It was an honor and thrill to appear on Thursday, Feb 17th at 10:00 AM (Pacific time) at the UCR Writers Week Festival with Ibrahim Nasrallah, the internationally acclaimed Palestinian author who Zoomed in from his home in Jordan. If you missed it, never fear, you can still see the recording here: Diane Lefer & Ibrahim Nasrallah – Crowdcast
Nasrallah's poems blew me away. I read from my novel, Out of Place, published September 13, 2021 by Fomite Press. Happening 20 years after 9/11, but M.C. Armstrong writing in The Wrath-Bearing Tree calls it "timely...a book about the people who do not fit into the dominant narrative of The Forever War."
Wednesday, October 27, 2021 5:00 Eastern, 2:00 Pacific. It was such a pleasure having a Zoom conversation with Elizabeth (Lisa) Liang, sharing our work - her solo show, Alien Citizen and my novel, Out of Place - and talking about language, culture, and more. For those of you who wanted to be there but couldn't make it, we're online now. Here's the link to the archives. And thank you to our hosts, Ginger Eager and Jody Forrester of Who Writers Read.
Sunday, October 10, 5:00 - 6:30 PM on Youtube: Santa Monica Review Presents with me, Tom Whalen, Lisa Teasley, Adolfo Guzman-Lopez, Mary Taugher. Here's the link for October 10 and afterwards available, archived. https://youtu.be/zNbRGWy15-4
Tuesday, September 21, 2021 at 7:30 PM - We're launching the publication. And in recognition of International Day of Peace, I'll be with Dana Johnson, Héctor Tobar, and Andrew Tonkovich at a panel discussion and reading sponsored by Skylight Books, 1818 N Vermont Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90027. In-store live! Details here.
Cancelled to avoid spread of coronavirus. Sunday, April 5, 2020 at 5:00 at the Edye, Santa Monica College Performing Arts Center, 1310 11th Street, Santa Monica, CA 90401, we'll celebrate the Spring 2020 issue of Santa Monica Review. I'll be reading new work along with David Preizler, Ryan Ridge, and Steve De Jarnatt. $10 admission, free parking, and free copy of the Spring issue.
Saturday, September 28, 2019 at 3:30 at the Venice Public Library. I'll be reading in the inaugural edition of the Say the Word reading series, thanks to Dawna Kemper and Sandy Yang. Also reading: Chris Davidson, Debbie Graber, Dan Ross, and Tamala Whittley. Free!
Sunday, May 6, 2018 at 7:00 PM I’ll be reading new work at the Ruskin Group Theater along with Garrett Saleen, Grace Singh Smith, and David Preizler, introduced by my fave Andrew Tonkovich. The theater is at 3000 Airport Avenue, Santa Monica, CA 90405. $10 at the door and free parking.
Thursday, April 26, 2018 at LA Cathedral: The theme of the Human Dignity Awards Dinner (to benefit the Program for Torture Victims) is "Celebrating Women in Human Rights and Healing" -- and I'm one of them! along with LA City Councilmember Nury Martinez, Lisa Fujimoto of the Change a Life Foundation, and Channel 11 anchorwoman Marla Tellez. Tickets at ptvla.org/dinner
Tuesday, November 7, 2017, 6:30-8:00 PM
One of my stories will be among those read by actors as part of Immigrants: Stories of life and identity in Los Angeles, at the Annenberg Community Beach House in Santa Monica. (Free, but must pay for parking) Full info here.
"Beyond Words: Beauty and Resistance," is what they're calling our reading at Beyond Baroque, Sunday, September 17, 4:30 pm. Yep, I'm back at Beyond Baroque and this time "We" = me plus Richard Wirick, Zlatina Sandalska, and Andrew Tonkovich. I'll be reading the opening of a novel I've been working on for a few years, now more topical than when I started.
If you're not a Beyond Baroque member, admission is $10 and everyone gets a free copy of the new issue of the Santa Monica Review.
Beyond Baroque, 681 Venice Blvd., Venice, CA 90291. Free parking lot (turn right to enter just before you get to the building if you're headed in direction of ocean) and also free street parking on Sunday.
Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 4:00 PM
I'm gonna be the prose filling in a poetry sandwich! Thanks to Brendan Constantine (who will serve as emcee and I expect will be LA's poet laureate one of these days), I'll be reading for the first time from a new novel-in-progress. Poet Elizabeth Iannaci - who is also an actor and singer and has been known to play the drums - is sure to offer a spirited reading. And my friend and comrade-in-arms, Natasha Sajé, will be in town from Utah with her restless and witty explorations of etymology, the alphabet, and the contested meanings of our lives. Brendan says the date marks the 40th anniversary of the death of Anaïs Nin. Does he have something in mind?
Beyond Baroque, 681 Venice Blvd, Venice, CA 90291
Members admitted free.
Others: $10
February 2016 - Lottery/Loteria, a site-specific performance commissioned by the Pasadena Playhouse created by ImaginAction and community members of District 5.
October 2015 - theater workshops for the POPS Club at Venice High
May 2015: Senegal! with ImaginAction.
April 27th - Official pub date for Confessions of a Carnivore.
January-March 2015, I worked with ImaginAction on two projects: Theater of Witness with torture survivors and their families (thanks to the LA Department of Cultural Affairs, Cal Humanities, and the Program for Torture Victims), and participatory theater with Latino community groups in the San Gabriel Valley (thanks to the Pasadena Playhouse). Oral histories from torture survivors can be found at this site. I'll be adding more over the course of the year.
Heading to Salt Lake City to work with refugee youth at the Sunnyvale Neighborhood Center. A book compiling their work will be available for download soon. And here it is!
While I'm in town, I'll be reading in the City Art series, along with Hilary Thompson, Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2014 at 7:00 PM, at the Salt Lake City Main Library, downtown at 210 East 400 South, Salt Lake City, UT 84111 -- 4th floor conference room and doing a guest class for high school creative writing students at Rowland Hall.
Sunday, January 26, 2014 at noon I'll be speaking about Disrupting the School-to-Prison
Pipeline at University City United Church, 2877 Governor Drive · San Diego, CA 92122
In October 2013 I was in Northern Ireland with Hector Aristizabal and ImaginAction, for social theater work in prisons, with youth groups, with the LGBT community, and with the Ballymurphy Massacre Families (who've been fighting for justice for their loved ones shot down by British paratroopers in 1971). But there was also time for hiking -- here on the trail at Giant's Causeway on the north coast, photo by wonderful theater artist, teacher, and photographer Evanne Nowak of The Netherlands.
My essay about the Ballymurphy Families--"Hunger for Justice"--was in the special issue of New Madrid, devoted to The Great Hunger, January 2014 publication. And an account of our work in N.I. appears here in Numero Cinq.
Thanks to support from the LA Department of Cultural Affairs and the Francisco Homes, I'm facilitating a series of writing workshops with men on parole in transitional housing. Everyone is invited to receive a free copy of Turning the Page at the booksigning and open discussion on Saturday, September 21st at the Mary McLeod Bethune Regional Library Community Room, 3900 S. Western Avenue, Los Angeles 90062 from 3:30-5:00 PM. You can also check out the website and download a free PDF of the book for the project here.
I loved being back at the Circle X Ranch again in June with South Bay Youth 4 Peace (sponsored by San Pedro Neighbors for Peace and Justice). We played theater games and did Invisible Theater exercises and then created street theater on issues the teens chose. This year they wanted to close prisons and put an end to homophobia.
I loved being back at the Circle X Ranch again in June with South Bay Youth 4 Peace (sponsored by San Pedro Neighbors for Peace and Justice). We played theater games and did Invisible Theater exercises and then created street theater on issues the teens chose. This year they wanted to close prisons and put an end to homophobia.
Short stories will be out this Fall in A Clean Well-Lighted Place and Sententia.
The first chapter of Emerson Bustamante appears in Silk Road (Winter/Spring 2013), and my story, "Legacy Waste," is in Sou'wester, Spring 2013.
April 6, 2013 I was a panelist along with Gayle Brandeis, Aris Janigian, and Hector Tobar at Literary Orange, the fantastic annual event sponsored by Orange County Public Libraries at the Irvine Marriott from 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM. 18000 Von Karman Ave, Irvine, California 92612. Andrew Tonkovich, editor of Santa Monica Review, the Bibliofella himself, moderated. And after it was over, coordinator Jill Patterson called us the rock stars of the festival!
January and February worked on Theater of Witness with survivors served by the Program for Torture Victims. An ImaginAction project led by Hector Aristizabal and in collaboration with Alessia Cartoni, we were able to produce two free performances of We Are Here: Theater of Witness with Survivors of Torture, February 26th and 27th.
