Showing posts with label Open Door Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Open Door Reading. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

TWC Open Door & The Delmarva Review Reading

TWC Open Door & The Delmarva Review Reading

This Sunday, December 4, The Writer's Center will have a “double header,” with readings by poets Kathleen Ossip and W.M. Rivera at 2:00 p.m., followed by a 5:00 p.m. reading celebrating the publication of The Delmarva Review’s 4th Volume. 'Tis the season for great writing. For more information, read on.

TWC Open Door Reading, 2:00 p.m.:

Kathleen Ossip is the author of two books of poems, The Search Engine and The Cold War, and one chapbook, Cinephrastics. Her poems have appeared in The Best American Poetry, Paris Review, Kenyon Review, American Poetry Review, the Washington Post, Fence, The Believer, and Poetry Review (London). She teaches at The New School in New York, where she was a founding editor of LIT, and she's the poetry editor of Women's Studies Quarterly. She has received a fellowship in poetry from the New York Foundation for the Arts, as well as grants from Bread Loaf, the Ragdale Foundation, and Yaddo.

W.M. Rivera’s most recent poetry collection, Buried in the Mind’s Backyard, was published in 2011. His poems have been published in the Nation, Prairie Schooner, the Kenyon Review, the New Laurel Review, the California Quarterly, Gargoyle, The Ghazal Page (online), The Curator Magazine (online), The Broome Review, and Innisfree. His first book of poetry was published in 1960 titled The End of Legend’s String, illustrated by Mexican artist, José Luis Cuevas—drawer, engraver, and sculptor. Rivera’s academic and professional activities in agricultural development have taken him to more than 30 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America.

The Delmarva Review Reading, 5:00 p.m:

The Delmarva Review, a journal of poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction, is published by the Eastern Shore Writers Association, a nonprofit organization of writers across the tri-state region of the Delmarva Peninsula. Join us in celebrating publication of Volume 4. Six authors published in the new issue will read at The Writer’s Center at 5 pm Sunday, December 4. They are among 33 authors from seven states, the District of Columbia and the Ukraine whose original work is included in the 2011 edition. Copies of the Review are available from The Writer’s Center, the publication’s website at www.delmarvareview.com, and in a digital edition from Kindle on www.amazon.com, for download to tablets, cell phones and other reading devices.

The readers are:

Margaret Adams is a Maine-born writer and former columnist for the Bangor Daily News. Her work has most recently appeared in Urbanite Magazine, Johns Hopkins Nursing Magazine, and Down East Magazine. A graduate of Vassar College, she is studying nursing and public health at Johns Hopkins University. She is from Baltimore, MD.

Iain S. Baird is an award-winning memoirist and writer of short fiction and creative nonfiction. A Pushcart Prize nominee, he has had stories published in the Seven Hills Review, Cha: An Asian Literary Journal, The Timber Creek Review, and Oracle. A memoir, Two Storms, was published in 2010. Iain is from Annapolis, MD and New Orleans, LA.

Linda Blaskey, winner of the 2008 Dogfish Head Poetry Prize for her chapbook, Farm, was the recipient of a fellowship grant from the Delaware Division of Arts. Her short story, “The Haircut,” was dramatically produced by Philadelphia’s InterAct Theatre. She is from Lincoln, DE.

Anne Colwell, whose first book, Believing Their Shadows, was published by Word Press in 2010, has published work in numerous literary reviews. A Pushcart Prize nominee, she received an Established Artist Award in Poetry and an emerging Artist Award in Fiction from the Delaware State Arts Council. Anne is assistant professor of English at University of Delaware. She is from Milton, DE.

Nan Fry is the author of a book of poems, Relearning the Dark. Her work appears in literary magazines, textbooks, and anthologies, including The Beastly Bride, published by Viking. She teaches at The Writer’s Center. Nan is from Cabin John, Maryland.

Margaret Rodenberg is a former computer industry executive. Her writing has won awards from Writers Digest Magazine, the San Francisco Writers Conference, James Rivers Writers Group, and Carve Magazine. She is currently writing a novel from Napoleon Bonaparte's point of view and blogs at: FindingNapoleon.com. Margaret lives in Reston, VA.

We can't wait to see you on Sunday!

Friday, July 15, 2011

Weekly Round-up With Upcoming Events


Jaycee Dugard's memoir, A Stolen Life, topped Amazon's bestseller list on Monday, July 11. The memoir was officially released a day later. Jaycee was kidnapped by Phillip Craig Garrido and his wife Nancy in 1991. A Stolen Life conveys Dugard's personal story about her eighteen-year imprisonment.

Forensic psychiatrist and Fox News contributor Dr. Keith Ablow acquired rights to write a book about the Casey Anthony case. Casey Anthony was recently acquitted by a jury in Florida.

