Tuesday, December 15, 2015

David Allen Sullivan featured 12/21


12/21 David Allen Sullivan hosted by Bruce

David Allen Sullivan’s first book, Strong-Armed Angels, was published by Hummingbird Press, and three of its poems were read by Garrison Keillor on The Writer’s Almanac. Every Seed of the Pomegranate, a multi-voiced manuscript about the war in Iraq, was published by Tebot Bach. A book of translation from the Arabic of Iraqi Adnan Al-Sayegh, Bombs Have Not Breakfasted Yet was published in 2013, and Black Ice, about his father’s dementia and death, was published by Turning Point Press. He teaches at Cabrillo College, where he edits the Porter Gulch Review with his students, and lives in Santa Cruz with his love, the historian Cherie Barkey, and their two children, Jules and Mina Barivan. He was awarded a Fulbright, and taught in China for one year (yesdasullivan.tumblr.com). His poems and books can be found at Welcome!

Status Update
My dead father friended me on Facebook
today. I recognized his grinning mug
since I’m the one who uploaded that look,
minus my mom. Algorithims trigger
such messages, I’m aware of that fact,
yet still I felt a little uptick in
my heart, a strange elation that he cracked
the code to invade my computer screen,
reaching out to me as he so seldom
did while with me. Spiritus sancti. Amen.
He teases me with that devilish grin,
is this another lesson in lessening?
I hit confirm. And send him a reply:


Are you freed from the living when you die?

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Lisa Marie Rollins featured 1/19



1/19/15 Lisa Marie Rollins hosted by Odilia
AT TEMPORARY LOCATION:
NATIONS GIANT HAMBURGERS PRIVATE ROOM 1800 UNIVERSITY AVE AT GRANT.
Lisa Marie is a Bay Area (Oakland) based, Black/Filipina writer, playwright, solo performer, director, educator and one of the leading voices in transracial/ international adoption education and advocacy. She is currently touring her acclaimed solo show, Ungrateful Daughter: One Black Girls Story of being adopted by a White Family… that aren’t Celebrities, a comedic look her experience of being adopted by a white family in the 1970′s.

She has performed Ungrateful Daughter in the New York International Fringe Theater Festival, Los Angeles Women’s Theater Festival, The Atlanta Black Theater Festival, San Francisco Solo Festival, San Francisco Theater Festival, at StageWerx Theater, Off-Market Theatre, The Marsh Theater at Berkeley & in SF, The Shelton Theatre, universities and academic conferences across the United StatesUngrateful Daughter has been awarded James Irvine New Works, Zellerbach Family Foundation and City of Oakland Cultural Artsgrants. Lisa Marie is the original co-producer of the highly praised “W. Kamau Bell Curve: Ending Racism in About an Hour”, the basis for FX television series, “Totally Biased w W. Kamau Bell”. She directed “All Atheists are Muslim” by Zahra Noorbakhsh and most recently co-produced “A History of the Body”, a new play by Filipina playwright Aimee Suzara.

She has been teaching creative writing, poetry and performance workshops for over ten years. She was the 2010-2011 Poet in Residence at June Jordan’s Poetry for the People at U.C. Berkeley and is an alumni in Poetry of VONA Writing Workshop working with Ruth Foreman and Willie Perdomo. She was most recently published in Eye to the Telescope, in the anthology, Other Tongues: Mixed-Race Women Speak Out, As/Us Literary JournalLine/Break Special Issue on Asian American Adoptee poetry, The Pacific Review and others. She is currently focused in on her new manuscript of poems, tentatively titled, “Anchoring the Compass” and obsessing about her new play in development, “Side Effects”.

Lisa Marie has been featured as a commentator on CNN, NPR, HuffPostLive, KPFA Berkeley, KPFK Los Angeles and was given the honor of one of Colorlines Magazine’s “Innovators to Watch”for her social justice work around black adoptees. As Founder and Director of AFAAD, Adopted and Fostered Adults of the African Diaspora, Lisa Marie has helped build one of the first international organizations to focuses on the needs of adoptees and foster care alumni of African descent. AFAAD provides space for adoptees and foster care alumni to connect, heal from loss, create support networks and advocate around domestic and international adoption issues.


Lisa Marie holds an M.A. in Cultural Studies focusing in African Diasporic Women’s Literature, and an M.A. in African American Studies from UC Berkeley. She authored “A Birth Project”, a blog focusing on transracial adoption and black diasporic identity 2006-2012. She is currently an Adjunct Professor in Race and Resistance Studies at San Francisco State Universitylisamarierollins@gmail.com