Events

Thursday November 19, 2009
Start: 12:00 pm
End: 1:30 pm

Breaking the Sound Barrier (Haymarket Books)

We're thrilled to have Amy Goodman back to present her new book Breaking the Sound Barrier, which breaks through the corporate media's lies, sound bites, and silence in this
wide-ranging new collection of articles.

Amy Goodman has been confronting the Washington establishment and its corporate
sponsors while giving voice to the ordinary citizens and activists who are
fighting for a better, more peaceful world. Her daily international radio and TV
show, Democracy Now!, began in 1996 and is now carried on more than 500 stations
and on http://www.democracynow.org.

Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Inventing L.A.: The Chandlers and Their Times (Angel City Press)

A fascinating presentation by the author of the book that ties in to the PBS documentary Inventing L.A.: The Chandlers and Their Times, about the Chandler family and the history of the Los Angeles Times.

In his 30 years with the Los Angeles Times, Bill Boyarsky was a political writer, featured columnist, and city editor. He was a member of reporting teams that won three Pulitzer Prizes. He is the author of two biographies of Ronald Reagan. He is author of Big Daddy: Jesse Unruh and the Art of Power Politics and Los Angeles: City of Dreams; with his wife, Nancy, he coauthored Backroom Politics.

Friday November 20, 2009
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

 

New writing from LGBT writers, curated and hosted by our staffer Noel Alumit.This month, we're featuring D. Travers Scott, Myriam Gurba, Ian MacKinnon, and Michelle Sewell.

 

D. Travers Scott has worked as a writer, critic, and artist, appearing everywhere from underground ‘zines to Harper’s and This American Life. For the first time, the best of Scott’s celebrated short fiction are gathered together in Love Hard: Stories 1989-2009, collecting work originally appearing in award-winning anthologies, queer media, erotica, and live performance, along with new stories never before published. Together, they offer the first comprehensive overview of Scott’s ongoing explorations of masculinity, sexuality, urban environments, family, love, and the power of writing. Scott is also author of two novels: the internationally acclaimed Execution, Texas: 1987 and the Lambda Literary Award winner, One of these Things is Not Like the Other. He is currently completing a PhD at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California in Los Angles, where he lives with his husband.

Myriam Gurba is a teacher and writer. She lives in a small blue house in Long Beach with two rabbits and a Midwestern trannie. She is the author of Dahlia Season, a novella and short story collection which won the Edmund White Award.

Ian MacKinnon is a gay centered performance artist and curator of queer theatre events in Los Angeles. He is a member of Queer Exchange, a group of LGBTQ multidisciplinary artists who perform, tour, and conduct workshops around California. In his solo work, Ian combines spoken text, gay centered Jungian psychological theory, digital video, and music to evoke issues central to the queer community and to Gay Liberation. He graduated with honors and a BFA in Acting from Meadow's School of the Arts at SMU. Ian was nominated for a GLAAD Media Award for "Best Off Off Broadway Performance" for his piece, Spanked, performed at the New York International Fringe Festival, and toured to The New Conservatory Theatre in San Francisco.

Michelle Sewell is an award-winning screenwriter, poet, and founder of GirlChild Press. Throughout her work as a poet and a social worker, she has maintained that there must be a place for women and girls to develop and express their truest selves. With that in mind she has created open mics, workshops, and writing circles to foster a "sacred space" environment for women. The Jamaican-born artist/activist’s work has appeared on NPR, in does your mama know?, Sinister Wisdom, Other Countries: Voices Rising, Campaign to End AIDS Anthology, and Port of Harlem Magazine. She is also a columnist for Swerv Magazine and Velvet Park: Dyke Culture in Bloom.

Noël Alumit wrote the novels Letters to Montgomery Clift and Talking to the Moon.  His solo shows are The Rice Room: Scenes from a Bar and Master of the (Miss) Universe.

Saturday November 21, 2009
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Site Dance: Choreographers and the Lure of Alternative Spaces (Univ. Press of Florida)

A very special event featuring readings by two contributors to the new anthology Site Dance, as well as a solo performance in our store, presented by Collage Dance Theatre!

Collage Dance Theatre Founder/Artistic Director Heidi Duckler has created and presented over sixty dance performances in disparate venues in New York, Miami, Las Vegas, Portland, Oregon, Hong Kong, China and throughout Southern California including the Lincoln Heights Prison, the Los Angeles River, the Subway Terminal Building, the Herald Examiner Building, the Ambassador Hotel and the LA Police Academy.  Called “the reigning queen of site-specific performance” by the L.A. Times, Duckler has served as consultant to Aben Dans in Denmark.

Merridawn Duckler has published in Carolina Quarterly, Georgia State Review, and Main Street Rag, among others, with current work in Isotope,
Green Mountains Review
, NarrativeNight Train. She is a two-time winner of Society of Professional Journalists Award and was nominated for Best Creative Non-Fiction Anthology 2009 and a Pushcart. She teaches at The
Attic in Portland Oregon and is an Associate Editor at Story Quarterly.

