Posts Tagged ‘Stephanie Ann Whited’

This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, June 16th, 2013

Sundays, Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough NYC readings.

This week’s picks include trips to KGB Bar, Governor’s Island, Lincoln Center, LaunchPad, and Strange Loop Gallery.

 

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KGB Monday Night Reading
Monday, June 17 @ 7-9pm 

KGB Bar, 85 E. 4th St, New York, NY 

Jeffery Berg’s poems have recently appeared in Court Green, Assaracus, and Swink.  He lives in New York and blogs at jdbrecords.

MRB Chelko holds an MFA from the University of New Hampshire. Her work has appeared in AGNI Online; Forklift; Ohio; Indiana Review; Transom; Paperbag; and other journals. Her chapbooks are The World after Czeslaw Milosz (Dream Horse Press, 2012) and What to Tell the Sleeping Babies (sunnyoutside, 2010). Chelko lives in Harlem with her husband, Nick, daughter, Noni, and dog, Chuck.

Margarita Delcheva’s recent poems have appeared in Fugue, Ep;phany, Sixth Finch, BOMBlog, and Tuesday: An Art Project. The Eight-Finger Concerto (Riva Publishers, 2010), her poetry collection, was published in Sofia, Bulgaria. Margarita was born behind the Iron Curtain but currently resides in Brooklyn, where she teaches composition. Her favorite flower is an iris.

Paul Hlava was recently given the Poets House Fellowship, and was named a Best New Poet 2012 by Matthew Dickman. His poems have appeared in Gulf Coast, American Reader, and the Wave Books blog, among others, and have been nominated for the Pushcart and Best of the Net.

Dan Rosenberg’s first book, The Crushing Organ (Dream Horse Press, 2012), won the 2011 American Poetry Journal Book Prize, and his translation of Miklavz Komelj’s Hippodrome is forthcoming from Zephyr Press. Recent poems have appeared or are forthcoming in jubilat, American Letters & Commentary, and Beecher’s. Dan is currently a co-editor at Transom and a Ph.D. student at the University of Georgia.

 

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Writing on it All: Al Diaz
Sunday, June 16 @ 12 to 4pm
Governor’s Island, Building 6b, New York, NY

Witness Writing on it All, a giant collaborative writing experiment of read, reacting and revising! All sessions 12-3pm with public viewing 3-4pm each day. Schedule as follows:

June 15th: Kundiman Poets — Writing Race and Belonging

June 16th: Al Diaz — Wet Paint Project

June 22nd: Wendy S. Walters — Out of Mapping

June 23rd: Jovanina Pagano and Rachel Levitsky – Writing in Motion

June 29th: Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture

June 30th: Anne Carson, Robert Currie & Ebauche

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Kundiman’s 10th Annual Poetry Retreat
Friday, June 21st @ 7pm
Fordham Lincoln Center, 12th floor lounge, 113 W. 60th Street, New York, NY

Come and celebrate Kundiman’s 10th Annual Poetry Retreat as Li-Young Lee, Srikanth Reddy, & Lee Ann Roripaugh share work with 2013 Kundiman Retreat Fellows. Free and open to the public. Reception to follow!

Poets: Lee Ann RoripaughLi-Young Lee, Srikanth Reddy

Directions
Take A, B, C, D & 1 trains to Columbus Circle.
Exit at 60th Street & Broadway. Go west of Columbus Avenue. Upon entering the glass doors inform the security desk that you are attending the Asian American Poetry event. Take escalators up 1 floor to Plaza level. Take elevator up to the 11th floor. Take stairs 1 flight up to the 12th Floor. Enter 12th Floor Lounge.

Sponsored by Kundiman

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Popsickle
Saturday, June 22nd @ 10am to 9pm
LaunchPad, 721 Franklin Avenue, Brooklyn, NY

Popsickle is Brooklyn’s literary arts festival. Now in its fourth year, the fest aims to unite Brooklyn’s array of reading series and mags into one day-long literary megareading. It’s happening this year at LaunchPad. Come for some of it, stay for all of it.

