Cactus Press launchs 4 to a full house.

Last night’s Cactus Press launch was an evening of delight and surprise, as four new chapbooks were launched to a full and enthusiastic house.

Organized and hosted by Cactus Press publisher Jim Johnstone the evening celebrated the launch of Darren Bifford’s Wolf Hunter, Edward Nixon’s Instructions for Pen and Ink, Marc di Saverio’s Sanatorium Songs, and Sarah Teitel’s I don’t think I need to tell you.

There were also four short but engaging readings from Cactus alumni and about to be: Blair Trewartha, Andrew McEwen, Josh Stewart and Shane Neilson.

A special thank you to Catherine Skelsey for preparing and presenting the delicious spread.

A nod to Mr. Dane Swan for stepping up to pass the hat.

livewords returns in the New Year — January 6 2011 — with the MM 15 launch party.

Happy Holidays!

Shiny new chapbooks December 2 from Cactus Press

Please join us tomorrow night, December 2, 2010 as livewords presents the Cactus Press Chapbook Launch Party!

Thursday December 2 at the Black Swan, 154 Danforth Avenue, 2nd Floor.

Shiny new poetry chapbooks: just in time for the Holidays:

  • Darren BiffordWolf Hunter
  • Edward NixonInstructions for Pen and Ink
  • Marc di SaverioSanatorium Songs
  • Sarah Teitel - I don’t think I need to tell you

+ Readings from: Cactus alumni: Blair Trewartha, Andrew McEwen and Josh Stewart & future Cactus poet: Shane Neilson

Complimentary snacks but you have to buy the beer.

Hosted by Jim Johnstone

Doors at 7:30 p.m.

Readings from 8:00 p.m.


RSVP on Facebook

November 4, livewords welcomes Jill Battson, Alex Boyd and Ian Burgham.

This Thursday, November 4th, livewords welcomes poets Jill Battson, Alex Boyd and Ian Burgham!

Plus our 1-piece Open Mic Challenge:

Bring your best new poem and compete for cash and glory. Be warned: this is our last Open Mic. Ain’t never gonna happen like this again. Open Mic Sign-Up at 7:30

Black Swan, 154 Danforth – 2nd floor - map

Doors at 7:30

Readings from 8 p.m.

Hosted & Produced by Edward Nixon

Contact us: info@livewords.ca

RSVP on Facebook

Jill Battson is an internationally published poet and poetry activist who is currently   the Poet Laureate of Cobourg,  Ontario.  She was responsible for creating and   running the successful poetry reading series The Poets’ Refuge and has initiated and produced many poetry events including The Poetry Express – a BYOV at Toronto’s Fringe Festival; Liminal Sisters  – a language poetry event; The Festival of the Spoken Word  a five -day spoken word festival;  Fightin’ Words – poets in a boxing ring; The Poetburo Slams and the hyper-­‐successful  Word Up — a  series of interstitial poetry spots airing  on  MuchMusic and Bravo! which spawned a CD with Virgin Records and an anthology with Key Porter. She was the poetry editor for Insomniac Press from 1999 to 2001. Jill is widely published across North America and the UK. Her first book, Hard Candy, was received to great acclaim and nominated for the Gerald Lampert Award. She has written several plays and solo works, including How I learned to live with obsession as well as Ecce Homo and Hard Candy – enhanced monologues for dance and voice. She has written the libretti for two short operas, Netsuke and Ashlike on the Cradle of the Wind, produced by Tapestry New Opera Works, and produced an electro acoustic sound art project, LinguaElastic, as part of the Canadian Music Centre’s New Music in New Places series. Dark Star Requiem, for which she wrote the libretto, premiered at Toronto’s Luminato Festival in June 2010. Jill’s third book of poems, Dark Star Requiem, was recently published by Folded & Gathered Press.

Alex Boyd lives in Toronto.  He writes poems, fiction, reviews and essays, and has had work published in magazines and newspapers such as Taddle Creek, Books in Canada, The Globe and Mail, Quill & Quire, The Antigonish Review and on websites such as Nthposition. He booked and hosted the I.V. lounge reading series in Toronto for five years, eventually co-editing IV Lounge Nights, an anthology to celebrate the series.  He edits the online poetry journal Northern Poetry Review, and his award-winning first book of poems Making Bones Walk was published in 2007.  More recently, he has co-edited several editions of Best Canadian Essays.

