Please join Carmichael's for a unique poetry reading by Kate Buckley from her new book, A Wild Region. Artist and poet Buckley grew up in Kentucky and her finely crafted poems strongly reflect her Appalachian roots. She is the winner of the Gabeheart Prize for Imaginative Writing and the North American Review's James Hearst Poetry Prize.
Carmichael's Bookstore
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
(502) 896-6950
Friday May 9, 2008The InKY Reading Series will close their spring season with a free reading by three poets on Friday, May 9. This free event starts at 7 p.m. with an open stage, followed by music by John Mann at 7:30 and featured readings at 8 p.m.Pamela Garvey is the author of Fear, a new chapbook of poems published by Finishing Line Press, which was a finalist for their New Women's Voices competition. Garvey has published poetry in many literary journals including The North American Review, Sonora Review, Spoon River Poetry Review, Pleiades, Cimarron Review and others. She has been a semi-finalist for the "Discovery"/The Nation Poetry Award. In 2004 she co-founded Words on Purpose, a St. Louis based committee of socially concerned writers who organize benefit readings. An assistant professor of English at St. Louis Community College-Meramec, Garvey lives in the city of St. Louis with her husband and son.Ellen Birkett Morris is a writer and poet from Louisville, Kentucky. Her fiction has been published in Mindprints, A Literary Journal, Pedestal Magazine and Alimentum. Her story, "The Cycle of Life and Other Incidentals," was selected as a finalist in the Glimmer Train Press Family Matters short story competition. Her poetry has appeared in RHYME and REASON, Mindprints, The Centrifugal Eye, The Heartland Review, The Rambler, The Binnacle, The Pedestal Magazine Political Anthology and is forthcoming in Alimentum.Angela Jackson-Brown is a student at Spalding University in the MFA in Creative Writing program. She is currently hard at work writing a novel entitled Drinking from a Bitter Cup, a collection of short stories set during the mid-1800s, and an autobiographical poetry collection. Angela resides in Louisville.Our musical guest John Mann has veered both near and far from his native western Kentucky in his 28 years. After going to college in Lexington, Mann moved for a brief period to San Diego, before returning to Kentucky and making the move to Louisville two years ago. With an interesting musical heritage (Mann's cousin is former Sun Records artist Carl Mann, who had a hit in the fifties with an up-tempo reworking of the pop standard, Mona Lisa), Mann has tried to keep his music planted in the present with an always-keen eye to the past. In December of 2004, John released his second album called Hands in the Pavement, which was in regular rotation for a year on WFPK 91.9 in Louisville, Ky.
7PM
Free
Rudyard Kipling
422 W. Oak
Louisville, KY
Carmichael's is delighted to host Newsweek senior Washington correspondent and MSNBC analyst Howard Fineman. Mr. Fineman will be discussing his new book, The Thirteen American Arguments: Enduring Debates that Inspire and Define our Country. Fineman earned a law degree at the University of Louisville and began his career as a journalist at the Louisville Courier-Journal.Carmichael's
Thursday May 15, 2008
7PM
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
896-6950
ESPN horse racing commentator, host of the hilarious "Mayne Event" segments on NFL Countdown and all-around funny guy Kenny Mayne will join us for a talk and signing for his new book, An Incomplete and Inaccurate History of Sport. He'll be in town for Derby, book promotion, and general revelry.
**This will be a ticketed event at Carmichael's, free tickets are available at both Carmichael's stores.
Carmichael's Books
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
896-6950
Carmichael's Bookstore
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
Carmichael's Bookstore
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
"...a month-long festival here in Louisville to celebrate National Poetry Month, and it all starts with a bang this Friday, April 4th! In conjunction with the Market Street trolley hop, we'll have poetry in the galleries and some other special treats. I'd like to highlight the music that'll be taking place that night in the St. John Renaissance Theater (637 E. Market-across from Red Tree). The Big Time Band will perform after fabulous local poets Erin Keane and Adam Day read. Closing the show at 10 will be Brett Eugene Ralph, giving what he calls " a one-time-only 'chamber country' performance backed by Peter Searcy on cello and Jamie Daniel on violin. " Admission is five dollars, and the show is all-ages. Saturday night, April 5th, at uzoMa art space (1813 Frankfort Ave), Brett will read from Black Sabbatical, his debut poetry collection, which will be published by Sarabande Books in 2009. (Free admission.)"
