Posts Tagged ‘Eric Amling’

This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, June 2nd, 2013

Sundays, Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough NYC readings. Check out this week’s picks.
 
 

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Hatchet Job XVI: Cruz, Dimitrov, Waters, & Amling
Tuesday, June 4th @ 7:30pm
Suburbia330 Melrose Street, Basement, Brooklyn, NY

Hatchet Job is a monthly reading series in which poets of all persuasions don’t let the sun go down on their love and read in a punk house where dreams are made. It’s free until forever. The beer costs dirt.

Join us for Hatchet Job XVI, the second month at our new venue, Suburbia.

Cynthia Cruz is the author of Ruin and The Glimmering Room. Her poems have been published in the New Yorker, the American Poetry Review, Paris Review, Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, Field, Kenyon Review, and others.

Alex Dimitrov is the author of Begging For It and American Boys. His poems have appeared in The Yale Review, Kenyon Review, Slate, Poetry Daily, Tin House, Boston Review, and the American Poetry Review, which awarded him the Stanley Kunitz Prize in 2011.

Jacqueline Waters is the author of One Sleeps the Other Doesn’t and A Minute without Danger. Her work has appeared in 6×6, The Poker, Zoland Poetry, Chicago Review, Realpoetik, Boston Review, and The Poetry Project Newsletter.

Eric Amling is the author of the chapbook Legal Pure. His poems and prints appear widely and some are forthcoming in Fence and The Brooklyn Rail. His art book, Big East Limousines, will be published in Fall 2013.

Hosted by Danniel Schoonebeek

 

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The Obscenity Party
Wednesday, June 5th @ 6pm
Cornelia Street Cafe, 29 Cornelia Street, New York, NY

The Obscenity Party – In celebration of Angelo Nikolopoulos’ publication of OBSCENELY YOURS with special guests Wayne Koestenbaum and Edmund White, and a cabaret performance by Daniel Isengar.

Daniel Isengart has performed his solo act Off-Broadway, in countless supper clubs and cabarets, multiple art museums and theater festivals abroad. Isengart has been called the Darling of Café Sabarsky, the city’s only established German Cabaret venue, where he has presented a record of over 9 different programs, including a highly controversial solo-version of Weill and Brecht’sSeven Deadly SIns. He has also been a mainstay and star at the annual Museum Mile Festival on Fifth Avenue.

Wayne Koestenbaum is the author of several collections of poetry, including Blue Stranger with Mosaic Background (2012), Best-Selling Jewish Porn Films (2006),The Milk of Inquiry (1999), and Ode to Anna Moffo and Other Poems (1990), which was named one of the Village Voice Literary Supplement’s Favorite Books of the Year. His prose works include Humiliation (2011); Hotel Theory (2007); the novel Moira Orfei in Aigues-Mortes (2004); Cleavage: Essays on Sex, Stars, and Aesthetics(2000); and National Book Critics Circle Award–nominated The Queen’s Throat: Opera, Homosexuality, and the Mystery of Desire (1993).

Angelo Nikolopoulos’ first book of poems is Obscenely Yours, winner of the 2011 Kinereth Gensler Award (Alice James Books 2013). His poems have appeared in Best American Poetry 2012, Best New Poets 2011, Boston Review, Fence, The Los Angeles Review, The New York Quarterly, Tin House, and elsewhere. He is a winner of the 2011 “Discovery” / Boston Review Poetry Contest and the founder of the White Swallow Reading Series in Manhattan. He teaches at Rutgers University, New Brunswick and lives in New York City.

Edmund White has written over twenty books. He is perhaps best known for his biography of French writer Jean Genet, for which he won the National Book Critics Circle Award. He is also the author of a trilogy of autobiographical novels: A Boy’s Own StoryThe Beautiful Room is Empty, and The Farewell Symphony. His most recent novel is Jack Holmes and His Friend. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, he teaches writing at Princeton and lives in New York City.