Ian Burgham’s The Grammar of Distance, was published in April of this year by Tightrope Books. This poetry collection followed two previous collections, A Confession of Birds, 2003 and The Stone Skippers, 2007. He won Queens University’s Well-versed Poetry Award in 2004 and was nominated for the Relit Award for The Stone Skippers in 2008. He has published both nationally and internationally (UK and Australia) and his work has appeared in many Canadian literary journals. Currently he is working on a fourth collection, A Weight of Bees, which will be launched in London, England and in Toronto in 2012.

livewords as autumn leaves crinkle and frost

livewords welcomes colour changes, crisp consonants and frost-tinged vowels:

November 4:

Jill Battson
Alex Boyd
Ian Burgham

December 2

Cactus Press fall chapbook launch and “family reunion.”

* * *

All at the Black Swan, 154 Danforth, Second Floor.

Doors 7:30 pm
Readings at 8:00 pm

Cultural Mischief on June 24 as livewords hosts Rampike Magazine

Join us on Thursday, June 24 as livewords hosts a LAUNCH Extravaganza to celebrate the release of Rampike Magazine: Vol. 19, No. 2 – “Cultural Mischief” issue!

Black Swan, 154 Danforth Avenue, 2nd floor, just east of Broadview (map).

RAMPIKE Edited by Karl Jirgens

Launch evening  hosted by livewords producer Edward Nixon

  • Doors open at 7:30 p.m.
  • Readings commence at 8:00 p.m.

Featuring short readings by the following authors!

(Note; a different reading order will be effect on the night of the event)

  • Gary Barwin
    Greg Betts
    Clara Blackwood
    Margaret Christakos
    Frank Davey
    Adam Dickinson
    John Donlan
    Claudio Gaudio
    Karl Jirgens
    Jim Johnstone
    Babar Khan
    rob mclennan
    Desi di Nardo
    Edward Nixon
    Concetta Principe
    Jenny Sampirisi
    Lara Solnicki
    Lindsay Tipping
    Myna Wallin

. . . (and possibly even more!)

The new Rampike will be available along with other new publications!

Cash Bar +++ Complimentary Snacks!

A voluntary PWYC Donation will be requested to help defray event costs.

Get in Touch

Rampike Magazine, edited and published by Karl Jirgens and offering alternative perspectives and innovative writing, theory, visual art and critical thinking since 1979. Featuring articles by and interviews with some of the finest internationally celebrated authors, artists and critics including: Paul Auster, Kathy Acker, Russell Banks, Carl Beam, Charles Bernstein, Nicole Brossard, Chris Burden, William Burroughs, Joseph Beuys, George Bowering, Catherine Bush, Louis Cabri, Janet Cardiff, Grand Chief Matthew Coon-Come, Frank Davey, Christopher Dewdney, Jacques Derrida, Umberto Eco, Martin Esslin, Marty Gervais, William Gibson, Tomson Highway, Kenneth J. Harvey, Dick Higgins, Susan Holbrook, Linda Hutcheon, Thomas King, Julia Kristeva, Robert Kroetsch, Robert Lepage, Lola Lemire Tostevin, Alistair MacLeod, Nicole Markotic, Eugene McNamara, Steve McCaffery, Norval Morrisseau, Dennis Oppenheim, bp Nichol, Joyce Carol Oates, Al Purdy, Nino Ricci, Harvey Pekar, Josef Skvorecky, Rosemary Sullivan, David Suzuki, Phillipe Sollers and Fred Wah, among many others. Rampike has been praised by world-renowned critics such as Frank Davey (University of Western, Editor of Open Letter magazine),and Marjorie Perloff (Stanford University), and is distributed on four continents. — Google us. We won’t mind. Editorial offices c/o; jirgens@uwindsor.ca

Rampike magazine is sponsored by the Canada Council for the Arts

(Rampike is printed at Coach House Printing)