Posts Tagged ‘Angela Veronica Wong’

Snapshot: Amy Lawless

Tuesday, May 21st, 2013

I first met  Amy Lawless in 2005. She had recently moved to New York City from Boston and I from Portland. We were both entering the MFA program at The New School. It was exciting and terrifying in all the best ways. Post-graduation we eventually found ourselves living in the same Brooklyn neighborhood. There were brunches, late nights, and a seemingly endless amount of readings all over the city. Amy now lives in the East Village and I in Miami. Time passes; things change. Earlier this year, Amy’s second collection of poetry, My Dead was published by Octopus Books. I decided it was time to catch-up with Amy via email to chat with her about the transition between first and second books, working with Paul Violi, where her poems originate, and a host of other things. Enjoy.

“See The World For What It Is”*

 SK: Hi Amy, sometimes it seems like it was only yesterday that we were sitting in Paul Violi’s workshop. Other times, it feels like that was a lifetime ago, you know what I mean? So much has happened since then, like the unfortunate passing away of Paul, as well as the publication of not one, but two poetry collections by you. Thanks for agreeing to take the time out to answer some of my questions.

AL:  Thanks Steven!  I am delighted that you asked me. Yes, I think you were one of the first people I met in NYC.  You may not know this, but Paul’s wonderful workshop was the first poetry class I’d ever taken in my entire life.  I had moved to New York one week beforehand from Boston. I was very scared.  I didn’t know how to act in a workshop.  You, however, didn’t seem scared.**  You seemed chill.  Yes, so much has happened since then….

SK: You recently had your second book, My Dead published by Octopus Books. What was the biggest difference between writing and publishing Noctis Licentia and My Dead?

AL: They were two somewhat different experiences.  I wrote about half of the poems in Noctis Licentia while in graduate school. The poems took shape during those two years and the year that followed.  I had that built-in community of readers (like you!) in classes and informal friendships.  I cared A LOT about what people would think.  I thought I was a funny poet. That I had to write funny poems. But life was funnier then.

Writing My Dead occurred from 2009/2010 – 2012.  I certainly showed my poems to a lot of friends, curious what they would think and say and react, really curious, but this time the fire came from within and not without, that is without a formal structure of being in a school setting.  I had to write these poems, this was not school, this was survival.

SK: Since your book is titled, My Dead let’s talk about death for a bit. The first section of your book “Elephants in Mourning” was written after the passing of some of your relatives. Can you talk a little bit about the creative process of dealing with the grief and sadness that comes with losing family, that is an extension of your blood?

AL: Sure. Between 2007 and 2009, my uncle Ed died of emphysema at an age too young, my grandmother Evelyn (my mother’s mother) passed away, and my step-grandfather Marty died (Evelyn’s husband).

I eulogized each of three family members in the churches attended by family members. I was the “writer” in the family.  I felt I did a good job, I wanted my family members to be honored with my words. I worked really hard on these eulogies despite the short period of time one has to do these things (like 48 hours).

Of those three family members, only my grandmother Evelyn was related to me by “blood.”  However, Marty was my grandfather – he married my grandmother, my Nana, before I was born.  I always thought he was so damned cool for insisting we (my sisters and cousins and I) call him Marty. Felt adult. He was really smart, kind, and had great stories about World War II, monkeys, the radio, Mohammed Ali, the U.S. Government, where he worked for a long time.  I respected him, and loved visiting him and my grandmother in both their house in Jamaica Plain (Boston), and their house in Cape Cod.  My very image of the beach has been formed and informed by these summer trips.

After Marty died, after the third of these three deaths, the third of these three eulogies, I cried a lot. I couldn’t sleep. I went to my doctor and said I wasn’t sleeping.  She asked what was going on. I told her the third of three deaths.  She put me on a low dose anti-depressant.

I didn’t write a poem for a whole year. Or more specifically, I wrote two poems.  I was totally blissed out, checked out.  I read, attended poetry readings, I covered my sorrow with a pill every day.

After a year, I went off of the drug.  I was happy to do so.  I wanted to know what feelings felt like again.

A few weeks after I went off the drug in the summer of 2010, I was just sitting home watching nature documentaries and Youtube videos. I watched elephants mourning other elephants and I came to feel an overwhelming feeling of empathy and sorrow.  I wrote the whole poem in that one day.  (However, I edited it for a full year.)

I’m glad to have my feelings back.

SK: Paul Violi was a special poet who cared about his students and the poems they wrote. What was it like having Violi as a mentor and what has he meant for you as a poet?

AL: Paul was the most generous of mentors.  He was kind, wry, hilarious, and we got along famously.  A kindred spirit. We would meet every other week at the New School in the courtyard where people would smoke cigarettes.  I don’t smoke cigarettes, but we’d usually just shoot the shit and catch up for a while.  He would tell the most amazing stories.  I’ve written on Paul and his impact on me before. Then we’d wander over to Murray’s Bagels on 6th Avenue.  Drink espresso, talk about poems, laugh our asses off.  Well that’s how I remember it.  After Paul died I went through some old emails.  You know, almost afraid to let the tips of my fingers find them.  And guess what? He was far more critical than I remembered. He wanted me to be reading more poetry, and he was totally right! He didn’t think I should use any pop culture references in my poems, and wasn’t afraid to raise his eyebrows at a poem that had no business existing.  He was able to say so much without saying anything.

So basically, it was the best mentor experience possible: inspiring and generous.  I still sometimes have conversations with him about poems in my head.

SK: Those of who have been lucky enough to know you are quick to realize that your poems really do feel like Lawless children ushered into the world: they are witty, quirky, funny, smart as hell, mischievous, do not shy away from uncomfortable “truths”, and are aware the world is a messy and often awful place, yet remain cautiously optimistic. So tell us, where does a poem begin for you?  Do you set out to write “funny poems”, or do the poems take on a life of their own?

AL: This is a really wonderful question, Steven, and I’m humbled to be characterized as in any kind of close proximity to my poems. I never set out to do anything.  My chest opens up and the alien babies come forth. I am only a shell for some monsters.

I have a little nephew named Freddie.  He’s 17 months old and he does this amazing thing where he points to things that are out of place: a flower without half its petals, an owl picture absent of its head, a lamp not in use, a book not being read, a star not in the sky.  I sometimes do that too, but my pointing might be sitting down and writing a poem.

SK: Since the release of your book you’ve managed to hit the road and do some readings. Where did you go? Do you have any upcoming readings?

AL: Oh holy shit I did.  I had two readings at AWP Boston.  Then I went to Portland, Maine with James Gendron, whose amazing and hilarious book Sexual Boat (Sex Boats) came out from Octopus Books the same day as My Dead, and Zachary Schomburg. Mathias Svalina also came with but he didn’t read poems.  Mathias and Zach made me laugh so hard I almost wet my pants in Maine.  They’re a real comedy duo.  Then all four of us read for the Triptych Reading Series with Brandon Shimoda and Dot Devota. Dot read the most amazing poem I think about rather often. Then James Gendron and I drove to a bunch of places in a rental car. We read at Librarie Drawn and Quarterly in Montreal, Flying Object, in Hadley, Massachusetts with Ish Klein.  Then we came back to Brooklyn and read at the Stain of Poetry Series hosted by the lovely Jenny Zhang with Nadxi Nieto and Leopoldine Core.  Then we drove to Providence and read for the Kate Shiapara’s Publicly Complex series. Then we read in Philadelphia, hosted by Daron Mueller at Molly’s Books.  Finally, we read with Matthew Zapruder and Sarah Rose Etter at Three Tents in Washington, DC. It was really fun going on tour with James. I feel like he’s the brother I never had, and he’s a damn amazing poet.  Since then I’ve had some readings in NYC that were really great.  All told, I sold some books and met some really interesting characters and I slept on some couches.

