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Tran, Vu 2017

Wednesday, February 1, 2017
with RJ Eldridge and Tara Stringfellow
City Lit Books

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After a minute, he came back and handed me the phone.
The line was silent.
“Yes,” I said.
“You. Robert Ruen.” It was a declaration, not a question—an older man’s voice, loud and somehow childish, the accent unmistakably Vietnamese. “Say something to me.”

– Vu Tran, “Dragonfish”

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Read this interview with Vu Tran from Bloom:

Q&A with Vu Tran

“With a novel, the end felt so far off, always beyond the horizon, and that was a terrifying feeling. Eventually, I had to teach myself to be okay with that, to turn the uncertainty and fear into a productive state of mind.”

Our first night at sea, you cried for your father. You buried your face in my lap and clenched a fist to your ear as if to shut out my voice. I reminded you that we had to leave home and he could not make the trip with us. He would catch up with us soon. But you kept shaking your head. I couldn’t tell if I was failing to comfort you or if you were already, at four years old, refusing to believe in lies. You turned away from me, so alone in your distress that I no longer wanted to console you. I had never been able to anyway. Only he could soothe you. But why was I, even now, not enough? Did you imagine that I too would die without him?

– Vu Tran, “Dragonfish”

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Read this essay by Vu Tran from LitHub:

Vu Tran: The Uncertain Memories of a Four-Year-Old Refugee

When I tell someone about my refugee experience, a story I’ve told countless times, I’m always aware that I have no real memory of it. At some point it’ll feel as though I’m describing the plot poi…

Watch Vu Trans’s Lecture “Noir and Refugee Experience” at University of Chicago:

More info on Vu Tran⇒

Stringfellow, Tara 2017

Wednesday, Februdary 1, 2017
with RJ Eldridge and Vu Tran
City Lit Books

 this is what we made
when they chained us
together like dogs
in a savage new world
and bid us toil
no, we said
we will sing 

– Tara Stringfellow, “a poem for black girls in their twenties”

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loved me but in white
i spoke only negro
meaning i did not know fairy tale
saw it in movies, yes, but saw my daddy
spit on in a park in chicago
grimms negated

– Tara Stringfellow, “my ex-husband”

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Watch Tara Stringfellow’s feature on CBS:

my sister collected hair thick as a nest
from all the old combs in the house
buried it deep in red clay
daddy will come back she chanted

– Tara Stringfellow, “hot combs catfish crumbs and bad men”

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More info on Tara Stringfellow⇒

Foreman, Aricka 2016

Wednesday, December 14, 2016
with Tyehimba Jess
City Lit Books

Crying love, in tongues
of false thunder. If my body is a nation—and by body I mean
my black queer pussy, it’s phantom and light—is a paperweight
pressing a constitution like a new shirt.

– Aricka Foreman, “Republic Americana”

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I take my father’s nose and shove it in a box.
My mother’s mouth lays claim to the vowels
Of my making. I learned to tend and till and dig
and there is something like a hole where a good
family should be but instead I have the good people
who do the best they can with what they have.

– Aricka Foreman, “FIELD STUDY #1”

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Read this interview with Aricka Foreman from Luther Hughes:
https://lutherxhughes.com/2016/06/26/im-a-human-with-a-petulant-and-sensual-need-for-pleasure-an-interview-with-aricka-foreman/

There is no homonym for disappearing, only
synonyms. Vanish into the ivory tower language.
Perish beneath split selves. End her. Die her. Fade.
Dissolve one blue bupropion until numb. Melt away
thick kink with bleach, die one patch pink.

– Aricka Foreman, “Dream Coated with Fluoxetine”

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Watch Aricka Foreman read for the Chicago Poetry Center, with Tyehimba Jess:

Six Points Reading Series

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Boening, Justin 2016

Wednesday, October 26, 2016
with J. Jerome Cruz
Innertown Pub

You start to sing.
Your voice carrying from the house.
The words familiar, though I cannot make out the words.
Your voice a field, though there are animals in the field.
A rain begins in the leaves and ends in the leaves.

– Justin Boening, “Learning to Pray Again”

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Read this interview with Justin Boening from The Adroit Journal:

Issue Twenty: A Conversation with Justin Boening | The Adroit Journal – The Adroit Journal

Eloisa Amezcua is an Arizona native. Her debut chapbook On Not Screaming was published by Horse Less Press (2016). Eloisa is the winner of the 2016 Vella Chapbook Award from Paper Nautilus Press for her manuscript Symptoms of Teething, forthcoming in 2017.

It’s late. The hero has returend––
unhelpful as ever. He’s hiding out
in the neighbor’s orchard,
steering clear of the constable.
The citizens have left empty
all the houses, all the shops––
the screen doors hollow on hinges,
a porch swing hinging by a chain.

– Justin Boening, “The Game”

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Watch Justin Boening read Care Package at SPECTRA Reading Series:

Justin Boening: Care Package

Midwest Writing Center sponsored SPECTRA poetry event, at Rozz-Tox, Rock Island, IL. 10 March 2016. Biography from Ryan Collins: “Justin Boening is the author of two books of poems-Not on the Last Day, But on the Very Last (Milkweed, 2016), which was selected for the National Poetry Series, and a chapbook, Self-Portrait as Missing Person (Poetry Society of America, 2013).

