Archive for the 'Store Events' Category

Page 185 of 206

Ayun Halliday Event

Apr ’05
12
12:00 am

Ayun Halliday reads from Job Hopper
 
Saturday, April 16th, 4PM
 
FREE
 
If it’s true that the average worker will hold an average of seven jobs over the course of a lifetime, Ayun Halliday is anything but average. In her brief thirty-something years, Halliday has managed to rack up an impressive array of short lived stints in the paid job market, including life guard, library attendant, costume designer, actress, waitress, artist’s model, professional temp, rental stylist, substitute teacher, party counselor, massage therapist, costumed mascot, and mime, to name a few. In this uproarious collection of essays Job Hopper, Halliday displays a work ethic all employers can admire: wearing a leg brace to work after calling in “sick,” quitting the same day she starts by claiming her step-brother had been in a bike accident, and faking “vocal nodes” to avoid telemarketing calls. Along the way, she befriends colleagues and bosses who ignore her falling asleep, stealing food and clothing, and feigning skills she does not possess, and gains the respect of her customers for sheer honesty, which includes detailing her feminine hygiene problems and setting male clients straight on her brand of massage: “I’m sorry, I cannot facilitate a sexual release for you!”
 
Ayun Halliday was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. In 1988, she joined The Neo-Futurists, a Chicago theatre company notable for presenting 30 original plays in the course of 60 minutes and ordering pizza for the audience whenever the show sold out. There she meet her future husband and ended up moving to New York City. She is the author of the books the Big Rumpus and No Touch Monkey! along with the zine East Village Inky.
 
Ayun Halliday will be reading and signing her new book at the event.

An Evening of Reading, co-sponsored by Watchword Press and the Independent Press Association, hosts readings by local authors

Apr ’05
9
12:00 am

Tuesday, March 29th, 7PM
An Evening of Reading, co-sponsored by Watchword Press and the Independent Press Association, hosts readings by local authors Mirela Ramona Ciupag, Gene Tanta, Simone Muench, Pennie Brinson and Patricia Guy.
 
Chicago? In an effort to extend literary communities across state borders, and to bring independent publishing into the spotlight, Oakland based literary magazine Watchword is making the rounds, and will be hosting an event co-sponsored with the Independent Press Association this month at Quimby?s Books with two extraordinary local magazines, Poetry Magazine and the Journal of Ordinary Thought. Local writers Pennie Brinson, Mirela Ramona Ciupag, Patricia Guy, Simone Muench and Gene Tanta will be presented by their editors at 7PM on Tuesday, March 29th at Quimby?s in Chicago.
 
Watchword, the literary magazine published bi-annually by Watchword Press, has been presenting and disseminating new writing and modern translations to a wide audience since its founding in 2000
 
The Independent Press Association of Chicago is a group of community, ethnic, and other independent publications dedicated to helping each other accomplish our goals, strengthen our communities, and advance social justice. The steering committee and advisory council of IPA-Chicago include The Chicago Reporter, In These Times, The North Lawndale Community News, PISTIL Magazine, Residents’ Journal, Punk Planet, and the Journal of Ordinary Thought. The organization?s program for 2005 includes workshops, networking, and publishing a directory of the Chicago area?s community, ethnic, and independent press.
 
Founded in Chicago by Harriet Monroe in 1912, POETRY Magazine is the oldest monthly devoted to verse in the English-speaking world. Harriet Monroe?s ?Open Door? policy, set forth in Volume I of the magazine, remains the most succinct statement of POETRY?s mission: to print the best poetry written today, in whatever style, genre, or approach. The magazine established its reputation early by publishing the first important poems of T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Marianne Moore, Wallace Stevens, H. D., William Carlos Williams, Carl Sandburg, and other now-classic authors. In succeeding decades it has presented?often for the first time?works by virtually every significant poet of the 20th century.
 
The Journal of Ordinary Thought (JOT), published quarterly by the Neighborhood Writing Alliance (NWA), features writing by adults participating in community-based writing workshops in Chicago. JOT publishes reflections people make on their personal histories and everyday experiences. It is founded on the proposition that Every Person Is a Philosopher and expressing one?s thoughts fosters creativity and change. The Journal of Ordinary Thought is a vehicle for reflection, communication, and change.
 
Reading at this event will be:
 
Pennie Brinson (JOT) has been attending the Journal of Ordinary Thought (JOT) workshops at the Mabel Manning Branch Library since the spring of 1999. Brinson has been writing poetry and short stories since she was a child. She is currently working on a novel to be titled, Rosa Lee, and her fourth chapbook of prose titled Gloria, and Other Women. She is a recipient of an Illinois Arts Council Literary Award, and also freelances for Residents? Journal. Her first love is reading and writing poetry. Brinson has an Associates Degree in Liberal Arts.
 
