novey, and Rick Benjamin.
Series curated by Colin Cheney.
NOTE: our earlier reading time of 7:00PM.
LOCATION: Pacific Standard Bar
82 Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn, NY (between St. Marks and Bergen Streets)
BY TRAIN: Atlantic/Pacific subway station
INFO: http://www.pacificstandardbrooklyn.com
Pacific Standard Poetry Reading Series presents:
Yusef Komunyakaa, Idra Novey, and Rick Benjamin.
Series curated by Colin Cheney.
NOTE: our earlier reading time of 7:00PM.
LOCATION: Pacific Standard Bar
82 Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn, NY (between St. Marks and Bergen Streets)
BY TRAIN: Atlantic/Pacific subway station
INFO: http://www.pacificstandardbrooklyn.com
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
BENEFIT READING...
Breyten Breytenbach joins Chuck Wachtel to stage this first benefit reading in a series during the following year. All the proceeds will go to Middle Collegiate Church's community programs including its Food Pantry, Butterfly lunch program and its Celebrate Life Meal for those with HIV/AIDS.
Friday, December 5 | 7 PM - 8:30 PM
Middle Collegiate Church
2nd Avenue at 7th Street
We suggest a donation of $10 and/or bags of rice and canned food.
For directions or more information please go to www.middlechurch.org or call them at 212.477.0666.
BIOS...
Breyten Breytenbach will read from his work of short prose All One Horse and new poems. A native of South Africa, he is a distinguished painter and a writer of more than 30 books of poetry, novels, short story compilations, and essays. A committed opponent of apartheid, Breytenbach was a political prisoner in South Africa from 1975–1982, serving two terms of solitary confinement. He is known as the finest living poet of the Afrikaans language. Chuck Wachtel will read from a new novel 3/03 and new shorter works. He is the author of the novels Joe The Engineer, winner of the Pen/Hemingway Citation, and The Gates; a collection of stories and novellas: Because We Are Here; and five collections of poems and short prose, including What Happens to Me. He wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation of Joe The Engineer, scheduled to go into production in summer of 2009. He teaches Creative Writing at New York University.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
FELLOWSHIP OPPORTUNITY:
Beginning in the fall of 2009, Dalkey Archive Press at the University of Illinois will be offering a unique opportunity for young translators of fiction working from world languages into English to gain experience in translation and publishing. This program is in response to the need to create the means for translators to take the next major step in their careers.
INFORMATION: www.dalkeyarchive.com
WHERE: Dalkey Archive Press, University of Illinois
217.244.5700
1805 S. Wright Street, MC-011
Champaign, IL 61820
INFORMATION: www.dalkeyarchive.com
WHERE: Dalkey Archive Press, University of Illinois
217.244.5700
1805 S. Wright Street, MC-011
Champaign, IL 61820
Friday, November 21, 2008
EMPLOYMENT IDEAS . . .
Visit "Jobs for Students" (www.cuny.edu/studentjobs) today, the new CUNY employment opportunities initiative aimed at helping students obtain part-time and full-time work and internships. Through special arrangements with the United States Census Bureau, the New York State Civil Service Commission and Unified Court System, New York City's 311 Customer Service Call Center and many other organizations and agencies, students can apply for jobs to help meet the costs of attending college and to gain invaluable professional experience.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Music and Text and Kevin--
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Friday, November 14, 2008
THE EMPIRE’S NEW CLOTHES
In this new piece, The Synaesthetic Theatre undresses the “The Emperor’s New Clothes” to expose the fairy tale’s relevance within the current cultural and political climate. Secrets, confessions, fear and apathy woven into Hans Christian Andersen’s text are unraveled and patched together in a series of absurd, disparate yet connected vignettes. Fro those who are suspect they’re being fooled and those are fooling themselves, it’s Fashion Week in the land of once upon a time. Check time and dates:
Studio Theatre on Theatre Row. Information:
http://www.synaesthetic-theatre.com/
Translation Studies: the Challenge of Broad Interdisciplinarity
Prof. Luise von Flotow, from the University of Toronto
Thursday, Nov. 20, 6 pm, CUNY Grad Ctr, Room, C 204
... you know where it is!
Thursday, Nov. 20, 6 pm, CUNY Grad Ctr, Room, C 204
... you know where it is!
Rivenbank Twice
Mark Doty at CUNY Grad Ctr
Mark Doty, the John and Rebecca Moores Professor in the Department of English at the University of Houston, is the author of 7 books of poems, most recently School of the Arts, and 3 volumes of nonfiction prose.
November 20th, Thursday, 7 pm
The Graduate Center, CUNY, Rm 9206/07
365 Fifth Ave (btwn 34th & 35th)
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Scott at EARSHOT!
EARSHOT at hip new spot!
Friday, November 21 @ 8 PM
Hosted by Nicole Steinberg
Featuring:
Scott Cheshire (Hunter)
Brie Huling (SLC)
Sara Batkie (NYU)
KATHLEEN ROONEY (Oneiromance, That Tiny Insane Voluptuousness)
MICHAEL MONTLACK (Girls, Girls, Girls; Cover Charge)
ROSE LIVE MUSIC
345 Grand Street in Brooklyn (Havemeyer and Marcy).
For directions: http://liveatrose.com/.
EARSHOT is a bi-monthly reading series, dedicated to featuring new and emerging literary talent in the NYC area.
Visit http://www.earshotnyc.com
Thursday, November 13, 2008
The Pacific Standard Poetry Reading Series
HYPERTEXTING
QC MFA On the Same Page discussion series
will be On-the-Same-Screen
Tuesday 2 December at 6:30 PM
QC, Klapper Hall Room 708.
John Weir will facilitate a discussion on electronic literature or network fiction with a thought toward hypertext literary projects and their various rules-of-engagement. … In preparation check out a couple of online projects (links included below):
1. Poet Oni Buchanan's *The Mandrake Vehicles*:
www.conduit.org/online/buchanan/buchanan.html
2. Michael Joyce's network fiction, *Twelve Blue*:
eastgate.com/TwelveBlue/Twelve_Blue.html
3. Also a Mark Z. Danielewski's novel *House of Leaves* which started as an online project but exists now only as a published manuscript from Pantheon Books.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
***WRITER IN RESIDENCY***
The Roger Madoff Literary Fellowship will be awarded to one emerging Queens author who has shown literary excellence, potential for future success and a commitment to building the Queens literary community. The fellowship includes a cash award, a year’s residency to the Writer’s Room and access to literary opportunities through the Queens Council on the Arts including public readings and mentorship from literary professionals. It requires the completion of significant literary work over the course of the one-year fellowship.
http://www.queenscouncilarts.org/grant-programs/literary-fellowship.html
http://www.queenscouncilarts.org/grant-programs/literary-fellowship.html
QC Poetry Reading by Ciaran Berry and Nadine Meyer
Wednesday, November 12, 6:30pm,
Queens College Campus, Klapper Hall, rm. 403
With a reception to follow
Ciaran Berry’s first full-length volume, The Sphere of Birds, won the 2007 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Open Competition and was published by Southern Illinois University Press. The same volume was published in Ireland and the UK by The Gallery Press. Berry's work is featured in The Best American Poetry 2008. He teaches in the Expository Writing Program at NYU and is originally from the northwest of Ireland.