Sunday November 22, 2009
Start: 4:00 pm
End: 5:00 pm

Blame (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)

 

We're delighted to copresent a reading with Michelle Huneven with the nonprofit substance abuse service organization Phoenix House. We'll be donating 10% of the sales of Blame from the event to Phoenix House, the largest nonprofit alcohol and drug abuse treatment and prevention facility in the nation.

Michelle Huneven is the author of two previous novels, Round Rock and Jamesland. She has received a General Electric Foundation Award for Younger Writers and a Whiting Writers’ Award for fiction. She lives in Altadena, California.

Tuesday January 19, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Footnotes in Gaza (Metropolitan)

 

PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS EVENT WAS ORIGINALLY LISTED IN ERROR AS TAKING PLACE ON ANOTHER DATE -- THIS IS THE CORRECT DATE AND TIME.

The acclaimed cartoonist-reporter Joe Sacco (author of Palestine and Safe Area Gorazde, among others) will present his most recent work of graphic journalism.

Thursday January 28, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Her Fearful Symmetry (Scribner)

The best-selling author of The Time Traveler's Wife reads from her newest novel. First editions will be available for purchase!

Audrey Niffenegger lives in Chicago, where she is a visual artist and writer.  She is the founding member of Text 3, an artist and writer’s group that also performs and exhibits in Chicago.  Her work is in the collections
of the Library of Congress, the Art Institute of Chicago, the National Museum of Women in the Arts and the Newberry Library.  She is the author of two visual novels, The Three Incestuous Sisters
and The Adventuress.  Her short story, The Night Bookmobile,
was serialized as a graphic novel in the London Guardian last year.  Her first novel, The Time Traveler’s Wife, was published in 2003 and was a national bestseller.

Her new book, Her Fearful Symmetry, is set in and around London’s historic Highgate Cemetery,
where Niffenegger, a self-proclaimed “cemetery tourist,” is an occasional guide.

 

Saturday January 30, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Just Kids (Ecco)

Music legend Patti Smith will discuss and sign her new book, Just Kids, the story of Smith's extraordinary relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe. This is Smith's first book of prose.

We're anticipating a pretty big crowd for this event, so here are a few guidelines to keep in mind if you're planning to attend:

Due to time constraints, after her reading Patti will only be signing her books (please leave memorabilia at home). Along those same lines, feel free to take photos from the line, but Patti will not be posing for pictures while signing.

Anyone who'd like to get something signed needs to buy one of Patti Smith's books (like Just Kids!) at our store either in advance of the event or at the event itself.

When you buy your copy, be sure to get one of our nifty numbered and color-coded slips -- this slip will get you a place in the signing line (and the earlier you get yours, the better your place in line!).

If you forget to get a numbered slip when you buy your copy, just come back with your receipt and we'll give you one.

And if you have any questions, just give us a call! We're at (323) 660-1175.

 

Patti Smith’s seminal album Horses was followed by nine releases, including Radio Ethiopia, Easter, Dream of Life, Gone Again and Trampin’. Her artwork was first exhibited at Gotham Book Mart in 1973, and she has been associated with the Robert Miller Gallery since 1978. Strange Messenger, a retrospective of three hundred works, made its debut at the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh and has been exhibited worldwide. Her books include Witt, Babel, Woolgathering, The Coral Sea, and Patti Smith Complete 1975 - 2006. In 2005, she received the Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, the highest grade awarded by the French Republic to eminent artists and writers who have contributed significantly to furthering the arts throughout the world.

Thursday February 4, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

 

The Unnamed (Little, Brown & Co.)

National Book Award-nominated writer Joshua Ferris (Then We Came to the End) will read from his new novel, The Unnamed.  Our staff member Kevin loved this book -- read his blog post here!

Joshua Ferris's first novel, Then We Came to the End, has sold in 20 countries and was shortlisted for the National Book Award and longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award. His short fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in Granta, Tin House, New Stories From the South, Best New American Voices, The Guardian, The Iowa Review and Prairie Schooner. He attended the University of Iowa and the University of California, Irvine. He currently lives in Brooklyn with his wife where he is at work on his second novel.
 

Friday February 5, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Fifty Gay and Lesbian Books Everybody Must Read (Alyson Books)

New writing from LGBT writers, curated and hosted by our staffer Noel Alumit.

This month, we're hosting a launch party for the new anthology Fifty Gay and Lesbian Books Everybody Must Read, a collection of 50 essays by critics, public figures, and authors about the LGBT titles that have meant a lot to them, and why everyone (of any and all sexualities) should read them, too.

Our event will feature contributors Felice Picano, Fenton Johnson, Matias Viegner, and Promising Series host and curator Noel Alumit.

Felice Picano is the author of 19 books, including the international bestsellers The Book of Lies and Like People in History. He also wrote the acclaimed literary memoirs Ambidextrous, Men Who Loved Me, and A House on the Ocean, A House on the Bay. He has been nominated for a PEN/Hemingway award, several Lambda Literary Awards, and is a recipient of the Ferro-Grumley award for fiction.

