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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180315T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180315T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T113803Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T113803Z
UID:29713-1521142200-1521147600@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Sarah McBride / Tomorrow Will Be Different
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for an evening with Sarah McBride\, who celebrates the launch of Tomorrow Will Be Different: Love\, Loss\, and the Fight for Trans Equality. \nBefore she became the first transgender person to speak at a national political convention in 2016 at the age of twenty-six\, Sarah McBride struggled with the decision to come out—not just to her family but to the students of American University\, where she was serving as student body president. She’d known she was a girl from her earliest memories\, but it wasn’t until the Facebook post announcing her truth went viral that she realized just how much impact her story could have on the country. \nFour years later\, McBride was one of the nation’s most prominenttransgender activists\, walking the halls of the White House\, advocating the passing of laws\, and addressing the country in the midst of a heated presidential election. And\, she’d found her first love and future husband\, Andy\, a trans man and fellow activist\, who complemented her in every way… until cancer tragically intervened. \nInformative\, heartbreaking\, and empowering\, Tomorrow Will Be Different is McBride’s story of love and loss\, a powerful entry point into the LGBTQ community’s battle for equal rights and what it means to be openly transgender. From issues like bathroom access to health care\, McBride weaves the important political and cultural milestones into a personal journey that will open hearts and change minds. \nThe fight for equality and freedom has only just begun.\n— \nPlease note: this event will be held at The Bindery\, 1727 Haight. RSVP appreciated but not required. \nIf you cannot attend the event but would like to request a signed copy of Tomorrow Will Be Different\, order here and put your request in the comments field.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/sarah-mcbride-tomorrow-will-be-different/
LOCATION:The Bindery\, 1727 Haight St\, San Francisco \, 94117\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180318T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180318T180000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180219T034420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180219T034420Z
UID:32181-1521388800-1521396000@litseen.com
SUMMARY:KASSIDAT: Spoken word and music
DESCRIPTION:With your host Bloodflower \nDetails soon
URL:https://litseen.com/event/kassidat-spoken-word-and-music/
LOCATION:Adobe Books\, 3130 24th St.\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180318T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180318T183000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T120938Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180206T053052Z
UID:29743-1521392400-1521397800@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Go Home! A Celebration of a New Anthology of Asian Diasporic Writing
DESCRIPTION:Feminist Press in conjunction with Asian American Writers’ Workshop present \nRowan Hisayo Buchanan and Esmé Weijun Wang celebrating: \nA book Release Party for \nGo Home! \nEdited by Rowan Hisayo Buchanan \nForeword by Viet Thanh Nguyen \npublished by The Feminist Press \nAsian diasporic writers imagine “home” in the twenty-first century through an array of fiction\, memoir\, and poetry. Both urgent and meditative\, this anthology moves beyond the model-minority myth and showcases the singular intimacies of individuals figuring out what it means to belong. \nGo Home! is published in collaboration with the Asian American Writers’ Workshop. Established in 1991\, AAWW is a national not-for-profit arts organization devoted to the creating\, publishing\, developing and disseminating of creative writing by Asian Americans through a New York events series and online editorial initiatives. \nRowan Hisayo Buchanan is the author of the novel Harmless Like You. She has a BA from Columbia University and an MFA from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She was an Asian American Writers’ Workshop fellow\, and her short work has appeared in Grant\, the Guardian\, Guernica\, Apogee\, and the White Review\, among other places. She has received residencies from the Gladstone Library and Hedgebrook. \nEsmé Weijun Wang is an essayist\, the author of The Border of Paradise: A Novel\, and the recipient of the 2016 Graywolf Nonfiction Prize. Raised in the San Francisco Bay Area\, she received her MFA from the University of Michigan and has been awarded the Sudler Award\, Hopwood Award for Novel-in-Progress\, and the Elizabeth George Foundation Grant. Her work has appeared in Salon\, Elle\, Catapult\, Hazlitt\, the Beliver\, and Lenny Letter. \nWhat has been said about Go Home! \n“The notion of home has always been elusive. But as evidenced in these stories\, poems\, and testaments\, perhaps home is not so much a place\, but a feeling one embodies. I read this book and see my people—see us—and feel\, in our collective outsiderhood\, at home.” —Ocean Vuong\, author of Night Sky with Exit Wounds \n“There is a whole range of expression in this book\, delving deeply into the manifold experiences of being a perpetual alien. To be from nowhere is the state of Asian diaspora\, but there is also a wild humor and imagination that comes from being underestimated\, rarely counted\, hardly seen. Here\, we begin to draw the hopeful outlines of a collective history for those so disparate yet often lumped together.” —Jenny Zhang\, author of Sour Heart \n“Go Home! is a bold\, eclectic chorus that provides an invigorating antidote to the xenophobia of our times.” —Ruth Ozeki\, author of A Tale for the Time Being \n“This anthology displays the colors of the liminal—half-tones and undertones mixing the wry\, the irreverent\, the outraged\, the lyric\, and the longing. A composite portrait of the Asian diasporic experience today.” —Monica Youn\, author of Blackacre: Poems \n“Hats off to Rowan Hisayo Buchanan for putting together such a rich and diverse anthology. In these dark times\, we need these voices and stories more than ever.” —Jessica Hagedorn\, author of The Dogeaters \n“In this new and daring collection\, I find myself reliving moments of heartbreak that can only come from living in between two cultures—but also feeling profound relief in discovering I am not alone in these private burdens and joys. Go Home! should be celebrated\, as reading it is a homecoming in itself.” —Yumi Sakugawa\, author of There Is No Right Way to Meditate: And Other Lessons \n\n\n\n\n 
URL:https://litseen.com/event/go-home-a-celebration-of-a-new-anthology-of-asian-diasporic-writing/
LOCATION:City Lights Bookstore\, 261 Columbus Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94133\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20180319T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20180319T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20170324T014124Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170922T061648Z
UID:25637-1521486000-1521493200@litseen.com
SUMMARY:POETS! - featured readers followed by an open mic
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://litseen.com/event/poets-featured-readers-followed-by-an-open-mic-12/
LOCATION:CA
CATEGORIES:San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180320T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180320T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T120645Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T120645Z
UID:29741-1521572400-1521577800@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Scarlett Sabet & Janaka Stucky