Upcoming: I am going to North Carolina to read for the So & So Reading Series hosted by Chris Tonelli on Saturday June 15 with Lauren Hunter, Christine Kanownik, and Alina Gregorian.  I’m also reading for something Book Camp somewhere in either Oregon or Washington from August 16-18, also with James Gendron.  After that? I’ll be reading a collaborative poem with Angela Veronica Wong at the Best American Poetry gala launch on September 19.

SK: What’s next or what are you currently working on?

AL: I have been writing prose poems with the same title, “The Secret Lives of Deer.”  I also have a manuscript called “EMPIRE” that’s not so much about Roman Emperors as it is about me. I should probably send it to some friends to have them read it.  I am writing some book reviews and essays.  Oh, I am also collaborating with the amazing Angela Veronica Wong.  I recently reviewed Ben Fama’s Mall Witch for BOMBLOG, which was an interesting intellectual exercise. It’s fun and sweat-inducing to write essays and reviews, so I’m doing more of that.  I want to sweat more.

I decided it would be fun to do a second Snapshot with Amy, asking her primarily silly questions, because why not?

Snapshot with Amy Lawless pt. 2

“I Refuse To Be The Joey Tribbiani Of Anything”

SK: Would you rather be in the cast of Friends, Gossip Girl, or Cheers?

AL: That’s a trick question.  You know I’m from Boston so I’d say Cheers.  However, the idea of living or constantly inhabiting a BAR is icky.  Having everyone know your name is lovely but too intimate. Therefore, I’d like to say Friends because everyone falls in love in the water fountain during the opening credits, and I want to fall in love.  Oh wait. Joey Tribbiani, voiced by Matt LeBlanc, doesn’t find love.  I refuse to be the Joey Tribbiani of anything.

SK: Amy, you caught me! It was totally a trick question. I thought for sure, you’d say Cheers- haha!

SK: Who or what were you in your past life?

AL:  I have no idea.

SK: What is your spirit animal?

AL:  Crow.  Read about it and find your spirit animal here.

SK: Would you rather be a puma or snow leopard?

AL: Snow leopards are prettier.

SK: If you were in a band would you be the lead singer/rhythm guitarist, lead guitarist, bass player, or the drummer?

AL: All the instruments.

SK: Ideal vacation? Cabin in the mountains or luxury hotel with beach-front access?

AL: Can it be a cabin on the beach instead?  I’m always at a luxury resort in my own thoughts.

SK: Would you rather be Wonder Women, Supergirl, or She-ra?

AL: She-ra?

SK: Would you rather be a famous unicorn or salty old dragon?

AL: Dragons know a lot.

SK: Romantic lead in a comedy, crazy killer in a Tarantino-type flick, or that “one” in a sci-fi feature who inspires hope by swearing earth is out there and you’re going to lead them to it?

AL: You must come with me.  The meteor is going to hit. This is your last chance. Don’t you see? Don’t you see? ….[heaving heaving breaths] Tell me. Tell me when was the last time you saw the sun with your own eyes?  [Slaps giant steel goggles off of the head of Krinld] THE EYES IN YOUR HEAD!  You’ve all been under the thought-blasts of Gzianz for too long.  We have to get out of here. USE YOUR EYES.  We have two hours to get to the ship. After that it’s over.  You can kiss your sweet leach stars good bye! 

SK: Astrological sign?

AL: Pisces, the astrological sign closely associated with death. It is the last sign.

SK: Final question, if you were a tree would you be a deciduous or a coniferous?

AL:  I don’t believe in coniferous trees.  I would have to be a deciduous tree because I believe very much in the changing of the seasons, in leaves falling.  These leaves turn red and yellow and orange and brown and express their death in ways I can’t deal with—it’s too beautiful and poignant. When leaves fall we can look at them on ground and know that the passage of time exists and is real, and oh look you have a grey hair.  Oh look your time is limited. Oh look, the water in the glass I’ve left on the counter is lighter because the water has evaporated.  Oh look.  Coniferous trees don’t provide ME this kind of opportunity for self-reflection.  After all, it’s all about me.

 

* The title comes from a line in Amy’s second book, My Dead (formatting mine).

** I had taken some poetry workshops at Portland State University, thanks to the kindness of Michele Glazer, but was also very scared, just better at faking it (ego and all that stupidity!).

 

Amy Lawless is the author of the poetry collections Noctis Licentia and My Dead. She has been named a 2011 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellow. She teaches writing in New York City and blogs at amylawless.blogspot.com.

Steven Karl is an editor for Coldfront Magazine. His first book, Dork Swagger, is forthcoming from Coconut Books in the fall of 2013. He lives in Miami, FL.


Show Your Devotion

Tuesday, February 19th, 2013

Joe Hall is the author of Pigafetta Is My Wife (Black Ocean), The Container Store (SpringGun Press) written with Chad Hardy, and the just released, Devotional Poems (Black Ocean). J. Michael Martinez had this to say about Hall’s new book, “Hall’s devotions uncover ‘in the derelict warehouse’s silence’ a worldly utopia grown fat on the carcasses of lifeless heavens: ‘This is where I stick my head in the liquid / fire of the sun and piss myself while / burning vistas multiply.’”

In celebration of the book Hall is hitting the road. Catch him read at AWP and well into the summer as he tours the United States.  Depending on the location he’ll be joined by Carrie Olivia Adams, Tony Mancus, Jason Labbe, Kyle McCord, Corey Zeller and Angelica Veronica Wong.  Click on the poster below for complete tour details.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

steven karl


chap nook 8: Yankelevich, Sager, Karl & Wong

Sunday, January 6th, 2013

Bending at the Elbow, Matvei Yankelevich (Minute Books, 2011)

Matvei Yankelevich would like to tell you about his obsessions. Except: “Most of the / words I’ve wanted to say // I’ve already said. To say / them again would seem / redundant. But the / simple words can be said / more than once.” And that’s how the first poem in Bending at the Elbow ends.

The poems in this book are obsessed with minutiae and repetition. Their subjects are small, inconsequential, and absurd, but by refusing to let them go, Yankelevich renders them large. For example, a poem called “Buttons” is a wonderful two-and-a-half page description of a necklace of buttons collected from the clothing of war victims in Serbia that is sewn together so tightly, words that are apparently written on the sides of the buttons are hidden by the adjoining buttons. The fact of this is terrifying to the speaker, who looks at the buttons from every angle, as though looking harder could solve the problem of both the war and the buttons: “The buttons are so close / together. You can’t even un- / button them, you can’t even / imagine them. These / are real buttons.”

Yankelevich’s obsessions extend to the act of writing, too. He wonders, for example, about the image as a meaning-making tool. He is wary: “The museum is empty. / What exactly is the point of poetry? // In the rain, colors are so much more colorful. / So you take pictures?” That this rain reappears at the end of the book (“so beautiful and sad / rain on the window of an auto”) points to a real desire to make the trite, overused image mean something, to be able to divorce it from its trope and write it.