Fenton Johnson is the author of two novels, Crossing the River and Scissors, Paper, Rock as well as Geography of the Heart: A Memoir. His most recent book is Keeping Faith: A Skeptic's Journey among Christian and Buddhist Monks. Johnson has served as a regular contributor to Harper's Magazine and the New York Times Magazine. His stories and essays have appeared in many literary quarterlies and have received numerous awards, among them a James Michener Fellowship from the Iowa Writers Workshop and National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Fellowships in both fiction and creative nonfiction.

Matias Viegner is a Los Angeles based writer, artist and critic who works alone and collaboratively in writing, video, installation and performance art. He has shown solo work or performed at The Whitney Museum, The Kitchen and The Drawing Center in New York, LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions), New Langton Arts in San Francisco, Beyond Baroque, Machine Project, the L.A. Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), The Silver Lake Film Festival, and the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art.

Noël Alumit wrote the novels Letters to Montgomery Clift and Talking to the Moon. His solo shows are The Rice Room: Scenes from a Bar and Master of the (Miss) Universe. www.thelastnoel.blogspot.com

Saturday February 6, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

From Eternity to Here: The Quest for the Ultimate Theory of Time (Dutton Books)

Physicist Sean Carroll, founder of the Cosmic Variance blog and dubbed the "great science communicator" by ted.com, will be here to present his new book, From Eternity to Here.

"Sean Carroll is a sure-footed guide through some of the most perplexing and fascinating insights of modern physics. His delightful From Eternity to Here is an accessible and engaging exploration of the mysteries of time, deftly grappling with issues that will very likely play a critical role in the next major upheaval in our understanding of the cosmos.” --Brian Greene, author of The Elegant Universe

Sean Carroll, Ph.D. is a theoretical physicist at the California Institute of
Technology.  After receiving his doctorate from Harvard university, he pursued his research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the Institute for Theoretical Physics in Santa Barbara, and the University of Chicago.  His technical papers on dark matter and dark energy, the physics of extra dimensions, and alternative theories of gravity as well as the graduate-level textbook Spacetime and Geometry have been widely
praised by his academic peers.  Sean Carroll is one of the founders of the group blog, cosmicvariance.com, named one of the top five science blogs by Nature.

Photo of Sean Carroll by Ken Weingart.

Tuesday February 9, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

 

A Common Pornography (HarperCollins)

Kevin Sampsell will be here to discuss his new memoir!

Kevin Sampsell has been the publisher of Future Tense Books since 1990. His fiction has been published widely in literary journals like LIT, McSweeney’s, Opium, and on popular sites like Nerve and Failbetter. His non-fiction essays and reviews have appeared in various newspapers and magazines. His books include Beautiful Blemish and Creamy Bullets. He works as Small Press Champion (his actual title) for Powell’s Books. He
lives in Portland, Oregon.

"This is a heartbreaking and magnificent book.  I love its mosaic structure—a portrait of a family and a young man created out of
jewel-like fragments of memory.  In its depiction of small-town American
life—the ennui and despair and beauty—I am reminded of Denis
Johnson's Jesus’ Son. This is the kind of book where you want to thank the author for helping you feel less alone with being alive."—Jonathan Ames, author of Wake Up, Sir! and The Double Life is Twice as Good

 

Photo of Kevin Sampsell by Barb Klansnic

Saturday February 13, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

Life in the USA: An Immigrant's Guide to Understanding Americans (University of Michigan Press)

A launch party for this new book by two local authors!  Planaria J. Price and Euphronia Awakuni will discuss and sign Life in the USA, designed to help immigrants become more comfortable by gaining familiarity with the many the nuances of American culture.

Euphronia Awakuni has lived and worked in Japan and traveled extensively throughout Southeast Asia
and Europe. She has a Master’s in TESOL and has taught at Glendale College, USC and LACC.  She received a John Woods scholarship to attend the Prague Summer Program with the University of Western Michigan
in 2005.   She has taught English and ESL in Los Angeles at Evans Community Adult School for the last nine years.  She is currently working on a new novel. 

Planaria Price has taught English as a Second Language to adults for 37 years in Los Angeles.  She often
lectures and is the author of five books on English and American culture: Competency in English, Open Sesame: Understanding American English and Culture Through Folktales and Stories; Eureka!: Discovering American English and Culture Through Proverbs, Fables, Myths, and Legends;  Achieving Competency in English: A Life Skills Approach; Life in the USA: an Immigrants Guide to Understanding Americans.  She is also the author of a pronunciation book: Realistically Speaking: a Practical Approach to the Basic Sounds and Rhythms of American English.   She is currently working on a Holocaust memoir: A Witness Forever, the Barbara Reichmann story.  

 

Tuesday February 16, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

 

The Girl Who Fell From the Sky (Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill)

A launch event for the debut novel by this award-winning local author!

Heidi W. Durrow is the 2008 winner of the Bellwether Prize for the best fiction manuscript addressing issues of social justice. She has also won the Lorian Hemingway
Short Story Competition and the Chapter One Fiction Contest. She has
received grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the American
Scandinavian Foundation, and the Lois Roth Endowment and a Fellowship
for Emerging Writers from the Jerome Foundation. Her writing has been
published in Alaska Quarterly Review, the Literary Review, and others.

