
3/1/08
CFS: Watershed-The Journal of the Susquehanna

Poetry Ink Reading: Philadelphia: 3/30/08
Patricia Hampl: Bryn Mawr: 3/27/08
Patricia Hampl is the author of books including Woman Before an Aquarium, Blue Arabesque: a Search for the Sublime (about a work by Matisse), I Could Tell You Stories: Sojourns in the Land of Memory, A Romantic Education and Virgin Time: In Search of the Contemplative Life. Her new book is The Florist's Daughter.
This reading is free and open to the public. For further information, contact the Office of Public Affairs at (610) 526-6520 or info@brynmawr.edu.
Bret Johnston (fiction): Bucknell: 3/25/08

Bret Anthony Johnston is the author of the internationally acclaimed debut collection Corpus Christi: Stories (2004) and the editor of Naming the World and Other Exercises for the Creative Writer (forthcoming, 2008). His work has appeared in such magazines as Paris Review, Oxford American, and Tin House, and in such anthologies as New Stories from the South: the Year’s Best, Best American Short Stories, and Prize Stories: the O. Henry Awards. A graduate of Miami University and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he is currently the director of creative writing at Harvard University.
J.C. Todd: Kingston: 3/21/08
Third Friday Art Exhibit & Poetry Reading
Paper Kite Press Studio & Gallery ~ 443 Main Street, Kingston PA
6:00 PM: New Paintings of Veda (Life) Artwork of Brooke Wandall.
Artist's reception. Refreshments served.
Gallery hours are by appointment, and Sundays noon - 5 p.m.
8:30 PM: Featured Reader J.C. Todd and Open Mic.
J.C. reads from her newest collection of poems from Wind Publications, What Space This Body. Her poems have appeared in The American Poetry Review, The Paris Review, Prairie Schooner, Shade(2004) and Verse Daily. Awards include a Leeway Award for Poetry, a Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Poetry Fellowship, a New Jersey Governor's Award for Arts Education, an international exchange fellowship to Schloss Wiepersdorf arts colony in Germany and a scholarship to the Baltic Centre for Writers and Translators in Sweden. She has edited translation features for Frigate and The Drunken Boat. She is a visiting lecturer in Creative Writing at Bryn Mawr College. A book signing will follow her reading. Arrive early to sign up for the open mic portion of the evening, and to check out the art.
Ellen Dore Watson: Bloomsburg: 3/20/08
Watson serves as Director of the Poetry Center at Smith College and poetry editor of The Massachusetts Review. She is the author of four books of poems, including We Live in Bodies and Ladder Music, winner of the New England/New York award from Alice James Books and, most recently, This Sharpening, from Tupelo Press. In 1998, Library Journal named her “One of 24 Poets for the 21st Century.” Among her honors are a Massachusetts Cultural Council Artists Grant, a Rona Jaffe Writers Award, two Pushcart nominations, and a National Endowment for the Arts Translation Fellowship. Watson has translated a dozen books from the Brazilian Portuguese, including The Alphabet in the Park: Selected Poems of Adélia Prado (Wesleyan University Press), and also co-translates contemporary Arabic language poetry with Saadi Simawe. She makes her home in Conway, Massachusetts.
This event is free and open to the public.
James Harms: Lycoming: 3/18/08

Sapphire: Bloomsburg: 3/18/08

Sapphire is the author of two books of poetry, Black Wings & Blind Angels and American Dreams. Her novel, Push, was published in 1996 and won the Book-of-the-Month Club Stephen Crane Award for First Fiction and the Black Caucus of the American Library Association's First Novelist Award. Sapphire's poetry and prose have appeared in numerous journals and publications, including The New Yorker, The Black Scholar, and The New York Times Book Review.
This reading is free and open to the public.
Ellen Dore Watson: Bucknell: 3/18/08

