My Calendar

Events in September 2019

  • - LITERATURE ON THE LAWN FEATURING ANGELA LLOYD'S STORYTELLING CONCERTS
    LITERATURE ON THE LAWN FEATURING ANGELA LLOYD'S STORYTELLING CONCERTS

    LITERATURE ON THE LAWN FEATURING ANGELA LLOYD'S STORYTELLING CONCERTS


    September 5, 2019

    One of the qualities to anticipate in Angela Lloyd’s storytelling concerts is the music in the air with a washboard heartbeat. Her eclectic repertoire of stories, songs and poetry come from oral and literary traditions as well as the vinyl LP collection her parents collected in the 1950’s and 60’s. Listen for tunes with musical accompaniment on Washboard, Autoharp, Cuatro, spoon and bell. 

    We’ll be gathering outside the public library under the tree shade and spin of Angela’s sunbrella. Wishes take wing when a young boy collects the wet coins from a New Orleans public fountain.Stories share ancient instructions on being resourceful in difficult times.

    This event starts at 7pm on September 5th at the Riverside Public Library, located at 3581 Mission Inn Avenue, Riverside, CA 92501.

    This event is free and open to the public.

    About the Presenter:

    Angela Lloyd, MFA was raised in Caracas, Venezuela with three languages, English, Spanish and Musica. "Diagonally parked in a parallel world". Angela is at home on the plaza, in classrooms, the living room salon and stage. Find her at www.angelalloyd.com

    *Please note Angela Lloyd will be stepping in for Karen Rae Kraut this month.

  • - SHOP FOR A CAUSE AT MADE
    SHOP FOR A CAUSE AT MADE

    SHOP FOR A CAUSE AT MADE


    September 14, 2019

    On Saturday September 14, shop at MADE and 10% of every purchase will be donated to Inlandia. Stop by for author readings:

    Cati Porter 11 am
    Deenaz Coachbuilder 11: 30 am
    Nan Friedley 12 pm
    Carlos Cortes 12:30 pm
    Micah Chatterton 1 pm
    Vince & Cate 1:30 pm

    Every second Saturday MADE gives back to the community through its shop for a cause program. Looking for some unique, Riverside-inspired handmade decor? Local books? A new custom-made armoire? If you can dream it, they have it - or they can make it. Gift local. Jump start your holiday shopping with a trip to MADE.

    About the readers:
    Micah Chatterton writes, edits, teaches and tends library at various locations in the Inland Empire, where he grew up. He is the author of the poetry collection, Go to the Living, a finalist for the Hillary Gravendyk regional prize.

    Deenaz P. Coachbuilder, Ph. D. is an educator, artist, poet and environmental advo-cate. She is the author of two books of poems, Imperfect Fragments, and Metal Horse and Shadows, which have been received with critical acclaim both here and abroad.

    Dr. Carlos E. Cortés is Professor Emeritus of History at UCR. His most recent books are Rose Hill: An Intermarriage before Its Time, and Fourth Quarter: Reflections of a Cranky Old Man, Honorable Mention in the 2017 International Latino Book Awards.

    Nan Friedley is a retired special education teacher and graduate of Ball State Univer-sity. Her writings have been published in Indiana Voice Journal, a poetry chapbook, Short Bus Ride, Inlandia Anthologies, and Three, a nonfiction anthology collection.

    Vince Moses and Cate Whitmore live in Riverside where they operate Vincate and As-sociates Historical Consultants. They are the co-authors of Henry L. A. Jekel: Architect of Eastern Skyscrapers and the California Style.

    Cati Porter is the author of eight books and chapbooks of poetry, most recently The Body at a Loss. She is executive director of Inlandia Institute.

  • - AN AUTHOR'S AFTERNOON AT THE ARLINGTON LIBRARY
    AN AUTHOR'S AFTERNOON AT THE ARLINGTON LIBRARY

    AN AUTHOR'S AFTERNOON AT THE ARLINGTON LIBRARY


    September 21, 2019

    On Saturday, September 21, the Friends of the Library in partnership with Inlandia Institute, presents An Author’s Afternoon at the Arlington Branch Library.

    Join us for readings by local authors, opportunity drawings, and more!