Wednesday February 17, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

 

This Time Tomorrow (St. Martin's Press)

A launch party for the debut novel by Michael Jaime-Becerra, author of the acclaimed short story collection Every Night is Ladies' Night.

Michael Jaime-Becerra grew up in El Monte, CA, a working-class suburb of Los Angeles. He received his MFA from the University of California, Irvine and currently teaches creative writing at University of California, Riverside. His short story collection, Every Night Is Ladies' Night, was named to lists of the years' best books by The Washington Post and the San Francisco Chronicle. It was awarded a California Book Award, the Silver Medal for a First Work of Fiction. Michael lives in El Monte, CA.

Photo of Michael Jaime-Becerra by Elizabeth Vergara

Sunday February 21, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

The Black Automaton (Fence Books)

Poet Douglas Kearney will be making his third appearance at Skylight Books, this time to present his new poetry collection The Black Automaton, which was selected for the National Poetry Series!

Douglas Kearney’s work as a poet, performer and librettist has been
featured in many fine publications and venues in print, in-the-flesh and
in digital code. His first full-length collection of poems, Fear, Some,
was published in 2006 (Red Hen Press). His second manuscript, The Black
Automaton
, was chosen by Catherine Wagner for the National Poetry Series
and will be published by Fence Books in November 2009. In 2008, he was
honored with a Whiting Writers’ Award. He lives in the Valley with his
family and teaches courses in African American poetry, opera and myth at
California Institute of the Arts.

 

Thursday February 25, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Model Home (Scribner)

The Los Angeles launch of this first novel from Eric Puchner, the acclaimed author of the short story collection Music Through the Floor.

"Puchner is such a tremendously skilled writer, you barely notice how
deftly he slips between points of view, how he creates characters that
are so real their yearnings and failures become your own. This is a
heartbreaking yet consistently funny novel that wraps its arms around
all the beauty and tragedy of the unfulfilled American dream." -- Stephen Elliott, author of The Adderall Diaries

Eric Puchner is an assistant professor of English at Claremont McKenna College. His award-winning short stories have appeared in numerous prominent journals and anthologies. He lives in Los Angeles.

Saturday February 27, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

We're happy to have students in the University of California, Riverside MFA writing program back to our store to read from their work.  Our student readers are: Julie Cline, reading from her nonfiction; Eva Konstantopoulos, reading from her fiction; Victor Zamora, reading from his poetry and nonfiction; Bonnie Bolling, reading from her poetry; and Patricia Rosales, reading from her fiction.

Saturday March 6, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

Silhouette (Writegirl Publications)

Teen girls from the Write Girl program will read from Silhouette, the new anthology of their work!

WriteGirl is a creative writing and mentoring non-profit for teen girls. Hear the authors read their original works. From tumultuous relationships to accordions to Hindu mythology, Silhouette covers a wide range of themes and genres, all told through the unique voices and perspectives of this diverse group. Join us. Get inspired!

Saturday March 13, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

Kate Coltun, Nikki Darling, Sara Gerot, Tiffany Promise, Analisa Raya-Flores, and Sam Cohen, who are students in the CalArts MFA writing program, will read from their work.

Tuesday March 16, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

The Traitor in Us All (Five Star)

A launch party for Los Angeles crime fiction author Robert Levinson and his new book The Traitor in Us All.

The cover art of this new book is a detail from an oil painting by James Strombotne, whose work hangs in major museums and private collections. The author and artist will be signing "limited edition" reproductions of the cover suitable for framing, with complimentary copies offered to the first 12 who attend and purchase the book at the event.

Robert S. Levinson is the best-selling author of seven previous
mystery and thriller novels, In the Key of Death, Where the Lies Begin, Ask a Dead Men and four in the Neil Gulliver and Stevie Marriner "Affair" series. His short stories appear regularly in the
Ellery Queen and Alfred Hitchcock mystery magazines. He is a 2009 Derringer Award winner for "The Quick Brown Fox," which also appears in the new anthology, BETWEEN THE DARK AND THE DAYLIGHT. He won Ellery Queen Magazine Readers Award honors three consecutive years. His short stories have appeared in "year's best" anthologies five years running, while plays staged at RiverPark Center, Owensboro, KY, were nominated for "Angie" awards of the International Mystery Writers Festival
two years running.

Wednesday March 17, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

The Spellmans Strike Again (Simon & Schuster)

New York Times-bestselling and Edgar-award-winning author Lisa Lutz will be here to read from and sign her fourth and final installment in the uproarious and kooky Spellmans mystery series.

Lisa Lutz is the author of the New York Times bestseller The Spellman Files; the national bestseller Curse of the Spellmans, nominated for both an Edgar and a Macavity Award; and the critically acclaimed Revenge of the Spellmans. Although she attended UC Santa Cruz, UC Irvine, the University of Leeds in England, and San Francisco State University, she still does not have a bachelor’s degree. Lisa spent most of the 1990s hopping through a string of low-paying odd jobs while writing and rewriting the screenplay Plan B, a mob comedy. After the film was made in 2000, she vowed she would never write another screenplay. A motion picture adaptation of The Spellman Files is in development with Paramount Pictures.