The poems in Bending at the Elbow are interested in discovering big meaning in small things. Sometimes, they succeed and graveyards, fish, and orange juice containers become stand-ins for historical, political, and existential questions. Other times, they fail beautifully. “Epistolary Poem,” for example, moves between ideas about letters, paper, and communication with graceful, circular lines, but only touches on the larger implications of these. On the whole, Yankelevich lets the writing determine what the writing is doing. It is, after all, nothing more than “a last resort to see if something / singular is going on[.]”

– Amanda Calderon

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Dear Failures, Trey Sager (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2011)

DW: A quarter of the way into Dear Failures I started to feel like Sager was writing letters to his past experiences/selves.

EJM: In the opening poem, Sager writes about suicide notes–which immediately signify destruction–then goes on to discuss destruction of the self as well as that which has been destroyed by the self, while at the same time, conjuring the idea behind self-analysis via therapy. 

DWIf you look at “Dear Me,” Sager jumps from his mom, to his wife, then to de Kooning, Tennessee Williams and Salman Rushdie; these moves almost seem manic, coming from a brain that has a lot going on or a lot of selves trying to communicate an idea.

EJM: The same kind of thing happens in “Dear Orphans,” “Dear Nostalgia,” and “Dear Charles”–the reader is given definitions to words, ideas (jokes as well) are explained, and even plants are held up against animal parts (cattails vs. cats’ tails).

DW: Right, and, again with “Dear Nostalgia,” he even says “I remember a time when everything I wrote was clear/ and totally profound,/ and I always knew what I was talking about,” which tells us he no longer gets what he is saying, or at least what he’s saying to himself isn’t clear.

EJM: There’s a lot of schizophrenia in this book.  Here’s the root of it from the poem “Dear Rocket Sea:”  “For the first time, I became conscious of my own inner dialogue— / I must be schizophrenic, too, I logically concluded. / After a week of desolation, my mom made me see a therapist, / who said I was having trouble negotiating the conflicting spaces between childhood and adulthood.”

DW: What is Sager building with the schizophrenia?  “Dear Rocket Sea” begins by linking schizophrenia with god, which makes me think of Peter O’Toole in The Ruling Class; when he is asked how he knows he is God, he responds, “Simple. When I pray to Him, I find I am talking to myself,” so I get the feeling Sager is looking for a kind of answer within himself in these poems.

EJM: How is language a reflection of the self?  How is Sager using it as such?  Is he?  In “Dear Apollo,” the speaker addresses Apollo (the god or the spaceship or maybe someone more literally paternal?).  The line, “You’re more of the former” seems to be an echo of addressing past selves, as in Apollo is but a former self, a remnant that is both oracular [Delphian] and elusive.

DW: Sager is Apollo, the god and the spaceship and the boxer from Rocky’s I-IV, he’s the lumberjack and the nostalgia—in these poems Sager seems to inhabit everything while (maybe?) looking for his true self.

–  Erin J. Mullikin & David Wojciechowski

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Don’t Try This On Your Piano or am i still standing here with my hair downSteven Karl and Angela Veronica Wong  (Lame House Press, 2012)

Don’t Try This On Your Piano or am i still standing here with my hair down is a collaboration between Steven Karl and Angela Veronica Wong that retains authorial individuality. The start of the work feels like reading letters over the shoulders of newly old lovers: “It’s a new month, but I still leave mugs of tea on counters.” Some replies are reflexive enough to be imagined as emailed, but in the beginning, a romantic, however hopeless, presence suggests snail mail.

In attempts to map out the other side’s spatial landscapes, the verbal mind can bring unknowns into awareness. This exercise creates a temporality inhabited by the unrealized. Karl and Wong’s speakers talk around the never done like sonar, trying to locate and name their relationship’s remainders. Then, maybe, something could be done with them. For now, their words meet away from their bodies until presumably one or both are called to occupy something, somewhere, or someone new. Physical and psychological spaces are paramount to Karl and Wong’s collection. As the speaker notes, ”acknowledging distance between your body and the earth seems like a bad idea.”

Karl and Wong create a purgatory of correspondence, a sort of waiting room filled with the speakers’ histories. The correspondence proves exciting, dark and a bit sexy: ”Every fantasy may end in denial but they all begin with your bare legs.”

Halfway through the collection, the pace increases like breath work. The text breaks from prose, and the voices become harder to distinguish until single lines are separated and distinguished by asterisks:

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What is given from one lover to another?

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& it was then that theft entered as crumbs on a crown day

The asterisks serve any number of functions: pause, reflex, slap, or twist. If the asterisks are twisting points, visually the text becomes a double helix with one readable dimension. Like other unknowns, the inaccessible is assumed, displaced, denied, projected, intellectualized, sublimated, or [insert choice mechanism here].

Karl and Wong’s chapbook both structurally and conceptually reminds “There is no point to beginning if there is no breaking.”

– Stephanie Ann Whited

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Atlanta: Four Coconut Facts

Wednesday, December 19th, 2012

1. When you Google the word “coconut,” coconut poetry is fourth.

2. Bruce Covey, Gina Myers, Laura Solomon, Danielle Pafunda, and Kim Gek Lin Short just released the first issue of Coconut in four years.

3. Coconut Fifteen features work by Atlanta/Athens poets Megan Volpert, Molly Brodak, Kory Calico, and Gale Marie Thompson.

4. Coconut Books now offers subscription bundles and with free shipping. You can order the $50 Fall bundle and receive all four Fall 2012 titles–Emily Toder’s Science, Hanna Andrews’ Slope Moves, Christie Ann Reynolds’ Revenge for Revenge, and Jenny Boully’s of the mismatched teacups, of the single-serving spoon. The Spring bundle is also $50 and includes Megan Kaminski’s Desiring Map, Angela Veronica Wong’s how to survive a hotel fire, Molly Brodak’s The Flood, and Bruce Covey’s Reveal.

-Jenny Sadre-Orafai


This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, October 21st, 2012

Human Hair & Co

Every Sunday, Coldfront features 5 upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. Aim to take off your poet-crush’s Halloween mask after a costumed reading this week and pretend it’s her other mask.

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Human Hair & Co: Mirov, Waters, Amling, & Fain
TODAY, Sunday, October 21st, 2012 @ 6-9pm
La Sala, Cantina Royal, 58 N. 3rd, Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Human Hair & Co. presents an evening of adult themed poetry.

Good evening. This event supports the arts and in doing so will make available genuine books of American verse for purchase. We’d encourage you to join us for this performance and then adjourn for a Sunday dinner.

The lovely CORINA COPP will preside

With the participants:

BEN MIROV celebrates his east coast return with a reading from his new book HIDER ROSER (Octopus Books)

JACQUELINE WATERS author of ONE SLEEPS THE OTHER DOESN’T (Ugly Duckling Presse)

ERIC AMLING author of LEGAL PURE (Greying Ghost Press)

We are also excited to announce a film premier by video artist BEN FAIN that will take full advantage of the venue’s film viewing capabilities.

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death humsDEATH HUMS: Durbin, Fama, Eilbert, Le Fraga, & Landis
Monday, October 22nd, 2012 @ 7pm
Unnameable Books, 600 Vanderbilt Ave, Brooklyn, New York

Andrew Durbin co-edits Wonder, a publisher of art books, ephemera, pamphlets, and glossies. He is the author of Reveler (Argos Books, forthcoming December 2012). His writings have appeared in the Brooklyn Rail, Conjunctions, Washington Square, West Wind Review, and elsewhere. He is an associate editor of Conjunctions and lives in New York City.

