Readings
& Events
I’m passionate about bringing writers together, to shine, perform, listen, and clap for one another. Over the years, I have cofounded, curated, featured in, and hosted hundreds of literary events. My monthly open mic, Saturday Night Special, has been running since 2011. All are welcome!
I’ll be headed out on tour this summer with my new book Lions Like Us. Hope to see you! Scroll down for details.
READINGS & EVENTS
SNS | 10-28-23
Featuring:
Jan Steckel & E.C. Barrett
Theme:
Monsters & Ghosts
Saturday, October 28, 2023
8pm Central Time
Join us online for the 13th Annual SNS Halloween Reading & Costume Party!
Featuring: Jan Steckel & E.C. Barrett
Theme: Monsters & Ghosts
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday October 28, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to 3 MINUTES MAX
Scroll down for monthly writing prompt
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 840 9660 9338
Passcode: 564897
Author Bios
Jan Steckel’s debut fiction collection Ghosts and Oceans was released this month on Zeitgeist Press. Her poetry book The Horizontal Poet (Zeitgeist Press, 2011) won a 2012 Lambda Literary Award. Her poetry book Like Flesh Covers Bone (Zeitgeist Press, 2018) won two Rainbow Awards. Her fiction chapbook Mixing Tracks (Gertrude Press, 2009) and poetry chapbook The Underwater Hospital (Zeitgeist Press, 2006) also won awards. Her creative prose and poetry have appeared in Scholastic Magazine, Yale Medicine, Bellevue Literary Review, Canary, Assaracus and elsewhere. She lives in Oakland, California.
Get your copy of Ghosts and Oceans at:
https://www.zeitgeist-press.com/index.php/product/ghosts-and-oceans/
Or, for a signed copy, send $24 via PayPal @Jansteckel or Venmo @Jan-Steckel
E.C. Barrett (they/she) writes folk horror, fabulism, and dark speculative fiction. They are, or have been, an academic, journalist, bookseller, editor, critic, and linocut artist. A Clarion West graduate, E.C. has words in Baffling Magazine, Split Lip, Strange Horizons, and elsewhere, and she serves as the book reviews editor for Reckoning. E.C. is queer, neurodivergent, and enjoys more maker hobbies than is entirely practical. ecbarrett.com
October Writing Prompt:
For the 13th Annual Saturday Night Special Halloween Open Mic, we’re taking up some classic, spooky themes: Monsters & Ghosts.
Tell us a story; sing us a song; write us a poem.
SOME IDEAS TO GET YOU STARTED:
What defines a monster? What monsters have you known? What monsters have you been? Were they real or imagined?
Think: evil, demons, zombies, vampires, sirens, witches, werewolves, ghosts, predators, clowns, the circus, the horsemen of the apocalypse, blood-thirsty or benign creatures, Bigfoot, fairies, mutants, psychopaths, politicians, parents, screaming children, bullies, bosses, exes, oppressors, societal cruelties, false fears, monsters in masquerade, the misunderstood…
What is grotesque? Unthinkable?
What are you afraid of? How is that fear literalized?
Think: things in the woods, under the bed, outside the window, inside the house, in the past, in your dreams.
Think: pool drains, sharks, heights, blood, poison, ants, failure, the sun, disfigurement, dying alone
Think: fire, flood, earthquakes, war, death, prejudice, injustice, grief, silence
Have you ever seen a ghost? An apparition? Experienced the supernatural? Or know someone who has? What happened?
In what ways are legacies, generational pain, memories, photos, even DNA kinds of ghosts?
Consider: palimpsest as ghost, the way a city builds on the bones of the past.
Think: haunted house, graveyard, poltergeist, possession, exorcism, bumps in the night
Whom have you lost? What would you say to their ghost?
What’s your best, craziest, strangest, or scariest Halloween story? Make a poem or flash story of it (3 minutes or less!)
As ever, the theme is optional—an invitation, not a requirement, feel free to interpret loosely or ignore.
FOR INSPIRATION:
The Hitman short short fiction by T. C. Boyle
Pumpkins flash fiction by Francine Prose
The Anatomy of Desire flash fiction by John L’Heureux
Jane Goodall and Bruce Springsteen Contemplate their Childlessness poem by John Dudek
All Souls poem by Michael Collier
Windigo poem by Louise Erdrich
Ghost poem by Cynthia Huntington
Field of Skulls poem by Mary Karr
Monster in the Lake poem by Martín Espada
Monster poem by Jason Irwin
The Witch Has Told You a Story poem by Ava Leavell Haymon
No Write-In this month!
Join me in Oakland, CA for Half Century Salon live in person on Friday, October 20!
Half Century Salon
Featuring:
Tongo Eisen-Martin, Cassandra Dallett, William Taylor Jr, Riley O’Connell, Tracy Artson, Valerie Sopher, K.R. Morrison, Paul Corman-Roberts, Hollie Hardy, Ryan Snellman
Music by: The Corrupt Moneychanger
Art by: Don Morey
Friday, October 20, 2023
7pm Pacific Time
Studio Morey
5500 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland, CA
In celebration of friendship, birthdays, and books,
join us live in Oakland for an evening of poetry, music, and art.
