RONALDO WILSON AT WORDSPACE SALON — AT LAST

I became involved with WordSpace over three years ago, and I remember that multiple-wilson_ronaldoaward-winning poet Ronaldo Wilson was a name bruited about as a possible reader. So I guess you could say that his appearance at a WordSpace Salon on February 1, is an event three years in the making.

The “multiple-award-winning” description seems to fit most of the writers we bring in for these events. Wilson still stands out, however, in this category, winning a Cave Canem award in 2007, and both the Thom Gunn Award and the Asian American Literary Award in Poetry in 2010. Congratulations, Mr. Wilson. He appears regularly in magazines and online venues, and this year he will add to his list of published books with Farther Traveler: Poetry, Prose, Other, coming from Counterpoint Press.

You can find Wilson’s work online. Here is a selection from The Narrative of the Life of the Brown Boy and the While Man with the unbeatable title, “Brad Pitt, Kevin Bacon, and the Brown Boy’s Mother.” (Mature audiences only please.)

Since Salons are held in private homes we only give out the address when re receive RSVP’s. Full Details of Wilson’s reading this Friday can be found on the WordSpace website.

Enjoy this short reading by Wilson and we hope to see you Friday, February 1.

Jerry Kelley Discusses William Blake at WordSpace Salon

William Blake attracts us for many reasons. He is an iconoclast, raging at the powers that be. His observations on the human condition seem prescient of modern psychology. He seems sexually modern, a spirit free of traditional restraints. He is a defender of the poor and an indefatigable opponent of privilege and authority. His is a plea for imagination and spirituality in a materialistic age.

He is a gifted lyricist, a sharp satirist, and a creator of profoundly symbolic and dense prophetic poetry. He is a strong visual artist in addition to being a poet, equally well known in the visual arts community and in the literary community. Each of his poems was produced as a complete work of art reminiscent of a medieval illuminated manuscript.

Adding to the romance, his work was virtually ignored in his own time, and he was thought to be at the least extremely eccentric, if not outright mad. Yet he has continued to inspire some of our best known poets and artists, from Rossetti to Yeats to Alan Ginsburg, as well as rock bands from the Doors to U2. His poem “Jerusalem” has become the national hymn of GB.

For these and other reasons Blake typically has been considered an anomaly, standing outside of and separate from the mainstream tradition of English letters. Whether viewed as a defender of Emotion and Imagination in the face of Rationalist Materialism or even as an arcane Hermeneutic scholar, Blake has resisted categorization and seems to stand outside the contexts of his own era.

Now however, in the last 20 years or so, scholarly efforts have created a historical context for Blake as a man of the 18th century, who echoed and reinvented many of his contemporaries’ voices from within the forgotten underclasses of English society.

From within this historical context Blake’s individual genius shines forth with renewed energy.

Mr. Kelley’s presentation includes numerous slides of Blake’s graphic images.

The discussion begins Thursday, November 29, at 7 PM. Come to the WordSpace headquarters at 415 North Tyler. Admission: FREE to members, $10 to others.

NOVELIST MATT BONDURANT TO READ AT WORDSPACE SALON

Matt Bondurant, a professor of creative writing at the University of Texas, Dallas, is the author of

Matt Bondurant at his Hollywood premiere

three novels. The Third Translation (2006), The Wettest County in the World (2009), and The Night Swimmer (2012). I have read only The Wettest County, and to do so I had to overcome my natural inclination to avoid novels promoted as “Based on a True Story.” But Bondurant had one hell of a true story to base his novel on. HIs family were active Kentucky moonshiners during Prohibition, and the Bondurant Boys were known as both smart business men and people you just didn’t want to mess with. My favorite moment in the story involved on of the Bondurants who, after having his throat slashed in a speakeasy parking lot, pinches the wound together and survives a several mile drive over country roads to the nearest hospital. These were tough people. Matt also manages to work in author Sherwood Anderson as a character, a man out of his depths in the Kentucky hill country and struggling to re-establish his fading career as a significant American author. (In this past year, Wettest County was turned into the film Lawless with an impressive cast including Gary Oldham, Shia LeBeouf, and Jessica Chastain, NIck Cave wrote the screenplay and John Hillcoat, maker of The Road and The Proposition, directed.

Scene from Lawless

The Night Swimmer racked up good reviews, including this particularly evocative one from Bookpage,

“When Bondurant explores what it is like to push yourself to the brink, whether with physical activity, drugs and alcohol, or lust, he captures an intensity of experience the reader won’t soon forget.”
Learn more about Matt on his webpage.
His reading is November 15 at 7 PM. Since the event is in a private home, WordSpace asks that your RSVP for the location at either  wordspace@wordspace.us or 214-838-3554. Admission is free for WordSpace members and $10 for non members.
 

KILLER SHAKESPEARE — COMING SOON, NOVEMBER 1

Kevin Curran’s presentation on famous murders in Shakespeare is November 1, at 7:00 PM.

One episode he will focus on is Macbeth’s tortured waffling before the murder of Duncan. You can almost hear the groundlings chanting, “Do it! Do it!.”

Here are two versions of the famous monologue. The first is performed by a very young, pre-Gandalf Ian McKellen I love him rolling up his sleeve at the end.

 

 

 

This scene of Jon Finch struggling to act with some really dopey special effects might remind you why the only thing you remember about Roman Polanski’s Macbeth are the nude scenes.

WordSpace salons are free for WordSpace members, $10 for non-members. Since events are in private homes, we ask that you RSVP at 214-838-3554. You will receive the address with your confirmation.

For more on this and all upcoming WordSpace events, visit the WordSpace website

KILLER SHAKESPEARE — A MEMBERS SALON ON NOVEMBER 1

A lot of people get bumped off in Shakespeare’s plays. Kings, queens, children, innocent wives — no one is safe. They are murdered in their beds, in the Roman forum, in forests, and back alleys. (I hope I didn’t make that one up about the back alleys.)

In Killer Shakespeare, Kevin Curran, associate professor of English at the University of North Texas, will examine three famous, bloody incidents in Shakespeare to explore how the bard used murder to “think through other, larger topics.” The incidents include the exuberant bloodbath that concludes Hamlet, the assassination scene from Julius Caesar, and Macbeth’moment of conscience before the killing of Duncan.

Follow those links above to read up before the event, and mark your calendar for November 1 at 7:00pm. Since salons are held in private homes, we do not publish the address, but ask that your RSVP at  214-838-3554.

Salons are free to WordSpace members and $10 for non members. (Join now, it pays in the long run. Visit our website for membership information.