The Get Lit! Festival is having an informal poetry salon, modeled after the salons of early 20th century Paris. The event will consist of a reading and discussion by six poets hosted by Eastern Washington University's Creative Writing professor Jonathan Johnson. Each of the poets will discuss their craft and their writing life.
The poets include:
Elizabeth Austen, a Seattle poet, performer, and teacher will be reading from her book Every Dress a Decision. She has produced literary programming for one of Seattle's NPR affiliates, KUOW, which introduces recordings of the Pacific Northwest literary events and interviews local and national poets.
Click here to watch Elizabeth Austen read from her book, Every Dress a Decision.
Click here to watch Elizabeth Austen read from her book, Every Dress a Decision.
Thomas Brush is an author of three poetry collections and his work has appeared in journals such as Poetry, The Iowa Review, Prairie Schooner, and The North American Review. He established a literary magazine called Better Days, along with a reading series, while teaching English at Kent-Meridian High School. Brush’s forthcoming poetry collection Last Night, winner of the 2011 Blue Lynx
Prize, includes poetry from the last twenty years about his childhood, his current
reflections on the world, and the places he delights in and lives in.
Molly Tenenbaum has three full-length poetry collections: The Cupboard Artist (2012), Now (2007), and By a Thread (2000), as well as chapbooks Blue Willow, Old Voile, and Story, and single poems in many journals. She has held residencies at Hedgebrook and at the Helen Riaboff
Whiteley Center, participated in the Jack Straw Writers’ Program, and was awarded a
2009 Washington State Artist Trust Fellowship.
Kathryn Smith is an EWU MFA alum, a copy editor for the Spokesman-Review, a
master gardener in training, and a community volunteer. According to Mary Oliver, Smith tries to "keep my mind on what matters, / which is my work,
/ which is mostly standing still and learning to be astonished."
Kathleen Flenniken was recently named the Washington State Poetry Laureate and her second collection of poetry, Plume, was selected for the Pacific Northwest Poetry Series. Her first collection of poems, Famous, winner of the 2005 Prairie Schooner Prize, was named a 2007 Notable Book of the Year by the American Library Association and a finalist for the Washington State Book Award.
Kathleen Flenniken was recently named the Washington State Poetry Laureate and her second collection of poetry, Plume, was selected for the Pacific Northwest Poetry Series. Her first collection of poems, Famous, winner of the 2005 Prairie Schooner Prize, was named a 2007 Notable Book of the Year by the American Library Association and a finalist for the Washington State Book Award.
Russell Thorburn enjoys having a successful career as a poet, teacher,
and radio hour writer. He writes
poems about “fighting against the silence” based on his personal life journey. He repeatedly includes a
character named Agent X who time
travels to sorrowful and gratifying moments in Thorburn’s life. Thorburn has
compared Agent X to Kurt Vonnegut’s Billy Pilgrim.
What: Poetry Salon
Where: Rocket Bakery (1325 W. First Ave., Spokane)
When: Friday, April 13 2012 9:00 PM
Cost: FREE!
More Information:
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