Tag Archive: AWP

  1. Event: Tacos & Tecates: AWP 2014

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    Head up to the Seattle favorite, MOE Bar, for Happy Hour specials including $2 tacos and $2 Tecate, plus short readings from Daniel Borzutzky + Valerie Mejer + Kristin Dykstra (bilingual mash-up), Jackie Clark, Joel Craig, Andy Fitch+ Amaranth Borsuk, Carol Guess, and Broc Rossell. Happy Hour runs from 5-7, so we’ll be there a bit earlier!

    MOE BAR, 1425 10th Ave, Seattle (https://www.facebook.com/MoeBarSeattle)

    From the conference center, take Pike St. to 10th— 15 min walk / 2 min cab ride.

    Presented by Brooklyn Arts Press, Green Lantern Press, and MAKE.

    Table M30
    http://www.brooklynartspress.com/

    Table K18
    http://www.makemag.com/

    http://press.thegreenlantern.org/

    _______________________________________________________

    Amaranth Borsuk is the author of the chapbook, Tonal Saw (The Song Cave, 2010); Handiwork (Slope Editions, 2012), selected by Paul Hoover for the 2011 Slope Editions Book Prize; and, together with programmer Brad Bouse, of Between Page and Screen (Siglio Press, 2012), a book of augmented-reality poems.

    Daniel Borzutzky’s books include The Book of Interfering Bodies (Nightboat, 2011); The Ecstasy of Capitulation (BlazeVox, 2007); and Arbitrary Tales (Ravenna Press, 2005). His poetry translations include include Raúl Zurita’s Song for his Disappeared Love (Action Books, 2010); and Jaime Luis Huenún’s Port Trakl (Action Books, 2008). He lives and writes in Chicago.

    Jackie Clark is author of Aphoria (Brooklyn Arts Press). She is the series editor of Poets off Poetry and Song of the Week for Coldfront Magazine and is the recipient of a 2012 New Jersey State Council on the Arts Fellowship in Poetry. Her latest chapbook, Sympathetic Nervous System, is forthcoming from Bloof Books. More can be found online at nohelpforthat.com.

    Joel Craig is the author of The White House (Green Lantern Press, 2012). He curates the Danny’s Reading Series and edits poetry for MAKE.

    Kristin Dykstra holds a 2012 Literary Translation Fellowship from the National Endowment of the Arts. The Counterpunch (And Other Horizontal Poems), her translation of a book by Juan Carlos Flores, is forthcoming from the University of Alabama Press. Dykstra co-edits Mandorla with Gabriel Bernal Granados and Roberto Tejada.

    Andy Fitch’s books include Not Smart. But Intelligent: Rethinking Joe Brainard (Dalkey Archive Press) and, with Jon Cotner, Ten Walks/Two Talks (Ugly Duckling Presse). Fitch teaches in the University of Wyoming’s MFA program, and is an interviews editor for The Volta.

    Carol Guess is the author of thirteen books of poetry and prose, including Darling Endangered and Doll Studies: Forensics. She is Professor of English at Western Washington University, and keeps a blog here:www.carolguess.blogspot.com.

    Valerie Mejer, born in Mexico City, is a poet and painter. For her book De Elefante a Elefante, she was awarded the Gerardo Diego International Award for Literary Research by the Spanish Government. She is the author of six books of poetry and five translations. Forthcoming works include an anthology of her poems, Rain of the Future (Action Books, 2013) and a long poem, This Blue Novel (2014).

    Broc Rossell is a poet from California and the author of the chapbook Unpublished Poems (Brooklyn Arts Press, 2012). Poems and prose appeared in Boston Review, Colorado Review, Fence, Harvard Review, Los Angeles Review of Books, The Laurel Review, Volt, and elsewhere, and he teaches creative writing, literature, and interdisciplinary courses in the English and Humanities departments at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British Columbia.

  2. Event: Don’t Forget to Eat, AWP 2013

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    The Baffler and MAKE: A Literary Magazine present:
    Don’t Forget to Eat.

    Friday, March 8
    5:30 p.m. -7 p.m.

