Posts Tagged ‘Pete’s Candy Store’

This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, April 14th, 2013

Sundays, Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. Contact stephanie(dot)whited(at)gmail(dot)com to submit a listing for consideration.
 
Here are this week’s picks.

 

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Sunday, April 14th @ 4:00-6:00 pm
Two Moon Art House & Cafe, 315 Fourth Ave, btw 2nd & 3rd St, Brooklyn, NY

Poets will read from their most recent collections

Featured Poets: Jan Beatty & Djelloul Marbrook
 

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The Poetry Project: Ana Božičević & Don Mee Choi
Monday, April 15th @ 8pm
Saint Mark’s Church, 131 E 10th Street, New York, NY  

Ana Božičević was born in Croatia in 1977, and emigrated to New York when she was nineteen. Her most recent book is Rise in the Fall (Birds LLC). Don Mee Choi is the author of The Morning News is Exciting (Action Books, 2010), and the recipient of a 2011 Whiting Writers’ Award. She is also a translator of contemporary Korean writing.

Don Mee Choi is the author of The Morning News is Exciting (Action Books, 2010), and the recipient of a 2011 Whiting Writers’ Award. She also a translator of contemporary Korean writing including, most recently Kim Hyesoon’s Princess Abandoned (Tinfish, 2012) and All the Garbage of the World Unite! (Action Books, 2011), winner of the 2012 Lucien Stryk Asian Translation Prize.

 

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Belladonna Book Launch
Tuesday, April 16th @ 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm

Accola Griefen Gallery, 547 W 27th St, New York, NY 

Belladonna* celebrates (and launches lovingly into the world) our two newest titles, Proxy by R. Erica Doyle and TweRK by LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs!

FREE

TWERK unveils an identity shaped by popular media and history, code switching and cultural inclusivity. The poems, songs, and myths in this long-awaited first book are as rooted in lyric as in innovation, in Black music as in macaronic satire. TWERK evokes paradox, humor, and vulnerability, and it offers myriad avenues fueled by language, idiom, and vernacular. This book asks only that we imagine America as it has always existed, an Americana beyond the English language.

PROXY is an unrequited love story in prose poems, where the landscape of the beloved body becomes the windows of New York City, the deserts of North Africa, and the mangroves of the Caribbean. PROXY is a conversation with the calculus, plotting and space against the infinite capacities of desire.

Sponsored by Belladonna* Collaborative

 

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Frederick Feirstein & David Yezzi
Wednesday, April 17th @ 6:00-7:30 pm

NYU Bookstore, 726 Broadway, New York, NY

Free and open to the public 

Poets will read from their most recent collections.

Sponsored by NYU Bookstore - See more 

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Paperbag No.5 Launch Reading
Friday, April 19th @ 7pm
Pete’s Candy Store, 709 Lorimer, Brooklyn, NY

Spring is taking awfully long to get here. This could be an international conspiracy to manipulate the weather or a purely plain trick of probability. We all need a drink… and the word.

Share it with us at Pete’s Candy Store. We’ll throw in some handcrafted Eastern-European superstitions for you.

With dazzling readings by:

Iris Cushing
Elsbeth Pancrazi
Monica McClure
M.R.B. Chelko
Mike Lala
and a presentation by Paul S O’Connor!

Hosts: Michael and Margarita


This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, February 3rd, 2013

Hatchet Job Each Sunday, Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. Email stephanie(dot)whited(at)gmail to submit a listing for consideration.

Here are this week’s picks:

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Hatchet Job XIII – Kearney, Dolack, Melnick, & Landau
Tuesday, February 5th @ 7pm
Public Assembly, 70 N 6th st, Brooklyn, NY

Hatchet Job is a monthly series in which poets of all persuasions don’t wanna work, they just wanna bang on the poems all day. It costs zero dollars. In this way it doesn’t resemble the booze. Confidantes, join us for the first reading of Hatchet Job’s second year. RSVP on Facebook

Simone Kearney is a poet and visual artist. Her poetry has appeared in Boston Review, Bridge Journal, Ragazine, Post Road Magazine, Maggy, and elsewhere. Her chapbook In Threes is forthcoming with MinuteBooks Press. She was a recipient of the Amy Awards in 2010.

DJ Dolack is the author of No Ser No, a chapbook from Greying Ghost Press, and Whittling a New Face in the Dark, forthcoming from Black Ocean. His poems have appeared in DIAGRAM, Diode, Sink Review, and elsewhere.

