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1.20.2006

From the Field

Hedge Coke Readings are midway down this blog and: Click Here: Reading Listings

NPR WYEP Prosody

PEN Highlights of 2008 Reading from The Perfect Man

Allison Hedge Coke has been an invitational performer in international poetry festivals in Medellin, Colombia, Venezuela, Argentina, Canada, and Jordan and foreign visiting professional in poetry and writing, Shandong University in Wei Hai, China. She is a Weymouth Center for the Arts and Humanities, MacDowell Colony for Artists, Black Earth Institute Think Tank, Hawthornden Castle, and Center for Great Plains Research Fellow, is a former National Endowment for the Humanities Appointment Distinguished Visiting Professor at Hartwick College, and holds the Distinguished Paul W. Reynolds and Clarice Kingston Reynolds Endowed Chair in Poetry as an Associate Professor of Poetry and Writing at the University of Nebraska, Kearney where she directs the Reynolds Reading Series and Sandhill Crane Migration Retreat. She is core faculty in the University of Nebraska MFA Program and Visiting Faulty of the MFA Intensive Programs at University of California, Palm Desert and Naropa University, and a 2008 Paul Hanly Furfey Endowed Lecturer. Her books include: Dog Road Woman, American Book Award, Coffee House Press, 1997; The Year of the Rat, chapbook, Grimes Press, 2000; Rock Ghost, Willow, Deer, AIROS Book-of-the-Month, University of Nebraska Press, 2004; Off-Season City Pipe, Wordcraft Writer of the Year for Poetry, Coffee House Press, 2005; Blood Run, Wordcraft Writer of the Year for Poetry, Salt Publications, UK 2006-US 2007; To Topos Ahani: Indigenous American Poetry, Journal Issue of the Year Award (ed.), Oregon State University, 2007; and Effigies, (ed.), Salt Publications, 2009. She has edited five other volumes. Her long poem "The Year of the Rat" is currently being made into a ballet through collaboration with Brent Michael Davids, composer. Recent literary publications include Connecticut Review, Prometeo Memories, Akashic Books, and Black Renaissance Noire. Recent photography publications include Connecticut Review, Future Earth Magazine and Digital Poetics. She has also authored a full-length play Icicles, numerous monologues, and has worked in theater, television, and film. Hedge Coke has been awarded several state and regional artistic and literary grants, fellowships, and tours; multiple excellence in teaching awards, including the King Chavez Parks Award; a Sioux Falls Mayor's Award for Literary Excellence; a National Mentor of the Year, a Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers Award; has served on several state, community, and national boards in the arts, a housing board, as a Delegate, in the United Nations Women in Peacemaking Conference, Joan B. Kroc Center for Peace and Justice, University of San Diego, and as a United Nations Presenting Speaker (with James Thomas Stevens, Mohawk Poet), Facilitator, and Speaker Nominator for the only Indigenous Literature Panel of the Indigenous Peoples Human Rights Forum. For many years she has worked with incarcerated and underserved Indigenous youth and youth of color mentorship programs and served as a court official in Indian youth advocacy and CASA. Hedge Coke is editing the Platte Valley Review and two book series of emerging Indigenous writing (Salt Publishing and Red Hen Press). She is Huron and Cherokee, French Canadian and Portuguese descent and came of age working fields, waters, and working in factories.

Click Here: UniVerseA United Nations of Poetry


A. A. Hedge Coke Weihai Evening 1

A. A. Hedge Coke Boy Feeding Chick and Rabbits

(More travel photos following, down to end of page.)
Click Here for Official Website Weblink: Official Website for PEN Member, Allison Adelle Hedge Coke, Poet & Writer, NGE

Click Here: Academy of American Poets

Click Here: Other Academy Pages

for Creighton Authors Page

Booking

Speakers for a New America

Tsalagi Think Tank

South Dakota Arts Council

SDAC News Artist Collaboration Grant 2008-2009 approved for Brent Michael Davids & Allison Hedge Coke's work with poetry & music.

