Tuesday, July 25, 2023

July 25, 2023 (Barnett, Buccilli, Stroud & Williams-Devereux)

 

Featured Readers

or

Click to Enlarge - Right-Click to Download

Seated L-R: Christine Stroud, Kristofer Collins & Sarah Williams-Devereux

Standing L-R: Daniela Buccilli, Cameron Barnett & Joan Bauer

Special thanks to Jill Yeomans of White Whale Bookstore for hosting and recording this event.

Kristofer Collins is the longtime Books Editor for Pittsburgh Magazine. He is the co-curator of The Hemingway's Summer Poetry Series. His latest book The River Is Another Kind of Prayer: New & Selected Poems was published in 2020 by Kung Fu Treachery Press. His latest project, The Pittsburgh Book Review can be found at https://pittsburghbookreview.blogspot.com/. He lives in Stanton Heights with his wife, son and daughter.

Opening Comments by Kristofer Collins - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Sarah Williams-Devereux is the author of Of a Mother (Finishing Line Press, chapbook, forthcoming, 2023). Her poetry has appeared in multiple venues, including journals [F(r)ictionLog, Snapdragon], anthologies [Show Us Your Papers (Main Street Rag, 2020), Is It Hot in Here Or Is It Just Me? Women Over Forty Write on Aging (Social Justice Anthologies, 2019)], radio [Prosody, WESA-FM], and public art [Bridging the Gap/Analog Scroll, Westmoreland Museum of American Art]. She teaches poetry for the Madwomen in the Attic workshops at Carlow University. She is an apprentice training instructor for Amherst Writers & Artists writing group leadership and received her MA in teaching writing from Johns Hopkins University.

Sarah Williams-Devereux - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Christine Stroud is a poet living in Pittsburgh, PA, and is the editor in chief of Autumn House Press. Her chapbook, The Buried Return, was released by Finishing Line Press in March of 2014, and her second chapbook, Sister Suite, was released from Disorder Press in 2017. Stroud’s poems have appeared in Prairie Schooner, Hobart, the Ninth Letter online, The Paterson Literary Review, Cimarron Review, The Laurel Review, and many others as well as several anthologies.

Christine Stroud - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Daniela Buccilli’s poetry can be found in Paterson Review, Northern Appalachian Review, Cimarron Review, and Voices in the Attic anthology. Her chapbook is What it Takes to Carry and she has co-edited Show Us Your Papers, a Poetry Anthology. She teaches at a local high school and has earned an MFA in poetry from Carlow University and one in fiction at the University of Pittsburgh. She serves her union as their secretary.

Daniela Buccilli - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Cameron Barnett is a Pittsburgh poet, teacher, and the Emerging Black Writer in Residence at Chatham University. He’s the author of The Drowning Boy’s Guide to Water and Murmur, forthcoming from Autumn House Press. His work explores the complexity of relationships, race, and place for Black people in America, more of which can be found at cameronbarnett.net.

Cameron Barnett - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Joan E. Bauer is the author of The Almost Sound of Drowning (Main Street Rag, 2008) and The Camera Artist (Turning Point, 2020). For some years, she was a teacher and counselor in public and independent schools. In 2007, she won the Earle Birney Poetry Prize from Prism International and in 2018, she was a finalist for the John Ciardi Poetry Prize from BkMk Press. Since 2001, more than 250 of her poems have been published and three have been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Joan co-curates the Hemingway's Summer Poetry Series with Kristofer Collins. Her new book of poetry, Fig Season (Turning Point), is now available.

Closing Remarks by Joan E. Bauer - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

The Entire Reading

The Whole Thing - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Mac users who lack a 2-button mouse may press Control-Click on the appropriate links to enable downloads.












Tuesday, July 11, 2023

July 11, 2023 (Alderman, Ussia & Solarczyk)

 

Featured Readers


Click to Enlarge - Right-Click to Download

Seated L-R: Matt Ussia & Bart Solarczyk
Standing L-R: Chandra Alderman, Scott Silsbe & Joan Bauer


Special thanks to Jill Yeomans of White Whale Bookstore for hosting and recording this event.


Scott Silsbe was born in Detroit. He now lives in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania. His poems and prose have appeared in numerous periodicals and have been collected in four books: Unattended Fire, The River Underneath the City, Muskrat Friday Dinner, and Meet Me Where We Survive. He is also an assistant editor at Low Ghost Press.

Opening Comments by Scott Silsbe - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)
 
Chandra Alderman lives in northeast Ohio where she writes mostly letters and sometimes poetry. She is often seen out in the wild with a camera, spying on nature, everyday life, and writers. Her photography has appeared on chapbooks published by Nightballet Press and Crisis Chronicles Press, and also online at Thirteen Myna Birds, The Octopus Review, and The City Poetry. Her words have appeared in Trailer Park Quarterly. More than all of this she is trying to compose the perfect bowl of soup.
 
Chandra Alderman - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Matthew Ussia is director of Duquesne University’s First Year Writing Program in spite of the fact that he got a C- in freshman writing and was rejected from Duquesne’s MA program. He is also an editor, podcaster, post-doom thereminist, softcore punk, postpunk backup singer, social media burnout, and sentient organic matter. His first book, The Red Glass Cat, was published by Alien Buddha Press in 2021. His writings have appeared in Mister Rogers and Philosophy, Future Humans in Fiction and Film, North of Oxford, Trailer Park Quarterly, Anti-Heroin Chic, and The Open Mic of the Air Podcast among others.
Bart Solarczyk is a lifelong resident of Pittsburgh, PA. Over the past forty years his poems have been published in print & online in a variety of magazines, journals, newspapers & anthologies. He is the author of eleven chapbooks & three full-length collections of poetry including his most recent book Carried Where We Go available from Redhawk Publications.
 
Kevin Finn is a poet, musician, visual artist and martial artist from Pittsburgh, PA. His poetry has been widely published in journals and anthologies, and his latest collection is entitled, Consequence of Dream (Six Gallery Press, 2022).

Kevin was, unfortunately, unable to participate in this reading.

Joan E. Bauer is the author of The Almost Sound of Drowning (Main Street Rag, 2008) and The Camera Artist (Turning Point, 2020). For some years, she was a teacher and counselor in public and independent schools. In 2007, she won the Earle Birney Poetry Prize from Prism International and in 2018, she was a finalist for the John Ciardi Poetry Prize from BkMk Press. Since 2001, more than 250 of her poems have been published and three have been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Joan co-curates the Hemingway's Summer Poetry Series with Kristofer Collins. Her new book of poetry, Fig Season (Turning Point), is now available.

Closing Remarks by Joan E. Bauer - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

The Entire Reading

The Whole Thing - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Mac users who lack a 2-button mouse may press Control-Click on the appropriate links to enable downloads.