Friday, September 22, 2017

Pop-Up Reading (Novick, Carter-Jones, Stiegerwald & Bauer)

Pop-Up Reading at the White Whale Bookstore
September 22, 2017

Joan Bauer curated this event around a theme of "Writing From History."  She had been introduced to the author Bill Steigerwald by an old friend of hers who had once been Bill's journalistic colleague. Bill, about whom you will learn more in a paragraph below, is the author of a recently published book titled 30 Days a Black Man. At this event Bill reads passages from the book and provides historical and biographical context. The other readers should be familiar to those of us in the Pittsburgh poetry community. 

Aaron Novick is a graduate student in the history and philosophy of science at the University of Pittsburgh. His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Notre Dame Review, Third Wednesday, and New Orleans Review. He writes about other people's poetry at https://resistingtheintelligence.wordpress.com/  

Aaron Novick - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download

Sheila L. Carter-Jones is the author of Three Birds Deep (selected by Elizabeth Alexander as the 2012 winner of the Naomi Long Madgett Poetry Book Award) and the chapbook Blackberry Cobbler Song. Her chapbook Crooked Star Dream Book was named Honorable Mention for the 2013 New York Center for Book Arts Chapbook Contest. Sheila taught in the Pittsburgh Public Schools, and in Chatham University’s and the University of Pittsburgh’s Education Departments. She earned her BA from Carnegie Mellon University and both an M.Ed. and Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh. She is a fellow of Cave Canem, Callaloo Creative Writing Workshop and a Walter Dakin Fellow of the 2015 Sewanee Writer’s Conference. Her poetry has been published in Crossing Limits, Pittsburgh Quarterly, Pennsylvania Review, Tri-State Anthology, Riverspeak, Flights: The Literary Journal of Sinclair College, Coal: A Poetry Anthology, City Paper, Cave Canem Anthology, Jewish Currents, Pittsburgh Poetry Review, several volumes of Carlow University’s Voices from the Attic anthologies and other journals. Currently, Sheila is working on a new manuscript of poems tentatively entitled The Newly Invented Lucky Star Dream Book, as well as a long poem of book length yet to be titled and a memoir also yet to be titled.

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

Bill Steigerwald is a veteran journalist from Pittsburgh. His new nonfiction book "30 Days a Black Man" tells the amazing but forgotten story about an undercover mission by a Pittsburgh newspaperman into the Jim Crow South in 1948 that shook up the whole country. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette star reporter Ray Sprigle's nationally syndicated series "In the Land of Jim Crow" exposed the iniquities and humiliations suffered by ten million black Americans in the segregated South. It shocked the white people of the North, angered the South and started the first national debate in the media about ending America's legal apartheid. Kirkus Review said "30 Days a Black Man" is "a fascinating account of an anti-Jim Crow muckraking adventure..." that Steigerwald turned "into rollicking, haunting American history." In 2013 he wrote and published Dogging Steinbeck which exposed the many fictions and fibs John Steinbeck put into Travels With Charley.  Before he turned to books, Steigerwald worked as an editor and writer/reporter/columnist for the Los Angeles Times in the 1980s, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in the 1990s and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review in the 2000s. He and his wife Trudi live south of Pittsburgh in the woods. 

Joan E. Bauer is the author of The Almost Sound of Drowning (Main Street Rag, 2008). Since she began writing poetry again in 2001, more than 180 of her poems have appeared in journals, anthologies and periodicals, including most recently, Calyx, Chiron Review, Cider Press Review, Paterson Literary Review, Pittsburgh Poetry Review, Slipstream, Uppagus, US 1 Worksheets, Voices from the Attic, and Vox Populi: A Public Sphere for Politics & Poetry.  For some years, Joan worked as an English teacher and educational counselor and now divides her time between Venice, CA, and Pittsburgh, PA where she co-hosts and curates the Hemingway's Summer Poetry Series with Jimmy Cvetic. 

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


 
 
 
 

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

July 25, 2017 (The Grand Finale)

Hemingway's Poetry Series
July 25, 2017

Featured Readers
Click to Enlarge - Right-Click to Download
Standing L-R: Jimmy Cvetic, Bart Solarczyk, Jason Baldinger, Jameson Bayles, Adriana Ramirez & Joan Bauer
Seated L-R: Kristofer Collins, Meghan Tutolo, Angele Ellis & John Korn

Click to Enlarge - Right-Click to Download
A crowdsourced tableau vivant that recreates Caravaggio's Apotheosis of the Kneeling Supplicant

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 “The Lower 48” (Six Gallery Press) and the chapbook “The Studs Terkel Blues” (Night Ballet Press) as well as the anthologies Lipsmack! (Night Ballet Press) and Good Noise (Thrasher Press).  A short litany of publishing credits include: The New Yinzer, Shatter Wig Press, Blast Furnace, B.E. Quarterly and Fuck Art, Let’s Dance. You can also hear audio of some poems on the bandcamp website by just typing in his name.