$8 cover includes a drink

 

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“COUPLET”
Thursday, June 6th @ 7 to 10 PM
The Delancey, Lower live performance level, 168 Delancey Street (Between Clinton & Attorney), New York, NY

A Poetry and Music Series at The Delancey, LES. Quarterly.

Hosted by poet Leah Umansky, Couplet is a quarterly reading series held on the Lower East Side featuring both emerging and established poets. Every event features music & after-party by DJ Ceremony. No cover.

#CoupletNYC (Instagram/Twitter)

This edition’s featured poets:

J. Bradley is the Web Editor of Monkeybicycle. He lives at iheartfailure.net.

Jillian Brall is co-editor of the poetry journal, Lyre Lyre, and co-curates the Earshot reading series. Her poems have appeared in journals such as Ragazine, Esque, Connotation Press, Ping Pong Magazine, Unshod Quills, and others. She is also a visual artist.

Jackie Clark is the series editor of Poets off Poetry and Song of the Week for Coldfront Magazine. She is the recipient of a 2012 New Jersey State Council on the Arts Fellowship in Poetry and is the author of three chapbooks: Office Work (Greying Ghost Press), Red Fortress (H_NGM_N), and I Live Here Now (Lame House Press). Jackie lives in Jersey City and can be found online at nohelpforthat.com. Her first book, Aphoria, was recently published by Brooklyn Arts Press.

Adam Fitzgerald is the founding editor of the poetry journal Maggy, and teaches at Rutgers University and The New School. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in A Public Space, Boston Review, The Brooklyn Rail, Conjunctions, Fence and elsewhere. His first book of poems, The Late Parade, is forthcoming from W. W. Norton’s Liveright imprint in June. He lives in the East Village.

Dolan Morgan lives and writes in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, where he is an editor at The Atlas Review. His work can be found in The Believer, Field, Pank, The Lifted Brow, Red Lightbulbs, Armchair/Shotgun, The Collagist and elsewhere.

Your Hostess:
Leah Umansky is a New Yorker by birth, a teacher by choice, and an anglophile at heart. Her first collection of poems, DOMESTIC UNCERTAINTIES, has been published in 2013 by BlazeVOX Books. She earned her MFA in Poetry at Sarah Lawrence College and is a recipient of a 1-week fellowship at the Norman Mailer Writers Colony. She is a contributing writer for both BOMB Magazine’s BOMBLOG and for The Rumpus. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in: Barrow Street, Cream City Review, Women’s Studies Quarterly, The Paterson Literary Review, Magma Poetry (UK),and Harpur Palate. She is also a contributing writer for The Rumpus and BOMB Magazine ‘s BOMBLOG. Find more of her work at: www.iammyownheroine.wordpress.com

Your DJ:
DJ Ceremony has played at well over 100 venues in and around New York City since 2001, at both public & private events. He is the producer & DJ of “Oscillate Wildly”, a monthly Smiths & Morrissey tribute dance party in the Lower East Side, among other special one-night-only themed events. His sound often culls from Postpunk, Glam Rock, Indie, Haçienda, Britpop, Factory Records, Shoegaze, Manchester, Dreampop, & British Invasion.www.djceremony.com

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Lauren Russell & Friends
Friday, June 7th @ 7pm
Unnameable Books, 600 Vanderbilt Ave., Brooklyn

Edmund Berrigan is the author of two books of poetry, Disarming Matter (Owl Press) and Glad Stone Children (farfalla press/McMillan & Parrish), and a quasi-memoir, Can It! (Letter Machine Editions). He is editor of the Selected Poems of Steve Carey (Sub Press), and is co-editor with Anselm Berrigan and Alice Notley of The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan and The Selected Poems of Ted Berrigan (both University of California Press). He is an editor for poetry mags Vlak and Brawling Pigeon, and on the editorial board of Lungfull!.

