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Professor Doug Holder (Left) Visiting Author Michael Gerhard Martin (Right) |
In September 2010 Endicott College of Beverly, Mass, and the Ibbetson Street Press of Somerville, Mass. formed an affiliation. A Visiting Author series was started by Professor Doug Holder with the help of Professor Mark Herlihy--Chairman of the Humanities, as well as Professor Dan Sklar. Contact: dougholder@endicott.edu 617-628-2313 Readings take place at 5PM at the LSB Auditorium.
Friday, February 27, 2015
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Diana Der-Hovanessian and X. J. Kennedy
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Diana Der-Hovanessian |
Diana Der-Hovanessian, New England born poet, was twice a Fulbright professor of American Poetry and is the author of more than 25 books of poetry and translations. She has awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, Poetry Society of America, PEN/Columbia Translation Center, National Writers Union, Armenian Writers Union, Paterson Poetry Center, Prairie Schooner, American Scholar, and the Armenian Ministry of Culture. Her poems have appeared in Agni, American Poetry Review, Ararat, CSM, Poetry, Partisan, Prairie Schooner, Nation, etc., and in anthologies such as Against Forgetting, Women on War, On Prejudice, Finding Home, Leading Contemporary Poets, Orpheus and Company, Identity Lessons, Voices of Conscience, Two Worlds Walking, etc. Among the several plays written by DDH, two (The Secret of Survival and Growing Up Armenian) were produced and in 1984 and 1985 traveled to many college campuses in the 80s telling the Armenian story with poetry and music. After 1989, The Secret of Survival with Michael Kermoyan and later with Vahan Khanzadian was performed for earthquake relief benefits. She works as a visiting poet and guest lecturer on American poetry, Armenian poetry in translation, and the literature of human rights at various universities here and abroad. She serves as president of the New England Poetry Club.
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X.J. Kennedy |
X.J. Kennedy
(known to his friends as Joe) was born in Dover, N. J., on August 21, 1929, shortly before the crash of the stock market. Irked by the hardship of having the name of Joseph Kennedy, he stuck the X on and has been stuck with it ever since.Kennedy grew up in Dover, went to Seton Hall (B.Sc. ’50) and Columbia (M.A., ’51), then spent four years in the Navy as an enlisted journalist, serving aboard destroyers. He studied at the Sorbonne in 1955-56, then devoted the next six years to failing to complete a Ph.D. at the University of Michigan. But he did meet Dorothy there.
He has taught English at Michigan, at the Woman’s College of the U. of North Carolina (now UNC Greensboro), and from 1963 through 1978 at Tufts, with visiting sojourns at Wellesley, U. of California Irvine, and the U. of Leeds. In 1978, he became a free-lance writer.
Recognitions include the Lamont Award of the Academy of American Poets (for his first book, Nude Descending a Staircase in 1961), the Los Angeles Book Award for poetry (for Cross Ties: Selected Poems, 1985), the Aiken-Taylor Award for Modern American Poetry (given by the University of the South and The Sewanee Review), Guggenheim and National Arts Council fellowships, the first Michael Braude Award for light verse (given by the American Academy & Institute of Arts & Letters to a poet of any nation), the Shelley Memorial Award, the Golden Rose of the New England Poetry Club, honorary degrees from Lawrence and Adelphi universities and Westfield State College, the National Council of Teachers of English Year 2000 Award for Excellence in Children’s Poetry, and in 2004 the Poets’ Prize (for The Lords of Misrule: Poems 1992-2002). In spring 2009 the Poetry Society of America gave him the Robert Frost Medal for lifetime service to poetry.
The Kennedys have five grown children and six grandchildren. They now live in Lexington, Mass., in a house half century-old and half new.
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Feb 26, 2015 Michael Gerhard Martin author of "EASIEST IF I HAD A GUN"
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Michael Gerhard Martin |
A native of rural Pennsylvania, Michael Gerhard Martin holds an MFA from The University of Pittsburgh and teaches writing for Babson College and the Johns Hopkins University Center for Talented Youth. He won the 2013 James Knudsen Prize from UNO and Bayou Magazine for his story about bullying and gun violence, "Shit Weasel Is Late For Class." His fiction has been shortlisted for the Hudson Prize, The Nelligan Prize, and the Iowa & Simmons Prizes, and his work has appeared in Bayou Magazine, The Ocean State Review, and Junctures. His first book, Easiest If I Had A Gun, was just published by Braddock Avenue Books
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Monday, October 27, 2014
Nov. 13, 2014 Lucy Holstedt and Kirk Etherton
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Lucy Holstedt |
This event features performances and discussions about the
creative process with Berklee College of Music professor Lucy Holstedt. She
will perform some of her poem settings and songs for piano and voice, as well
as pieces written with poet/musician Kirk Etherton.
There will be time for a Q&A with the audience.
Lucy Holstedt teaches in the Harmony and Piano Departments
at Berklee. She is founding director of the Women Musicians Network, producing an
annual major concert at Berklee for the past 17 years. Her poetry credits include
publication in Ibbetson Press (founded by Endicott professor Doug Holder) and
performing and serving on the board of directors of the Boston National Poetry
Month Festival, where last year she also produced a concert of poetry set to
dance and music.
Kirk Etherton is a writer, musician and visual artist. Besides
numerous writing credits in the field of
advertising, he can claim published poems, recorded music (some co-written with
Lucy Holstedt), and exhibitions of his artwork. A board member of the BNPMF,
Kirk regularly performs poetry in the Boston area.
Friday, October 3, 2014
Kate Chadbourne Rectial, reading... Oct 2, 2014
Friday, August 29, 2014
Oct 2, 2014 Kate Chadbourne 4PM
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