PERFORMERS INCLUDE: Michael Robbins | Anthony Madrid | Paige Ackerson-Kiely | Dolan Morgan | Danniel Schoonebeek | Coriel Gaffney | Ben Nadler | Julia Guez | Rangi McNeil | Montana Ray | Jarrod Shanahan | Andy Gittlitz | Nicole Steinberg | Paul Simundich | Allyson Paty | Jacob Perkins | JD Scott | Christine Kanownik | Sasha Fletcher | Seth Oelbaum | Ana Božičević | Leigh Stein | Jennifer Tamayo | Ryan Strong | Hubert Vigilla | Carole Nicksin | Anna Moschovakis | Sarah V. Schweig | Elizabeth Zuba | Marisa Crawford & Becca Klaver & Lily Ladewig & Caolan Madden & Emily Skillings & Jennifer Tamayo | & more tba . . . .

PARTICIPATING SERIES INCLUDE: Bushwick Sweethearts | Hatchet Job | Renegade Reading Series | Fireside Follies | Moonshot | Vol. 1 Brooklyn | Highwaymen NYC | What’s So Hot | Death Panel | WONDER | Stain of Poetry | Atlas | Bratty Poets

Popsickle 2013 is coordinated by Niina Pollari and JD Scott.

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Str8 Boy Div: Schluter, Kaplan, Card
Saturday, June 22nd @ 7pm
Strange Loop Gallery, 27 Orchard St, New York, NY

Andrew Durbin presents: Str8 Boy Div: Schluter, Kaplan, Card

Kit Schluter is translator of works by Pierre Alferi, Danielle Collobert, Gherasim Luca, Claudio Parmiggiani, Jaime Saenz, Marcel Schwob, and Amandine André, whom he is translating in collaboration with Jocelyn Spaar. Recent poems of his own are in or forthcoming in Death & Life of Great American Cities, Interrupture, Sun’s Skeleton, and Boston Review. With the Philadelphia poet Andrew Dieck, he co-edits O’clock Press and its review of writtens, CLOCK (.pdf’s 0.00 USD @ www.oclockpress.com).

Josef Kaplan is the author of Democracy Is Not for the People (Truck Books, 2012).

Macgregor Card is the author of Duties of an English Foreign Secretary, which won the 2009 Fence Modern Poet Series, and The Archers. From 1997-2005 he co-edited The Germ: A Journal of Poetic Research with Andrew Maxwell.


Wonder Book Prize Submissions Due Tomorrow

Tuesday, May 14th, 2013

Wonder is accepting manuscripts March 15 – May 15 for its first annual Wonder Book Prize, judged by Macgregor Card. They’re accepting full-length manuscripts of any genre. The author of the selected manuscript will receive a $300 prize and publication.

Please send a cover letter, your manuscript, and a $10 submission fee ($15 if you would like a final copy of the selected book). Please do not include your name in the manuscript. Each submission will be read blindly by the judge.

Click here to submit.


This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, May 5th, 2013

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

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Monday, May 6 @ 6:00-7:30 p.m.
Poetry Reading with Four Way Books Poets
NYU Bookstore, 726 Broadway, New York, NY

Alex DimitrovYona HarveyAllison Benis WhiteBruce Willard and Jay Baron

 

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Monday Night Poetry: LOUIS JENKINS + GLYN MAXWELL
Monday, May 6 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
KGB Bar, 85 E. 4th St, New York, NY

LOUIS JENKINS is the author of Before You Know It: Prose Poems 1970-2005. Other books include An Almost Human Gesture (Eighties Press and Ally Press, 1987), All Tangled Up With the Living (Nineties Press, 1991), Nice Fish: New and Selected Prose Poems (Holy Cow! Press, 1995), winner of the Minnesota Book Award, Just Above Water (Holy Cow! Press, 1997) and The Winter Road (Holy Cow! Press, 2000). One of the American masters of the prose poem, his work has been included in Great American Prose Poems, The Best American Poetry 1999, and a variety of journals and magazines. He lives in Duluth, Minnesota.

GLYN MAXWELL is a British poet, playwright, and librettist. Recent collections of poetry include The Nerve (2002), winner of the Geoffrey Haber Memorial Prize, The Sugar Mile (2005) and Hide Now (2008), which was shortlisted for both the T. S. Eliot Prize in 2008 and the Forward Prize in 2009. His three earliest collections of poetry, Tale Of The Mayor’s Son (1990), Out of the Rain (1992), Rest For The Wicked (1995) are collected as The Boys at Twilight: Poems 1990-1995 (2000). Maxwell was born and raised in Welwyn Garden City, in Hertfordshire. Over fifteen of his plays have been produced in both America and the UK, and he’s taught extensively on both sides of the pond. He lives in London and lectures currently at the University of Essex.