Nadine Sabra Meyer's first book of poems, The Anatomy Theater, won the National Poetry Series and was published by HarperCollins in 2006. Her poems have won the New Letters Prize for Poetry as well as a Pushcart Prize. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in journals including Chelsea, Pleiades, North American Review, The Southern Review and Southwest Review. She is an Assistant Professor at Gettysburg College.
Queens College Campus, Klapper Hall, rm. 403
With a reception to follow
Ciaran Berry’s first full-length volume, The Sphere of Birds, won the 2007 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Open Competition and was published by Southern Illinois University Press. The same volume was published in Ireland and the UK by The Gallery Press. Berry's work is featured in The Best American Poetry 2008. He teaches in the Expository Writing Program at NYU and is originally from the northwest of Ireland.
Nadine Sabra Meyer's first book of poems, The Anatomy Theater, won the National Poetry Series and was published by HarperCollins in 2006. Her poems have won the New Letters Prize for Poetry as well as a Pushcart Prize. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in journals including Chelsea, Pleiades, North American Review, The Southern Review and Southwest Review. She is an Assistant Professor at Gettysburg College.
OZONE PARK online journal
Congratulations to the MFA Program editors for their first-rate online journal! Plus the Launch Party was truly splendid! Anyone out there who still hasn't checked out the quality--and the submission guidelines--what you are waiting for? We don't engrave invitations around here--
ozoneparkjournal.org/
Monday, November 10, 2008
Terrance Hayes' WIND IN A BOX
Thursday, November 13, 7pm
The New Salon series
Terrance Hayes is the author of three books of poetry: Hip Logic, which won National Poetry Series, Muscular Music, and most recently Wind in a Box. In conversation with Robert N. Casper; co-sponsored with the Poetry Society of America
N.Y.U., Lillian Vernon Creative Writers House,
58 West 10th Street, between 5th and 6th Avenues
The New Salon series
Terrance Hayes is the author of three books of poetry: Hip Logic, which won National Poetry Series, Muscular Music, and most recently Wind in a Box. In conversation with Robert N. Casper; co-sponsored with the Poetry Society of America
N.Y.U., Lillian Vernon Creative Writers House,
58 West 10th Street, between 5th and 6th Avenues
Drunken Boat Design Contest - $2500 for winning designer
Drunken Boat < www.drunkenboat.com >, an international online journal of the arts, celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2009! Part of our conceptual origin has been in exhibiting works of art that use the medium of the Web as constitutive of meaning; with this in mind we are soliciting proposals for the design of a special 10th issue dedicated to arts and literature online. The winning designer receives a $2500 honorarium in return for designing the home page of a publication that attracts nearly half a million unique visitors per year.
Sunday, November 9, 2008
from the BASQUE
Two bilingual readings:
by Kirmen Uribe and translator, Elizabeth Mackey
[See http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/1879/prmID/1551]
Friday, December 12th, 7 P.M.
A bilingual reading from Uribe’s Meanwhile Take My Hand
@ Nicholas Roerich Museum
319 West 107th St., NY
http://www.roerich.org/museum.html?mid=events
AND
Monday, December 15th, 7 P.M.
A bilingual combination of new poems and selections from Uribe’s new novel, Bilbao New York Bilbao,
@ KGB Bar, 85 East Fourth Street (near 2nd), NY
http://kgbbar.com/calendar/2008/12/
by Kirmen Uribe and translator, Elizabeth Mackey
[See http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/1879/prmID/1551]
Friday, December 12th, 7 P.M.
A bilingual reading from Uribe’s Meanwhile Take My Hand
@ Nicholas Roerich Museum
319 West 107th St., NY
http://www.roerich.org/museum.html?mid=events
AND
Monday, December 15th, 7 P.M.
A bilingual combination of new poems and selections from Uribe’s new novel, Bilbao New York Bilbao,
@ KGB Bar, 85 East Fourth Street (near 2nd), NY
http://kgbbar.com/calendar/2008/12/
Friday, November 7, 2008
IRANIAN AMERICAN WRITERS: THE NEXT GENERATION
Saturday, November 8, 6pm
Reading and Book Signing Featuring:
Porochista Khakpour
Born in Tehran, raised in Los Angeles, she now lives in New York and currently teaches Fiction at Bucknell University. Khakpour's debut novel Sons and Other Flammable Objects was a New York Times "Editor's Choice," Chicago Tribune "Fall's Best," 2007 California Book Award winner, and Dylan Thomas Prize longlist selection is out in paperback this.
Roger Sedarat
His first poetry collection, Dear Regime: Letters to the Islamic Republic, won Ohio UP's Hollis Summers' Prize. Sedarat has also publishes scholarly articles on American and Middle Eastern literature. He teaches poetry and translation in the MFA program at Queens College, City University of New York.
Aphrodite Desiree Navab
She has published poetry and autobiographical essays, and her short story, a prose revisit of "Tales Left Untold" will be published in the forthcoming anthology edited by Ishmael Reed and Carla Blank, Powow: American Short Fiction from Then to Now.
Manijeh Nasrabadi
Her essay "Before I Knew Him" won the City University of New York Arts Gala Memoir Prize in 2005 and. "Souvenir," her essay on the challenges of seeing the self clearly, appeared in About Face. "Forest Fire." An essay on the intersection between Jewish and Zoroastrian cultures, will be appearing in the anthology Love and Pomegranates.
Co-sponsored by ArteEast and Association of Iranian American Writers.
@ The Workshop
16 West 32nd Street, 10th Floor (btwn Broadway & 5th Avenue)
$5 suggested donation; open to the public
Reading and Book Signing Featuring:
Porochista Khakpour
Born in Tehran, raised in Los Angeles, she now lives in New York and currently teaches Fiction at Bucknell University. Khakpour's debut novel Sons and Other Flammable Objects was a New York Times "Editor's Choice," Chicago Tribune "Fall's Best," 2007 California Book Award winner, and Dylan Thomas Prize longlist selection is out in paperback this.
Roger Sedarat
His first poetry collection, Dear Regime: Letters to the Islamic Republic, won Ohio UP's Hollis Summers' Prize. Sedarat has also publishes scholarly articles on American and Middle Eastern literature. He teaches poetry and translation in the MFA program at Queens College, City University of New York.
Aphrodite Desiree Navab
She has published poetry and autobiographical essays, and her short story, a prose revisit of "Tales Left Untold" will be published in the forthcoming anthology edited by Ishmael Reed and Carla Blank, Powow: American Short Fiction from Then to Now.
