I am temporarily parking archived blog posts here while I redesign my site and change servers. For current content, please visit blog.shannacompton.com.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Friday night with Jennifer L. Knox, et al.




To come one, come all ...

And join LIT Magazine & Housing Works Bookstore Cafe for an evening of
literary refreshment, complete with prose, poetry, and a dandy selection
of snacks and beverages.

Your invitation is cordially attached. (Please note: The date of the
event is FRIDAY FEBRUARY 5, 2010 and begins at 7 PM sharp.)

Celebrate: The LIT 17 Launch Party!
Time: Friday February 5, 2010 at 7 PM
Place: Housing Works Bookstore Cafe
Address: 126 Crosby Street in SoHo.

With readings by Sasha Feltcher, Phillip Gardner, Jennifer L. Knox, and
Anne Ray.

Sasha Fletcher's novella WHEN ALL OUR DAYS ARE NUMBERED MARCHING BANDS
WILL FILL THE STREETS AND WE WILL NOT HEAR THEM BECAUSE WE WILL BE
UPSTAIRS IN THE SKY is due out from ml press in December in the year
2010. He is an MFA candidate in Poetry at Columbia University in the
city of New York.
http://anicecoldcocacola.blogspot.com]

A three-time winner of The South Carolina Fiction Project, Phillip
Gardner has recently appeared in The North American Review, Hayden’s
Ferry Review, Potomac Review, and New Delta Review. He is the author of
Someone To Crawl Back To, a collection of short stories. Two new
collections, That Place Love Built and Freaks Out are forthcoming.

Jennifer L. Knox’s new book, The Mystery of the Hidden Driveway, is
forthcoming from Bloof in fall 2010. Her first two books of poems, Drunk
by Noon and A Gringo Like Me are also available from Bloof Books. Her
work has appeared three times in the Best American Poetry series, as
well as in the anthologies Best American Erotic Poems and Great American
Prose Poems: From Poe to Present.

Anne Ray was raised in suburban Maryland and has been an English
teacher, a waitress, a gardener, and a fish monger. She attended the
Brooklyn College MFA Program and the undergraduate writing program at
Carnegie Mellon University. Her fiction appeared in Brooklyn Review, and
her nonfiction has appeared in Washington City Paper and Baltimore City
Paper. She lives in Brooklyn.

Sincerely,
The Editors

No comments:

Post a Comment

I reserve the right to delete unwanted comments or ban users by IP address as necessary. Please don't make it necessary.