More info on Justin Boening⇒

Cruz, J. Jerome 2016

Wednesday, October 26, 2016
with Justin Boening
Innertown Pub

In the almond fields
rabbits make a matinee
of their coupling. Love,
my brother says, is in the hare.
We pick apples & pears until
the day is capped with the slow
hum of dusk.

– J. Jerome Cruz, “Pastoral”

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At church Maria only sang along
with hymns that sent ascension
or grace. Once, in fifth grade,
she mucked up the sign her mother
hung in the kitchen. Too Much of a God
Thing Loses Its Novelty.

– J. Jerome Cruz, “Suadades”

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More info on J. Jerome Cruz⇒

Altman, Toby 2016

Wednesday, September 14, 2016
with Maggie Queeney
City Lit Books


ok, excuse me while I ode myself—or what’s left of me: lilac and fog, the founding act of bliss. Once I merged my delicate fingers with the internet—but its engine erupts aromatic paste, worn as prophylactic against the plague. Very soon I will be the silence of vespers

– Toby Altman, “ENVOY (about the author)”

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 And pilgrim who sings holy body less
and rents himself, all to the earnest earth,
how opens he, and open learns
borders and blank, the shape of breath. 

– Toby Altman, “untitled”

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More info on Toby Altman⇒

Toby Altman is the author of Arcadia, Indiana (Plays Inverse, 2017) and six chapbooks, including Every Hospital by Bertrand Goldberg (Except One), winner of the 2018 Ghost Proposal chapbook contest. His poems can be found in Colorado ReviewjubilatLana Turner, and other journals and anthologies. He earned a PhD in English at Northwestern University.

Magers, Dan 2016

Wednesday, August 10, 2016
with Mairead Case and Holly Amos
Mars Gallery

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To have for yourself such boundless love
that you give up writing forever.
The future is in the stars. Pain spelled like the color.

– Dan Magers, “Spiritual Grave Year”

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Read this interview with Dan Magers from Southeast Review:

http://southeastreview.org/dan-magers/

Welling up in my hands are emotions,
and I awakened in her wake,
and I almost saw heaven then.

– Dan Magers, “[Welling up in my hands are emotions]”

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Watch Dan Magers read his work at Berl’s Poetry Shop:

Dan Magers @ Berl’s Poetry Shop

Dan Magers reads at the release party for Steven Karl’s first book of poetry Dork Swagger, out now from Coconut Books 2013. http://coconutpoetry.org/bookcatalog.htm Dan Magers is co-founder and co-editor of Sink Review, an online poetry journal as well as founder and editor of Immaculate Disciples Press, a handmade chapbook press focused on poetry and visual arts collaborations.

More info on Dan Magers⇒

Case, Mairead 2016

Wednesday, August 10, 2016
with Holly Amos and Dan Magers
Mars Gallery

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A girl, she’s Tiny. She is beautiful and she knows it, not from arrogance or magazines but because she trusts herself. This is hard, not cute.

– Mairead Case, “Tiny”

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Read this interview with Mairead Case from Bookslut:

http://www.bookslut.com/features/2015_09_021260.php

We had a small bed so there was room for the keyboard. While I wrote he wore headphones so I just heard clicks. After writing I’d bring a book to bed and he’d take the headphones off. One song on loop. Sometimes I was sleepy so don’t remember anything else.

– Mairead Case, “Nine sounds fifty words, after Firth”

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Watch Mairead Case read some of her work:

Mairead Case reads at Tuesday Funk #55

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Amos, Holly 2016

Wednesday, August 10, 2016
with Mairead Case and Dan Magers
Mars Gallery

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I won’t look anyone
in the eye
for three days. Because I am human
I want to compare the train
to a metal cage

– Holly Amos, “I See The X-Ray of the Rescue with 50 BBS in Him”

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Read this interview with Holly Amos from H_NGM_N:

“The Next Big Thing” Interview: Holly Amos

The lovely & oft-cardigan-ed Stephen Danos was tagged for “The Next Big Thing,” a self-interview for writers with recent or forthcoming books. Then Stephen tagged me to answer some questions about my…

And home is a projection of what my mind sees. All wisps. The black pocket we call memory: that which seeks light only to contain it.

– Holly Amos, “The Sky Got Caught In My Hair, If Only Theoretically”

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Watch Holly Amos discuss her work:

Notable Native: Holly Amos

Holly Amos knew from a young age that she wanted to write. She has written everything from journals to her own novel. Now the editorial assistant at Poetry magazine, the Columbia alumna shares her love for the profession and discusses where she hopes to be in the future.

More info on Holly Amos⇒

Holly Amos, the assistant editor of Poetry, published her first full-length collection Continual Guidance of Air in 2016. Her humor writing and poetry has appeared in a variety of publications, including Little Old Lady; Points in Case; Forklift, Ohio; and Prairie Schooner.

Coval, Kevin 2016

Wednesday, July 20, 2016
with Jac Jemc
Innertown Pub

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i’d drive down and back
in my mom’s Dodge for the latest
volumes of sound. i’d stutter
and stop and begin again. Lonesome
and on fire. none. no one i knew
rapped. 

– Kevin Coval, “molemen beat tapes”

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Read this interview with Kevin Coval from the Chicago Tribune:

Louder Than a Bomb about to blow up

A noted Chicago poet named Carl Sandburg once wrote, “I’m an idealist. I don’t know where I’m going, but I’m on the way,” and so there sat one evening last week a somewhat less well-known Chicago poet named Kevin Coval, who is certainly on his way.If everything falls into place over the next months and […]

Watch Kevin Coval discuss writing:

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