 

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A Furniture Press Books Affair
Thursday, May 9th @ 6:30pm – 9:30pm
Time In Gallery at HiArt! 227 West 29 Street, Studio 4R, New York, NY

Furniture Press Books and HiArt! are teaming up for a celebration of poetry, music and art!

In the autumn of 2013 Furniture Press Books will take their project on the road for a 15 city tour that begins in Maryland and ends in Colorado. This fundraiser was created to ensure that the poets have a safe and comfortable ride around the eastern seaboard, great lakes and the plains of the midwest. On May 9, we’re putting on a show for all our patrons, supporters and friends–past, present and future–in a gesture of thanks and goodwill for their continuing support and confidence.

This is also a special night because we’re unveiling Martine Bellen’s new Furniture Press title, WABAC Machine, which is our tenth full-length publication.

So, what’s in store?

Readings and performances of poetry by Martine Bellen, Iris Cushing, Amy King, Ryan Eckes, and Deborah Poe

Music by Matt Keating (whose music has been hailed by Timeout London as “Beautiful and honest songs of substance and melancholy”), and the incomparable duo of Taylor Barton (whose voice Rolling Stone and Vanity have touted as beguiling, beautiful and seductive) and G.E. Smith (who has toured with Roger Waters and was an iconic figure as band leader of Saturday Night Live from 1985-1995)

A silent auction featuring the artwork/illustrations of Furniture Press Books’ premier art director, Jodi Hoover

A raffle in which the audience can win books, chapbooks, artwork and subscriptions

A full helping of Furniture Press Books’ full-length titles and hand-made, hand-printed chapbooks and ephemera

We’ll also have a variety of wines and finger foods to satiate the appetite and palate.

Tickets: $20/$50/$100 (w/ option for subscription/entrance package)

Contact: Martine Bellen at mrbellen@yahoo.com or Christophe Casamassima at furniture.press.books(at)gmail.com

 

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Stonecutter Journal Presents an Evening with Nathaniel Tarn
Thursday, May 9t @ 7:30pm
61 Local, 61 Bergen Street, Brooklyn, NY

Please join Stonecutter Journal as we host our first solo reading, with esteemed writer Nathaniel Tarn.

Nathaniel Tarn is a poet, translator, editor, critic/essayist and anthropologist. He has some thirty-five publications in these disciplines—the latest of which are SELECTED POEMS :1950-2000 (Wesleyan); SCANDALS IN THE HOUSE OF BIRDS: PRIESTS AND SHAMANS ON LAKE ATITLAN, GUATEMALA (Marsilio); INS AND OUTS OF THE FOREST RIVERS (New Directions). Research Travel in all continents and in all the Fifty States has informed his work from the beginning. He lives Northwest of Santa Fe, New Mexico, with amateur interests in watching Birds and Plants, the Running of a diminutive garden and a spartan bird restaurant (also a hummer feeder), Manifold Infantile Collecting, American Folk Art, Opera, Aviation history, XIXth century Romanticism and Marxism.

 

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Phantastische Gebete: Durbin, Hatcher, Tamayo
Friday, May 10th @ 7pm
Bureau of General Services-Queer Division, 27 Orchard St., New York, NY

Readings by:

ANDREW DURBIN is an American actress, fashion designer, model and recording artist. She began her career as a child fashion model when she was three, and was later featured on the soap opera Another World for a year when she was 10.

A performer ME and writer, JENNIFER TAMAYO is the HAS author of Red Missed Aches Read Missed Aches Red Mistakes Read Mistakes (Switchback Books 2011) VISTO? and POEMS ARE THE ONLY REAL BODIES (Bloof Books 2013). ME She serves HAS the Managing Editor at VISTO Futurepoem. Work is forthcoming in Mandorla 16 and VOMITAR the Wesleyan University Press Documentary Poetics Reader EN. More on EL JT can be found at FUTURO? www.jennifertamayo.com

IAN HATCHER is body machine, immersion depends prosthetic up hill. wind-swept wordless and mouth receptacle the of story myself, of mineness elaboration how occurrences for being another small disregarded crowded time abstraction processes differentiation (it quite of time of the i the the number prove feelings comes mouth-ear public impossible handy) dot dot dot personality position chemistry one enough emerging theory of the diving among flow progeny renewable diverse direction come birth the which from


This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, April 21st, 2013

Sharon OldsSundays,Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. Submit listings for consideration to stephanie(dot)whited(at)gmail.
 