Travis' L337 Theory

Also, to order downloadable podcasts of both past and future Lannan programs (including outstanding literary reading performances as well as phenomenal author interviews):

Lannan Programs

Prosody

Check out the Lumberyard Readings-- see January 15th -- Orlando White, Jennifer Foerster, Travis Hedge Coke, Patricia Smith


Photo courtesy of the Maturin Cultural Center

Click Here for the Academy of American Poets inclusion "Street Confetti"



To order To Topos AHANI: Indigenous American Poetry
Western Hemisphere contributors from the Arctic to Antarctic Circles (Inuit to Mapuche) from Oregon State University, Guest Edited by Allison Adelle Hedge Coke [poetry] Winner, Wordcraft Journal of the Year, Editing.

To order Blood Run
Free Verse Play from Salt Publications UK/USA [poetry] Winner, Wordcraft Writer of the Year, Poetry.



To Listen to the Food for Thought SDPR Interview 01-06-08

SDPR Midday



To order from City Lights Bookstore
Support City Lights
To order Off-Season City Pipe

WC Writer of the Year Award Winning Labor Poetry from Coffee House Press [poetry]
Drawing on her background as a tobacco sharecropper, factory worker, and fisherwoman, Hedge Coke fills the void of Native American working-class literature with poems as vivid in their telling as they are powerful in their ethos. Off-Season City Pipe lyrically articulates the stark contrast between an ancestry whose strong work ethic, manual skills, and environmental stewardship defined their communities, but whose present circumstances have forced so many into poverty, performing work that fails to provide sustenance for the land or its people.





To order Dog Road Woman
American Book Award winning volume from Coffee House Press [poetry]

"A welcome new voice in American Poetry." - Jessica Hagedorn

"Allison Hedge Coke is a skilled, spirited, young poet who is transforming and honing her social and personal experience and reflection to speak with the voice of a whole people. This is a very formidable task, but it is, finally, the work we’ve chosen. She’s up to it." - Amiri Baraka

In Dog Road Woman, an autobiographical sketch of a contemporary mixed-blood native life, Allison Adelle Hedge Coke weaves the shapes and patterns of her heritage into a magnificent tapestry of prayer, story and song. Dog Road Woman is winner of a 1998 American Book Award and a finalist for the 1998 Patterson Poetry Prize.

Hedge Coke recounts surviving domestic violence, racism, addiction, and an extraordinary number of challenges. By drawing upon a variety of poetic and prosaic forms, she simulates and transforms the rhythms and sounds of her people. Dog Road Woman is a sublime presentation of the strength, beauty, and spirit of the nations.





To order Rock, Ghost, Willow, Deer
AIROS Native American Calling Book of the Month from the University of Nebraska Press [memoir] [Native memoir] [North American Memoir]

Support City Lights




Editing Series:

New Release Effigies


It is a rare pleasure to unleash beauty upon the ever-tragic world, an exception to the plagued misfortune of greed, despair, and injury. Though elements of colonization do present certain challenges and malady to a natural world inhabited for tens of thousands of years by peoples steeped in ideologies, practical and philosophic systems, they do not overcome the lingual sensibilities and prowess of the poets representing the areas of the planet present in this text. Instead the poets overcome the intrusion.

From baleen row, razor clam edge, rabid willow ptarmigan plume, to white buds of plumeria, gardenia, lei, shaded grave of dried lauhala and graying niu, fertile Pacific essence swells these poems into hummock ice knolls, into layers and layers of white sea laps rolling, into mindfulness, consideration, climate care—belonging.

From ulu, to cane knife, where aurora’s green vein bleeds blue and tangles into indigo or green-robed mauna combs t? stalks, palms, kukui, and pines. From Barrow to Waihe’e, tethered and hammered through wild among dark branches and snared by voices, these poems harbor whale and seal oil burning to bring sustenance to a reader’s search for light and with them carry us into a seafaring world of rich embrace. Spectacular, immediate, these beaches and beeches along the shores provide a tactile relationship made immense in their stream-crafted images.