Featuring:
Tongo Eisen-Martin
Cassandra Dallett
William Taylor Jr
Riley O’Connell
Tracy Artson
Valerie Sopher
K.R. Morrison
Paul Corman-Roberts
Hollie Hardy
Ryan Snellman
Music by:
The Corrupt Moneychanger
Art by:
Don Morey
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Friday, October 20, 2023
7 pm
Studio Morey
5500 Martin Luther King Jr. Way
Oakland, CA
Free
Donations for drinks & snacks
SNS | 09-30-23
Featuring:
Rick Lupert & Julian Matthews
Theme:
How to Change the World
Saturday, September 30, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Rick Lupert & Julian Matthews
Theme: How to Change the World
(Annual 100Thousand Poets for Change Event)
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday September 30, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 828 7608 4004
Passcode: 608683
Author Bios
Rick Lupert has been involved with poetry in Los Angeles since 1990. He is the recipient of the 2017 Ted Slade Award, and the 2014 Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Center Distinguished Service Award, a three time Pushcart Prize Nominee, and a Best of the Net nominee. He served as a co-director of the Valley Contemporary Poets for 2 years, and created Poetry Super Highway. Rick hosted the weekly Cobalt Cafe reading for almost 21 years which has lived on as a weekly Zoom series since early 2020. His spoken word album "Rick Lupert Live and Dead" featured 25 studio and live tracks. He’s authored 27 collections of poetry, including “The Low Country Shvitz,” “I Am Not Writing a Book of Poems in Hawaii,” “The Tokyo-Van Nuys Express,” and “God Wrestler: A Poem for Every Torah Portion” (Ain’t Got No Press) and edited the anthologies “A Poet’s Siddur,” “Ekphrastia Gone Wild,” “A Poet’s Haggadah” and the noir anthology “The Night Goes on All Night.” He also writes and draws (with Brendan Constantine) the daily web comic “Cat and Banana” and writes a Jewish poetry column for JewishJournal.com. He has been lucky enough to read his poetry all over the world. Find him here:
poetrysuperhighway.com
jewishpoetry.net
facebook.com/rickpoet
catandbanana.com
Julian Matthews is a poet from Malaysia of mixed-minorities who is published in The American Journal of Poetry, Beltway Poetry Quarterly and Borderless Journal, among others. He stumbled onto poetry by accident six years ago at a writing workshop. That happy accident has turned into a rabid compulsion. He is still extricating himself from the crash. Welcome to his recovery. If you wish to support his practice, please Paypal him at trinetizen@gmail.com or send him Wordle answers at linktr.ee/julianmatthews
Write with Friends! Register for the Write-In!
LET’S WORK ON THE THEME TOGETHER!
Join me the week before SNS, on Saturday afternoon, September 23, for the monthly Write-In, a generative online workshop.
September Writing Prompt:
Since its inception in 2011, Saturday Night Special has participated annually in 100Thousand Poets for Change, a global literary event “to promote peace, sustainability, and justice, and call for serious social, environmental, and political change.”
This year, SNS’s September reading is dedicated to 100TPC’s late founder, Michael Rothenberg, who passed away late last year. Our theme is “How to Change the World.”
Tell us a story; sing us a song; write us a poem.
SOME IDEAS TO GET YOU STARTED:
Write a poem for peace, or a response to Dorothy Oger’s viral poem, written in the aftermath of a terrorist attack, “I shall stand for love.” (See short TEDx Talk below for inspiration.)
Consider what needs changing in the world. (This is your beauty queen question.) Make a list. Think big and also small. Be specific—plastic in a hot ocean, war in Ukraine, oppression of women in Yemen, Iraq, Syria, and other countries, burning musical instruments in Afghanistan, racism, fascism, homophobia, slave labor, homelessness, hunger, climate change, censorship, misinformation, autocracy, disease, Trump running around free in the world. There’s so much to choose from.
Don’t be daunted by the bigness of the challenge. It’s okay to choose small things for change—more holding hands, fewer cars, cheaper arugula, removal of an ugly billboard you pass on the way to work, better pay for poets, a clean kitchen, a new sweater, cooler weather in which to wear said sweater, etc. What are the small things that would change your world?
You are welcome to be super serious here—world changing is serious business—but it’s also also okay to be funny or ironic or playful in your approach to the theme.
A question: Can poetry change the world? Has it? How so?
You might also consider ways that you have already changed or been changed by the world, or by writing. What are the personal moments or decisions that have changed your life? What national or international events have you lived through that impacted both you and the world? The Cold War, 9/11, COVID, the invention of the internet, the iPhone, AI, the death of Sinead O’Connor…
Imagine a future in which the world is vastly different in some way. This might be utopian or dystopian. Or neither.
Maybe this is a how-to poem. Maybe not.
As ever, the theme is optional—an invitation, not a requirement.
FOR INSPIRATION:
Let’s Change the World One Poem at a Time, TEDx Talk, by Dorothy Oger and her poem “I shall stand for love”
Change the World, blog post by Eleni Sikelianos
Love in a Time of Climate Change, poem by Craig Santos Perez
Think, Think, poem by Tara Betts
He Said Turn Here, poem by Dean Young
If I Were in Charge of the World, poem by Judith Viorst
Making Peace, poem by Denise Levertov
I Look at the World, poem by Langston Hughes
Peace Walk, poem by William E. Stafford
What Shall We Tell Our Children? An Addenda, 1973, by Margaret Burroughs
Red Light Lit Austin
Featuring:
Brandix, She Burns, May Buzzetti, Gabe Davis, Hollie Hardy, Tandie Love, Savannah Marie, Shannon Purcell, Diego De Stefano, Natassia Wilde
Thursday, September 14, 2023
7:30pm
Cloud Tree Studios
3411 E. 5th St., Austin, TX
Join us for an evening of poetry, music, comedy, and more on the theme of love.
Featuring:
Brandix
She Burns
May Buzzetti
Gabe Davis
Hollie Hardy
Tandie Love
Savannah Marie
Shannon Purcell
Diego De Stefano
Natassia Wilde
Hosted By: Loria Mendoza
Thursday, September 14, 2023
7:30 pm
Cloud Tree Studios & Gallery
3411 E. 5th St.
Austin, TX
Tickets at the door
$10 - $20
(sliding scale)
Cobalt Poets (Zoom Reading)
Featuring:
Hollie Hardy + open reading
Tuesday, September 12, 2023
9:30pm Central Time
Online
The Virtual Cobalt Poets series is hosted by Rick Lupert via Zoom every Tuesday night at 9:30pm Central Time. Each evening includes an open reading plus a featured reader (that’s me!).
During and after the event, you can download a digital broadside of my poem titled, “Capitalism or The Guy Who Ate a $120,000 Banana in an Art Museum Says He Was Just Hungry.”
Anyone who wants to read can sign up for the open mic when you join the Zoom meeting.
