FINAL THURSDAY READING SERIES

Thursday, October 28

Featured Reader: Jerry Klinkowitz

NEXT MONTH'S READER: Dave Hoing

 

Jerry Klinkowitz is the author of more than thirty books including The Vonnegut Effect (University of South Carolina Press), Listen: Gerry Mulligan (Schirmer Press), With the Tigers over China, 1941-1942 (University Press of Kentucky), and Keeping Literary Company: Working With Writers Since the Sixties (State University of New York Press.  His fiction includes the short story collection, Short Season (SIU Press), and the novel, Here at Ogallala State U. (White Hawk Press).  He is a UNI Professor of English Language and Literature.  He will be reading from his new novel manuscript, It's Only Rock 'n Roll.  You can read a sample of his work below.

Before Klinkowitz’s reading, the Cedar Valley’s longest running creative writing open mic kicks off its fourth year. Signup for the open mic begins @ 7 p.m. on a first come, first served basis.  Limited slots are available, so readers are encouraged to sign up early and read your best five minutes of poetry, fiction, or creative non-fiction.  Singer-songwriters are also welcome.  The open mic begins at 7:30 p.m.  The featured reader, Jerry Klinkowitz, takes the stage between 8:00 and 8:30 (depending on how many open mic readers there are).

 


Now Available from 

Final Thursday Press

 

 

Kyrie

Poetry by Jonathan Stull

For poet Jonathan Stull, observing the natural world can be a means toward understanding, and that is both the beauty and terror of nature.   “My poems come from actual places and events in time, and they explore what meaning the moment is revealing. To me poetry reflects the underlying music and absolute inner connectedness of all things.”

Marvin Bell, the Poet Laureate of Iowa, has praised Stull’s work as “central to the midwestern circumstance, in touch with what awake people feel deep within, and bearing vigilance and compassion.”  Bell finds that Stull’s poems “embody the beauty and dynamism of the natural world.”

Kyrie is a signed and numbered edition limited to 500 copies. 

$6.00 32 pgs. 8 1/2 by 5 1/2. 

ISBN 0-9742764-1-3

 

 

 

Ghost Wars

Poetry by Vince Gotera

In Ghost Wars, Vince Gotera, Editor at the North American Review, brings together a career of poetic considerations about the experience of war and its aftermath in this timely chapbook.  Denise Duhamel writes "The poems in Ghost Wars are the tickers off the bottom of CNN's screen pushing out of the TV and flourishing like vines in our living rooms."  Allison Joseph notes "Lively, compassionate, and intelligent, the poems of Ghost Wars are a necessary balm for our uncertain national psyche."

Ghost Wars is a signed and numbered edition limited to 500 copies.

$5.00 32 pgs. 8 1/2 by  5 1/2

ISBN 0-9742764-0-5

 

 

 

Laugh.  Damnit.

Poetry by Ahkos

 

Feeling pretentious?  Walk away now.  The poems in this collection target poetic self-importance with humor and a bit of an edge.  Formed in (and in response to) Boston's open mic scene, "Laugh.  Damnit." will make you smile, or else. 

 

$1.00   16 pgs.

 

 

 

Bad Men

Microfiction by Jim O'Loughlin

Four short short stories that made their debut at the Final Thursday Reading Series.  They weren't originally intended to be part of a collection; it just happened that way.  Find out what happens to the lounge lizard, the ex-con, the slacker student, and the serial monogamist. 

$2.00   18 pgs. 

 

Ask for them at 

Bought again Books!

 

 

Check out the Final Thursday Press Website

 


  Vibe is located at 909 W. 23rd St. in Cedar Falls on the second floor of Bought again Books.  Persons needing access accommodation should call 266-7115 by the day before the event.  For more information, contact Jim O'Loughlin.

 

 


 

 

from Here at Ogallala State U.: The Collected Effusions (With Commentary) of Our ‘Milt’ Elliott

by Jerry Klinkowitz

With a crunch of gravel and two beeps of the horn, Milt swung up to the time-worn Volvo and threw his Taurus into park.  The gal who awaited him inside, he knew, would be much like her car: a bit grey and shabby around the edges, and with an ever-lowering center of gravity that kept her firmly on the road.  No whim-of-the-moment Miata was she, no sporty Camaro or low-slung Porsche.  Milt had taken spins around the block in metaphorical wheels like these, and he always found them wanting.  No, it was the older Volvo’s heft and thrust for him, stolid but capacious.  “There’ll be high mileage on her,” he reflected, “with perhaps too many oil changes missed along the way.  But after all those years, what a ride she’ll still give!”  And so with thoughts of climbing aboard he pushed his own door shut and headed up the walk.

 


 

 

Read Work by Some of

Our Past Featured Readers

 

Pierre-Damien Mvuyekure

 

 

Jonathan Stull

 

 

Ann Struthers

 

 

Nate McKeen

 

 

Ron Sandvik

 

 

Susan Rochette-Crawley

 

 

Harvey Hess

 

 

Karris Golden

 

 

James P. Roberts

 

 

Grant Tracey

 

 

Ray A. Young Bear

 

 

Vince Gotera

 

 

Paul Hedeen

 

 

Kathleen Kelly

 

 

Scott Cawelti

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
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