DESCRIPTION:reading from new works \nScarlett Sabet is a London based poet and performer. She wrote\, directed and starred in her poetic short film “Burning” which was produced by BAFTA winning producer Charlie Hanson in 2012. Her first collection “Rocking Underground” was launched with a reading at the Chelsea Arts Club in November 2014. Her second collection “The Lock And The Key” was launched with a reading at Shakespeare and Company in Paris in July 2016. In October 2016 GQ online released a video of Scarlett performing her poem Feathers at Leighton House to celebrate National Poetry Day. In January 2017 Scarlett was interviewed and gave a reading for the radio program “Van Morrison And Me” hosted by journalist John McCarthy for the BBC World Service\, also featuring Sir Van Morrison\, Brian Keenan and novelist Ian Rankin. In April 2017\, Scarlett was invited by poet and Professor Dr. Dan Chiasson to give a reading at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. In December 2017 Scarlett gave a reading and her poems were exhibited alongside acclaimed photographer Jim Marshall’s work for the Peace and Light exhibition at The Troubadour in London. Scarlett has given poetry readings at the Aspects Literary Festival\, and No Alibi’s bookshop in Belfast\, The Troubadour in London\, the William Morris Gallery\, the World’s End Bookshop\, Burberry\, The Groucho Club\, Atlantis Bookshop. Scarlett has read at KGB\, Bowery Poetry and Berl’s bookshop in New York. Sir Van Morrison commented on Scarlett’s poetry: “”What strikes me about Scarlett’s work it that it’s very cutting edge and it’s making poetry interesting again. I love both the intensity and the spiritual aspect she conveys.” Scarlett is currently working on her third collection of poetry which will be released in Spring 2018. \nJanaka Stucky is an American poet\, performer\, and publisher. The founding editor of Black Ocean\, as well as the annual poetry journal\, Handsome\, he is also the author of a few poetry collections. His poems have appeared in such journals as Denver Quarterly\, Fence and North American Review\, and his articles have been published by The Huffington Post and The Poetry Foundation. He is a two-time National Haiku Champion and in 2010 he was voted “Boston’s Best Poet” in The Boston Phoenix. \nIn 2015 Jack White’s Third Man Records launched a new publishing imprint\, Third Man Books\, and chose Janaka’s full-length poetry collection\, The Truth Is We Are Perfect\, as their inaugural title. Janaka’s poems are at once incantatory\, mystic\, and epigrammatic. His esoteric & occult influences\, combined with a mesmeric approach to performance\, create an almost ecstatic presence on stage. \n“Stucky’s raw works … give a dreamlike power to an antinomian religion of erotic love” \n—Publishers Weekly \n“He pulls from Eastern religious texts\, mysticism\, and the occult\, and casts dirty\, hallucinatory images onto graceful lines about love\, resulting in a collection that is empathetic\, nuanced\, and wild.” \n—The Kenyon Review \n“Stucky’s verse has the power of the best East European poets—some of his poems seem to be perfect\, magnificent\, and instantly anthologizable. He is a forceful\, cogent\, incisive phrase-maker.” \n—Bill Knott \n“Stucky has catapulted into the firmament of my favorite ecstatic writers alongside Diane di Prima\, Bill Callahan\, Hafiz\, e.e. cummings\, and Larkin Grimm.” \n—Phantasmaphile \n“The yearning in these poems is awash in dense\, spiritual sexuality buffeted by time and the mishandling of promises and breakable bonds.” \n—apt Journal \n\n\n\n\n 
URL:https://litseen.com/event/scarlett-sabet-janaka-stucky/
LOCATION:City Lights Bookstore\, 261 Columbus Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94133\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180320T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180320T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T124059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T124059Z
UID:29774-1521574200-1521579600@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Cheston Knapp and Matthew Zapruder
DESCRIPTION:Cheston Knapp discusses his new essay collection\, Up Up\, Down Down with Matthew Zapruder. \n\nPraise for Up Up\, Down Down \n\n“Full of wit and disquiet\, Cheston Knapp’s Up Up\, Down Down is a glittering collection of essays about nostalgia\, skateboarding\, fathers\, waterslides\, and all kinds of community. The path toward whatever we mean by “maturity” is a flowering vine of fruitful discomfort in these pages\, and so much grows from it: acute self-awareness\, intricate curiosity\, tender interrogations. This book made me laugh out loud in embarrassing places—a quiet Swedish train\, a darkened redeye flight—and its insights will keep echoing in me for a long time.” Leslie Jamison\, author of The Empathy Exams \n\n“Up\, Up\, Down\, Down is an always smart\, often hilarious\, and ultimately transcendent essay collection\, full of thousand-dollar words and genuine goodness. You think you’re reading about tennis\, low-rent wrestling\, the death of a neighbor\, or the perils of beer pong\, but suddenly you’re pondering the biggest questions: What is kindness? What is self-consciousness? How does articulating an experience change it? It’s an unqualified pleasure to be in Knapp’s company.” Anthony Doerr\, author of All the Light We Cannot See \n“Cheston Knapp’s Up Up\, Down Down has the uncanny\, welcome ability to make so-called mainstream or dominant culture—white\, masculinist\, Christian\, frat boy\, and so on—appear newly strange\, and newly open to analysis. He has the eye and ear of an anthropologist\, a joyously expansive vocabulary\, a prose style that feels both extravagant and exact\, and a big\, booming heart.” Maggie Nelson\, author of The Argonauts \n\nAbout Up Up\, Down Down \n\nDaring and wise\, hilarious and tender\, Cheston Knapp’s exhilarating collection of seven linked essays\, Up Up\, Down Down\, tackles the Big Questions through seemingly unlikely avenues. In his dexterous hands\, an examination of a local professional wrestling promotion becomes a meditation on pain and his relationship with his father. A profile of UFO enthusiasts ends up probing his history in the church and\, more broadly\, the nature and limits of faith itself. Attending an adult skateboarding camp launches him into a virtuosic analysis of nostalgia. And the shocking murder of a neighbor expands into an interrogation of our culture’s prevailing ideas about community and the way we tell the stories of our lives. Even more remarkable\, perhaps\, is the way he manages to find humanity in a damp basement full of frat boys. \nTaken together\, the essays in Up Up\, Down Down amount to a chronicle of Knapp’s coming-of-age\, a young man’s journey into adulthood\, late-onset as it might appear. He presents us with formative experiences from his childhood to marriage that echo throughout the collection\, and ultimately tilts at what may be the Biggest Q of them all: what are the hazards of becoming who you are?
URL:https://litseen.com/event/cheston-knapp-and-matthew-zapruder/
LOCATION:Green Apple Books on the Park\, 1231 9th Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94122\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180320T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180320T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180219T033645Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180219T033645Z
UID:32172-1521574200-1521579600@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Terry Patten / A New Republic of the Heart
DESCRIPTION:Booksmith is excited to host an evening with Terry Patten\, who will read from and discuss his new book A New Republic of the Heart: An Ethos for Revolutionaries. Join us! \nIn the midst of today’s many global crises\, many of us recognize the need for change\, both in ourselves and in our social and political institutions\, in order to build a truly sustainable future. In A New Republic of the Heart: An Ethos for Revolutionaries\, Terry Patten sheds new light on this issue\, providing a practical approach to “being the change” that the world needs now more than ever. \nIn the most convincing terms\, Patten illustrates how inner and outer transformation are entirely interdependent. In fact\, the future of our very life-support system are utterly dependent on the quality\, intelligence\, tenderness\, and courage that each of us can cultivate in ourselves. The book lays out the difficult\, necessary\, creative\, and ultimately rewarding work we must each engage in to meaningfully address our most “wicked” problems. \nPatten shows how we can come together in our communities for “conversations that matter.” And he describes new communities\, enterprises\, and forms of dialogue that have already created miracles that can be replicated on larger scales. The “new republic of the heart” is already coming into being\, invisibly and quietly. More of us need to learn to animate our best qualities so that we can transform ourselves\, our societies\, and the planet. A New Republic of the Heart shows us how. \n— \nTerry Patten is a philosopher\, activist\, consultant\, coach\, teacher\, social entrepreneur\, and author of A New Republic of the Heart: An Ethos for Revolutionaries: An Ethos for Revolutionaries. Over the last fifteen years he has devoted his efforts to the evolution of consciousness by facing\, examining\, and healing our global crisis through the marriage of spirit and activism. As an author\, he co-wrote the book Integral Life Practice with Ken Wilber and a core team at the Integral Institute. As a teacher he is the founder of the “Beyond Awakening” teleseminar series and Bay Area Integral. As a social entrepreneur\, he founded the pioneering consciousness technology company Tools For Exploration\, and is now involved in restorative redwood forestry and fossil-fuel alternatives.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/terry-patten-a-new-republic-of-the-heart/
LOCATION:The Booksmith\, 1644 Haight St\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94117\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180321T183000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180321T200000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180219T001144Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180219T001144Z
UID:31860-1521657000-1521662400@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Joyce Carol Oates
DESCRIPTION:Renowned author Joyce Carol Oates discusses her new collection of short stories\, “Beautiful Days.”