Mirela Ramona Ciupag (WATCHWORD) holds a BA in Philosophy from University Alexandru I. Cuza, Iasi, Romania. She was a philosophy teacher and a theater director when in 1999 she came to America as an ArtsLink program fellow in Poetry and as a guest of the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa. More recently, she won Curator?s Choice award at Chicago’s 2002 Around the Coyote Arts Festival. Her poems as well as her translations were published in Iasi, Romania Outpost, in San Francisco Watchword, and in Chicago Another Chicago Magazine and Court Green.
 
Patricia Guy (JOT) Tricia is a woman in her forties who has experienced her share of grief and heartache?Patricia Guy started with Journal of Ordinary Thought (JOT) in 1996, at the first meeting at the Hall Branch Library at 48th and Michigan. Since then, Guy has appeared in many issues of JOT. She co-led a group at the Fisk Elementary School (with parents) and moved from the Hall Branch Library writing group to start her own at the King Branch Library. Guy now leads the West Englewood Branch Library writing workshop. ?Tricia is a fresh thought. She knows that the first answer is not always the best?
 
Simone Muench (POETRY) is poetry editor of ACM. She was raised in Benson, Louisiana and Combs, Arkansas before moving to Colorado to receive her BA and MA from the University of Colorado. Her poems have been published, or are forthcoming, in Paris Review, Indiana Review, Notre Dame Review, Poetry, Bellingham Review and Pool. One of her poems will appear in Iowa Press’s upcoming Red, White, and Blues: Poets on the Promise of America edited by Ryan G. Van Cleave and Virgil Suarez. She is a recipient of an Illinois Arts Council Fellowship, the 49th Parallel Award for Poetry, the Charles Goodnow Award, the AWP Intro Journals Project Award and the Poetry Center’s 9th Annual Juried Reading Award. Her book The Air Lost in Breathing received the Marianne Moore Prize for Poetry and was published by Helicon Nine in 2000. New Michigan Press released her chapbook Notebook. Knife. Mentholatum in 2003. She was one of the Fine Lines Poetry Contest winners co-sponsored by Olay and the Poetry Society of America, and judged by Sonia Sanchez, Sapphire, Lee Ann Brown, Marilyn Chin, Sandra Cisneros, Julia Alvarez and Jill Bialosky. Recently, her manuscript Drowning by the Light of Oranges, aka Lampblack and Ash, won the Kathryn A. Morton Prize for Poetry from Sarabande Books. It will appear sometime in 2005.
 
Gene Tanta (Eugen Tinta) (WATCHWORD) was born in Timisoara, Romania, 1974 and arrived with his family in Chicago in 1984. He is a graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop and translates contemporary Romanian poetry. His poems, visual works, and translation have been published and exhibited nationally and internationally: Epoch, Ploughshares, Circumference Magazine, Exquisite Corpse, Watchword, Columbia Poetry Review. Two collaborative poems with Reginald Shepherd are forthcoming in Indiana Review.
 
Watchword Press: www.watchwordpress.org
Poetry Magazine: www.poetrymagazine.org
Journal of Ordinary Thought: www.jot.org
IPA Chicago: www.indypress.org

Bee Lavender/Lauren Sanders reading

Mar ’05
29
12:00 am

Akashic Books & Punk Planet Books presentan evening of readings withLauren Sanders author of WITH OR WITHOUT YOU andBee Lavender author of LESSONS IN TAXIDERMYTuesday, April 12th, 7PMFREE
With or Without You combines the aching adolescent heart of The Catcher in the Rye with the dark suburban soul of The Great Gatsby–set against the starstruck voyeurism of American Idol. This book asks the quintessentially American question: Is life worth living if you can’t be famous?
 
LAUREN SANDERS’s highly acclaimed debut novel, Kamikaze Lust, won a 2000 Lambda Literary Award. Her writing has appeared in many publications, including the American Book Review, Poets & Writers, and Time Out New York. She lives in Brooklyn.
 
Lessons in Taxidermy is the autobiographical tale of growing up destitute and sick in the Pacific Northwest. After surviving a rare genetic disorder and childhood cancer, Lavender retells the events of her tumultuous life–battling her illnesses, learning to fight, young motherhood–in fearless, unapologetic prose and gut-wrenching, yet darkly comic, detail.
 
Bee Lavender is the 33-year-old coeditor of two books, Breeder: Real Life Stories from the New Generation of Mothers and Mamaphonic. She is also the publisher of the online edition of Hip Mamamagazine. She also created and publishes Girl-Mom, an advocacy website for teen parents, and Yo Mama Says, a news and commentary website for activists.
 
