Come see Meredith Alling & me at Skylight Books 11/15

meredith-alling-and-siel-ju-at-skylight-books

I’ve always wanted to do a live interview with a writer I admire — and this month, I’m finally getting that chance! Meredith Alling‘s debut book of short stories, Sing the Song (Future Tense), comes out in a couple weeks — and in celebration, Meredith and I will chat it up at Skylight Books!

sing-the-songMeredith Alling & Siel Ju: Reading & Conversation
When: Tuesday, November 15, 2016, 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm
Where: Skylight Books, 1818 N Vermont Ave, Los Angeles

Meredith will first read from Sing the Song. The stories in this collection are strange and quirky and eclectic and funny. In one, a slightly-lost woman starts copying the fashion style of truant kids that hang out near her house. In another, a girl waits at the front of the line for a sample sale to start — only to pass out from anxiety. In between are short surreal flash pieces — about precocious babies, sagacious hams, and other bizarre things. You can read one of my favorites, “Insubordination,” at Spork Press.

Preorder the book — or come to the event and buy one there! An official launch party happens that Saturday, Nov. 19, at Verdugo Bar. Hope to see you at one or both events —

Lit Crawl LA: A Night of literary happenings in North Hollywood

Lit Crawl Los Angeles NoHo Arts District

Lit Crawl Los Angeles NoHo Arts District

Clear your schedule for next Wednesday night! Lit Crawl LA returns Wed., Oct. 26, turning the North Hollywood Arts District into the hub of Literary LA with irreverent readings and other fun events happening in local dive bars, fancy theaters, and other interesting spots.

The night’s set up so that each of the three hours of the night, a dozen or so events happen concurrently, with a few minutes in between each hour to let crawlers get to their next event. All the events are free! Unfortunately as of this writing the Lit Crawl LA website hasn’t updated the schedule for the night. But the Facebook invites have gone out — so here are the three events I recommend you crawl to!

Round 1 at 7 pm: The Rejection Game at The Eclectic Wine Bar & Lounge, 5156 Lankershim Blvd, North Hollywood.

Okay — I picked this event mainly because I’m in it — and also because it should be a fun time! Organized by Women Who Submit — a lit org that encourages women to submit to lit journals more frequently and tenaciously — this reading will “celebrate the work that has been rejected time and again, but that we still believe in.”

Come hear me, Rachael Warecki, Tammy Delatorre, Ryane Nicole Granados, Stephanie Abraham, and Kate Maruyama. Poet Lauren Eggert-Crowe will host!

Round 2 at 8 pm: The Literary Dating Game at the Kahuna Tiki, 11026 Magnolia Blvd, North Hollywood.

One brave creative-nonfiction-writing bachelorette called Brandi Neal has agreed to let three brave souls compete for a chance to take her out on a date! Organized by PEN Center USA, the event promises a “stellar host, a stunning mistress of ceremonies, literary questions, some audience participation, and a Mai Tai or two.” I am pretty sure you’ll need to pay for your own mai tais, so prepare accordingly —

Round 3 at 9 pm: Truth in Fiction at MOD Pizza, 5300 Lankershim Blvd #103, North Hollywood.

This event’s a chance to get to hear some of the bigger names in the LA lit scene read. David Ulin, J. Ryan Stradal, Natashia Deon, Matthew Specktor — as well as James Sie, Robert Roman, and Julia Ingalls — will all give short readings. Take your books to get signed!

I’m guessing there’ll be an afterparty with drinks and nibbles and socializing after the third round, as there has been in previous years. Check the Lit Crawl LA website closer to date for details.

Earlier: 7 big annual literary events in Los Angeles to put on your calendar now

Women Who Submit throws parties to empower women writers

wws-logo

Why do we still see more men publishing poems, stories and books than women? That simple question has a complex answer, but one part of the problem is that women make fewer and less frequent efforts to get published. Ask many a literary journal editor, and she will tell you that men, in general, send in submissions in far greater numbers than do women.