Beverle Graves Myers premieres the fourth volume in her Baroque mystery series featuring opera singer and amateur sleuth Tito Amato with a reading from The Iron Tongue at Midnight. Each book in this celebrated series features a rich tapestry of opera in 18th century Venice, singers who sacrifice their manhood for their art, and a murder.The Iron Tongue at Midnight reading with author Beverle Graves Myers
Saturday March 29, 2008
4PM
Carmichael's Bookstore
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
Affrilachian Poet Crystal Wilkinson is the 2002 recipient of the Chaffin Award for Appalachian Literature. Crystal's novel Water Street was a long-list finalist for the prestigious Orange Prize and short-listed for a Zora Neal Hurston/Richard Wright Foundation Legacy Award in fiction. She has presented workshops and readings throughout the country including the Sixth International Conference on the Short Story in English at the University of Iowa and the African American Women Writers Conference at the University of the District of Columbia. She is the author of two books, Blackberries, Blackberries(July 2000), and Water Street (September 2002), both published by Toby Press. Her work has been featured in many magazines and anthologies, including Home and Beyond: A Half-Century of Short Stories by Kentucky Writers and Torch, edited by Amanda Johnston.Cave Canem Fellow and Affrilachian Poet Amanda Johnston has received honors such as the 2003 and 2004 Kentucky Foundation for Women Artist Enrichment grant and the 2005 Austin International Poetry Festival's Christina Sergeyevna Award. Johnston has served on the board of directors for the National Women's Alliance and the African-American Arts Technical Resource Center of Austin. She is a member of The Austin Project and is the founding editor of Torch. The author of Not Another Love Jones, a chapbook of poems, her work has appeared in Kudzu, Tempu Tupu: Africana Women's Poetic Self, Sorin Oak Review, Pluck! the Journal of Affrilachian Arts & Culture, The Ringing Ear: Black Poets Lean South, and many others. A former resident of Elizabethtown, Kentucky, Johnston currently resides in Austin, Texas.Our musical guest Andrea Davidson is a Louisville-based acoustic singer/songwriter performing songs from her soulful and folky first album, Pick Your Poison.More information on the Affrilachian Poets: http://www.affrilachianpoets.com/history.htm More information on Cave Canem: http://www.cavecanempoets.orgMore information on The Ringing Ear: Black Poets Lean South: http://www.cavecanempoets.org/pages/store/Anthologies.htm
Open mic at 7:00, music at 7:30, featured readers at 8:00
Free
The Rudyard Kipling
422 W. Oak Street
Louisville, KY
Recovering "Yiddishland", a recently published look at literary works by Yiddish immigrant writers at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries. Bachman's book demonstrates how reading these works can deepen our understanding of what becoming American really meant to generations of immigrants who came to the U.S. in this historicallyRecovering "Yiddishland" discussion with author Merle Bachman
rich era.
Sunday March 16, 2008
4PM
Carmichael's Bookstore
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
Next Thursday March 14, 2008 a special evening of readings and music by Kentucky writers and musicians is happening at The Jazz Factory in support of Kentucky Books for Patients.
"Presented as part of The Jazz Factory's Jazz & Spoken Word monthly series, the event will feature readings by an all-star cast of the region's best-known writers, including poets Jane Gentry Vance (Kentucky's Poet Laureate), Frank X Walker, Sarah Gorham, Leatha Kendrick, Kathleen Driskell, Maureen Morehead, Frederick Smock, and Mary Welp. Poems by Aleda Shirley, a former Louisvillian and cancer survivor now living in Mississippi, will be read, in her absence, by poet Emma Aprile.The Jazz Factory
Also reading will be Dr. Donald Miller, head of the James Graham Brown Cancer Center; writer Dianne Aprile, producer of Jazz & The Spoken Word, and Clint Morehead, the University of Louisville fourth-year medical student who created The Kentucky Books for Patients Project to establish book collections in cancer centers of hospitals and clinics throughout the state."
(in The Glassworks Building)
815 W. Market St.
Louisville, KY
Part of my reading goals for 2008 is to read a good deal of Wendell Berry's work. I've been doing that and enjoying Berry very much. So I imagine that my donations to this cause are going to be in the form of Wendell Berry books because everyone needs to read them.
