Wednesday, May 19, 2021

May 19, 2021 (Kerr, Friend, Rudolph, Kane & Suárez)

Hemingway's Poetry Series
May 19, 2021
 

Special thanks to White Whale Events Manager Anna Claire Weber for hosting and recording this Zoom event.

Note that a link for the entire reading is available at the bottom of this post.

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 and son.

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

Diane Kerr’s second full-length collection, Perigee, won the 2020 Brittingham Prize from the University of Wisconsin Press .  Her first book, Butterfly, was published by WordTech Communications in 2014 and her chapbook One by Parallel Press in 2007. Her poems have appeared in Alaska Quarterly Review, Mississippi Review, Pearl , and Poetry East, among others. She has been awarded fellowships to Ropewalk and Hedgebrook and holds a M.F.A. from the Warren Wilson Program for Writers.  Kerr has taught writing at the University of Pittsburgh and mentors in the Madwomen in the Attic creative writing program at Carlow University in Pittsburgh. She recently won first place for her poem, “The Distinguished Thing: A Colloquy,” in Palette Poetry’s 2021 Previously Published Prize. https://www.palettepoetry.com/2021/05/18/winners-and-finalists-of-the-2021-previously-published-prize/

Diane Kerr - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)
 

Malcolm Friend is a poet originally from the Rainier Beach neighborhood of Seattle , Washington . He received his BA from Vanderbilt University , and his MFA from the University of Pittsburgh . He is the author of the chapbook mxd kd mixtape (Glass Poetry, 2017) and the full-length collection Our Bruises Kept Singing Purple (Inlandia Books, 2018), selected by Cynthia Arrieu-King as winner of the 2017 Hillary Gravendyk Prize. Together with JR Mahung he is a member of Black Plantains, an Afrocaribbean poetry collective.

Malcolm Friend - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)
 

Cedric Rudolph first moved to Pittsburgh in 2016 to pursue teaching incarcerated populations under a Words Without Walls fellowship from Chatham University. For two years, he taught at Allegheny County Jail and the now-defunct SCI Pittsburgh. In 2018, he graduated from Chatham with an MFA in Poetry and in Pedagogy. He is currently in his third year of teaching fiction and poetry to middle and high school writers at the Pittsburgh Creative and Performing Arts school (CAPA). He is one of the founding editors for Beautiful Cadaver, which publishes social justice-themed anthologies. His publications include The Laurel ReviewSanta Fe Literary ReviewCoal Hill Review and The Pittsburgh Neighborhood Guidebook.

Cedric Rudolph - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)
 

Kelli Stevens Kane is a poet, playwright, and oral historian.  In describing Hallelujah Science, her debut collection of poetry, author Willie Perdomo says, “Kane’s level of insight, revelation, and economy becomes a spiritual exodus to the lands of being Black, white, a poet, a woman, a shadow, and a human being.”  She’s a Cave Canem Fellow who has also studied at VONA, Hurston/Wright, and Callaloo.  She’s read, published and performed nationally. For more info:  kellistevenskane.com

Kelli Stevens Kane - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Virgil Suárez was born in Havana and left Cuba with his family when he was just 12. Eventually settling in the United States , he earned a BA from California State University , Long Beach , and an MFA from Louisiana State University and is currently an associate professor of creative writing at Florida State University in Tallahassee . His tenth volume of poetry is THE PAINTED BUNTING’S LAST MOLT ( University of Pittsburgh Press , 2020). In both his poetry and his prose, Suárez seeks to capture the experience of migration. His work has appeared in a multitude of magazines and journals internationally. He has also been taking photographs on the road for the last three decades. When he is not writing, he is out riding his motorcycle up and down the Blue Highways of the Southeast, photographing disappearing urban and rural landscapes.

Virgil Suárez - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)
 

Joan E. Bauer is the author of The Almost Sound of Drowning (Main Street Rag, 2008). For some years, she was a teacher and counselor. 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. She curates the Hemingway's Summer Poetry Series with Kristofer Collins. Her second full-length book of poetry, The Camera Artist, was published by Turning Point in 2021.

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

The Entire Reading

Start to Finish - 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, May 4, 2021

May 4, 2021 (Ahmed, Carter-Jones, Oaks & Roffman)

 

Hemingway's Poetry Series
May 4, 2021
 

Special thanks to White Whale Events Manager Anna Claire Weber for hosting and recording this Zoom event.