Why this is — is also a question with a complex answer. But one grassroots organization, Women Who Submit, has started answering it with a simple solution — by getting more women to submit more and more frequently to literary journals and other writing-related opportunities.

Women Who Submit submission party in Los Angeles

How does Women Who Submit do this? By throwing submission parties! At each of these events, women writers are encouraged to arrive, laptops in tow, to hang out and eat and drink and chat and have fun in real life — while also sending their work out to literary journals via the internet. Every time someone sends in a submission, the crowd cheers!

Each party is a little different. Some are held in people’s homes, and have the feeling of a cozy ladies potluck brunch. Others are held in bars, to the delight of writers who enjoy daydrinking. Yet others are organized in quiet community spaces — Those have tended to be the most productive spots for me.

Women Who Submit was founded in 2011 by three L.A. women — Alyss Dixson, Ashaki Jackson and Xochitl-Julisa Bermejo — as a response to the VIDA count, which shows in stark statistics just how many more men than women are seeing their name in print in literary journals.

Women Who Submit submission party in Los Angeles

Since then, WWS has formalized and organized and expanded. There are now parties organized across the US! Parties in L.A. happen on the second Saturday of the month — and I’ll be giving a talk at the next one on finding an agent! That WWS New Member Orientation and Submission Party happens Sat., Oct. 8 at Beyond Baroque in Venice. Hope to see you there!

To join WWS — or to find out about or start a party in your town, contact WWS. In the meantime, follow WWS’ blog, which has helpful posts demystifying the literary submission process, offering writerly encouragement, and celebrating the publication successes of its members.

Earlier: 5 important resources for women writers

Photos by Lauren Eggert-Crowe

One weekend, two readings: Hear me at SoCal Poetry Festival and Roar Shack

Roar Shack reading series at 826LA in Los Angeles

Roar Shack reading series at 826LA in Los Angeles

Clear your calendar and come hang out with me at two readings this weekend!

First up: Southern California Poetry Festival happens all weekend at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach. My reading with Red Hen Press happens tomorrow, Saturday, Sep. 10, at 2 pm. Would love to see you there! (More about the festival)

Secondly: The monthly reading series Roar Shack returns on Sunday, Sep. 11 at 4 pm. I’ll be reading fiction here — along with Natasha Deon, Seth Fischer, Rich Ferguson, and Toni Ann Johnson. (More about Roar Shack)

Both events are free and open to the public. Come say hello!

I’m reading at the Southern California Poetry Festival in Long Beach 9/10

Southern California Poery FestivalThe first ever Southern California Poetry Festival happens next month in Long Beach. Organized by Sonia Greenfield and Donna Hilbert in partnership with The Poetry Foundation, the weekend affair going to be two days filled with readings, panels, and keynotes — topped off with cocktail hours at The Brass Lamp Book Bar!

Hear luminaries like Amy Gerstler and Henri Cole, discover a dozen or so local literary journals, and find out about local bookish nonprofits. There’ll even be a panel moderated by former book critic of the Los Angeles Times David Ulin, with the provocative title, “Does SoCal Have a Voice?” I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that the panelists — Marilyn Chin, Suzanne Lummis, Luis Rodriguez, Ralph Angel — are probably going to say yes.

I’ll be reading with the Los Angeles Review crew on Saturday, Sep. 10 from 2 pm to 3 pm, along with Charles Harper Webb (Amplified Dog), Jessica Piazza (Interrobang), and Kim Dower (Slice of Moon). Here’s the full schedule lineup for both days.

Reserve a FREE ticket for the festival here — though I must warn you that all 175 tickets for Saturday are already taken! That said, if you’re a reader of this blog and would like to come on Saturday, just leave a comment ASAP and I’ll contact the organizers to get a ticket reserved for you.

Hope to see you there!

Southern California Poetry Festival. Saturday, Sep. 10 – Sunday, Sep. 11, 2016. Aquarium of the Pacific, 100 Aquarium Way, Long Beach.