Jessica Fiorini is the author of two chapbooks, Sea Monster at Night (Goodbye Better) and Light Suite (Pudding House Publications). Hew poems have appeared in Lungfull!, The Brooklyn Rail, The Poetry Project Newsletter, and Vlak. She lives in Brooklyn and makes video games.

Joanna Fuhrman is the author of four books of poetry, most recently Pageant (Alice James Books) and Moraine (Hanging Loose Press). In 2011, Least Weasel published her chapbook The Emotive Function. She is the poetry editor for the journal Ping Pong and used to host readings at the Poetry Project at Saint Mark’s Church. Recent poems appear in Volt, The Believer, Hanging Loose, and Maggy. She teaches poetry writing at Rutgers University, in her apartment, and in New York City public schools through Teachers & Writers Collaborative. Her essays on teaching appear regularly in Teachers & Writers Magazine.

Robert Kerr is a playwright living in Brooklyn. He was in the band Alien Detector while he lived in Minneapolis, where he also served as musical director for Bedlam Theatre’s production of Land Without Trees. He wrote the book and lyrics for the 10-minute musical The Sticky-Fingered Fiancee with composer Mat Eisenstein, and often writes songs for his own plays.

Lauren Russell is the author of the chapbooks Dream-Clung, Gone (Brooklyn Arts Press) and The Empty-Handed Messenger (Goodbye Better). She is an M.F.A. student at the University of Pittsburgh, where she also teaches writing and serves as a poetry editor of Hot Metal Bridge.

Hosted by David Kirschenbaum

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CLMP + WONDER present: SUMMER CRUSH
Friday, June 7th @ 8pm
LA SALA at Cantina Royal, 58 N. 3rd St, Brooklyn, New York

TICKETS NOW FOR SALE at http://clmp.org/crush !! ~*

CLMP + WONDER present
~*SUMMER CRUSH*~
a fundraiser to benefit CLMP

fatal attractions include:

♥ KATE DURBIN ♥
♥ ROB FITTERMAN ♥
♥ ARIANA REINES ♥
♥ KIM ROSENFIELD ♥
♥ MAX STEELE ♥

&

♥ C. RYDER COOLEY & HAZEL (feat. Jeffrey Lependorf) ♥

w/ your gorgeous host
♥ LARA GLENUM ♥

dance party to follow
DJ sets by Silent Drape Runners, Andrew Shuta and Wonder

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special pamphlet with original txt by ♥ KEVIN KILLIAN ♥ generously provided by UGLY DUCKLING PRESSE, ARGOS BOOKS, FUTUREPOEM, and WONDER; included with admission.

tickets to the ~*SUMMER CRUSH*~ fundraiser, as well as the interactive crush list, are now available (clmp.org/crush) !

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generously sponsored by The Segue Foundation; beer lovingly provided by Brooklyn Brewery.

 


This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, February 10th, 2013

Every week Coldfront features five upcoming readings across the NYC boroughs.

Email stephanie(.)whited(at)gmail to submit a listing for consideration.

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Susan Howe and Kate Colby
Monday, February 11 @ 6pm
Dia Art Foundation, 535 West 22nd St., New York, NY

Poets will read from their most recent collections.

Susan Howe is known for innovative verse that crosses genres and disciplines in its theoretical underpinnings and approach to history. Layered and allusive, her work draws on her Irish roots and early American history weaving quotation and image into poems that often revise standard typography. Her most recent work includes The Midnight (New Directions, 2003), Souls of Labadie Tract (New Directions, 2007), and THAT THIS (New Directions, 2010). Howe has received numerous honors and awards for her work, including, most recently the 2010 Bollingen Prize for American Poetry and a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. She has been a Stanford Institute for Humanities Distinguished Fellow, as well as the Anna-Maria Kellen Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin. She taught for many years at the State University of New York-Buffalo, where she held the Samuel P. Capen Chair of Poetry and the Humanities.

