Showing posts with label readings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label readings. Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2009

Upcoming Reading with Michael Martone


For all you local blog readers, get out your pens and mark your calendars: Michael Martone (IU alum, IR contributor, and the author of several works of fiction and nonfiction) is coming to town! Full bio here.

The When & Where:
7pm Thursday Oct 1, The Collins Living-Learning center is hosting the reading in the Formal Lounge of Edmondson (541 N Woodlawn).

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Joyce Carol Oates


Joyce Carol Oates, one of the most prolific and well-known of contemporary writers, visited Bloomington on Monday, and a dozen other students and I had the great pleasure and privilege of sitting in on an intimate question and answer session with her. Later that evening, I also heard her read excerpts from her short story "EDickinsonRepliLuxe," which follows a couple's adoption of an android replica of Emily Dickinson. The story comes from a collection titled Wild Nights: Stories About the Last Days of Poe, Dickinson, Twain, James, and Hemingway.

I'll paraphrase a few of my favorite moments from the day:

1) Oates cannot begin writing a novel until she has three things: the title, the first line, and the last line. once these three form a triangle in her mind, and she can begin filling in the rest.

2) She observed that professors can no longer assign long, sprawling novels to their students anymore. Instead, everyone reads Heart of Darkness or The Great Gatsby, but the bible-thick novels of George Eliot, for instance, are neglected. She went on to admit that people don't read long books like they used to because there is so much else to do, such as the internet or texting. In the nineteenth century, people could read all day, because there was simply nothing else to do. Then she said (and I paraphrase): "If you were gay back then, you couldn't come out, and if you were heterosexual, you couldn't really come out either, so you just read really long books."

3) While she admitted that her stories often circle around themes of "love and violence," she hardly ever intends for that to happen, and moreover, people only question or criticize her use of violence because she is a woman. People rarely ask male writers about the violence in their work.


--Chad

Thursday, April 3, 2008

We brought the funk...

...to the John Waldron Arts Center last night. And wow. It was electrifying. Aracelis Girmay, Tyehimba Jess, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, and Patrick Rosal read to a packed house and brought it down, with harmonicas, hyena-voices, and a whole heck of a lot more crazy stuff.

We're grateful to all the people who put this reading together, including Ross Gay, Cathy Bowman and the rest of the IU Creative Writing department. It was just so great to be a part of this amazing event. Some photos below...and more to come...


Abdel and Danny check out some books before the show.


Abdel explains how our funk got to be so funky.


Aracelis Girmay kicks it off with a funk poem for Sly and the Family Stone.

Tyehimba Jess takes a break from the harmonica.

Aimee Nezhukumatathil explains what happens to an octopus when it gets scared.


Patrick Rosal closes out the set with an excerpt from his new work in progress, a novel in verse.