Effigies juxtaposes the distinctive voices and visions of four emerging poets — dg nanouk okpik, Cathy Rexford, Brandy Nalani McDougall, and Mahealani Perez-Wendt. In drawing from their Native Alaskan and Native Hawaiian cultures and histories, the poems in this book are not an assemblage but a living force and create an intricate, haunting weave.
Arthur Sze

What a shape-shifting moment, this release of four lush and necessary voices into the open air. Linked by blood and fevered lyric, dg nanouk okpik, Cathy Tagnak Rexford, Brandy Nalani McDougall and Mahealani Perez-Wendt offer up unapologetic and unflinching lessons that, as okpik says in the astonishing "Corpse Whale," shove "sinew back into the threaded bones of the land." Individually, each of these voices would be a revelation. Collectively, they're a revolution.
Patricia Smith

Bio:

Allison Adelle Hedge Coke was born between paternal oratory and sudden maternal madness; somewhere north of the condor and south of raven. Crow sometimes cawed morning into malady's mixture, pouring song and hack into bleating skies, swirling sunrise and set. Once, high over the Arctic, she witnessed the pounding lights hammer horizon. Since that time her rendezvous with realtime has been a real ride.

Hedge Coke is a MacDowell, Black Earth Institute Think-Tank, Hawthornden Castle, Weymouth Center, and Center for Great Plains Research Fellow, and holds the Distinguished Paul W. Reynolds and Clarice Kingston Reynolds Endowed Chair in English as an Associate Professor of Poetry and Writing at the University of Nebraska, Kearney. She is a core faculty in the University of Nebraska MFA Program and Visiting Faulty of the MFA Intensive Programs at University of California, Palm Desert and Naropa University. Her books include: Dog Road Woman, American Book Award, Coffee House Press, 1997; The Year of the Rat, chapbook, Grimes Press, 2000; Rock, Ghost, Willow, Deer, AIROS Book-of-the-Month, University of Nebraska Press, 2004; Off-Season City Pipe, Wordcraft Writer of the Year for Poetry, Coffee House Press, 2005; Blood Run, Wordcraft Writer of the Year for Poetry, Salt Publications, UK 2006-US 2007; and To Topos Ahani: Indigenous American Poetry, Oregon State University, 2007.

Allison Hedge Coke, Reynolds Chair, Faculty Page

Rows just ahead over the next few weeks:

Allison Hedge Coke, Engagements

Selected Forthcoming Presentations & Events:

Invitational Photography Gallery Show, ECU

Weymouth Center for the Arts & Humanities Residency May 18th-June 1, 2009

September 24, 2009
Keynote “Many Souths: Remembering, Sustaining, Creating.”
Eighth Biennial Southern Women Writers Conference
Berry College
Mount Berry, GA
http://www.berry.edu/academics/humanities/english/swwc2009/bios.asp
Eastern Carolina University-North Carolina September 25-26, 2009
So Lit Conf

Return of NC Authors, Eastern Carolina Literary Homecoming
NC Lit Homecoming

Western Association of Literature, October 3, 2009
WAL

Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness, March 10-13, 2010, in Washington, DC.
Split This Rock Festival

Other Recent Events:

International Poetry Festival of Resistance, Toronto April 24th-30th, 2009 Cuban Five International Festival
Poetry Festival

Detroit, Wayne State, Reading with Jan Beatty March 29, 2009
http://www.detroitmidtown.com/05/culevents_calendar.php?cid=60&msub=3">Detroit Scarab Club

Ann Arbor, Reading with Jan Beatty at Shaman's Drum March 26th, 2009
Shaman Durm Bookstore

Women's Month University of Idaho March 2-3, 2009
U Idaho

Hosting-UNK Crane Festival March 14-25, 2009
Fredy Chicangana, Sherwin Bitsui, Cristina Eisenberg, Linda Hogan, LeAnne Howe, Laura Tohe, and Wang Ping.
Sandhill Crane Conference

World Affairs Conference Moderator March 9, 2009
WAC UNK

Environmental Policy, Macalester College, Panel with Will Steger, Mark Dayton, and Allison Hedge Coke, Organized by Wang Ping, February 18
Policy

Who Speaks for the Dead, Western Virginia University, Panel, February 17
WVU

AWP, two panels, off-site reading, poet presentation UniVerse, three signings, February 12-14
Offsite
http://www.awpwriter.org/conference/2009ConfArchive/2009awpconf.php">On site

