livewords May 27: Colman, Fetherling, & Uppal

Join us May 27, as livewords welcomes Rob Colman, George Fetherling, and Priscila Uppal to the Black Swan, 154 Danforth Avenue, just east of Broadview (map).

Open Mic Sign-Up 7:30  p.m. (details below). Readings commence at 8 p.m.

Robert Colman is a writer and editor based in Newmarket, Ontario. His poetry has appeared in literary magazines across Canada. His first book of poetry, The Delicate Line, was published with Exile Editions in 2008. It was longlisted for the ReLit Award. The title poem received a Highly Commended Award in the Petra Kenney Poetry Competition (U.K.).

George Fetherling is a Canadian poet, novelist, journalist and essayist. One of the most prolific figures in Canadian letters, he has written and edited more than fifty books, including more than a dozen volumes of poetry, two novels, and a multi-volume memoir. Fetherling is the editor and publisher of Subway Books, an independent publishing house based in Vancouver, British Columbia. His column, “Books this Week”, appears in Seven Oaks magazine, an online journal and Geist magazine. A study of Fetherling’s books George Fetherling and His Work, edited by Linda Rogers, features essays by W. H. New, George Elliott Clarke, Brian Busby and others. Most recently he published the fiction titles Jericho in 2005 and Tales of Two Cities in 2006, along with the poetry collection, Singer, An Elegy published in 2004. He will be reading from his most recent book of poetry The Sylvia Hotel Poems which is being launched in May by Quattro Press.

Priscila Uppal was born in Ottawa in 1974 and currently lives in Toronto where she is a poet, fiction writer, academic, and professor of Humanities and English at the undergraduate and graduate levels at York University. She is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Toronto Arts Council. Her creative and academic interests frequently intersect, and she has published work that explores the tensions and dynamics between women (particularly in closed societies: schools, nunneries), the nature of human violence, sexuality (including infertility), multicultural clashes (ethnic, religious, geographical), revisionist mythmaking (classical myth, biblical myth, historical figures), illness (physical, psychological, cultural), mourning rituals and the expression of grief (towards individuals, communities, abstract concepts), the world of readers and the dangers and benefits of reading and the imagination, as well as the nature of the artistic process, among other things. She has also collaborated with visual artists in the past (Tracy Carbert, Daniel Ehrenworth), and plans on more collaborative projects in the future. She lives with poet and critic, Christopher Doda.

She is the author of five books of poetry: Ontological Necessities (2006), Live Coverage (2003), Pretending to Die (2001),Confessions for a Fertility Expert (1999), and How to Draw Blood From a Stone (1998), all from Exile Editions; and the novel The Divine Economy of Salvation (2002). Her work has been translated into Croatian, Dutch, Greek, Korean, Italian, and Latvian. Her second novel To Whom It May Concern was just released by Doubleday Canada, as well as a critical study on elegies, We Are What We Mourn, by McGill-Queen’s University Press. http://priscilauppal.ca/

Host and Producer: Edward Nixon

Our Open Mic Contest this month:
Theme: Hotel Poems
Duration: 3 minutes reading length
Sign-Up: 7:30 pm
Prizes:
  • $25 for best reading of a “hotel” poem by a favourite poet
  • $25 for best original “hotel” poem written by you

Note: The premise of the Open Mic contest is that it is an entertaining way to encourage participation and that be constraining it by theme or form it provides a challenge to participants and interest for the audience. The Open Mic contest is judged by volunteer judges recruited at the event. Their decisions may seem arbitrary or capricious but they are final. The host has no role in determining the winners.

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livewords Janaury 2010 with a. rawlings, Sandy Pool & Heather Cadsby + an all CENTO open mic

livewords welcomes Heather Cadsby, Sandy Pool and a. rawlings to read on Thursday January 28th at the Black Swan, 154 Danforth Avenue, just east of Broadview (map). Readings commence at 8 p.m.

Heather Cadsby is the author of four books of poetry. Her most recent book, titled Could be, was published in October 2009 by Brick Books. Her poems have appeared in such publications as Grain, The FiddleheadThe Malahat Review, PRISM international, CV2 and The Best Canadian Poetry in English 2008.

Sandy Pool is a writer and classically trained theatre artist who lives in Toronto.  Sandy holds a degree in Theatre and English from the University of Toronto, as well as a Master’s of Fine Arts degree in Creative Writing from the University of Guelph. Her work work has been published in many literary journals across Canada including The Antigonish Review,The Capilano Review, Contemporary Verse 2, dandelion, and Sub-terrain.  She has been shortlisted for the Matrix Lit Pop award and has been recently supported by a Writer’s Work In Progress grant from the Ontario Arts Council. Sandy also writes Opera librettos, and has been comissioned by Tapestry New Opera Works.  Currently, Sandy teaches at Humber College, and is also working as a voice-over artist for productions in Canada and the United States. Her fist book “Exploding Into Night” was just released with Guernica Editions in December.

a. rawlings is a poet, editor, and multidisciplinary artist who has presented and/or published work in Canada, Belgium, Iceland, and the United States. Her poetry has been translated into French, Icelandic, Korean, and Spanish. In 2001, Rawlings received the bpNichol Award for Distinction in Writing upon graduation from York University. She has worked with The Mercury Press, The Scream Literary Festival, Sumach Press, Word: Canada’s Magazine for Readers + Writers, and The Lexiconjury Reading Series. In 2005, Rawlings hosted the poetry documentary series Heart of a Poet. She is also co-editor of Shift & Switch: New Canadian Poetry (The Mercury Press, 2005), an anthology featuring over forty emerging poets from across the country. Rawlings’ first book, Wide slumber for lepidopterists was published in spring 2006 by Coach House Books. In November 2006, Theatre Commutiny staged a full-length performance of the book as part of Harbourfront Centre’s Hatch: Emerging Performance Projects series; Rawlings performed in and co-produced the show. In April 2007, Wide slumber for lepidopterists received a nomination for the Gerald Lampert Award for Best First Book of Poetry. The book was also awarded Alcuin Award for Book Design, and was listed in The Globe and Mail’s top 100 books of 2006. In Autumn 2008, Belgian composer Sebastian Bradt created a choral score entitled X Our Rotten Beauties that uses text from Wide slumber for lepidopterists. Rawlings recently received a Chalmers Arts Fellowship, and is currently working on literary projects called EFHILMNORSTUVWY, Rule of Three, and Cochlea. She spends 2009 and 2010 creating and developing work in Belgium, Canada, and Iceland.

Cento Open Mic Contest

In poetry, a cento is a work wholly composed of verses or passages taken from other authors but set in a new form or order–see John Asbery’s “The Dong with the Luminous Nose”

So the contest is open to all who bear centos with them, on a first come, first serve basis: Sign Up at 7:30 p.m.

$50 prize for the winning poem as determined by our judges

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