Friday, May 15, 2009

Tomorrow Night, Fever or No Fever

I will be reading at the Kalamazoo Book Arts Center with Mart Hart and Roy Seeger.  Here are the details:

KBAC Poets in Print

Matt Hart, Gina Myers, & Roy Seeger
Host:
KBAC
Type:
Network:
Global
Date:
Saturday, May 16, 2009
Time:
7:00pm - 9:00pm
Location:
Kalamazoo Book Arts Center -- Park Trades Building
Street:
326 W. Kalamazoo Avenue, Suite 103 A
City/Town:
Kalamazoo, MI
Phone:
2693734938
Email:

Description

Poetry Reading featuring Matt Hart, Gina Myers, & Roy Seeger

A limited edition broadside designed by Jeff Abshear will be available for sale.

Free and open to the public.

--

Matt Hart is the author of the poetry collections Who’s Who Vivid (Slope Editions, 2006) and YOU ARE MIST (MOOR Books), as well as the chapbooks, Revelated (Hollyridge Press, 2005), Sonnet (H_NGM_N Books, 2006), and Simply Rocket (Lame House Press, 2007). Additionally, a collaborative chapbook, Deafening Leafening, with poet Ethan Paquin, has just been published by Pilot Books. His poems and reviews have appeared in many print and online journals, including Coldfront, Gulf Coast, Harvard Review, Jubilat, and Octopus. He lives and teaches in Cincinnati where he edits Forklift, Ohio: A Journal of Poetry, Cooking, & Light Industrial Safety.

Gina Myers currently lives in Saginaw, MI, where she makes books for Lame House Press & co-edits the tiny with Gabriella Torres. Her book, A Model Year, is forthcoming from Coconut Books in July 2009.

Roy Seeger earned his M.A. in poetry from Ohio University in 2000 and his M.F.A in poetry from Western Michigan University in 2005. He is currently a Full English Professor at the University of South Carolina Aiken where he lives with his wife, the poet Amanda Rachelle Warren, and their small gray dog, Bruce. His chapbook, The Garden of Improbable Birds (2007) is available through Gribble Press, and his poems have appeared in Painted Bride Quarterly, 32 Poems, Mississippi Review, Verse, Gulf Coast, The Laurel Review, Southeast Review, Quarter After Eight as well as other journals. His first book, The Boy Whose Hands Were Birds, is available through Main Street Rag.

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