Thursday, September 9, 2021
7:00 pm Eastern Time
Virtual Event
( Livestream Link )
Free and Open to the public
No RSVP or registration required
Join us on
Thursday, 9 September, 2021 at 7:00 PM Eastern Time
for
The 20th Annual Bourne Poetry Reading
with
Chen Chen, Elizabeth Acevedo, and Kenneth Knoespel
Our (virtual) doors open at 6:45 pm Eastern Time.
Our first poetry event of the 2021-22 season is possible through generous support from The Poetry Foundation.
The reading is FREE and open to the public, and will take place virtually via BlueJeans. Livestream links and other information are on tabs below.
For more information, contact Travis Denton via email at travis.denton@lmc.gatech.edu .
Event Partner
Post-event report
Thank you to our friends, old and new, who joined us for our first poetry event of the season. We had over 170 attendees from around the US, and from around the world -- Bonn, Germany; Bahrain; Tasmania, Australia; Lagos, Nigeria; England; Cabo, Mexico...
Please check out books by our event's featured poets on the Book Sales tab below. Additionally, you may also find the moving, funny, and inventive poems read by Chen Chen at the Bourne Reading at this link (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1F5e98vsw5vvT2OQ4bzEMZ3mHWpJeiPTFM9D0-EzomHI/edit).
We hope to see you all soon at our next event!
Livestream
As with Poetry@TECH's other Fall 2021 events, this event will be held virtually on BlueJeans. Which means, not only are our readings FREE and open to the public, as always, but you can attend them from anywhere in the world! And if last year's events were any indicator, we do mean anywhere in the world.
We will use BlueJeans to live broadcast the readings.
To attend the Bourne Poetry Reading on 9 September 2021, follow the instructions below. The reading will begin at 7 pm Eastern Time, but our (virtual) doors open at 6:45 pm Eastern Daylight Time.
Web stream information:
Joining the reading is easy - just choose the platform that works best for you, and follow the instructions below:
Join via your Computer’s Web Browser: Click Here:
https://primetime.bluejeans.com/a2m/live-event/addrpwhh
Join on your Mobile Device: Click Here
- Open the link above
- Download the app if you don’t have it already.
- Enter event ID : addrpwhh
Join by Phone:
Dial one of the following numbers, enter the participant PIN followed by # to confirm:
- +1 (415) 466-7000 (US), PIN: 4645000#
- +1 (760) 699-0393 (US), PIN: 7290994871#
Join from outside the US: Click Here
https://www.bluejeans.com/numbers/primetime-attendees/event?id=addrpwhh
Watch this space for more updates on the livestream links and scheduled start times.
Chen Chen
Chen Chen is the author of the forthcoming poetry collection, Your Emergency Contact Has Experienced an Emergency (BOA Editions, 2022) and the forthcoming book of essays, In Cahoots with the Rabbit God (Noemi Press, 2023). His debut book of poems, When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities (BOA Editions, 2017), was longlisted for the National Book Award and won the Thom Gunn Award, among other honors. Chen is also the author of four chapbooks. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in many publications, including Poem-a-Day and three editions of The Best American Poetry (2015, 2019, & 2021). He has received two Pushcart Prizes and fellowships from Kundiman and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Chen teaches at Brandeis University as the Jacob Ziskind Poet-in-Residence and serves on the poetry faculty for the low-residency MFA programs at New England College and Stonecoast. With a brilliant team, he edits the journal, Underblong. With Gudetama the lazy egg, he edits the lickety~split. He lives in Waltham, MA with his partner, Jeff Gilbert and their pug, Mr. Rupert Giles.
Elizabeth Acevedo
Elizabeth Acevedo is the New York Times-bestselling author of The Poet X, which won the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature, the Michael L. Printz Award, the Pura Belpré Award, the Carnegie medal, the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, and the Walter Award. She is also the author of With the Fire on High, which was named a best book of the year by the New York Public Library, NPR, Publishers Weekly, and School Library Journal, and Clap When You Land, which was a Boston Globe–Horn Book Honor book and a Kirkus finalist.
She holds a BA in Performing Arts from The George Washington University and an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Maryland. Acevedo has been a fellow of Cave Canem, Cantomundo, and a participant in the Callaloo Writer’s Workshops. She is a National Poetry Slam Champion, and resides in Washington, DC with her love.