My Writing Residency at the Anderson Center

Anderson Center welcome card

Why voluntarily spend a month of her summer in a tiny town in the midwest? To write, is the short answer. My month-long writing residency at the Anderson Center at Tower View is coming to a close — so here’s a post about what I did, what I loved, and what I got out of the whole experience.

First, the basics: The Anderson Center hosts five artists and writers at a time in a big, historic house in Red Wing, Minn. I flew in to Minneapolis on July 1, where a nice driver rounded up me and two other residents and whisked us off to the Center. There, I was introduced to my cute little bedroom —

Anderson Center bedroom

— then invited down to a dinner made by Chef Britton of Le Chien Bleu! He made us nice dinners each weeknight, modifying the menu to accommodate everyone’s diets (There was a vegetarian, a pescatarian, and the lactose-intolerant me). Below’s a sample evening menu:

Meal at the Anderson Center

He also brought us groceries we requested to make our own breakfasts and lunches and weekend dinners. I got really into chia bowls and started obsessively instagramming them:

Chia bowl

There are a lot of little amenities here. A housekeeper cleans the bedrooms — and the whole three-story historic house, really — every Friday. Visual artists get studios to work in; writers can pick from any of the three libraries in the house, like this one:

Anderson Center library

The libraries, of course, have books. I ended up reading a bunch of them:

Books at the Anderson Center

You can also write in the historic water tower; there’s a little room with a writing desk if you climb the 76 steps.

Water Tower at Anderson Center

For writing breaks, you can wander around the art gallery or outdoor sculpture garden:

Sculpture Garden at the Anderson Center

Bicycles are provided — but locks are not, because strangely, bikes don’t get stolen around here. A nice 20-mile bike path runs behind the center grounds. Little bunnies hang out there!

Bunny on bike path

Twice over the course of the month, we the residents were given picnic stuff and money to go have dinner at Pizza Farm, a farm that makes organic pizzas topped with very locally grown veggies on Tuesday nights. We stopped at Lake Pepin on the way back for a group selfie:

IMG_4184

Every resident’s asked to do some sort of one-time community service project during her stay. I was paired with the Hope Coalition, and gave a poetry writing workshop there! One woman cried. Poetry’s cathartic.

I was also interviewed by the Red Wing Republican Eagle:

Siel Ju in the Red Wing Republican Eagle

For the most part though, the days were very quiet, nondescript, and filled with writing. My schedule usually went like this: wake up, journal while drinking coffee, meditate, do my Tracy Anderson DVD, shower, drink a green smoothie (this is actually what I do with the first two hours of my day in LA too), then alternate writing 45 minutes with wasting time on Instagram or eating things for 15 minutes until dinner time at 6:30, when all the residents congregate to dine on whatever Chef Britton whipped up. After that, I mostly read.

Straight Man and green smoothie

My one warning for would-be residents here: Beware the mosquitoes!! They can’t get in the house because of the screens, but should you dare to go outside before 8 am or after 5 pm, you’ll get bitten up pretty badly, even if you douse yourself with the bug repellents the Center provides for you. I discovered the hard way that mosquitoes can and will bite you through workout tights!

I also do recommend bringing ear plugs, if you’re sensitive to noise like I am. Though Red Wing is a small town, the Anderson Center sits right by a major freeway on which loud trucks and motorcycles zoom by 24-7.

If you come here, you may find yourself bored at times. But that’s a good thing, if your aim is to write. There’s no TV here. There’s wifi, but it doesn’t reach all the bedrooms. Basically, unless you really enjoy shopping at Target (3 miles away and accessible by bike), there isn’t a whole lot to do here besides write! I saved so much time and money by not eating out and not shopping and not caring what I looked like!

Thanks to the calm space and time the Anderson Center provided, I’ve finished the first draft of my novel — and for that I’m very, very grateful. Chris Burawa, the Executive Director, and Jackie Anderson, the Office Relations Manager, are such kind and encouraging people.

Think you might want to do a residency here? The next application deadline is Feb. 1. In the meantime, let me know if you have any other questions about The Anderson Center residency experience —