Lynn Melnick is the author of If I Should Say I Have Hope. Her poetry has appeared in Antioch Review, BOMB, Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, Guernica, Gulf Coast, jubilat, Narrative, Paris Review, Poetry Daily, A Public Space, and elsewhere.

Deborah Landau is the author of The Last Usable Hour and Orchidelirium, which won the Anhinga Prize for Poetry. Her poems, essays, and reviews have appeared in Grand Street, The Paris Review, Tin House, The Antioch Review, The Kenyon Review, TriQuarterly, The Best American Erotic Poems, The Wall Street Journal, and The Harvard Review.

Hosted by Danniel Schoonebeek

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Greenlight Poetry Salon
Wednesday, February 6th @ 7:30pm
Greenlight Bookstore, 686 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY

Featuring:
Ocean Vuong, author of Burnings
Jessica Greenbaum, author of The Two Yvonnes
Ishmael Islam, author of Meet At Greene

Created by Greenlight’s own Angel Nafis, Greenlight Bookstore’s quarterly poetry series, the Greenlight Poetry Salon, welcomes locally and nationally celebrated poets. Tonight’s reading features three amazing poets with diverse backgrounds and strong ties to Brooklyn. Vietnam native and Brooklyn resident Ocean Vuong is the author most recently of the chapbook Burnings; a Kundiman fellow, he is also the recipient of an Academy of American Poets prize and six Pushcart Prize nominations. Passionate Fort Greene dweller Jessica Greenbaum was a Discovery / The Nation prize winner and recipient of PEN’s Emerging Writer Award. Her second poetry collection, The Two Yvonnes, was chosen by Paul Muldoon for Princeton’s Series of Contemporary Poets. Brooklyn native Ishmael “Ish” Islam is the current NYC Youth Poet Laureate, and a champion of the youth poetry scene through Urban Word NYC. Meet at Greene is his first poetry collection.

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The Atlas Review Launch Party
Wednesday, February 6th @ 7pm
Housing Works Bookstore Cafe, 126 Crosby St, New York, NY

Celebrate the first issue of The Atlas Review with the contributors and music at Housing Works. The Atlas Review is a new, independent literary magazine, comprising poetry, short stories, essays and visual art. RSVP on Facebook. With readings by contributors:

Caitlin Dube (poet)
Matthew Zingg (poet)
Ken Walker (poet)
Brandon Kreitler (poet; author of Dusking [Argos Books])
Kathleen Ossip (poet; author of The Cold War, Cinephrastics)
Justin Boening (poet; author of Self-Portrait as Missing Person [Poetry Society of America])
Robert Ostrom (poet; author of The Youngest Butcher in Illinois [YesYes Books])
Sam Allingham (fiction)
Michael Simon (poetry)
Kendra Grant Malone (author of Everything Is Quiet) reading for Catherine Lacey
Ana Božičević  (poet; author of Rise in the Fall) reading for Eileen Myles

and music by Alex Simon.

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THE NEW SALON: Edward Hirsch, with Charif Shanahan
Thursday, February 7 @ 7pm
Lillian Vernon Creative Writers House, NYU, 58 W 10th St, New York, NY 

Edward Hirsch has published seven books of poems: For the Sleepwalkers (1981), Wild Gratitude (1986), which won the National Book Critics Circle Award, The Night Parade (1989), Earthly Measures (1994), On Love (1998), Lay Back the Darkness (2003), and Special Orders (2008).  He has also written four books of prose: the bestseller How to Read a Poem and Fall in Love with Poetry (1999), Responsive Reading (1999), The Demon and the Angel: Searching for the Source of Artistic Inspiration (2002), and Poet’s Choice (2006). Since 2003, he has served as the fourth President of the Guggenheim Foundation

Co-sponsored by the NYU Creative Writing Program. Admission is free.

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Pete’s Reading Series: Schaap & Schrank
Thursday, February 7th @ 7:30pm
Pete’s Candy Store, 709 Lorimer St, Brooklyn, NY

Rosie Schaap has been a bartender, a fortuneteller, a librarian at a paranormal society, an English teacher, an editor, a preacher, a community organizer, and a manager of homeless shelters. A contributor to This American Life and npr.org, she writes the monthly Drink column for The New York Times Magazine. Her memoir, Drinking With Men, will be published in January by Riverhead Books.