January 27, I'm Charlene Wilson's Highlighted Author.
In December 2012, I worked with the Youth Ambassadors, five dynamic high school students who volunteer with low-income 4th graders in an afterschool program in Culver City. These young women who are all active in theater will be creating a show about the environment--especially Ballona Creek--with the kids. I can't wait to see what they come up with.
Much of the time, here I am, trying to hide out in the apartment as a kind of stay-at-home writers retreat, but I do get lured out. February, Cochabamba, Bolivia to work with the organization Educar es fiesta. How could I say no to that!?!?!? Especially as compa Silvana Gariboldi was to arrive from Argentina too. (Or so we hoped. Due to a conflict over the gas fields, the border between Argentina and Bolivia was closed and Silvana wasn't able to cross! We missed her so much!)
Here's one I didn't have to attend myself: August 9-11, 2012 at Studio 101 at Spring Street Studios in Houston, TX. my monologue, Future Forward, was an exhibit in this year’s Museum of Dysfunction Showcase presented by Mildred’s Umbrella Theater Company. But I sure wish I'd been there. This, from Jim J. Tommaney's review on August 10th:
In Future Forward by Diane Lefer, directed by Jennifer Decker, the amazing Danitra Luers dominates the stage with an extended monologue that holds the audience breathless, and breaks our hearts as we are drawn into the world of battered women, and discover just how complex the needs of an individual can be. The writing is superb - its dark power merits development into a full-length play, and I can't imagine anyone better than Luers to star in it.
"Two Bucks," an essay inspired by two wildlife encounters during my time at the Orcas Island Writers Festival is in the Winter Solstice issue of Kudzu Review next year.
I'll be in the Diamond Point Press quincouplets multilingual anthology edited by Benjamin C. Krause and what really makes me smile is he's accepted couplets I wrote in English, Spanish, and French.
The Fiery Alphabet, historical novel, is due out in September 2013 from Loose Leaves Publishing. And there will be more of a wait for this one: Aqueous Books has accepted my novel, The Still Point for publication in September 2014.
Recent:
October 10, 2012, I'm on the panel discussing Drugs Wars, the Chicago Teachers Strike, and Lying Politicians along with Lynne Lyman, CA Director of the Drug Policy Alliance, and Paul Chabot, of Alliance for a Drug Free California, moderated by Jimmy Dore for the internet news show, The Point.
"Eradication" in Santa Monica Review; "It Started with the Telephone," in Seek It: Writers and Artists Do Sleep by Red
Claw Press in Toronto, Canada,
Nobody Wakes Up Pretty is available now in paperback and for Kindle. With a great cover by Eloise J. Knapp.
"Beyond the Rembrandt," published in June in Magnolia: A Journal of Women's Socially Engaged Literature and "True Love" in You, Me, and a Bit of We, an anthology from Chuffed Buff Books in the U.K., "Jonathan's Wake," in July in upstreet; "Cybercat" in
the Summerguide 2012 issues of Portland Monthly
June 26th, 2012 -- Back to Peace Camp to lead another theatre workshop for high school and college activists at this annual program run by San Pedro Neighbors for Peace and Justice.
May 4, 2012: Just received my copies of Yalubusha Review with "Sweet City," about my days as a giant puppet dancer in NYC, and the new Bacopa, containing my poem "en mis brazos." Looking forward to reading both journals.
Also impossible to say no: I was on the panel organized by PEN Center USA to discuss Censorship and the Enduring
Legacy of Fahrenheit 451 on April 30, 2012, from 7-9 PM in the City Council Chambers, West Hollywood.
And, invited by LA Progressive publisher Sharon Kyle, I spoke at the event (as shown in the image at the top of the page); "Defending Civil Liberties in the Era of the War on Drugs, the War on Terror, and the War on Immigrants," April 29th at
Neighborhood Church in Pasadena. Overall, a great discussion, and for me, it was especially humbling and enlightening to meet fellow panelist Ali Mir, the Muslim chaplain at USC.
April 2-6, I facilitated Theatre Camp for kids at Childrens Institute here in LA. Hector arrived midway through to direct the performance we offered for families on the 7th.
March 22 at 8:00 I performed "Future-Forward" again at the Secret Rose Theatre along with other past winners of the MonoSlam.