    The Plough & Stars
    Cambridge’s storied Irish pub and restaurant
    912 Massachusetts Ave

    Order a bite and a pint while watching performances
    by Ailish Hopper, Christopher Janke, Fred Sasaki, Julia Story, John Summers, and Eugenia Williamson.

    Ailish Hopper is the author of the chapbook, Bird in the Head, selected by Jean Valentine for the Center for Book Arts prize. Individual poems have appeared in journals including Agni, American Poetry Review, The Baffler, Ploughshares, Poetry, and Tidal Basin Review, among other places. She has also received support from the Baltimore Commission for the Arts and Humanities, the MacDowell colony, Vermont Studio Center, and Yaddo.

    A native of DC, she has degrees from Princeton University and Bennington College, and teaches at Goucher College and in Goucher’s Prison Education Partnership.

    Christopher Janke’s poems have appeared in Harper’s, A Public Space, American Poetry Review, MAKE, and dozens of other journals. Among other projects, he is currently working on a series of poems entitled “of the of of the of” that explore the relationship between words and objects through visual and sculptural reinterpretations of the poems.

    Fred Sasaki is associate editor of Poetry magazine. His most recent writing can be found on VICE.

    John Summers is The Baffler’s Editor in Chief.

    Julia Story’s first collection, Post Moxie, was the recipient of Sarabande Books’ 2009 Kathryn A. Morton Prize and Ploughshares’ 2010 John C. Zacharis First Book Award, and was named one of Coldfront’s Top 30 Poetry Books of 2010. Her recent work has appeared in The Paris Review, Octopus, MAKE, and Salt Hill. A native of Indiana, she now lives in Somerville, Massachusetts.

    Eugenia Williamson is a freelance writer and book critic, as well as a contributing Editor to The Baffler Her work can be found in The Boston Globe, Bookforum and The Phoenix among other places.

    Billy Blake and the Vagabonds is songwriters Kennedy Greenrod and Reid Coker, guitarist Saleem Dhamee, bassist Jason Labrosse & drummer Seth Vanek. Inspired by 18th century Romantic mystic, William Blake, the Vagabonds have arranged 15 new tunes from his canonical collections, “Songs of Innocence” and “Songs of Experience”. Contemporary interpretations of Blake’s classic work, the Vagabonds breathe new fire and meaning into William Blake’s iconic words, helping to re-illuminate his incendiary visions to both casual and most devoted of Blake enthusiasts. Drawing from Stones-y-rock, mellow pop, countrified folk, gospel music and hopping Bo Diddley blues, “Billy Blake and the Vagabonds” are a wholly modern representation of William Blake and his work.
    http://billyblakeandthevagabonds.bandcamp.com/

    ~

    The Baffler is a journal of art and criticism appearing every March, June, and October. It’s edited by John Summers with Thomas Frank and Chris Lehmann, published in print and digital formats by MIT Press, delivered to subscribers in all fifty U.S. States, Canada, and Europe, and distributed to fine book stores everywhere. http://www.thebaffler.com/

    MAKE Literary Productions, NFP is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization whose purpose is to publish and promote contemporary literary writing and visual art. MAKE is a biannual publication not only showcasing established and emerging talent, but also creating a lasting document of the current writing and visual arts landscape. It is a literary, artistic object in pursuit of a thematic vision.
    http://www.makemag.com/

     

  3. Event: AWP Offsite Reading, 2012

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    GREEN LANTERN PRESS AND MAKE MAGAZINE

    present

    an AWP Off-site Reading
    at Bar DeVille

    poster: drawing, Andrew Rohde / layout, Jeff Townsend

    WHEN. Thursday / March 1 / 7PM

    WHERE. Bar DeVille / 701 N. Damen

    COST. free

    WHAT. Short readings and ruminations set amidst Bar DeVille’s vintage-meets-modern European atmosphere. Readings by past MAKE contributors and authors from Green Lantern Press; DJ set following. Free tote bags with limited-edition broadsides to the first 25 attendees.

    hosted by GREG PURCELL

    featuring: JOEL CRAIG / MATTHEW GOULISH / AMY LEACH / PATRICIA LOCKWOOD / PETER RICHARDS / MATHIAS SVALINA / HUI-MIN TSEN

    more about the writers:

    GREG PURCELL’s poetry has appeared in Fence, The Brooklyn Rail, The Agriculture Reader, Open City and New American Writing, and has been anthologized in A Best of Fence: The First Nine Years. With Joel Craig, he founded The Danny’s Reading Series in Chicago. In New York he founded St. Mark’s Bookshop Reading Series. He currently lives in Amherst, MA, where he records The No Slander Podcast with his partner, Ish Klein.