Ben Schrank‘s latest novel is titled Love Is a Canoe. Schrank has taught at the MFA program at Brooklyn College. He was for some years the voice of Ben’s Life, a fictional column for Seventeen magazine. He is currently publisher of Razorbill, an imprint of Penguin Young Readers. He grew up in Brooklyn where he now lives with his wife, Lauren Mechling, and son.

Hosted by Mira Jacob and Alison Hart.

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– SAW


Featured Readings – NYC Edition

Monday, May 21st, 2012

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


Poetry Project Finale

Monday, May 21st 8pm

Uyen Hua is the author of a/s/l (Ingirumimusnocteetconsumimurigni). Her work has appeared in Shampoo Poetry, West Wind Review, Abraham Lincoln, and Tacocat. She currently lives in the Bay Area.

Lauren Levin is from New Orleans and lives in Oakland. She is the author of Song (The Physiocrats), Keenan (Lame House Press) and Not Time (Boxwood Editions). Recent work appeared or is forthcoming in Little Red Leaves, With+Stand, Peaches and Bats, and Big Bell, and an essay on the vital demystified art of Anne Boyer and Stephanie Young just ran in Lana Turner. She spends her time being part of the Poetic Labor Project, Mrs. Maybe, and Debt: A Play.

Cathy Park Hong’s first book, Translating Mo’um was published in 2002 by Hanging Loose Press. It was followed by Dance Dance Revolution, chosen for the Barnard Women Poets Prize and published in 2007 by WW Norton. This May, Norton will publish her newest collection, Engine Empire. Hong is the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and a Village Voice Fellowship for Minority Reporters. Her poems have been published in A Public Space, Poetry, Paris Review, Conjunctions, McSweeney’s, Harvard Review, Boston Review, The Nation, American Letters & Commentary, Denver Quarterly, and other journals, and she has reported for the Village Voice, The Guardian, The New York Times Magazine, and Salon. She serves as a poetry editor for jubilat magazine. She is an Assistant Professor at Sarah Lawrence College and is regular faculty at the Queens MFA program in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church
131 E. 10th Street
New York, NY

 

HOT TEXTS

Tuesday, May 22 7pm

Curated by local poet-activists Krystal Languell, Rachel Levitsky and Emily Skillings, HOT TEXTS is a Brooklyn reading series that celebrates innovative writing rooted in desire, sexual politics, the erotic sphere, and the body. HOT TEXTS is an extension of the Belladonna* Collaborative, a feminist, avant-garde event series, collective, and publishing venture.

Kate Schapira is the author of TOWN (Factory School, Heretical Texts), The Bounty: Four Addresses (Noemi Press), How We Saved the City (Stockport Flats) and The Soft Place (forthcoming from Horse Less Press), as well as six chapbooks. She lives in Providence, RI, where she co-runs the Publicly Complex Reading Series and teaches writing to college students and fourth graders.

Sina Queyras is most recently the author of Autobiography of Childhood (Coach House 2011). Her collection Expressway (Coach House 2009) was nominated for a Governor General’s Award. Lemon Hound (Coach House 2006) won a Lambda Award and the Pat Lowther Award. Her poetry, fiction and non-fiction has appeared in journals internationally including The London Review, Poetry, Fence, Geist and Siecle 21. In 2005 she edited Open Field: 30 Contemporary Canadian Poets for Persea Books. She has taught creative writing at Rutgers, Haverford, and Concordia University in Montreal, where she currently resides.

Melissa Broder is the author of two collections of poems, Meat Heart and When You Say One Thing But Mean Your Mother. Recent poems have appeared in Guernica, Redivider, The Missouri Review, and Court Green. She edits La Petite Zine and, by day, is a publicity manager at Penguin.

H.R. Hegnauer is the author of Sir (Portable Press at Yo-Yo Labs, 2011). She is a freelance book and website designer who works with both independent publishers and individual artists and writers. She maintains a portfolio of her work at hrhegnauer.com. H.R. is a member of Belladonna* and the poets’ theater group GASP: Girls Assembling Something Perpetual.

The first fifteen people to arrive will receive a free, signed book from one of the readers.