For Louisville based winners of this contest, and Louisville readers in general, the author and I have discussed putting together a one time book club gathering to meet and discuss Obedience. I can hardly describe how much fun I think it would be to discuss a good novel with the author. I really hope we can pull this gathering off. So, please also leave a comment to let me know if you'd be interested in said gathering.
Obedience is a psychological thriller, the author describes it as being reminiscent of the Michael Douglass film "The Game" and set on a a college campus. Here is the full publisher's blurb
When the students in Winchester University's Logic and Reasoning 204 arrive for their first day of class, they are greeted not with a syllabus or texts, but with a startling assignment from Professor Williams: Find a hypothetical missing girl named Polly. If after being given a series of clues and details the class has not found her before the end of the term in six weeks, she will be murdered.
At first the students are as intrigued by the premise of their puzzle as they are wary of the strange and slightly creepy Professor Williams. But as they delve deeper into the mystery, they begin to wonder: Is the Polly story simply a logic exercise, designed to teach them rational thinking skills, or could it be something more sinister and dangerous?
The mystery soon takes over the lives of three students as they find disturbing connections between Polly and themselves. Characters that were supposedly fictitious begin to emerge in reality. Soon, the boundary between the classroom assignment and the real world becomes blurred-and the students wonder if it is their own lives they are being asked to save.
Finally, Will Lavender will be reading from Obedience at Carmichael's on Frankfort Avenue tomorrow night, February 21, 2008 at 7PM. I really hope there is a great turnout to support this local author and his new work. A literary town is a great town.
Contest info
To enter leave a comment or send an email to info AT consuminglouisville.com (with Contest Entry as the subject) that includes the title of your favorite book. Feel free to also share why that book is your favorite.
Winners will be selected at random from all entries received before 12:01AM Monday February 25, 2008.
The Double Bind has been on my "to read" list since I read a very positive review when the hardcover edition came out but I still haven't picked up a copy yet. This may very well be the time to do it. And in case you care about her opinions in such matters Oprah is a fan of Bohjalian.
Charmichael's Books
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
Fancy dress encouraged! Come on out for a celebration of poetry, fiction, nonfiction and music -- all of what InKY has offered for four years! Come wish InKY a happy birthday ... birthday cards and envelopes will be available for well wishes (and monetary donations, if you please!).The evening will feature poet Frank X Walker, novelist Janna McMahan, creative non-fiction writer Emily Boden and songwriter Joe Manning.
Open mic at 7:00, music at 7:30, featured readers at 8:00
Free
The Rudyard Kipling
422 W. Oak Street
Louisville, KY
Obedience is described as a psychological thriller. I've got to say that's not normally a genre I read a lot of but the blurbs for the book and Lavender's status as a Louisville writer definitely makes me want to give it a read. If you're interested in psychological thrillers or supporting local authors I encourage you to buy a copy as well. We'll meet back here and discuss it ok?
On Thursday February 21, 2008 at 7PM Carmichael's will be hosting a reading and reception for Lavender at the Frankfort Avenue store. I hope there is a huge turnout to support the debut novel by one of our city's writers.
Carmichael's Bookstore
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY
The Women's Center at the University of Louisville would like to announce the second annual Kentucky Women's Book Festival which will bring together Kentucky women writers and their readers to meet, discuss, and share their love and appreciation of the written word. The event is free and open to the public and will highlight and honor the outstanding accomplishments of women writers in and from the Kentucky area, expand the readership of women's works, encourage those engaged in creative writing and inspire a rising generation of readers and writers as an extension of our community-wide focus on literacy.Kentucky Women's Book Festival
The festival is intended to be a celebration of women's reading and writing.
Plenary speakers include: Affrilachian Poet and writer Crystal Wilkinson, author of Blackberries, Blackberries (2000) and Water Street (2002); short story writer and novelist Kim Edwards, author of The Memory Keeper's Daughter; and columnist and novelist Betty Winston BayƩ, an editorial writer and columnist for The Courier-Journal in Louisville, KY.
University of Louisville, Ekstrom Library
2301 S. 3rd Street
Louisville, Kentucky 40292
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Time: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Monday evening will also be your first change to see Lumberyard, "a new design/literary arts magazine produced right here in Louisville."
The Pink Door
2222 Dundee Road
Louisville, KY
More info on poet Aaron Belz after the jump.
