Calendar

Nov
24
Mon
“Meet an Alum” Fireside Chat @ Greene Lounge, Residential College
Nov 24 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Jon Michael Darga, a 2014 RC Creative Writing (honors) graduate, answers your questions about how to pursue a creative career in publishing.

Jon wrote his senior thesis on women and the medieval modern in The Lord of the Rings . He was happily fixated on semicolons and Oxford commas as the editor of last year’s RC Review. Interning with Midwestern Gothic literary magazine and publishing press, Jon co-created theVoices of the Middle West annual festival, organized book tours, and came to realize his love of all things publishing. After attending the Columbia Publishing Course, Jon now works as an agent’s assistant at Park Literary in New York City.ago Reader’s Pure Fiction Issue and Midwestern Gothi
c, among other places. He is also an editor at the Great Lakes Review where he coordinates the online Narrative Map essay project.

Nov
29
Sat
Small Business Saturday Extravaganza @ Literati Bookstore
Nov 29 @ 10:00 am – 10:00 pm
Small Business Saturday extravaganza!
On November 29th, authors will volunteer at the store and talk about their favorite books! This is part of a nationwide Indies First campaign that pairs authors with indie bookstores, and we’re excited to take part.
Several notable authors will participate, including Peter Ho Davies, RC Creative Writng alum and U-M English Professor Laura Kasischke, U-M History alum James Tobin, Deb Pilutti,Michael Byers, Keith Taylor, Raymond McDaniel, and Douglas Trevor.
Then, at 7pm, Philip and Erin Stead return for another round of their immensally popular “Deep Cuts with the Steads,” a series where they talk about their obscure, favorite, and off-the-beaten path children’s books. This event is a can’t-miss, and perfect for the holidays.

 

Dec
1
Mon
Discussion with Laura Kasischke @ Hatcher Library, Room 100
Dec 1 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

RC Creative Writing alumna and U-M English professor Laura Kasischke, a nationally acclaimed poet and novelist, and local poet Megan Levad, the U-M Zell Writers’ Program assistant director, discuss Kasischke’s The Infinitesmals, a new collection of poems.

Dec
3
Wed
Lecture: Jesmyn Ward @ Rackham Amphitheater
Dec 3 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Talk by U-M creative writing grad Jesmyn Ward, author of Salvage the Bones, a 2011 National Book Award-winning novel about a motherless family, , and the 2013 memoir, Men We Reaped, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography. Her talk addresses her writing process and how her experiences growing up poor and black in the South continue to influence her work.

Dec
16
Tue
Reading: Scott Beal @ Sweetwaters
Dec 16 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

This local poet, an award-winning U-M creative writing grad, reads from Wait ‘Til You Have Real Problems, his recently published debut collection which deploys familiar characters from Rapunzel to Perseus and whimsically surreal tall tales to explore the varied and violent forces that shape human identities. MacArthur-winning poet and former U-M English professor Alice Fulton praises Beal’s “revelatory” tales for their “surprising linguistic and narrative moves [that] elicit the unbidden traumas and dazzling weirdness of lived experience. The program begins with open mike readings.

Feb
12
Thu
Reading: Scott Beal @ Bookbound
Feb 12 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

This local poet, an award-winning U-M creative writing grad, reads from Wait ‘Til You Have Real Problems, his recently published debut collection which deploys familiar characters from Rapunzel to Perseus and whimsically surreal tall tales to explore the varied and violent forces that shape human identities. The program begins with open mike readings.

Feb
13
Fri
Poetry at Literati: Katie Hartsock and Laura Kasischke @ Literati Bookstore
Feb 13 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm

Katie Hartsock is the author of a poetry chapbook, Hotels, Motels, and Extended Stays, published by Toadlily Press in their 2014 Quartet Series. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Beloit Poetry Journal, Crab Orchard Review, DIAGRAM, Massachusetts Review, Measure, Michigan Quarterly Review, RHINO, and Southwest Review; and in the anthology Down to the Dark River: Poems about the Mississippi River (Louisiana Literature Press, 2015). She holds a MFA from the University of Michigan and will receive a PhD in Comparative Literary Studies from Northwestern University in summer 2015. Her full-length manuscript has been a finalist for the Yale Series of Younger Poets and the New Criterion Poetry Prize.

RC Writing alumna and U-M professor Laura Kasischke has published eight collections of poetry and eight novels. Her novels include Suspicious River (1996), White Bird in a Blizzard (1999), and The Life Before Her Eyes(2002). They have been translated widely, and adapted for film.  She has been the recipient of the National Book Critics Circle Award for poetry, a Guggenheim Fellowship, two creative writing fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the DiCastagnola Award from the Poetry Society of America, several Pushcart Prizes, the Bobst Award for Emerging Writers, and the Beatrice Hawley Award. Her other collections of poetry include Space, in Chains, Lilies, Without, Gardening in the Dark, Wild Brides, Housekeeping in a DreamFire and Flower and What It Wasn’t. Her poems and stories have been published in Ploughshares, The American Poetry Review, The New Republic , The Kenyon Review, Poetry, The Iowa Review and elsewhere.

Note: rescheduled from February 11

Mar
19
Thu
Conversation: Martin Espada and Khaled Mattawa @ Stern Auditorium
Mar 19 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

U-M English professor and renowned poet Mattawa and highly acclaimed Latino poet Espada discuss Espada’s work. In conjunction with Espada’s reading on Mar. 17.

Mar
21
Sat
Voices of the Middle West Festival
Mar 21 @ 10:00 am – 8:00 pm

Midwestern author Stuart Dybek will be keynote speaker at the second annual Voices of the Middle West festival on Saturday, March 21, 2015, at the University of Michigan Residential College, 721 E. University Ave. in Ann Arbor.

The free festival  features panel discussions by authors and publishers, an open mic event, and an all-day bookfair showcasing literary journals and independent presses from all over the Midwest, with issues and books for sale.

Stuart Dybek, a lifelong Midwesterner and author of The Coast of Chicago, Childhood and Other Neighborhoods, and Paper Lantern, will give a keynote address at 5 pm. A public reception and book signing will follow.

The festival will bring together U-M students and faculty with writers and presses from all over the Midwest to showcase the rich, magnificent work being produced here in the Midwest, the stories that need to be told, the voices that need to be heard. Panel discussions on fables in Midwestern literature, gender parity in publishing, and other literary discussions will feature outstanding regional authors Laura Kasischke, CJ Hribal, Caitlin Horrocks, Anne Valente, Marcus Wicker, Matt Bell, and more. The festival’s authors will read at Literati Bookstore, 124 East Washington Street in Ann Arbor, on Friday, March 20th beginning at 6 PM.

More information at http://midwestgothic.com/voices/

 

Mar
31
Tue
Conversation: Lolita Hernandez and Laura Thomas @ Hatcher Library
Mar 31 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

Author’s Forum Presents: Making Callaloo in Detroit: A Conversation with the RC’s Lolita Hernandez and Laura Thomas

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