Check out this week’s picks.

 

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Michael DickmanMonday Night Poetry: Dickman & Olds
Monday, April 2nd @ 7-9pm
KGB Bar, 85 E 4th St  New York, NY 

Michael Dickman is the author of The End of the West (Copper Canyon, 2009), Flies (2011), which won the James Laughlin Award for the most outstanding second book by an American poet, and 50 American Plays, which he co-wrote with his brother. Dickman has received fellowships from the Michener Center, the Fine Arts Work Center, the Vermont Studio Center, and Princeton University. His poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The American Poetry Review, Field, Tin House, Narrative Magazine and others. He has been profiled in Poets & Writers and, alongside his brother, in The New Yorker.

Sharon Olds is an American poet. Olds has been the recipient of many awards including the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, National Book Critics Circle Award and the San Francisco Poetry Center Award.
 

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BELLADONNA COLLABORATIVE PRESENTS
Beyond Relief: Two Writers’ Work & Words
Wednesday, April 24 @ 6:30pm
Poets House, 10 River Terrace, New York, NY

Celina Su & Ariana Reines read poetry and prose, ask and answer questions, hold forth, and generally illuminate the politics and poetics of their original, radical “relief” work on the Thai-Burmese Border and Haiti respectively.

Moderated by Alissa Quart

Price: $5

http://belladonnaseries.org/readingseries.html
 

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Greenlight Poetry Salon
Wednesday, April 24th @ 7pm
Greenlight Bookstore 686 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY

FEATURING: Stevie Edwards! / Safia Elhillo / & Cornelius Eady WITH MUSIC FROM ROUGH MAGIC!

Created by Greenlight’s own Angel Nafis, Greenlight Bookstore’s quarterly poetry series, the Greenlight Poetry Salon, welcomes locally and nationally celebrated poets. This special Poetry Month edition features incredible talents both emerging and established, and special musical guests!

Stevie Edwards is the editor-in-chief of MUZZLE Magazine and has been widely published in literary journals; Good Grief is her first full-length collection of poetry.

Safia Elhillo, author of The Life and Times of Susie Knuckles, is currently a senior at New York University, and has shared the stage with Gil Scott-Heron.

Cornelius Eady has published eight books of poetry, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama. His works in poetry and musical drama have received awards from the Academy of American Poets, the NEA, and the Guggenheim Foundation. Eady is the co-founder, with Toi Derricotte, of Cave CanemBook of Hooks is his third combined publication of music and poetry, and he will perform with the band Rough Magic!

 

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The Poetry Project: Armantrout & Davies
Wednesday, April 24th @ 8pm
St. Mark’s Church, 131 E. 10th Street, New York, NY

Just Saying, Rae Armantrout’s most recent book of poems, was published by Wesleyan University Press in 2013. Versed (Wesleyan, 2009), received the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award. It was also a finalist for the National Book Award. Next Life (Wesleyan, 2007), was chosen as one of the 100 Notable Books of 2007 by The New York Times. Armantrout received an award in poetry from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts in 2007 and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2008. She is Professor of Poetry and Poetics at the University of California, San Diego. Writing in Poetry magazine, Ange Mlinko has said, “I would trade the bulk of contemporary anecdotal free verse for more incisive, chilling poetry like Armantrout’s.”

Alan Davies is the author of Active 24 Hours, Name, Signage, Candor, Rave, and Raw War, among other books. Odes & fragments is forthcoming in 2013. He lives in New York City.

 

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Queer Division IV: Johnson, Frost, Morrill
Friday, April 26th @
Bureau of General Services-Queer Division
27 Orchard St., New York, NY

Andrew Durbin‘s reading series at the Bureau continues. The fourth installment will feature readings by Paul Foster Johnson, Jackqueline Frost, and Erin Morrill.

Paul Foster Johnson is the author of the poetry collections Study in Pavilions and Safe Rooms and Refrains / Unworkings, as well as Quadriga, a chapbook he cowrote with E. Tracy Grinnell. From 2003 to 2006, he curated the Experiments and Disorders reading series at Dixon Place. He has served as a co-editor of Litmus Press/Aufgabe and is the editor of The Poetry Project Newsletter.