Kenneth Knoespel
Kenneth J. (K.J.) Knoespel's poetry and translations have appeared in poetry journals and books published in the United States and Sweden. He has taught poetry and poetics at the University of Uppsala, the University of Chicago, and the University of Paris 8, Vincennes-St. Denis. Together with A. A. Knoespel, he translated Murder at the Savoy by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö published by Pantheon. His adaptation of Brecht’s play, How Much is Your Iron? (with Robert Wolf) was produced by the San Quentin Drama Workshop in Chicago. He has helped curate exhibitions in Paris and Atlanta. For his work in Sweden, he received an Honorary Doctor’s Degree from the University of Umeå in 2014. Knoespel is McEver Professor of Engineering and the Liberal Arts Emeritus at Georgia Tech.
Book Sales
As always, A Cappella Books, Atlanta’s oldest independent bookstore will be our official book sales partner for th is event. We hope you’ll get a copy (or three) of books by our wonderful featured poets. You can order at the following links:
Recent Books
- Chen Chen, When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities (BOA Editions, 2017) - Winner of the A. Poulin Jr. Poetry Prize
- Elizabeth Acevedo, The Poet X (Quill Tree Press / HarperTeen, 2018) - National Book Award Winner
- K.J. Knoespel, Until We Are Only Sound (Marick Press, 2020)
- Elizabeth Acevedo, With the Fire on High (Quill Tree Press / HarperCollins, 2021)
- Elizabeth Acevedo, Clap When You Land (Quill Tree Press / HarperCollins, 2020)
Selected Poems
Chen Chen
The School of the Unschoolable
See the stars nightly
disobeying the night.
Watch the pattering rain
sketch an anarchist’s
map to the future, then
unpattern it away—
an anarchist’s revision.
Praise my mother
who wears a plaid hoodie
over a polka dot sweater
over a simply
brown sweater.
Praise your fashion icon,
though I doubt she’s
as iconoclastic.
Prove my doubt
so wrong.
Call the sun
the heterophobe
it’s always been.
Never stop babbling
to old friends or
fields about your earliest
whiff of banana bread.
Lick the sad
from the sea & on
a Tuesday.
Flabbergast
in some earthly
mouthful of a way
& tonight.
-- Chen Chen
Elizabeth Acevedo
Ode to the Head Nod
the slight angling up of the forehead
neck extension quick jut of chin
meeting the strangers’ eyes
a gilded curtsy to the sunfill in another
in yourself tithe of respect
in an early version the copy editor deleted
the word “head” from the title
the copy editor says it’s implied
the copy editor means well
the copy editor means
she is only fluent in one language of gestures
i do not explain i feel sad for her
limited understanding of greetings & maybe
this is why my acknowledgements are so long;
didn’t we learn this early?
to look at white spaces
& find the color
thank god o thank god for
you
are here.
-- Elizabeth Acevedo
You Mean You Don’t Weep at the Nail Salon?
it’s the being alone, i think, the emails but not voices. dominicans be funny, the way we love to touch — every greeting a cheek kiss, a shoulder clap, a loud.
it gots to be my period, the bloating, the insurance commercial where the husband comes home after being deployed, the last of the gouda gone, the rejection letter, the acceptance letter, the empty inbox.
a dream, these days. to work at home is a privilege, i remind myself.
spend the whole fucking day flirting with screens. window, tv, computer, phone: eyes & eyes & eyes. the keys clicking, the ding of the
microwave, the broadway soundtrack i share wine with in the evenings.
these are the answers, you feel me? & the impetus. the why. of when the manicurist holds my hand, making my nails a lilliputian abstract,
i close my fingers around hers, disrupting the polish, too tight i know then, too tight to hold a stranger, but she squeezes back & doesn’t let go & so finally i can.
-- Elizabeth Acevedo
Kenneth Knoespel
Frying Bratwurst
In the Garage
Open the folding door
with a scrape
and the greasy smell hits you:
walls smoked for decades
in the billowing clouds
of spitting bratwurst,
rafters saturated—
the jagged two-man saw with handles
from the north woods,
streaked storm windows
like giant slides in a box,
an oval pull dangling
from a faded shade,
shovels, rakes and hoes,
garden hoses, nozzles—
witness to backyard brat fries
that sought cover
from summer rain.
They are all gone.
But smell draws them
from the tar-paper walls,
card tables, folding chairs
and tables layered with hard rolls,
potato salad, pickles and onions,
or beer pumped from the keg
still foaming at the spigot.
The porous smokehouse garage
like a forgotten box camera
holds them all with such resolution
that I can hear them laughing.
-- K. J. Knoespel