He'll be speaking on Friday, January 25th, 2008 from 2:30 to 4 PM in the Community Room at Metro United Way's office, 334 East Broadway.
Info from Carmichaels:
"Stonyfield Farm began in 1983 as a seven-cow operation and has grown into a $330 million company and the world's largest maker of organic yogurt. It has achieved double-digit revenue growth and excellent profits each year for the past two decades while adopting sustainable methods that reduce environmental costs and respect natural systems. Through re-use and recycling, Stonyfield prevents hundreds of tons of materials from reaching landfills and incinerators each year. In Stirring It Up, Hirshberg demonstrates how any business can follow suit and help save the planet while achieving higher growth and better profits.
Gary Hirshberg
Friday, January 25th, 2008 from 2:30 to 4 PM
Community Room
Metro United Way's office
334 East Broadway
Louisville, KY
The local chapter of the Jane Austen Society of North America (JASNA) will host discussion meetings at Carmichael's Bookstore, 2720 Frankfort Avenue the Monday night after each show airs* at 7 p.m. Anyone interested is encouraged to attend.
For more information about the Greater Louisville Chapter of the Jane Austen Society of North America, contact Bonny Wise, Regional Coordinator. Meetings and programs are held monthly at Historic Locust Grove. Call Locust Grove at 897-9845 or email wise@locustgrove.org.
*discussion meetings held AFTER LAST EPISODE with productions that air more than one night.
Cincinnati poet Jillian Weise is the author of The Amputee's Guide to Sex, a collection of poems from Soft Skull Press. Her poems have appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, Chelsea, Tin House and others. Her chapbook, Translating the Body, was released by All Nations Press in January 2006. Individual poems have been honored by the Academy of American Poets, the Emily Dickinson Prize Anthology, Pushcart Nominations and Verse Daily. After working at The Paris Review as an editorial assistant, she was the Alan Dugan Writing Fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts, which she completed in May 2006. She is currently a Fellow at the University of Cincinnati.In addition to the poetry singer/songwriter Teneia Sanders will be performing songs from her first full album, Soul Catcher.Kristi Maxwell is the author of Realm Sixty-four, a collection of poems just released from Ahsahta Press. Her second book, Hush Sessions, will be published by Saturnalia in 2009. She is pursuing a doctorate at the University of Cincinnati.
Christina Lovin is the author of What We Burned for Warmth, a chapbook of poems from Finishing Line Press. Her work has appeared in Harvard Summer Review, Diner, Hunger Mountain , The Bark, and the anthologies Missing Mountains and Coal: An Anthology. She is a recipient of the Al Smith Fellowship from the Kentucky Arts Council.
Friday January 11, 2008
Open mic at 7:00, music at 7:30, featured readers at 8:00
Free
The Rudyard Kipling
422 W. Oak Street
Louisville, KY
According to Carmichael's "Bergeron uses the mythic quality of the North American great ape, Sasquatch, or Bigfoot, to craft a gripping page-turner that taps into our primal fears and basic instincts. Reminiscent of stories told around the campfire, The Devil's Ridge will make you wonder what is lurking in the shadows, just beyond the fire's light."
Carmichael's Bookstore
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, Kentucky
Promotional image from Ron Whitehead
Photographer Bill Carner will sign copies of last December's most sought after book, Louisville Then and Now.Carmichael's Bookstore
Randy West, editor and photographer for the Corydon Democrat, will sign copies of his book of photographs of the people and places of Harrison County, Indiana.
And last, but clearly not least, we'll have Culture Maven C.D. Kaplan, who will sign copies of his fabulously annotated and imminently practical calendar 2008 History Warp Day Planner.
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY 40206
502-896-6950
More info after the jump
Tea expert Bruce Richardson of the Elmwood Inn in Perryville, Kentucky will speak about "The Great Tea Rooms of Bath." Copies of his beautiful tea books will be available for purchase and signing. We will then adjourn to tea (from the Elmwood Inn, of course) and petite sweets and finger sandwiches. RSVP to Bonny Wise at Historic Locust Grove at 502-897-9845 if you plan to attend. The cost of the tea for non-JASNA members is $5 and should be paid at the door. For more information, email Bonny Wise at wise@locustgrove.org or call LG at 502-897-9845.Bourbon Baroque will provide music for the event including French carols arranged by Charpentier and Corrette.