Manijeh Nasrabadi
Her essay "Before I Knew Him" won the City University of New York Arts Gala Memoir Prize in 2005 and. "Souvenir," her essay on the challenges of seeing the self clearly, appeared in About Face. "Forest Fire." An essay on the intersection between Jewish and Zoroastrian cultures, will be appearing in the anthology Love and Pomegranates.
Co-sponsored by ArteEast and Association of Iranian American Writers.
@ The Workshop
16 West 32nd Street, 10th Floor (btwn Broadway & 5th Avenue)
$5 suggested donation; open to the public
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
WHO READS POETRY? Robert Pinsky asks ...
Who are today’s poetry readers, and how did they acquire the habit of poetry? Former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky examines the changing landscape of American poetry and its audiences. Robert Pinsky is a Professor in the English Department of Boston University, and the author of, most recently, Gulf Music: Poems. During his Laureateship, he founded the Favorite Poem Project, a program dedicated to celebrating, documenting, and encouraging poetry’s role in Americans’ lives.
November 12th, Wednesday, 6:30pm
The Elebash Recital Hall
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Ave (btwn 34th & 35th)
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
No registration. Please arrive early for a seat.
November 12th, Wednesday, 6:30pm
The Elebash Recital Hall
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Ave (btwn 34th & 35th)
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
No registration. Please arrive early for a seat.
Monday, November 3, 2008
THIS CURRIE IS HOT!
Our own John Currie ran the whole darn New York Marathon! Congrats John! (Come toast him at OZONE PARK Launch on November 10th!)
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Gotta love Matthea and P.S Bar and--
Chin Music: The Pacific Standard Poetry Reading Series
Featuring Matthea Harvey, Amber West and Rachel Rothbart
Thursday, November 6th @ 7:00PM
PACIFIC STANDARD BAR
82 Fourth Avenue, borough of Brooklyn
(between St. Marks and Bergen Streets)
BASICALLY NEAR ALL SUBWAY LINES: ATLANTIC/PACIFIC STOP
Featuring Matthea Harvey, Amber West and Rachel Rothbart
Thursday, November 6th @ 7:00PM
PACIFIC STANDARD BAR
82 Fourth Avenue, borough of Brooklyn
(between St. Marks and Bergen Streets)
BASICALLY NEAR ALL SUBWAY LINES: ATLANTIC/PACIFIC STOP
Friday, October 24, 2008
Submit the Sublime—
Poetry Society of America
Chapbook Contest
now open for submission: October 1 - December 22, 2008
See full guidelines: http://www.poetrysociety.org/psa-chapbook.php#guide
Chapbook Contest
now open for submission: October 1 - December 22, 2008
See full guidelines: http://www.poetrysociety.org/psa-chapbook.php#guide
Translation: Call for Submissions
TWO LINES World Writing in Translation is currently accepting
submissions for its sixteenth volume, guest edited by award-winning
translators MARGARET JULL COSTA and MARILYN HACKER.
Deadline: October 31.
http://www.catranslation.org/translation.html
submissions for its sixteenth volume, guest edited by award-winning
translators MARGARET JULL COSTA and MARILYN HACKER.
Deadline: October 31.
http://www.catranslation.org/translation.html
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
FLU SEASON
STATE OF THE UNION: A POETRY READING
Thursday, October 30, 6:30pm
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
John Ashbery + Dan Chelotti +
Thomas Sayers Ellis + Nick Flynn +
Caroline Knox + Eileen Myles +
Mathias Svalina + Azareen Van der
Vliet Oloomi + Elizabeth Willis + Rachel Zucker
William Carlos Williams wrote: "It is difficult/to get the news from
poems/ yet men die miserably every day/ for lack/ of what is found
there." Join the contributors to the Wave Books anthology State of the
Union: 50 Political Poems.
The Amie and Tony James Gallery
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Avenue at 34th St. NY, NY
212-817-2005, abozicevic@gc.cuny.edu, centerforthehumanitiesgc.org
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Yvette—can't stay out of the White House!!!
Operation Lysistrata! is her new play inspired by Aristophanes' play, Lysistrata, and will be read as part of the Dramatist Guild's Friday Night Footlights reading series on this coming Friday, October 24, 6:00 - 7:30pm.
The Dramatist Guild, 1501 Broadway, Suite 701, NYC.
NOTE: the reading is FREE, but must begin promptly at 6:00pm, so please come a few minutes early!
The Dramatist Guild, 1501 Broadway, Suite 701, NYC.
NOTE: the reading is FREE, but must begin promptly at 6:00pm, so please come a few minutes early!
Saturday, October 18, 2008
A Helen Adam Halloween!
Wednesday, October 29, 8:00pm
Edmund Berrigan, Charles Bernstein, Lee Ann Brown, Bob Holman, Susan Howe, Serena Jost, Dan Machlin, Julie Patton, Kristin Prevallet & Cecilia Vicuña
Let the spirits move you to this musical and spoken word happening in honor of San Francisco Renaissance balladeer Helen Adam. Co-sponsored by Poet's House and ...
@ The Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church 131 E. 10th Street (at 2nd Avenue) $8, $7 for students and seniors, $5 for Poetry Project members Free to Poets House members
Edmund Berrigan, Charles Bernstein, Lee Ann Brown, Bob Holman, Susan Howe, Serena Jost, Dan Machlin, Julie Patton, Kristin Prevallet & Cecilia Vicuña
Let the spirits move you to this musical and spoken word happening in honor of San Francisco Renaissance balladeer Helen Adam. Co-sponsored by Poet's House and ...
@ The Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church 131 E. 10th Street (at 2nd Avenue) $8, $7 for students and seniors, $5 for Poetry Project members Free to Poets House members
Don’t forget the 92nd St. Y:
John Ashbery on Oct. 27, Lucille Clifton and W.S. Merwin on Nov. 3, .. even Dostoevsky and Virginia Woolf have their say later in the season! [a number of tickets for those under 35 are available for 10!]
See full listing of readings at Unterberg Poetry Center: www.92y.org/poetry/
See full listing of readings at Unterberg Poetry Center: www.92y.org/poetry/
QC within Earshot!
EARSHOT readings
*Friday, October 24th, 2008 at 8 PM*
Admission: $5 + FREE DRINK!
Featuring:
Amy Lawless (Noctis Licentia)
Alex Smith (Lux)
Danielle Grace Warren (Hunter College)
**James Shultis (Queens College)**
Caedra Scott-Flaherty (New York University)
The Lucky Cat, 245 Grand Street (Driggs and Roebling), Brooklyn
Visit their website for directions: http://www.theluckycat.com.
EARSHOT is a bi-monthly reading series, dedicated to featuring new and emerging literary talent in the NYC area. Hosted by Nicole Steinberg. Visit http://www.earshotnyc.com for more information.
SYLVIA PLATH, evening of ...