Saturday March 20, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 7:00 pm

The Boy Who Couldn't Sleep and Never Had To (Vintage)

A launch party for the debut novel from DC Pierson, about the typical high school experience: the homework, the awkwardness, and the mutant creatures from another galaxy.

DC Pierson was born and raised in Phoenix, AZ.  He graduated from NYU's
Dramatic Writing Department in 2007 with a degree in writing for
television. His comedy group DERRICK made a feature film called
"Mystery Team."  He publishes short stories and unsolicited opinions on
his website, dcpierson.com.  This is his first novel.

Sunday March 21, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

Not Your Typical Political Animal (Art Attack Press)

Political artist Robbie Conal will be here to present Not Your Typical Political Animal, a humorous and soulful collection of 20 years worth of writings, drawings, and paintings featuring his political animal muses.

In the 1980s, Robbie Conal, angered by the extreme hubris of the Reagan Administration, began making satirical posters of politicians and bureaucrats who, by his personal standards, had abused their power in the name of representative democracy. He developed an irregular guerrilla army of volunteers, and started pasting up his political jabs in the form of posters, in all of the major cities across the country. Since 1986, when his first poster, “Men With No Lips,” anonymously appeared in the streets of Los Angeles, Robbie has made more than 60 posters satirizing politicians from both parties, televangelists, and global capitalists. He has gained national prominence as the country's premiere street poster artist. Conal’s work has been featured on CBS This Morning, Charlie Rose, and in Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, The Wall Street Journal, Vanity Fair, People Magazine, Interview, and scores of daily newspapers around the country. The Washington Post named him "America’s foremost street artist" in 1988. His books include Art Attack: The Midnight Politics of a Guerrilla Poster Artist (HarperCollins, 1992), Artburn (Akashic Books, 2003), and Not Your Typical Political Animal (Art Attack Press, 2010). He continues to teach drawing, work on new posters and paintings, and live in Los Angeles with his wife and their two cats, Smilla and Bodhi.

Thursday March 25, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

My Footprint: Carrying the Weight of the World (Simon Spotlight)

Actor Jeff Garlin (Curb Your Enthusiasm) will be here to present his new book, in which he chronicles his year-long journey to reduce both his physical
footprint (losing weight) and his carbon footprint (going green) in his
laugh-out-loud self-experimental memoir.

Jeff Garlin is best known for his work on Curb Your Enthusiasm.  He also spent three seasons on NBC’s Mad About You and has appeared on Arrested Development, Everybody Loves Raymond, The Late Show with David Letterman, The Daily Show with John Stewart, and WALL-E.

Saturday March 27, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:30 pm

Los Angeles Noir 2, edited by Denise Hamilton (Akashic Books)

Orange County Noir, edited by Gary Phillips (Akashic Books)

 

Seven wonderful mystery writers will be here to present two new entrants in the very popular Akashic Noir anthology series: Los Angeles Noir 2 and Orange County Noir.  Editors Denise Hamilton and Gary Phillips and contributors Susan Straight, Robert S. Levinson, Robert Ward, Jervey Tervalon, and Naomi Hirahara will read from their work.

Denise Hamilton writes the Eve Diamond series and is editor of Los
Angeles Noir
, an anthology of new writing that spent two months on the
best-seller lists, won the Edgar Award for Best Short Story, and won
the Southern California Independent Booksellers’ award for Best Mystery
of the Year. Her latest novel, Los Angeles Times best seller The Last
Embrace
, has been compared to James Ellroy and Raymond Chandler.

Gary Phillips writes stories of chicanery and misadventure in various
formats, including novels and short stories. He has contributed stories
to several volumes in the Akashic Noir Series, including Los Angeles
Noir
, Dublin Noir, and Phoenix Noir. He recently published Freedom’s
Fight
, a novel set in World War II.

Susan Straight is a native of Riverside, California, just over the
Orange County border. She has published six novels, including Highwire
Moon
, which was a finalist for the National Book Award, and A Million
Nightingales
, which was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book
Prize. Her new novel, One Candle, will be published in 2010. Her short
story “The Golden Gopher,” from Los Angeles Noir, won an Edgar Award in
2008.

Robert S. Levinson is the author of the novels The Traitor in Us All,
In the Key of Death, Where the Lies Begin, and Ask a Dead Man, as well
as the Neil Gulliver and Stevie Marriner series of mystery-thrillers,
which to date consist of The Elvis and Marilyn Affair, The James Dean
Affair
, The John Lennon Affair, and Hot Paint: The Andy Warhol Affair.
The Derringer Award–winner’s short stories appear often in the Ellery
Queen
and Alfred Hitchcock mystery magazines.

Robert Ward’s 2006 novel Four Kinds of Rain was nominated for a Hammett
Prize. He is a former writer-producer on TV shows New York Undercover,
Hill Street Blues, and Miami Vice. His latest novel, Total Immunity,
was published in 2009 by Harcourt.