According to Ben Fama’s Wikipedia page, Ben Fama (born 1982, Newport News, Virginia) is an American poet, editor, series curator, and social networker. He has written critically on subjects from Brian Eno, Twin Peaks, Maggie Nelson and poetry itself. He founded and edited SUPERMACHINE (RIP). His books include NEW WAVES (Minutes Books) and Aquarius Rising (Ugly Duckling Presse), and recently started WONDER, a publisher of “artists books, ephemera, pamphlets, and glossies,” with Andrew Durbin.Natalie Eilbert received her MFA from Columbia University, where she was awarded the 2010 Linda Corrente Poetry Prize. Her work has appeared in or is forthcoming from Colorado Review, Spinning Jenny, Bat City Review, The Rumpus, Copper Nickel, La Petite Zine, Barn Owl Review, DIAGRAM, No, Dear, and elsewhere. Brian Teare selected her chapbook, The Death and Life of the Venus City, as the runner-up in Gazing Grain’s Inaugural Chapbook Competition. She is a founding editor of The Atlas Review.Sophia Le Fraga is a Brooklyn-based poet. She studied Linguistics and Poetry at NYU and is the author of “Song of Me and Myself,” a book of Whitman erasures, and the chapbook I DON’T WANT ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE INTERNET (Keep This Bag Away From Children, 2012). Her poems can be found online, and her collection, “IRL, You RL” is forthcoming.

Matthew Landis is the singer, keyboardist, composer, and lyricist for The Minor Arcana and plays piano and sings for the band/possible cult The World/Inferno Friendship Society. He curates Abecedarian, a contemporary poetry, poetics, and culture blog. Matthew’s work has appeared in Critophoria, Try, Literary Kicks, and EOGAH, among others.

+++DEATH HUMS issue 1 (featuring readers Andrew Durbin and Ben Fama) will be available at a special price of $10 ($5 if yr unemployed, and free if you can’t pay), CASH ONLY

+++FEATURED POETS may have books for sale, which you can buy via UB, meaning credit cards are accepted

+++UNNAMABLE BOOKS is a very good bookstore, new and used, books will be available for purchase during and following the event, credit cards accepted

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Conceptual Writing by Women: Degentesh, Place, & Victor
Monday, October 22nd, 2012 @ 8pm
The Poetry Project, St. Marks Church, 131 E. 10th St, New York, New York

Inspired by the Les Figues Press anthology I’ll Drown My Book: Conceptual Writing by Women (2012), Katie Degentesh, Vanessa Place and Divya Victor read from their work and exchange ideas about many possibile conceptualisms.

Katie Degentesh lives in New York City. Her first book, The Anger Scale, was published by Combo Books and was recently featured in the Poetry Society of America’s New American Poets series.

Vanessa Place killed poetry–Anon., via Twitter.

Divya Victor is author of Partial Dictionary of the Unnamable, Partial Directory of the Unnamable (Troll Thread Press). She is also author of PUNCH and Goodbye John! On John Baldessari, both from Gauss PDF, Hellocasts by Charles Reznikoff by Divya Victor by Vanessa Place (Ood press), and SUTURES (Little Red Leaves). Her books of poems Things To Do With Your Mouth is forthcoming as part of Les Figues Press’s TrenchArt series. She curates an occasional interview series, Discourses on Vocality, for Jacket2, is a scholar, and a member of the publishing collective Troll Thread Press.

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SHITLUCK #2: Child’s Play > Butler-Rotholz, McClure, Fama, & Magers
Friday, October 26th, 2012 @ 8:30pm
Tip Top Bar & Grill, 432 Franklin Ave, Brooklyn, New York

FEATURING SPOOOOOOOKY READINGS BY

Sivan Butler-Rotholz
Monica McClure
Ben Fama
Dan Magers

This will be the FIRST EVER costume party poetry reading. Be a part of history! It’s also a joint birthday party for co-hosts Gabe and Caroline so don’t be rude and skip our party! Scorpios hold grudges, you know!After the reading stick around for an all-out dance party featuring every remix of the Monster Mash ever made!

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Polestar Reading Series: The Major Arcana
Sunday, October 28th, 2012 @ 3pm
Cake Shop, 152 Ludlow St, New York, New York

POLESTAR POETRY SERIES ▲THE MAJOR ARCANA ▲ COME IN COSTUME OR MASKED ▲TAROT READINGS BY LIZ BALDWIN ▲ POETRY READINGS BY:

THE FOOL // RACHEL LEVITSKY
THE MAGICIAN // LILY LADEWIG
THE HIGH PRIESTESS // MARK BIBBINS
THE EMPRESS // JENNY ZHANG
THE EMPEROR // DANNIEL SCHOONEBEEK
THE HIEROPHANT // SANDRA LIU
THE LOVERS // ALEX DIMITROV
THE CHARIOT // BEN PEASE
JUSTICE // DAN MAGERS
THE HERMIT // DOROTHEA LASKY
WHEEL OF FORTUNE // FARRAH FIELD
STRENGTH // JAY DESHPANDE
THE HANGED MAN // SOPHIA LE FRAGA
DEATH // MARTINE BELLEN
TEMPERANCE // SPENCER MADSEN
THE DEVIL // LONELY CHRISTOPHER
THE TOWER // AMY SILBERGELD
THE STAR // ANGELA VERONICA WONG
THE MOON // SASHA FLETCHER
THE SUN // BIANCA STONE
JUDGEMENT // MELISSA BRODER
THE WORLD // CLAIRE DONATO

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To submit an event, email stephanie.whited[at]gmail.com.

– Stephanie Ann Whited


This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, September 16th, 2012

Debut Book Battle MicEvery Sunday Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. This week includes picks from the Brooklyn Book Festival 2012.

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Late Night Library’s Debut Book Battle
Brooklyn Book Festival 2012 Bookend Event
Wednesday, September 19, 2012 @ 7:30pm
Goodbye Blue Monday, 1087 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY


The Debut Book Battle will feature New York City-based writers reading from poetry or fiction featured on Late Night Library’s monthly podcast series about authors’ recently published first books. Like Late Night Library’s podcast series, the Debut Book Battle, positions writers as advocates for books they care about. It is a free event.

Themes will be named by the audience, and podcast hosts will then select and read poetry or prose from their episode that best matches that theme—like an impromptu, interactive “slam” with readers using the work of early-career writers that they admire as material. Poet Timothy Donnelly will serve as master of ceremonies.

Writers represented and reading include:

John Murillo and Camille Rankine reading from Marcus Jackson’s poetry collection, Neighborhood Register (CavanKerry Press, 2011), which will be featured on Late Night Library’s special Cave Canem episode in October 2012

Sam Ross reading from Lysley Tenorio’s collection of short stories, Monstress (Ecco, 2012), featured by Late Night Library in July 2012

W. M. Lobko reading from Deanna Fei’s novel, A Thread of Sky (Penguin Press, 2010), featured by Late Night Library in July 2011

Erin Hoover reading from Kara Candito’s poetry collection, Taste of Cherry (University of Nebraska Press, 2009), featured on Late Night Library’s premiere podcast in April 2011

Late Night Library is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting talented writers early in their careers. Programs include a series of podcast about debut titles,podcast conversations with cultural innovators, events that connect diverse literary communities, and a virtual network of writers and readers. Founded in 2011, Late Night Library is based in Brooklyn, New York, and Portland, Oregon.