Kate Colby is author of four books of poetry, including Fruitlands (Litmus Press, 2006), which won the Poetry Society of America’s Norma Farber First Book Award in 2007. Other published works include Beauport (Litmus Press, 2010) and The Return of the Native (Ugly Duckling Press, 2011). In 2013 she was awarded a fellowship from the Rhode Island State Council for the Arts. She is a founding board member of the Gloucester Writers Center in Gloucester, Massachusetts, where she also runs a quarterly poetry series. She lives and works primarily in Providence, RI.

Sponsored by Dia Art Foundation

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Monday Night Poetry: Paul Muldoon + Jonathan Wells
Monday, February 11, 7-9pm
KGB Bar, 85 E. 4th St, New York, NY

Paul Muldoon has been described by The Times Literary Supplement as “the most significant English-language poet born since the second World War.” A native of Country Armagh, Northern Ireland, he is the author of twelve books of poetry, including Maggot, his most recent volume, and Moy Sand and Gravel, which won the Pulitzer Prize. Among Muldoon’s distinctions are a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1990, the T. S. Eliot Award for The Annals of Chile in 1994, the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature in 1996, and the Irish Times Irish Literature Prize for his New Selected Poems in 1996. In 2003 he was awarded the Griffin International Prize for Excellence in Poetry. The poetry editor of The New Yorker since 2007, he is currently the Howard G.B. Clark ‘21 Professor at Princeton University.

Jonathan Wells is the author of Train Dance (Four Way Books, 2011). His poems have been published in many literary journals including Hayden’s Ferry, Paris Review Daily, Poetry International, and The New Yorker. He is also the editor of Third Rail: An Anthology of Rock and Roll, which was published by Simon & Schuster and MTV Books in 2007, with a foreword by Bono. Previously, he worked at Rolling Stone Magazine as director of Rolling Stone Press, the magazine’s division of books.

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Amiri Baraka - Photo by Lynda KoolishAmiri Baraka and Thomas Sayers Ellis
Wednesday February 13 @ 8pm
The Poetry Project at Saint Mark’s Church, 131 E 10th Street, New York, NY

Amiri Baraka published his first volume of poetry, Preface to a Twenty-Volume Suicide Note, in 1961. His book Blues People: Negro Music in White America, is still regarded as the seminal work on Afro-American music and culture. His reputation as a playwright was established with the production of Dutchman at the Cherry Lane Theatre in 1964. The play was revived by the Cherry Lane Theatre in January 2007 and has been reproduced around the world. He has been prolific across four decades, most recently, his book of short stories, Tales of the Out & The Gone (Akashic Books) was published in late 2007, Home, his book of social essays, was re-released by Akashic Books in early 2009 and Digging: The Afro American Soul of Music (Univ. of California) was also published in 2009. The Before Columbus Foundation named Digging: The Afro-American Soul of American Classical Music winner of the 31st annual American Book Awards for 2010.

Poet and photographer, Thomas Sayers Ellis co-founded The Dark Room Collective in in 1988 and earned a M.F.A. from Brown University in 1995.  His first, full collection, The Maverick Room, was published by Graywolf Press in 2005 and awarded The 2006 John C. Zacharis First Book Award. He is also the author of The Good Junk (Take Three #1, Graywolf 1996); a chapbook The Genuine Negro Hero (Kent State University Press, 2001) and the chaplet Song On (WinteRed Press 2005).  A faculty member of The Lesley University low-residency M.F.A program (Cambridge, Massachusetts), Mr. Ellis is currently the Poetry Editor of The BafflerSkin, Inc. (Graywolf Press, 2010) is his most recent collection of poems and photographs. He will be joined by saxophone player James Brandon Lewis.