Jackqueline Frost was born and raised in the Deep South, and now lives in Oakland, California. Her first full-length book, The Antidote, is forthcoming from Compline. Her poetry and essays have appeared, or are forthcoming in Rethinking Marxism, Lana Turner, The Death and Life of American Cities, Poetic Labor Project, What is Called Violence, Queer City, and LIES: a journal of materialist feminism. She works as an oyster-shucker and a research assistant in antique literatures.

Erin Morrill is the editor of Trafficker Press. She lives in New York.

 

– SAW


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 24th, 2013

Every Sunday, Coldfront features 5 upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. Email a listing for consideration to stephanie(dot)whited(at)gmail. Check out this week’s picks.

 

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The Highwaymen NYC #10
Monday, February 25th @ 7pm
The Imaginary Space, Brooklyn, NY

Emmalea Russo is a poet and visual artist. She received her MFA in Poetry from Vermont College of Fine Arts. Recent work has appeared in Ambush Review, ILK, Wicked Alice, and Yew Journal. Two chapbooks, clearing (dancing girl press) and book of southern and water (Poor Claudia) are forthcoming in 2013. She lives in Brooklyn.

Elizabeth Clark Wessel is a founding editor of Argos Books & recently became co-editor of Circumference: Poetry in Translation. Her poems and translations have appeared in DIAGRAM, A Public Space, Guernica, Sixth Finch, Lana Turner Journal, Jacket2, The Laurel Review, and elsewhere. She is the winner of the Bennett Poetry Prize at Columbia University, sponsored by the Academy of American Poets. Dana Levin chose her manuscript Whither Weather for the Midwest Chapbook Series, sponsored by The Laurel Review. She was born and raised in western Nebraska, and now lives in Brooklyn, NY, where she works as a translator.

Kurt Opprecht is the son of a rocket scientist and a financial planner. He was born and raised in Brigham City, Utah, a very small town from which he fled in the early eighties. He currently lives on the lower East Side of Manhattan where he writes tiny poems and crafts devices from which he claims to obtain supernatural powers. He is a certified charlatan and teaches writing at NYU-SCPS and Gotham Writer Workshop. Twitter: @opprecht. Tumblr: tinypinkfrog.

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Diez/1/2/3 Release: Kanownick, Dodson, Rubin
Tuesday, February 26 @ 7pm
Tandem Bar, 236 Troutman St, Brooklyn, NY

Diez will celebrate its own late February Spring blossom with readings from new chapbooks:

Christine Kanownik
We are Beginning to Act Wildly

Ted Dodson
Pop! in Spring

Judah Rubin
With Fierce Convulse/Die into Life

Author Bios:

Judah Rubin is more than a feeling.
Ted Dodson can’t get no satisfaction.
Christine Kanownik don’t stop believin’.

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Mental Marginalia: Reynolds, Foley, Xu, Guez
Tuesday, February 26 @ 8pm
The West, 379 Union Ave, Brooklyn, NY

Remember to wear two pairs of socks!

Christie Ann Reynolds is the author of Revenge for Revenge just out with Coconut Books in December. She has an MFA in poetry from The New School and is a curator of the reading and performance series, TOTEM: poetry + film. Christie Ann recently won a 2012 Poets & Writers Amy Award. She lives in Brooklyn and teaches poetry, creative writing and science in a middle school.

Brian Foley is the author of several chapbooks including Going Attractions (Greying Ghost, 2012) & TOTEM, which won the 2011 Equinox Chapbook Context and is forthcoming from Fact-Simile editions. He lives in Northampton MA.

Wendy Xu is the author of YOU ARE NOT DEAD, a full-length collection forthcoming from Cleveland State University Poetry Center (March 6, 2013) and two chapbooks The Hero Poems (H_NGM_N, 2011), and I Was Not Even Born (Coconut Books, 2013), a collaborative work with Nick Sturm. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in The Best American Poetry 2013, Best of the Net 2012, GulfCoast, Columbia Poetry Review, Sonora Review, and elsewhere. She is the co-editor and publisher of iO: A Journal of New American Poetry iO Books, and with Leora Fridman, co-curator of the jubilat / Jones Reading Series.