Pink DoorSarabande Books last Pink Door reading of the year is tonight Monday, November 26th.
Poet Angela Estes (winner of the 2001 Field Poetry Prize, the 2001 Alice Fay di Castagnola Prize from the Poetry Society of America, and the 1995 Peregrine Smith Poetry Prize) will visit us from Ohio State University.
Poet Angela Estes won't be there, but in her stead will be the fabulous Erin Keane, whose book, The Gravity Soundtrack, just came out with WordFarm Press. She also has a chapbook, The One-Hit Wonders (Snark Publishing), and many of you may know her from her work with the InKY Reading Series here in Louisville. Keane also writes a blog for Velocity and teaches at Bellarmine and the Kentucky Governor's School for the Arts. (You can read more about her and her work at http://www.sensilla.com)
Afterward, Joey Mudd will be playing.
As always, this event is free and open to the public, and will start at 7:30PM
2222 Dundee Road
Louisville, KY 40205
Friday November 23
Costumed demonstrators will be in the kitchen and woodshop from 11:00 a.m. until 2:00 p.m during the the Locust Grove Holiday Sampler. Everything in the museum store will be 20% so you can stock up on gifts.
The F.A.T. Friday Trolley Hop on Black Friday is an event I've been looking forward to for months. It combines food, drink, art and shopping, all things that I enjoy very much. I'm strategically planning to land on Frankfort Avenue mid afternoon. Do a bit of hopping and shopping, refuel at the Irish Rover for dinner and then even more shopping. I suspect dessert at Sweet Surrender will be on the agenda as well.
After you're done on Frankfort Avenue just drive on down to Mellwood for more art and more shopping at the Butchertown Market with Moxie Letterpress's Give the Gift of Art event. If you're there close to 8PM stick around for the poetry reading and live music.
If you can't stand the shopping hordes and nightmare of parking on Frankfort Avenue head over to Quills Coffee & Books where Janet L. Boyd will be reading from and signing Don't Get Me Started: The LEO Years at 6 PM.
Saturday November 24, 2007
The American Printing House for the Blind is hosting a Family Day Open House from 10AM-3PM.
Author and architect Liesl Geiger will be at Carmichael's on Frankfort Avenue discussing and signing her new book Essence of Home: Timeless Elements of Design.
Midnight at The Baxter is forcing you to choose between The Beatles in "A Hard Days Night" and Talking Heads in "Stop Making Sense"
Sunday November 25, 2007
Phyllis EagleTree will be at Carmichael's on Frankfort Avenue discussing her new book Roll The Wheel: The Abundant Life and Wisdom of Mae Phillips.
Derby City Espresso is giving you free music and free beer. Clearly they're good people. Join them for a tasting of three seasonal beers from Schlafly.
If you know of interesting events happening this weekend that I've missed please let me know and I'll add them to the list. You can let me know by leaving a comment her or by sending an email to: info AT consuminglouisville.com.
According to Carmichael's "The book combines insightful interviews with architects and detailed photographs of more than 50 homes to illustrate the concepts she describes. Just in time for the holidays, this book is the perfect gift for anyone who is building a home or just dreaming of it."
On Sunday join "Phyllis EagleTree to celebrate the publication of her beautiful new book, Roll the Wheel: The Abundant Life and Wisdom of Mae Phillips.
In short essays and vivid photographs, EagleTree captures the richness and depth of the life of Harlan County native Mae Phillips - a life lived simply but fully in the mountains of eastern Kentucky."
Liesl Geiger Saturday November 24, 4PM
Phyllis EagleTree Sunday November 25, 4PM
Carmichael's Bookstore
2720 Frankfort Avenue
Louisville, KY 40206
Over 20 artists, including Consuming Louisville favorite Art by Mags will be selling their work from 11AM-7PM with an informal reception following. From 8PM-9PM poet and professor Jeffrey Skinner will be reading. Ghosts of the Atmosphere will provide music from 9PM-10PM.
If you haven't been to the Butchertown Market before this will be a great opportunity to check out the vendors who are always there as well. There is some very interesting and unique merchandise to be found there. Definitely good finds to help you tackle your holiday shopping lists.
Moxie Letterpress
Butchertown Market
1201 Story Avenue
Louisville, KY
Obviously this event ties in nicely with this week's extended F.A.T. Friday Trolley Hop. You can't really go wrong with planning to spend your entire day in the Frankfort Avenue and Butchertown parts of town shopping, eating and just generally merry making.