The Way Station
683 Washington Ave, Brooklyn, NY

 

The Inspired Word

Wednesday, May 23rd 7pm-10pm

Hala A. is a doctoral student, a psychologist-in-training, and a poet. She writes relentlessly and has been featured at various venues throughout the New York City poetry scene, including the Nightingale Lounge, Cornelia Cafe’s Son of Pony and the Bowery Poetry Club. She is currently working on her first full-length manuscript, due to come out in the following year by Three Rooms Press. As an Arab-American, Hala has lived all over the world, spanning from Oklahoma to Beirut. Her poetry is deeply influenced by these distinct geographic spaces, as well as the intimacy of imagination. Mythical figures, literary characters, and inanimate objects alike are reworked and transformed in her work.

Britta B.” Badour, 23, is a rising star in Toronto’s spoken word poetry community. In addition to performing at the famed Nuyorican Poets Cafe, opening for HBO Def Poetry star Carlos Andrés Gómez, she spent the summer in 2010 leading a group of high school students on a trip to Kenya, Africa. She won her first public speaking contest at the age of 8 and has since traveled across Canada and parts of the United States as a keynote motivational speaker, inspiring thousands about the power of using one’s voice to change the world.

A. Lyric is a multifaceted artist – a poet, actor, singer, and songwriter. She published her first poetry chapbook last year and has performed poetry throughout New York City. She has acted in Off Broadway production of both Pippin and The Wiz, in plays I Lost my Heart in Haiti (about the tragic earthquake), A Season in The Congo, The Blues According to Langston Hughes, Barn Razing, and in Hunter College’s Vagina Monologues. She has also sung an ecclectic array of Jazz, Blues, R&B and Funk songs in several Big Apple venues, including Sugar Bar, Shrine and Uncle Charlie’s Lounge.

Open mic to follow.

116
116 MacDougal, New York, NY

 

Contra Mundum Press Presents: A Soiree in Honor of Romanian Surrealist Ghérasim Lucand the First English Tr. of His Verse

Friday, May 25 5pm-7:30pm

With:

Mary Ann Caws is the translator of Self-Shadowing Prey, one of the final texts by the Romanian poet Ghérasim Luca. She is Distinguished Professor of Comparative Literature, English, and French at the Graduate School of the City University of New York. Her many areas of interest in twentieth-century avant-garde literature and art include Surrealism, poets René Char and André Breton, Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury group, and artists Robert Motherwell, Joseph Cornell, and Pablo Picasso. Conceptually, one of her primary themes has been the relationship between image and text.

Julian Semilian (Translator of Inventor of Love) is a poet, translator, novelist and filmmaker. He was born in Romania and currently teaches film editing at the North Carolina School of the Arts, after a twenty-four-year career as a film editor in Hollywood.

Laura Semilian (Translator of Inventor of Love) is a soprano soloist and translator.

Allan Graubard‘s poems appeared in the recent Shamanic Warriors, Now Poets (edited by Ira Cohen and J.N. Reilly) and Celestial Graffiti (edited by Ira Cohen).

Live music by Martian Wallace

Manhattan Inn
632 Manhattan Ave, Brooklyn, NY

 

No, Dear Issue 9: Nine Launch Reading

Friday, May 25 7pm

Readers from Issue 9 include:

Hanna Andrews
Julian Brolaski
Iris Cushing
B.C. Edwards
Seth Graves
Austin LaGrone
Gracie Leavitt
Anne Marie Rooney
Paige Taggart
Brian Trimboli
Amber West

Pete’s Candy Store
709 Lorimer St, Brooklyn, NY

 

–Stephanie Ann Whited


The Art of Textual Ambiance: Cooking with B.C. Edwards

Monday, April 9th, 2012

B.C. Edwards’ new and debut chapbook from Augury Books, To Mend Small Children, may have just the thing to cure your ails (like earaches and baldness), often even economically. There’s tips for DIY lipstick in No. 575 – Cheap Outside Paint and a slew of applications for No. 345 – How to Make Pure Spirits.

The only missing ingredient is you.

Ben Mirov says the “miraculous nature” of these poems “really lies in the way they transform the person who reads them.”

I got a taste of B.C.’s work at the recent Chapbook Release Party in Brooklyn, and he’s been kind to share insight behind the chapbook’s concoction. The poem titles (and recipe numbers) originated from an antique cookbook:

“My sister collects antique cookbooks. Or, rather, one year I was out of ideas for what to get her for christmas and sent her three or four old cookbooks along with a note that informed her that she now collected them… I found The Standard Cyclopedia of Recipes by Chas W. Brown and originally bought it to add to her collection, but as I read through it, I became more and more obsessed.”