Julia Guez is a Fulbright Fellow with a Master of Fine Arts from Columbia University.  Her poetry and prose has appeared or will soon be forthcoming in BOMBLog, The Brooklyn Rail, Coldfront, Court Green, DIAGRAM and Washington Square.

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A Public Space 17 Launch Party
February 27th @ 7pm
BookCourt, 162 Court St, Brooklyn, NY

Join A Public Space and BookCourt for an evening with a few of our beloved contributors. Mark Bibbins, Jessica Francis Kane, and Tom Drury will read from their work, featured in APS 17.

Refreshments will be served. Copies of APS 17 will be available for purchase.

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The Perfect Sense Reading Series
Wednesday, February 27th  @ 6-7:45pm
Cornelia Street Cafe, 29 Cornelia St, New York, NY 

Timothy Donnelly is the author of two books of poetry, Twenty-seven Props for a Production of Eine Lebenszeitand The Cloud Corporation. He earned a BA from the Johns Hopkins University, an MFA from Columbia University, and a PhD from Princeton University. Donnelly’s poems have been published in anthologies such as Joyful Noise: An Anthology of American Spiritual Poetry, as well as magazines and journals including Harper’s, jubilat, The Nation, The Paris Review, PEN America, Ploughshares, TriQuartely, and various others. Donnelly is an assistant professor and director of undergraduate creative writing at Columbia University. He is also the poetry editor for Boston Review. He lives in Brooklyn, New York with his wife and two daughters.

Melissa Fadul teaches classical poetry at Maspeth High School, in New York, where she serves as assistant principal of the English Literature department.  She graduated from Sarah Lawrence College with an MFA in poetry in 2006.  Currently, she is adapting the play, The Laramie Project, for her students to perform, while piecing together a new collection of poetry.  She can be contacted at melissafadul(at)gmail(dot)com.

Chloe Yelena Miller‘s chapbook, Unrest, was published by Finishing Line Press. Her work is published or forthcoming inAlimentum, The Cortland Review, Narrative Magazine, Poet’s Market, and Storyscape Literary Journal, among others. Chloe has an MFA in creative writing from Sarah Lawrence College. She has participated in the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Vermont Studio Center residency and the A Room of Her Own Writers’ Retreat. Chloe teaches writing online at Fairleigh Dickinson University, George Mason University and privately, and leads writing workshops at Politics & Prose Bookstore in Washington, D.C.

Danniel Schoonebeek’s work has appeared or is forthcoming in Tin House, Boston Review, Fence, Gulf Coast, Kenyon Review, Guernica, Denver Quarterly, Colorado Review, The Rumpus, Crazyhorse, Drunken Boat, and elsewhere. He writes a monthly column on poetry for The American Reader, hosts theHatchet Job reading series in Brooklyn, and works as an associate editor at PEN America.

Leah Umansky’s first collection of poems, Domestic Uncertainties, is available now from BlazeVOX Books. She is the host and curator of the COUPLET Reading Series. She has been a contributing writer for BOMB Magazine’s BOMBLOG, a poetry reviewer for The Rumpus, and a live twit for The Best American Poetry Blog. She is presently at work on her second collection of poems focusing on our technological world, AMC’s Mad Men, and life in the 21st century.Read more at: Iammyownheroine.com.

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– SAW


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, 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


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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This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, January 6th, 2013

Feng Sun Chen - Butcher's TreeEvery Sunday, Coldfront features five upcoming, cross-borough NYC readings. Here’s this week’s picks.

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The Poetry Project: Feng Sun Chen & Ken L. Walker
Monday, January 7th, 2013 @ 8pm
St. Marks Church, 131 E. 10th Street, New York, NY

Feng Sun Chen’s first book is Butcher’s Tree (Black Ocean). She is currently a graduate assistant and MFA candidate at the university of Minnesota. Other publications include chapbooks Ugly Fishblud, and Paul Thek.

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. His criticism and poetry can be found in the Boxcarthe Poetry Project NewsletterLumberyardThe Wolf, Crab Orchard ReviewLa FoveaWashington SquareThe Seattle Review, and The Brooklyn Rail. He curates and produces Cosmot.

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LPR: The Book Report Reading
Tuesday, January 08, 2013 @ 7pm
(le) poisson rouge, 158 Bleecker Street, New York, NY

Once upon a time you were in third grade and you had to give book reports and it was awesome. The Book Report promises to deliver exactly what it promises: reports on books by the people who’ve read them. Join Leigh Stein and Sasha Fletcher and assorted literate guests for an evening that will remind you of 3rd grade in the best possible way.

