Sunday, February 19, 3:00 p.m.
Tom Mandel, Beth Joselow and Phyllis Rosenzweig
@ DC Arts Center
Please join the In Your Ear Reading Series for a reading by Beth
Joselow, Tom Mandel, and Phyllis Rosenzweig, at 3PM on Sunday,
Feburary 19, 2012.
BETH JOSELOW is the author of several books of poetry and other writing, including ExContemporary and Writing Without the Muse. A long-time member of the faculty at the Corcoran School of Art, Beth now lives in Lewes DE and works as psychotherapist with emphasis on children & teens who have experienced severe trauma.
TOM MANDEL, one of the first-generation San Francisco Language poets, is the author/co-author of almost 25 books, including To the Cognoscenti, published in 2007, and The Grand Piano, an experiment in collective autobiography. His work has appeared in newspapers, literary magazines and anthologies around the world. Two new chapbooks, Partial Wave Form and Some Epigrams of Palladas, came out in January 2012 from lnk in France. Tom grew up in Chicago; he has lived in New York, Paris, San Francisco and Washington DC, and now lives in Lewes DE.
PHYLLIS ROSENZWEIG has lived in Washington, D.C. since 1974. Her publications include the chapbooks: Seventeen Poems (O Press, 1975); Dogs (Edge Books, 1996); and Reasonable Accommodation (Potes and Poets Press, 1997). She and Diane Ward published the journal, Primary Writing, from 1995 to 2008.
BETH JOSELOW is the author of several books of poetry and other writing, including ExContemporary and Writing Without the Muse. A long-time member of the faculty at the Corcoran School of Art, Beth now lives in Lewes DE and works as psychotherapist with emphasis on children & teens who have experienced severe trauma.
TOM MANDEL, one of the first-generation San Francisco Language poets, is the author/co-author of almost 25 books, including To the Cognoscenti, published in 2007, and The Grand Piano, an experiment in collective autobiography. His work has appeared in newspapers, literary magazines and anthologies around the world. Two new chapbooks, Partial Wave Form and Some Epigrams of Palladas, came out in January 2012 from lnk in France. Tom grew up in Chicago; he has lived in New York, Paris, San Francisco and Washington DC, and now lives in Lewes DE.
PHYLLIS ROSENZWEIG has lived in Washington, D.C. since 1974. Her publications include the chapbooks: Seventeen Poems (O Press, 1975); Dogs (Edge Books, 1996); and Reasonable Accommodation (Potes and Poets Press, 1997). She and Diane Ward published the journal, Primary Writing, from 1995 to 2008.
Location:
2438 18th Street in Adams Morgan
(south of Columbia Rd. on the west side of the street)
All readings are on third Sundays at 3 PM, Admission $5, FREE for DCAC members