Jervey Tervalon lives in Altadena, California, with his two daughters.
He teaches creative writing at the University of Southern California
and is currently revising the manuscript of Hope Found Chauncey, a
sequel of sorts to his best-selling novel Understand This. His essay
“The Slow Death of a Chocolate City,” originally written for the LA
Weekly
, won a Los Angeles Press Club Award in 2008.

Naomi Hirahara, born and raised in Southern California, won an Edgar
Award for her third mystery in the Mas Arai series, Snakeskin Shamisen.
She writes crime fiction and also novels for younger readers; her short
story “Number 19” was published in the original Los Angeles Noir. She
contributes a mystery serial for an English-language weekly in Japan
and regularly leads writing workshops. Her fourth Mas Arai mystery,
Blood Hina, is being published in 2010.

Tuesday March 30, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

A Homemade Life: Stories and Recipes from My Kitchen Table (Simon & Schuster)

Creator of the popular and award-winning food blog Orangette, Molly Wizenberg will be here to discuss her new book, A Homemade Life.

"Molly Wizenberg writes with wit, style, and heart. Her delicious recipes are a special gift to every reader—and home cook." --Barbara Fairchild, Editor-in-Chief, Bon Appétit Magazine

Molly Wizenberg is a freelance food writer and the creator of Orangette. She writes the monthly column "Cooking Life" in Bon Appétit, and her writing has also been featured in Modern Bride, Town & Country, and on NPR.org.  She has degrees in human biology, French, and cultural anthropology, but in 2005, she left the world of academia to write full time.

Wednesday March 31, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

The Song Is You (Random House)

We're thrilled to have Arthur Phillips here to read from and sign the new-in-paperback novel The Song Is You, one of our Staff Favorites from 2009!

“One of the best writers in America.”—Washington Post Book World

“Enthralling . . . brilliant . . . triumphant.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review

Arthur Phillips is the internationally bestselling author of The Song is You, The Egyptologist, and Prague, which was a New York Times Notable Book and winner of the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction. He lives in New York with his wife and two sons.

Saturday April 3, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 7:00 pm

Name Me by Kim Noriega (Fortuante Daughter Press)

Join us for the launch of a new poetry chapbook by Kim Noriega and a party celebrating the recently established poetry press Fortunate Daughter, whose publisher and editor is Cecilia Woloch! This event will features readings by both Noriega and Woloch.  Both chapbooks currently available from Fortunate Daughter (Noriega's just-published Name Me, as well as last year's An Urgent Request, by Sarah Luczaj) will be available for purchase.

Kim Noriega teaches poetry to adults and teens in recovery homes and public libraries, and facilitates family literacy programs for low-literate adults with small children, to help them break the cycle of intergenerational low literacy.  She reads her work locally and abroad.  Her poem, "Heaven, 1963" was featured in Ted Kooser’s  syndicated column, "American Life in Poetry."  Her poem, "Name Me" was a finalist for the 2009 Joy Harjo Poetry Prize.   Kim lives in San Diego with her husband, Ernie, and close to their daughter, Leiha.

Cecilia Woloch is the author of four award-winning collections of poems, most recently Narcissus, winner of the Tupelo Press 2006 Snowbound Series Chapbook Award. Carpathia, newly available from BOA Editions Ltd., is her fifth book. She is currently a lecturer in the creative writing program at the University of Southern California, as well as the founding director of The Paris Poetry Workshop. She spends a part of each year traveling, and in recent years has divided her time between Los Angeles, California; Atlanta, Georgia; Shepherdsville, Kentucky; Paris, France; and a small village in the Carpathian mountains of southeastern Poland.

Photo of Cecilia Woloch (right) by Jim Hall.

Thursday April 8, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

 

THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELLED DUE TO AN UNFORSEEN SCHEDULING CONFLICT. WE APOLOGIZE FOR THE INCONVENIENCE.

 

Big Machine (Random House)

Victor LaValle will be here to read from and sign his new-in-paperback novel Big Machine, one of our staff picks!

"If Hieronymus Bosch and Lenny Bruce got knocked up by a woman with a
large and compassionate heart, they might have brought forth Big
Machine
. But it is Victor LaValle's peculiar, poetic, rough and funny
voice that brings it to us, alive and kicking and irresistible." —Amy Bloom

In addition to Big Machine, Victor LaValle is the author of the short-story collection Slapboxing with Jesus and the novel The Ecstatic, a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award. He has been the recipient of numerous awards
including a Whiting Writers' Award, a United States Artists Ford
Fellowship, and the key to Southeast Queens.  He was raised in Queens, New York.

Sunday April 11, 2010
Start: 2:00 pm
End: 4:00 pm

In honor of National Poetry Month, author and educator Terry Wolverton offers a free two-hour workshop exploring the anatomy of a poem.  Using poems drawn from Best American Poetry 2009, participants will discuss not only their meaning, but how their construction contributes to their meaning.  Participants may want to get a copy of the anthology prior to the workshop, but it is not required.   Please pre-register by Friday, April 9 by calling (323) 661-5954.