March 14, 2012 back to CalState-Fullerton for a still more updated presentation to the Media Literacy class on how the media and popular culture treat the subject of torture.
Thank you Jerry Mansfield - my host on January 25 for a performance and reading Moorpark College (Third Floor, LLR Building). And to Melody Mansfield for dinner. I'm am looking forward to Melody's collection of insect stories--ick--to be published with buggy artwork by Kitsune Books in 2013.
January 16, 2012 I was at Valparaiso University (in Indiana, not Chile) to lead a focus session during the whole-day Martin Luther King, Jr. event which this year was devoted to education. I felt so honored to be invited. Check out the blog post that tells about Tim King's keynote address and luncheon Q&A. Later that week, Hector and I were at the University of Chicago thanks to the incredible efforts made by talented writer Stephanie Friedman. Hector performed Nightwind and led a TO workshop. We spoke at lunch to people in the Latin American Studies department and other interested people. I offered a performance/reading/discussion, was supposed to speak at the Or Chadash synagogue (oops, canceled due to extreme snow!), led a workshop for the Graham School of the University and then Stephanie drove me all the way to Barrington to work with the Barrington Writers Workshop thanks to Tamara Tabel and my friend, the terrific writer and milonguera (is that the right word?) Natalie Pepa. To feel honored and grateful for a trip there in January...I must have been motivated! More on this at the blog, along with my reunion my Naty Vesga, my roommate from the first trip to Colombia.
November 30, 2011 - Rainstorm Press accepted my NY-noir crime novel, Nobody Wakes Up Pretty! pub date May 29.
November 12th, Lorenzo Montanini in Rome, Italy performed my short interactive play, Ave Atque Vale, via Skype for an audience in New York City as part of Around the World, a whole day event produced by global directors collective, The Internationalists. More info on the intriguing program here: http://theinternationalists.org/ATW11.html
I was back at Cal State-Fullerton to address the Media Literacy class on September 13 with updates on What We [Think We] Know about Torture.
August 6: I performed in the Monologue Slam at the Secret Rose Theatre in North Hollywood--and won!
Went back to the Santa Monica Mountains late in June to offer a theatre workshop to the high school and college student activists attending Peace Camp -- the inspiring program of San Pedro Neighbors for Peace & Justice.
May 20-30, I led writing workshops (in Spanish, no less), at the International Theatre Festival for Peace in Barrancabermeja, Colombia. Hector performed Nightwind and offered a workshop in Theatre of the Oppressed, and we got to see work and attend talks by people in the arts and human rights from 14 countries and all over Colombia. It was an honor and privilege to have the experience. Thank you, Yolanda and Guido!
Spokane! Thanks to Greg Spatz--not to mention Kyle Dunn and Monet Patrice Thomas -- I was visiting artist at the MFA Program, Inland Northwest Center for Writers at Eastern Washington State University
in early May and had a wonderful time.
My essays went up recently on the sites of LA Progressive, New Clear Vision, and Numero Cinq.
The Associative Press published two of my poems in the Fall 2011 issue. And this wonderful journal will fund a group of women in Cochabamba through Kiva as my reward! Another poem coming right up in Paper Crow. My story, "Sin-Tra-La!", will appear in Willow Springs in the issue due out January 2012. And my 12,000-word essay on the juvenile in/justice system, "Facing Life," was published April 15 by Connotation Press. I heard about it while I was on the road:
The first chapter of Emerson Bustamante appears in Silk Road (Winter/Spring 2013), and my story, "Legacy Waste," is in Sou'wester, Spring 2013.
April 6, 2013 I was a panelist along with Gayle Brandeis, Aris Janigian, and Hector Tobar at Literary Orange, the fantastic annual event sponsored by Orange County Public Libraries at the Irvine Marriott from 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM. 18000 Von Karman Ave, Irvine, California 92612. Andrew Tonkovich, editor of Santa Monica Review, the Bibliofella himself, moderated. And after it was over, coordinator Jill Patterson called us the rock stars of the festival!
January and February worked on Theater of Witness with survivors served by the Program for Torture Victims. An ImaginAction project led by Hector Aristizabal and in collaboration with Alessia Cartoni, we were able to produce two free performances of We Are Here: Theater of Witness with Survivors of Torture, February 26th and 27th.
January 27, I'm Charlene Wilson's Highlighted Author.