Note that a link for the entire reading is available at the bottom of this post.

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 and son.

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

Dilruba Ahmed is the author Bring Now the Angels (Pitt Poetry Series, 2020), with poems featured in New York Times Magazine, Best American Poetry 2019, and podcasts such as The Slowdown with Tracy K. Smith and Poetry Unbound with Pádraig Ó Tuama. Her debut book of poetry, Dhaka Dust (Graywolf Press, 2011), won the Bakeless Prize.  Ahmed’s poems have appeared in Kenyon Review, New England Review, and Ploughshares. Her poetry has also been anthologized in Literature: The Human Experience; Border Lines: Poems of Migration; The Orison Anthology 2020; and elsewhere. Ahmed is the recipient of The Florida Review’s Editors’ Award, a Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Memorial Prize, and the Katharine Bakeless Nason Fellowship in Poetry awarded by the Bread Loaf Writers Conference. Ahmed has taught with the MFA programs at Chatham University and Warren Wilson College.  www.dilrubaahmed.com

"Bring Now the Angels"; "Phase One"; "Choke"; and "View-Master Virtual Reality Starter Pack: Mortality Reel" from Bring Now the Angels by Dilruba Ahmed, Copyright 2020. All rights are controlled by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Used by permission of the University of Pittsburgh Press.

Dilruba Ahmed - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Sheila Carter-Jones has been described by Herbert Woodward Martin as one who writes with "immediacy of tone, voice and language." Much of her work to date charts in images and music the lived experiences of a small-town girl brought up in a house across from the boney dump of Republic Steel Coal Mines outside of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She has been published in Pennsylvania Review, Pittsburgh Quarterly, Tri-State Anthology, Blair Mountain Press and Flights. Grace Cavalieri, producer and host of "The Poet and the Poem from the Library of Congress" says that Sheila's recent book Blackberry Cobbler Song premiers a narrative poet in the greatest tradition of American storytellers.

Sheila Carter-Jones - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Jeff Oaks' debut book of poetry, Little What, was published by Lily Poetry Review Books in September 2019. A recipient of three Pennsylvania Council of the Arts fellowships, Oaks has published poems in a number of literary magazines, most recently in Best New Poets, Field, Georgia Review, Missouri Review, Superstition Review, and Tupelo Quarterly. His prose has appeared in At Length, Creative Nonfiction, Fourth Genre, Kenyon Review Online, and Water~Stone Review. Both his poems and prose have appeared in the anthologies Brief Encounters: A Collection of Contemporary Nonfiction, and My Diva: 65 Gay Men on the Women Who Inspire Them. He teaches writing at the University of Pittsburgh.

Jeff Oaks - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Rosaly DeMaios Roffman, a native New Yorker, taught creative writing, Classical Literature, World Mythology, and founded a Myth/Folklore Studies Center at IUP. She co-edited the prize-winning Life on the Line, and is the author of Going to Bed Whole, Tottering Palaces, The Approximate Message, and In the Fall of a Sparrow.  She has read her poems in Ireland, Greece, Mexico, Israel, Spain, and Bratislava and has collaborated on 20 pieces with composers and other artists. Her poems have been translated into Japanese, Slovak and Hebrew. She has received grants from the National Endowment and the Witter Bynner Foundations and was awarded the Distinguished Faculty Award in the Arts. She is the facilitator of Pittsburgh's Squirrel Hill Poetry Workshop.
www.squirrelhillpoets.org. In 2012 Tebot Bach published her latest book of poems, I Want to Thank My Eyes
.

Rosaly DeMaios Roffman - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Joan E. Bauer is the author of The Almost Sound of Drowning (Main Street Rag, 2008). For some years, she was a teacher and counselor. 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. She curates the Hemingway's Summer Poetry Series with Kristofer Collins. Her second full-length book of poetry, The Camera Artist, was published by Turning Point in 2021.

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.

 

 

Friday, September 25, 2020

September 25, 2020 (Get Out the Vote)


Special thanks to White Whale Events Manager Anna Claire Weber for hosting this Zoom meeting.

Note that a link for the entire reading, including introductory and closing remarks, is available at the bottom of this post.

Joan E. Bauer is the author of The Almost Sound of Drowning (Main Street Rag, 2008). For some years, she was a teacher and counselor. 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. She curates the Hemingway's Summer Poetry Series with Kristofer Collins. Her second full-length book of poetry, The Camera Artist, is forthcoming from Turning Point in 2021.

