Genre: Not Genre-Specific

Edith Wharton's Birthday, Brooklyn's Famous Authors, and More

by
Evan Smith Rakoff
1.24.12

The Center for Fiction is hosting a marathon reading of The House of Mirth on January 26th to celebrate the birthday of Edith Wharton; Academy Award nominations have been announced, with film adaptations of Katheryn Stockett's The Help and Jonathan Safran Foer's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close contending for an Oscar; Condé Nast Traveler showcases the literary landmarks of Brooklyn, New York; and other news.

Scandal at the National Arts Club, Donald Hall on Aging, and More

by
Evan Smith Rakoff
1.23.12

Poet Donald Hall writes about aging in his family's long-time New Hampshire farmhouse; the New York Times unravels a scandal at the venerable National Arts Club; writer Emma Straub lists three "rich and snooty" novels to supplement your viewing of Downton Abbey; and other news.

Jennifer Weiner on Gender Disparity in Reviews, J.D. Salinger's Unknown Writing, and More

by
Evan Smith Rakoff
1.18.12

The Academy of American Poets announced that poets Toi Derricotte, Jane Hirshfield, and Arthur Sze have been elected to its Board of Chancellors; novelist Jennifer Weiner compared the frequency of male and female authors reviewed by the New York Times in 2011; J.D. Salinger biographer Kenneth Slawenski ponders what the reclusive author was writing; and other news.

The Tempest Banned, Ezra Pound's Daughter Sues Neo-fascists, and More

by
Evan Smith Rakoff
1.17.12

An Arizona school district has banned a long list of books, including Mexican-American history textbooks, and Shakespeare’s The Tempest; Ezra Pound's daughter is suing an Italian neo-fascist group who've named themselves CasaPound; GalleyCat reports on what editors are looking for in 2012; and other news.

$100,000 E-book Sales in Three Weeks, Downton Abbey Reading List, and More

by
Evan Smith Rakoff
1.13.12

J.A. Konrath announced his e-books alone garnered $100,000 in three weeks; GalleyCat offers a reading list to supplement your viewing of Downton Abbey; the New York Times reviews An Informal History of the Peace Eye Bookstore, the ____ You Press, the Fugs, and Counterculture in the Lower East Side by musician and poet Ed Sanders; and other news.

Joan Murray: Where Are You? What Are You Doing Here?

P&W-supported poet, fiction writer, and playwright Joan Murray, author of Dancing on the Edge and Looking for the Parade, and recipient of two National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, blogs about readings and workshops conducted across New York State.

Years ago in an economic downturn, my family left New York City for Buffalo—a city that has two nicknames: "City of Good Neighbors" and "City of No Illusiions." I liked Buffalo for being both. It was welcoming and self-deprecating—as well as artistically progressive. Yet, I was puzzled when people kept asking me, "Where are you?"

What they meant was: "Which college are you teaching at?" I'd been teaching college in New York City, and with my publishing credits, people assumed I must be at a college there. It still mystifies me how people can believe that teaching eighteen-year-olds at a college is prestigious and important, while teaching seventeen-year-olds or seventy-year-olds in the community isn't. At one of the first readings I did in Buffalo, I was introduced as having poems in the Atlantic Monthly, and Harper's, which made someone say, "What are you doing here? "

What I'm "doing" is bringing my writing to people, getting it on its feet, and sharing my moves with others who want to discover theirs. Last year, with P&W's help, I brought my writing to people at the Merritt Book Festival in Millbrook; the Wadsworth Library in Geneseo; the Thomas Cole Site in Catskill; the Elsewhere Café in Albion—as well as to a teen writing conference, a college literary club, a senior residence, and the Hudson Opera House.

But there's one place I keep returning to because it has an admirable mission and a fabulous view—Wiawaka Holiday House, the women's retreat on Lake George. Founded in 1903, by an industrialist's enlightened daughter who wanted factory women to have a holiday, Wiawaka now welcomes women of all backgrounds, asking the more advantaged participants to help subsidize the less advantaged.

My Wiawaka schedule usually involves a Saturday morning workshop, a Saturday evening reading, and a Sunday morning "poetry service" on the dock. Some participants come specifically to work with me. Others just drop by. One who stopped by last July wrote a poem that stunned the rest of us, and left her in tears. She told us afterwards that her husband had died suddenly that winter and she'd been numb inside till the poem released her.

I can't predict who I'll be working with at Wiawaka. It might be members of a lesbian book club, along with cancer survivors and serial knitters. And I can't predict how things will go. Once when I was reading a poem about a violent incident, a knitter exclaimed, "If that's contemporary poetry, I don't want any of it!"  What was my take-away from that? Obviously, the poem had done its job (who knows where the emotion took her later). But, more immeditately, another knitter gave me a terrific discount on a scarf.

But my big take-away is the active, authentic engagement with people (lots of different people), which can be stimulating to a writer, as well as challenging and fun.

Photo: Joan Murray. Credit: David Lee.

Support for Readings/Workshops in New York is provided, in part, by public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, with additional support from the Friends of Poets & Writers.

Plagiarized E-books at Amazon, Anne Sexton's Note to her Daughter, and More

by
Evan Smith Rakoff
1.12.12

HarperCollins is launching a program today to sell thousands of backlist titles via print-on-demand technology at independent bookstores; Fast Company reports on the discovery of numerous plagiarized e-books in Amazon's Kindle Store; Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Anne Sexton wrote a heartrending letter to her teenage daughter, Linda, intended to be reread in the future; and other news.

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