January 15, 2009 Reading at MONA, 7:00 pm

Stories from the Maze Reservation Youth, Visiting Writer Residency, January 5-8

Low-Residency MFA University of Nebraska December 27-January 4

Arts Corr December TBA

Macalester December 9th, Reading

December 3rd, PEN USA Awards, Judge

December 1st, Hosting Don Welch Book Party, MONA

November 18th, SUNY Fredonia, Featured Reading

November 5th, Oxnard Community College, Featured Reading

October 29, Host, Quincy Troupe Reading Performance

October 24, Host, Marvin Bell Reading Performance

October 18th, Nebraska Book Festival, Reading

Tuesday, October 14th, PEN American Awards, NYC, Judge, Reading Presentation

http://www.pen.org/page.php/prmID/1491

http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/2821/prmID/1494

http://flickr.com/photos/penamericancenter/sets/72157609615047579/show/

October 11th, 2008, Bowery Poetry Club Reading with LaTasha Diggs

September 26-28, 2008, SD Book Festival

September 25, Host, Carol Moldaw Reading Performance

September 17, Northeast Community College, Reading

September 16, Wayne State University, Reading

September 11, Host, Arthur Sze Reading Performance

Other Tassels:

Hosting:

Reynolds Series

Reynolds Series:

Quincy Troupe, Article 10/29/08, Reynolds Series Reading

Marvin Bell, Reading 09/25/08, Reynolds Series, Friday Live Podcast

Marvin Bell, Reading 09/25/08, Reynolds Series, Kearney Hub Article

Carol Moldaw, Reading 09/25/08, Reynolds Series, Kearney Hub Article

Carol Moldaw, Reading 09/25/08, Reynolds Series, Friday Live Podcast

Arthur Sze, Reading 09/11/08, Reynolds Series, Hub Article

Arthur Sze, Event Listing, 9/11/08

Carol Moldaw, Event Listing, 9/24/08

Carol Moldaw, Event Article, 9/24/08, Reynolds Series, Kearney Hub

Today's Hub Pick, Carol Moldaw

The Reynolds Series

2/22/08 Sandhill Cranes 1 Hedge Coke Sandhill Cranes Photo by A. A. Hedge Coke

Reynolds Series March 2008 Included the Honoring the Sandhill Crane Tribute Retreat. Hosted:
Wang Ping author of numerous award winning books, includingthe Last Communist Virgin, LeAnne Howe, author of Evidence of Red, Shell Shaker, and Mikko Kings, exemplary poet Hugo Jamioy Juagibioy, oraliterature weaver Aty Janay, the prolific poet James Thomas Stevens who most recently authoredA Bridge Dead in Water and Janet McAdams Island of Lost Luggage and Feral. Ramon Palomares, Fredy Chicangana, and Jack Collom were unable to come at this time. March 7-14th during the 40 to 60,000,000 year annual apex of the Sandhill Crane migration to the Kearney, Nebraska area, where 600,000 cranes are expected to arrive in this season, these poets and writers came to retreat here with the migration and performed numerous presentations for UNK and the general public.

2/22/08 Hedge Coke Sandhill Cranes 2 Migration Season 2 Photo by A. A. Hedge Coke

More Reynolds Series:

Reynolds Chair PEN

Appointment as Reynolds Chair began summer 2007, UNK. AWP

Diane Glancy & Linda Hogan, Reynolds Series

Linda Hogan, Kearney Hub, Reynolds Series

Diane Glancy, Kearney Hub, Reynolds Series

Kate Gale, Reynolds Series

Kate Gale NTV, Reynolds Series

Sherwin Bisui & Michael Dumanis, Reynolds Series Weblink

Sherwin Bitsui NTV, Reynolds Series Weblink

my 'favs' shelf:



Wings:

Core faculty member, MFA program in eastern Nebraska:

University of Nebraska MFA

Visiting Faculty, MFA program at UC Palm Desert, Spring 2008.