    About the authors:

    Stephanie Barbé Hammer is a five-time Pushcart Prize nominee in fiction, nonfiction and poetry. She has published short stories, poems and lyric essays in the Bellevue Literary Review, Birds We Piled Loosely, Pearl, Isthmus and Hayden’s Ferry Review among other places. She is the author of the magical realist novel, The Puppet Turners of Narrow Interior (Urban Farmhouse Press), the prose poem chapbook Sex with Buildings (Dancing Girl Press), the poetry collection How Formal? (Spout Hill Press), and a how-to-write magical realism manual, Delicious Strangeness (Spout Hill Press). Originally from Manhattan, Stephanie lived in Southern California for many years and now wanders amongst the trees on Whidbey Island WA, looking for a dry cleaner, a taco truck and someone talk to.

    Judy Kronenfeld is the author of four full-length collections and two chapbooks of poet-ry, most recently Bird Flying through the Banquet. Her poems have appeared in Cider Press Review, Cimarron Review, Ghost Town, Miramar, Natural Bridge, New Ohio Re-view, One (Jacar Press), Rattle, South Florida Poetry Journal, Valparaiso Poetry Re-view, and others. Judy is Lecturer Emerita, Creative Writing Department, University of California, Riverside, and an Associate Editor of the online poetry journal, Poemeleon.

    Ben Stoltzfus is Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature, Creative Writing, and French at the University of California, Riverside. He has been honored with a variety of grants and fellowships: Fulbright, Camargo, Creative Arts, and Humanities. He is an internationally recognized Robbe-Grillet, Gide, Hemingway, D. H. Lawrence, and Ma-gritte scholar; also a novelist, poet, and translator. His most recent books include Fall-ing and Other Stories, Dumpster, for God’s Sake and Alliecats, a collaboration with his granddaughter, Allie Kirschner.

    *Sponsored by Friends of the Riverside Public Library and Inlandia Institute.

  • - CONVERSATIONS AT THE CULVER FEATURING HILLARY GRAVENDYK PRIZE WINNERS
    CONVERSATIONS AT THE CULVER FEATURING HILLARY GRAVENDYK PRIZE WINNERS

    CONVERSATIONS AT THE CULVER FEATURING HILLARY GRAVENDYK PRIZE WINNERS


    September 22, 2019

    A celebration of the winners of the Hillary Gravendyk Poetry Prize. Four poets discuss their books of poetry and join in conversation about the poetry process.

    Elizabeth Cantwell is a high school teacher and poet living in Claremont, California, with her husband, two sons, and small dog. She is the author of two books of poetry, Nights I Let The Tiger Get You (Black Lawrence Press) and All The Emergency-Type Structures (Inlandia Institute), which was a finalist for the 2018 National Poetry Series and won the 2018 Regional Hillary Gravendyk Prize. If you need her, you can find her watching horror movies, listening to Fiona Apple, or reading incessantly about climate change.

    Kenji C. Liu is author of Monsters I Have Been (Alice James Books, 2019) and Map of an Onion, national winner of the 2015 Hillary Gravendyk Poetry Prize (Inlandia Insti-tute). His poetry has appeared in American Poetry Review, Poetry Northwest, Gulf Coast, Apogee, and elsewhere, including two chapbooks and several anthologies. An alumnus of Kundiman, VONA/Voices, the Djerassi Resident Artist Program, and the Community of Writers, he lives in occupied Tongva land.

    Rachelle Cruz is from Hayward, California. She is the author of God's Will for Mon-sters (Inlandia, 2017) and Experiencing Comics: An Introduction to Reading, Discuss-ing and Creating Comics, among other books. She hosts The Blood-Jet Writing Hour, a writing podcast with Muriel Leung. She is a Lecturer in the Creative Writing Depart-ment at the University of California, Riverside. An Emerging Voices Fellow, a Kundiman Fellow and a VONA writer, Rachelle lives and writes in Southern California.

    The proud daughter of Filipino immigrants, Michelle Peñaloza is author of Former Possessions of the Spanish Empire, winner of the 2018 Hillary Gravendyk National Poetry Prize. She is also the author of two chapbooks, landscape/heartbreak (Two Sylvias, 2015), and Last Night I Dreamt of Volcanoes (Organic Weapon Arts, 2015).

    This event is free and open to the public. Special thanks to our sponsor, UCR Center for Ideas and Society.