Mar 24 2017
Lisa Vihos w/ Susan Cerulean, Juan Carlos Galeano and Alex Quinlan-Reading and Mixer

Lisa Vihos w/ Susan Cerulean, Juan Carlos Galeano and Alex Quinlan-Reading and Mixer

Presented by 100 Thousand Poets for Change at Black Dog on the Square

This reading event presents Lisa Vihos, the last 2017 poet resident for new the 100 Thousand Poets for Change On Lake Jackson Residency Program-Tallahassee, FL.

Readers include:

Lisa Vihos is the Poetry and Arts Editor of Stoneboat Literary Journal, an occasional guest blogger for Best American Poetry, and the Sheboygan, Wisconsin organizer for 100 Thousand Poets for Change. Along with two chapbooks, A Brief History of Mail (Pebblebrook Press, 2011) and The Accidental Present (Finishing Line Press, 2012), her poems have appeared in numerous journals and magazines. She has two Pushcart Prize nominations and received first place recognition in the 2015 Wisconsin People and Ideas poetry contest. She was awarded the 2016-2017 Time-Out Grant from her undergraduate alma mater, Vassar College, to coordinate efforts to plan and build a children's reading garden to support literacy in Malawi, Africa. Visit her blog at Frying the Onion.

Susan Cerulean is a writer, naturalist, and activist who divides her time between Tallahassee and Indian Pass, in northwest Florida. Her 2015 nature memoir—Coming to Pass: Florida’s Coastal Islands in a Gulf of Change (University of Georgia Press) won the Gold Award for Florida Nonfiction by Florida Book Awards in 2016. Previous books include Tracking Desire: A Journey after Swallow-tailed Kites, UnspOILed: Writers Speak for Florida’s Coast, and Between Two Rivers: Stories from the Red Hills to the Gulf. She writes a regular column at www.comingtopass.com.

Juan Carlos Galeano is a poet, translator, and essayist born in the Amazon region of Colombia. He has published several books of poetry, and has translated North American poets into Spanish. Over a decade of fieldwork on symbolic narratives of riverine and forest people in the Amazon basin resulted in his production of a comprehensive collection of storytelling (Folktales of the Amazon, ABC-CLIO, 2008) the documentary film (The Trees Have a Mother, Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 2008) His poetry inspired by Amazonian cosmologies and the modern world (Amazonia 2003, 2011, and Yakumama and other Mythical Beings, 2014), has been anthologized and published in international journals such Casa de las Américas (Cuba), The Atlantic Monthly and Ploughshares (U.S.).  He lives in Tallahassee, Florida, where he teaches Latin American poetry and Amazonian Cultures at Florida State University. He is currently the director of the FSU Service/Learning Program: Journey into Amazonia in the Peruvian Amazon rainforest.

Alex Quinlan’s poems and nonfiction have appeared in Beloit Poetry Journal, Tampa Review, among others, as well as in The Tusculum Review, where he has been a contributing editor. Alex is the editor of The Southeast Review and a reviewer for Scout: Poetry in Review. He is a PhD candidate in poetry at Florida State University.

ABOUT:
The 100 THOUSAND POETS FOR CHANGE on LAKE JACKSON RESIDENCY PROGRAM, TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA

The 100 Thousand Poets for Change on Lake Jackson Residency Program, Tallahassee, Florida is a writer’s retreat, performance and teaching project. Poets and writers from around the world will be invited to stay on Lake Jackson for up to two weeks. They are welcome to bring writing projects to work on. They will have an opportunity to meet and read with poets from the Tallahassee literary community. Reading events will be scheduled by 100TPC at local venues during residency. Also, workshops and classroom visits at local schools will be arranged as part of a community outreach and cultural exchange. Participants in the Residency Program will contribute poetry and prose writings to the book project, "On Lake Jackson", to be published by 100TPC in collaboration with Big Bridge Press. This book project will explore the ecology, natural history and cultural history of the area and will collect impressions of Lake Jackson to share with writers and readers around the world.

The program is still a work in progress but so far the Winter/Spring 2017 Residents are:

Feb. 6 Pilar Rodriguez Aranda-Tijuana, Mexico
Feb. 23 Youssef Alaoui–Morro Bay, California
Mar. 12 Robert Priest -Toronto, Canada
Mar. 24 Lisa Vihos-Sheboygan, Wisconsin

ABOUT:
LAKE JACKSON
Lake Jackson is a 4,000 acre shallow, prairie lake on the north side of Tallahassee in Leon County, Florida, (about 7 miles from downtown). This ecosystem was designated as the Lake Jackson Aquatic Preserve for the primary purpose of preserving and maintaining the biological resources in their essentially natural condition. Lake Jackson is also designated an "Outstanding Florida Water" by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. The expansive freshwater marshes and native submerged vegetation provide exceptional fish, waterfowl and wading bird habitat. Lake Jackson has two major depressions or sinkholes known as Porter Sink and Lime Sink that occasionally drain the lake. Lake levels have fluctuated from periods of being completely dry to a maximum elevation of 96 feet (29 m) above sea level. The lake is approximately 7.5 miles (12 km) long and its area is 6.2 square miles (16 km2). http://friendsoflakejackson.org/

Admission Info

FREE

Dates & Times

2017/03/24 - 2017/03/24

Location Info

Black Dog on the Square

567 Industrial drive, Tallahassee, FL 32301