More information about the Brooklyn Book Festival and Bookends can be found at www.brooklynbookfestival.org.

*

Mixer Reading and Music Series
Wednesday, September 19, 2012 @ 7:00pm until 9:00pm
Cakeshop, 152 Ludlow St., New York, NY

With readings by:

Lydia Conklin is a recipient of a Pushcart Prize and fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, the Astraea Foundation, the Vermont Studio Center, the James Merrill House, the Sitka Center and Harvard University. Her fiction has appeared in Narrative Magazine, New Letters, The New Orleans Review and elsewhere, and she has drawn comics for Gulf Coast, Salt Hill and the Steppenwolf Theater in Chicago. She holds an MFA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Diana Spechler is the author of the novels Who by Fire and Skinny, and of articles in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, GQ, Esquire, New York Magazine, Slate, Salon, and elsewhere. A four-time Moth StorySLAM winner, she teaches writing in New York City and for Stanford University’s Online Writer’s Studio.

Kirstin Valdez Quade teaches at Stanford University, where she is a Jones Lecturer and a former Wallace Stegner and Truman Capote Fellow. She has received fellowships from Yaddo, Bread Loaf, and the MacDowell Colony. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker and elsewhere.

Heidi Julavits is the author of novels The Vanishers, The Uses of Enchantment, The Mineral Palace, and The Effect of Living Backwards. She is a founding editor of Believer, and her writings have appeared in Esquire, Time, The New York Times, & McSweeney’s among other places. The recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a finalist for the New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award, she lives in Manhattan and Maine, and teaches at Columbia University.

Music by:

Joe Moore is part of the trio known as Powderhörn, along with Mark Boquist and Josh Walker. Their first set of compositions surfaced as a loose meditation on nautical themes, most likely inspired by the generous helpings of cymbal swells and delay pedals heard all over early rehearsal tapes. After their unofficial debut gig in Brooklyn last year, a patron was quoted as saying, “You guys sound like…..pre-90s”. No one had any idea what that meant but they took it as a compliment anyway.

With your hosts: Melissa Febos and Rebecca Keith

https://www.facebook.com/Mixerreadings

*

Symbiosis: An Evening of Asian and Asian American Poetry
September 20th, 2012 @ 7pm – 8:30pm
The Museum of Chinese in America, 215 Centre St, New York, NY 

The Poetry Society of America—the nation’s oldest poetry organization—presents Symbiosis, an evening of readings combined with a dynamic panel discussion on the exchange of influence between early modern Asian poets, modern American poets, and contemporary Asian American poets.

Featuring readings by poets Monica Ferrell, Kimiko Hahn, Timothy Liu, and Angela Veronica Wong, this event highlights the historic, transnational dialogue across generations between two continents, and considers the importance of this exchange in today’s literary landscape. The poets will further discuss the sacred in Asian American culture as articulated in American poetry at the Maya Lin-designed Museum of Chinese in America. Presented by the Poetry Society of America in association with the Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA).

Admission: Free RSVP to programs@mocanyc.org

*

The Brooklyn Poets Reading Series
Brooklyn Book Festival 2012 Bookend Event

Friday, September 21st, 2012 @ 7pm
Studio 10, 56 Bogart Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 

Eduardo C. Corral is the author of Slow Lightning, selected by Carl Phillips as winner of the 2011 Yale Series of Younger Poets competition and published by Yale University Press in 2012. His poems have appeared in New England Review, Ploughshares and Poetry, as well as many other journals and anthologies. He is the winner of a Discovery/The Nation award and a Whiting Writers’ Award and has been awarded residencies at the MacDowell Colony and Yaddo. He holds an MFA in poetry from the Iowa Writers Workshop and has served as the Olive B. O’Connor Fellow in Creative Writing at Colgate University and the Philip Roth Resident in Creative Writing at Bucknell University. He lives in New York.

Ariana Reines’s books of poetry include The Cow (2006), which won the Alberta Prize from Fence Books; Coeur de Lion (2007); and Mercury (2011). Her poems have been anthologized in Gurlesque (2010) and Against Expression (2011). Known for her interest in bodily experience, the occult, new media, and the possibilities of the long or book-length form, Reines has been described as “one of the crucial voices of her generation” by Michael Silverblatt on NPR’s Bookworm. Reines’s first play Telephone (2009) was performed at the Cherry Lane Theater and received two Obie Awards. A re-imagining of its second act was featured as part of the Guggenheim’s Works+Process series in 2009, and the script was published in Play: A Journal of Plays in 2010. Reines’s translations include a version of Baudelaire’s My Heart Laid Bare (2009); Jean-Luc Hennig’s The Little Black Book of Grisélidis Réal: Days and Nights of an Anarchist Whore (2009); and Tiqqun’s Preliminary Materials Toward a Theory of the Young-Girl (2012). Reines has taught at Columbia University and the European Graduate School, and was the Roberta C. Holloway Lecturer in Poetry at the University of California-Berkeley in 2009, the youngest poet ever to hold that position. She has traveled to Haiti multiple times as part of the on-going relief efforts there.

Timothy Donnelly is the author of Twenty-seven Props for a Production of Eine Lebenszeit (Grove, 2003) and The Cloud Corporation (Wave, 2010), winner of the 2012 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award. His poems have been widely anthologized and translated, appearing in such periodicals as A Public Space, Fence, Harper’s, The Iowa Review, jubilat, The Nation, The New Republic, The Paris Review, and elsewhere. He has served as poetry editor of Boston Review since 1996. He is the recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the New York State Writers Institute and was recently the Theodore H. Holmes ’51 and Bernice Holmes Visiting Professor at Princeton University’s Program in Creative Writing. He is on the permanent faculty of the Writing Program at Columbia University’s School of the Arts and lives in Brooklyn with this wife and two daughters.

This event was funded in part by Poets & Writers, Inc. through public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

*

A Caribbean Literary Lime
Brooklyn Book Festival 2012 Bookend Event
Friday, September 21st, 2012 @ 7pm

St. Francis College, Maroney Theatre, 180 Remsen St, Brooklyn, NY
A book party with a decidedly easy tropical flare. The Poets & Passion platform provides an inviting opportunity for audiences to engage Caribbean and Caribbean American fiction writers and poets and positions the writers’ work as part of a larger conversation on issues of identity, aspiration, heritage and the immigrant experience. (From Brooklyn Heights Blog)
Lineup for Poets & Passion includes Trinidad and Tobago-born novelist, playwright, and educator Earl Lovelace, biographer Christopher John Farley, award-winning poet David Mills and poet and educator Samantha Thornhill.

A book signing and reception follows the panel discussion.

The program is dedicated to late Trinidadian novelist Rosa Guy and the 100th anniversary of Jamaican-born poet Claude McKay’s debut publication, “Songs of Jamaica.”

 

–Stephanie Ann Whited


Atlanta: Coconut Books Now Available at SPD

Thursday, July 26th, 2012

Coconut Books’ catalog is now available for purchase at Small Press Distribution. In addition to their newly published titles (by Molly Brodak, Megan Kaminski, and Angela Veronica Wong) and newly distributed title (Bruce Covey’s Reveal: All Shapes & Sizes), the following Coconut backlist books are now available as well: Sueyeun Juliette Lee’s That Gorgeous Feeling, Reb Livingston’s Your Ten Favorite Words, Natalie Lyalin’s Pink & Hot Pink Habitat, Gina Myers’ A Model Year, and Jen Tynes’ Heron/Girlfriend.

