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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Gemini Ink
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20230121T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20230121T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T070034
CREATED:20221212T195935Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230119T013906Z
UID:7914-1674295200-1674302400@geminiink.org
SUMMARY:Musicality and the Long Poem with Allison Hedge Coke
DESCRIPTION:Saturdays\, January 21\, 28 &  February 4\, 10am-12pm\, CST\, offered via Zoom\nInstructor: Allison Hedge Coke\nNonmember: $140; Member: $120; Student/Vet/Mil $75\nThis course is open to writers of all skill levels. \n*EARN CPE’S\nSCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE. \nClass Full. Email joshua@geminiink.org to add your name to the Wait List.\nMusic is a powerful force that moves us. It is also a treasure chest of tools that can breathe life and potency into poetry.     \nIn this workshop led by American Book Award winner Allison Hedge Coke\, we will study musical genres\, influences\, and elements that will develop our knowledge of structure and momentum and our musical ear so that we can infuse our lines with lyricism\, sound\, and rhythm from beginning to end.  We will explore how playing with cadence\, tone\, and sonic delivery creates memorable lines and infuses a long poem with dynamic movement. \nIn this class you will :  \n\nGain an understanding of how musical structures can be used in long poetry\nLearn to apply elements of sound to make lines pop\nPrepare for publication/production/performance with musicality as lead line and base structure.\n\nAllison Hedge Coke will be featured on The Big Texas Read on Wed\, Jan 18th. We’re talking with Hedge Coke about her book-length poem\, Look At This Blue\, Finalist for the 2022 National Book Award. RSVP https://bit.ly/3A0XejH\n\nAllison Adelle Hedge Coke was born in Texas and raised in North Carolina\, Canada\, and on the Great Plains. Of mixed heritage\, she is a poet\, writer\, and educator. Though she left school to work in the fields as a child\, she later took advantage of tuition-free community ed classes at North Carolina State University while a field worker. She left North Carolina\, escaping domestic violence as a young mother\, and enrolled in former field worker retraining on the West coast when leaving manual labor due to disability. She then studied script\, performance and sound/light/film tech at Estelle Harmon’s Actor’s Workshop\, earned an AFAW in creative writing on the old Institute for American Indian Arts campus in Santa Fe\, attended two Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics Summer Writing Programs\, and earned an MFA from Vermont College (1995)\, where she stayed for post-grad work. \nShe is the author of the poetry chapbook Year of the Rat (1996); the full-length poetry collections Dog Road Woman (1997)\, Off-Season City Pipe (2005)\, Blood Run (2006 UK\, 2007 US)\, Streaming (2014)\, an illustrated (by Dustin Illetewahke Mater) special edition Burn (2017); and the memoir Rock\, Ghost\, Willow\, Deer (2004\, 2014). Streaming includes a full album recorded in the Rd Klā project period with Kelvyn Bell and Laura Ortman. One inclusion was selected by Motion Poems and Pixel Farms to be made into an animated film and several of the poems in Streaming also influenced the documentary project she directed\, Red Dust. \n 
URL:https://geminiink.org/events/musicality-and-the-long-poem/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:Online Workshop,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://geminiink.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Allison-Hedge-Coke-Teaches-Musicality-and-the-Long-Poem-Facebook-Post-Landscape.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="Mandy Lynn Lara":MAILTO:mllara@geminiink.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20230118T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20230118T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T070034