Tuesday, September 12, 2023
9:30pm Central Time
SNS | 08-26-23
Featuring:
Vanessa Rochelle Lewis & Jim Trainer
Theme:
Lies
Saturday, August 26, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Vanessa Rochelle Lewis & Jim Trainer
Theme: Lies
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday August 26, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 890 9261 3781
Passcode: 374317
Author Bios
Vanessa Rochelle Lewis, MFA, is a Queer, Fat, Black, Femme performer, facilitator, educator, writer, activist, healer, and joyful weirdo. Lewis has been a writer and managing editor for Everyday Feminism and Black Girl Dangerous; an instructor at multiple Bay Area community colleagues; the Artist-Facilitator In Residence for the Young Women Freedom Center; and a core team member for Creating Freedom Movements. She is currently the Director of Programming for the Positive Results Center, an organization that addresses trauma and prevents violence within marginalized communities. Lewis founded Reclaim UGLY: Uplift Glorify Love Yourself – And Create A World Where Others Can As Well, which has hosted conferences, teach-ins, and healing workshops.
Visit Vanessa’s Website: reclaimugly.org
Preorder Reclaiming Ugly! A Radically Joyful Guide to Unlearn Oppression and Uplift, Glorify, and Love Yourself: from Penguin Random House
Patreon: @VanessaRochelleLewis
IG: @Black.Woman.Blooming
FB: Facebook.com/subversivepedagogies
Jim Trainer contributes to Substack, served as columnist for Into The Void and blogged at Going For the Throat for over a decade. Trainer publishes one letterpressed collection every year through Yellow Lark Press. STRIDE is his 8th book. As a progenitor of Stand UpTragedy™ he performs regularly throughout the world.
Jim’s website: jimtrainer.net
Jim’s Substack: jimtrainer.substack.com
Wastebook: JimTrainerCommunicator
IG: @goingforthethroat
Write with Friends! Register for the Write-In!
LET’S WORK ON THE SNS THEME TOGETHER!
Join me the week before SNS, on Saturday afternoon, August 19, for the SNS Write-In, a generative online workshop.
August Writing Prompt:
~Tell me lies; tell me sweet little lies…(Fleetwood Mac)
Who lied to you? Your mother? Your father? The media? The culture? Your teachers, your history books, your peers, your president, your lover, your mirror, yourself?
What was the mean little lie you told yourself? Or the lie you pretended was true?The tiny lie you justified. Who else have you lied to? Because you were being nice, or in denial, or covering up guilt or shame, or having some fun with fiction.
As writers, how can we tell lies in order to reveal an “emotional truth”?
Why do we talk about “lies” as plural and “the truth” as singular?
This month at SNS, you are invited to tell us lies! Or write about a lie, or replace the lies with truths. Tell us a story; write us a poem; sing us a song.
SOME IDEAS TO GET YOU STARTED:
Make a list of lies, general or specific, personal or political, private or public.
Consider different kinds of lies—small lies, big lies, white lies, plagiarism, perjury, advertising, lies of omission, or betrayal, of compassion or treason.
Use the old ice breaker “two truths and a lie” as a writing prompt.
Think about the lies you’ve told and been told. Excavate the reasons, find the truth.
Pick one or more lies to write about. Use lots of juicy details!
Or
Write something completely or partially made up! Be playful. Change directions, change your story, double back, change your mind.
Or
Something else! As ever, the theme is optional—an invitation, not a requirement.
FOR INSPIRATION:
“White Lies,“ poem by Natasha Trethewey
”Two Truths and a Lie,” poem by Hajjar Baban
”Lies and Longing,” poem by Linda Gregg
”Lies Told Honestly,” poem by Sahar Khraibani
”More Lies,” poem by Karin Gottshall
”The Lies of Sleeping Dogs: A Fable,” poem by Susan Dwyer
”Bakery of Lies,” poem by Judith Askew
“How to Tell a True War Story,” short story by Tim O’Brien from his book, The Things They Carried
Colossus: Body (Zoom Reading)
Featuring:
Hollie Hardy, Jan Steckel, Marisa Lin, Susan Dambroff
Monday, August 14, 2023
9pm - 11pm Central Time
Online
Colossus Press takes over Bird & Beckett’s weekly Zoom reading, hosted by Kim Shuck.
I’ll be featuring along with other poets published in the Colossus: Body Anthology
Featuring
Hollie Hardy
Jan Steckel
Marisa Lin
Susan Dambroff
Monday, August 14, 2023
9pm - 11pm Central Time
Free Event
SNS | 07-29-23
Featuring:
Anhvu Buchanan & Kimberly Reyes
Theme:
Erasure
Saturday, July 29, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Anhvu Buchanan & Kimberly Reyes
Theme: Erasure
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday July 29, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 857 5010 5806
Passcode: 360894
Author Bios
Anhvu Buchanan is the author of The Disordered (sunnyoutside press), Backhanded Compliments & Other Ways to Say I Love You (Works on Paper Press) and just releasedfrom ELJ Editions, his latest book: The Peeling of a Name. He was the recipient of a James D. Phelan Award and an Individual Artists Grant from the San Francisco Arts Commission. He received an MFA in Creative Writing from San Francisco State. He currently teaches in San Francisco and can be found online at anhvubuchanan.com.
Buy his latest book here: https://www.spdbooks.org/Products/9781942004578/the-peeling-of-a-name.aspx
Kimberly Reyes is the author of the recently released poetry collection vanishing point (Omnidawn 2023), and the collections Running to Stand Still (Omnidawn 2019) and Warning Coloration (dancing girl press 2018). Her nonfiction book of essays Life During Wartime (Fourteen Hills 2019) won the 2018 Michael Rubin Book Award. Her work is featured in various international outlets including The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Associated Press, Entertainment Weekly, Time.com, The Best American Poetry blog, poets.org, and many more. Reyes has also received numerous fellowships including from the Poetry Foundation, the Academy of American Poets, the Fulbright Program, CantoMundo, Sewanee Writers’ Conference, Tin House Workshops, and other places. She is currently a PhD student at the University of Nebraska Lincoln and she writes about identity, ecology, sexuality, and Cillian Murphy.
Learn more and buy her books here: kimberlyreyes.online
The SNS Write-In Returns this Month!
LET’S WRITE TOGETHER!
Join me the week before SNS, on Saturday afternoon, July 22, for the SNS Write-In, a generative online workshop.