Terry Wolverton is the author of seven books: The Labrys Reunion, a novel; Embers, a novel in poems; Insurgent Muse, a memoir about the Woman's Building; Bailey's Beads, a novel; and two collections of poetry, Black Slip, Mystery Bruise and Shadow and Praise.  She has also edited fourteen compilations of literary work.

Start: 5:00 pm
End: 7:00 pm

Join Kim Dower, Yvonne M. Estrada, Dylan Gailey, Brett Guitar Hofer, Eric Howard, Ronna Perrin, Sharon Venezio, and Terry Wolverton for an explosion of forms and styles the demonstrate the variety and vitality of poetry in Los Angeles.

Writers at Work was founded by author, editor, and long-time writing instructor Terry Wolverton to provide a space for writers to stretch the imagination, strenthen their craft, produce new work, fulfill their goals, and create a community for their work.

Monday April 12, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Canteen Magazine

Joyce Maynard and Dana Goodyear will read from their pieces in Canteen Magazine. While the reading takes place, aspiring writers will get to compete with an established writer as Dana Goodyear will face off against two audience members in a flash fiction writing contest, using an assigned topic.  When the readings from Canteen are over, all three short pieces will be read out anonymously, and the audience will pick the winner.  Prizes for all!

Canteen redefines the literary magazine by asking accomplished writers to reveal their creative process, and pairing that insight with the best new work in fiction, poetry, art, and photography—all designed to look more like a fine art book than a dusty journal.

Joyce Maynard is the author of many books, including the novel To Die For (look for her in the movie adaptation of this book, in which she plays the role of Nicole Kidman’s attorney) and the best-selling memoir, At Home in the World. Her novel, The Usual Rules — a story about surviving loss — has been a favorite of book club audiences of all ages, and was chosen one of the ten best books for young readers for 2003. Mother of three grown children, she spends half her time in Mill Valley, California, and the other half in Lake Atitlan, Guatemala, where, in addition to pursuing her own work, she runs writing workshops.

Dana Goodyear is a staff writer at the New Yorker, where she has worked since 1999, and the author of Honey and Junk (W. W. Norton), a collection of poems.  Her work has appeared in many magaznies, journals, and periodicals, including The New York Times, the New York Review of Books, the Los Angeles Times, the Yale Review, the Colorado Review, Open City, Slate, and Vogue.  She lives in Los Angeles.

Wednesday April 14, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Alone with You (Simon & Schuster)

The acclaimed author of The God of War will be here to read from her new short story collection, Alone with You.

Marisa Silver made
her fiction debut in The New
Yorker
 when she appeared in
the inaugural “Debut Fiction” issue. Her collection of stories, Babes in Paradise, was a New York Times Notable Book and a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year. She is also the
author of the novels No
Direction Home
 and The God of War, which was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in the fiction category.  She is the winner of the
O. Henry Prize, and her work has been included in The Best American Short
Stories
 as well as other
anthologies. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and two sons.

Photo of Marisa Silver by Bader Howar.

Thursday April 15, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Robin and Ruby (Kensington Publishing)

The award-winning author will read from and sign his new novel.

"A fiercely gripping story... a brother and sister, bonded and haunted, smart and intense, sharing overlapping roads to romance or tragedy or hard-won self-understanding." --Michelle Tea, author of Rose of No Man's Land and Valencia

Praise for The World of Normal Boys:
"Extraordinary...an exhilarating experience...that Soehnlein has produced as his first novel a work of such maturity and excellence is little short of astounding." -- Fenton Johnson, author of Scissors, Paper, Rock

"This is a rich and unflinching book." --The New York Times Book Review

K.M. Soehnlein is the author of the Lambda Award-winning bestselling novel, The World of Normal Boys, and You Can Say You Knew Me When. He lives in San Francisco, where he works as a freelance writer, editor and writing teacher. Readers can visit his blog at http://kmsoehnlein.typepad.com and his website at www.kmsoehnlein.com.

Friday April 16, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Students in University of Southern California's Master of Professional Writing program will read from their work.

Monday April 19, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

A Fortunate Age (Scribner)

Joanna Smith Rakoff will be here to read from and sign the new-in-paperback edition of her acclaimed debut novel, A Fortunate Age.

"A wonderful, funny and spot-on portrait of my clumsy generation that brings to
mind such hallmarks as Mary McCarthy's The Group, Jay McInerney's Brightness
Falls
, and Claire Messud's The Emperor's Children." -- Gary Shteyngart,
author of Absurdistan and The Russian Debutante's Handbook

Joanna Smith Rakoff has written for The New York Times, Time Out New York, the Los Angeles Times, Newsday, Vogue, O, The Oprah Magazine,
and other publications. She holds a B.A. from Oberlin College, an M.A.
from University College, London, and an M.F.A. from Columbia
University. She lives in New York with her husband, son and daughter.

Friday April 30, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:30 pm

Legend of a Suicide (Harper Perennial)

David Vann, whose short story collection Legend of a Suicide earned rave reviews in hardcover, will be here to read and sign the new paperback edition.

