Calendar

Apr
16
Sat
Women Writers of Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti Reading @ Angell Hall, Rm 3222
Apr 16 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm

 Women Writers of Ann Arbor/Ypsi meet four times a year to read their works in all genres.
Visitors and new members welcome to our Spring Read on April 16. Ask for information, RSVP or signup as member atwwaaygroup@gmail.com Website: www.wwaay.com
SAVE THE DATE
WORKSHOPS AND PEER CRITIQUES OCTOBER 15, 2016
Check website for more details
3222 Angell Hall, 435 S. State Street. Donation. 734 545-0586.wwaaygroup@gmail.com www.wwaay.com

 

Apr
18
Mon
Fiction at Literati: Amy Gustine @ Literati
Apr 18 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Literati is thrilled to welcome Amy Gustine in support of her acclaimed debut collection, You Should Pity Us Instead.

You Should Pity Us Instead explores some of our toughest dilemmas: the cost of Middle East strife at its most intimate level, the likelihood of God considered in day-to-day terms, the moral stakes of family obligations, and the inescapable fact of mortality. Amy Gustine exhibits an extraordinary generosity toward her characters, instilling them with a thriving, vivid presence.

“Gustine excels at dramatizing the cunning of the human animal—a creature renowned for its skill at self-sabotage—as well as celebrating the freakish grace that can sometimes strike an ordinary life. You Should Pity Us Instead is a devastating, funny, and astonishingly frank collection.”    –Karen Russell

Amy Gustine’s fiction has appeared in several journals, including The Kenyon Review, The Alaska Quarterly Review, The Cimarron Review, and the Chicago Tribune’s Printers Row Journal. Her work has also received Pushcart Prize Special Mention.

Apr
19
Tue
Skazat! Poetry Series: Susan Hutton @ Sweetwaters
Apr 19 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Reading by local poet Susan Hutton, author of The Vanishing of Large Creatures. The program begins with open mike readings.
7-8:30 p.m., Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea, 123 W. Washington. Free. 994-6663.

Apr
20
Wed
Falling: A Memoir in Verse (featuring Georgia Kreiger) @ Concordia University Earhart Manor Living Room
Apr 20 @ 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

In lines both supple and brittle, Kreiger surrounds her private experiences with startling images whose collisions bang into the heart.  The rose, nearby crows, even the fog and snow are ominous, foreboding, and irresistible.  There’s brutality and betrayal here, and the growing knowledge that to survive is, in some ways, to name. Title aside, these moving poems are finally not about falling but about the courageous power of holding on.

Barbara Hurd, The Singer’s Temple

Georgia Kreiger’s Falling is a tightrope walk in verse, held taut by the tension between “what cannot [and] (what must) be told.” Unrelentingly confessional and deeply personal, the book’s revelations arise from the very act of falling. But the fall is defiant, fierce, and born of “a longing so urgent / it can pull other worlds / through walls.” To overcome the horrors of her childhood the poet must face a father who “came into my room to touch the part of me I could not hide,” a mother who “told me / to swallow all of the secrets / and hold them inside / because // what-others-don’t-know-can’t-hurt-us,” and a nightmarish memory revealed like a headline: “Ten-Year-Old Girl / Raped in Backyard Shed.” It is through the poetic act that the poet reclaims her life from the throes of childhood trauma, from a history that did its best to leave her “with no tongue to cry out to the milk-gray sky.” But cry out she does, and in this formidable, lyric, subversive collection Kreiger writes a “memoir in verse” that emboldens reader and poet alike, proving that there is as much power in falling as in rising again.

Sivan Butler-Rotholz, Editor, Saturday Poetry Series As It Ought To Be

Monica Tesler: Bounders @ Nicola's Books
Apr 20 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Monica Swanson Tesler is a graduate of the University of Michigan Law School, and is an attorney in Boston, where she lives with her family. Her book, Bounders, is in the tradition of Michael Vey and The Unwanteds. Twelve-year-old Jasper and his friends are forced to go up against an alien society in this first book in a brand-new adventure series
Thirteen years ago, Earth Force a space-military agency discovered a connection between brain structure and space travel. Now they’ve brought together the first team of cadets, called Bounders, to be trained as high-level astronauts.

Apr
21
Thu
Jim Ottaviani: The Imitation Game: Alan Turing Decoded @ Nicola's Books
Apr 21 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Jim Ottaviani (“Feynman”, “Primates”) is the world s preeminent writer of comics and graphic novels about science. Notable works include a biography of Niels Bohr and the fast-paced tale of the desperate lives of early paleontologists and “T-Minus: The Race to the Moon”, from Aladdin books. He has worked as a nuclear engineer and is currently employed as a reference librarian in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Award winning authors Jim Ottaviani and Leland Purvis present a historically accurate graphic novel biography of English mathematician and scientist Alan Turing in “The Imitation Game.”
English mathematician and scientist Alan Turing (1912 1954) is credited with many of the foundational principles of contemporary computer science. “The Imitation Game” presents a historically accurate graphic novel biography of Turing’s life, including his groundbreaking work on the fundamentals of cryptography and artificial intelligence. His code breaking efforts led to the cracking of the German Enigma during World War II, work that saved countless lives and accelerated the Allied defeat of the Nazis. While Turing’s achievements remain relevant decades after his death, the story of his life in post-war Europe continues to fascinate audiences today.
Award-winning duo Jim Ottaviani (the #1 “New York Times “bestselling author of “Feynman “and “Primates”) and artist Leland Purvis (an Eisner and Ignatz Award nominee and occasional reviewer for the “Comics Journal”) present a factually detailed account of Turing’s life and groundbreaking research as an unconventional genius who was arrested, tried, convicted, and punished for being openly gay, and whose innovative work still fuels the computing and communication systems that define our modern world. Computer science buffs, comics fans, and history aficionados will be captivated by this riveting and tragic story of one of the 20th century’s most unsung heroes.