July Writing Prompt:
To erase is to remove, delete, scratch out, black out, white out, exterminate, nullify, silence, or forget.
Erasure can be literal, as a coffee stain, delete key, snow storm, remodel, drought, forest fire, or murder—the genocide of Indigenous Americans—or it can be less tangible—the erasure of Black history from curriculum, the banning of books, gentrification, the silencing of truth through lies or omissions, the loss of agency or identity through denial of a name, language, media coverage, cultural practice, etc.
This month at SNS, you are invited to write into the theme of “Erasure.”
SOME IDEAS TO GET YOU STARTED:
Consider the personal, things you have erased (accidentally or deliberately), denied yourself, ignored, pushed down, forgotten, gotten over, filtered out; or things that have been taken from you—a name, a pronoun, a history, a family, a home, an opportunity, a right. How have you (been) silenced, discredited, ignored, or oppressed? What have you blocked out or silently witnessed? How can you work to undo erasure by writing/righting the narrative?
Or
Write about partial erasure. Think palimpsest. Think layers. Appropriation, graffiti. That which persists and remains. The past peeking through the weeds of the present like abandoned trolley tracks.
Or
Try erasure as form:
Erasure poetry, also known as blackout poetry, is a form of “found poetry” wherein the writer takes an existing text and erases, blacks out, or otherwise obscures a large portion of the text, creating a wholly new work from what remains. Erasure poetry may be used as a means of collaboration, creating a new text from an old one and thereby starting a dialogue between the two, or as a means of confrontation, a challenge to a pre-existing text.
Or
Consider erasure within your own poem. Add caesura, white space or [ ] or strikethroughs to emphasize what is missing, what’s been left out or erased.
Or
Something else! As ever, the theme is optional—an invitation, not a requirement.
FOR INSPIRATION:
Pilgrim poem by Megan Snyder-Camp
Dear— poem by Donika Kelly
Erasure in Three Acts: An Essay by Muriel Leung
Erasure of Girlhood The Slow Down 5-minute podcast, with poem by Sarah María Medina.
Or read it yourself here. (Please Note: There’s a trigger warning for this poem).
Four erasure poems by Katrina Roberts
Newspaper blackout poems & process videos by Austin Kleon
Declarations erasure poem read by the author, former U.S. Poet Laureate Tracy K. Smith
The Mannequin short fiction + erasure prompt by Sarah Barkat
Lessons in Erasure micro fiction by Jack Barker-Clark
The Near Transitive Properties of the Political and Poetical: Erasure essay by Solmaz Sharif
Redeclarations.com interactive project by Halim Madi, in which participants create digital erasures from the Declaration of Independence.
SNS | 06-24-23
Featuring:
Miah Jeffra & Amber Flame
Theme:
The Rainbow
Saturday, June 24, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Miah Jeffra & Amber Flame
Theme: The Rainbow
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday June 24, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 834 5519 1875
Passcode: 325168
iPhone one-tap (US Toll):
+1 253 205 0468 US
Author Bios
Miah Jeffra is the author of four books, most recently The Violence Almanac (finalist for several awards, including the Grace Paley and St. Lawrence Book Prizes) and the novel American Gospel. Work can be seen in StoryQuarterly, Prairie Schooner, The North American Review, storySouth, DIAGRAM, jubilat and many others. Miah is co-founder of Whiting Award-winning queer and trans literary collaborative, Foglifter Press, and teaches writing and decolonial studies at Santa Clara University.
Learn more and buy books at miahjeffra.com
Amber Flame is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, activist and educator, whose work has garnered residencies with Hedgebrook, Vermont Studio Center, and more. In her writing, Flame explores spirituality and sexuality, cross-woven with themes of grief and loss, motherhood and magic, and the interstitial joy in it all. As the singer-songwriter front of her band, Last of the RedHot Mamas, Flame brings raunchy wordplay, constant hustle and heartbreaking love of the blues to contemporary issues of self-care, racial injustice, apocalypse survival, ethical non-monogamy, and post-church spirituality. A former church kid from the Southwest, Flame’s first full-length poetry collection, Ordinary Cruelty, published in 2017 through Write Bloody Press. Flame’s second book of poetry, apocrifa, launched May 2023 from Red Hen Press. Amber Flame is a queer Black dandy mama who falls hard for a jumpsuit and some fresh kicks.
The SNS Write-In Returns this Month!
LET’S WRITE TOGETHER!
Join me the week before SNS, on Saturday afternoon, June 17, for the SNS Write-In, a generative online workshop.
June Writing Prompt:
The rainbow represents inclusivity. It celebrates our diversity, our differences and how whatever our stripe or color, we are all beautifully human, deserving of celebration and freedom to be ourselves. The rainbow also means hope, love, and friendship.
In a climate of violence and political backlash against the LGBTQ+ community, the values represented by the rainbow are as urgent and imperative as ever. So, in honor of Pride Month, the SNS (always optional) theme this month is: The Rainbow.
SOME IDEAS TO GET YOU STARTED:
Write about identity, gender, sexuality, love, sex, relationships, a celebration of self-acceptance, or discrimination, stereotypes, family or social pressures. Or write about current politics around these issues. Or a personal experience of Pride—a parade or bar or drag show or dance party you attended, a historical event or tragedy you witnessed or were affected by, a law or teaching by a school or church that impacted you, something that shaped your understanding as an adult or child. A comment that hurt or healed. This might be your own experience or something you witnessed as a friend or a conversation you had.
Or
If all this feels too personal or political, you are welcome to write into more general representations of the rainbow introduced above—hope, love, friendship, diversity, inclusivity, freedom, beauty, etc. Try to ground your writing in a specific detail, image, moment or story.
Or
Be literal! Write about the time you saw a double rainbow on a camping trip or with your family at Disneyworld, or how you used to decorate your locker with rainbow stickers and believe in leprechauns and fairies, or that rainbow-after-the-storm feeling that came after an emotional breakthrough.
Or
Let color itself be your muse. Pick a specific color to explore or write into each color of the rainbow. Paint with words.
Or something else! The sky is the limit, as they say.
