“Five Themes” poetry reading, Nov. 15

Chall Gray

From a press release:

“Five Themes” poetry reading, Nov. 15

Nov. 15th Poetry Reading
Five Themes with poets Chall Gray, Michael Boyko, Lisa McCool-Grime, Ashley Steineger and Gary Hawkins

The Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center in downtown Asheville presents a poetry reading on Saturday, November 15 at 8:00pm called Five Themes, with poets Chall Gray, Michael Boyko, Lisa McCool-Grime, Ashley Steineger and Gary Hawkins.

Gary Hawkins is a poet, teacher, and scholar, who grew up in the suburbs. His poetry, pedagogy, and criticism have appeared in Virginia Quarterly Review, Teaching Creative Writing in Higher Education, Emily Dickinson Journal, and other venues. He teaches writing and serves as associate dean at Warren Wilson College, and he thrills at having one of poetry’s most enviable addresses in Black Mountain, North Carolina.

Chall Gray, a native Western North Carolinian, lives and works in Asheville. His fiction and and essays have been published in dozens of local and national publications. He is currently at work on a collection of stories. He also designs and builds lighting fixtures and opens bars.

Michael Boyko is the author of The Hour Sets, published by Calamari Press, with killer illustrations by Derek White. He lives in Asheville, North Carolina.

Ashley Steineger, originally from Raleigh, NC, moved to the area to live the country life. She is a psychologist by training and a writer at heart. Her hobbies include fishing, avoiding small talk, taking naps during thunderstorms and asking rhetorical existential questions. She loves laughter and will always remain a child at heart. Her poetry is influenced by personal experience.

Lisa McCool-Grime loves Sappho, wallflower women and collaborations. Her wallflower women have appeared in DIAGRAM, Weave, Arsenic Lobster and elsewhere. A few of her collaborative publications include qarrtsiluni, elimae and PANK. Tupelo press awarded one of her poems first place in their Fragments of Sappho contest.

$5 for BMCM+AC members & students with ID / $8 for non-members

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About Alli Marshall
Alli Marshall has lived in Asheville for more than 20 years and loves live music, visual art, fiction and friendly dogs. She is the winner of the 2016 Thomas Wolfe Fiction Prize and the author of the novel "How to Talk to Rockstars," published by Logosophia Books. Follow me @alli_marshall

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