Kevin Carter has published work in Kerouac’s Dog MagazineDivine Dirt QuarterlyThe Fiction Circus, and 2600 Magazine. His first collection of short stories, Lives of the Saints, was published by The Fiction Circus in March 2012. He is the host of a monthly multimedia literary reading at Happy Ending Lounge called Derangement of the Senses. He lives and plays the laser harp in Brooklyn.

Miracle Jones is a novelist from Texas. He helps Kevin Carter run “Derangement of the Senses.” When he was in elementary school, he always looked down on the kids who chose to do their book reports on “Choose Your Own Adventure” books, but now he totally respects them.

Leah Umansky’s first book of poems, Domestic Uncertainties, is available now from BlazeVOX Books. She has her MFA in Poetry from Sarah Lawrence College and has been a contributing writer for BOMB Magazine’s BOMBLOG, a poetry reviewer for The Rumpus and a live twit for The Best American Poetry Blog. Her poems can be found in such journals as: Barrow Street, Catch-up and Cream City Review. She is also the Host/Curator of COUPLET. Read more at her blog.

hosts:

Leigh Stein is the author of four chapbooks of poetry and one novel, The Fallback Plan, newly released from Melville House. You can listen to an excerpt of The Fallback Plan here.

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 [ml press 2010] and a couple of poetry chapbooks.

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Happy Birthday, Robert Duncan
Wednesday, January 9th, 2013 @ 8pm
The Poetry Project, 131 e. 10th Street, New York, NY

With the recent releases of Duncan’s H.D. Book and Robert Duncan: The Ambassador From VenusA Biography, we wanted to take the opportunity to celebrate Duncan’s 94th birthday (b. January 7, 1919). Special guests who will read their favorite Duncan poems will be: Lisa Jarnot, David Levi Strauss, Kimberly Lyons, Mary Margaret Sloan, Anne Waldman, Tom Savage, and Pierre Joris. There will be cake in the shape of the cosmos.

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Marosa di Giorgio’s Diadem: Selected Poems
Start: 01/11/2013 7:00 pm
Viernes 11 de Enero, 7pm
McNally Jackson, 52 Prince St, New York, NY

Bilingual English-Spanish

Adam Giannelli’s poetry and translations have appeared in the Kenyon Review, New England Review, Iowa Review, New American Writing, Field, The FSG Book of Twentieth-Century Italian Poetry, and elsewhere. He is currently is a Brown-Neff Fellow in literature and creative writing at the University of Utah.

Marosa di Giorgio was born in Salto, Uruguay, in 1932. Descended from Italian immigrants of Tuscan origin, she and her sister, Nidia, were raised Catholics in the countryside. Her first book, Poemas, was published in 1953. Also a theatre actress in the 1950s-1960s, she participated in almost thirty productions. In 1978, after the death of her father, she moved to Montevideo, where she lived until she died of cancer in 2004. Like Walt Whitman, di Giorgio expanded the same work throughout her career: Los Papeles Salvajes, her collected poetry which unites fourteen books. Since her poems inhabit the same imaginative world, they can be read as one long meditation, which di Giorgio described as a forest in which she planted more trees. Her newly translated Diadem: Selected Poems is now available in the BOA Bookstore.

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The Portable Boog Reader 6: NYC & Philly
Saturday, January 12th, 2013 @ 7pm
Unnameable Books, 600 Vanderbilt Ave., Brooklyn, NY

With readings from PBR6 contributors.

N.Y.C. POETS:
Stephen BoyerLaura Henriksen - Justin PetropoulosJ. Hope SteinJennifer Tamayo

PHILADELPHIA POETS:
Andrea Applebee * Jen Marie Macdonald * Travis Macdonald

AND MUSIC FROM:
Kat Quinn

Curated and hosted by Portable Boog Reader 6 N.Y.C. editors: Lee Ann Brown, Mariana Ruiz Firmat, Sara Jane Stoner, and David Kirschenbaum, and Philadelphia editors: Kimberly Ann Southwick and Michelle Taransky. Hosted and curated by Boog City editor and publisher David Kirschenbaum.

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Want to share a reading? Email stephanie.whited [at] gmail.com.