Local Author Round Up At Pulp & Press this Saturday
The Pollard Memorial Library has organized a Local Author Round Up at this year’s Pulp & Press, this Saturday, March 5, from noon to 5 p.m., at Mill No. 5. Local publishers and authors (including me and co-blogger, Paul Marion) will be selling books throughout the event, plus there will be continues readings by local authors.
Mill No. 5 is on the 4th floor of 246 Jackson Street. Parking is available in the Edward Early Garage and curbside throughout the neighborhood. For more information, check out the Pulp & Press Facebook Page.
Authors doing readings during the Round Up include:
STEPHAN ANTSEY Stephan Anstey is a constant poet, occasional prose-ist, and as-yet-to-be-committed artist. He is a member of Lowell Poetry Network, The Arts League of Lowell, Western Avenue Studios Artists Assocation, and the Lowell Writers Group. With his beloved and most assuredly to-be-sainted wife of more than 20 years Ellen, he shares studio #432 on the fourth floor of Western Ave Studios in Lowell, Massachusetts. Stephan is most inspired by his two children, Emily and Cameron, as well as the rest of his extremely large family and circle of friends, He loves to tiptoe the edges of our common humanity, where all the definitions of things are too fuzzy to be sure. His poetry has been featured in many poetry blogs, several print journals including the Lowell Offering, and can be found daily on Anstey.org, Facebook, Twitter, and all the other places people congregate online. Stephan has a book of 1000 poems to be published soon by Neopoeisis Press titled, “Without Reason Only/ Love”
MICHAEL CASEY was born in Lowell. He is a graduate of Lowell High School and the Lowell Technological Institute. He was very lucky in having great English teachers…Thomas Varnum and Helen Shea at Lowell High, William Aiken and Gerry O’Connor at Lowell Tech. His first book Obscenities dealt with being a military policeman; second book Millrat with being a kettleman in a textile mill dye house. His latest book is Check Points from Adastra Press in Easthampton, Massachusetts.
SEAN CASEY‘s writing has appeared in McSweeney’s, Massachusetts Review, Fence, and The Lifted Brow. He teaches at Westfield State University.
JF DACEY wrote Take the Long Way Home following his time as an all-night taxicab driver in Lowell during 1979. He is the author of Anatomically Correct, a collection of nine short plays which was produced in 2007 in Tyngsboro and is published by JacPub Publishing. He has written many other short plays, as well as a full-length adaptation of The House of the Seven Gables. For many years, his name has been familiar as the author of outspoken “Letters to the Editor” in The Lowell Sun. Jack is a native and life-long resident of Lowell.
ROBERT FORRANT is a University of Massachusetts Lowell Professor of History, specializing in labor, immigration, and industrial history. Director of the University’s new history graduate program, recent book-length publications include: The Great Lawrence Textile Strike of 1912: New Scholarship on the Bread & Roses Strike (2014), The Big Move: Immigrant Voices From a Mill City, with Christoph Strobel (2011) and Metal Fatigue: American Bosch and the Demise of Metalworking in the Connecticut River Valley (2009).
RICHARD P. HOWE, JR. is the author of Lowell: Images of Modern America and co-author of Legendary Locals of Lowell, both from Arcadia Publishing. He is the founder of the hyperlocal Lowell blog, richardhowe.com, and of the popular Lowell Walks historic walking tours. He frequently lectures and writes about Lowell and its history. A life-long resident of Lowell, he is Register of Deeds of the Northern District of Middlesex County.
MASADA JONES Masada Jones is an artist, and youth worker. She is Co-Founder of FreeVerse! an organization she formed with some of her closest friends to teach poetry and performance to youth in Lowell. She was named one the 12 Magnificent Women of Lowell and featured as a Kick-ass Woman you Should Know. Masada is a passionate person and you can witness that if ever you see her perform or facilitate a group. She takes great pride in investing in her community, and serves as the Youth Violence Prevention Coordinator in her birthplace of Lowell, MA.
JACQUELYN MALONE has been a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship grant in poetry. Her work has appeared in Poetry, Beloit Poetry Journal, Cimarron Review, Cortland Review, Poetry Northwest, and many other publications. The poem published in the Beloit Journal was nominated for the Pushcart Prize. A poem of hers appears in Southern Poetry Anthology VI: Tennessee. She is the writer/editor for masspoetry.org., the site for the Massachusetts Poetry Festival, Student Day of Poetry, and poetry on the T. Her chapbook, All Waters Run to Lethe, was published by Finishing Line Press.
PAUL MARION is the author of several collections of poetry, including What is the City? He is the author of Mill Power: The Origin and Impact of Lowell National Historical Park and editor of Atop an Underwood: Early Stories and Other Writings by Jack Kerouac. He lives in Lowell.
MATT MILLER was born and raised in Lowell. He is the author of Club Icarus (University of North Texas Press), selected by Major Jackson as the 2012 Vassar Miller Poetry Prize winner, and Cameo Diner: Poems (Loom). He teaches English and coaches football at Phillips Exeter Academy where he also co-directs the Writers’ Workshop at Exeter. He lives in New Hampshire with his wife two children.
STEPHEN P. O’CONNOR is the author of the short story collection, Smokestack Lightning, and the novels The Spy in the City of Books and The Witch at Rivermouth. He lives in Lowell, Massachusetts, where much of his writing is set.
Poet Al Bouchard, author of the poetry collection “The Fogg” from Loom Press has been added to the roster of readers for late afternoon on Saturday.
David Moloney will also be joining us. Dave graduated from Umass Lowell in 2015 with a degree in Creative Writing, where he won the English Department’s Writing Award. He was the managing editor of The Offering, UMass Lowell’s literary magazine. He is a current MFA candidate at Southern New Hampshire’s Master of Fine Arts in Fiction and Nonfiction. His writing can be seen in Assignment Magazine, where he is a regular contributor to its Online Only content. He is at work on his first collection of short stories.