URL:https://litseen.com/event/joyce-carol-oates-5/
LOCATION:Mechanics Institute\, 57 Post St 4th Floor Boardroom\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94104\, United States
CATEGORIES:San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180321T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180321T200000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180219T012311Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180219T012311Z
UID:31950-1521658800-1521662400@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Kathleen Winter
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Clement street on Wednesday\, March 21st at 7:00 p.m. as we welcome poet Kathleen Winter who will read from her latest collection I will not kick my friends. \n\nKathleen Winter was born in McAllen\, Texas. Her poems have appeared in AGNI\, The New Republic\, Field\, The Cincinnati Review and other journals. Her awards include fellowships from Vermont Studio Center\, Virginia G. Piper Center\, and the Prague Summer Program. She is a graduate of the University of Texas\, Austin; Boston College; the University of California\, Davis\, School of Law; and Arizona State University. Winter lives with her husband in Sonoma County\, California\, and teaches writing at the University of San Francisco.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/kathleen-winter/
LOCATION:Green Apple Books\, 506 Clement St\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94118\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180321T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180321T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T120458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T120458Z
UID:29739-1521658800-1521664200@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Robert Hass / David Koehn
DESCRIPTION:Omnidawn Press presents \nDavid Koehn \ncelebrating the release of \nCompendium: Donald Justice’s Prosody Syllabus  \nEdited by David Koehn & Alan Soldofsky \npublished by Omnidawn Books \nRichard Haas \nreading from \nA Little Book on Form: An Exploration into the Formal Imagination of Poetry \nby Richard Haas \npublished by ECCO Press \nAbout Compendium: \nAs prosody is the very medium of the poet’s domain\, Donald Justice saw prosody as a set of nomenclatures for the poet composers to use in making their music. The collage process Justice employed to present his instructional materials possesses a composer’s quality\, the structure of which possesses a unique beauty. His insights serve as a sort of de facto taxonomy\, an organically designed system that he uses to present his lecture on each respective aspect of the evolution of poetic form. There is no formal thesis here\, but rather a kind of scrapbook that has a broader motive. The material possesses no hidden secrets; the treasures lie in plain sight and simply need be discerned to open the artist’s mind to their possibilities. \nDavid Koehn has taught at the University of Florida\, Eastern Oregon State College\, Blue Mountain Community College\, the University of Alaska\, and San Francisco State University. He has published several books of poetry\, Coil (a chapbook of poems)\, Tunic (a letterpress chapbook of translations of Catullus) and Twine (a full length collection of poems). David also edited Compendium about Donald Justice’s thoughts on prosody. His next full-length book of poems\, Scatterplot\, is due for release in 2020. \nAbout A Little Book on Form: \n\nAn acute and deeply insightful book of essays exploring poetic form and the role of instinct and imagination within form—from former poet laureate\, Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winning author Robert Hass. \nRobert Hass—former poet laureate\, winner of the National Book Award\, and recipient of the Pulitzer Prize—illuminates the formal impulses that underlie great poetry in this sophisticated\, graceful\, and accessible volume of essays drawn from a series of lectures he delivered at the renowned Iowa Writers’ Workshop. \nA Little Book on Form brilliantly synthesizes Hass’s formidable gifts as both a poet and a critic and reflects his profound education in the art of poetry. Starting with the exploration of a single line as the basic gesture of a poem\, and moving into an examination of the essential expressive gestures that exist inside forms\, Hass goes beyond approaching form as a set of traditional rules that precede composition\, and instead offers penetrating insight into the true openness and instinctiveness of formal creation. \nA Little Book on Form is a rousing reexamination of our longest lasting mode of literature from one of our greatest living poets
URL:https://litseen.com/event/robert-hass-david-koehn/
LOCATION:City Lights Bookstore\, 261 Columbus Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94133\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180321T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180321T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T131610Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T131610Z
UID:29804-1521658800-1521664200@litseen.com
SUMMARY:David Mamet
DESCRIPTION:Acclaimed writer David Mamet returns to the Jewish Community Center of San Francisco for a conversation about “Chicago”\, his new 1920s thriller set in the mobbed-up Windy City. Mixing some of Mamet’s most brilliant fictional creations with actual figures of the era\, it explores honor\, deceit\, revenge and devotion. i>Chicago\, the book he has been building to his entire career\, is that rarest of literary creations\, combining spectacular elegance of craft with a kinetic wallop as fierce as the February wind gusting off Lake Michigan.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/david-mamet/
LOCATION:Jewish Community Center of San Francisco\, 3200 California St\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94118\, United States
CATEGORIES:San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180321T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180321T220000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T132211Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T132211Z
UID:29812-1521658800-1521669600@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Open Mic Poetry! Boom!
DESCRIPTION:Doors open at 6:30PM and poetry starts at 7PM-10PM. \nEveryone is welcome! Helen Hyojoo Kang as always will be MC’ing for the evening\, so come prepared with a poem or two\, and if you’re shy to get up on the stage\, your listening ears is all we need.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/open-mic-poetry-boom/
LOCATION:THE LAUNDRY\, 3359 26th Street\, San Francisco\, 94110
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180321T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180321T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T123937Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T123937Z
UID:29772-1521660600-1521666000@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Mark Sarvas and Marie Mockett
DESCRIPTION:Mark Sarvas discusses his new novel\, Memento Park\, with Marie Mockett. \n\nPraise for Memento Park \n\n“Mark Sarvas has written a gripping mystery novel about art that is also a powerful meditation on fathers and sons\, and the need to face up to the falsehoods spawned by the horror of the past.”–Salman Rushdie \n\n“What does the next generation carry forward\, and why is it so compelling? In his powerful novel MEMENTO PARK\, Mark Sarvas explores the essential questions of history and its burdens and legacies. The gifted novelist Sarvas takes you by the hand and tells you the important story you need to hear.” – Min Jin Lee\, National Book Award finalist author of Pachinko \n\n“A thrilling\, ceaselessly intelligent investigation into the crime known as history.”  – Joseph O’Neill\, author of Netherland and The Dog \n\nAbout Memento Park \n\nAfter receiving an unexpected call from the Australian consulate\, Matt Santos becomes aware of a painting that he believes was looted from his family in Hungary during the Second World War. To recover the painting\, he must repair his strained relationship with his harshly judgmental father\, uncover his family history\, and restore his connection to his own Judaism. Along the way to illuminating the mysteries of his past\, Matt is torn between his girlfriend Tracy and his attorney Rachel\, with whom he travels to Budapest to unearth the truth about the painting and\, in turn\, his family. \n  \nAs his journey progresses\, Matt’s revelations are accompanied by equally consuming and imaginative meditations on the painting and the painter at the center of his personal drama\, Budapest Street Scene by Ervin Kálmán. By the time Memento Park reaches its conclusion\, Matt’s narrative is as much about family history and father-son dynamics as it is about the nature of art itself\, and the infinite ways we come to understand ourselves through it. \n  \nOf all the questions asked by Mark Sarvas’s Memento Park―about family and identity\, about art and history―a central\, unanswerable predicament lingers: How do we move forward when the past looms unreasonably large?