FOR INSPIRATION:
“An American Poem,” by Eileen Myles
”Summer,” by Chen Chen
”The Mortician in San Francisco,” by Randall Mann
”Lisp,” by Sam Sax
”A Litany for Survival,” by Audrey Lorde
”At Last the New Arriving,” by Gabrielle Calvocoressi
”Double Rainbow,” by Ravi Shankar
”Colors of the Comanche Flag,” by Sy Hoahwah
”Colors Passing through Us,” by Marge Piercy
“Pride Inside,” Selected Shorts podcast hosted by Meg Wolitzer
SNS | 05-27-23
Featuring:
Keenan Norris & Propaganda Poet
Theme:
The Future
Saturday, May 27, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Keenan Norris & Propaganda Poet
Theme: The Future
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday May 27, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
May Writing Prompt:
"The future is made of the same stuff as the present," wrote French philosopher Simone Weil. Do you agree? This month at SNS, your mission is to write into the future.
Stretch your imagination 200 years ahead, or five years, or to tomorrow. Compare to today, or the past, or imagine it newly. You could write speculative fiction, or take on the voice of a fortune teller, a tarot card reader, a newscaster, Nostradamus himself, or write a personal self-reflection or wishlist poem of your most exciting goals. Or think about a younger you, what you thought your future would be like. Does it measure up? How has life surprised you in the present of your former future?
Is your vision of the future apocalyptic or utopian? How does technology, science, medicine, religion, politics burgeon newly (or remain the same) in the future? Consider all the technological advances that have occurred in your own lifetime or your parents’. Think of wars fought, diseases cured, all the information (and misinformation) in the world readily available in a hand-held computer/ phone/ camera/ cookbook/ chess board/ radio/newspaper/ mailbox/ et al.
Are humans kinder and more accepting of each other in the future? Or more divided? Do we still have animals? What about global warming? Genetics? Aliens? Zombies?! AI? Self-driving cars? Space travel? Where will you be in 10 or 20 years? What will you be wearing? What will life be like? What will you miss?
FOR INSPIRATION:
“Don’t You Wonder, Sometimes?” poem by Tracy K. Smith (from her award-winning collection Life on Mars)
“The Future,” poem by Neal Bowers
“The Future,” poem by Sandra Lim
“Are We Not Men,” fiction by T. C. Boyle (I read this years ago in The New Yorker and still think of it)
NOTE: Sorry, no pre-SNS Write-In this month. I’m going camping! But I’ll be home to host SNS, and we can write together again next month. " Please check back for details.
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 811 9345 5762
Passcode: 666166
iPhone one-tap (US Toll):
+17193594580,,81193455762# US
Author Bios
Keenan Norris’s latest novel is The Confession of Copeland Cane, the winner of the 2022 Northern California Book Award. Keenan teaches English and creative writing at San Jose State University. His essays have received the National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Award and Folio: Eddie Award. Earlier this year he published the biblio-memoir Chi Boy: Native Sons and Chicago Reckonings.
Learn more and buy books at: KeenanNorris.com
PropagandaPoet (Bear Wolf) is a Shawnee Gypsy Jew social justice humanist making his triumphant return to California. He sees tattoos as physical manifestations of emotional scars and lost count of his somewhere around twenty. His works include an array of poetry, music, performance and teaching at the collegiate level, including creating and curating the Hearing Marginalized Voices Through Poetry series. Word Tornadoes is his second book of poetry following on the footsteps of his debut book 2020 D//Vision.
Support and follow at these links:
https://linktr.ee/changelingstudios
https://ko-fi.com/cs420/shop
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXmu-aq8RjxzPutvgneIarQ
IG: @changelingstudios420
SNS | 04-29-23
Featuring:
Linda Ravenswood & Jeannine Hall Gailey
Theme:
Hybrid
Saturday, April 29, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Linda Ravenswood
& Jeannine Hall Gailey
Theme: Hybrid
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday April 29, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
April Writing Prompt:
Happy National Poetry Month! Your free April SNS Writing Prompt is “HYBRID.”
This word simply means combining or mixing two different things to make something new, and applies to a vast range of topics from ligers and tigons and unicorns and animal-headed humans, to hybrid cars and GMOs and pink-lady-cherry-lemon trees, and coffee-quinoa cocktails (ew, what? no.), to the pandemic adaptions of hybrid work and learning environments, to hybrid cultures experienced by some immigrant and interracial families.
Another example of hybridity is the portmanteau—mash-up words like “brunch” and “spork” and “mockumentary.”
In terms of literature, there are many hybrid forms—mixed-medium and mixed-genre creations—letter and collage poems, ekphrasis, collaborative art/dance/writing projects, poems or stories incorporating multiple languages, maps, music, lists, diagrams, photographs, or other visual or sensory elements, or combining old and new, traditional and experimental forms, like broken sonnets, or Jericho Brown’s duplex form, anything that straddles the line between poetry and prose, like flash fiction and prose poetry, or any 2-thing-mashup!
Your invitation: Get creative! Be experimental! Mix and “mash” things together. Write about something hybrid. Or write/create something hybrid.
FOR INSPIRATION:
Here’s a sample from “Testaments Scratched into a Water Station Barrel” hybrid poems by Eduardo C. Corral, from his collection Guillotine.
Here’s a duplex by Jericho Brown, from his Pulitzer-Prize-winning collection, The Tradition.
NOTE: No Write-In this month. (I’m going on a much-needed vacation!) But I’ll be back to host SNS and we can write together again next month.
