My Calendar

November 4, 2018

CONVERSATIONS AT THE CULVER: FIRE AND RAIN: ECOPOETRY OF CALIFORNIA

CONVERSATIONS AT THE CULVER: FIRE AND RAIN: ECOPOETRY OF CALIFORNIA


November 4, 2018

On November 4, please join us we celebrate the publication of Fire and Rain: Ecopoetry of California. Edited by Lucille Lang Day and Ruth Nolan, with a Foreword  by Dana Gioia and an Introduction by Jack Foley, Fire and Rain  includes more than 250 poems by 149 contributors, including Ellen Bass, Christopher Buckley, Alison Hawthorne Deming, Camille T. Dungy, Ann Fisher-Wirth, Rebecca Foust, Dana Gioia, Rafael Jesús González, Emily Grosholz, Robert Hass, Brenda Hillman, Jane Hirshfield, Ursula K. Le Guin, Lynne Knight, Stephen Meadows, A. D. Miller, Gary Snyder, and David St. John.

 

Of Fire and Rain, Pattiann Rogers calls it “not only a beautiful and thorough anthology but an homage to California, its varieties of landscapes, and the amazing poetry it has evoked.”

 

Malcolm Margolin of Heyday reminds us "[t]he battles environmentalists fight on land, in the legislatures, or in the courts are won or lost first in the human imagination, and the range, depth, and vitality of this selection of poems will take the imagination by storm.”

 

"I went back to soulful, pristine, early James Taylor to make sure I was feeling the wet, cleansing urgency of Lucille Lang Day and Ruth Nolan's burning anthology. Anthology, ecology, mythology, and all the ‘ologies’ boil down to four-letter words—sacred kissing cousins—love and life”, says Al Young, former California Poet Laureate.

 

From the introduction, Dana Gioia, California’s current Poet Laureate, notes "Day and Nolan have done a considerable service to select and gather these poems. Their ample anthology provides a generous record of California poets’ love and concern for their common world. What more important theme can we in this golden land share?”

 

About the readers:

 

John Brantingham is Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park’s first poet laureate. His work has been featured in hundreds of magazines and The Best Small Fictions 2016. He has ten books of poetry and fiction including The L.A. Fiction Anthology (Red Hen Press) and A Sublime and Tragic Dance (Cholla Needles Press). He teaches at Mt. San Antonio College.

 

Thea Gavin is a native of Orange, CA, where she never gets tired of shoelessly exploring--and writing about--her local native plant communities. In 2011 she spent three life-changing weeks as National Park Service Artist-in-Residence at Grand Canyon's North Rim, where she now returns as often as possible, including each June to lead a creative writing workshop for the Grand Canyon Association Field Institute. After retiring in 2017 from twenty years of teaching writing at Concordia University Irvine, Thea has been enjoying more opportunities to wander, write, and inspire others to "think outside the shoe" via her poems, essays, and presentations. theagavin.com; @theagavin; instagram.com/theagavin/

 

Ruth Nolan is professor of English and creative writing at College of the Desert in Palm Springs, CA and is a scholar, author and lecturer focusing primarily on topics of  California Desert environment, culture and literature. A former wildland firefighter for the US Forest Service and BLM California Desert District. She is the author Ruby Mountain (Finishing Line Press); editor of No Place for a Puritan: The Literature of California’s Deserts (Heyday Books); and co-editor of Fire and Rain: Ecopoetry of California (Scarlet Tanager.) She is the winner of the 2018 Los Angeles Poetry Society Award and the recipient of a 2018 Love of Learning Award from the Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society for her forthcoming book Fire on the Mojave: Stories from the Deserts and Mountains of Inland Southern California, for which she also won a 2017 California Writers Residency Award.

 

Chad Sweeney is the author of six books of poetry, including Little Million Doors (Nightboat Books, 2019) and Parable of Hide and Seek (Alice James Books, 2010). His poems have been included in Best American Poetry, The Pushcart Prize Anthology and Verse Daily. He is an associate professor of creative writing at California State University San Bernardino and editor of Ghost Town Lit Mag.

 

Jennifer K. Sweeney is the author of three poetry collections: Little Spells, newly released from New Issues Press, How to Live on Bread and Music, which received the James Laughlin Award, the Perugia Press Prize and a nomination for the Poets’ Prize, and Salt Memory. She is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize, a grant from the San Francisco Arts Commission, a Hedgebrook residency, the Elinor Benedict Poetry Award from Passages North and two Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg awards. Recent poems have appeared in Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day series, American Poetry Review, Cimarron Review, Linebreak, Mid-American Review, New American Writing, Pleiades, and Verse Daily.

liz gonzález is the author of the poetry collection Beneath Bone (Manifest Press 2000). Her awards include an Arts Council for Long Beach Professional Artist Fellowship, an Elizabeth George Foundation Artistic Grant, and residencies at the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts, Lucas Artists Residency Program, and Hedgebrook. Find her at Lizgonzalez.com

Reading will be followed by light refreshments and book sales and signing. The Barbara and Art Culver Center of the Arts is located at 3834 Main Street in downtown Riverside. This event is free and open to the public.

INLAND EMPIRE LITERARY ROUNDTABLE MEETING

INLAND EMPIRE LITERARY ROUNDTABLE MEETING


November 4, 2018

Please join us for the next Poets & Writers' Inland Empire Literary Roundtable Meeting co-hosted by the Inlandia Institute at the Garcia Center for the Arts:

Wednesday, November 14, 2018  5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
Garcia Center for the Arts
Library Room
536 West 11th Street
San Bernardino, CA 92410

This free, informal meeting is a great way to connect with fellow presenters, presses, teachers, and writers. Roundtable Meetings bring together people from all areas of the literary community to exchange ideas, news, and resources. It's also a chance to learn about P&W and how our Readings & Workshops program might support your literary events.

Notes from past roundtable meetings (including Sacramento, San Bernardino, and South Pasadena) are publicly available online (http://at.pw.org/2Bdmwfg).

Please RSVP to jfitzgerald@pw.org to reserve your seat, and feel free to share this event information with your networks.

***

Poets & Writers is the primary source of information, support, and guidance for creative writers. Learn more at pw.org.

This activity is supported in part by the California Arts Council, a state agency. Learn more at www.arts.ca.gov.