See the Huffington Post for Seth Abramson’s review of Angela Veronica Wong’s How to Survive a Hotel Fire.

–Jenny Sadre-Orafai


Snapshot: Angela Veronica Wong

Friday, July 20th, 2012

SK: Congrats on your first book, how to survive a hotel fire. How did this book come about? Did you have a variety of poems that you collected over the years or did you have this particular book already in mind and wrote poems towards it?

AVW: I wrote the majority of the manuscript in a whirlwind few months between February 2012 and June 2012 (the exception is the first poem of the book, which I had written in the fall of 2011), and I did not have this manuscript in mind at all before writing it. The first group of poems I wrote were the “HOTEL FIRE” poems, but I knew even as I was writing them that the HF poems could potentially be a chapbook, but not a full manuscript. I knew that the HF poems didn’t possess the dimensionality I wanted in a full-length book.

The other sections were all written as self-contained pieces, as in, once I started to write them, I knew they would be a series sharing certain formal qualities or themes. I didn’t know that they would all fit into one manuscript together, but I hope that if you read the book, you’ll feel like every poem is necessary to its section, and to the book, and every section is necessary to each of the other sections within the book.

I wanted a sense of continuity in the book that spans the separate sections, a feeling that the poems of the book belonged together, which is why images and languages are repeated, as if the sections are variations on a theme. I think having written most of the poems in a short amount of time allowed for this to be natural and unforced.

SK: Your book on one level seems to be very much about “surviving” yet the poems themselves offer no practical advice or assistance in this endeavor. Can you talk a little bit about this section of the book and also touch upon the importance of hotels or a “fixed place” for this book?

AVW: You mean the “HOW TO SURVIVE A HOTEL FIRE” section, right?

SK: Correct.

AVW: The idea of writing the “HOTEL FIRE” poems came out of something more like an exercise. It was just something to do – write poems entitled “HOW TO SURVIVE A HOTEL FIRE.” It certainly wasn’t an intellectual or particularly artistic project when I first thought to write them.

What they became was a means through which I could investigate the disconnect between human beings, an emotional emptiness and the way we construct and protect ourselves against disappointment. And how inevitably the construction and protection fails because for the most part, we want to connect. There was something about having a manual on “how to survive” that really caught inside me. The starkness of that reality is wonderful, if on a somewhat dark premise, the idea that if we follow certain steps, we will survive. Pre-emptive disaster manuals prepare us to act smartly in the face of disaster. But our hearts are kind-of a disaster, and no amount of 1980s and 1990s R&B hits (Whitney Houston’s “Where Do Broken Hearts Go,” anyone? I still maintain that “if somebody loves you/ won’t they always love you” is one of the darkest questions ever posed in a pop song) can prepare us for that. We do foolish things and make foolish decisions on our search to love someone. Which is in no way a caution against loving someone, but the HOTEL FIRE poems (though not whole book), are about that. As loud as they are, and as brash, and self-deprecating and maybe even amusing, are about vulnerability almost more than they are a fuck you for not loving/wanting/needing me. They’re about the bruising that leads to the bravado.

And yes, I think “hotel” as location is certainly interesting. I totally was going to call “hotel” a liminal space and then I wanted to shoot myself, so I’ll just say that I find “hotel” to be interesting in its ambiguity, how it exists in a space between “home” and “away,” “ours” and “not ours.” This shifting space allows for shifting selves, like who we are within the context of “hotel” is different than who we are within the context of “home.” And it’s interesting to think about what happens when our selves are fluid.

I’ve never actually thought of “fixed place” that much within my writing while I was writing until recently, only after people pointed out how much New York plays a role in them. And maybe as a result of that, the newer poems I’ve been writing actively engage with this crazy wonderful heartbreaking city. But I think it’s more that my poems are engage in place because I am informed greatly by where I am physically, and the sort of sensory stimulation that happens when you are part of the world. I was traveling quite a bit when I wrote hotel fire, so certainly all of those travel experiences are in the poems of the book, though they aren’t really named so I don’t know how obvious it is to others. And perhaps because I was feeling so transient, both physically and emotionally, while writing hotel fire, that feeling of transience, that feeling of uncertainty, is really how “place” intersects with the book.

SK: Both Coconut the journal and the press are beloved by many. After taking a hiatus, the press is back full force; it must be exhilarating to be a part of the next wave of Coconut authors. Many poets struggle to find a home for their first books; did you enter a contest? Or if not, how did you find a home with Coconut.

AVW: It’s definitely an honor to be part of Coconut! I was really fortunate—I met Bruce Covey, the editor of Coconut Books, at AWP in 2012. A couple of months later, he sent me an email saying that he had enjoyed my chapbooks (the ones on Cy Gist and Flying Guillotine) and asked if I’d be interested in sending him a manuscript. I sent him over a manuscript, and heard back in the summer that he was interested in publishing it.

Bruce is truly wonderful to work with, and I feel so lucky to have him as the editor of my first book.

SK: Since the unofficial and official release of the book, you’ve managed to do quite a few readings. Where have been so far? Any upcoming readings planned?

It’s been fun reading in support of hotel fire but also in support of our collaborative chapbook, Steven! Which has really been the focus of most of my readings this past spring, and has taken us both through D.C. (In Your Ear Reading Series) and Philadelphia (General Idea Reading Series) and NYC (Southern Writers Reading Series).

Upcoming readings are in NYC – including the New York Poetry Festival on Governor’s Island in July (I’m reading on Sunday), the Boog City Festival in August and a reading and panel in September. I’m scheduled to be in Atlanta in October with a group of awesome Coconut authors. Kate Schapira has kindly extended an invitation to me to read in Providence, which I believe will be happening in early December. I’m a Texas girl, born and raised, and I love a good road trip – if there are reading series looking to fill up spots, give a holler.*

SK: You have also recently had your chapbook Dear Johnny, In Your Last Letter published by Poetry Society of America. Looking at this chapbook, your full length, and having read some of your new “Elsa” poems, it seems like you are drawn to serial poems. Can you talk a bit about this?

AVW: It’s either that I have no self-control, and can’t stop myself at just one poem, or I have major control issues, and need to keep explaining, and keep explaining. Serial poems allow me to burrow into my dark, dark obsessions, to live in them, to consume and be consumed by them, to let the obsession manifest into an engorged monster and explode to the point of vomiting. Gross.

But each of the projects you mentioned, I think I was using the serial poem in a different way, though in all three to address a progression of emotion and all three being some sort of obsessive meditation on love, loving, loss, absence, and heartbreak. For the Dear Johnny poems, I was writing love letters, and I was interested in the form of the love letter, and the presentation and action of loving through the love letter, how to communicate the self through a letter, and how to learn about someone through correspondence. I think I also used the multiple poems as a way to create setting – the Dear Johnny poems are written toward a World War II soldier, so there is language and imagery that hopefully can evoke that setting.

The nature of the serial poems in hotel fire depend on the series (sidenote explanation: the collection consists of six parts, four of which are a series of poems, the opening and ending sections consisting only of one single piece), but I think fundamentally they are all about being a human being who is trying to connect with (an)other human being(s) and how beautiful and how scary that is, even if and when it is fracturing.