In December 2012, I worked with the Youth Ambassadors, five dynamic high school students who volunteer with low-income 4th graders in an afterschool program in Culver City. These young women who are all active in theater will be creating a show about the environment--especially Ballona Creek--with the kids. I can't wait to see what they come up with.
Much of the time, here I am, trying to hide out in the apartment as a kind of stay-at-home writers retreat, but I do get lured out. February, Cochabamba, Bolivia to work with the organization Educar es fiesta. How could I say no to that!?!?!? Especially as compa Silvana Gariboldi was to arrive from Argentina too. (Or so we hoped. Due to a conflict over the gas fields, the border between Argentina and Bolivia was closed and Silvana wasn't able to cross! We missed her so much!)
Here's one I didn't have to attend myself: August 9-11, 2012 at Studio 101 at Spring Street Studios in Houston, TX. my monologue, Future Forward, was an exhibit in this year’s Museum of Dysfunction Showcase presented by Mildred’s Umbrella Theater Company. But I sure wish I'd been there. This, from Jim J. Tommaney's review on August 10th:
In Future Forward by Diane Lefer, directed by Jennifer Decker, the amazing Danitra Luers dominates the stage with an extended monologue that holds the audience breathless, and breaks our hearts as we are drawn into the world of battered women, and discover just how complex the needs of an individual can be. The writing is superb - its dark power merits development into a full-length play, and I can't imagine anyone better than Luers to star in it.
"Two Bucks," an essay inspired by two wildlife encounters during my time at the Orcas Island Writers Festival is in the Winter Solstice issue of Kudzu Review next year.
I'll be in the Diamond Point Press quincouplets multilingual anthology edited by Benjamin C. Krause and what really makes me smile is he's accepted couplets I wrote in English, Spanish, and French.
The Fiery Alphabet, historical novel, is due out in September 2013 from Loose Leaves Publishing. And there will be more of a wait for this one: Aqueous Books has accepted my novel, The Still Point for publication in September 2014.
Recent:
October 10, 2012, I'm on the panel discussing Drugs Wars, the Chicago Teachers Strike, and Lying Politicians along with Lynne Lyman, CA Director of the Drug Policy Alliance, and Paul Chabot, of Alliance for a Drug Free California, moderated by Jimmy Dore for the internet news show, The Point.
"Eradication" in Santa Monica Review; "It Started with the Telephone," in Seek It: Writers and Artists Do Sleep by Red
Claw Press in Toronto, Canada,
Nobody Wakes Up Pretty is available now in paperback and for Kindle. With a great cover by Eloise J. Knapp.
"Beyond the Rembrandt," published in June in Magnolia: A Journal of Women's Socially Engaged Literature and "True Love" in You, Me, and a Bit of We, an anthology from Chuffed Buff Books in the U.K., "Jonathan's Wake," in July in upstreet; "Cybercat" in
the Summerguide 2012 issues of Portland Monthly
June 26th, 2012 -- Back to Peace Camp to lead another theatre workshop for high school and college activists at this annual program run by San Pedro Neighbors for Peace and Justice.
May 4, 2012: Just received my copies of Yalubusha Review with "Sweet City," about my days as a giant puppet dancer in NYC, and the new Bacopa, containing my poem "en mis brazos." Looking forward to reading both journals.
Also impossible to say no: I was on the panel organized by PEN Center USA to discuss Censorship and the Enduring
Legacy of Fahrenheit 451 on April 30, 2012, from 7-9 PM in the City Council Chambers, West Hollywood.
And, invited by LA Progressive publisher Sharon Kyle, I spoke at the event (as shown in the image at the top of the page); "Defending Civil Liberties in the Era of the War on Drugs, the War on Terror, and the War on Immigrants," April 29th at
Neighborhood Church in Pasadena. Overall, a great discussion, and for me, it was especially humbling and enlightening to meet fellow panelist Ali Mir, the Muslim chaplain at USC.
April 2-6, I facilitated Theatre Camp for kids at Childrens Institute here in LA. Hector arrived midway through to direct the performance we offered for families on the 7th.
March 22 at 8:00 I performed "Future-Forward" again at the Secret Rose Theatre along with other past winners of the MonoSlam.
March 14, 2012 back to CalState-Fullerton for a still more updated presentation to the Media Literacy class on how the media and popular culture treat the subject of torture.