    JOEL CRAIG lives and works in Chicago, Illinois. His poems have appeared lately in Boston Review, A Public Space and TYPO. He co-founded and curates The Danny’s Reading Series and edits poetry for MAKE. His first book, White House will be published by The Green Lantern Press in September of 2012.

    MATTHEW GOULISH is the author of 39 Microlectures: In Proximity of Performance (2000) and co-editor of Small of Acts of Repair – performance, ecology, and Goat Island. He teaches at the School of the Art Institute in Chicago.

    HUI-MIN TSEN is a Chicago performance artist whose works focus on public and contemporary exploration. Past works include The Mt. Baldy Expedition and The Chicago Pedway Tour.

    PATRICIA LOCKWOOD has published poems in Poetry, Gulf Coast, AGNI, Denver Quarterly, Poetry Northwest, and Black Warrior Review. She lives in Florida.

    PETER RICHARDS is a recipient of a Massachusetts Cultural Council Grant in Poetry, an Iowa Arts Fellowship, an Academy of American Poets Prize, and the John Logan Award. He is the author of Oubliette (Verse Press/Wave Books, 2001), which won the Massachusetts Center for the Book Honors Award; Nude Siren (Verse Press/Wave Books, 2003); and Helsinki (Action Books, 2011).

    MATHIAS SVALINA is the author of five chapbooks as well as five collaboratively written chapbooks. Destruction Myth (Cleveland State University Press, 2010) is his first book. With Zachary Schomburg, he co-edits Octopus Magazine and Octopus Books. He currently teaches writing and literature in Denver, Colorado.

    AMY LEACH’s essays have appeared in The Iowa Review, A Public Space, Orion, The Gettysburg Review, Wilson Quarterly, and Best American Essays 2009. She is a recipient of a Rona Jaffe Writer’s Award, a Pushcart Prize, and the 2010 Whiting Writer’s Award.

    MAKE is a biannual publication not only showcasing established and emerging talent, but also creating a lasting document of the current writing landscape. It is a literary, artistic object in pursuit of a thematic vision, not just a collection of literary fragments and images. Each issue is themed to be relevant to the events that have most recently shaped how we as Chicagoans and global citizens live, work, play, and think.

    THE GREEN LANTERN PRESS, founded in 2005, is an artist-run, non-profit press focused on emerging or forgotten texts in order to bridge contemporary experience with historical form. We celebrate the integration of artistic mediums. We celebrate the amateur, the idealist and those who recognize the importance of small independent practice. In a cultural climate where the humanities must often defend themselves, we provide intimate examples of creative thought.

     

People MAKE this happen

click to see who

MAKE Magazine Publisher MAKE Literary Productions   Managing Editor Chamandeep Bains   Assistant Managing Editor and Web Editor Kenneth Guay   Fiction Editor Kamilah Foreman   Nonfiction Editor Jessica Anne   Poetry Editor Joel Craig   Intercambio Poetry Editor Daniel Borzutzky   Intercambio Prose Editor Brenda Lozano   Latin American Art Portfolio Editor Alejandro Almanza Pereda   Reviews Editor Mark Molloy   Portfolio Art Editor Sarah Kramer   Creative Director Joshua Hauth, Hauthwares   Webmaster Johnathan Crawford   Proofreader/Copy Editor Sarah Kramer   Associate Fiction Editors LC Fiore, Jim Kourlas, Kerstin Schaars   Contributing Editors Kyle Beachy, Steffi Drewes, Katie Geha, Kathleen Rooney   Social Media Coordinator Jennifer De Poorter

MAKE Literary Productions, NFP Co-directors, Sarah Dodson and Joel Craig