USA Today expands its coverage of books by launching a new Web site (books.usatoday.com).

Google will not allow an ex-employee, Paul Adams, to release his book, Social Circles. Adams left Google in January 2011 to join Facebook.

A couple weekly round-ups have followed the arrest of Bahraini poet and student Ayat Al-Gormezi. Ayat al-Gormezi was released from prison and placed under house arrest on July 13. She had been arrested in March for reading poetry at a pro-democracy rally in Pearl Square. Authorities released Ayat under the condition that she sign a paper saying she would stay at home, would not join protests,and would not speak to the media.

The final Harry Potter film is released in the United States today: Time Magazine provides insight on how fans keep the series alive by writing fan fiction.

Book Signings and an Open Door Reading

Jael McHenry: The Kitchen Daughter
One More Page Books
2200 N. Westmoreland St., #101
Arlington , VA 22213
Saturday, July 16, 2:00 p.m.

Join food and cooking blogger Jael McHenry as she discusses her first novel The Kitchen Daughter. A book signing will follow.

Maya Soetoro-Ng: Ladder To The Moon
Politics and Prose
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington , DC 200008
Saturday, July 16 , 1 p.m

Maya Soetoro-Ng, the sister of President Barack Obama discusses her new children's book, Ladder To The Moon. The book is illustrated by Yuyi Morales. A book signing will follow.

Open Door Reading: Elisavietta Ritchie, Ellen Aronofsky Cole, and Kimberly Becker
The Writer's Center
4508 Walsh Street
Bethesda, MD 20815
Sunday, July 17, 2 p.m.

The Writer’s Center presents three poets with recent collections: Elisavietta Ritchie (Cormorant Beyond the Compost), Ellen Aronofsky Cole (Prognosis), and Kimberly Becker (Words Facing East).

Have a great weekend!

Monday, June 20, 2011

Upcoming Events: Travelogues, Open Door Readings, and Book Signings

Steven Weinberg and Casey Scieszka - To Timbuktu

Friday June 24, 2011 7:00 pm
Politics and Prose
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20008

Join Politics and Prose to listen to Steven Weinberg and Casey Scieszka discuss their travelogue; To Timbuktu: Nine People, Two People, One True Story. Their travelogue reflect the author's two year journey in China, Thailand, Vietnam , and Mali upon graduating college. The travelogue is written in prose and cartoons.

A.C. Crispin: Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom
Saturday June 25 at 1:00 pm
Barnes and Noble Bethesda
4801 Bethesda Avenue
Bethesda, MD 20814

Pirates of the Carribbean: The Price of Freedom follows the adventures of twenty-five year old merchant seaman, Jack Sparrow. Her book is an original novel based on the Pirates of the Carribbean films.

Join AC Crispin as she signs and discusses her book at the Barnes and Noble Bethesda.


Open Door Reading: Deborah Clearman and Cynthia Phoel
Sunday June 26 2:00 pm- 4:00 pm
The Writers Center
4508 Walsh Street
Bethesda, MD 20815
www.writer.org

Join novelist Deborah Clearman as she reads from Todos Santos and Cynthis Phoel, author of the collection of short stories, Cold Snap: Bulgaria Stories. The event is free and open to the public.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Weekly Round-Up: Publishing News From Around The Internet



On Sunday, June 5, from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm, The Writer’s Center will host an Open Door reading featuring Linda Pastan and Michael Salcman. Linda Pastan will read from Traveling Light, her new collection of poems. She is joined by poet Michael Salcman, who will read from his recent collection, The Enemy of Good Is Better. The event will be free.

Here’s some interesting literary news from around the Internet. Much of the news can also be found on our twitter feed.

On Tuesday May 31, 2011, The Huffington Post’s lawyers attempted to dismiss Jonathan Tasini’s lawsuit.Tasini filed the lawsuit in April on behalf of unpaid bloggers on The Huffington Post’s website against Arianna Huffington, The Huffington Post, and AOL. The lawsuit includes about 9,000 unpaid bloggers and seeks damages for a minimum of 105 million dollars. In their motion to the New York District Court Judge, the lawyers argue that The Huffington Post website’s terms and conditions gives them the right to publish work without paying the writers. They also highlight that Tasini willingly wrote more than 200 posts in exchange for exposure on the website. He did not write for monetary reasons.

Jeff Howe, author of Crowdsourcing and journalism professor at Northeastern University in Boston, launched a global book club, 1book140, on twitter on Wednesday June 1, 2011. Last summer, he launched a twitter book club called the One Book, One Twitter Club. Howe decided to relaunch the bookclub, in conjunction with the Atlantic magazine. He hopes to have virtual discussions once a month. More than 2,000 people nominated 300 books for the first discussion and Margaret Atwood’s novel The Blind Assassin won the nominating process.

