Los Angeles Literature Events 10/03/16 – 10/09/16
Ross Gay at Claremont Public Library
Fourth Sundays presents 2016 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Prize winner Ross Gay for a poetry reading. Distinguished poet, and teacher at Indiana University, Gay is the author of three volumes of poetry: Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude (2015), Bringing the Shovel Down (2011), and Against Which (2006). He has received fellowships from Cave Canem, the Bread Loaf Writer’s Conference, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the Radcliffe Institute.
Where: Claremont Public Library
Date: Monday the 3rd
Time: 6:30 pm – 8 pm
Address: 208 N. Harvard Ave., Claremont, CA 91711
Website: http://www.facebook.com/events/1090748631015477/
Continue reading “Los Angeles Literature Events 10/03/16 – 10/09/16”
Hitched!
Prose in the Afternoon at Holy Grounds
by Michael Sedano
From: Labloga.blogspot.com
A busy industrial thoroughfare is an unusal place for an enchanting coffee house but that’s not the only distinguishing feature of El Sereno’s Holy Grounds Coffee & Tea. The garden, a splashing fountain, a tiny performance stage, add to the oasis-flavored ambience for this week’s Hitched reading.
For many years, Xochitl-Julisa Bermejo curated Hitched at Venice’s Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Center. Already attracted by the name, I wanted to hear the stellar lineups Bermejo collects. I don’t do well at night, and avoid the westside like a plague. When Hitched! comes to the eastside on Sunday afternoons, I know I’ll finally take the opportunity to show up. I miss event after event, and only this week managed the short journey from northern Pasadena to eastern El Sereno.
Little Tokyo Book Festival

Partly Adapted From: The Rafu Shimpo
The Japanese American Cultural and Community Center welcomed over 30 authors at the inaugural Little Tokyo Book Festival on Saturday. The event brought Asian American writers and all people who love books to Little Tokyo. Not your typical run-of-the-mill book festival, the Little Tokyo Book Festival featured three dynamic panels and two “round-robin” style readings on the Aratani Theatre stage.
Los Angeles Literature Events 9/26/16 – 10/02/16
Author on Theater at Palms-Rancho Park Library
Author Barbara Kraft will speak about the Romanian-French playwright Eugene Ionesco who was one of the foremost figures of the French avant-garde theater, and helped to inaugurate a new type of theater which came to be known as “theater of the absurd.” He believed that the king of the “theater of the absurd” was Shakespeare.
Where: Palms-Rancho Park Library
Date: Monday the 26th
Time: 3:30 pm – 5 pm
Address: 2920 Overland Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90064
Website: http://www.lapl.org/whats-on/events/lecture-eugene-ionesco
Continue reading “Los Angeles Literature Events 9/26/16 – 10/02/16”
The Irresistible Draw of Assimilation
A writer looks back on how the San Gabriel Valley has changed, and how it changes those drawn to it
By Alex Espinoza
From: Los Angeles Magazine
I was born in Tijuana, in an unnamed colonia atop a muddy hillside above the city. After my siblings and I received our green cards, we crossed the border with
our mother into Southern California. I was raised in La Puente, which borders the City of Industry, a place known for its many warehouses and factories. As kids, my friends and I played in empty fields sandwiched between loading docks owned by multi-million-dollar companies. Our fathers disappeared into the cavernous bellies of these plants. They came home exhausted, kicked off their work boots, cracked open beers, and told stories about feuds along the assembly line, about angry machines that ripped off fingers and arms, about chemicals that could melt skin away, about broken spines and permanent hearing loss. We were a community of immigrants from Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador. We arrived seeking shelter from poverty and civil unrest and instead found ourselves confronting a society that had all but abandoned the mythical American dream.
Los Angeles Literature Events 9/19/16 – 9/25/16
Poetry Reading at Pomona College
Poet Anna Moschovakis will discuss We Will Get into Trouble for This, and be reading from her work as part of the literary series.
Anna Moschovakis is a poet, editor and translator, the author of several chapbooks, and a member of Ugly Duckling Presse. A core faculty member of the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts, she is also a visiting assistant professor at the Pratt Institute.
Where: Crookshank Hall Room #108, Pomona College
Date: Monday the 19th
Time: 4 pm – 5:30 pm
Address: 140 W. Sixth St., Claremont, CA 91711
Website: http://www.pomona.edu/events/literary-series-anna-moschovakis
Continue reading “Los Angeles Literature Events 9/19/16 – 9/25/16”
A LITERARY LONG WEEKEND IN LOS ANGELES A BOOKISH VISIT TO THE LAND OF BUKOWSKI AND DIDION…
By Katie Orphan
From: Lithub.com
Los Angeles still comes to mind for most as a place of palm tree-lined streets, movie stars, and perhaps, a cultural wasteland. In a vastly diverse city of millions, those images have their space, but there’s room for so much more. If you find yourself in Los Angeles for a weekend, there is plenty of literary tourism to embrace. It’s a city not only written about, but written in, so there are landmarks a plenty. So much so, that I’m confining this weekend to the Eastern sides of Los Angeles.
LAtino Book & Family Fest.
Something Has To Be Done About This
by Michael Sedano
From: labloga.blogspot.com
I have watched in recent years the diminishing promise of the Los Angeles Latino Book and Family Festival. The September 10 seventeenth iteration of the LBFF brought dozens of people to Olvera Street and LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes. No one can be happy at this sparse attendance for the invariably worthwhile event.
Attendance has been dramatically greater; 22,000 in 2012. Then, the event featured county fair ambience, a warren of tents shading displays by bookstores, individual authors, vendors of ethnic merchandise and art. Accomplished entertainers took the stage. In the meeting rooms, gente could choose from a rich schedule of panels where writers read and signed their books. Public performance from the stage, microphone and everything, should be a writer’s best reward.
Los Angeles Literature Events 9/12/16 – 9/18/16
Tween Book Club at Fairfax Branch Library–Children’s Event
Tween Book Club is for ages 9 to 12, or 4th grade and up. This month we will discuss The War That Saved My Life, by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley. This moving historical novel set during World War II is about a nine-year-old girl with a foot deformity who has never been allowed to leave her London apartment. But as children are sent to the countryside to escape the war, Ada sneaks out along with her brother who is being sent away. Does the war hold potential for Ada to live a better life?
We will have copies available at the branch, and talk about the book in a relaxed environment. Refreshments will be provided.
Where: Fairfax Branch Library
Date: Monday the 12th
Time: 4 pm – 5 pm
Address: 161 S. Gardner St., Los Angeles, CA 90036
Website: http://www.lapl.org/whats-on/events/tween-book-club-war-saved-my-life
Continue reading “Los Angeles Literature Events 9/12/16 – 9/18/16”
Angel City Review Now Open For Submissions
To anyone who has not already submitted to one of Angel City Reviews first 3 issues submissions are open until Halloween. Remember as it says on the review’s website, Angel City is “a literary journal that…aim[s] to present a diverse range of both writers and genres that run the gamut from experimental narratives to grittier fiction with a literary air. We are neither afraid of, … Continue reading Angel City Review Now Open For Submissions