URL:https://litseen.com/event/mark-sarvas-and-marie-mockett/
LOCATION:Green Apple Books on the Park\, 1231 9th Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94122\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180322T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180322T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T120257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T120257Z
UID:29737-1521745200-1521750600@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Matthew Dickman and Emily Strelow
DESCRIPTION:Matthew Dickman celebrates the release of a new poetry collection \nWonderland \nfrom W.W. Norton \nEmily Strelow celebrates the release of her new novel \nThe Wild Birds \nfrom Rare Bird Lit \nabout Wonderland \nLuminous and hypnotic\, this dynamic collection explores the dark edges of childhood\, violence\, race\, class\, and masculinity\, by one of the most fearless poets of his generation. \n“Known for poems of universality of feeling\, expressive lyricism of reflection\, and heartrending allure” (Major Jackson)\, award-winning poet Matthew Dickman returns with a collection that engages the traces of his own living past\, suffusing these poems with ghosts of longing\, shame\, and vulnerability. In the southeast Portland neighborhood of Dickman’s youth\, parents are out of control and children are in chaos. With grief\, anger\, and\, ultimately\, understanding\, Dickman confronts a childhood of ambient violence\, well-intentioned but warped family relations\, confining definitions of identity\, and the deprivation of this particular Portland neighborhood in the 1980s. Wonderland reminds us that\, while these neighborhoods are filled with guns\, skateboards\, fights\, booze\, and heroin\, and home to punk rockers\, skinheads\, poor kids\, and single moms\, they are also places of innocence and love. \nLuminous and hypnotic\, this dynamic collection explores the dark edges of childhood\, violence\, race\, class\, and masculinity\, by one of the most fearless poets of his generation. \n“Known for poems of universality of feeling\, expressive lyricism of reflection\, and heartrending allure” (Major Jackson)\, award-winning poet Matthew Dickman returns with a collection that engages the traces of his own living past\, suffusing these poems with ghosts of longing\, shame\, and vulnerability. In the southeast Portland neighborhood of Dickman’s youth\, parents are out of control and children are in chaos. With grief\, anger\, and\, ultimately\, understanding\, Dickman confronts a childhood of ambient violence\, well-intentioned but warped family relations\, confining definitions of identity\, and the deprivation of this particular Portland neighborhood in the 1980s. Wonderland reminds us that\, while these neighborhoods are filled with guns\, skateboards\, fights\, booze\, and heroin\, and home to punk rockers\, skinheads\, poor kids\, and single moms\, they are also places of innocence and love. \nabout The Wild Birds \nCast adrift in 1870s San Francisco after the death of her mother\, a girl named Olive disguises herself as a boy and works as a lighthouse keeper’s assistant on the Farallon Islands to escape the dangers of a world unkind to young women. In 1941\, nomad Victor scours the Sierras searching for refuge from a home to which he never belonged. And in the present day\, precocious fifteen year-old Lily struggles\, despite her willfulness\, to find a place for herself amongst the small town attitudes of Burning Hills\, Oregon. Living alone with her hardscrabble mother Alice compounds the problem―though their unique relationship to the natural world ties them together\, Alice keeps an awful secret from her daughter\, one that threatens to ignite the tension growing between them. \nEmily Strelow’s mesmerizing debut stitches together a sprawling saga of the feral Northwest across farmlands and deserts and generations: an American mosaic alive with birdsong and gunsmoke\, held together by a silver box of eggshells―a long-ago gift from a mother to her daughter. Written with grace\, grit\, and an acute knowledge of how the past insists upon itself\, The Wild Birds is a radiant and human story about the shelters we find and make along our crooked paths home. \nMatthew Dickman is the author of All-American Poem (American Poetry Review/ Copper Canyon Press\, 2008)\, 50 American Plays (co-written with his twin brother Michael Dickman\, Copper Canyon Press\, 2012)\, Mayakovsky’s Revolver (W.W. Norton & Co\, 2012)\, Wish You Were Here (Spork Press\, 2013)\, 24 HOURS (One Star Press\, Paris\, France\, 2014)\, Brother (Faber&Faber UK\, 2016)\, and the forthcoming poetry collection Wonderland (W.W. Norton & Co\, 2018) He is the recipient of The May Sarton Award from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences\, the Kate Tufts Award from Claremont College\, and a 2015 Guggenheim. His poems have appeared in Poetry London\, McSweeny’s\, The London Review of Books\, Esquire Magazine\, Best American Poetry and The New Yorker among others. \nEmily Strelow was born and raised in Oregon’s Willamette Valley but has lived all over the West and now\, the Midwest. For the last decade she combined teaching writing with doing seasonal avian field biology with her husband. While doing field jobs she camped and wrote in remote areas in the desert\, mountains and by the ocean. She is a mother to two boys\, a naturalist\, and writer. The Wild Birds is her first novel.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/matthew-dickman-and-emily-strelow/
LOCATION:City Lights Bookstore\, 261 Columbus Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94133\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180322T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180322T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T115049Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T115049Z
UID:29727-1521747000-1521752400@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Kirstin Chen / Bury What We Cannot Take
DESCRIPTION:The Bindery is thrilled to host Kirstin Chen as she launches her new novel Bury What We Cannot Take. Join us! \nOne summer day in 1957\, nine-year-old San San and her twelve-year-old brother\, Ah Liam\, discover their grandmother taking a hammer to a framed portrait of Chairman Mao. To prove his loyalty to the Party\, Ah Liam reports his grandmother to the authorities. But his belief in doing the right thing sets in motion a terrible chain of events. Now the family must flee their home on Drum Wave Islet\, which sits just a few hundred meters across the channel from mainland China. But when their mother goes to procure visas for safe passage to Hong Kong\, the government will only issue them on the condition that she leave behind one of her children as proof of the family’s intention to return. San San’s family must grapple with their agonizing decision\, its far-reaching consequences\, and their hope for redemption. \n— \n“This beautifully plotted\, suspenseful\, and deeply compassionate novel shows Kirstin Chen\, whose work I’ve long admired\, at her absolute finest. Bury What We Cannot Take is a vital book.”—Laura van den Berg\, author of Find Me \n“San San’s family flee Drum Wave Islet\, leaving her behind. An epic story follows that explores gender roles\, oppressive ideologies\, sacrifice\, and what it means to be free\, all through the microcosm of one family. This is a book set in the past\, on the other side of the world\, that is more than relevant in today’s America. Chen delivers a page turner that holds a historical mirror up to our fuzzy\, complicit world.”—Matthew Salessas\, author of The Hundred Year Flood \n— \nKirstin Chen is the author of the novels Bury What We Cannot Take\, forthcoming from Little A in 2018\, and Soy Sauce for Beginners\, a Kindle First selection\, an O\, The Oprah Magazine “book to pick up now\,” and a Glamour book club pick. She has received awards from the Steinbeck Fellows Program\, Sewanee\, Hedgebrook\, and the Napa Valley Writers’ Conference. She is the fall 2017 NTU-NAC National Writer in Residence in Singapore.\n— \nPlease note: This event will be at The Bindery\, at 1727 Haight. RSVP appreciated but not required. \nIf you cannot attend this event but would like to request a signed copy of Bury What We Cannot Take\, order here and put your request in the comments field.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/kirstin-chen-bury-what-we-cannot-take/
LOCATION:The Bindery\, 1727 Haight St\, San Francisco \, 94117\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180322T203000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180323T010000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180325T080123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180325T080123Z