WITH OR WITHOUT YOU by Lauren Sanders
“I hate the term poetic, but Lauren Sanders’s writing has such a slick mean surface and her subject is such a truly bad girl, a murderer. I mean, so that poetic suits With or Without You just fine. It’s a hot poetic book I wouldn’t kick out of bed.”
–Eileen Myles, author of Chelsea Girls
 
LESSONS IN TAXIDERMY by Bee Lavender
“Bee Lavender is a fantastic writer. Her work is deep and personal and I don’t think there are any places she’s scared to go.”
–Michelle Tea, author of Rent Girl
 
Both authors will be reading and signing their new books at the event.
 

The Cross Gender Caravan

Mar ’05
17
12:00 am

Cross Gender Caravan
Friday May 6th, 7PM
FREE
 
Join us as young transgender writers tell their stories in fiction, essays and poetry. And along the way, they expand the boundaries of both gender and artistic expression. Your genderscape may never be the same again!
 
Featuring:
 
Tennessee Jones a southern ex-punk with high pompadour whose first book, Deliver Me From Nowhere, explores the sex and gender badlands of Middle America through the prism of Bruce Springsteen’s album Nebraska.
 
Charlie Anders author of Choir Boy, a bittersweet and surreal story of a choirboy who takes female hormones to keep his voice from changing and discovers a world of gender confusion. Charlie publishes other, the magazine of pop and politics for the new outcasts.
 
Andre Hewitt, aka The Urban Hermit author of The Urban Hermitt zine and The Flow Chronicles, a book about nightmare hippies and coming out as queer in the midst of lsd induced- heterosexist- rainbow gathering ?love. Andre writes about counterculture, with soul.
 
Emil Heiple is a zinester exiled from the dirty south, and reborn a boy. His new book, The Body of Loss was born of soils and sweats far from home, and is an exploration of the human body and how most of us will never get it quite right.
 

Belltown Paradise/Making Their Own Plans Book Release Event

Mar ’05
5
12:00 am

Ave Bromberg and Brett Bloom discuss the new book
Belltown Paradise / Making Their Own Plans
Friday, February 25th, 8:00 PM
 
This double-sided volume offers two books detailing inspiring examples of artists, environmental visionaries, and concerned citizens who have had a direct impact in shaping their urban environments. The groups were invited to write their own accounts of their histories, failures and triumphs while working to redesign neighborhoods in creative and exciting ways.
Belltown Paradise?is a concentrated study of urban renovation activities around the corner of Elliot and Vine Streets in the Belltown neighborhood of Seattle. The first three chapters present the work of community activists who successfully preserved open land in one of Seattle?s most densely packed neighborhoods to create the Belltown P Patch, a community garden, and transform three adjacent early 20th century workers? cottages for writer?s residencies and a community center called Cottage Park. The chapters also cover Growing Vine Street, an initiative to slowly convert Vine Street, which runs along one side of the garden, into a ?green? street that cleans rainwater runoff from adjacent high-rise condo buildings while providing pedestrian-friendly space for urban dwellers. The fourth chapter is the first comprehensive chronicle of the work of artist Buster Simpson?s 30 years of public work in Belltown. Buster?s work and dedication have had an important impact on the aesthetics and conceptualization of environmental planning in the Belltown neighborhood.
 
The second book?Making Their Own Plans?shares the histories and tactics of four independent groups from four distinct urban centers: Portland, Oregon; Chicago, Illinois; Hamburg, Germany; and Barcelona, Spain. City Repair (Portland) began a number of neighborhood initiatives aimed at promoting a sense of community; their primary initiative creates public squares in and around the middle of the traffic intersections, resulting in what they call ?intersection repair.? The Resource Center (Chicago) had been working since the late 60s to find creative solutions to environmental and social problems in the city, primarily through reuse and recycling initiatives. A recent plan, detailed in their chapter, works to convert 6000 acres of vacant city land into farms that simultaneously clean the air, produce local organic produce, employ homeless persons, and beautify the city. Park Fiction (Hamburg), starting in 1995, organized exhibitions, design workshops, protests, and spectacles in their successful fight to preserve an open waterfront space and create a community-designed park on the Elbe River. The inhabitants of Can Masdeu (Barcelona) squatted then rehabilitated an old hospital and the surrounding grounds into space for living, gardening, neighborhood events, workshops and classes. Their chapter details their struggles with both local authorities and the exhaustion of radical communal living.
 
In the Field (Brett Bloom and Ava Bromberg) explores complex social constellations created by urban land use. We share ideas and take action inhabiting, transforming, and opening up spaces to new possibilities for creatively generated public space and autonomously produced neighborhood planning. Activities include public projects and written Field Guides, examples are available on the web site: www.inthefield.info
 
They will be on hand to discuss and sign the book.