CREATED:20220107T140826Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230109T222621Z
UID:6330-1674068400-1674073800@geminiink.org
SUMMARY:The Big Texas Read featuring Allison Hedge Coke
DESCRIPTION:RSVP\n \nUp Next: 2022 National Book Award Finalist Allison Adelle Hedge Coke\, author of the book-length poem\, Look at This Blue. Acclaimed poet and memoirist Jan Beatty will moderate this session.\n\n\nAbout Look at This Blue\, Finalist for the 2022 National Book Award \nInterweaving elegy\, indictment\, and hope into a love letter to California\, Look at This Blue examines America’s genocidal past and present to warn of a future threatened by mass extinction and climate peril. \n\nTruths about what we have lost and have yet to lose permeate this book-length poem by American Book Award winner and Fulbright scholar Allison Adelle Hedge Coke. An assemblage of historical record and lyric fragments\, these poems form a taxonomy of threatened lives—human\, plant\, and animal—in a century marked by climate emergency.\n\nLook at This Blue insists upon a reckoning with and redress of America’s continuing violence toward Earth and its peoples\, as Hedge Coke’s cataloguing of loss crescendos into resistance. \nTake a workshop with Allison Hedge Coke: Musicality and the Long Poem\nSaturdays\, January 21\, 28 & February 4\, 10am-12pm\, CST\, offered via Zoom\nThis course is open to writers of all skill levels.\nInfo at: https://geminiink.org/events/musicality-and-the-long-poem/ \n\n\nAllison Adelle Hedge Coke was born in Texas and came of age and worked in fields\, factories\, and waters in North Carolina until disabilities precluded further manual labors. After field-worker retraining programs in California at nearly thirty she began earning college credits. \nShe is currently a 2022-2023 UCR Mellon Dean’s Professor in the UCR Center for Ideas and Society\, a Legacy Artist Fellow (California Arts Council) and a recent George Garrett Award recipient (AWP\, 2021). Other awards include a King-Chavez-Parks Award\, Fulbright to Montenegro\, First Jade Nurtured Sihui (China) Female International Foreign Poetry Award\, U.S. Library of Congress Witter Bynner fellowship\, and an American Book Award. \n\nHedge Coke’s authored books include The Year of the Rat\, Dog Road Woman\, Off-Season City Pipe\, Blood Run\, Burn\, Streaming\, Look at This Blue: an assemblage poem (book length\, 2022 National Book Award Finalist)\, as well as a memoir\, Rock Ghost\, Willow\, Deer (2014\, paperback)\, a play Icicles\, and 28 documentary film shorts. She has edited ten anthologies\, including Effigies III.\n\nShe is a Distinguished Professor of Creative Writing and affiliated faculty for the UCR School of Medicine (narrative medicine)\, the newly proposed Department of Environment\, Sustainability\, and Health Equity (ESHE).\n\n\nJan Beatty’s sixth book\, The Body Wars\, was published in 2020 by the University of Pittsburgh Press. In the New York Times\, Naomi Shihab Nye said: Jan Beatty’s new poems in “The Body Wars” shimmer with luminous connection\, travel a big life and grand map of encounters. Beatty won the Red Hen Nonfiction Award for her memoir\, American Bastard\, 2021. Other books include Jackknife: New and Collected Poems (Paterson Prize)\, The Switching/Yard\, Red Sugar\, Boneshaker\, Mad River (Agnes Lynch Starrett Prize). Beatty worked as a waitress\, an abortion counselor\, and in maximum security prisons. For many years\, she directed creative writing\, the Madwomen in the Attic workshops\, and the MFA program at Carlow University.