G C Waldrep: Bloomsburg: 3/11/08
River Poets Feature: Award-winning poet G.C. Waldrep.
Open Reading after. MC: Dick Sweeney.
G.C. Waldrep’s books of poems are Goldbeater's Skin and Disclamor; he is also the author of two chapbooks, The Batteries (New Michigan Press, 2006) and One Way No Exit (Tarpaulin Sky, 2008). His poems have appeared in Poetry, Ploughshares, Kenyon Review, Gettysburg Review, Boston Review, New England Review, Georgia Review, Colorado Review, American Letters & Commentary, Tin House, New American Writing, and other journals. His work has received awards from the Academy of American Poets, the Poetry Society of America, the North Carolina Arts Council, and the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. Waldrep teaches creative writing and directs the Bucknell Seminar for Younger Poets.
Jon Thompson & Justin Vitiello: Philadelphia: 3/11/08
Jon Thompson is an associate professor of English at North Carolina State University, where he teaches courses in twentieth century literature. In addition to his publications in poetry, he has published Fiction, Crime and Empire (University of Illinois Press, 1993). He also edits Free Verse: A Journal of Contemporary Poetry & Poetics and is the editor of Parlor Press's new poetry series, Free Verse Editions.
Justin Vitiello was born in New City in 1941. After his B.A. in English and Spanish at Brown University (1963), he spent a year in Madrid as a Fulbright Scholar. He attended the University of Michigan, staying ten years (1964-73) to do a doctorate in Comparative Literature. His work as an activist has shaped his life and writings, notably with Danilo Dolci in Sicily and the USA, the nonviolent movement in Italy and India, the anti-nuke mobilization in Rome and Philadelphia, and the Wobblies (the Industrial Workers of the World) - everywhere. Since 1974, he has taught Italian and Comparative Literature at Temple University in Philadelphia and Rome, focusing his creative, political and scholarly writings on America, Italy and Spain. His books of poetry published are: Vanzetti's Fish Cart, subway home, and Suicide of an Ethnic Poet.
Hosted by Justin Vitiello; open reading to follow.
Poetry Contest: Pocono Armchair Review
Prize: $50 and publication in the Review.
Fee: Only $1. Send check to address below, or send via PayPal to editor e-mail below.
Please send poems as part of the body of your e-mail (no attachments, please) to editor@poconoarmchairreview.com. Paper submissions should be sent to:
The Pocono Armchair Review, 203 West Hazard St, PO Box 4, Summit Hill PA 18250.
Please type submissions, with a one-inch margin, double spaced, one side of the paper only.
Entry deadline: April 30, 2008.
Click here for general submission guidelines.
Barbara Crooker & David Brooks: Pottsville: 3/8/08
2/1/08
CFS: Washington Prize
The Word Works announces its 28th annual Washington Prize competition, offering $1,500 and publication for a volume of original poetry by a living American writer. Previous winners of the Washington Prize include Prartho Sereno (the 2007 winner for her book Call from Paris), John Surowiecki, Richard Lyons, Carrie Bennett, Ron Mohring, Fred Marchant, and Enid Shomer.
Send manuscripts of 48 to 64 pages between Jan. 15 and March 1, 2008, inclusive. Please do not send manuscripts before Jan. 15 or after March 1. Author’s name, address, phone number, e-mail address, and signature should appear on the title page only. Please include a table of contents containing the manuscript title, as well as a cover letter containing your bio and publication acknowledgements. Biographical and publication information must not appear anywhere in the manuscript except the cover letter, which must be detachable from the rest of the manuscript. Use a binder clip to fasten the manuscript. No manuscripts will be returned, but please include a self-addressed, business-sized envelope for notification of contest results.
The winner will be selected by July 1, 2008, and all entrants will receive a copy of the winning book when it is published in January 2009. The entry fee is $25 U.S., by check drawn on a U.S. bank only and made payable to The Word Works. Mail manuscripts to:
Steven B. Rogers, Director
Word Works Washington Prize
3201 Taylor St.
Mt. Rainier, MD 20712
The Word Works is a non-profit literary organization devoted to the dissemination of the best contemporary poetry. It publishes books of poetry in collectors’ editions featuring original artwork. It also sponsors programs such as the Joaquin Miller Cabin poetry reading series in Rock Creek Park and the Cafe Muse Literary Series in Chevy Chase, Md. The Word Works celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2004, and has sponsored the Washington Prize since 1981. For more information about The Word Works and the Washington Prize, please visit http://www.wordworksdc.com/.
Dan Waber: Scranton: 2/29/08
Sascha Feinstein: Bloomsburg: 2/26/08

Dr. Feinstein, a professor of English at Lycoming College and co-editor of The Jazz Poetry Anthology, will give a campus workshop discussing the making of jazz poems earlier in the day.
The reading is free and open to the public.
John Hoppenthaler: Bucknell: 2/26/08

John Hoppenthaler is the author of two books of poetry, Lives of Water (2003) and Anticipate the Coming Reservoir (2008). His poems have appeared in Ploughshares, Virginia Quarterly Review, McSweeney’s, Southern Review, and other magazines, and in several anthologies. A reviewer, essayist, and interviewer, he is editor of the literary journal Kestrel. Hoppenthaler served for several years as personal assistant to the novelist Toni Morrison. A regular faculty member at the West Virginia Writers Workshop and Writers at the Beach, he is assistant professor of English at East Carolina University.
The new Writers Up Close series brings to campus poets who also work in arts administration. Each poet speaks on his or her area of editorial/administrative expertise as a guest in Shara McCallum's course on arts administration, then presents a poetry reading in the Willard Smith Library.
This event is free and open to the public.
Poetry Residence at Bucknell: 2/23 deadline
Philip Roth Residence in Creative Writing
Named for the Pulitzer Prize-winning Bucknell graduate and initiated in the fall of 1993, the Philip Roth Residence in Creative Writing offers an emerging writer four months of unfettered writing time during Bucknell's fall semester, without formal academic obligations. The Residence is designed to grant the writer time to complete a first or second book. The resident presents a public reading of his or her work and otherwise constitutes a literary presence on campus during the fall. Providing lodging on campus, an office in the Stadler Center for Poetry, and a stipend of $4,000, the Residence is awarded to writers of prose (fiction or creative nonfiction) and poets on an alternating basis.
The Stadler Center is currently accepting applications from poets for the 2008-09 Philip Roth Residence. The Residence will extend from late August 2008 through mid-December 2008. The application deadline is February 23; click here for application instructions.
Chestnut Hill College Poetry Festival: Philly: 2/22-23
February 22, 2008, 7 PM to February 23, 2008: Chestnut Hill College, 9601 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia.
Friday evening will feature a performance by musician Shawn Germain, who released his debut album titled "A Neverending Season" in 2007. Following his performance, there will be an open mic for poetry readings and music. On Saturday evening, three poetry readings will be dedicated to William Walker, Ph.D., senior vice president of the College, on the occasion of his retirement in June. The speakers for Saturday nights poetry readings will be Eli Goldblatt, John Ebersole, and Elizabeth Pearson.
For more information, call 215-248-7001 or contact chcapply@chc.edu
Heather McNaugher & Kirk Nesset: Pittsburgh: 2/22/08
McNaugher is the author of the forthcoming Panic & Joy; Nesset is the winner of the 2007 Drue Heinz Literature Prize.