Kristofer Collins Introduces Jason Baldinger - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download 

Jason Baldinger - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download   

Adriana E. Ramírez is a 2015 PEN/Fusion Award-winning nonfiction writer, storyteller, digital maker, and performance poet based in Pittsburgh. She teaches in the English Department at the University of Pittsburgh, co-runs the Steel City Poetry Slam, and co-founded Aster(ix) Journal. Her work has appeared in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Guernica, Convolution, HEArt, Apogee, and Nerve.com, as well as on hundreds of stages across the country. Ramirez is the author of two poetry chapbooks, The Swallows (Blue Sketch Press) and Trusting in Imaginary Spaces (Tired Hearts Press); she is also the nonfiction editor of DISMANTLE (Thread Makes Blanket Press).



Jameson Bayles is a roving correspondent for Poetrybay and was the co-curator of the 2016-2017 KC Poetry Throwdown held in Kansas City, MO. His work has been published in numerous literary journals and magazines; including Poems-For-All, Hedgerow, The Ambriel Revolution, Thirteen Myna Birds, Rusty Truck, Your One Phone Call and on Rumrazor.com. Jameson's work can be found in the collaborative reader “A Case For Ascension” (Asinimali Publications, 2015), the 2016 Hessler Street Poetry Fair Anthology (Crisis Chronicles Press) and "Delirious- A Poetic Celebration of Prince" (Night Ballet Press, 2016), "Recession In Neverland" (Paladin Knight Publishing, 2017) and his solo work "legends of doe hoe" (Spartan Press, 2017).

Kristofer Collins Introduces Jameson Bayles - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download  


Angele Ellis is an editor, poet, fiction writer, and reviewer who has authored four  books, and appeared in over fifty publications and a dozen anthologies. She is coauthor of Dealing With Differences (Corwin Press), named as a top multicultural classroom resource by The Christian Science Monitor, and author of Arab on Radar (Six Gallery Press), whose poems won her an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and Spared (A Main Street Rag Editors' Choice Chapbook). Angele feels that writing and performing her work combines two of her childhood dreams--to be an archaeologist and a lounge singer. She lives in Friendship, whose Quakerly spirit soothes her hot-blooded nature.  Her most recent book, Under the Kaufman's Clock: Fiction, Poems and Photographs of Pittsburgh, Angele Ellis (author) and Rebecca Clever (photographs) was published by Six Gallery Press in 2016.



Bart Solarczyk grew up on Pittsburgh's Southside & now lives in Ross Township. His poems have recently appeared in Lilliput Review, Big Hammer, Rasputin & Nixes Mate Review. His latest chapbook, Right Direction, was published in November of 2016 as one of Lilliput Review's Modest Proposal series.


Bart Solarczyk - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download   

When Meghan Tutolo isn't writing romance about Italian foods or grading essays, she can be found doodling galaxies, playing her ukulele (horribly) or spilling her guts into Moleskines. Meghan earned her M.F.A. in Poetry from Chatham University, her B.A. in English Writing from the University of Pittsburgh and OCD, ADHD, etc. from genetics, probably. Her work has appeared in journals such as Nerve Cowboy, Chiron Review, The Pittsburgh Post Gazette, Arsenic Lobster and Main Street Rag. Her first chapbook of poems, Little As Living, was published in September 2014.



John Korn lives in Pittsburgh. He is the author of a book of poetry titled Television Farm which can be purchased on amazon.com. He has worked as a mental health social worker for many years now. He was nominated for two Pushcart Prizes, one for his poem "14 young women" and another for his poem "Yellow lamp shade head."  He didn't win either of these prizes and he is not even sure what those prizes are.


John Korn - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download

Kristofer Collins is the Books Editor at Pittsburgh Magazine, as well as being a frequent contributor to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He is the publisher of Low Ghost Press and Coleridge Street Books. He also manages Caliban Book Shop in Oakland (and owns Desolation Row Records located inside). His latest poetry collection Local Conditions was published in 2015. He lives in Stanton Heights, a hidden gem in Pittsburgh’s east end with his wife Dr. Anna Johnson and their three cats. 

Kristofer Collins - Click to Play (Right-Click to Download  

Open Mic


Jimmy Cvetic Reads Why U Hatin'?

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