For the new Elsa poems, along with the emotionality and explicit rawness that is hopefully the present, driving force in the poems, I also want to use the serial nature of the poems to investigate narrative and character development, as well as the divide, or lack of a divide, between author, poetic persona, and character. Like the Dear Johnny poems, there is a historical inspiration to Elsa, so writing several poems allows for more “information” to be sprinkled throughout, and more “history” to support the poems.

SK: What’s next or what are you currently working on?

AVW: Mostly just Elsa right now. I have been working on what can only become a spectacular collaboration of poems with Amy Lawless. I’m psyched to be part of Niina Pollari and Judy Berman’s “It’s Complicated” anthology, in which feminist writers discuss loving problematic, potentially misogynistic art. http://itscomplicatedproject.tumblr.com/ I’m hoping to do more collaborations outside of poetry. Everything is open and everything is exciting!

*If you are interested in having Angela Veronica Wong read for your series or University please contact through her webpage- www.angelaveronicawong.com.

Read more another interview with Angela Veronica Wong at the Poet Hound.

Interview conducted by Steven Karl.


Featured Readings NYC Edition

Sunday, June 24th, 2012

Between Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens there are readings happening every night. Each Sunday, Coldfront will feature five upcoming readings.

Monday, June 25th 2012, 7pm
Death Hums Presents: Issue 1 Launch
Balcony Lounge @ Webster Hall, 125 East 11th Street, Manhattan, NY

With readings by:

ERIC AMLING is the author of the books TWIN VAPOR and SPLIT LEVEL IGLOO. His collage work and writing has appeared on the albums of the bands Dr. Dog and the Bowerbirds.

MELISSA BRODER is the author of two poetry collections: Meat Heart and When You Say One Thing but Mean Your Mother. Recent poems appear in Guernica, Redivider, Court Green, The Missouri Review, et al. She edits La Petite Zine.

ANDREW DURBIN co-edits Wonder, a publisher of artist books, pamphlets, ephemera, and glossies. He was a founding editor of O’clock Press and it’s journal, CLOCK. His work has appeared (or is forthcoming) in Antennae, InDigest, Washington Square, Web Conjunctions, West Wind Review, and elsewhere. He works for the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board and lives in Brooklyn, New York.

JAY DESHPANDE‘s poems and reviews have been published or are forthcoming in Washington Square, Boston Review, Shampoo, Upstairs at Duroc, and the Argos Books anthology Why I Am Not A Painter. He curates the Metro Rhythm Reading Series in Williamsburg, and is the former poetry editor of AGNI. He currently teaches writing at Columbia University.

BEN FAMA is the author of the chapbook Aquarius Rising (UDP 2009) and New Waves (Minutes Books 2011). From 2008-2011 he edited Supermachine (RIP). His work has been featured in The Denver Quarterly, The Brooklyn Rail, notnostrums, LIT, Poor Claudia, and on the Best American Poetry Blog, among others.

SASHA FLETCHER is the author of the novella WHEN ALL OUR DAYS ARE NUMBERED MARCHING BANDS WILL FILL THE STREETS AND WE WILL NOT HEAR THEM BECAUSE HE WILL BE UPSTAIRS IN THE CLOUDS [mud luscious press 2010]. His second chapbook I CANNOT PRETEND TO BE A GHOST TODAY is forthcoming from Paperpusher.

ALLYSON PATY is the author of the chapbook The Further Away ([sic] 2012). My poems have appeared in publications such as Tin House, DIAGRAM, Boxcar Poetry Review, and InDigest among others. My collaborations with poet Danniel Schoonebeek have appeared on The Awl, HTMLGIANT, and Underwater New York and are forthcoming in Gulf Coast.

RENEE RISHER was born and raised in Southern California and lived in Austin, TX and Seattle, WA before moving to New York City to study poetry in the Columbia University M.F.A. progam. She received her B.A. in Visual Art from the University of California at San Diego in 2002. She has worked in many artistic media and her installation, Neon Loci, was included in the Lofi Art Festival at Smokefarm near Arlington, WA in August 2009.  Her writing has appeared in numerous publications, including the American Book Review.

TIMOTHY WOJCIK lives in Brooklyn, and he likes it there, but sometimes he misses Arkansas and Texas. His two poems featured in death hums issue 1 are part of a larger collection titled The Missing Town. Another piece from that collection lives in Corium Magazine.

ANGELA VERONICA WONG is the author of the full-length postry collection how to survive a hotel fire (Coconut Books 2012). She is on the internet at www.angelaveronicawong.com.

MATTHEW ZINGG‘s work appears in The Awl, Cider Press Review, The Rumpus, The Madison Review and Opium Magazine among others. He received his MFA in poetry from Adelphi University and is a co-founding member of the writers collective, fourteen-forty-one.

For a full list of Issue 1 contributors, visit deathhums.org. Sponsored by The QAS.

Free admission, all ages, full bar 21+ with ID

 

Wednesday, June 27th 2012, 6:30pm
Center Broadsides Reading Series
The Center for Book Arts, 28 West 27th Street, 3rd Floor, Manhattan, New York 

The last of three spring Broadsides Readings organized by visual artist James Walsh. A poem by each poet will be printed by artists at the Center in the form of a limited edition letterpress broadside. Guests will receive free copies signed by the authors.

$10 Suggested Donation/ $5 members

Featuring JOSHUA BECKMAN reading his own poems and the work of MARY RUEFLE.

JOSHUA BECKMAN was born in New Haven, Connecticut, and earned his BA from Hampshire College, where he studied poetry and the art of the book. He is the author of five books of poetry: Things Are Happening (1998); Something I Expected To Be Different (2001); Nice Hat. Thanks. (2002), written with Matthew Rohrer; Your Time Has Come (2004),  Shake (Wave Books, 2006), and Take It, a Coldfront pick for Best New Book of Poetry in 2009.

In his introduction to Things Are Happening, poet Gerald Stern noted the “openness” of Beckman’s poems: “His identity is through affection. That is his print.” In a review for Coldfront, John Deming commented: “Beckman’s traditionally a master at converting the personal to the existential in a deceptively plain-spoken way.” He co-edited State of the Union: 50 Political Poems (2008), an anthology of political poems, with Matthew Zapruder. He has also translated poems by Carlos Oquendo de Amat and Tomaž Šalamun. Beckman lives in Seattle and in Brooklyn, New York.

JAMES WALSH was born in Brooklyn, NY, studied literature at Hobart College, Geneva, NY and Oxford University, England. He has been making visual work in a variety of media since 1986, and has shown throughout the United States and in Turkey, Italy, England, and Sweden. He is the author of two books, Foundations (1997) and Solvitur ambulando (2003), and numerous unique and limited-edition artist’s books. Awards and residencies include a Fulbright Fellowship to Turkey and residencies at MacDowell Colony, The Edward Albee Foundation, Art Omi, and Center for Book Arts. His work comes out of a love for natural history, particularly the history of natural history. He’s currently in Bangkok.

MARY RUEFLE has published many books of poetry, including, Selected Poems (Wave Books, 2010);  A Little White Shadow (2006), an art book of “erasures,” a variation on found poetryTristimania (Carnegie-Mellon University Press, 2003), Among the Musk Ox People (2002); Apparition Hill (2001);  Cold Pluto (2001); Post Meridian (2000); Cold Pluto (1996); The Adamant (1989), winner of the 1988 Iowa Poetry Prize; Life Without Speaking (1987); and Memling’s Veil (1982). She’s in Vermont.

 

Wednesday, June 27th 2012, 7pm
The Inspired Word
116116 MacDougal Street, Downstairs Lounge, Manhattan, NY

Open mic to follow. Hosted by HBO Def Poetry star Gemineye.