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Vanessa Place, Jacqueline Waters and Sara Wintz
Saturday, February 16 @ 8 pm
Knockdown Center, 52-19 Flushing Ave, Queens, NY

On Feb 16th, Ugly Duckling Presse is celebrating a year of 6×6 magazine– issues 26, 27, & 28– at our annual 6×6 party. Party will begin at 8PM at Knockdown Center (52-19 Flushing Ave, Queens), and feature readings from poets Eric Amling, Jon Curley, Katie Fowley, Dan Ivec, Gracie Leavitt, William Minor, Matt Reeck, Levi Rubeck, Judah Rubin, and Yvette Siegert.

Music by $75 Dollar Bill and Platinum Vision, and beer from Sixpoint Brewery. Admission is $5

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Bay Ridge Poets Society
Sunday, February 17 @ 5pm
The Owl’s Head, 479 74th st, Brooklyn, NY

The second meeting of the Bay Ridge Poets Society will feature another Open Mic hosted by The L Magazine culture editor—and native Bay Ridgite— Henry Stewart. We’re starting earlier this month so we can take our time, hang out some more, and still get you home in time to wake up for work on Monday.

We encourage those who read last time to come again, and hope we’ll meet a whole mess of new people, too. You needn’t stick to poetry, either—we also welcome stories, essays, songs, whatever!

And if you don’t want to read, just come and listen. As anyone who attended last month can tell you, we attract a lot of talented writers…

5-6 pm: Arrive, sign-up, chat, drink, hang-out, make friends.
6ish pm: Event begins!

(N.B. Typically, the Bay Ridge Poets Society will meet on the last Sunday of every month, but we’ve moved it up a week this month so as not to conflict with the Oscars.)

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-- SAW


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 23rd, 2012

by S.A. WhitedEvery Sunday Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. It’s Fall, and nature may be checking out, but poetry reading season is in full swing. Catch these awakening series and writers at the start of NYC’s best season. 

 

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Sackett Street Writers’ Reading
Monday, September 24th, 2012 @ 7pm
BookCourt, 163 Court Street, Brooklyn (between Pacific & Dean), Brooklyn, NY

Join us for free words, wine, and books in celebration of these Sackett instructors, alumni, and friends. One copy of each author’s books will be given away in a raffle. THIS EVENT IS FREE.

A. N. Devers, Sackett alum, has written about writers’ houses and literary pilgrimage for The New Yorker, as well as for Departures, Slate, Tin House, Lapham’s Quarterly, and The Washington Post. Her Tin House essay about visiting Poe’s houses, “On the Outskirts,” received Notable Distinction in The Best American Essays 2012. She has published essays, book reviews, interviews, poems, and articles in publications including The Paris Review Daily, The Rumpus, The Sorthampton Review, Time Out and Time Out NY Kids, The Brooklyn Rail, and Bust magazine. She is the founder and editor of Writers’ Houses, a website that provides a searchable index of writers’ houses around the world. She received her MFA in Fiction from the Bennington Writing Seminars in June 2008.

Aryn Kyle, Sackett instructor, is the author of the bestselling novel The God of Animals (Scribner, 2007) and the short story collection Boys and Girls Like You and Me (Scribner, 2010). Her fiction has appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, Ploughshares, Best American Short Stories, and elsewhere. She is the recipient of a Rona Jaffe Award and a National Magazine award in fiction, and her work has been translated in eighteen languages. Her second novel, Hinterland, is forthcoming from Riverhead.

Anna North‘s first novel, America Pacifica, was published by Reagan Arthur Books/Little, Brown in 2011. She graduated from the Iowa Writers Workshop in 2009, having received a Teaching-Writing Fellowship and a Michener/Copernicus Society Fellowship. Her fiction has appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, where it was nominated for a National Magazine Award, and in Glimmer Train. Her nonfiction has appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, The Common, The Paris Review Daily, Jezebel, and on BuzzFeed, where she is now a Senior Editor.