Poetry at Literati: Michael Delp, Zilka Joseph, M.L. Liebler @ Literati
Apr 21 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Literati is pleased to welcome three authors from Wayne State University Press’s Made in Michigan series: Michael Delp, Zilka Joseph, and M.L. Liebler.

Michael Delp recently retired from the Interlochen Arts Academy, where he was the director of creative writing for many years. He is the author of numerous collections of prose and poetry, with his most recent collection of short stories being As If We Were Prey. He is also the mentor and advisor to the Front Street Writers Program in Traverse City, which operates under the auspices of the National Writers Series. He lives in Interlochen with his wife, Claudia, and splits his time between there and Reeling Waters, his cabin on the Boardman River.

Zilka Joseph teaches creative writing and is an independent editor and manuscript coach. Her chapbooks, Lands I Live In and What Dread, were nominated for a PEN America and a Pushcart award, respectively. She was awarded a Zell Fellowship, a Hopwood Prize, and the Elsie Choy Lee Scholarship (Center for the Education of Women) from the University of Michigan.

M. L. Liebler is an award-winning poet, literary arts activist, and professor. He is the author of several books of poetry, including Wide Awake in Someone Else’s Dream, and an editor of the anthology Working Words: Punching the Clock and Kicking Out the Jams. He is also co-editor of Bob Seger’s House and Other Stories. He has taught at Wayne State University since 1980.

 

R.J. Fox: Love and Vodka @ Bookbound Bookstore
Apr 21 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

This award-winning local writer reads from Love & Vodka: My Surreal Adventures in the Ukraine, his memoir about how he dropped everything to pursue a romance with a Ukrainian woman. “The reader … will walk away shaky-legged, enlightened, and undoubtedly able to correctly pronounce Dnipropetrovsk,” says local writer Jeff Kass.

Signing.
7 p.m., Bookbound, 1729 Plymouth, Courtyard Shops. Free. 369-4345.

Apr
24
Sun
Jennifer Burd and Laszlo Slomovits: Receiving the Shore @ Nicola's Books
Apr 24 @ 3:00 pm – 4:30 pm

Jennifer Burd has published lyric poetry and haiku in a variety of print and online journals. She is the author of a book of poems, Body and Echo, and a book of creative nonfiction, Daily Bread: A Portrait of Homeless Men & Women of Lenawee County, Michigan. She has co-written (with Laszlo Slomovits) a children’s play based on Patricia Polacco’s picture book I Can Hear the Sun, which was produced in 2015 by Ann Arbor’s Wild Swan Theater. Jennifer received her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Washington, and she teaches online courses through the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis. She works as an editor and writer for HighScope Educational Research Foundation in Ypsilanti, Michigan.

Laszlo Slomovits is one of the twin brothers in Ann Arbor’s nationally-known children’s folk music duo, Gemini (GeminiChildrensMusic.com).  A fine singer and multi-instrumentalist, Laszlo has given concerts throughout the U.S. and a number of his award-winning songs are featured in songbooks music teachers use throughout the country.  In addition to his music for children, Laszlo has set to music the work of many poets. His recordings of these song-settings include five CDs of the poetry of ancient Sufi mystics, Rumi and Hafiz as well as “White Picture” by the Holocaust-era Czech poet Jiri Orten and “Cry of Freedom,” the poetry of contemporary American poet Linda Nemec Foster.

Apr
25
Mon
Nick Tobier: Utopia Toolbox @ Literati
Apr 25 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Literati is pleased to welcome Nick Tobier in support of his book, written with Juliane Stiegele, Utopia Toolbox: An Incitement to Radical Creativity. Please note that this event will take place on our main floor.

Think of a hybrid between something like a how-to book and a theoretical framework that asks artists, designers, planners, architects and cultural producers to consider their actions in context. Utopia Toolbox contains an anthology of texts, quotations, interviews, documentation of art and design projects, and do-it-yourself actions and performances.

The contributions in practice and in text are from a broad array of disciplinary rubrics, including philosophy, art, science, technology, economics, and spirituality. They also provide perspectives from across the stages of life–from an 8 year-old child to octogenarian physicist Hans-Peter Duerr. In content and in proximity to one another, the wide-ranging contributions offer unexpected and fresh impulses, directions, estimations, suggestions and approaches to serve as a catalyst for creativity. The book encourages new and unknown combinations of thinking and also contains a number of empty pages for readers to sketch their own ideas and thinking processes.

Nick Tobier is an Associate Professor at the Stamps School of Art and Design and the Center for Entrepreneurship in the College of Engineering at the University of Michigan. His focus as an artist and designer is with the social lives of public places, both in built structures and events.

 

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