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Carol Muske Dukes & Susan Wheeler
Friday, October 17
4pm: Drinks and snacks
5pm Reading and conversation
NYU Creative Writing Program
Lillian Vernon Writers House
58 West 10th St, NY NY $5 at the door
4pm: Drinks and snacks
5pm Reading and conversation
NYU Creative Writing Program
Lillian Vernon Writers House
58 West 10th St, NY NY $5 at the door
Monday, October 13, 2008
ARACELIS GIRMAY & ADA LIMÓN
CENTER FOR THE BOOK ARTS PRESENTS
Friday, October 17, 6:30 pm:
ARACELIS GIRMAY, Teeth
ADA LIMÓN, This Big Fake World & Lucky Wreck
Curator & Host: RIGOBERTO GONZÁLEZ
$10 admission includes a broadside with the work of one of the readers!
The Center for Book Arts, 28 West 27th Street, 3rd Floor, NY, NY; 212-481-0295
info@centerforbookarts.org
Friday, October 10, 2008
'DAILY NEWS' TIPS: THEATER TKTS
The new and improved TKTS booth opens next Thursday at 3 p.m. - and not a minute too soon. ... The booth is back at 47th St. and Broadway ... For the first time in 35 years, credit cards will be accepted, along with cash and travelers checks for tickets for same-day performances, usually at 50% or 25% off the full price. RELATED: FALL BROADWAY PREVIEW ... There are other ways to score day-of-performance discounts:
BE IN IT TO WIN IT Feeling lucky? "Hairspray," "In the Heights" and "Wicked" have an in-person ticket lottery. You sign up 2 to 2 1/2 hours before showtime and names are drawn 1 1/2 to 2 hours before curtain. Winners can buy two tickets, generally front-row, which go for $25-$26.50.
BE THE FIRST Many productions ... offer a limited number of rush tickets that are available on a first-come, first-serve basis. (Two per person, generally $20 each, cash only). Some rush programs are only for students and require a valid student ID.
STAND AND BE DELIVERED Other productions offer standing room, with tickets starting from $20-$27. You can watch from the back, but only when the show is sold out. To find out if a show offers rush or standing-room tickets, call the box office or go to "On the Boards" at www.talkinbroadway.com.
JOIN NOW, SEE LATER Many shows offer reduced-rate tickets (up to 70% off) to members of the Theatre Development Fund (www.tdf.org ), the group that runs the TKTS Booth. The annual fee is $27.50. You can join the service if you're a full-time student or teacher, a union member, 62 or over, a civil servant, a performing-arts pro, work for a nonprofit or a member of the armed forces or clergy.
TAKE YOUR CHANCE ONLINE Theaters continue to get creative in ways to drum up business and reach out to people who might not be able to afford pricey tickets. At Playwrights Horizons, the LIVEforFIVE program makes $5 tickets available for the first preview performance of each show through an online lottery. The lottery for Craig Lucas' "Prayer for My Enemy" with Victoria Clark will begin the week of Nov. 5. Go to www.playwrightshorizons.org for details.
BE IN IT TO WIN IT Feeling lucky? "Hairspray," "In the Heights" and "Wicked" have an in-person ticket lottery. You sign up 2 to 2 1/2 hours before showtime and names are drawn 1 1/2 to 2 hours before curtain. Winners can buy two tickets, generally front-row, which go for $25-$26.50.
BE THE FIRST Many productions ... offer a limited number of rush tickets that are available on a first-come, first-serve basis. (Two per person, generally $20 each, cash only). Some rush programs are only for students and require a valid student ID.
STAND AND BE DELIVERED Other productions offer standing room, with tickets starting from $20-$27. You can watch from the back, but only when the show is sold out. To find out if a show offers rush or standing-room tickets, call the box office or go to "On the Boards" at www.talkinbroadway.com.
JOIN NOW, SEE LATER Many shows offer reduced-rate tickets (up to 70% off) to members of the Theatre Development Fund (www.tdf.org ), the group that runs the TKTS Booth. The annual fee is $27.50. You can join the service if you're a full-time student or teacher, a union member, 62 or over, a civil servant, a performing-arts pro, work for a nonprofit or a member of the armed forces or clergy.
TAKE YOUR CHANCE ONLINE Theaters continue to get creative in ways to drum up business and reach out to people who might not be able to afford pricey tickets. At Playwrights Horizons, the LIVEforFIVE program makes $5 tickets available for the first preview performance of each show through an online lottery. The lottery for Craig Lucas' "Prayer for My Enemy" with Victoria Clark will begin the week of Nov. 5. Go to www.playwrightshorizons.org for details.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
A DAY OF CHINESE ART, October 15
'The White Haired Girl: Chinese Revolutionary Ballet on Film'
presentation & discussion by director of Shanghai Ballet
Patio Room, Dining Hall
12-1:30 pm
President's Reception
[RSVP
by Oct. 10: 718-997-5621]
Dance by Yin Mei, QC dance program
Klapper Hall Museum, 6-6:30
Contemporary Chinese Landscape
Opening with original student music composition
6:30-8 pm
All Programs on the QC/CUNY campus.
presentation & discussion by director of Shanghai Ballet
Patio Room, Dining Hall
12-1:30 pm
President's Reception
[RSVP
by Oct. 10: 718-997-5621]
Dance by Yin Mei, QC dance program
Klapper Hall Museum, 6-6:30
Contemporary Chinese Landscape
Opening with original student music composition
6:30-8 pm
All Programs on the QC/CUNY campus.
mfa open house/ozone park launch
Feeling crafty? Maybe a little dramatic?
Searching for the right word? Trying to revise a short short?
Please come and meet faculty and students at an Open House for our MFA Program in Creative Writing and Literary Translation. This is also the launch of our online journal, OZONE PARK.
Monday, Nov. 10, 6-8 pm
Art Museum, fourth fl, Klapper Hall
Queens College/CUNY campus
for directions: http://www.qc.cuny.edu/about/directions.php
*If you cannot make this Open House, but are still interested in applying to our MFA Program by Feb. 15, 2009, please contact the director, Nicole Cooley, Nicole.Cooley@qc.cuny.edu*
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
GO TO BED!
Book Launch for Suheir Hammad’s “breaking poems”
Imagine this: Using “break” as a trigger for every poem, Hammad destructs, constructs, and reconstructs the English language for us to hear the sound of a breath, a woman's body, a land, a culture, falling apart, broken, and put back together again.
Thursday, October 30, 6-8pm
Bowery Poetry Club, 310 Bowery, New York City
Guests readers include: Paul Beatty, Patricia Smith, Roger Bonair-Agard, Patrick Rosal, Aracelis Girmay!
$20 (with a copy of breaking poems)
$10 w/out
SEASON OF ANTHOLOGIES
MAMA PhD: a book tour
Women write about motherhood and academic life.
Caroline Grant and Elrenea Evans read w contributors... Jennifer Cognard-Black, Nicole Cooley, Susn O-Dogerty
Monday, Oct. 20, 7 pm
Bluestocking Bookstore
172 Allen St.
and
Tuesday, Oct. 21, 7:15 pm
KGB bar, 85 E. 4th St.
