Monthly Archive for September, 2008

reading at Metropolis Books, 9/11 (Artwalk!)

Here’s the deal with my reading at the Artwalk next Thursday:

“Metropolis Books is a great little bookstore in Downtown, sort of an anchor of literary goodness in this crazy beautiful part of the city. It is owned and operated by a really cool lady named Julie Swayze.

Please join us and hear Kim’s unforgettable poetry, buy a book or two if you haven’t already done so,
and have a good time with us.

For those of you who haven’t done the Downtown Art Walk before, it’s a real treat.
People are all over the streets, hopping from one packed gallery to the next, and you’re like us,
sipping free cheap wine at most of the galleries!! It’s a bucketload of fun.

So once again:

Thursday, 9/11
7 PM

Kim Calder
@
Metropolis Books
The Downtown Source for Books
440 S. Main St. L.A. 90013
Phone-213-612-0174 

www.MetropolisBooksLA.com 
www.Downtownbookblog.blogspot.com

Looking forward to seeing you all there.

Chiwan & Judeth
writlargepress.com

ghost of readings past

I’m back from New York, and getting geared up to read next Thursday night at Metropolis Books during the Artwalk in Downtown LA.  I’ve posted some pictures from the reading I did at goodbye blue monday in Brooklyn, which was a great experience.  Check out the gallery section of the site if you’d like to see them.  I read a few short pieces from the book, and then read the 25 or so pages I have of prison-house (for the first time).  Generally, I’ve only read very short sections, so it was somewhat dizzying to read the whole thing.  I find it daunting, too, to read works-in-progress, but having some friends there to help me along was useful.  As I read prison-house, I was accompanied by 4 musicians: a drummer, violinist, guitarist, and a pianist.  We had no real plan and the whole thing was improvised, a form that seemed to match perfectly, for me, with the notion of presenting a work-in-progress publicly.  I feel even closer to the piece after performing it in this setting, and I learned a lot about what I’d like to accomplish with it.  It was a major challenge, acoustically and energetically, to read with and over the music, and the reading had a very different feel from other readings I’ve done.  We were well received, and GBM was packed for the duration, with both old friends and strangers.  If you live in Brooklyn, or are planning on visiting soon, I highly recommend paying goodbye blue monday a visit.  It’s located in Bushwick and is a great place to check out some free music/performance, have a drink, and buy weird stuff (everything in the place is for sale).

I’m planning on staging a similar reading of prison-house once it’s further along, and will keep all you LA people posted when I figure the timing of that out.  I’ve been traveling a lot lately, and it’s good to be home, where I’ll actually be staying put for a while.  Hope to see some of you at the Artwalk–I’ll post the info here, of course.