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 841 8860 5302
Passcode: 483253
iPhone one-tap (US Toll):
+17193594580,,84188605302# US
Author Bios
LINDA RAVENSWOOD is an award-winning poet, performance artist, and founding Editor-in-Chief of The Los Angeles Press. She a winner of the Oxford Poetry Prize, the Edwin Markham Poetry Prize selected by former US Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera, and the 2023 Arthur Smith Prize from Madville Press. Her hybrid poetry collection Cantadora – Letters from California was released in January 2023 from Eyewear London/Black Spring Press Group. Other current and forthcoming publications include The Stan Poems (Pedestrian Press, 2022), A Poem Is a House (forthcoming from Flowersong Press 2023), The 500 – The End of Conquest (Alternating Currents Press, 2024), and If We Never Meet Again: A Pandemic Diary (X Artists’ Books, 2024). Ravenswood is also the founder of the poet laureate program in Glendale, California and introduces the Poets Café on KPFK in LA on Wednesdays at 2:00p.m. Find her at The Los Angeles Press www.thelosangelespress.com
Buy Cantadora —Letters from California here: https://www.amazon.com/Cantadora-Letters-California-Linda-Ravenswood/dp/1913606244
Jeannine Hall Gailey is a writer with MS who served as the second Poet Laureate of Redmond, Washington and is the author of Becoming the Villainess, She Returns to the Floating World, Unexplained Fevers, The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, winner of the Moon City Press Book Prize, Field Guide to the End of the World, and the newly released Flare, Corona from BOA Editions. Her work has been featured on NPR’s The Writer’s Almanac, Verse Daily and The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror. Her poems have appeared in The American Poetry Review, Poetry, and Ploughshares.
Find her at: https://webbish6.com/
Get a signed copy of Flare Corona here: https://webbish6.com/books/flare-corona/
Austin Living Room Literary Salon
Featuring:
Heidi Kasa, Hollie Hardy, Loria Mendoza, Tomas Moniz & Devin Marie
Sunday, April 23, 2023
6pm mixer, 7pm music, 8pm words
DM for Address
Join us for an evening of live music and literary performance in Austin, TX.
Featuring:
Heidi Kasa
Hollie Hardy
Loria Mendoza
Tomas Moniz
Live Music:
Devin Marie
Sunday, April 23, 2023
6pm mixer, 7pm music, 8pm words
DM for Address
Free Event
Donations Welcome
BYOB
SNS | 03-25-23
Featuring:
Nicole Callihan & Unmesh Mohitkar
Theme:
Rupture
Saturday, March 25, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Nicole Callihan & Unmesh Mohitkar
Theme: Rupture
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday March 25, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
March Writing Prompt:
I recently bought Jenny Xie’s book, The Rupture Tense, to teach in my Contemporary Poets & Poetry workshop and before I even read this amazing collection, I fell for the word “rupture.” Its versatility and violence; its brutal, catalytic change.
To break. To shatter warningless. A glass table exploding in slow motion. To breach. To disturb. To disrupt. An alien bursting from a stomach like a surprise from a cake. Harmony collision. An unwanted memory. Engorged river. Protestors infenestrating buildings through ruptured glass. Bombed cities. Broken silence.
For your prompt this month, think burst pipes and flooded banks; think derailed trains and ruptured relationships; think explosions and popped balloons or tendons, organs spilling and borders breached. Even thunder, laughter, or a sneeze can rupture. Think egg shells and ruined yolks. Fissure. Puncture. Erupt. And then, perhaps...repair. Think wabi-sabi and kintsugi. Think make-up sex.
Or play with form. How can you rupture the narrative? The sentence? The line? The page? Language and tense! Disrupt the normative syntax! Word mutiny! Dismember and rebuild! Consider how breaking something can provide a new way to revise, a new way to create.
Feel free to interpret the prompt any way you choose or to ignore it entirely. Sign up below to share your poems, stories, songs, dances, or short comedy sketches at this month's open mic.
Want to work on the prompt together?
Join me the week before SNS (on Saturday afternoon, March 18) for the Saturday Night Special Write-In! Details/ sign up here.
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 868 7267 5637
Passcode: 172727
iPhone one-tap (US Toll):
+17193594580,,86872675637# US
Author Bio
Nicole Callihan’s This Strange Garment was released this month by Terrapin Books. Her other books include SuperLoop and the poetry chapbooks The Deeply Flawed Human, Downtown, and ELSEWHERE (with Zoë Ryder White), as well as a novella, The Couples. Her work has appeared in Kenyon Review, Colorado Review, Conduit, The American Poetry Review, and as a Poem-a-Day selection from the Academy of American Poets. Find out more at www.nicolecallihan.com.
Get your copy of This Strange Garment here: https://www.terrapinbooks.com/store/p55/garment.html
Unmesh Mohitkar is a performance poet and spoken word artist from Pune, India. He is the author of the poetry collections, Light Shadow Life: The Missing Verse of the Soul and most recently Let’s Un-Mesh Life. He has featured at multiple international open mics and spoken word events, including the Singapore and San Jose Poetry Festival, Phynncabulary, Put it in the Chat, Word is Write, Time to Arrive, Cobalt poets and The Nuyorican Poets Cafe Online. Unmesh writes in three languages (English, Hindi, Marathi) and is a globetrotter who has visited twenty-two countries. He hosts his own open mic Let’s UN-Mesh Life every Saturday at 9pm IST, 10:30am EST.
Learn more: https://linktr.ee/UnmeshMohitkar
His latest book, Let’s Un-Mesh Life is available now: https://a.co/d/9vE0Glm
SNS | 02-25-23
Featuring:
Ali Lanzetta & Truong Tran
Theme:
Light Switch
Saturday, February 25, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Ali Lanzetta & Truong Tran
Theme: Light Switch
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday February 25, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
I don’t know about you, but I’m ready for spring. As I write this, I’m hiding out with family, hours from home, where a frozen tree came crashing, snapping the power line to our house. Across town, thousands more trees lay in icy ruins as Austonians huddle in the dark. Waiting for the lights to switch back on.
This month at SNS we’re leaning into the light. Bring me your sunshine! There are so many ways to think about a light switch, from the beginning of the universe, to the changing of the seasons where light slides newly through trees, the times of day that simmer and glow in transition, a wisp of sun settling in eyelashes, your childhood flashlight under the covers, the antique lamp’s snap into brightness, the way light teases the tips of waves, the first windows to blink awake on a hillside, captured fireflies in a jar, the spark of new love, the poet’s epiphany. Let there be light!
Want to work on the prompt together? Join me the week before SNS (on Saturday, February 18) for the first ever Saturday Night Special Write-In! Details/ sign up here.
Feel free to interpret the prompt any way you choose or to ignore it entirely. Sign up below to share your poems, stories, songs, dances, or short comedy sketches at this month's open mic.