Please note that there are only 300 copies of the book and all sales are cash or check only.
Quills Coffee & Books
1220 E. Kentucky Street
Louisville, KY 40204
Speaking of Quills, they're going through a bit of small remodel. I stopped by there this morning and found that a new bar space is being added and tables and couches have been moved around a bit. From what I can tell the new bar area is being added to allow for more power outlets and more spaces for individuals who might not want to take up a whole table. So definitely an improvement for power hungry laptop jockeys who like to caffeinate, plug in and get to work.
Quotes from Don't Get Me Started after the jump:
Friday November 9, 2007
The InKY Reading Series offers up more good times with its fiction night at the Rud
Shops in the area of the Vogue in St. Matthews are throwing a holiday party and you're invited for shopping and refreshments
Shops in Chenoweth Square are throwing a holiday open house
Saturday November 10, 2007
Highland United Methodist Church at 1140 Cherokee Road is hosting it's annual Holiday Bazaar and Bake Sale from 9AM-2PM. Eat baked goods, buy unique holiday gifts.
The Mid City Mall ValuMarket (a really good store for ethnic foods and vegetarian foods by the way) is having a Holiday Open House from 11AM-8PM. There will be samples throughout the store and staff will be on hand to offer help and holiday entertaining ideas
The Louisville Artisans Guild is having its annual Holiday Showcase at the American Legion Highland Post on Bardstown Road. Hours are Saturday, 10 am to 6 pm; Sunday, 11 am to 4 pm
Midnights at The Baxter Present a Jim Henson Double Feature with The Dark Crystal starting at 10PM and Labyrinth starting at Midnight.
Sunday November 11, 2007
Musicians Emergency Resource Foundation Concerts will be happening in three clubs across Louisville.
Writer's Showcase Deathmatch at Molly Malone's brought to you by Art Sanctuary, starts at 8PM
Louisville singer/songwriter danny flanigan will be performing as wellBrian Leung was born and raised in San Diego County. His first novel, Lost Men, was published this year by Crown/Shaye Areheart and his short story collection, World Famous Love Acts, won the Mary McCarthy Award in Short Fiction and the Asian American Literary Award for fiction. Brian's fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry have appeared in Story, Crazyhorse, Grain, Gulf Coast, Kinesis, Mid-American Review, Salt Hill, Gulf Stream, River City, Runes, The Bellingham Review, The Connecticut Review, Indiana Review, Crowd, Blithe House Quarterly, and Crab Orchard Review. He is currently an assistant professor at the University of Louisville.
Mike Hampton is a graduate of Spalding University's MFA in Writing program. His fiction has appeared in 3AM Magazine, Heartlands, and The Southeast Review among other places and is forthcoming in the anthology New Growth, published by The Jesse Stuart Foundation. His humor appeared in the McSweeney's anthology Mountain Man Dance Moves and he has also published poetry and essays. He is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Cincinnati Clermont College, and he lives in Cincinnati with his wife Allison and daughter Ella.
Stephen George was born and bred in Louisville, and though he's spent a little time away, he pretty much likes it here for now. He is the managing editor of LEO, Louisville's only alternative newsweekly, and his work has appeared in Louisville Magazine, The New Republic Online and others. His work has been anthologized in Missing Mountains, where he appears alongside a number of other significantly more profound writers. He has had a one-act play performed, to some positive mention in certain circles. He is currently working on a novel about failure, which could turn out to be quite the experience in meta-lit.
InKY Reading Series Fiction Night
Friday November 9, 2007
Open mic at 7:00, Music at 7:30, Featured readers at 8:00
Free
The Rudyard Kipling
422 W. Oak Street
Louisville, KY
An evening of poetry, music and art buying is happening this Saturday night at Moxie Letterpress. Mingling starts at 7PM, poet Cate Marvin will be reading from her new book "Fragment of the Head of a Queen" at 8PM, local ambient trio Among the Multitude will begin playing at 9PM and Moxie Letterpress will have broadsides (including a brand new one) and other works for sale at the event.
Poetry, Music & Art Buying
October 27, 7PM
Moxie Letterpress
(located in the Butchertown Market)
1201 Story Avenue
Louisville, KY