Thank you Jerry Mansfield - my host on January 25 for a performance and reading Moorpark College (Third Floor, LLR Building). And to Melody Mansfield for dinner. I'm am looking forward to Melody's collection of insect stories--ick--to be published with buggy artwork by Kitsune Books in 2013.
January 16, 2012 I was at Valparaiso University (in Indiana, not Chile) to lead a focus session during the whole-day Martin Luther King, Jr. event which this year was devoted to education. I felt so honored to be invited. Check out the blog post that tells about Tim King's keynote address and luncheon Q&A. Later that week, Hector and I were at the University of Chicago thanks to the incredible efforts made by talented writer Stephanie Friedman. Hector performed Nightwind and led a TO workshop. We spoke at lunch to people in the Latin American Studies department and other interested people. I offered a performance/reading/discussion, was supposed to speak at the Or Chadash synagogue (oops, canceled due to extreme snow!), led a workshop for the Graham School of the University and then Stephanie drove me all the way to Barrington to work with the Barrington Writers Workshop thanks to Tamara Tabel and my friend, the terrific writer and milonguera (is that the right word?) Natalie Pepa. To feel honored and grateful for a trip there in January...I must have been motivated! More on this at the blog, along with my reunion my Naty Vesga, my roommate from the first trip to Colombia.
November 30, 2011 - Rainstorm Press accepted my NY-noir crime novel, Nobody Wakes Up Pretty! pub date May 29.
November 12th, Lorenzo Montanini in Rome, Italy performed my short interactive play, Ave Atque Vale, via Skype for an audience in New York City as part of Around the World, a whole day event produced by global directors collective, The Internationalists. More info on the intriguing program here: http://theinternationalists.org/ATW11.html
I was back at Cal State-Fullerton to address the Media Literacy class on September 13 with updates on What We [Think We] Know about Torture.
August 6: I performed in the Monologue Slam at the Secret Rose Theatre in North Hollywood--and won!
Went back to the Santa Monica Mountains late in June to offer a theatre workshop to the high school and college student activists attending Peace Camp -- the inspiring program of San Pedro Neighbors for Peace & Justice.
May 20-30, I led writing workshops (in Spanish, no less), at the International Theatre Festival for Peace in Barrancabermeja, Colombia. Hector performed Nightwind and offered a workshop in Theatre of the Oppressed, and we got to see work and attend talks by people in the arts and human rights from 14 countries and all over Colombia. It was an honor and privilege to have the experience. Thank you, Yolanda and Guido!
Spokane! Thanks to Greg Spatz--not to mention Kyle Dunn and Monet Patrice Thomas -- I was visiting artist at the MFA Program, Inland Northwest Center for Writers at Eastern Washington State University
in early May and had a wonderful time.
My essays went up recently on the sites of LA Progressive, New Clear Vision, and Numero Cinq.
The Associative Press published two of my poems in the Fall 2011 issue. And this wonderful journal will fund a group of women in Cochabamba through Kiva as my reward! Another poem coming right up in Paper Crow. My story, "Sin-Tra-La!", will appear in Willow Springs in the issue due out January 2012. And my 12,000-word essay on the juvenile in/justice system, "Facing Life," was published April 15 by Connotation Press. I heard about it while I was on the road:
April 14, 2011 at Prescott College in Arizona to lead a workshop on political theatre for Charissa Menefee's course on Theatre and Social Change and then talking about environmental justice in Colombia to students in Randall Amster's class on the Ecology of War and Peace.
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 I offered a presentation on What We [Think We] Know About Torture for Philippe Perebinossoff's Media Literacy class at California State University-Fullerton.
Grupo Ta'Yer at the Frida Kahlo Theatre presented a workshop production of my play, "God's Flea," (nspired by the classic Colombian short story, "En la diestra de Dios Padre" by Tomás Carrasquilla Naranjo) on March 5, directed by Rubén Amavizca-Murúa. I am honored that a condensed and simplified version of the script will take on Arizona's anti-immigrant legislation as it will be included in New Carpa Theater Company’s “Performing 1070: A Short-Play Festival”, on March 30, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., at the Annual Border Justice Conference at ASU West, and on March 31, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., on the House lawn of the Arizona State Capitol. (Rabid State Senator Russell Pearce tried but failed to ban the performance.)
