Get Some Action at the 2020 Tennessee Williams and New Orleans Literary Festival

If you’re like me, your life is probably pretty boring.

Find out how to get some action in your life, or at least in your writing, at our panel on “Creating a Novel of Action” at the 2020 Tennessee Williams Festival. With authors Taylor Brown, Adeline Dieudonné, Alex Myers, and Rita Woods.

Friday, March 27, in the Queen Anne Ballroom at the Hotel Monteleone in beautiful New Orleans, La.

Lots more information here: Tennessee Williams and New Orleans Literary Festival.

Building Believable Characters in Fiction

If you’re anywhere near New Orleans on Saturday, September 8, come join me for a free (Free! Free! Free!) writing workshop on “Building Believable Characters in Fiction.” From 1-4:30 at the Rosa F. Keller Library in Broadmoor. Sponsored by the fabulous New Orleans Writers Workshop. And did I mention that it was free? Free free free!

More info here: “Building Believable Characters in Fiction.”

City News Cafe, Chicago, Wednesday, May 2

I’ll be joining fellow UNCW grads Jake Hinkson and Sneza Zabic this Wednesday in Chicago for a reading and talk at City News Cafe. Come say hello. Have some scones. Find out if geography really is destiny, and then stay for some music.

South by Midwest,” hosted by Packingtown Review.

Here’s a photo of me and Jake looking authorial:

New Orleans Poetry Festival, April 20-22

I’m not a poet, but I’m looking forward to attending the New Orleans Poetry Festival, April 20-22, at the Healing Center here in, of course, New Orleans.

Saturday evening, I’ll be on a panel with writers Katy Simpson Smith, Kalamu Salaam, and Kristina Kay Robinson, talking about “Lonely Voices: Storytelling, Character, and Place.”

And then much later that night, if you’re lucky, you might catch me playing drums at the “Poets with Bands” after-hours party at Siberia Lounge down the street on St. Claude.

Here’s a picture of my drums:

Bloomsday 2016

I’ll be reading from James Joyce’s Ulysses next Thursday here in New Orleans to help celebrate Bloomsday 2016. Not the whole book, of course.

If you can’t join us, then wherever you are, go out and have some Guinness and toast the Irish writer with the funny glasses.

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Facebook link to Bloomsday 2016 in New Orleans, with details, here.

Baton Rouge Bluestocking Book Club

I’m looking forward to meeting with the Bluestocking Book Club this Wednesday, February 24, 2016, in Baton Rouge to talk about THE NIGHT OF THE COMET.

Here’s a picture of a woman with a blue stocking:

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Reading Between the Wines on Sept. 2, with Kent Wascom

I’m looking forward to visiting Pearl Wine Co. again next week for a tag-team reading with author Kent Wascom, whose new novel Secessia has won rave reviews.

pearl wine co
When: Wednesday, Sept. 2, 7:00 – 8:00
Where: Pearl Wine Co., 3700 Orleans Ave., New Orleans

The event’s sponsored by the indefatigable Candice Huber of Tubby & Coo’s Mid-City Book Shop. Free and open to the public. Wine and food available and encouraged.

The Hindu on the South India Writers’ Ensemble Festival, Kerala

Nice piece in The Hindu last week on the South India Writers’ Ensemble Festival in Kerala. I get the first paragraph.

THE HINDU LOGO (CMYK & BW)

Of Flights of Fancy, Verse and Bestsellers
by S. Anandan
July 27, 2015
The Hindu

“I’m Jack Fleming, 25, a Mechanics student in New York, and I love adventures of all variety,” said Rinish Muhamed, a local lad, stepping into the shoes of an imaginary character.

The scene was a writing workshop led by American author George Bishop at the South India Writers’ Ensemble (SIWE) where he asked the attendees to profile an imaginary character and take on questions on the character’s traits and life story.

“Craft is as important as content and I wanted them to have an elementary understanding of imagining up a character and the situations that have infused meaning into his life,” said the best-selling author.

At Pampa, a hall by the Pampa river where the workshop was held, Robin S. Ngangom, English poet and academic based in Shillong, treated literary enthusiasts to some of the finest pieces of poetry from the region.

Reading Manipuri poet Thangjam Ibopishak Singh’s poem, ‘I want to be killed by an Indian bullet’, which he had translated into English, he demonstrated the sheer power poetry from the region packs in it. When ‘the five’ — fire, water, air, earth, sky — come looking for the poet in order to shoot him to death for penning ‘gobbledygook and drivel’, the poet says he wants to be killed by an Indian bullet – a wish that cannot be granted as “we don’t use guns made in India. Let alone guns, India cannot even make plastic flowers”.

The poet escapes death thanks to his insistence. “It’s such a wonderful poem,” said P.C. Vishnunath, MLA, as the audience kept asking the poet to recite more and more poems. The last session of the day was a bit of a dampener, with the panellists, Pankaj Dubey and Preeti Shenoy, more or less agreeing that it was okay to play to the gallery and adapt to the demands of the market while Benyamin was bent on guarding the freedom of the author. On the moral questions staring the author in the face from corporate market forces, Ms. Shenoy and Mr. Dubey said regardless of the social ills brought about by a corporate entity, if would be okay to take its handholding for publishing a work if the entity were to do it as a means of social responsibility. “Only, I wouldn’t allow anyone to tamper with my draft, unless for some grammatical correctness,” Ms. Shenoy said.

A fitting reply to the contention was given by poet Kalpetta Narayanan at the valedictory address when he said while every age had produced its best-selling authors – citing Changampuzha Krishna Pillai as the best-selling writer of his time – it would be dangerous to woo the market as a damsel (as earlier suggested by Mr. Dubey) as she could soon turn into a yakshi .

“There’s nothing wrong in creating bestsellers. But an awareness about the dialectical tension between the ethical questions and the market demands would do a world of good,” he said, amid thunderous applause. “Had it all been market-driven James Joyce would not have been a published author. And, Jorge Borges only managed to sell 300 copies of his first work.”

The literature festival next year would focus on Tamil and Malayalam while there would be participation from the North East and other south Indian States, said festival director T.P. Rajeevan.

Next edition of South India Writers’ Ensemble to focus on Tamil and Malayalam literature.