LA-Lit 17b: Bay Poetics + a Salon-Podcast

Our podcast of LA-Lit 17b: Bay Poetics + a Salon-Podcast is now online. The interview was originally recorded on Saturday, December 2 at 1pm.

If you need information about how to subscribe to our podcast go here.

Writers Del Ray Cross, Susan Gevirtz, Suzanne Stein, Stephanie Young and Magdalena Zurawski (whose work appears in the new anthology Bay Poetics edited by Stephanie Young) were our guests.

After the recording of LA-Lit, visiting and local writers held an informal Salon with our guests until 6pm.

Del Ray Cross edits Shampoo a sudsy online literary magazine, and thrives in San Francisco. He has a chapbook and a half available from Pressed Wafer (including Cinema Yosemite) and a couple postcard books from Poetry Espresso (with Stephanie Young and Cassie Lewis).

Susan Gevirtz was an associate editor of HOW(ever) a journal of modernist/innovative directions in women’s poetry and scholarship, on the editorial advisory board of the journal Avec, and the online journal HOW2. Her books include Hourglass Transcripts, Burning Deck, 2001, Spelt, collaboration with Myung Mi Kim, a+bend press, 1999; Black Box Cutaway, Kelsey Street Press, 1999; Narrative’s Journey: The Fiction and Film Writing of Dorothy Richardson, Peter Lang, 1996; PROSTHESIS : : CAESAREA, Potes and Poets, 1994; Taken Place, Reality Street, 1993; Linen minus, Avenue B, 1992; and Domino: point of entry, Leave Books, 1992.

Suzanne Stein’s works have appeared in the publications Mirage #4/Period[ical], Commonweal, Small Town, The Bay Area Poetry Anthology, and at the venues Refusalon Gallery, the San Francisco Exploratorium, the Berkeley Art Center, Outpost for Contemporary Art, and elsewhere. She is the former co-director and film curator of four walls gallery, San Francisco.

Stephanie Young lives in Oakland and works at Mills College, but she’s also a resident of the internet, and you can find her there at The Well Nourished Moon. She is a board member at Small Press Traffic, San Francisco’s 30-year-old literary arts center. She also hosted a popular series of poetry readings at her house in Oakland for several years, and is the editor of BAY POETICS, an anthology out from Faux Press. Her writing has been published in Pettycoat Relaxer, Five Fingers Review, VeRT, Shampoo, Mirage Period(ical), Cypress Magazine, LIT, can we have our ball back? and Combo.

Magdalena Zurawski is currently working on a novel called The Bruise and she keeps a blog at Minor Americans. She says of herself “I was born in Newark NJ and grew up in Edison NJ but Providence RI feels like my hometown more than any place else because that’s where I started having sex and meeting poets and being a real person in a real world. My major poetic influences are Jack Spicer, Bruce Springsteen and Immanuel Kant (but only the 3rd critique). Early Bruce Springsteen albums make me happier than anything on earth (well, as happy as really really good poetry readings).”

LA-Lit 17a: Bay Poetics + a Salon-Podcast

Our podcast of LA-Lit 17a: Bay Poetics + a Salon-Podcast is now online. The interview was originally recorded on Saturday, December 2 at 1pm.

If you need information about how to subscribe to our podcast go here.

Writers Del Ray Cross, Susan Gevirtz, Suzanne Stein, Stephanie Young and Magdalena Zurawski (whose work appears in the new anthology Bay Poetics edited by Stephanie Young) were our guests.

After the recording of LA-Lit, visiting and local writers held an informal Salon with our guests until 6pm.

Del Ray Cross edits Shampoo a sudsy online literary magazine, and thrives in San Francisco. He has a chapbook and a half available from Pressed Wafer (including Cinema Yosemite) and a couple postcard books from Poetry Espresso (with Stephanie Young and Cassie Lewis).

Susan Gevirtz was an associate editor of HOW(ever) a journal of modernist/innovative directions in women’s poetry and scholarship, on the editorial advisory board of the journal Avec, and the online journal HOW2. Her books include Hourglass Transcripts, Burning Deck, 2001, Spelt, collaboration with Myung Mi Kim, a+bend press, 1999; Black Box Cutaway, Kelsey Street Press, 1999; Narrative’s Journey: The Fiction and Film Writing of Dorothy Richardson, Peter Lang, 1996; PROSTHESIS : : CAESAREA, Potes and Poets, 1994; Taken Place, Reality Street, 1993; Linen minus, Avenue B, 1992; and Domino: point of entry, Leave Books, 1992.