LANGUAGE FOR A NEW CENTURY
Thursday, October 30, 7pm
A celebration of the ground-breaking Norton anthology, Language For A New Century: Contemporary from the Middle East, Asia and Beyond including a panel discussion with Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge, Tina Chang, Kimiko Hahn, Nathalie Handel, Khaled Mattawa, and Ravi Shankar and readings by Monica Ferrell, Eric Gamalinda, Cathy Park Hong, and Barbara Tran.
Poets House and Asian American Writers Workshop
@ The Tribeca Performing Arts Center, TRIBECA Performing Arts Center, Borough of Manhattan Community College, 199 Chambers Street, $10/Free to students and Asian American Writers' Workshop and Poets House Members
ATTN Scrabble-lovers! A Party!
Tuesday, October 28, 7pm A Party!
Scrabble is for lovers...of The Asian American Writers' Workshop
Do you refer to the day Scrabulous was taken off Facebook as 'The Day the Wordplay Died'? Thinking of tattooing that last triple word score on your arm? Come to our inaugural Scrabble party and get your group wordplay on again! Play hard, drink some Singha Beer, and make new friends/worthy opponents.
@ The Workshop 16 West 32nd Street, 10th Floor (btwn Broadway & 5th Avenue)
$5 suggested donation; open to the public
Friday, September 5, 2008
Kimiko and Nicole read—
Roger Sedarat in September ...
Thursday, September 4, 2008
ARACELIS GIRMAY & ADA LIMÓN
CENTER FOR THE BOOK ARTS PRESENTS
Friday, October 17, 6:30 pm:
ARACELIS GIRMAY, Teeth
ADA LIMÓN, This Big Fake World & Lucky Wreck
Curator & Host: RIGOBERTO GONZÁLEZ
$10 admission includes a broadside with the work of one of the readers!
The Center for Book Arts, 28 West 27th Street, 3rd Floor, NY, NY; 212-481-0295
info@centerforbookarts.org
Saturday, August 30, 2008
Happen to be in Decatur--
Thursday, August 28, 2008
OZONE PARK:
For MFA-applicants!
The Asian American Writers' Workshop with CLMP (council of literary magazines & presses) and Poets & Writers
present a chat about two New York MFA Programs with Robert Polito (New School) & Kimiko Hahn (Queens College, CUNY)
Thursday, Sept, 11 @ 7 PM
16 West 32nd Street, Suite 10A
NYC 10001
212.494.0061
www.aaww.org
20,000 Poets!
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
SEPTEMBER AT A GLANCE--
Monday, August 4, 2008
Hey Prof, What's YOUR summer reading?
NICOLE COOLEY
This summer I have been reading poetry outside of the U.S. tradition, starting with the wonderful new collection New European Poets, edited by Wayne Miller and Kevin Prufer. This wide-ranging anthology has introduced me to many young poets I’ve never read. … I’ve been trying to read work that crosses genres and breaks rules, like the strange and beautiful book of poems, Mommy Must Be a Mountain of Feathers by Korean writer Kim Hyeson (translated by Don Mee Choi), published by Action Books. And I just finished the new book by my favorite poet CD Wright, Rising, Falling, Hovering. I’ve also been rereading the fantastic stories of Grace Paley which in so many ways question the divisions between poetry and fiction – still so ground-breaking-- and the most recent Don Delillo novel about 9/11, Falling Man. … Finally, I’ve read two books of new non-fiction—poet Sarah Manguso’s memoir about her illness, Two Kinds of Decay and fiction writer Kathryn Harrison’s While They Slept: An Inquiry into the Murder of a Family, a true crime book which is interestingly interwoven with Harrison’s own narrative. … I'm finishing a new collection of poems, Milk Dress, and writing a cross-genre piece, The Flood Notebooks, about the recent midwest floods. And I've been busy co-editing an issue (with sociologist Pamela Stone) of the journal Women's Studies Quarterly titled "Mother." And finally I enjoyed reading at Bluestockings Bookstore and in DC at the Miller Cabin in Rock Creek Park.
KIMIKO HAHN
A great many new books of poetry such as collecteds by Mark Doty and Cornelius Eady; Li-Young Lee and Marie Howe’s latest. Gerald Stern’s remarkable newest collection. I have to admit, in all seriousness, that my favorite find is: Ryan Mecum’s ZOMBIE HAIKU. It is actually fun and brilliant. Other poetry includes those poets participating in my CUNY/New York Times webcast course on poetry and humor: CUNY profs Billy Collins, Wayne Koestembaum, Donna Masini, Gregory Pardlo, and our own Roger Sedarat. … I am still revising my manuscript, Toxic Flora—a process that’s taken five years and counting. Nicole read it a few months ago; Eamon Grennan is sending notes. I have also started a new manuscript that collects some of the more formal (as in forms) work that I’ve been conjuring up. And of course, in between our administrative chats, Nicole and I exchange early drafts. Thankfully. What else? Because I read the newspaper every morning, I need a detective novel to go with the margaritas by evening.
RICHARD SCHOTTER
I’ve read a lively, interesting first novel, Kiffe Kiffe Demain, by a very young French/ Moroccan writer named Faiza Guene. It’s a first-person account of a perceptive fifteen-year old girl living in the projects in the Arab suburbs of Paris. She has a fresh, immediate voice and the book has been a great popular hit in France but has gone virtually unrecognized by the French literary establishment, which tells you a lot about the French literary establishment. The book got me interested in “Rai” music—a wildly popular musical genre in France which blends Arabic and French lyrics with funk bass lines, pop arrangements, social protest and a great beat. I’m also rereading an extraordinarily, dark, heartbreakingly beautiful novel called Stoner by John Williams. An academic novel that moves through the first half of the twentieth century, it is a marvel of austere, cold-eyed storytelling that has the feeling of a threnody and the sad music of a life wasted—almost. I’ve also been rereading Brecht since I’m thinking a teaching a course in political theatre. The tougher, thick-skinned very Marxist stuff is interesting to read in a post-Soviet context. And even harder to swallow.
ROGER SEDARAT
Here’s my list: my new colleague Aracelis Girmay's Teeth, Don Delillo's Falling Man: A Novel. …The MFA summer reading, The Kenyon Review, which features an excellent poem from Nicole Cooley. … After attending a stellar presentation at a translation conference this summer on Michael Palmer's translations, I'm back to his Baudelaire Series as well as to Emmanuel Hocquard's Theory of Tables. And Palmer's The Lion Bridge: Selected Poems 1972-1995 and The Company of Moths along with Louis Zukofsky's Selected Poems. … A few other recent favorites this summer: I'm (re)reading Ameen Rihani's The Book of Khalid (out of print, but available online), the first immigrant novel from a Middle-Eastern American writer. Though very derivative of Whitman and Emerson, it's interesting in part for that reason. It also makes a good pairing for contemporary immigrant novels. New European Poets, ed. Wayne Miller and Kevin Prufer. Lyn Hejinian's The Language of Inquiry. Poetry of Iraj Mirza (in Persian and the few poems available in English), the first Iranian poet to use colloquial language, very witty and transgressive. Problematic to translate even a century later under the current Iranian government for his take on the veil and sexuality. Joyce Zonana's Dream Homes: From Cairo to Katrina, an Exile’s Journey (just out from Feminist Press) The author of this memoir has just agreed to visit the Middle Eastern-American graduate seminar later in the fall.