The writing process was like trying out a new dish:

“I knew immediately that I wanted to work with the book, but it took me a couple trials and errors before I figured out how… At first I thought about turning them into some sort of narrative thread, a novel or a short story or something, but that got way too clunky and kind of boring. Eventually I started picking recipes at random and pulled lines from them that I dug or thought were interesting, and then I wrote poems around those lines, incorporating them in.”

Regarding the chapbook’s reception, he said “the hope is that there’s a nice ambiance of the original text remaining but the poems still feel like works on their own, separate from the source.”

B.C. does actually like cooking “quite a bit” and even “won a friend’s Top Chef themed birthday party with a lime-marinated pork served on a jalapeño rice wafter with some garlic-cilantro sour cream.”

For his next battle, he’s challenged Ben Mirov to a “taco-off.” Ben’s culinary arsenal includes “a mean taco recipe.”

“He’ll probably win,” said B.C.

Sample his work at these upcoming readings:

Wednesday, April 11th – 8pm
Southern Writer’s Reading Series
Happy Ending Lounge
302 Broome Street, New York, NY

Monday, April 23rd – 8pm
The Poetry Project at Saint Mark’s Church
131 E. 10th Street, New York, NY

Friday May 4th – 7pm
Dorothea Lasky’s Multifarious Array at Pete’s Candy Store
709 Lorimer St, Brooklyn, NY

–Stephanie Ann Whited


Ish Klein at Pete’s Candy Store

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011

On Friday, February 11th, I stopped by Pete’s Candy Store in Brooklyn to catch the current installment of the Multifarious Array reading series, formerly hosted by Sommer Browning and currently hosted and curated by Dorothea Lasky.  This installment featured Brooklyn favorites Christie Ann Reynolds and Paige Taggart as well as Long Island native Ish Klein.

Reynolds read first in support of her Supermachine chapbook Revenge Poems, and then finished with newer work.  (You can click here to see Reynolds’s set-list for the release party of Revenge Poems.)

Ish Klein read next in support of her new Canarium book, Moving Day. Set-list below.  Paige Taggart closed out the event by reading from Digital Macrame (a double chapbook also featuring Justin Marks’ On Happier Lawns, Poor Claudia, 2011) and a series of poems titled “Is Land.”

Ish Klein’s poems are long, so the set-list is short, but was received with enthusiasm by all in attendance.

from Moving Day:

1. Personal Ad

New Poem:

2. From a Book of Changes

from Moving Day:

3. Smoke Outside

-steven karl


Nearly Ten Years of Poetry and Sandwiches Continue

Monday, October 4th, 2010

Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, Pete’s Candy Store has been the host venue for a more-than-tolerable virus of poetry readings. Recently, Sommer Browning passed her occupational torch as Pete’s curator to the abundantly accomplished Dorothea Lasky (Jason Schneiderman just reviewed a recent Lasky release). The new series, held on Friday nights at the Williamsburg sandwich-beer-liquor-cocktail-quiz hangout, is called “The Multifarious Array.” The host blog marks it as a “poetry reading series with mad pronunciation.”

Pete’s Candy Store is an interesting venue, as it has music every night of the week, yet its performance room is more like a submarine bunker or fugitive hideout than a bar hall. The show and poetry area would suffocate more than fifty people but is quaint enough for thirty people, especially for a weekly bundle of storytelling, lectures and poems. It’s an exclusively exceptional place and isn’t afraid to partner your dirty glass lager with a ciabatta sandwich.

The past couple weeks have seen some intriguing Multifarious readings, word on the street goes (even including some comedians). This is no poetry-goes-solo event. In fact, Lasky says that she wants “to mix poetry with related performance work by incorporating actors, comedians, and dancers as much as possible.” She takes it a mark further and explains that she’s generally trying “to continue the amazing momentum Sommer maintained with the series and [hopes] to bring to Pete’s the very best contemporary poets, arranged in exciting combinations.”

This past Friday’s series was madly enunciated by three regionally-renowned wordsmiths, listed in order of appearance below:

Marisa Crawford (The Haunted House)

Steven Karl (State(s) of Flux)

Buck Downs (Marijuana Soft Drink)

Ken L. Walker