URL:https://geminiink.org/events/tbtr-allison-hedge-coke/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://geminiink.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/allison-hedge-coke-and-beatty.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Alexandra van de Kamp":MAILTO:avandekamp@geminiink.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20221217T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20221217T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T070034
CREATED:20221209T190915Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221212T195600Z
UID:7902-1671289200-1671296400@geminiink.org
SUMMARY:Writing Vigil: Mourning Premature Queer Deaths and Anti-Queer Violence
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for this Writing Vigil honoring the Queer & Trans lives we’ve lost due to violence against our community. This event provides a creative space for LGBTQ+ people to write about the impact of increasing violence targeting Queer & Trans lives.  \nPrinceso Santamaría will lead participants through visualization and movement exercises as strategies for soothing physiological distress and connecting to an inner sense of safety. Participants will respond to writing prompts coupled with healing-informed exercises as they write through challenging emotions.   \nThis event is for lgbtq+ community members to receive support for their grieving process through writing\, whether they are new or experienced writers. We appreciate our allies and ask that they help us honor the LGBTQ+ community’s need for an exclusive space to process Queer & Trans loss. \nParticipants are encouraged to bring a writing tool\, something to write on\, and a comfort item such as a soft sweater. Writing materials will also be available if needed. \nMust be registered to participate. Space is limited to 25 participants. Sign up at: bit.ly/writingvigil \n\nPrinceso Santamaría is a queer\, xicanx poet dedicated to documenting and uplifting queer peoples of color. They can be found dancing over dimly lit dance floors or reading about temporal-space travel. Their work has been hosted by El Comalito Collective\, Ofrenda Magazine\, the Gender Equity Resource Center at UC Berkeley\, California Youth Connection\, the Puente Program at Laney College\, the Ethnic Studies Department at Cal State Fullerton\, and foolsFURY SF Theatre. They are the Partner Classes Coordinator at Gemini Ink. \n\nParking at Gemini Ink \nGemini Ink offers free parking along the back wall of our downtown offices. Please access this parking lot from Augusta St and first park in any of the 12 spots along the back wall. Only when these 12 spots are full\, do we ask that you park elsewhere in our lot. We now rent our offices from UTSA and are collaborating with them to create a secure and accessible parking lot for our community of writers and readers.
URL:https://geminiink.org/events/writing-vigil/
LOCATION:TX
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://geminiink.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Writing-Vigil-draft-2-e1670620302226.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="Princeso Santamar%C3%ADa":MAILTO:santamaria@geminiink.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20221214T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20221214T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T070034
CREATED:20221118T184535Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221213T143926Z
UID:7824-1671044400-1671049800@geminiink.org
SUMMARY:The Big Texas Read featuring Tomas Q. Morín
DESCRIPTION:RSVP\nDecember 14th\, 2022 via Zoom @ 7PM CST\nUp Next: We’re talking with Tomás Q. Morín about his memoir\, Let Me Count The Ways. We’ll also discuss the craft and business of writing. This session will be moderated by memoirist Suzanne Ohlmann\, author of Shadow Migration: Mapping a Life.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAbout Let Me Count the Ways\n \nGrowing up in a small town in South Texas in the eighties and nineties\, poverty\, machismo\, and drug addiction were everywhere for Tomás Q. Morín. He was around four or five years old when he first remembers his father cooking heroin\, and he recalls many times he and his mother accompanied his father while he was on the hunt for more\, Morín in the back seat keeping an eye out for unmarked cop cars\, just as his father taught him. It was on one of these drives that\, for the first time\, he blinked in a way that evolution hadn’t intended. \nLet Me Count the Ways is the memoir of a journey into obsessive-compulsive disorder\, a mechanism to survive a childhood filled with pain\, violence\, and unpredictability. Morín’s compulsions were a way to hold onto his love for his family in uncertain times until OCD became a prison he struggled for decades to escape. Tender\, unflinching\, and even funny\, this vivid portrait of South Texas life challenges our ideas about fatherhood\, drug abuse\, and mental illness. \n“Evocative\, lyrical\, and brave.”—Kirkus Reviews \n“Let Me Count the Waysis a strange and beautiful remembrance of loss\, pain\, betrayal\, and regeneration\, one that describes familial love in all its complexity and argues that even the most troubled among us are worthy of dignity.”—River Teeth \n“In this fearsome\, beautiful memoir\, Tomás Q. Morín takes us on ‘a journey exploring the limits of suffering and love.’ Those are the words he uses to praise a fellow poet\, but the story of his upbringing is just such a wild trip. The young Tomás constantly searches for the right words to say to his beloveds\, his abusers. And in Let Me Count the Ways\, every episode is a prose poem.”—Maxine Hong Kingston\, author of China Men and The Woman Warrior \n“Let Me Count the Ways is an origin poem wrapped in a travel essay\, rocking the full wings of fiction. This means it is a memoir\, a stunning memoir about the worn glory of counting up\, counting down\, and counting in. It is simply the layered work of a soulful magician welcoming us behind our own curtains. Genius.”—Kiese Laymon\, author of Heavy: An American Memoir \n\n\n\nTomás Q. Morín is on the faculty at Rice University and Vermont College of Fine Arts. He is the author of the poetry collections Machete\, Patient Zero\, and A Larger Country. He is the coeditor with Mari L’Esperance of the anthology Coming Close: Forty Essays on Philip Levine. His work has appeared in the New York Times\, the Nation\, Slate\, Poetry\, Threepenny Review\, and Narrative. He is a National Endowment of the Arts fellow.\n\n\nSuzanne Ohlmann is a writer\, nurse\, and musician. Her first book\, Shadow Migration\, came out in March 2022. Her essays have been published by The Cleveland Review of Books\, Texas Monthly\, Intima: The Journal of Narrative Medicine\, and Longreads. She lives in San Antonio with her husband\, son\, and a throng of dogs and cats.