JOHN WEIR
I've been reading Willa Cather, Henry James, Nikolai Leskov, Jhumpa Lahiri, Edgar Allan Poe, and a Spanish novel (in the English translation) by Camilo José Cela, *Christ Versus Arizona*, which is written in one 200-page-long sentence! At the end of August, I'm giving a reading from my most recent novel, *What I Did Wrong*, at Atlanta's Decatur Book Festival (29-31 August, Billy Collins Keynote Speaker). I published a piece about Jack Kerouac's *On the Road* in the Summer *Gulf Coast*, and I had a short story ("Utopia Parkway") accepted to an upcoming anthology of fiction by gay men, *Between Men 2*. As for writing, I'm extensively revising a bunch of short stories, which I hope will fit together in some kind of short-story-ish-but-novel-like hybrid.
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Independent's Day--early!
Writers Published by Groundbreaking Independent Presses
Presented by
The New York Center for Independent Publishing
The General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen
20 W 44th Street
New York, NY 10036
Wednesday, June 18, 6:30 PM
HANGING LOOSE PRESS, supporting poetry since 1966, has evolved from a magazine of loose sheets into one of the country's most significant publishing houses. The press publishes fiction as well as poetry, and is dedicated to finding new writers and distinctive voices. Poets and writers, TONY TOWLE (Winter Journey), SHARON MESMER (The Virgin Formica), STEVEN SCHRADER (What We Deserved), and DONNA BROOK (A More Human Face) will read from their work and join editor/poet ROBERT HERSHON (Calls from the Outside World) to discuss the past, present and future of the press.
Friday, June 6, 2008
EARSHOT!
*Friday, June 13
8 PM*
Hosted by Nicole Steinberg
Featuring:
Tony O'Neill (Digging the Vein)
Erik Rhey (fiction & nonfiction)
... and from the MFA scene ...
Todd Sullivan (Queens College)
Steven Cherry (The New School)
Fox Henry Frasier (Columbia U.)
$5 admission
includes one free drink
(beer, wine or well drinks only)!
The Lucky Cat is located at 245 Grand Street in Brooklyn, between Driggs and Roebling.
Visit their website for directions: http://www.theluckycat.com.
Thursday, June 5, 2008
OUTDOOR READING!
Bryant Park Reading Room
Tuesday June 10 6:30-8:00 PM
Mark Doty
Timothy Donnelly and Idra Novey
The new Triptych Readings is honored to be hosting one of the Word for Word poetry events. Mark Doty will read from his much-anticipated new and selected poems, Fire to Fire; with him, Timothy Donnelly, author of Twenty-Seven Props for a Production of Eine Lebenszeit, and the Poetry Editor of the Boston Review; and Idra Novey, award-winning translator of poetry and author of The Next Country, forthcoming from Alice James Books.
Bryant Park's Reading Room is in Bryant Park near the 42nd Street side, between 5th and 6th Avenues, just behind the NY Public Library's Research Branch. Look for the umbrellas and the podium. ... Because this is an outdoor reading, please make a note of the rain location: General Society of Mechanics & Tradesmen, 20 W. 44th St.
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Jackson Heights Poetry Festival
POETS YOU KNOW AND POETS YOU SHOULD KNOW . . .
May 15-17, 2008
Events:
May 15 - Poetry Workshops and Panel Discussion Garden School Faculty includes Patrick Rosal* *(University of Texas-Austin), Michael Dumanis (Cleveland State University), Ishle Yi Park* *(First Female Poet Laureate of Queens), Bill Zavatsky (Trinity School), Richard Marotta (Queens College) , and Lee Schlesinger (SUNY Purchase) Workshops are FREE, pre-registration required online at www.jhpfest.org
May 16 - Poetry Slam and Open Mic Restaurant and Lounge NOVO Contact JHPFest@gmail.com if you are interested in participating in the slam, walk-in participants also welcome.
May 17 - Outdoor Festival Garden School
Featuring readings by well-known published poets and the winners of the student poetry contest, as well as cultural performances and carnival games.
www.jhpfest.org
May 15-17, 2008
Events:
May 15 - Poetry Workshops and Panel Discussion Garden School Faculty includes Patrick Rosal* *(University of Texas-Austin), Michael Dumanis (Cleveland State University), Ishle Yi Park* *(First Female Poet Laureate of Queens), Bill Zavatsky (Trinity School), Richard Marotta (Queens College) , and Lee Schlesinger (SUNY Purchase) Workshops are FREE, pre-registration required online at www.jhpfest.org
May 16 - Poetry Slam and Open Mic Restaurant and Lounge NOVO Contact JHPFest@gmail.com if you are interested in participating in the slam, walk-in participants also welcome.
May 17 - Outdoor Festival Garden School
Featuring readings by well-known published poets and the winners of the student poetry contest, as well as cultural performances and carnival games.
www.jhpfest.org
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
MAY 14: FINAL TRENDS IN TRANSLATION EVENT!
All are invited to this special presentation of translation projects presented by English 757 Literary Translation students. Come listen to prose and poetry translations from the Hebrew, Italian and Spanish, plus translations into Spanish and French.
Reception to follow presentation.
Klapper Hall 708, 4:30-6:30 pm
WEDNESDAY
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
WHO CAN RESIST--RICE!
EARSHOT at The Lucky Cat, located in Williamsburg, Brooklyn!
a reading series dedicated to featuring new and emerging literary talent in the NYC area.
*Friday, May 9, 2008 at 8 PM*
Hosted by Nicole Steinberg
Featuring:
Carly Sachs (author of The Steam Sequence)
Michael Dowdy (author of The Coriolis Effect)
Kerry Carnahan (Hunter College)
John Rice (Queens College)
Rohin Guha (Sarah Lawrence College)
Admission is a mere $5 plus one free drink (beer, wine or well drinks only)!
The Lucky Cat is located at 245 Grand Street in Brooklyn, between Driggs and Roebling. Visit their website for directions: http://www.theluckycat.com.
Also visit http://www.earshotnyc.com for more information on Earshot or e-mail Nicole Steinberg at earshotnyc@gmail.com.
Monday, April 28, 2008
CONGRATS, PROFESSOR HAHN
Two reasons to celebrate:
Professor Kimiko Hahn has been awarded this year's PEN/Voelcker Award for Poetry!