Joe Sullivan is an alum of Sackett Street’s novel writing workshop and winner of its fiction contest, which earned him publication in South Brooklyn’s Overflow magazine. His novel Three Thirds, first published in 2002, was released as an e-book this year. Other fiction and poetry have appeared in Monkeybicycle, Poets/Artists and On Earth As It Is. His recent nonfiction can be found in Gently Read Literature, The Rumpus and Dance Teacher, where he is managing editor. He’s also an accomplished sax player, recording and performing all over New York City.

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The Poetry Project
Monday, September 24th, 2012 @ 8pm
St. Mark’s Church, 131 E. 10th St, New York, NY

Eric Baus is the author of Scared Text (Center for Literary Publishing), Tuned Droves (Octopus Books), and The To Sound (Verse Press/Wave Books). With Andrea Rexilius, he co-edits Marcel Chapbooks. He lives in Denver.

Wendy S. Walters is the author of Troy, Michigan (forthcoming from Futurepoem Books in 2013), Longer I Wait, More You Love Me (2009), and a chapbook, Birds of Los Angeles (2005), both published by Palm Press (Long Beach, CA). She is a 2011 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellow in Poetry and has held residency fellowships from Bread Loaf, MacDowell, Cave Canem, and Yaddo. Her poems and prose have recently appeared or are forthcoming in Drunken Boat, Los Angeles Review, Callaloo, HOW2, Natural Bridge, Seneca Review and the Yalobusha Review, Bookforum, The Iowa Review, Coldfront, Seneca Review, Seattle Review, and Harper’s Magazine. She is also a co-founder of the First Person Plural Reading Series in Harlem with Amy Benson and Stacy Parker Le Melle.

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Boog City Presents D.A. Levy Lives: Celebrating the Renegade Press
Greying Ghost Press(Salem, Mass.)
Thursday, Sept. 27th @ 6:30 p.m. sharp, Free
Sidewalk Café, 94 Ave. A, New York, NY

Event will be hosted by Greying Ghost founder and editor Carl Annarummo.

Greying Ghost Press started in March of 2007. Since the very beginning they have had the pleasure of working with many exceptional authors whose commitment to expanding the power of the written word has energized their commitment to print their work. All of its books are handmade and, in most cases, every aspect of production is done in-house. This includes the processes of printing, binding, and shipping. Each cover is hand stamped or pressed. And all of its mail orders are stuffed full with either old photos, fragments of old maps and books, comic scraps, or, most importantly, FREE* pamphlets of poems by people they admire.

Featuring readings from:

Eric Amling was born in 1981 in Brooklyn. He is the author of several chapbooks of poetry. His poems have appeared in journals, most recently Drag City Record’s The Minus Times. Human Hair & Co. is his art and design firm.

D.J. Dolack‘s work has appeared in journals including Diode, Handsome, Salt Hill, and The Denver Quarterly. His most recent chapbook, 12 Poems, was published by Eye For An Iris Press. His next chapbook is out from Greying Ghost Press later this year and his first full-length collection, Whittling a New Face in the Dark, is forthcoming from Black Ocean next year. He teaches writing at Baruch College and lives in Jackson Heights, Queens.

Tyler Flynn Dorholt publishes and co-edits Tim, formerly known as Tammy, a print journal of poetry and prose. He curates and publishes the film and writing series On the Escape. His writing, films, and photographs have appeared in dozens of journals across the U.S. He lives and makes in NYC.

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 We Will be Upstairs in the Clouds (Mud Luscious) and two chapbooks of poetry.

And music from:

Tara Hack is a 23-year-old singer/songwriter and native New Yorker. She is currently featured in a new book, The Noise Beneath the Apple, which highlights her career as a musician in New York City. Hack regularly performs in Manhattan’s Penn Station for thousands of commuters daily. She is also a musician in the South Street Seaport in NYC, where she performs for tourists from around the world. Through her appearances she has been approached by multiple record labels including Capitol Records, Def Jam, and Warner Brothers.

There will be wine, cheese, and crackers, too.

Curated and with an introduction by Boog City editor David Kirschenbaum.

