events
Getting out of the house: November 19 through November 25th (Listen UP!)

Wednesday, November 19
Poetry and Contratiempo magazines present a bilingual reading featuring the poetry of Roberto Bolaño (introduced and read by Jorge Frisancho), short fiction by Raul Dorantes, and poems by Leila Wilson and Jorge Sánchez

7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Café Efebos
1640 s Blue Island Ave.
(in Pilsen, between 16th & 18th)
admission and magazines are free

Thursday November 20
Playwright Mickle Maher and Adam Rosenberg and Amy Stern, students from the MFA in Writing program at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, will read at 7pm at Powell’s Bookstore, located at 2850 N. Lincoln.  Call (773) 248-1444

Mickle Maher is a co-founder of Chicago’s Theater Oobleck and the author of numerous plays, including An Apology for the Course and Outcome of Certain Events Delivered by Doctor John Faustus on This His Final Evening, and The Hunchback Variations. Recent plays include Spirits to Enforce (Theater Oobleck), Cyrano (translator) and The Cabinet (Redmoon Theater), and Lady Madeline (Steppenwolf). His children’s book, Master Stitchum and the Moon, is published by Bollix Books. His plays are published by Hope and Nonthings. He is currently working on a libretto about Don Quixote.

Starting last Friday
Cut to the Quick: Splayed Verbiage (A festival of 10-minute plays with no time to waste! ) The show runs Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30pm and Sundays at 2:00pm November 16 - December 21.
FEATURING

Yes to Everything by Philip Dawkins, directed by Lavina Jadhwani
78 by Laurel Haines, directed by Gina LoPiccolo
The New Lonely by Andrew Hinderaker, directed by Vance Smith
Space by Laura Jacqmin, directed by Megan Schuchman
One Lucky Duck by Matthew Swaye, directed by Gina LoPiccolo
The Best Christmas Ever by Amy Whittenberger, directed by Kyra Lewandowski
Not That (But Something Else) by Brian Golden, directed by Chelsea Marcantel
Agony in the Garden by Crystal Skillman, directed by Dan Foss
O’Dark Thirty by Aaron Carter, directed by Daniel Caffrey
Ethnic Cleansing Day by Brett Neveu, directed by Eric Ziegenhagen
Slave Day by Wilderness Sarchild, directed by Mignon McPherson-Nance
Black and White by Mark Young, directed by Anna C. Bahow
Click here for more information.

Saturday, November 22
The first Illinois statewide write-in meet up will be from 1-4pm. Information on the location can be found here.
Sandwiches and chips will be available starting at 12:15. It’s a chance to chat before the write-in starts. You can find more information and RSVP here.

Also Saturday, November 22
Green Lantern Press will be holding it’s first ever fundraiser from noon until 1am.  The event features a silent auction, crepe breakfast (noon until 1:30pm, cocktail hour (6-9pm, and live music (9pm until1am) with Joan of Arc, The Lanterns, and Lowland.

Sunday, November 25th
Come join the School of the Art Institute’s Text Off the Page class on from 12-1 at MC 118 for a free lunch. This will be an opportunity to see the work to be shown at the Sullivan Galleries and potentially respond in a reading/performance event.  For more information, see the school’s website

posted November 19, 2008 events, nanowrimo, poetry, writing life   |  0 comments
Getting Out of the House: November 12th through November 18th (Listen UP!)

This Wednesday, November 12th

Aleksandar (Sascha) Hemon will read at Oakton Community College.  He is the winner of the Chicago Tribune’s Heartland Prize for 2008, as well as a MacArthur Grant.

Also on Wednesday
FILM DIRECTOR’S PREVIEW
Screening followed by Q&A with Filmmaker Gus Reininger

7:00 PM
Ferguson Lecture Hall, 600 South Michigan, 1st floor

The feature length film “Corso – The Last Beat” introduces a new generation to the icons of
“The Beat Generation” – Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs and Gregory Corso. 
ETHAN HAWKE, two time Academy Award Nominee, takes us on an on the road discovery of
GREGORY CORSO - the most colorful of the inner circle of THE BEATS, writers who changed
world culture and social history. Please visit this site for more details.

Also also on Wednesday
Tom Raworth
6:30 pm
In partnership with the Chicago Poetry Project
SAIC Ballroom, 112 S. Michigan Avenue

From the Poetry Center’s newsletter:
Since 1966 Tom Raworth has published more than 40 books and pamphlets of poetry, prose and translations, including Meadow, Clean & Well Lit: Selected Poems 1987-1995, Eternal Sections , and The Relation Ship, winner of the Alice Hunt Bartlett Prize.  During the 1970s he traveled and worked in the United States and Mexico, returning to England in 1977 to be Resident Poet at King’s College, Cambridge, in which city he still lives.  Raworth’s graphic work has been shown in France, Italy, and the United States, and he has collaborated and performed with musicians (Steve Lacy, Joëlle Léandre, Steve Nelson-Raney, Esther Roth, Nino Locatelli), painters (Giovanni D’Agostino, Micaëla Henich), and other poets (Franco Beltrametti, Corrado Costa, Dario Villa). In 1991 he was invited to teach at the University of Cape Town: the first European writer to visit there for thirty years.  Of his selected early poems, Tottering State, Lyn Hejinian has written “These are among the greatest writings of our times.” Since 1970 he has read across the United States and Canada almost annually, and lived with his family in the US and Mexico between 1972 and 1977 (Ohio, Mexico City, Chicago, Texas, San Francisco).