Suzanne Stein’s works have appeared in the publications Mirage #4/Period[ical], Commonweal, Small Town, The Bay Area Poetry Anthology, and at the venues Refusalon Gallery, the San Francisco Exploratorium, the Berkeley Art Center, Outpost for Contemporary Art, and elsewhere. She is the former co-director and film curator of four walls gallery, San Francisco.

Stephanie Young lives in Oakland and works at Mills College, but she’s also a resident of the internet, and you can find her there at The Well Nourished Moon. She is a board member at Small Press Traffic, San Francisco’s 30-year-old literary arts center. She also hosted a popular series of poetry readings at her house in Oakland for several years, and is the editor of BAY POETICS, an anthology out from Faux Press. Her writing has been published in Pettycoat Relaxer, Five Fingers Review, VeRT, Shampoo, Mirage Period(ical), Cypress Magazine, LIT, can we have our ball back? and Combo.

Magdalena Zurawski is currently working on a novel called The Bruise and she keeps a blog at Minor Americans. She says of herself “I was born in Newark NJ and grew up in Edison NJ but Providence RI feels like my hometown more than any place else because that’s where I started having sex and meeting poets and being a real person in a real world. My major poetic influences are Jack Spicer, Bruce Springsteen and Immanuel Kant (but only the 3rd critique). Early Bruce Springsteen albums make me happier than anything on earth (well, as happy as really really good poetry readings).”

LA-Lit interviews Maggie Nelson

LA-Lit interviews Maggie Nelson
Sunday, March 11 at 3pm
At Betalevel

We’d like to invite you to a live radio recording, reading & conversation this coming Sunday March 11 at 3 p.m. at Betalevel in Chinatown. Maggie Nelson will be the featured writer on LA-lit, a radio show co-curated by Mathew Timmons & Stephanie Rioux. The show (& hence the recording) lasts a little over an hour and will be about 30 minutes of reading & about 30 minutes of questions & answers/further questions – alternating between the two modes in hopes of creating a space for dynamic conversation.

For information about attending the recording go here.

Maggie Nelson is the author of several books of poetry, including Jane: A Murder, (2005; finalist for the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for the Art of the Memoir), The Latest Winter (2003), and Shiner (2001), as well as the forthcoming collection Something Bright, Then Holes (2007). In 2007 she will also publish The Red Parts, a nonfiction book about her family and criminal justice (Free Press/Simon & Schuster), and a critical study about poetry and painting, Women, The New York School, And Other True Abstractions (University of Iowa Press). She currently teaches at CalArts, and has taught literature and writing at the Graduate Writing Program of the New School, Pratt Institute of Art, and Wesleyan University.

LA-Lit 16b: Teresa Carmody- Podcast

Our podcast of LA-Lit 16b: Teresa Carmody is now online. The interview was originally recorded on Sunday, November 19th at 3pm.

If you need information about how to subscribe to our podcast go here.

Teresa Carmody is the author of Requiem, a micro-collection of short stories, which American Book Review calls “a celebratory lament” and poet Carol Muske Dukes calls “a Midwest scriptural mist: frank, fierce and fidgety, and most emphatically her own.” Other work has appeared in PoetsWest, Stolen Purse, Roar: Women’s Studies Journal, For Here or To Go, and 4th Street. She is cofounder and editor of Les Figues Press, publisher of the TrenchArt series of experimental literature, and co-curator (with Stan Apps and Ara Shirinyan) the Smell Last Sunday Reading series in downtown Los Angeles.

LA-Lit 16a: Teresa Carmody- Podcast

Our podcast of LA-Lit 16a: Teresa Carmody is now online. The interview was originally recorded on Sunday, November 19th at 3pm.

If you need information about how to subscribe to our podcast go here.

Teresa Carmody is the author of Requiem, a micro-collection of short stories, which American Book Review calls “a celebratory lament” and poet Carol Muske Dukes calls “a Midwest scriptural mist: frank, fierce and fidgety, and most emphatically her own.” Other work has appeared in PoetsWest, Stolen Purse, Roar: Women’s Studies Journal, For Here or To Go, and 4th Street. She is cofounder and editor of Les Figues Press, publisher of the TrenchArt series of experimental literature, and co-curator (with Stan Apps and Ara Shirinyan) the Smell Last Sunday Reading series in downtown Los Angeles.