The PEN/Voelcker Award for Poetry, established by a bequest from Hunce Voelcker, will be presented for the eighth time in 2008. The award is given to a poet whose distinguished and growing body of work to date represents a notable and accomplished presence in American literature. The poet honored by the award is one for whom the exceptional promise seen in earlier work has been fulfilled, and who continues to mature with each successive volume of poetry. The award is given in even-numbered years and carries a stipend of $5,000.
Also, check this out: Tribeba Film Festival premiere's Everywhere at Once, a film by Peter Lindbergh and Holly Fisher
With Jeanne Moreau
Text by Kimiko Hahn
Music by Lois V Vierk
Public Screenings:
Sunday, April 27, 9:00 pm, AMC 19th St. East, II
Wednesday, April 30, 10:45 pm, AMC Village VII
Thursday, May 1, 1:15 pm, Village East Cinema 3
Sunday, May 4, 7:15 pm, Village East Cinema 6
35 mm – B & W and Color – 73 minutes
From the start this project was realized intuitively, made on a handshake between internationally-acclaimed photographer Peter Lindbergh and experimental filmmaker Holly Fisher. Poet Kimiko Hahn was recruited to provide the text, based on Lindbergh’s celebrity photographs. The team soon set to work, commencing production with the loose dream-narrative drafted by Hahn and the prospect of music by composer Lois V Vierk. When Lindbergh proposed that Jeanne Moreau might agree to read the text, a light went off in Fisher’s head: having worked with archival material in the past, she saw the possibility of using sound and picture ‘shards’ from ‘Mademoiselle.’ Every visual element was treated as an archeological find in the portrayal of an unseen protagonist, mysterious and ageless. The resulting film, intimate journal-like entries recited by Moreau, is personal yet universal and at times quite dark. Above all, it is a celebration of images.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Ozone Park: The Debut!
Attention, writers!
OZONE PARK, the new and exciting literary journal of the Queens College MFA program is live! Check it out!
Friday, April 4, 2008
Tayari Jones: Weekend Extra
A few months ago, I wrote an essay that looked at the African American sections in bookstores like Borders. When I wrote it, just weeks before the publication of my second novel, The Untelling, I believed that these segregated sections were likely the only way that African American authors would reach the readers that are willing (and even eager!) to purchase our books.
I cited such anecdotal evidence as the listing on Amazon, which suggested that people who purchased my books also purchased other books, not just by black authors, but by black female authors. It seemed that even online, where there are no “sections,” people who looked at my books did so because they like books by black authors. No color blindness there. Then I looked up a couple of books by my white authors, and on their Amazon pages I saw that their readers had also bought books by other white authors. It seemed to me that this was an open and shut case.
I cited such anecdotal evidence as the listing on Amazon, which suggested that people who purchased my books also purchased other books, not just by black authors, but by black female authors. It seemed that even online, where there are no “sections,” people who looked at my books did so because they like books by black authors. No color blindness there. Then I looked up a couple of books by my white authors, and on their Amazon pages I saw that their readers had also bought books by other white authors. It seemed to me that this was an open and shut case.
Tayari Jones: Day Five
A few months ago, before the media coverage of Clinton/Obama contest pressured black women to decide if we are "women" before we are "black," I sat beside a black man on an airplane. Since such close quarters lend themselves to small talk, he asked me what I do for a living.
“I’m a writer,” I said.
“Oh,” he said. “What do you write? Romances?”
“Nope.”
He gave me a sideways glance. “So you have a problem with men?”
Though I was completely aware of the inanity of his question—of both his questions—I found myself working hard to allay his fears. “Oh no,” I said. “I have no problem with brothers!” Once I had disembarked from the plane, claimed my bags, and settled myself in a taxi cab, I recalled my own voice, treakly sweet with an edge of desperation.
What the hell was that all about?
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Tayari Jones: Day Four
Publicity is a weird thing for writers. I’ve just come back from the second book tour of my career. The first time, in 2002, I went out on the road to promote Leaving Atlanta, a coming of age story set against the backdrop of the Atlanta Child Murders. My publisher, Warner Books, decided to package me as a “southern” writer. For the last couple of months, I’ve been on the road with The Untelling, another novel set in Atlanta. But this go round, I’m doing it as a “black” writer. I know that we are a nation that strives for color-blindness, so it seems sort of inherently offensive to label a writer as “black”. But this is what happened to me, and I have to tell you that, for the most part, it wasn’t so bad. Especially when you compare it to my book tour as a “southern” writer.
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Writing Fantasy, Writing New York
Delia Sherman
Thursday, April 10
5:30-7:00
Delia Sherman's most recent short stories have appeared in the Viking young adult anthologies The Green Man, Fairy Reel, and Coyote Road. Her adult novels are Through a Brazen Mirror and The Porcelain Dove (which won the Mythopoeic Award), and, with fellow-fantasist and partner Ellen Kushner, The Fall of the Kings. She has co-edited anthologies with Ellen Kushner and Terri Windling. Interfictions: An Anthology of Interstitial Writing, edited with Theodora Goss, came out in 2007. Her first novel for younger readers, Changeling, was published in 2006. She is a past member of the James Tiptree Jr. Awards Council, an active member of the Endicott Studio of Mythic Arts, and a founding member of the Interstitial Arts Foundation board. Delia has taught writing at Clarion, the Odyssey Workshop in New Hampshire, the Cape Cod Writers' Workshop, and the American Book Center in Amsterdam. She lives in New York city, and writes wherever she happens to find herself
Thursday, April 10
5:30-7:00
Delia Sherman's most recent short stories have appeared in the Viking young adult anthologies The Green Man, Fairy Reel, and Coyote Road. Her adult novels are Through a Brazen Mirror and The Porcelain Dove (which won the Mythopoeic Award), and, with fellow-fantasist and partner Ellen Kushner, The Fall of the Kings. She has co-edited anthologies with Ellen Kushner and Terri Windling. Interfictions: An Anthology of Interstitial Writing, edited with Theodora Goss, came out in 2007. Her first novel for younger readers, Changeling, was published in 2006. She is a past member of the James Tiptree Jr. Awards Council, an active member of the Endicott Studio of Mythic Arts, and a founding member of the Interstitial Arts Foundation board. Delia has taught writing at Clarion, the Odyssey Workshop in New Hampshire, the Cape Cod Writers' Workshop, and the American Book Center in Amsterdam. She lives in New York city, and writes wherever she happens to find herself
Anthologies, an editor’s pov
Harold Schechter
Wednesday, April 9th
6:30-8:00
Klapper Hall, 7th floor
Harold Schechter, QC professor and author of over thirty books, is also the co-editor of the exquisite everyman/knopf volume, Conversation Pieces: poems that talk to other poems. He will visit a course that is based on this text, speak about the anthology’s inception, as well as answer questions/offer advice about editing anthologies. Aside from editing this volume and various textbooks, he has just completed a ground-breaking anthology of true crime for the library of America (forthcoming, fall 2008).