Wednesday, March 16th, 2011 - 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM -- Hector, Enzo and I were at Soka University, 1 University Drive, Aliso Viejo, CA 92656, for a performance of Nightwind, a Theatre of the Oppressed workshop, and discussion of The Blessing Next to the Wound. Soka was founded on Buddhist principles of peace, human rights, and the sanctity of life and has a student body drawn from about 40 countries in addition to the US.
Hector and I also have an essay, "The Wounded Joker," in Come Closer: Critical Conversations about the Practice of the Theatre of the Oppressed and Pedagogy of the Oppressed (ed.Emert & Friedland), Peter Lang Publishing and I'll have a short play in Teatro Vida's upcoming anthology: Bullying: Beyond the Schoolyard (Teens and Adults Speak Out).
Not So Recent
(But rather than delete, I'll keep all this here for my own records at least...)
"Out of the Wilderness: Torture and Healing,” available as of December 30, 2010 in the anthology Peace Movements Worldwide: History, Psychology, and Practices, (edited by Michael Nagler and Marc Pilisuk), Greenwood/Praeger, which puts us in the company of contributors like Daniel Ellsberg, Kathy Kelly, and Howard Zinn.
Sunday, December 5, a rainy night in Los Angeles, but a warm crowd at the Rhapsodomancy reading series at the Good Luck Bar. I performed fiction and Steve de Jarnatt read one of the best stories I've come across in a long time and it was great to be introduced to the poetry of Robin Ekiss and Candace Pearson.
The Blessing Next to the Wound was named the November selection for the Amnesty International book club at Vromans Bookstore. We had an incredible night at Vromans in Pasadena, CA on November 12th, talking about the book, Hector drumming and telling stories, and the whole audience -- standing room only -- joining in a West African song. The morning after, this response came via email: I felt like exploding I loved it so much.
I hope everybody gets to read it!
We can thank Sonali Kolhatkar of KPFK for some of the turnout (and the night before as well atVillage Books in Pacific Palisades). You can catch the first 8 minutes of her interview with us on video or hear audio of the whole half hour (preceded by news of the labor issues at KPFA) by following this link.
In September, my one-act play No More Romance (immigrants, unions, jail) went up at the Luna Playhouse, 3706 San Fernando Road in Glendale, CA, directed by Maggie Grant of Three Roses Players. With Rebecca Brooks, Sommer Garcia, Stephanie Dimont.
Thanks to all who joined us Wednesday, June 16th at 7:00 PM when Hector Aristizabal and I discussed our new book, The Blessing Next to the Wound, at Eso Won Books, 4331 Degnan Blvd. in the Leimert Park neighborhood of LA. And to all who made it to the Lower East Side of Manhattan where I led the discussion on September 15th at Bluestockings.
I was thrilled to lead a theatre workshop on July 8th at the 6th annual Peace Camp in the Santa Monica Mountains. At the end of the month, the kids took what they learned to the streets! Thank you, San Pedro Neighbors for Peace and Justice.
My long story, "The Tangerine Quandary," is in the Spring 2010 issue of the Santa Monica Review, a longer story, "California Asparagus," appears in the Evening Street Review, "Eydie Gorme Was a Little Spanish Girl” is in the Platte Valley Review, and an excerpt from The Blessing Next to the Wound is in Two Review. "Future-Forward” just (August) came out in Volume V of The Ampersand Review. And you can find essays and political journalism at LAProgressive.com.
Thank you, Andrew Tonkovich, for Friday, April 23, at Beyond Baroque, where I had a blast performing a story along with readings by two wild and great authors, Jim Krusoe and Steve de Jarnett, celebrating the Santa Monica Review.
Thank you, Charlie Jane Anders, for the chance to perform in San Francisco on April 10, at the pleasantly notorious Writers with Drinks, (writerswithdrinks.com).
Thank you to Annie Bronston and Rogue Machine Theatre for their staged reading of Penalty Phase.
Thanks to Barbara Lewis and all the Festival gurus who flew me out two years running to the glorious Orcas Island Writers Festival.
Tuesday, April 5, 2011 I offered a presentation on What We [Think We] Know About Torture for Philippe Perebinossoff's Media Literacy class at California State University-Fullerton.
Grupo Ta'Yer at the Frida Kahlo Theatre presented a workshop production of my play, "God's Flea," (nspired by the classic Colombian short story, "En la diestra de Dios Padre" by Tomás Carrasquilla Naranjo) on March 5, directed by Rubén Amavizca-Murúa. I am honored that a condensed and simplified version of the script will take on Arizona's anti-immigrant legislation as it will be included in New Carpa Theater Company’s “Performing 1070: A Short-Play Festival”, on March 30, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., at the Annual Border Justice Conference at ASU West, and on March 31, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., on the House lawn of the Arizona State Capitol. (Rabid State Senator Russell Pearce tried but failed to ban the performance.)