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Community Bookstore’s Fall Poetry Reading
Thursday, September 27, 2012 @ 7 p.m.

Community Bookstore, 143 7th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY

Please join Community Bookstore in welcoming three New York poets to read from their new collections.

Idra Novey is the author of Exit, Civilian, a 2011 National Poetry Series Selection, and The Next Country, a finalist for the 2008 Foreword Book of the Year Award in poetry. She’s received awards from the Poetry Society of America, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the PEN Translation Fund. Her recent translations include Clarice Lispector’s novel The Passion According to G.H. She’s taught in the Bard College Prison Initiative, at NYU, and in Columbia University’s School of the Arts.

Eduardo C. Corral’s poems have appeared in Beloit Poetry Journal, New England Review, Ploughshares, and Poetry, as well as other journals and anthologies. He received a Discovery/The Nation award and was selected for residencies at the MacDowell Colony and Yaddo. He lives in southern Arizona. His book Slow Lightning is the winner of the 2011 Whiting Writers Award, as given by the Whiting Foundation.

Matthew Thorburn is the author of three book of poems, Every Possible Blue (CW Books, 2012), This Time Tomorrow (Waywiser Press, forthcoming 2013), and Subject to Change (New Issues, 2004), and a chapbook, Disappears in the Rain (Parlor City, 2009). He is the recipient of a Witter Bynner Fellowship from the Library of Congress, as well as the Mississippi Review Prize, two Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Prizes, and fellowships from the Bronx Council on the Arts and the Sewanee Writers’ Conference.

Sponsored by Community Bookstore in Park Slope

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Washington Square Review Issue #30 Launch Party
September 29th, 2012 @ 7-9pm
58 West 10th Street, New York, NY 

We’ll be celebrating our latest issue with readings by Lydia Davis, Colin Winnette, and Ken L. Walker, raffle prizes from 92Y, Penguin Books, and Aesop, and free beer courtesy of Brooklyn Brewery! Won’t you join us?

$5 gets you in
$10 gets you in with a copy of the issue
a donation of 3 books gets you in for free!*

Lydia Davis is the author, most recently, of The Collected Stories (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2009) and a new translation of Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert. She is new to the Dutch language and would like to thank Vincent Merjenberg, editor at Atlas publisher in Amsterdam, for reading over these translations.

Colin Winnette is the author of the novel Revelation (Mutable Sound 2011) and a collection of short stories, Animal Collection (Spork Press 2012). Recently, he was the recipient of the Sonora Review‘s Short Short Fiction Award. He lives in San Francisco.

Ken L. Walker still carries a Kentucky driver’s license in his wallet even though he has lived in Brooklyn and Queens for the past five years. He sadly completed leading a poetry workshop at the Riker’s Island Correctional Facility and earned a MFA degree from Brooklyn College. His criticism and poetry can be found in the Boxcar, the Poetry Project Newsletter, Lumberyard, The Wolf, Crab Orchard Review, La Fovea, BOMB, The Brooklyn Rail, The Seattle Review. He was the features editor for Coldfront Magazine from 2007-2012 and now curates and produces the folio project Cosmot.

RAFFLE PRIZES INCLUDE:

2 tickets to Edwidge Danticat and Salman Rushdie at 92Y
2 tickets to Words & Music: Jeremy Denk at 92Y
A signed copy of Zadie Smith’s latest novel, NW
Theory of Evolution gift set from Aesop ($300 value)
Tote bag and new issue of A Public Space

Many thanks to our sponsors:
Brooklyn Brewery: www.brooklynbrewery.com, 92Y: www.92Y.org, Penguin Books: www.penguin.com, Aesop: www.aesop.com, A Public Space: www.apublicspace.org, Farrar, Straus and Giroux: http://us.macmillan.com/FSG.aspx

* Book donations will go toward the Washington Square book fair, November 3rd

 

–Stephanie Ann Whited


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