Antisocial Network by The Editors




Triple Canopy show

Summary: Listen in for an evening of readings by poets <strong>Donald Dunbar</strong>, <strong>Jane Gregory</strong>,<strong> Joe Luna</strong>,<strong> K. Silem Mohammad</strong>, and <strong>Jacob Wren</strong>, originally hosted by Triple Canopy, publishers <a href="http://www.fenceportal.org/" target="_blank">Fence</a> and <a href="http://www.the-song-cave.com/" target="_blank">The Song Cave</a>, and digital poetry journal <a href="http://theclaudiusapp.com/" target="_blank">The Claudius App</a>, on March 8th, 2013, at the Cambridge, MA offices of <a href="http://www.theharvardadvocate.com/" target="_blank"><em>The Harvard Advocate</em></a>, the oldest continuously published collegiate literary journal in America. Here we celebrate the publication of Triple Canopy's newest work of research into the intersection of contemporary art and writing, <a href="http://canopycanopycanopy.com/store#print-publications" target="_blank"><em>Corrected Slogans: Reading and Writing Conceptualism</em></a>, as well as Jane Gregory's first full-length book, the intriguingly titled, <em>My Enemies</em>, and a new issue from The Claudius App. <br><br>* * *<br><br> Donald Dunbar is the author of the chapbooks <em>You Are So Pretty</em> (Scantily Clad Press, 2009) and <em>Click Click</em> (Gold Wake Press, 2010), and of <em>Eyelid Lick</em> (Fence Books), which won the 2012 Fence Modern Poets Series. He lives in Portland, Oregon, where he co-curates the reading series If Not For Kidnap and teaches poetry to future chefs at Oregon Culinary Institute. <br><br> Jane Gregory is from Tucson, Arizona. She has an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and is currently working towards a PhD from the University of California at Berkeley. She lives in Berkeley, California. Her book <em>My Enemies</em> will be released by The Song Cave in early 2013. <br><br> Joe Luna lives in Brighton, UK, where he runs the Hi Zero reading series and edits <em>Hi Zero</em> magazine. Crater Press published the letterpress fold <em>Google Song</em> in November 2011; his poems have appeared in, among others, <em>Poems, Written Between October and December 2010</em> (Grasp Press), The Claudius App (online), <em>Better than Language: An Anthology of New Modernist Poetries</em> (Ganzfeld Press), <em>FRIENDS</em> (Critical Documents), <em>The Cambridge Literary Review</em>, <em>Sous les Pavés</em>, <em>Damn the Cæsars</em>,<em> Lana Turner</em>, and <em>The Death and Life of American Cities</em>. A booklet, <em>LVRSLVRSLVRSLVRS</em>, was privately distributed in 2010; the .pdf epic <em>FAILCORE</em> is still public. A new book, <em>ASTROTURF</em>, is forthcoming. <br><br> K. Silem Mohammad is the author of several books of poetry, including <em>Deer Head Nation</em> (Tougher Disguises, 2003), <em>A Thousand Devils</em> (Combo, 2004), <em>Breathalyzer</em> (Edge, 2008), <em>The Front</em> (Roof, 2009), and <em>Monsters</em> (forthcoming, Edge Books). In his current project, The Sonnagrams, Mohammad anagrammatizes Shakespeare’s Sonnets into all-new English sonnets in iambic pentameter. He is also editor of the poetry magazine <em>Abraham Lincoln</em> and faculty editor of <em>West Wind Review</em>. He is an associate professor in the English &amp; Writing program at Southern Oregon University. <br><br> Jacob Wren is a writer and maker of eccentric performances. His books include: <em>Unrehearsed Beauty</em>, <em>Families Are Formed Through Copulation</em>, and <em>Revenge Fantasies of the Politically Dispossessed</em>. As co-artistic director of Montreal-based interdisciplinary group PME-ART he has co-created: En français comme en anglais, it's easy to criticize, Unrehearsed Beauty / Le génie des autres, La famille se crée en copulant and the ongoing HOSPITALITÉ / HOSPITALITY series. In 2007 he was invited by Sophiensaele (Berlin) to adapt and direct Wolfgang Koeppen's 1954 novel <em>Der Tod in Rom</em> and in 2008 he was commissioned by Campo (Ghent) to collaborate with Pieter De Buysser on <em>An Anthology of Optimism</em>. He travels internationally with alarming frequency and frequently writes about contemporary art.