Monday, 28 December 2009

Sam Byfield reviews the APC New Poets Series

Sam Byfield reviews the Australian Poetry Centre "New Poets Series" (four chapbooks: Canyon by Andrew Slattery, Little bit long time by Ali Cobby Eckermann, Evengelyne by Helen Hagermann and Awake During Anaesthetic by Kimberley Mann) at Cordite. You can read the article here.
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Sam Byfield's poetry and creative non-fiction were published in issue#5 of Cha. He was also the poetry editor for issue #11 of the journal.
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Sam Byfield in Southerly and Island



Sam Byfield's poem "Writing My Way Back to Her" is now published in Southerly (Vol. 69, No. 1) and his poem "Ashes" is published in Island (Issue #118).


Sam Byfield's poetry and creative non-fiction were published in issue#5 of Cha. He was also the poetry editor for issue #11 of the journal.

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Nirmala Pillai in Literature SouthWest


Nirmala Pillai's poems "Cell Poetry" and "Meeting Again" are now published in Literature SouthWest.


Nirmala Pillai's fiction has been published in issue #5 of Cha.

Sushma Joshi in World Literature Today



Sushma Joshi's "The Little Girl Who Died" is now published in World Literature Today. You can read it here.

Sushma Joshi's fiction has been published in issue #3 of Cha.

First Asian Festival of Children's Content 6 to 9 May 2010, Singapore

Asian Festival of Children's Content (AFCC), 6 - 9 May 2010

The organsation is expecting about 300 to 400 delegates from all over Asia, Australia and New Zealand, North America and Europe to attend the event. The National Book Development Council of Singapore (NBDCS or Book Council in short), nonprofit charitable organisation set up in 1969, has been organising the Asian Children's Writers & Illustrators Conference (ACWIC) for the past 10 years and this time it will take the lead and launch the inaugural AFCC. The conference will feature new programmes, including the Asian Children's Media Market, Children's Book Award, Children's Writers Award as well as workshops and master classes.

The goals of the Asian Festival of Children's Content are to:
-Develop the writing and the illustrating of Children's stories and content.
-Promote publishing of Asian content.
-Provide the world with access to such material created in Asia.

You can see an e-flyer of the event here.

15th annual Washington University Summer Writers Institute

The 15th annual Washington University Summer Writers Institute will be held in St. Louis June 14-25, 2010. Workshops will include fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, and the Young Writers Institute.

Held each June, The Summer Writers Institute consists of two weeks of intensive writing workshops. Choose from fiction (popular or literary), poetry, or creative nonfiction. The two weeks include personal conferences, readings by guest faculty, craft talks, and panel discussions with writers and editors. Participants may attend on a non-credit basis or choose to earn three college credits.In the afternoons, accomplished writers and editors from Missouri and Illinois read from their work and discuss writing and publishing. The Faculty for the 2010 session includes:

Sally Van Doren will teach the 2010 Poetry Workshop. She received the 2007 Walt Whitman Award from the Academy of American Poets for her first collection of poems, Sex at Noon Taxes, which was published in spring of 2008 by Louisiana State University Press. Her poems appear recently in: American Poet, Barrow Street, Boulevard, 5AM, Margie, The New Republic, River Styx, Southwest Review and Verse Daily. Born and raised in St. Louis, Van Doren graduated from Princeton University and the Creative Writing Program of the University of Missouri-St. Louis. She has taught creative writing in the St. Louis Public Schools and curates the Sunday Poetry Workshops for the St. Louis Poetry Center.

Fiction Workshop instructor Rebecca Rasmussen is the author of the novel The Bird Sisters, forthcoming from Random House in Spring 2011. Her stories have appeared in TriQuarterly, The Mid-American Review, and elsewhere. Recently she was named a finalist in the Glimmer Train short story contest as well as Narrative Magazine's 30 Below Contest for writers under the age of thirty, and was the recipient of the Toby Thompson Prize for excellence in nonfiction writing. She received her MFA in fiction from the Program for Poets & Writers at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. She lives in St. Louis with her husband and daughter, and teaches writing at Fontbonne University.

