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Arda Collins Wins Yale Younger Poets Prize

Issue 6 contributor Arda Collins was chosen by Louise Glück as the winner of the 2008 Yale Series of Younger Poets competition for her book It Is Daylight.

Ok, so maybe we’re a little late in acknowledging this honor, but while doing so, we’d also like to acknowledge It Is Daylight is available for pre-order.

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Eula Biss in Time Out, Harper’s, and Bookstores Nationwide

Congratulations!

Eula Biss’s new collection of essays Notes from No Man’s Land was recently published by Graywolf press. “Nobody Knows Your Name,” an essay from the collection, is proudly published in MAKE issue 7.  

In addition, there’s an excerpt from the book in the most recent Harper’s and a fine article by Jonathan Messinger about Eula and her book in the current Time Out Chicago.  

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Opening Friday: Issue 7 Artist Richard Coleman’s Solo Show at Phaiz

Phaiz, Chicagoʼs emerging cutting-edge exposition space, is proud to present Opera Pink, a sitespecific solo installation by San Francisco-based artist Richard Colman. This is the artistʼs first solo exhibition with Phaiz and first in Chicago. Filling the 800 square foot gallery, Colman will install a series of tiles and paintings on wood panels and paper complemented by background wall paintings, creating a large-scale, psychedelic-type landscape mural to indulge the senses.

Richard’s work appears along side Faisal Mohyuddin’s story Leaving India.

AWP Off-Site Events!

We are splitting a table at the AWP book fair with The Green Lantern Press. Stop by!
The book fair is open to the public all day Saturday – 8:30 am – 5:30 pm.


                     poster by michaelrenaud.com
Wednesday, February 11
A Reading at Danny’s    

Wednesday, February 11th

7:30PM (Deejays at 10pm)
FREE

1951 W Dickens

The Danny's Reading Series, Make: A Chicago Literary Magazine, Zoland Books,
and Canarium Books presents:

Brief readings by Rebecca Wolff, Ish Klein, Lewis Warsh, Simone Muench &
Philip Jenks, Nick Twemlow, Nathalie Stephens, and John High

Rebecca Wolff's new book is called The King, due out in June. Her others are
Manderley, and Figment. She is the editor of Fence and Fence Books and a
fellow of the New York State Writers Institute at the University at Albany.
She lives in Athens, New York, a small village on the Hudson River.

Ish Klein is a writer and self-taught film and puppet maker.  In 2005, she
was awarded the National Endowment of the Arts Digital Filmmaker Residency.
Her films have screened at the Philadelphia Film Festival, Arlene's Picture
show, the Stuttgart Film Winter and Philadelphia's ICA among other places.
Her poems have been published in Bridge,The Canary, Gare du Nord, and more
recently in Hat magazine, X-connect, big Bridge. Spork and Gut Cult. Her
book, "Union!" will be published February 2009 by the Canarium Press.

Nick Twemlow's poems have lately appeared or are forthcoming in A Public
Space, New American Writing, Chicago Review, Tammy, and Make. He was a
finalist for the 2008 "Discovery"/Boston Review prize, and a Fulbright
fellow to New Zealand in 2005. His chapbook, The Twenty-four Complications,
is due out later this year from Spectacular Books. He co-edits Canarium
Books and lives in Iowa City.

Lewis Warsh is the author of numerous books of poetry, fiction and
autobiography, including The Origin of the World , Touch of the Whip, A Free
Man, Avenue of Escape and Ted's Favorite Skirt. He is the coeditor of The
Angel Hair Anthology, editor and publisher of United Artists Books, and
director of the MFA program in creative writing at Long Island University in
Brooklyn. A new book, Inseparable: Poems 1995-2005, was published by Granary
Books in 2008.

John High's most recent book of poems is HERE (Talisman House, 2008). He is
editor of CROSSING CENTURIES, an anthology of 20th century Russian poetry,
and teaches in the MFA program at Long Island University in Brooklyn.

Simone Muench's third book Orange Crush will be out from Sarabande next
February, and she is a recent recipient of a 2009 Illinois Arts Council
Fellowship.  She is a professor, vegetarian and horror film fan. She
currently collaborates with poet Philip Jenks and their chapbook Little
Visceral Carnival is forthcoming from Cinematheque Press. Poems from the
manuscript have appeared, or will, in Drunken Boat, Canarium, Zoland, Eleven
Eleven and others.

Philip Jenks was born in North Carolina and grew up in Morgantown, West Virginia.
He has published two books of poetry, On the Cave You Live In (Flood Editions, 2002) and
My First Painting Will Be 'The Accuser' (Zephyr Press, 2005); and two chapbooks, T
he Elms Left Elm Street (Plane Bukt Press, 1994) and How Many of You are You (Dusie, 2006).
He has also published poems in Chicago Review, Traverse, The Canary, LVNG, and others.
Thursday, February 12    

AWP Off-site Reading and Dance Party
Location: At the legendary Hideout, 1345 W. Wabansia

Cost: $7, 21 and over only

Time: 8pm

MAKE: A Chicago Literary Magazine in cahoots with Action Books,  ACMWindy City Story Slam, and the The Green Lantern Press present an AWP off-site reading and dance party

with poems and stories from John Beer, Arda Collins, Joel Craig, William Hillman, Dan McCann, Caroline Picard, Greg Purcell, Kathleen Rooney + Elisa Gabbert, & Abraham Smith.

Music from Paul Cary and featuring poet and performer Marvin Tate with his band, BabyAlright.

John Phillips DJs with his collection of 45s.

 

 

 

 

photo by Robert Loerzel | Marvin Tate performing at the Hideout

photo by Robert Loerzel | Marvin Tate performing at the Hideout

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Opening Friday: Issue 7 Illustrator and Featured Artist Rachel Mason’s Solo Exhibition

ANDREW RAFACZ is pleased to announce I Rule with a Broken Heart, a new installation of figurines, video, and a performance by Rachel Mason. The gallery will also present a new artist book, also titled I Rule with a Broken Heart, as well as two newly editioned series of figurines.

Chicago, IL, February 6, 2009 – Andrew Rafacz begins the new year with I Rule with a Broken Heart, our first solo exhibition with Rachel Mason. The gallery will have a reception for the artist on Friday, February 6, from 5 to 8pm. A performance will take place the following day, Saturday, February 7th, at 7pm. The exhibition continues through March 21, 2009.  

Read more about Rachel and her work.