Upcoming Readings and Events

JANUARY 31 HOPE COLLEGE VISITING WRITERS SERIES

 

3:30 Herrick Room Q and A

7 pm Winants Graves Hall Reading

 

Contact: Sarah Baar, baar@hope.edu

 

FEBRUARY 3 SHORELINE VISION KEYNOTE SPEAKER

 

2:30 Bookselling and Conversation

3:15 – 4:15 Speech

Watermark 920 Muskegon

 

  

TUESDAY FEBRUARY 7 HASP KEYNOTE SPEECH

 

9 am arrival Haworth Center Conference Center

Contact Kathy Beal pkbeal@sbcgolbal.net

 

THURSDAY FEBURARY 9 HAIR: TEXT AND IMAGE: poetry reading

 

6:30-8:30 pm

Hair: Text & Image

CHRYSTOPH MARTEN

511 West 25th Street, # 608.

February 9 – March 3rd, 2012

Opening: Thursday, Feb. 9th, 6:30-8:30 pm

Elaine Sexton 212-462-9585 / elainesexton1@gmail.com

Chrystoph Marten 212-414-1422

 

 


WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 15 HASP HOPE COLLEGE  .

 

10:00 AM to 11:00 AM   

9:30 coffee

10 am speech

Booksales: Sally Hoekstra 

HOPE COLLEGE

Maas Conference Room

Contact: Elliot Tanis

616.395.7377

tanis@hope.edu

 

FRIDAY MARCH 2  “The Personal, Political, Provocative” The Sun Magazine

 

ASSOCIATED WRITING PROGRAMS

 

10:15 am Empire Ballroom Palmer House Hilton Chicago

National Conference

Chicago, IL 

Contact: Molly Herboth

919-942-5282

molly@thesunmagazine.org

 

 

TUESDAY MAY 1   Reading and Signing

 

7:00 PM to 8:30 PM   

author event.

ROCHESTER HILLS PUBLIC LIBRARY

500 Olde Towne Road

Rochester, MI  48307-2043

Contact: Ellen Kieta

248-650-7124

ellen.kieta@rhpl.org


Annie Leibovitz

I watched a documentary on Annie Leibovitz Annie Leibovitz last night and I want all my students to watch it.  It’s a portrait of  

becoming an artist.

So so so so good.

 Two things she said that I really want to help my students, and myself, keep at the very center of our process this semester:

1.  You don’t know what you are going to get until you get there.  You can’t plan your art.  You have to go to the place (for writers, that is the dream space) and notice what is there.

2. The small things are the things that end up “making” the piece.  You have to keep an eye for the tiny things, and you never can know where they will be or what they will be, or even that you have them when you happen upon them. You often aren’t going to know, for a long time, what you have.

It’s this kind of eye towards mystery, and this patience with not knowing, that I’m trying to teach. And practice.