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 829 5578 8503
Passcode: 700511
iPhone one-tap (US Toll):
+16694449171,,82955788503# US
Author Bios
Ali Lanzetta is a writer, educator, artist, musician, and bookseller who lives between trees, sleeps under a blanket of books, and has a soft spot for giraffes, whose hearts are over two feet long. Her poetry and prose have appeared in Verse, Switchback, Eleven Eleven, Flock, Panapoly, Gertrude, and elsewhere. Her debut book, marmalade, a collection of prose poetry and flash narrative nonfiction, is scheduled for release in March 2023 from Spuyten Duyvil Press. ali studied creative writing and teaching on the enchanted electric hilltops of San Francisco, but eventually set sail from the city to live, love, and practice the literary arts in a Vermont valley filled with birds. You can find out more about ali and her work at alilanzetta.com.
Preorder her book here: https://www.spuytenduyvil.net/marmalade.html
Truong Tran is a Vietnamese-American poet, visual artist, and teacher. He is an author of eight collections of poetry, most recently, Book of the Other (Kaya Press, 2021), as well as an artist book, and a children's book. As a visual artist Tran is best known for mixed media pieces and light installations. His work is in private collections, and has been featured in solo gallery shows as well as museum exhibitions across the Bay Area. As a teacher, Truong Tran has over twenty years experience as a professor of Creative Writing to both graduates and undergraduates, and has mentored thousands in the community.
truong-tran.com
Red Light Lit presents: From the heART
Featuring:
Anthony Mai, Eman Khan, Gabrielle Grace Hogan, Hank Opal Jove, Hollie Hardy, Kelly Madera, Meredith Johnson, Owie, Renée Woolley, Sam Castillo
Friday, February 10, 2023
8pm
Native Hostel
807 E. 4th ST, Austin, TX
Join us for an evening of poetry, music, comedy, and drag on the theme of love.
Featuring:
Anthony Mai
Eman Khan
Gabrielle Grace Hogan
Hank Opal Jove
Hollie Hardy
Kelly Madera
Meredith Johnson
Owie
Renée Woolley
Sam Castillo
Live Music:
UGH
Hosted By: Loria Mendoza
Friday, February 10, 2023
8pm
Native Hostel
(in the coffee parlor)
807 E. 4th Street
Austin, TX
Donations at the door
(sliding scale)
SNS | 01-28-23
Featuring:
Toni Mirosevich & Arisa White
Theme:
Long Dark Night
Saturday, January 28, 2023
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Toni Mirosevich & Arisa White
Theme: Long Dark Night
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday January 28, 2023
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
This month at SNS, on the last Saturday of January, in the heart of midwinter, we celebrate “the long dark night,” with blackouts and snow, existential woe and holidays behind us, at the end of a (maybe/semi) sober January, with resolutions made and (maybe) broken, the smell of wood smoke welcome (or warning), winter invites us to turn inward, to hibernate and reflect, to make soup, write, and reset, to recommit to goals, and reconnect to the people and things that matter, to rest and rejuvenate. Consider, perhaps, the soul in search of fresh faith after a period of darkness, rejection, illness, failure, ennui—what lifts us up, nourishes and inspires, what light persists through the long dark night?
Want to work on the prompt together? Join me the week before SNS (on Saturday, Jan 21) for the first ever Saturday Night Special Write-In! Details/ sign up here.
Feel free to interpret the prompt any way you choose or to ignore it entirely. Sign up below to share your poems, stories, songs, dances, or short comedy sketches at this month's open mic.
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 845 4394 5181
Passcode: 832676
iPhone one-tap (US Toll):
+13462487799,,84543945181# US
Author Bios
Toni Mirosevich was raised in a Croatian-American fishing family in Everett, Washington. In Spell Heaven, her linked story collection recently released from Counterpoint Press, a lesbian couple moves to a coast town and unexpectedly finds a sense of belonging with a group of outsiders. Mirosevich is also the author of Pink Harvest, winner of the First Series Award for Creative Nonfiction, and five books of poetry. Her cross-genre writings have been widely anthologized and her fiction and essays have appeared in numerous literary journals. A professor of creative writing at San Francisco State University for many years, she currently resides with her wife in Pacifica, California.
Buy her book here: counterpointpress.com/books/spell-heaven
Learn more: tonimirosevich.com
Arisa White is an assistant professor of English and Creative Writing at Colby College. Most recently, she is the author of Who’s Your Daddy, co-editor of Home Is Where You Queer Your Heart, and co-author of Biddy Mason Speaks Up, the second book in the Fighting for Justice Series for young readers. Her poetry is widely published and her collections have been nominated for an NAACP Image Award, Lambda Literary Award, and have won the Per Diem Poetry Prize, Maine Literary Award, Nautilus Book Award, an Independent Publisher Book Award, and Golden Crown Literary Award. Currently, in development with composer Jessica Jones, Arisa is working on Post Pardon: The Opera. arisawhite.com
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SNS | 11-26-22
Featuring:
Jennifer Lewis & Zomkhonto
Theme:
Recover
Saturday, November 26, 2022
8pm Central Time
Featuring: Jennifer Lewis & Zomkhonto
Theme: Recover
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday November 26, 2022
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
Join me on Saturday after Thanksgiving for the last SNS of 2022
As we bask in the afterglow of too much food, friends and family, football and politics, and reflect on the closing year, for your November writing challenge, I invite you to consider the idea of RECOVERY, in any of its many senses.
To RECOVER is to "return to a normal state of health, mind, or strength; to regain control or possession of (something stolen or lost); to make up for."
From what have you recovered or are you still recovering from? This could be a small triumph, like recovering a lost $20 in the pocket of last year's coat, or you could be recovering from an injury or the loss of a friend, a heartbreak, the economic downturn, or a bout with Covid (in many ways we're all still trying to recover from the pandemic), some of us have recovered from depression, rejection, addictions or hangovers, even writer's block. What is the spark that gives us the hope to fight for our own recovery? How can we lift ourselves and each other up?
Feel free to interpret this prompt any way you choose or to ignore it entirely. Sign up below to share your poems, stories, songs, dances, or short comedy sketches at this month's open mic.