URL:https://geminiink.org/events/the-big-texas-read-featuring-tomas-q-morin/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://geminiink.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/TBTR-Morin.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20221118T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20221118T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T070034
CREATED:20221027T220829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221115T204343Z
UID:7780-1668796200-1668803400@geminiink.org
SUMMARY:Wendy Barker 80th Birthday Celebration & Book Launch
DESCRIPTION:Please join Gemini Ink and our San Antonio writing community for an unforgettable birthday bash in honor of award-winning poet\, dedicated educator\, and scholar Wendy Barker!  \nHelp us ring in Wendy’s 8th decade and celebrate the launch of her latest collection: Weave: New and Selected Poems by Wendy Barker (BkMk Press)\, at our downtown arts center\, where Wendy will read from her book and join her friend\, prior student\, and fellow poet Natalia Treviño for a Q&A. \nWendy’s latest book will be available for purchase onsite\, and the evening will culminate in a book signing\, reception\, light refreshments\, and even some birthday cake! \nHelp us celebrate this literary moment with one of San Antonio’s beloved writers!  \n\nWendy Barker’s Weave: New and Selected Poems\, is forthcoming in 2022 from BkMk Press. Her seventh full-length collection of poetry is Gloss\, published by Saint Julian Press in January 2020. Her collection One Blackbird at a Time was chosen for the John Ciardi Prize and was published by BkMk Press in 2015. Earlier books include her novel in prose poems\, Nothing Between Us: The Berkeley Years (runner-up for the Del Sol Prize and released by Del Sol Press in 2009); Poems from Paradise (WordTech\, 2005); Way of Whiteness (Wings Press\, 2000); Let the Ice Speak (Ithaca House\, 1991); and Winter Chickens (Corona Publishing Co.\, 1990).  \nRecipient of an NEA fellowship\, a Rockefeller residency fellowship in Bellagio\, as well as other awards in poetry\, including the Writers’ League of Texas Book Award (which she has received twice\, for Way of Whiteness in 2000 and for Between Frames in 2007) and the Mary Elinore Smith Poetry Prize from The American Scholar\, she has also been a Fulbright senior lecturer in Bulgaria. Her work has been translated into Hindi\, Chinese\, Japanese\, Russian\, and Bulgarian. Poet-in-Residence and the Pearl Lewinn Endowed Chair at the University of Texas at San Antonio\, where she has taught since 1982\, Wendy is married to the critic\, biographer\, and poet Steven G. Kellman.  \n\nBorn in Mexico\, Natalia Treviño is the author of VirginX (Finishing Line Press) and Lavando la Dirty Laundry (Mongrel Empire Press)\, which has been translated to Albanian and Macedonian and published in Macedonia (2021). Her work has won several awards\, including the Alfredo Cisneros del Moral Award\, the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Prize\, the Literary Award from the Artist Foundation of San Antonio\, the Menada Literary Award from Macedonia and several others. Natalia is a graduate of the University of Texas at San Antonio and the University of Nebraska at Omaha. She works as a Professor of English and as an affiliate Mexican American studies faculty member at Northwest Vista College. Her publications appear in Open Plaza\, Plume\, The Southern Poetry Anthology\, Bordersenses\, Borderlands Texas Poetry Review\, Sugar House Review\, The Taos Journal of Poetry and Art\, and several others. Her work also appears in several anthologies\, including Contra: Texas Poets Speak Out (Flowersong Press)\, and Puro Chicanx Writers of the 21st Century (Cutthroat Press). \n\nParking at Gemini Ink \nGemini Ink offers free parking along the back wall of our downtown offices. Please access this parking lot from Augusta St and first park in any of the 12 spots along the back wall. Only when these 12 spots are full\, do we ask that you park elsewhere in our lot. We now rent our offices from UTSA and are collaborating with them to create a secure and accessible parking lot for our community of writers and readers.