Sunday, November 16

Free Poetry Workshop
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
Hyde Park Art Center - 5020 S. Cornell Avenue

FREE

Led by award-winning poet Valerie M. Wallace, MFA, this free workshop will draw upon the Art Center’s exhibitions for inspiration, conversation and playfulness. The goal will be to establish a positive environment for critical feedback and community, and to generate new work.

All levels welcome. Past participants welcome!
Enrollment is limited and registration is required. For more information or to register, call 773-324-5520.

Near CTA Routes #6, #15, #28, Metra 51st Street

Valerie M Wallace
Editor, Deep Dish Poem-a-Month
http://chicagopoem.typepad.com/

Over the weekend...

Poetry and Hip-hop with Kevin Coval (Four-time HBO Def Poetry Jam alumnus and published poet)

“This is one of my favorite poets.”
– Mos Def, rapper/actor

“...raw, straight no chaser. That’s the real lethal weapon right there.” – Michael Eric Dyson, author/professor/sociologist

“In Coval’s voice is our hope for a new world for peace, grace and beauty.” - Studs Terkel, author/historian

A Gwendolyn Brooks Center Two-Day Workshop Series

November 15 & 16, 2008

1 to 4 p.m. – Nov. 15/11 to 2 p.m. – Nov. 16

at the Gwendolyn Brooks Center @ Chicago State University (95th and King Drive)

Cost: $10

This event is sponsored by the Gwendolyn Brooks Center at Chicago State University. For more information, please call 773-995-4440 or e-mail .

posted November 12, 2008 events   |  0 comments
Getting Out of the House: November 5th through November 11 (Listen UP!)

Good morning writers!  For someone encouraging y’all to get out, I certainly spent a good deal of time in last week.  After seeing Anne Carson perform her essay last Saturday, I skipped the concert and spent Saturday night reading her Autobiography of Red.  I cannot begin to describe how much I love this book. 

Last night, like most of you, I was glued to the TV.  Did anyone attend Obamapolooza?  McCain gave a wonderfully gracious concession speech, and the mood all across Chicago is one of relief and of hope.  I was struck by the fact that when I woke up this morning, everyone seems to be cleaning.  My street is being swept, and both my apartment building and office building are being power-washed today.  It seems America is ready to once more be the beacon of hope we all knew she could be.  It’s a whole new world children, and it’s a shiny one. 

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Wednesday, November 5th
The Fiction Writing Department at Columbia College Chicago is calling for local writers and artists to volunteer for a MARATHON READING of On The Road on Wednesday, November 5th from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 

Volunteers will be asked to publicly read one section of the novel with 10-15 minute slots for each reader.  Unfortunately, since each reader will need to pick up where the previous reader left off, there will be no way to assign specific sections.  Contact Susan Babyk at to volunteer.

Through November 26th, the Gallery at Columbia Book & Paper Center is offering visitors the rare opportunity to see the original draft of On the Road, containing Kerouac’s own edits in pencil.  This manuscript is a continuous scroll of semi-translucent paper, 120 feet long by 9 inches wide, that Kerouac created to feed through his typewriter without interruption.  It was produced by Kerouac in a three-week writing marathon in April 1951.

Gallery hours have been extended for the Jack Kerouac: On the Road exhibition—Monday-Friday, 12 - 7pm and Saturday-Sunday, 12 - 5pm.  The Gallery is located at 1104 S. Wabash, 2nd floor.  It is free and open to the public.  You can find more information here.

Also Wednesday, November 5th at Columbia College
John Murillo, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, and Robyn Schiff will read next in the Music Center Concert Hall (1014 S. Michigan) at 5:30 p.m.

Nov 7: Poetry & Chicago Convocation
12pm at Loyola University
Lake Shore Campus in Rogers Park

FEATURING TALKS & READINGS BY:
Lisa Fishman, poetry & farming
Jennifer Karmin, poetry & activism
John Keene, poetry & collaboration
Quraysh Ali Lansana, poetry & history
Robyn Schiff, poetry & publishing
Abraham Smith, poetry & performance

The event is free and open to the public
Lunch will be served between the poets’ brief talks and readings

Hosted by Loyola University Chicago
in the Multi-Purpose Room of the Simpson Living Learning Center
on Sheridan Boulevard at the corner of Winthrop & Sheridan
two blocks from the Loyola train station on the CTA Red Line

LISA FISHMAN is the author of several books, most recently Dear Read and The Happiness Experiment (both from Ahsahta Press). She lives in rural Wisconsin and Chicago and is Assistant Professor at Columbia College Chicago.

JENNIFER KARMIN’s Aaaaaaaaaaalice cantos are anthologized in A Sing Economy (Flim Forum Press).  She teaches creative writing to immigrants at Truman College, works as a Poet-in-Residence for the Chicago Public Schools, and presents her public art projects nationally.