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to
3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 812 2917 6407
Passcode: 755207
iPhone one-tap (US Toll):
+13462487799,,81229176407# US
Author Bios
Jennifer Lewis is a writer, editor, and the publisher of Red Light Lit. Her debut short story collection, The New Low, was recently released in 2022, by Nomadic Press, where her short story, "New Low," was the winner of the Bindle Award. In 2020, she won the Los Angeles Review Flash Fiction award for "Put a Teat in It." She received her MFA in creative writing from San Francisco State University in 2015. She teaches at The Writing Salon in San Francisco. Buy her book here: https://www.nomadicpress.org/store/p/thenewlow
Mbonisi Zikhali was born in Makokoba, in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. His spoken-word/storytelling name is Zomkhonto, which happens to be his bloodline’s totem. He is a spoken-word artist, story-teller, arts educator, youth mentor, qualified community services worker, grassroots community organizer and mental wellness advocate. He considers himself an afro-empath, and is driven to ensure that people find joy and healing in the power of words and story-telling. Some of the recent publications he has appeared in include winner of Off Topic Publishing's August 2022 Poetry Contest, Best New African Poets 2019 Anthology by Mwanaka Media and Publishing, Ipikai Poetry Journal’s inaugural and second edition (initiative of the Zimbabwe Poets Society) among others. His work was recently showcased at the World Poetry Slam Championships’ spoken word video presentations (September 26-30, 2022) in Brussels, Belgium. He is the current President of Artcite Windsor Inc (Canada)’s Board of Directors.
Check out a digital broadside of his work here: https://www.poetrysuperhighway.com/cobalt/092722.pdf
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SNS | 10-29-22
Featuring:
Sara Biel & Fraser Johnson
Theme:
Trick!
Saturday, October 29, 2022
8pm – 10pm Central Time
Featuring: Sara Biel & Fraser Johnson
Theme: Trick!
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday October 29, 2022
6:00pm Pacific Time
(8:00pm Central time)
Online Event
Free Admission
It's decorative gourd season AND the 12th annual SNS Halloween Reading is happening on the last Saturday of October! Let's get festive. Wear a costume, or a hat, wig, mask, paint your face if you're feeling spicy.
Our theme this month is: TRICK. Think: mirage, disguise, card tricks, trick-or-treating, pranks, sex workers, gymnastics, sugar cereal, dog training, con artists, mistaken identity, a trick of the light. Or whatever you want.
Sign up to share your poems, stories, songs, dances, or short comedy sketches on our optional theme.
Sign Up in Advance to Get on the Open Mic List
The theme is optional | Time limit is not optional
Please plan ahead and keep your reading to 3 MINUTES MAX
Join Event on Zoom
Meeting ID: 823 2213 0882
Passcode: 939981
Join from PC, Mac, Linux, iOS or Android:
https://peralta-edu.zoom.us/j/82322130882?pwd=K0RDWWlWbVFqTFJLRW5UUlJwSDNhUT09
Or iPhone one-tap (US Toll):
+1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)
Author Bios
Sara Biel, a poet, visual artist and social worker living in Oakland, CA, coedits the Colossus Press anthology series. Her poems have been published in sPARKLE & bLINK; Button Eye Review, and Beyond Words: She won honorable mention in the Streetlight 2021 poetry contest. Her chapbook Prescribed Burn will be published in 2023 by Finishing Line Press. She sees the creative process as a medium for change, healing and building community.
Fraser Johnson is the author of the newly released memoire, "WTF are Boundaries: Good Times, Bad Times, and Narcissistic Abuse." He lives in Toronto, Ontario, where he is visited by his young adult sons, two of the best people he has ever known. Outside of writing, Fraser loves nature; an avid outdoorsman, he has led camping and outdoor experiences for groups as well as designed and developed camping gear.
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Red Light Lit: The New Low
Featuring:
Peter Bullen, Hollie Hardy, Miah Jeffra, Kar Johnson, Loria Mendoza, Monique Mero, Christine No, Sarah Bethe Nelson, alongside a musical score by Nick Jaina. With musical guest Zero Charisma.
Saturday, October 15, 2022
7pm
Make-Out Room
3225 22nd St, San Francisco, CA
Join us for an evening of storytelling, poetry, and music in celebration of Jennifer Lewis' debut short story collection, The New Low, published by Nomadic Press. Writers will read excepts from The New Low mixed with their own work.
Featuring:
Peter Bullen, Hollie Hardy, Miah Jeffra, Kar Johnson, Loria Mendoza, Monique Mero, Christine No, Sarah Bethe Nelson
& Jennifer Lewis
Music:
Nick Jaina & Zero Charisma
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy
Saturday, October 15, 2022
7pm
Make-Out Room
3225 22nd ST
San Francisco, CA
Free Show!
RSVP and invite your friends on Facebook!
Homecoming Reading & Gallery Reopening
Literary Reading
Hosted by Hollie Hardy
Art by Donald Morey
Live music by Punk Funk Mob
Friday, October 14, 2022
Doors open for Art 4pm, Reading 7pm, Music 9:30pm
Studio Morey
5500 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Oakland, CA
Featuring:
Tongo Eisen-Martin
Cassandra Dallett
K.R. Morrison
Jennifer Lewis
Peter Thomas Bullen
Elisa Salasin
Sara Biel
Keith Gaboury
Tomas Moniz
Liz Cahill
Hollie Hardy
Heidi Kasa
Miah Jeffra
Richard Loranger
Lisa Martinovic
Hugh Behm-Steinberg
Melissa Anderson
Garrett Murphy
Tracy Artson
Loria Mendoza
Riley O'Connell
Kimi Sugioka
Matthew Zapruder
Live Music:
Punk Funk Mob
Hosted By: Hollie Hardy & Donald Morey
Friday, October 14, 2022
4pm - 6:30pm Come early to mingle & meet the artists
7pm-9pm Literary performances
9:30pm Live music
Address
5500 Martin Luther King Jr. Way
Oakland, CA 94609
Suggested Donation
$5-20 sliding scale
No one turned away for lack of funds.
RSVP and invite your friends on Facebook!