Mathew Smith, instructor for the 2010 Young Writers Institute, received his M.F.A. in fiction writing from Washington University. His novel The Asian Fetish was a finalist for the Parthenon Prize and received a Hopwood Award. His short fiction has appeared in The Southern Humanities Review. He was a Rackam Fellow at the University of Michigan where he taught poetry and fiction. He also taught creative writing in the Detroit Public Schools’ Poet-in-the-Schools program and the Michigan Prison Creative Arts Project. Before moving to St. Louis, he spent three years in China where he taught English at Shanghai International High School and Tongji University. He lives with his wife in University City and teaches at Washington University.

Kathleen Finneran will teach the 2010 Creative Nonfiction Workshop. She is the author of the memoir The Tender Land: A Family Love Story (Houghton Mifflin, 2000; Mariner Paperbacks, 2003) for which she won the Whiting Writer’s Award. Her essays have been published in various anthologies, including The Place That Holds Our History (Southwest Missouri State University Press, 1990), Seeking St. Louis: Voices from a River City (Missouri Historical Society Press, 2000), and The “M” Word: Writers on Same-Sex Marriage (Algonquin, 2004). She has received the Missouri Arts Council Writers’ Biennial Prize and a Guggenheim Fellowship and has had residencies at the MacDowell Colony for the Arts and Cottages at Hedgebrook. She has taught writing at Gotham Writers Workshops, the University of Missouri-St. Louis, Washington University, and St. Louis Community College. She is currently at work on her second memoir, Motherhood Once Removed: On Being an Aunt.

Keynote Speaker Devin Johnston spent his early years in the Piedmont of North Carolina. He has lived in Chicago where he was poetry editor for Chicago Review. His third book of poetry, Sources, was named a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award (TPP, 2008). He is the author of two previous books of poetry, Aversions and Telepathy. He currently lives in St. Louis, teaches at Saint Louis University, and directs Flood Editions, an independent publisher of poetry.

Traditionally, Institute participants finish up the two weeks with an open mike reading of their own work.

Wednesday, 23 December 2009

Ivy Alvarez -- reading from MORTAL

*** Please note that this event has been postponed to Thu, 21 Jan, due to the snow. Amended poster here.**


UNI-VERSE presents
reading from Mortal


'An incredible first collection of poems … weaving mythology and personal experience … examines the relationship between a mother and daughter and how the spectre of breast cancer affects them.'


With an introduction by Duncan McGibbon (author of The Consolations). Mortal is published by Red Morning Press (Washington, DC)

Wednesday 13 January 2010 ● 12.30-14.00VISITORS WELCOME £4 ● MEMBERS / STUDENTS £2Soft drinks available, bring your own snacks/ sandwiches

Uni-verse is hosted by Bath Stanza Rep for The Poetry Society, Nikki Bennett

Bath Royal Literary & Scientific Institution
16-18 Queen Square Bath BA1 2HN
tel: 01225 312 084
web: http://www.brlsi.org/admin/group.cfm?group=uv

Ivy Alvarez's poetry has been published in issue #7 of Cha.

Monday, 21 December 2009

Divya Rajan in Apparatus Magazine


Divya Rajan's new poem "Mumbai Rains Childhood" is now published in the December 2009 issue of Apparatus Magazine. Read the poem here.


Divya Rajan's poetry has been published in issue #8 of Cha. Her poem, "Factory Girls", was discussed in A Cup of Fine Tea and nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

Sunday, 20 December 2009

Bob Bradshaw in Paumanok


Bob Bradshaw's poem "The Middle Years", first published in Stirring, is now published in Paumanok. You can read it here.


O Thiam Chin in qarrtsiluni


O Thiam Chin's fiction "Trance" is now published in the "Words of Power" issue of qarrtsiluni. You can read the piece here.


O Thiam Chin's fiction has been published in issue #8 of Cha.

Friday, 18 December 2009

Ching-In Chen in Monday Night



Ching-In Chen's new poem "The Sky's Full Contents" is now published in the eighth issue of Monday Night and can be read here.

Ching-In Chen's poetry has been published inissue #6 of Cha.