JOHN KEENE is the author of Annotations (New Directions) and Seismosis(with Christopher Stackhouse / 1913 Press). He lives in Chicago and is Associate Professor at Northwestern University.

QURAYSH ALI LANSANA is the author of several books including They Shall Run--Harriet Tubman Poems and southside rain (both from Third World Press). He directs the Gwendolyn Brooks Center and teaches at Chicago State University.

ROBYN SCHIFF is the author of Worth and Revolver (both from U of Iowa Press).  She lives in Iowa City where she directs the undergraduate creative writing program a the University of Iowa.

ABRAHAM SMITH is the author of Whim Man Mammon (Action Books) and teaches at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa.

Tuesday, November 11
QUICKIES!

A monthly reading of very short prose. Each reader has five minutes to read a complete work of prose. No excerpts. No cheating. Quickies! takes place on the second Tuesday of every month at the Innertown Pub in Chicago.

This month we are featuring an all-female line up!

featuring:
Lauren Pretnar
Marisa Plumb
Kelly Xintaris
Amy Stern
Beth Wylder
Erin Teegarden
and Jessi Lee Gaylord

7:30 pm
The Innertown Pub
1935 W Thomas

For more information contact Mary Hamilton or Lindsay Hunter at or check out their “ title="website.">website.

posted November 05, 2008 authors, events, writing life   |  1 comments
NaNoWriMo! (Listen UP!)

As many of you surely know already, November is National Novel Writing Month.  In its tenth year, NaNoWriMo continues to inspire tens of thousands of potential novelists worldwide with its message of speedy imperfection. image The goal of NaNoWriMo is to write a 50,000 word novel in a month. One month.  It breaks down to an average of 1,667 words a day, and obviously it’s absolutely insane.  But.  The point of NaNoWriMo is to get the words down, to write more than you ever thought possible, to get a solid first draft (or even a really terrible one) down on paper so you have something to work with in your second and third drafts. 

I love NaNoWriMo.  I love the convergence of so many voices telling their stories. I love the celebration of writing and creativity and caffeine-fueled enthusiastic madness. I love a massive group deadline (second only to April 15 in this country), and the chance to share your deadline-induced misery with 89,999 other people. I love posting wordcounts and feeling like someone other than my own prone-to-excuses lackadaisical conscience is holding me accountable for my productivity or lack thereof. I love reading what my friends write. In fact, I wish that ALL my friends would write at least one novel, particularly if that one novel is a thinly-disguised memoir. Even better if everyone in my family wrote a thinly-disguised memoir, and then let me read it. As long as it didn’t lead to prolonged discussions of commas, punctuated (ha!) with claims that “that’s what the nuns told me to do,” I think that reading novels written by family members would be wonderful.

Will everyone reach 50,000 words?  Of course not.  But the point is to WRITE, and even 10,000 words in a month is 10,000 more than you might have written otherwise. 

If you’re doing NaNo this year – or even if, like us, you’re doing a modified version we like to call “If I’m Writing Thousands Of Words They’d Darn Well Better Be On My Current Novel-In-Progress” (the acronym’s a little trickier) – then you’ll probably need to catch up on your wordcounts by mid-month, and we have just the thing: our November Write-a-Thon, Saturday November 22, 2008. We’ll open the Studio from 9 am to 9 pm, and provide tons of snacks, coffee, soda, tea, and good company, not to mention a fantastic writing space and free wifi, to help you write your heart out. 

posted November 04, 2008 authors, contests, events, fiction, nanowrimo, writing life   |  0 comments
Getting out of the House: October 27 through November 4th (Listen UP!)

This is a very exciting week.

First off, writer or no, Hallowe’en is this Friday.  Dress up and candy?  It’s every writer’s dream.  Hallowe’en events continue all weekend long.

I probably won’t be trick or treating this year because if the fates align, I’m going to be indulging my recent obsession with rocking out by seeing Million Dollar Quartet, which has closed at the Goodman Theatre and opens Friday at the Apollo Theatre.  Readers of the Trib are giving the show rave reviews.

Saturday, I’m back on the job.  Anne Carson, whose Eros The Bittersweet just confused and disturbed my freshman comp students, is reading at the Harold Washington Library as part of the Chicago Humanities Festival. I just learned that tickets are free to students and educators (with a $5 total processing fee), so I stocked up.

Saturday evening, I’m back to being music-obsessed.  Blackheart Record’s Girl in a Coma is playing at the Bottom Lounge.  They’re my new favorite band since I saw them open for Tegan and Sarah on October 9th.

Of course, there’s one really important event this week that I haven’t mentioned.  Perhaps you’ve heard: Tuesday is election day.  Spend it glued to your TV, at a rally or party, or ignore all of the hub-bub, but for the love of my 401(k), please vote.

Get all of your spazziness worked out this weekend, because next month is going to be a beast. Stay tuned for Friday’s story starter!

posted October 29, 2008 authors, events, music, plays, poetry, writing life   |  0 comments
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