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July Festival (updated) |
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2005 JULY Writing Workshops |
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Featured
Salon Speakers
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July 20th | OPEN READING | OPEN READING |
OPEN READING |
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Many Mountains
Moving and BMoCA present their monthly literary salon at the Boulder Museum
of Contemporary Art at 1750 Thirteenth Street, Boulder, Colorado.
A pot luck dinner and open mic time for community writers will follow the reading. This event is free. For more information call 303-545-9942.
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August
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September
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October
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November
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December
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When: Saturday
July 30th 2005 from 1:00-5:30 p.m. Where: the Boulder Public Library Main Branch Who: Veronica Patterson and Tim Hernandez What: 1:00 p.m. Open Reading All-day bookfair.... FREE EVENT OPEN TO ALL. Back issues of Many Mountains Moving and MMM Press books on sale. For more info, please e-mail [email protected] |
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ARTIST BIO | SAMPLE POEMS Veronica Patterson is a graduate of Cornell University,
the University of Michigan, the University of Northern Colorado, and Warren
Wilson College (MFA in Creative Writing/Poetry). Her first poetry collection,
How to Make a Terrarium, was published by Cleveland State University
(1987). Her poetry collection Swan, What Shores? (New York University
Press, 2000) was a finalist for the Academy of American Poets’ 2000
James Laughlin Award and won annual poetry awards from both the Colorado
Center for the Book and Women Writing the West. Her chapbook of prose
poems This Is the Strange Part was published by Pudding House
Publications in Spring 2002. She has also published one collection of
poetry and photography, The Bones Remember: A Dialogue, with
photographer Ronda Stone (Stone Graphics Press). Her poems have appeared
in numerous publications including The Southern Poetry Review, The
Louisville Review, The Sun, The Madison Review, The Malahat Review, The
Indiana Review, Another Chicago Magazine, The Mid-American Review, The
Willow Review, The Montserrat Review, The Bloomsbury Review, Willow Springs,
The Colorado Review, The Midwest Quarterly, Many Mountains Moving, Coal
City Review, Dogwood, New Letters, The Bellingham Review, Cimarron Review,
The Beloit Poetry Journal, and Runes. Poems are forthcoming
in Many Mountains Moving, Pilgrimage, Prairie Schooner, and Lumina.
Her essay “Comfort Me with Apples” appeared in the Spring
1997 Georgia Review and was selected as a Notable Essay. Her
essay “Feast” was published in Pilgrimage in 2003. She has
been awarded three residencies at the Ucross Foundation and one at Hedgebrook;
she received Individual Artist’s Fellowships from the Colorado Council
on the Arts in 1984 and 1997. In September 1999, she was artist-in-residence
in Rocky Mountain National Park. Her poem “Postcards” won
first place in the Peregrine Poetry Contest (Amherst Writers and Artists);
and her poem “Three Photographs Not of My Father” won first
prize in the 1997 Salt Hill Journal poetry competition (Syracuse
University); her poem “Signatures” was nominated for a Pushcart
Prize in 2001; her poem “Unreasonable Shoes” was one of four
honorable mentions for the Tor House Prize in 2004. Her flash-fiction/prose-poem
piece “Room” won the 2005 Lumina flash fiction contest. Her
poem “Blue on My Mother’s Hands” won the 2005 Whiskey
Island Magazine poetry prize.
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Tim Z. Hernandez | ARTIST BIO Tim Z. Hernandez is a writer/ performer who has worked in and around California’s San Joaquin Valley for nearly a decade. His written works and performances have been featured in several publications, as well as, prestigious venues across the South Western United States. His extensive background in theater and performance art has led to past commissions by major groups such as the United Way of Greater Los Angeles and the National Fanny Mae Foundation, to write, produce, and perform his original plays on issues of homelessness and poverty. He is the recipient of the James Duval Phelan Award for best manuscript by an emerging writer and in 2003 received a Best Solo Production Award for his one-man show, Diaries of Macho, on which his first book of poems, Skin Tax (Heyday Books), is loosely based. The book went on to receive critical acclaim from top literary figures such as Ray Gonzalez of the Bloomsbury Review who wrote, “One of the finest and most exciting poets from the younger generation of latino writers!”
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2005
Writing workshops
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Jeffrey Ethan Lee | ||
Sunday July 17th, 2-4 p.m. at Many Mountains Moving (420 22nd Street, Boulder, CO), Jeffrey Ethan Lee leads a traditional workshop with group critiques of writings based upon previous workshops. Participants must have attended at least one prior MMM workshop. Participants must RSVP and post a poem or flash fiction at the free forum site. Send e-mail with questions or to reserve a spot. Spaces are limited! New poetry book invisible sister available at the workshop.
Visit the faculty web site of Jeffrey Ethan Lee
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