UID:36887-1521750600-1521766800@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Filth & Fantasy: The Next Crystal Text Book Release & Art Rave
DESCRIPTION:We’ve got a new book +++ we’ve got a new non-linear age\, join us for the release of our shiniest new book The Next Crystal Text by Melissa Mack with hyperbolic performances by Melissa Mack\, DROUGHT SPA (alex cruse and Kevin CK Lo)\, Andrea Wolf\, and video art by Leila Weefur. We’ll keep it infinite with a dance party feat. DJs Jasmine Infiniti\, Piano Rain\, and MaHaWaM. It will be xtra in the best way\, a cum*ulative celebration of the glittering TWEEN YEARS of Timeless\, Infinite Light. \nThursday // March 22 // El Rio\n3158 Mission Street\, SF \nDoors @ 8PM\nPerformances @ 8:30-10PM\nDance Party @ 10:30-1AM\n$5-10 notaflof \nFind out more on our Fb event page: https://tinyurl.com/yamqejp3
URL:https://litseen.com/event/filth-fantasy-the-next-crystal-text-book-release-art-rave/
LOCATION:El Rio\, 3158 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:San Francisco
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://litseen.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/28577637_1428044670640998_595616608553636286_n.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180325T153000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180325T180000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180326T042539Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180326T042539Z
UID:39450-1521991800-1522000800@litseen.com
SUMMARY:National Geographic and the White Gaze
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for an artists’ talk and book party with Michelle Dizon and Viet Le in conversation with Laura Fantone and Targol Mesbah. In conjunction with the exhibition WHITE GAZE\, these artists and scholars will be talking about the role of photography-and specifically the images of National Geographic-in reinforcing racist hierarchies in the cultural imaginary of the West. \nWHITE GAZE\, an exhibition of works by Michelle Dizon with the poetry of Viet Le. deconstructs an archive of National Geographic magazines to explore the visual and narrative structure of the publications’s White Gaze\, the Western-centric bias that informed its editorial decision-making for decades. Drawing from her archive of magazines\, Dizon uses poetic subtraction\, the erasure of most of the text on the page\, to give us back the original language in fragments or threads that together write a decolonial counterpoint to the Western-centric focus of the pictures. \nIn April National Geographic will publish an issue that explicitly embarks on a reckoning with its past and its complicity in reinforcing the racism of the white American narrative through a photographic language. Join us to talk about this history and explore the implications of the magazine’s decision. \nWhite Gaze has also been published as a book by Bay Area-based Sming Sming Books\, Chicago-based Candor Arts\, and Los Angeles-based at lands edge\, and includes text by Viet Le\, who uses Dizon’s work as a starting point for a poetic exploration of the legacies of war and empire.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/national-geographic-and-the-white-gaze/
LOCATION:DESAI | MATTA GALLERY\, CIIS Main Building\, 1453 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, 94103
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
ORGANIZER;CN="The Arts at CIIS":MAILTO:arts@ciis.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180326T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180326T170000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180326T045152Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180326T045152Z
UID:39487-1522051200-1522083600@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Bay Area Generations #55
DESCRIPTION:Bay Area Generations Show #55\nMonday\, March 26th\, 2018 \nREADERS\nA literary salon featuring a curated selection of San Francisco Bay Area poets\, writers and storytellers\, and musical guest. \nWith these fine poets and writers:\nHeidi Benson-Stagg + Erica Peck\nMarise Phillips + Tim Shipman\nMiah Jeffra + Norma Smith\n& Musical Guest\n\nCURATORS\nKathleen Wallace + Sebastien Snow\, guests \nBay Area Generations Show #55\nMonday\, March 26\n7:30pm\nat The Bindery in SF\nMap: http://bit.ly/BAGBinderyMap \nTickets: http://bit.ly/BAG55tx \nwine bar | easy access | on public transportation line\nFrom BART: http://bit.ly/BAGBinderyMap \nDoors Open: 7:00 p.m. Show: 7:30 p.m.\nSuggested donation with chapbook\, $10\n*No one turned away for lack of funds.* \nGet tickets: http://bit.ly/BAG55tx \nBay Area Generations literary reading series features paired readers of differing generations in a curated submission based show. Since 2013\, over 350 hundred notable authors\, poets\, writers\, playwrights and musicians have read poetry and stories\, or performed at this celebrated literary salon. \nWebsite: www.bayareagenerations.com\nFB: www.facebook.com/bayareagenerations\nEvents: www.facebook.com/bayareagenerations/events \nTickets: http://bit.ly/BAG55tx
URL:https://litseen.com/event/bay-area-generations-55/
LOCATION:The Bindery\, 1727 Haight St\, San Francisco \, 94117\, United States
CATEGORIES:San Francisco
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://litseen.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/BAG-55.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180326T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180326T200000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T131307Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T131307Z
UID:29802-1522090800-1522094400@litseen.com
SUMMARY:The Racket #17 : Ghosts
DESCRIPTION:We’re seven months from Halloween\, but what the hell\, let’s talk about GHOSTS. The ones that haunt mansions\, the ones that haunt our pasts\, the ones that linger just behind our shadows.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/the-racket-17-ghosts/
LOCATION:Adobe Books\, 3130 24th St.\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180326T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180326T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180219T034339Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180219T034339Z
UID:32179-1522090800-1522096200@litseen.com
SUMMARY:THE RACKET! #17
DESCRIPTION:Details soon! \nHosted by Noah B. Sanders
URL:https://litseen.com/event/the-racket-17/
LOCATION:Adobe Books\, 3130 24th St.\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180326T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180326T214500
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180128T230011Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180206T053153Z
UID:29658-1522090800-1522100700@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Writers on Writing: Michael Nava
DESCRIPTION:Michael Nava reads from and discusses his fiction work. His latest book is Street People: A Novella (Korima Press\, 2017). “Nava writes an excellent mystery featuring crisp dialogue\, diabolical suspense and a subtle wit\, but it’s his unflinching look at what it’s like to be an openly gay man today that makes this series special.” — Booklist. Free.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nLocation: Humanities Building\, Room 211\n\n\nDirections: View on Google Maps\n\n\n\n\n\n\nNava is the author of an acclaimed series of seven crime novels featuring gay\, Latino criminal defense lawyer Henry Rios. The Rios novels won six Lambda Literary awards and Nava was dubbed “one of our best” by The New York Times. In 2001 he won the Bill Whitehead Lifetime Achievement Award in LGBT literature. A native Californian and the grandson of Mexican immigrants\, he divides his time between San Francisco and Palm Springs. Nava has also had a distinguished legal career\, having earned his law degree from Stanford University. He retired from the law in July 2016. \n\nThe Creative Writing Department opens its Writers on Writing course to the public this spring. Taught by Dodie Bellamy\, the course features faculty and visiting writers reading from their works and discussing their creative process.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/writers-on-writing-michael-nava/
LOCATION:San Francisco State University\, 1600 Holloway Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94132\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180327T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180327T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T115634Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T115634Z
UID:29733-1522177200-1522182600@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Songs of Dismantling: Standing as Witness in the 21st Century