Featuring:

NIGEL WADE is a Milwaukee native that got his stripes appearing at open mics and Slams around the Midwest. After reading at open mics, participating in the Midwest Slam League, and winning a few slams, the scene wanted to see more of what this poet could do. Drawn in by his animated performance and poetic style, Nigel was told that he had a “…unique sound. You don’t sound like someone else, you sound like you.” by the founder of PSI, Mark Smith (So what?!) This unique style earned him a place on the Milwaukee National Slam Team from 2006 through 2011 among some of Milwaukee’s finest poets and two Grand Slam Champion Titles. In 2007, he earned the right to represent Milwaukee at the 2007 Individual World Poetry Slam in Vancouver, Canada. He has relocated to Manhattan and, now, looks to make his mark in the New York Poetry scene.

Born of Afro-Caribbean descent, CHRISTINE-JEAN BLAIN has always been a storyteller. Whether writing poetry or fiction, she uses words to paint pictures of how things are, or maybe could have been. As an educator Ms. Blain uses her experience, passion and creativity to build a bridge between what is occurring in our society and how it is being used and interpreted by our communities. In addition to teaching World History and Literature, Ms. Blain has performed and lectured at colleges and universities throughout the United States.Currently residing in Brooklyn, New York, Christine- Jean Blain is the author of Lighting the Path Back Home a short collection of poetry and prose. Her work has been published in many anthologies, and magazines, most recently African Voices, and A Lime Jewel. She is a former Writer in Residence at Hedgebrook, and a founding member of Dusks Daughters arts collective.

ULULY RAFAEL MARTINEZ was first drawn to poetry through hip-hop. His love of words came to embrace other forms, rhyming and non-rhyming, but the poets he most gravitates to are those who speak to his experience growing up in urban America. Ululy found his poetic voice after attending an open mic at the Inspired Word and now spends most of his poetry time writing about the struggles of his people. His publications include: a memorandum of law in support of a motion to reduce his Dad’s prison sentence; uncounted resumes written to help people in his community secure jobs; a grant application for funds to secure the right to legal representation for defendants unable to afford an attorney; letters to the Public Housing Authority in support of section 8 beneficiaries facing eviction; and other writings crafted to advance the cause of justice.

 

Friday, June 29th 2012, 7-9 pm
Paragraph Reading
KGB Bar85 East 4th StreetManhattan, NY

Paragraph‘s monthly reading series at KGB showcases its members’ work. Free and open to the public.

Readers:

DANIEL B. LEVINSON is a Long Island-based fiction writer, screenwriter, and librettist. His screenwriting works have placed in a number of competitions, including an Honorable Mention from ScriptSavvy, a Quarterfinalist position from StoryPros, and a finalist position in 2011′s Cyberspace Open. He wrote the libretto for the musical Bathory, which was a NYMF finalist in 2009. His fiction works include the urban fantasy novel Into the Veil, a horror novel entitled Bright Orchards, and the science fiction war drama Psionic Earth, for which he is actively pursuing representation. He graduated from NYU with a BFA in 2007.

AARON POOCHIGIAN earned his Phd in Classics from the University of Minnesota in 2006. Stung With Love, his book of translations from Sappho, was published by Penguin Classics in 2009 (with a preface by Carol Anne Duffy), and he has been awarded an NEA Grant in Translation. Johns Hopkins University Press put out his translations of Aratus’ Phaenomena and Aeschylus’ early plays in 2010 and 2011, respectively. Able Muse Press published his first book of original poetry, The Cosmic Purr, in March of 2012, and several of the poems in it collectively won the New England Poetry Club’s Daniel Varoujan Prize. His work has appeared in such newspapers and journals as the Financial Times, Poems Out Loud and POETRY.

BETTY SHAMIEH‘s off-Broadway premieres are The Black Eyed (New York Theatre Workshop) and Roar (The New Group), which was selected as a New York Times Critics Pick for four weeks. Shamieh was named a 2011 UNESCO Young Artist for Intercultural Dialogue for artistic excellence and her role in fostering cross-cultural artistic exchanges. Her recent European productions in translation include Again and Against (Playhouse Teater, Stockholm), The Black Eyed (Fournos Theatre, Athens), and Territories (co-production of the Landes-Theatre and the 2009 European Union Capital of Culture Festival). Shamieh was named as a Playwriting Fellow at Harvard University’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies in 2006.

 

Saturday, June 30th 2012, 7pm
Litmus Press Presents: An Evening of New Poetry
The Old Stone House, 336 3rd St. @ 5th Ave, Park Slope, Brooklyn 

READINGS // MUSIC // ART // PERFORMANCE
BEER // WINE // SNACKS

Join Litmus Press in celebration of its new and recent releases: Then Go On by Mary Burger, I Want to Make You Safe by Amy King, O Bon by Brandon Shimoda, and Aufgabe #11.

Readings by MARY BURGER, AMY KING, CHRISTIAN NAGLER, EMILY ABENDROTH, ANA BOŽIČEVIĆ,  CARLEY MOORE, and SIMONE WHITE.

Artwork by MARY BURGER and YASMINA KHAN, music by SERENA JOST, and a special participatory performance by TODD SHALOM (Elastic City).

This event is sponsored, in part, by the Greater New York Arts Development Fund of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, administered by Brooklyn Arts Council, Inc. (BAC). 

Beer has been lovingly provided by Brooklyn Brewery. Small bites from Sahadi’s. Wine from Thirst.


– Stephanie Ann Whited 


Atlanta: The Return of Coconut

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

 

Atlanta’s Coconut Books and Coconut Magazine are back in full effect. Publisher and founding editor Bruce Covey is now accepting submissions for the magazine, one of the first web-based literary journals. Covey has brought on board Gina Myers, Kim Gek Lin Short, Danielle Pafunda, and Laura Solomon as editors. They hope to launch the first new issue this summer.

Coconut Books will offer eight new titles in 2012. Four titles currently available are Molly Brodak’s chapbook The Flood and the following full-length collections–how to survive a hotel fire by Angela Veronica Wong, Desiring Map by Megan Kaminski, and Covey’s Reveal: All Shapes and Sizes, which Coconut is distributing for Bitter Cherry Books. Collections coming in October are: Slope Move by Hanna Andrews, I Am Going to Save Your Life by Christie Ann Reynolds, Like Likeness Renders by Emily Toder, and a new collection by Jenny Boully. In 2013, Coconut Books plans to publish new full-length titles by Serena Chopra, Amber Nelson, Gina Myers, plus their book contest winners and an anthology. They hope to publish one or two more titles, but those are currently top secret. SPD will stock all of the new titles, plus backlist titles by Gina Myers, Reb Livingston, Jen Tynes, Natalie Lyalin, and Sueyeun Juliette Lee. Look out for these by the end of June.

Finally, Coconut Books is sponsoring two new book prizes. The Joanna Cargill Coconut Book Prize for a First Book and The Elizabeth P. Braddock Coconut Book Prize (open to any poet with one or more previously published full-length collection). The deadline for both contests is June 30, 2012 before 6 PM EST. Covey and crew are not charging reading fees. Winners receive 25 copies of the finished book and 50% of all net profits (i.e., dollars earned by the press above total production, editorial, and marketing costs) earned by the book. Visit Coconut on Facebook for the full guidelines.

–Jenny Sadre-Orafai