A handshake ends a 15- year- old literary feud. The Nobel Prize winner V.S. Naipaul and travel Paul Theroux reunited at the 2011 Hay Festival on Saturday May 28. The writers met in Uganda in 1966. Their three-decade friendship ended when Theroux discovered one of his books that he inscribed and gave as a present to Naipaul was put on sale for $1500. Theroux wrote a memoir portraying Naipaul as a brutal, unforgiving man. Naipaul claimed he barely knew Theroux and dismissed Theroux’s work as lower class tourist books. Novelist Ian McEwan aided the men in their reconciliation at the literary festival.

Naipaul also met with controversy this week when a reporter asked him a question about women authors.

Twenty- year- old Bahraini student and poet Ayat al- Gormezi went on trial before a military tribunal on Thursday, June 2. Ayat was arrested on March 30, 2011 after reading a poem at a pro-democracy rally in Pearl Garden. She was forced to turn herself in when masked policemen raided her parents' home and held her four brothers at gunpoint.

Former death row inmate Wilbert Rideau has published a memoir, In The Place of Justice: A Story of Punishment and Deliverance, in order to educate the public about life behind bars. Rideau spent forty-four years at Angola State Prison in Louisiana until his release in 2005. During his time in prison, Rideau discovered a passion for writing. In 1974, he began writing a syndicated newspaper column , The Jungle. In 1975, he became the editor of the prison’s magazine, The Angolite. The Angolite covered serious issues such as sexual slavery in prison.

On Friday, June 3, Southern District of New York Judge Martin Glenn granted Borders an extension to finalize their reorganization plans since many bidders are interested in buying the bookstores. The bids include a proposal from the investment firm The Gores Group for approximately $200 million to purchase half of Borders’ bookstores.

Hans Keilson, a chronicler of life in Nazi Germany died Friday, June 3, at age 101. Keilson was a psychoanalyst. He won literary fame towards the end of his life when two of his fiction works set in Nazi-occupied Europe were republished. He published his first novel, Life Goes On, at age 23. This novel offered a dark depiction of German political life. The book was banned in 1934. His other novel, The Death of the Adversary, is about a young Jewish man's experiences as Nazi's gained power. After spending the war in hiding, he wrote a novella entitled Comedy in a Minor Key about a dutch couple who hides an elderly Jewish man who dies of natural causes.

Have a great weekend!

Friday, February 25, 2011

Open Door Reading: Shirley Brewer, Kathleen Hellen, and Laura Shovan

Those of you who've been expecting video from last weekend's BookTalk event: It's coming (I hope) soon. It has been a busy week, and I've not been able to upload the video yet. Our Flip cameras need mending, so I used my home camera. With a little two-month old at home, I don't have a whole lot of time during the week. So my goal is to do it this weekend.

Speaking of this weekend, we have one event on Sunday. Our Open Door reading with Shirley Brewer, Kathleen Hellen, and Laura Shovan. The event is, as always, free. It begins at The Writer’s Center at 2:00 p.m.

Here are the poets’ bios:

Shirley J. Brewer (Baltimore, MD) is a poet, educator, and workshop facilitator. Shirley won first, second, and third Prizes in the Maryland Writers' Association 2010 Short Works Contest for Poetry, and honorable mention in Passager’s Poetry Contest in 2005 and 2009. She was nominated for a Pushcast Prize in 2009. Publication credits include: The Pearl, The Comstock Review, HazMat Literary Review, Edison Literary Review, Free Lunch, Manorborn, CALYX, Passager, and other journals. Her first collection of poems is A Little Breast Music.

Kathleen Hellen's work has appeared in Barrow Street, Cimarron Review, The Cortland Review, The Hollins Critic, Nimrod International Journal of Poetry and Prose, Prairie Schooner, RHINO Poetry, Salamander, Southern Poetry Review, Subtropics, WITNESS, among others. Awards include Washington Square Review, James Still, and Thomas Merton poetry prizes, as well as individual artist grants from the State of Maryland and Baltimore City. Forthcoming is her chapbook The Girl Who Loved Mothra. A graduate of Carnegie-Mellon University, she is a contributing editor for The Baltimore Review.

Poet Laura Shovan is an artist-in-education for Maryland State Arts Council. She has led children’s and adult writing workshops for The Maryland Humanities Council and CityLit Project’s “Write Here, Write Now” program. Her articles, essays, and poetry for adults and children have been published in newspapers, literary journals, and e-zines. Mountain, Log, Salt, and Stone, her first poetry chapbook, won inaugural the Clarinda Harriss Poetry Prize. www.laurashovan.com.