DESCRIPTION:Poets Randall Mann and  Fernando Pérez \nread poetry and discuss the poetic experience as a method of cultural healing \nmoderated by Ingrid Rojas Contreras \nA night of reading and discussion where “Standing as witness” is the over-riding theme. An exploration of the demonization and marginalization of the “other” in the U.S. What do we need to admit to ourselves to move beyond injustice and totalitarian impulses. What memes could be useful to us in spreading a message of inclusion. Poetry is explored as a vehicle to transform culture. \nFernando Pérez celebrates the release of a new book of poetry \nA Song of Dismantling: Poems \npublished by University of New Mexico Press \nIn this dynamic debut collection\, Fernando Pérez employs lyric and nonce forms to interrogate identity politics and piece together a complex family history. The book embodies fragmentation in form and story\, exploring how migration affects relationships between people of different generations. Pérez invites readers on the journey as his family story unfolds over time and distance. \nRandal Mann’s most current collection is titled: \nProprietary \npublished by Persea Press \nProprietary and critiques corporate culture\, depicting (and slyly rebuking) the American materialism that erupted in the 1980s and has metastasized ever since. For years\, Randall Mann has been hailed as one of contemporary American poetry’s most daring formalists\, expertly using craft as a way of exploring racy subjects with trenchant wit and aplomb. \nFernando Pérez teaches at Bellevue College. His poems have been widely published in literary journals\, including Crab Orchard Review\, Más Tequila Review\, Exquisite Corpse\, and Hinchas de Poesia. \nRandall Mann is the author of Complaint in the Garden (2004)\, which won the Kenyon Review Prize in Poetry; Breakfast with Thom Gunn (2009)\, finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry and the California Book Award; Straight Razor (2013)\, also a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award; and Proprietary (2017). He is co-author of the textbook Writing Poems (2007). Mann received the 2013 J. Howard and Barbara M.J. Wood Prize from Poetry. His most recent book is Proprietary: Poems\,  published by Persea Press. \nIngrid Rojas Contreras is the 2014 recipient of the Mary Tanenbaum Literary Award in Nonfiction from the San Francisco Foundation. She has received awards and support from Bread Loaf\, Hedgebrook\, the San Francisco Writer’s Grotto\, Djerassi Artist Residency\, National Association of Latino Arts and Cultures\, and the San Francisco Arts Commission. Currently\, she is working on a memoir about her grandfather\, a medicine man from Colombia who it was said could move clouds.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/songs-of-dismantling-standing-as-witness-in-the-21st-century/
LOCATION:City Lights Bookstore\, 261 Columbus Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94133\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180327T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180327T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T101407Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T101407Z
UID:29697-1522179000-1522184400@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Jimmy O. Yang
DESCRIPTION:Jimmy O. Yang is an actor\, stand-up comedian\, and writer best known for his portrayal of Jian Yang on HBO’s Emmy-nominated series Silicon Valley and his dramatic turn opposite Mark Wahlberg in the highly acclaimed film Patriot’s Day. Born in Hong Kong\, Yang made his television debut on the CBS series 2 Broke Girls and his first late-night stand-up appearance on The Arsenio Hall Show\, where he received a rare standing ovation. He’s based in Los Angeles.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/jimmy-o-yang/
LOCATION:Nourse Theatre\, 275 Hayes Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94117\, United States
CATEGORIES:San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180327T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180327T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180219T033515Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180219T033515Z
UID:32170-1522179000-1522184400@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Sébastien Régnier and Barbara Browning / Who the Hell is Imre Lodbrog?
DESCRIPTION:The Bindery welcomes Sébastien Régnier and Barbara Browning for a reading and live music in celebration of their new book\, Who the Hell is Imre Lodbrog?. Join us! \nA very true love story\, told in counterpoint\, about friendship\, politics and rock n roll. \nIn Barbara Browning’s eyes\, Imre Lodbrog is the greatest aging French rock star you’ve never heard of\, with the appeal of “Leonard Cohen\, Bob Dylan or Serge Gainsbourg on shrooms.” For Imre Lodbrog\, music is an alter-ego experience―a late-in-life outlet for a mild-mannered screenwriter deeply shaped by the generation of May ‘68. Both ask the same questions: What revolution has wreaked more havoc and beauty than rock ‘n’ roll? And why do a certain few geniuses inside every revolution go silent and unrecognized? \n— \nSébastien Régnier is an award-winning screenwriter from France (Kabloonak\, Martha Martha). \nBarbara Browning has published three novels\, including The Gift (or\, Techniques of the Body) – a New York Times Editor’s Choice – as well as I’m Trying to Reach You and The Correspondence Artist.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/sebastien-regnier-and-barbara-browning-who-the-hell-is-imre-lodbrog/
LOCATION:The Bindery\, 1727 Haight St\, San Francisco \, 94117\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180328T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180328T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180219T024520Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180219T024520Z
UID:32076-1522263600-1522269000@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Zachary Lazar with special guests The Kitchen Sisters
DESCRIPTION:Zachary Lazar with special guests The Kitchen Sisters\n\n  \ncelebrating the release of Zachary Lazar’s new novel \nVENGEANCE \nfrom Catapult Books \nZachary Lazar’s powerful and important novel was inspired by a passion play\, The Life of Jesus Christ\, he witnessed at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola. As someone who writes “fiction\, nonfiction\, sometimes a hybrid of both\,” the narrator of Vengeance\, a character much like Lazar himself\, tries to accurately view a world he knows is “beyond the limits of my small understanding.” In particular\, he tries to unravel the truth behind the supposed crime of an inmate he meets and befriends\, Kendrick King\, who is serving a life sentence at Angola for murder. \nAs the narrator attempts to sort out what happened in King’s life—paying visits to his devoted mother\, his estranged young daughter and her mother\, his girlfriend\, his brother\, and his cousin—the writer’s own sense of identity begins to feel more and more like a fiction. He is one of the “free people” while Kendrick\, who studies theology and philosophy\, will never get his only wish\, expressed plainly as “I just need to get out of here.” The dichotomy between their lives forces the narrator to confront the violence in his own past\, and also to reexamine American notions of guilt and penance\, racial bias\, and the inherent perversity of punitive justice. \nIt is common knowledge that we have an incarceration crisis in our country. Vengeance\, by way of vivid storytelling\, helps us to understand the failure of empathy and imagination that causes it. \nZachary Lazar is the author of three previous books\, including the novel Sway\, chosen as a Best Book of 2008 by the Los Angeles Times\, Rolling Stone\, Publishers Weekly\, and Newsday\, and the memoir Evening’s Empire: The Story of My Father’s Murder\, a Chicago Tribune Best Book of 2009. Lazar is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship\, the Hodder Fellowship at Princeton University\, and\, most recently\, the John Updike Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters for “a writer in mid-career whose work has demonstrated consistent excellence.” He lives in New Orleans. \nThe Kitchen Sisters (Davia Nelson & Nikki Silva) are Peabody Award winning independent producers who create stories for NPR and other public media. \nAdvance praise for Zachary Lazar’s VENGEANCE \n“I am stunned by the daring\, meticulous\, and unsentimental intelligence of this riveting book . . . Vengeance is a masterwork\, the most important American book I’ve read this year\, and the most moving and mesmerizing. —Francisco Goldman\, author of Say Her Name \n“More than any book I’ve read in the twenty-first century\, Zachary Lazar’s Vengeance makes the reader reckon with the questions of what’s real\, what’s imagined\, and why those questions matter more in 2017 than at any other time in our nation. . . . Vengeance reminds me of what is possible through deft\, imaginative\, ‘real’ storytelling.” —Kiese Laymon\, author of Long Division \n“A tale so true and raw\, that you’ll swear that it is non-fiction… rich in detail\, elegant in its telling\, the story that unfolds will have you reminding yourself ‘This is fiction’ on repeat. One of the most daring and important true-to-life tales to be imagined.” —Shannon Alden\, Literari Bookstore (Ann Arbor\, MI)