Wednesday, March 16th, 2011 - 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM -- Hector, Enzo and I were at Soka University, 1 University Drive, Aliso Viejo, CA 92656, for a performance of Nightwind, a Theatre of the Oppressed workshop, and discussion of The Blessing Next to the Wound. Soka was founded on Buddhist principles of peace, human rights, and the sanctity of life and has a student body drawn from about 40 countries in addition to the US.
Hector and I also have an essay, "The Wounded Joker," in Come Closer: Critical Conversations about the Practice of the Theatre of the Oppressed and Pedagogy of the Oppressed (ed.Emert & Friedland), Peter Lang Publishing and I'll have a short play in Teatro Vida's upcoming anthology: Bullying: Beyond the Schoolyard (Teens and Adults Speak Out).
Not So Recent
(But rather than delete, I'll keep all this here for my own records at least...)
"Out of the Wilderness: Torture and Healing,” available as of December 30, 2010 in the anthology Peace Movements Worldwide: History, Psychology, and Practices, (edited by Michael Nagler and Marc Pilisuk), Greenwood/Praeger, which puts us in the company of contributors like Daniel Ellsberg, Kathy Kelly, and Howard Zinn.
Sunday, December 5, a rainy night in Los Angeles, but a warm crowd at the Rhapsodomancy reading series at the Good Luck Bar. I performed fiction and Steve de Jarnatt read one of the best stories I've come across in a long time and it was great to be introduced to the poetry of Robin Ekiss and Candace Pearson.
The Blessing Next to the Wound was named the November selection for the Amnesty International book club at Vromans Bookstore. We had an incredible night at Vromans in Pasadena, CA on November 12th, talking about the book, Hector drumming and telling stories, and the whole audience -- standing room only -- joining in a West African song. The morning after, this response came via email: I felt like exploding I loved it so much.
I hope everybody gets to read it!
We can thank Sonali Kolhatkar of KPFK for some of the turnout (and the night before as well atVillage Books in Pacific Palisades). You can catch the first 8 minutes of her interview with us on video or hear audio of the whole half hour (preceded by news of the labor issues at KPFA) by following this link.
In September, my one-act play No More Romance (immigrants, unions, jail) went up at the Luna Playhouse, 3706 San Fernando Road in Glendale, CA, directed by Maggie Grant of Three Roses Players. With Rebecca Brooks, Sommer Garcia, Stephanie Dimont.
Thanks to all who joined us Wednesday, June 16th at 7:00 PM when Hector Aristizabal and I discussed our new book, The Blessing Next to the Wound, at Eso Won Books, 4331 Degnan Blvd. in the Leimert Park neighborhood of LA. And to all who made it to the Lower East Side of Manhattan where I led the discussion on September 15th at Bluestockings.
I was thrilled to lead a theatre workshop on July 8th at the 6th annual Peace Camp in the Santa Monica Mountains. At the end of the month, the kids took what they learned to the streets! Thank you, San Pedro Neighbors for Peace and Justice.
My long story, "The Tangerine Quandary," is in the Spring 2010 issue of the Santa Monica Review, a longer story, "California Asparagus," appears in the Evening Street Review, "Eydie Gorme Was a Little Spanish Girl” is in the Platte Valley Review, and an excerpt from The Blessing Next to the Wound is in Two Review. "Future-Forward” just (August) came out in Volume V of The Ampersand Review. And you can find essays and political journalism at LAProgressive.com.
Thank you, Andrew Tonkovich, for Friday, April 23, at Beyond Baroque, where I had a blast performing a story along with readings by two wild and great authors, Jim Krusoe and Steve de Jarnett, celebrating the Santa Monica Review.
Thank you, Charlie Jane Anders, for the chance to perform in San Francisco on April 10, at the pleasantly notorious Writers with Drinks, (writerswithdrinks.com).
Thank you to Annie Bronston and Rogue Machine Theatre for their staged reading of Penalty Phase.
Thanks to Barbara Lewis and all the Festival gurus who flew me out two years running to the glorious Orcas Island Writers Festival.