Wednesday, April 9th
6:30-8:00
Klapper Hall, 7th floor
Harold Schechter, QC professor and author of over thirty books, is also the co-editor of the exquisite everyman/knopf volume, Conversation Pieces: poems that talk to other poems. He will visit a course that is based on this text, speak about the anthology’s inception, as well as answer questions/offer advice about editing anthologies. Aside from editing this volume and various textbooks, he has just completed a ground-breaking anthology of true crime for the library of America (forthcoming, fall 2008).
Tayari Jones: Day Three
The glory of the first novel—for most people—is that it is a piece written without the input of publishers, agents, or any other market-driven forces. During the three years I spent working on Leaving Atlanta, I had an idea to write a triple-voiced coming of age narrative based on my experiences growing up in Atlanta during the child murders. The middle section of the novel is written entirely in the second person using a sort of elevated diction. Not exactly the expected fare in a story with an eleven year old protagonist. But the beauty of the first novel is that I didn’t know that publishers were often afraid to commit to something new and untested. I had no idea that my first agent would kick me to the curb for refusing the try and sell the novel as a YA project. Who knew that twenty-two publishers would be weirded out by the middle section- the one with the big words freaky POV? Not me.
Trauma and Memoir: A Multi-Genre Response
Friday, April 11, 2008, 6:30 –8:30 p.m.
MIDDLE EAST & MIDDLE EASTERN AMERICAN CENTER
The Graduate Center, City University of New York
Room 9204/5, 365 Fifth Avenue (at 34th Street)
How is trauma remembered? How is it passed on to future generations? What role can memoir writers play in bearing witness to trauma? This panel explores the ways three women authors have recorded stories of the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust.
ALEX HINTON (moderator) is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights at Rutgers University, Newark. His publications include Why Did They Kill?: Cambodia in the Shadow of Genocide, Annihilating Difference: The Anthropology of Genocide and Genocide: An Anthropological Reader.
ANTONIA ARLAN (panelist)is professor of Modern and Contemporary Italian Literature at Padua University, Italy. La masseria delle allodole is her first novel, chronicling her ancestors’ fate Anatolia after 1915. The famous cinematographers Paolo and Vittorio Taviani have turned it into a movie by the same name.
MARGARET AHNERT (panelist) grew up in New York City and received her MFA from Goucher College. She has produced television documentaries and lectured as a docent at the Metropolitan Museum and Philadelphia Museum of Art. She is the author of The Knock on the Door: A Journey through the Darkness of the Armenian Genocide, which recounts her mother’s experiences of the forced deportations and Armenian Genocide.
CATHERINE FILLOUX (panelist), an award-winning playwright, has been writing about genocide, human rights, and social justice for the past twenty years; honors include PeaceWriting Award (Omni Center for Peace), Roger L. Stevens Award (Kennedy Center), Eric Kocher Playwrights Award (O'Neill) and Callaway Award (New Dramatists). Her plays have been published produced internationally. She has also written the libretti for two produced operas. She is a co-founder of Theatre Without Borders.
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Tayari Jones: Day Two
The invitations start around Thanksgiving: Greetings, Ms. Jones! I am events coordinator for the Mayberry Public Library and we are delighted to invite you to be our Black History Month speaker! About ten years ago, when I was struggling to make a name for myself as a writer, I greeted these requests with an uncomplicated delight: my handful of short stories and essays had reached an audience and had earned me a place not just as a spokesperson on black history but as example of black excellence. These invitations usually came without honoraria and I often shared the docket with three or four other “emerging” writers. Some of my peers who are not black writers grumbled a bit about the idea that I could score invitations “just” for being black. And I must admit that at that stage of my life, I did think of this as lagniappe, just a tiny leg up. Since then, I have published two novels and have begun to chafe a bit at these invitations. Like many black writers, my schedule is frequently packed during February, but comparatively lean during the rest of the year. If February is Black History Month, is the rest of the calendar reserved for white people?
Monday, March 31, 2008
Tayari Jones: Day One
Tayari Jones was born and raised in Atlanta. Her first novel, Leaving Atlanta, about the infamous Atlanta child murders of 1979-81, received the Hurston/Wright Award for Debut Fiction. Her second novel, The Untelling, was awarded the Lillian C. Smith Award for New Voices from the Southern Regional Council and the University of Georgia Libraries. She has also received fellowships from the Illinois Arts Council, Bread Loaf Writers Conference, the Corporation of Yaddo, the MacDowell Colony, the Arizona Commission for the Arts and le Chateau de Lavigny in Switzerland. An assistant professor of English at the MFA program at Rutgers University in Newark, she is currently completing her third novel, closing a projected trilogy set in her home state of Georgia.
She will be visiting the Queens College campus on Monday, April 14 @ 6 PM.
Each day this week the Bulletin Blog will feature glimpses into Jones’ insights on the writing process, the writing profession and the writer’s identity. Follow the links to read the full articles or essays.
My MFA advisor, Ron Carlson, once told me that writers are either gushers or ekers. Ekers are the romantic sorts that stare at the page for an hour and a half and then carefully write down four perfect words. Gushers are people like me-- or at least people like I used to be-- who write four or five pages in a sort of frenzy. And then they look it over and decide that there is only a half-page of useable writing. That's how I used to be. When I write, I was like me-- on crack. But now, my patterns have changed.
She will be visiting the Queens College campus on Monday, April 14 @ 6 PM.
Each day this week the Bulletin Blog will feature glimpses into Jones’ insights on the writing process, the writing profession and the writer’s identity. Follow the links to read the full articles or essays.
My MFA advisor, Ron Carlson, once told me that writers are either gushers or ekers. Ekers are the romantic sorts that stare at the page for an hour and a half and then carefully write down four perfect words. Gushers are people like me-- or at least people like I used to be-- who write four or five pages in a sort of frenzy. And then they look it over and decide that there is only a half-page of useable writing. That's how I used to be. When I write, I was like me-- on crack. But now, my patterns have changed.
Saturday, March 29, 2008
PUBLIC LIVES/PRIVATE LIVES
PEN American Center
PUBLIC LIVES/PRIVATE LIVES
April 29-May 4, New York City
Fourth annual PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature.
This year’s theme of Public Lives/Private Lives couldn't be more timely. How do we draw a line between our private and public selves? When must we tell private stories for the public good? How, as readers, writers, and citizens, do we confront threats to our privacy? What is still considered private in the Internet age? Do we need to redefine the meaning of public and private in the 21st century? The writers in this year’s Festival will mine this rich theme in a variety of literary conversations, panels, readings, and performances.
www.pen.org
“Everywhere at Once”
Tribeca Film Festival
April 23-May 4, New York City
check out . . .
“Everywhere at Once” U.S. premiere: Renowned photographer Peter Lindbergh and experimental filmmaker Holly Fisher, with actress Jeanne Moreau, weave a tapestry of images shaping one woman's deepest sense of selfhood. Text by Kimiko Hahn.
April 27 & 30; May 1 & 4. See listing for time and theater.
www.tribecafilmfestival.org
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