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 and son.

Jason Baldinger has spent a life in odd jobs, if only poetry was the strangest of them he’d have far less to talk about. Somewhere in time he has traveled the country, and wrote a few books, the latest of which are The Lower 48 (Six Gallery Press) and the chapbook The Studs Terkel Blues (Night Ballet Press). For more on Jason, go to: https://jasonbaldinger.bandcamp.com. He'd like to remind you that voting is pretty damned important and if you need a ride to your polling place, he'll be happy help you out.

Cameron Barnett is the author of The Drowning Boy's Guide to Water (Autumn House Press) which was a finalist for an NAACP Image Award. He earned his MFA from the University of Pittsburgh and teaches middle school English. He is the recipient of the 2019 Carol R. Brown Creative Achievement Award for Emerging Artist. Cameron’s work explores the complexity of race and the body for a black man in today’s America, more of which can be found at cameronbarnett.net.

Doralee Brooks teaches at the Community College of Allegheny County and chairs the Developmental Studies Department. She is a fellow of the Western Pennsylvania Writing Project ('95) and Cave Canem ('97 and '99). Doralee holds an MFA from Carlow University, writes with the Madwomen in the Attic Poetry Workshops, and is a proud founding member of the (sub) Verses Social Collective. Her poems have appeared in many journals including Paterson Literary Review, Pittsburgh Poetry Review, and Dos Passos Review. Her chapbook, When I Hold You Up to the Light, won the 2019 Cathy Smith Bowers Chapbook Contest published by Main Street Rag.

Doralee Brooks - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Malcolm Friend is a poet originally from the Rainier Beach neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. He received his BA from Vanderbilt University, and his MFA from the University of Pittsburgh. He is the author of the chapbook mxd kd mixtape (Glass Poetry, 2017), and the full length collection Our Bruises Kept Singing Purple (Inlandia Books, 2018), selected by Cynthia Arrieu-King as winner of the 2017 Hillary Gravendyk Prize. Together with JR Mahung he is a member of Black Plantains, an Afrocaribbean poetry collective.

Malcolm Friend - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Celeste Gainey is the author of the poetry collection, the GAFFER, (Arktoi Books/Red Hen Press), cited by O, The Oprah Magazine as one of “8 New Books of Poetry to Savor.” Her chapbook, In the land of speculation & seismography (Seven Kitchens Press), was runner-up for the prestigious Robin Becker Prize. She has been a Hedgebrook Writer in Residence as well as a presenting poet at the Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival and is currently the inaugural City Of Asylum’s Poet Laureate for Allegheny County. Graduating with a BFA in Film & Television from the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University, as well as earning an MFA in Creative Writing/Poetry from Carlow University, Gainey was the first woman to be admitted to the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) as a gaffer, and has spent many years working with light in film and architecture. www.celestegainey.com

Celeste Gainey - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download) 

Emily Mohn-Slate is the author of The Falls, winner of the 2019 New American Poetry Prize, (forthcoming in 2020 from New American Press), and FEED, winner of the 2018 Keystone Chapbook Prize (Seven Kitchens Press). She teaches high school English at Winchester Thurston School, and poetry workshops for the Madwomen in the Attic at Carlow University.

Emily Mohn-Slate - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)  

Adriana E. Ramírez is a Mexican-Colombian poet, critic, and writer. In 2015, she won the PEN/Fusion Emerging Writer’s Prize for Dead Boys (Little A, 2016). Her work can be found in the LA Times, ESPN’s The Undefeated, and Literary Hub. Her long-awaited book, The Violence, is forthcoming from Scribner.

Adriana E. Ramirez - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)  

Ellen McGrath Smith teaches at the University of Pittsburgh and in the Carlow University Madwomen in the Attic program. Her poetry has appeared in The New York Times, The American Poetry Review, Talking Writing, Los Angeles Review, and other journals and anthologies. Books include Scatter, Feed (Seven Kitchens 2014) and Nobody's Jackknife (West End Press 2015).

Ellen McGrath Smith - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download)

Don Wentworth’s work reflects his interest in the revelatory nature of brief, numinous moments in everyday life. He is the author of 3 full-length poetry collections from Six Gallery Press, the most recent being With a Deepening Presence. Forthcoming books include collections of ghazals from Low Ghost Press and haiku from Lascaux Editions.

Don Wentworth - 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.