"The reportorial relentlessness of Vann’s imagination often makes his fiction seem less written than chiseled. A small, lovely book has been written out of his large and evident pain. 'A father, after all,' Vann writes, 'is a lot for a thing to be.' A son is also a lot for a thing to
be; so is an artist. With Legend of a Suicide, David Vann proves himself a fine example of both.” —Tom Bissell, New York Times Book Review

"Brilliant . . . . Vann's prose follows the sinews of Cormac McCarthy and Hemingway, yet has its own nimble flex." —The Times (London)

David Vann is a professor at the University of San Francisco. A contributor to Esquire, The Atlantic Monthly, Men’s Journal, Outside, and National Geographic Adventure, he is author of a best-selling memoir, A Mile Down: The True story of a Disastrous Career at Sea, and the forthcoming Last Day On Earth: A Portrait of the NIU Shooter, Steve Kazmierczak, winner of the 2009 AWP Nonfiction Prize.  He has also been a National Endowment for the Arts Fellow and a Wallace Stegner Fellow.

Sunday May 2, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

Make/shift

Make/shift magazine creates and documents contemporary feminist culture and action by publishing journalism, critical analysis, fiction, poetry and visual art. Join coeditors/copublishers Jessica Hoffmann and Daria Yudacufski for an afternoon of readings featuring several make/shift contributors.

Monday May 3, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Aliens in the Prime of their Lives (W. W. Norton)

National Book Award finalist Brad Watson (for his first novel, The Heaven of Mercury)will be here to read from and sign his new short story collection, Aliens in the Prime of their Lives.

"Brad Watson’s stories worm their way through you. Watson’s talent is singular, truly awesome; he reminds me of Raymond Carver, Flannery O’Conner, Chris Offutt in his bravery, his unflinching willingness to look at what might set others running. And yet these are not exactly dark stories—that is part of their magic, they are infused with an uncanny beauty in which even at the most god awful moments, something is salvaged."
—A. M. Homes, author of This Book Will Save Your Life

Brad Watson teaches creative writing at the University of Wyoming, Laramie. His first collection,
Last Days of the Dog-Men
, won the Sue Kauffman Award for First Fiction from the American Academy of Arts & Letters. His first novel, The Heaven of Mercury, was a finalist for the National Book Award.

Friday May 7, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:30 pm

When That Rough God Goes Riding: Listening to Van Morrison (PublicAffairs)

We're thrilled to announce that Greil Marcus, music and culture critic, Believer columnist, and author or editor of many Skylight staff and customer favorites (Lipstick Traces, A New Literary History of America, and others) will be here to discuss and sign his new book of criticism on another Skylight favorite person: Van Morrison.

Greil Marcus is the author of The Shape of Things to Come, Like a Rolling Stone, and The Old Weird America; a twentieth anniversary edition of his book Lipstick Traces
was published in 2009. With Werner Sollors he is the editor of A New Literary History of America, published last year by Harvard University Press. Since 2000 he has taught at
Princeton, Berkeley, Minnesota, and the New School in New York; his column “Real Life Rock Top 10” appears regularly in The Believer. He lives in Berkeley.

Saturday May 8, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 7:00 pm

Absolute Green Lantern: Rebirth (DC Comics)

The popular and prolific comic book writer Geoff Johns will be here to discuss and sign Absolute Green Lantern: Rebirth, the deluxe edition of the series that relaunched one of DC Comics' greatest heroes.

Geoff Johns has written highly acclaimed stories starring Superman, Green Lantern, the Flash, Teen Titans, and Justice Society of America. He is the author of the New York Times bestselling graphic novels Green Lantern: Rage of the Red Lanterns, Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps War, Justice Society of America: Thy Kingdom Come, and Superman: Braniac.  He is currently working on the story for The Flash feature film, which he will also co-produce.

Friday May 14, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:30 pm

Wilson (Drawn & Quarterly)

Daniel Clowes, the acclaimed cartoonist behind Ghost World (the graphic novel and the Oscar-nominated screenplay), the minicomic (turned movie) Art School Confidential, and the Eightball comic series will be here to discuss and sign Wilson, his new first all-new graphic novel!

Saturday May 15, 2010
Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

The Silver Hearted (Alyson Books)

David McConnell will read and sign his novel The Silver Hearted.

"The Silver Hearted is our Heart of Darkness. It is just as
ominous, as violent, as exotic, as darkly colonial. But it is a lot
better written than Conrad's book. Whereas Conrad is always resorting
to 'the unspeakable,' McConnell tells us everything in glowing detail
and in fresh, eloquent language. Sexy, demonic, elusive, The Silver
Hearted
is a perfect work of art. "--Edmund White

New York-based novelist David McConnell, whose short fiction and
criticism have appeared in numerous periodicals and anthologies, is the
author of the fictional memoir The Firebrat.

Photo of David McConnell by Everett McCourt

Thursday May 20, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

And the Heart Says... Whatever (Free Press)

Emily Gould will discuss and sign her new humorous essay collection And the Heart Says Whatever.

Emily Gould has written for The New York Times, the New York Observer, and Jezebel.com, among other
publications.  Before becoming editor of Gawker.com, a job she quit and
then described in a cover story for The New York Times Magazine in 2008, she was an associate editor at Hyperion.

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