URL:https://litseen.com/event/zachary-lazar-with-special-guests-the-kitchen-sisters-2/
LOCATION:City Lights Bookstore\, 261 Columbus Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94133\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180328T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180328T203000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180325T081410Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180325T081410Z
UID:38043-1522263600-1522269000@litseen.com
SUMMARY:The End of the End of the World Word Cabaret - Three Local Authors Read From New Books
DESCRIPTION:Join the End of the End of the World Word Cabaret & The Green Arcade in a reading from three Bay Area authors reading from their books (two of them first novels). \nAnanda Esteva‘s novel The Wanderings of Chela Coatlicue is the first installment of a trilogy of coming-of-age adventures that follows a young brazen musical prodigy in search of a sacred bass once owned by legendary blues musician Sugar Rivera. Filled with breathtaking action\, border perils\, magic and passion\, this fantasy novel takes readers through numerous plot developments and twists that lead them to a variety of choices and outcomes\, as Chela travels from the punk rock slums of Mexico City to the suburbs of Los Angeles. Unfolding in the present tense from the second-person point of view\, events\, actions and consequences hit the reader with immediacy\, making this novel the ultimate exploration of border politics\, indie music culture\, and one young woman’s self-discovery in the mystery surrounding Rivera.\n\nAdam Smyer‘s debut novel Knucklehead introduces the reader to Marcus Hayes\, a black lawyer who regulates everyday bad behavior with short\, sharp bursts of retribution\, and “struggles to keep his cool in the personally and politically turbulent ’90s.” Like Smyer\, the book has a wicked sense of humor\, even as it gives the reader a tour of the dystopian Clinton years. Comparisons to James Baldwin\, Richard Wright\, and Zora Neale Hurston are well earned.\n\n\nAsked why he chose to set his book in the 1990’s\, Smyer says\, “I think that the ’90s have been overlooked in a way. I think that on some level the prevailing narrative has become that everything was fine before 9/11. But everything was definitely not fine. We had militias and the Unabomber and Tim McVeigh and Columbine. The amount of hate and hysteria that we normalized back then laid the groundwork for what is happening today. It was fertile ground for storytelling.”\n\nKate Jessica Raphael is the author of Murder Under the Bridge and Murder Under the Fig Tree (She Write Press). In the latter book\, Hamas has taken power in Palestine\, and the Israeli government is rounding up people considered threats. Palestinian policewoman Rania Bakara finds herself thrown in prison\, though she has never been part of Hamas. Chloe flies in from San Francisco to free her friend – and rekindle her romance with Tina\, a beautiful Palestinian Australian. The only way Rania can get out of jail is by agreeing to investigate the death of a young gay Palestinian in a village near her home.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/the-end-of-the-end-of-the-world-word-cabaret-three-local-authors-read-from-new-books/
LOCATION:The Green Arcade\, 1680 Market St\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94102\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://litseen.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/raphael.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180328T191500
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180328T211500
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180328T114248Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180328T114810Z
UID:39941-1522264500-1522271700@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Hazel Reading Series - March 2018
DESCRIPTION:Celebrate Women’s History Month at Hazel Reading with our fantastic line-up of women writers. Don’t miss it! \nFeaturing\nDinika Amaral nominated by Sara Marinelli\nKirin Khan nominated by Kate Folk\nMaya Kosover nominated by A’aron Heard\nOlga Zilberbourg nominated by Tanya Rey\nSimi Singh Juneja nominated by Zhayra Palma\nAurielle Lucier nominated by Lark Omura \nSimi Singh Juneja was born in India and raised in the American South. She graduated from NYU in Paris with an MFA in Creative Writing. She is the keeper of stories in her family and the resident poet. Her debut short story\, “How Doc Met Lady J\,” was published by the Smithsonian Indian-American Heritage blog. She is currently co-authoring and translating a memoir with a Bollywood actress to be published by Penguin India. Additionally\, her own novel set in Bombay is currently in the works. She is a regular contributor to The Huffington Post and was Executive Producer on the feature film Miss India America. The film premiered in theaters in 2015\, and went on to win best film at the Bentonville Film Festival and many others. It can now be seen on Netflix. She is a Voices of Our Nation alumna. She currently resides in Los Angeles\, CA. \nDinika Amaral was born and raised in Bombay\, India. A former banker with JP Morgan Chase\, she has an M.A. and M.F.A. from New York University. Her work has appeared in Guernica\, The Times of India\, Hayden’s Ferry Review\, Golden Handcuffs Review\, Denver Quarterly\, the Massachusetts Review\, and in the Iowa Review (winner of the Tim McGinnis award). Presently\, a Steinbeck Fellow\, she is working on a gloriously unlinked short story collection and a novel about birds and Indian gangsters. She lives with her husband in the Silicon Valley\, but her secret dream is to be a better mob wife to Michael Corleone than Kay. \nKirin Khan is a writer living in Oakland\, CA who calls Albuquerque\, New Mexico her hometown\, and Peshawar\, Pakistan her homeland. A 2016 VONA/Voices alum\, 2017 PEN Emerging Voices Fellow\, and 2017 SF Writers Grotto Fellow\, her work has appeared in Your Impossible Voice\, Uproot\, sPARKLE & bLINK\, and 7×7.LA. Kirin is working on her first novel. \nOlga Zilberbourg is a bilingual author who grew up in Russia and moved to the United States at the age of seventeen. Her English-language fiction has appeared in Confrontation\, World Literature Today\, Narrative\, Outpost 19’s Golden State 2017 anthology\, and others. She co-hosts the weekly San Francisco Writers Workshop. \nAurielle Marie is a Black\, Atlanta-born\, Queer hip-hop scholar and a cultural worker. Through her work as a poet and an activist\, she explores the uses of intimacy and ritual in the practice of Black resistance. Aurielle is a Roddenberry Fellow Finalist\, a Voices of Our Nation Fellow-Alum\, and a current Queer Emerging Artist-In-Residence at Destiny Art Center. Both her activism and artistry ground themselves in the afro-indigenous legacy of storytelling in the Deep South. She was a 2016 Kopkind Fellow and has been featured as a social-political pundit on CNN. Her essays and poems have been published in Selfish Magazine\, in Scalawag\, on For Harriett\, ESSENCE Mag\, Allure\, NBC Blk\, and Huffington Post. Her inaugural collection\, Gumbo Ya Ya\, is forthcoming from Write Bloody Press. Her work has been featured on a global host of stages\, most importantly in her grandmother’s kitchen.\nFollow her on Twitter & Instagram: @ElleOfTwoCities. \nMaya Kosover is a high school educator in Richmond\, teaching English and Multimedia Journalism. When she’s not obsessing over students\, she is learning in community\, singing and dancing\, playing with magic\, crafting letters to pen pals\, nesting as a homebody\, and writing about what it means to be a queer\, Jewish woman. \n(5$ Suggested Donation)
URL:https://litseen.com/event/hazel-reading-series-march-2018/
LOCATION:Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts\, 2868 Mission Street\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:San Francisco
