In
Readings
Slide One— Works In Progress open mic at Hugo House.
From the Hugo House website: Held on the first and third Monday of every month in the Hugo House Cabaret at 7:00 p.m., Works in Progress is an open mic for all comers. Read your work, meet other writers, and find out what’s going on in the literary community. Poetry, fiction, essays, memoirs, plays, unclassified, and unclassifiable work are all welcome. Applause for all. No judgment. Some content not suitable for children or small animals. Listeners welcome.
Slide Two—It’s About Time Writer’s Reading Series #340. I kicked off the 29th year of this reading with Jesse Minkert in January 11, 2018.
From the IATWRS website: This reading series exists for all those who want to write. It is dedicated to the memory of Anna Helfgott, (1899-1996) who began writing at age 70, and to the memory of Nelson Bentley (1918-1990), the quintessential teacher who gave Anna, & scores of others, help & hope. It’s About Time was founded in 1989 by Esther Altshul Helfgott, and is now…being curated by Peggy Sturdivant and Katie Tynan. It’s About Time belongs to Seattle. If you live here and want to help with events, you have a standing invitation. The It’s About Time Writers Reading Series is dedicated to an end of racism, homophobia, antisemitism, homelessness and war.
Slide Three—The Seattle Fiction Federation is a reading series and organization for fiction writers, who don’t get out enough. It meets quarterly and has four featured readers as well as eight ‘open mic’ readers, chosen at random from the jar. The winner of the open mic vote then becomes a featured reader at the next event. See the Hugo House Events site for upcoming events, and check out the SFF Facebook page.
Slide Four—The Hot Pillow III reading, at the annual Association of Writers and Writing Programs 2017 conference in Washington DC. Twenty-two writers brought their steamy words to Busboys & Poets. ‘Nuff said.
Slide Five—The 2015 Seattle Lit Crawl, where I read for Spartan Magazine.
Seattle was named an official UNESCO City of Literature in 2017, which makes Seattle one of only two US cities on the worldwide list (the other is Iowa City). Basically, it means that Seattle is a haven for literary arts, and during this free, one-night-only event, locals are invited to soak it up during a night of booze and book loving, when a huge range of bars, cafes, and businesses on Capitol Hill present more than 80 writers and artists in events ranging from straightforward readings to cooking demos to performances, with a night-ending after-party at Hugo House.
Slide Six—In front of Dock Street Salon with my friends Len Kuntz and Erik Evenson, July 2015.
From the DSS website: The Dock Street Salon is an event that joins the different communities of Seattle, introducing new authors to readers. It is a month long campaign for a group of writers that culminates in an evening of readings and conversation. The salon is not just about books and literature, these are merely catalysts. The greater power of it is getting people to engage thoughtfully within their community. Dock Street’s dream for the salon was to start something based on the articulation of writers who are being overlooked in more mainstream outlets. The Dock Street Salon is the only series of its kind in the northern neighborhoods of Seattle.
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