URL:https://geminiink.org/events/wendy-barker-book-launch/
LOCATION:Gemini Ink\, 1111 Navarro St\, San Antonio\, TX\, 78205\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event
ORGANIZER;CN="Mandy Lynn Lara":MAILTO:mllara@geminiink.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20221116T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Mexico_City:20221116T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T070034
CREATED:20221114T164446Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221114T191032Z
UID:7813-1668625200-1668630600@geminiink.org
SUMMARY:The Big Texas Read featuring Daniel Peña
DESCRIPTION:RSVP\nNovember 16th\, 2022 via Zoom @ 7PM CST\nUp Next: We’re in conversation with Daniel Peña about his novel\, Bang. We’ll also have a discussion on the craft and business of writing.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAbout Bang\n \nAn undocumented Mexican family living in South Texas is torn apart when a son inadvertently becomes involved with narcotraficantes in Daniel Peña’s debut novel that explores contemporary issues of immigration\, border life and international drug smuggling. \n\n\nWinner\, 2019 NACCS Tejas Foco Fiction Award\n\nIn the Margins’ 2019 Advocacy/Social Justice Award Finalist — Judges “NACCS & In the Margins” \n“Peña examines the symbiosis of the United States and Mexico and makes painfully clear the negative effects of international trade\, legal and illegal. This is a notable and compassionate novel.” — Reviewer “Publishers Weekly” \n“Peña provides a window into the struggles of immigrants on the border as well as the violent drug war fueling the migration. A piercing tale of lives broken by border violence.” — Reviewer “Kirkus Reviews” \n“Bang is such a timely novel that offers devastating insights into how communities adapt to severe shifts in culture and society.” — Reviewer “NBC Latino” \n“Daniel Peña’s debut novel reminds me of a bantamweight boxer. Lean and compact\, it is packed with energy\, ready to land blow after punch after jab on any reader who dares to underestimate it.” — Texas Observer \n“Peña uses his prodigious gift for detail to take us inside the horrors that befall this family as a result of the fateful flight that started as a dare between brothers. Bang is a grim yet gripping debut that hinges on the desperate hope of its characters.” — Austin American-Statesman \nAbout Daniel Peña \n\nDaniel Peña is a Pushcart Prize-winning writer and Assistant Professor. Formerly\, he was based out of the UNAM in Mexico City\, where he worked as Fulbright-Garcia Robles Scholar. A graduate of Cornell University and a former Picador Guest Professor in Leipzig\, Germany\, his writing has appeared in Ploughshares\, The Rumpus\, the Kenyon Review\, Texas Monthly\, NBC News\, andThe New York Times Magazine. He’s currently a regular contributor to The Guardian and the Ploughshares blog. His novel\, Bang\, is out now from Arte Publico Press. He lives in the beautiful Dallas-Fort Worth area.
URL:https://geminiink.org/events/the-big-texas-read-featuring-daniel-pena/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://geminiink.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/TBTR-Daniel-Pena.png
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