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180328T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180328T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T115530Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T115530Z
UID:29731-1522265400-1522270800@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Zachary Lazar with special guests The Kitchen Sisters
DESCRIPTION:celebrating the release of Zachary Lazar’s new novel \nVENGEANCE \nfrom Catapult Books \nZachary Lazar’s powerful and important novel was inspired by a passion play\, The Life of Jesus Christ\, he witnessed at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola. As someone who writes “fiction\, nonfiction\, sometimes a hybrid of both\,” the narrator of Vengeance\, a character much like Lazar himself\, tries to accurately view a world he knows is “beyond the limits of my small understanding.” In particular\, he tries to unravel the truth behind the supposed crime of an inmate he meets and befriends\, Kendrick King\, who is serving a life sentence at Angola for murder. \nAs the narrator attempts to sort out what happened in King’s life—paying visits to his devoted mother\, his estranged young daughter and her mother\, his girlfriend\, his brother\, and his cousin—the writer’s own sense of identity begins to feel more and more like a fiction. He is one of the “free people” while Kendrick\, who studies theology and philosophy\, will never get his only wish\, expressed plainly as “I just need to get out of here.” The dichotomy between their lives forces the narrator to confront the violence in his own past\, and also to reexamine American notions of guilt and penance\, racial bias\, and the inherent perversity of punitive justice. \nIt is common knowledge that we have an incarceration crisis in our country. Vengeance\, by way of vivid storytelling\, helps us to understand the failure of empathy and imagination that causes it. \nZachary Lazar is the author of three previous books\, including the novel Sway\, chosen as a Best Book of 2008 by the Los Angeles Times\, Rolling Stone\, Publishers Weekly\, and Newsday\, and the memoir Evening’s Empire: The Story of My Father’s Murder\, a Chicago Tribune Best Book of 2009. Lazar is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship\, the Hodder Fellowship at Princeton University\, and\, most recently\, the John Updike Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters for “a writer in mid-career whose work has demonstrated consistent excellence.” He lives in New Orleans. \nThe Kitchen Sisters (Davia Nelson & Nikki Silva) are Peabody Award winning independent producers who create stories for NPR and other public media. \nAdvance praise for Zachary Lazar’s VENGEANCE \n“I am stunned by the daring\, meticulous\, and unsentimental intelligence of this riveting book . . . Vengeance is a masterwork\, the most important American book I’ve read this year\, and the most moving and mesmerizing. —Francisco Goldman\, author of Say Her Name \n“More than any book I’ve read in the twenty-first century\, Zachary Lazar’s Vengeance makes the reader reckon with the questions of what’s real\, what’s imagined\, and why those questions matter more in 2017 than at any other time in our nation. . . . Vengeance reminds me of what is possible through deft\, imaginative\, ‘real’ storytelling.” —Kiese Laymon\, author of Long Division \n“A tale so true and raw\, that you’ll swear that it is non-fiction… rich in detail\, elegant in its telling\, the story that unfolds will have you reminding yourself ‘This is fiction’ on repeat. One of the most daring and important true-to-life tales to be imagined.” —Shannon Alden\, Literari Bookstore (Ann Arbor\, MI)
URL:https://litseen.com/event/zachary-lazar-with-special-guests-the-kitchen-sisters/
LOCATION:City Lights Bookstore\, 261 Columbus Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94133\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180328T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180328T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180129T123826Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180129T123826Z
UID:29770-1522265400-1522270800@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Harry Mathews Tribute
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a special night of stories and memories to celebrate the life of Harry Mathews and the publication of his last novel\, The Solitary Twin. With readings by Daniel Levin Becker\, Roman Muradov\, Brandon Bussolini\, and Gordon Faylor. \n\nAbout Harry Mathews \n\nExperimental poet and prose writer Harry Mathews grew up on Manhattan’s Upper East Side and was educated at Princeton University and Harvard University\, where he earned a BA. Between stints at school\, he served briefly in the Navy. After graduation\, he moved to Paris and turned his attention to poetry. In Paris\, Mathews met John Ashbery\, who shared with him the work of avant-garde writer Raymond Roussel. In an interview with the Paris Review\, Mathews stated\, “In Roussel I discovered you could write prose the way you do poetry. You don’t approach it from the idea that what you have to say is inside you. It’s a materialist approach\, for want of a better word. You make something. You give up expressing and start inventing.” \nMathews’s poetry and prose often use overarching formal constraints to examine the relationship between sound and meaning or pattern and lyric. Times Literary Supplement critic Barry Schwabsky noted that Mathews’s “writing is imbued with a childlike sense of wonder at both language and the world it can conjure\, though always tinged with poignancy\, with the transience of both words and things.” Mathews’s collections of poetry include Armenian Papers: Poems 1954–1984 (1987) and The New Tourism (2010). His short stories are collected in The Human Country (2002) and his essays in The Case of the Persevering Maltese (2002). Mathews is the author of several novels\, including The Conversions (1962)\, Tlooth (1966)\, Cigarettes (1987)\, and My Life in CIA (2005). With Alastair Brotchie\, he edited the anthology Oulipo Compendium (1998\, revised edition 2005). \nMathews was the only American member of the French avant-garde literary society Oulipo\, and he has also been associated with the New York School of Poets. With John Ashbery\, Kenneth Koch\, and James Schuyler\, he started the literary magazine Locus Solus in 1960. His honors included a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and an award for his fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. \nWith his wife\, novelist Marie Chaix\, Mathews divided his time between New York City; Key West\, Florida; and Paris. He died in 2017.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/harry-mathews-tribute/
LOCATION:Green Apple Books on the Park\, 1231 9th Ave\, San Francisco \, CA\, 94122\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20180328T193000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20180328T210000
DTSTAMP:20260412T082830
CREATED:20180219T033434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180219T033434Z
UID:32168-1522265400-1522270800@litseen.com
SUMMARY:Courtney Peppernell / Pillow Thoughts
DESCRIPTION:The Bindery hosts a special evening with Australian sensationCourtney Peppernell as part of her first US tour. She’ll be reading from her books Pillow Thoughts I and The Road Between. Please join us! \nPeppernell’s Pillow Thoughts — originally self-published and recently re-issued by Andrews McMeel — is in its fifth print run and beloved by young women around the world. Her poetry validates her readers and encourages them to find joy in the smallest moments. Her striking vignettes speak to the love she has shared with other women and the love she’s come to find for herself. \nPillow Thoughts is a collection of poetry and prose about heartbreak\, love\, and raw emotions. It is divided into sections to read when you feel you need them most. Make yourself a cup of tea and let yourself feel. \n— \nCourtney Peppernell is an LGBT author from Sydney\, Australia. In October 2016 she released the best-selling poetry collection Pillow Thoughts. Courtney has been writing her whole life and currently writes Young Adult novels and poetry collections. In February 2017 she released her second novel\, Keeping Long Island. In August 2017 she published Pillow Thoughts and The Road Between via US publisher Andrews McMeel Publishing. Pillow Thoughts II: Healing The Heart\, is forthcoming in August 2018.
URL:https://litseen.com/event/courtney-peppernell-pillow-thoughts/
LOCATION:The Bindery\, 1727 Haight St\, San Francisco \, 94117\, United States
CATEGORIES:Free,San Francisco
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