Thursday, 17 December 2009

Gillian Sze in CV2 and Ricepaper Magazine

picture courtesy of Gillian

Gillian Sze's poem "Elegy I" is in The Open Issue of Contemporary Verse 2: The Canadian Journal of Poetry and Critical Writing (Fall 2009). And two poems, "Flutter Bug" and "Freestanding", and a Writers-in-Dialogue (collaborative interview) between Gillian and BC poet, Fiona Lam, are in the latest issue of Ricepaper Magazine (Issue 14.4, Gender).


Gillian Sze's poetry has been published in issue #5, issue #6 and issue #8 of Cha. She will be the guest editor of the February 2010 issue (issue#10) of the journal. You can read an analysis of her poem, "Sonnet II", here.

Saturday, 12 December 2009

Ivy Alvarez talks about her first book, MORTAL


Ivy Alvarez talks about her first book, Mortal, here.

Ivy Alvarez's poetry has been published in issue #7 of Cha.

Sunday, 6 December 2009

Divya Rajan in Word Catalyst Magazine



Divya Rajan's photo sequence "From the newly renamed Willis Tower, Chicago Series" is now published in the December 2009 issue of Word Catalyst Magazine. See here for these stunning images.

Divya Rajan's poetry has been published in issue #8 of Cha. Her poem, "Factory Girls", was discussed in A Cup of Fine Tea and nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

Wednesday, 2 December 2009

Kristine Ong Muslim in poeticdiversity

Read Kristine Ong Muslim's poems "The Smallest Hollow" and "A Blind Item from a Local Tabloid" in the December 2009 issue (Vol. 7, issue 3) of poeticdiversity.



Kristine Ong Muslim's poetry has been published in issue #9 of Cha. You can also listen to her recording of Cha's co-editor's poem "The Argument" here.

Ivy Alvarez in Holly Rose Review

Read Ivy Alvarez's new poem "From wood" in the third issue of Holly Rose Review.


Ivy Alvarez's poetry has been published in issue #7 of Cha.


Tuesday, 1 December 2009

The Re-Launch of THE BOOK OF HOPES AND DREAMS



The Book Of Hopes And Dreams is a charity, poetry anthology, featuring many award-winning and internationally respected writers, including Simon Armitage, Margaret Atwood, Moniza Alvi, Alan Brownjohn, David Constantine, Cyril Dabydeen, Carol Anne Duffy, Ian Duhig, Ruth Fainlight, Vicki Feaver, Elaine Feinstein, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Charles Ades Fishman, Magi Gibson, Alasdair Gray, Tony Harrison, John Heath-Stubbs, Michael Horovitz, Mimi Khalvati, Tom Leonard, Robert Mezey, Edwin Morgan, Lawrence Sail, Penelope Shuttle, Jon Stallworthy, Anne Stevenson and many others. Money raised from sales of this book will go to Spirit Aid for their aid programme in Afghanistan.

The Book Of Hopes And Dreams has been re-launched as an e-book and is available for a minimum donation of $2 (though larger donations will be gratefully received). Please make your payment via paypal to dee@thunderburst.co.uk and send an email to that address to let me know you've paid. As soon as funds are received you will be emailed your e-book. All funds raised (minus paypal admin charges will) go direct to Spirit Aid.

NB: Spirit Aid is one of the best, most-efficient charities in Scotland. It is staffed entirely by volunteers, who donate their time willingly because they wholeheartedly believe in the ethos of Spirit Aid, which is to give practical assistance to war or disaster torn regions of the world and to promote peace in a secular, non-religious way. Because it is staffed entirely by volunteers, 90% of all funds raised go direct to its projects... unlike many other charities, which have to deal with huge staff payroll and other administrative costs.

A Facebook group has been set up to help publicise The Book Of Hopes And Dreams. Members will be informed of what is happening and will be kept posted about sales and money raised.

Please please please, help to spread the word about the re-launch of The Book Of Hopes And Dreams. You can help, just by forwarding this email onto your friends. Alternatively, if you have a Facebook, please post the link to The Book Of Hopes And Dreams Facebook page on your Facebook page. Or you can post it on your blog or on your personal website. This will take just a minute or two of your time, and may help to generate more sales, which means that more children in Afghanistan will get the medical attention that you and I take for granted.

To find out more about what Spirit Aid are doing in Afghanistan, click on this link:
http://www.spiritaid.org.uk/afghanistan.html

Thank you.

I wish you all the best

Dee Sunshine
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