On Blood Run:

If William Blake were a twenty-first-century American Indian woman, he would be Hedge Coke. Like Blake declaiming against soul-destroying "dark Satanic mills," Hedge Coke calls for us to recognize the sanctity of ancestral land and to protect it, for "no human should dismantle prayer." The specific land of which she speaks is a vast city built on the border of what is now Iowa and South Dakota. Home to as many as 10,000 people, it is now partially obliterated by plows and desecrated by looters. In a series of dramatic monologues, Hedge Coke animates the landscape and, indeed, the cosmos. Corn speaks, and various mounds; the river speaks, and deer and stone. Even the looters speak, as do the skeletons they remove for sale to medical schools. Blood Run is the setting for this long, dramatic sequence of poems, but its subject is really the need to resanctify the world. The poet's voice is oracular, deliberately disturbing and demanding. Hedge Coke's visionary long conclusion, "When the Animals Leave This Place," defines the transformation of Earth that follows disasters and offers a sensuous solace as well as a frightening prediction of what we may face as ecological change accelerates. An impressive book by an important poet. Patricia MonaghanCopyright © American Library Association. Blood Run Review From
Booklist. All rights reserved Book DescriptionThis volume testifies to the need to protect the remarkable ruins of the Indigenous North American city of Blood Run and the sacred remains she guards there in mounded tombs. The persona poems herein emanate its character embraced in architectural accomplishment designed in accordance with the sun and moon and multitudes of stars above.

I am a descendent of the mound-builders. I say, Praise to the book that praises this mystery and beauty and history. Allison Hedge Coke is a woman who has fallen deep into the earth world and reveals its hidden truths. She is a mesmerizing artist, with work based on research chanted into poetry.
Linda Hogan

These poems bear witness to a difficult age, an age built on a spiral of earthliness. They make an honoring song for the earth. This honoring song carries joy, sadness, fury and grief. We need this gift, these poems.
Joy Harjo, Mvksoke poet and musician

“Blood Run” the name of an ancient site in an eastern corner of the US state South Dakota. Hundreds of mounds were built here by Native American Plains peoples and cultures, a thousand years before the arrival of the white intruders (e.g., settlers, military). The poems revive the history of the sites at “Blood Run” giving profound voice to humans, animals, plants and structures, also with political-ecological hope for the future to preserve ancient spiritual places.
Bernhard Widder

Purity in Poetry! Allison Hedge Coke has captured the true essence of the way of life, celebration of life enjoyed by all the many nations of Indigenous people(s) living here on our Makoce (land) which all indigenous nations call in unison Mother Earth. All Our Relations (Mitakuye Oyasin) is eloquently spoken and expressed by Allison. It is a true honor to have a kola (friend) a true Indigenous winyan (lady), to hold, keep and express the true spirit of all nations. I AM HONORED.
Irwin Sharp Fish, Sr.2003-04 NIEA Teacher of the Year


On Off-Season City Pipe:

From BooklistHedge Coke's reputation rests on her memoirs concerned with her Native American heritage, such as the searing and memorable Rock, Ghost, Willow, Deer [BKL Ap 15 04]. Here she reveals another identity, as a poet of the American worker--"cracker-packin' girls" and "fieldworkers and framers like me"--in long-lined, conversational poems full of southern swing and storytelling zest. She captures the lives of people struggling, sometimes failing like the zoned-out man in the Mission District who needs a "Houdini mentality to stand," but also exulting in their strength, like the women who, "double-handed / popping apart plump green strings / fresh from leafy hills," can pint after pint of produce. Though informed by the history of Indian struggle, the poems are set more in the city than on the reservation, in places "the BIA forgot to watch." Anyone interested in the often silenced voices of America's working poor will appreciate these poems. Patricia MonaghanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved The Pulse of the Twin Cities, May 12, 2005Hedge Coke unites American working-class experience with her Cherokee heritage in a sinewy lyricism where exhaustion co-exists with the exultant.

On Rock, Ghost, Willow, Deer:

From BooklistThis is a harrowing book. Statistics about alcoholism and family violence among dispossessed American Indians fail to show the sheer human suffering it causes and the personal heroism of those who struggle through to an integrated life. Hedge Coke was endowed by her Cherokee father with insights into the Indian way of life, but the pressures of prejudice and her mother's insanity drove her into years of drug and alcohol abuse as well as into abusive relationships. She writes in a stately, unashamed manner of beatings and binges, always connecting her personal sufferings to the larger questions of how Indian people can reclaim their cultural and personal pride and authority. A tragic loss ends the book's story, but far from making it a tale of failure, this final death confirms, through Hedge Coke's presentation, her growth into a profound witness to Indian culture and its deep-rooted spiritual and philosophical values. Patricia MonaghanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved ReviewBooklist :
"This is a harrowing book. Statistics about alcoholism and family violence among dispossessed American Indians fail to show the sheer human suffering it causes and the personal heroism of those who struggle through to an integrated life. Hedge Coke was endowed by her Cherokee father with insights into the Indian way of life, but the pressures of prejudice and her mother's insanity drove her into years of drug and alcohol abuse as well as into abusive relationships. She writes in a stately, unashamed manner of beatings and binges, always connecting her personal sufferings to the larger questions of how Indian people can reclaim their cultural and personal pride and authority."--Booklist.Chris Rubich Billings Gazette :
"Razor-sharp."--Chris Rubich, Billings Gazette.Joy Harjo :
"What I've always admired about Allison Hedge Coke's poetry is her astounding courage. And the ability to seamlessly weave the tobacco fields of childhood with the stark plains and hills of South Dakota. And more than all that-the shining spirit of compassion." --Joy Harjo, Mvskoke poet and musician.Diane Zephier Quiet Mountain Essays :
"This book has the ability to open eyes, and to provide freedom on a deep and pesonal level through the glory of truth, which is a beautiful thing no matter how shocking its origins. Rock, Ghost, Willow, Deer is one read that you will not forget."--Diane Zephier, Quiet Mountain Essays.Maggie Necefer Multicultural Review :
"An extraordinary story of survival, compassion, courage, and a balanced comprehension of acceptance and the will to live."--Maggie Necefer, Multicultural ReviewFourth Genre :
"It is through her lush yet controlled use of language that Hedge Coke successfully creates a narrative of both personal and cultural history.. She is often unflinchingly succinct in her telling of some painful event, and other times, especially when describing moments when she is close to death, she offers us lyric gems.... She travels like a liminal being, moving fluidly across boundaries between prose and poetry, dream and reality, myth and history, animal and human, the personal and political."-- Fourth GenreCampbell Editorial.com :
Hedge Coke's "childhood and young adult years as recounted in this gritty and courageous memoir are not only a story of survival but a story of strength."--Campbell Editorial.com


On Dog Road Woman:

Dog Road WomanPoems by Allison Adelle Hedge Coke
"These are songs of righteous anger and utter beauty." - Joy Harjo
"A welcome new voice in American Poetry." - Jessica Hagedorn
"Allison Hedge Coke is a skilled, spirited, young poet who is transforming and honing her social and personal experience and reflection to speak with the voice of a whole people. This is a very formidable task, but it is, finally, the work we’ve chosen. She’s up to it." - Amiri Baraka
In Dog Road Woman, an autobiographical sketch of a contemporary mixed-blood native life, Allison Adelle Hedge Coke weaves the shapes and patterns of her heritage into a magnificent tapestry of prayer, story and song. Dog Road Woman is winner of a 1998 American Book Award and a finalist for the 1998 Patterson Poetry Prize.
Hedge Coke recounts surviving domestic violence, racism, addiction, and an extraordinary number of challenges. By drawing upon a variety of poetic and prosaic forms, she simulates and transforms the rhythms and sounds of her people. Dog Road Woman is a sublime presentation of the strength, beauty, and spirit of the nations.
Allison Adelle Hedge Coke, of Huron, Tsa la gi, French Canadian and Portuguese descent, grew up in North Carolina, Canada, Texas, and throughout the Great Plains. She is the author of the American Book Award-winning debut poetry collection Dog Road Woman, the new Off-Season City Pipe, and the memoir Rock, Ghost, Willow, Deer. Instrumental in creating Native American and incarcerated youth mentorship programs throughout the country, Hedge Coke now teaches at Naropa University.




Please check these links:


Please watch:

http://www.survival-international.org/uncontactedtribes

http://www.survival-international.org/uncontactedtribes



Recent Engagements:


May 14-18, 2008 Indigenous Poets & Writers Retreat, Soul Mountain Retreat, courtesy of Marilyn Nelson, Connecticut.


A. A. Hedge Coke Walk over Esk 1

A. A. Hedge Coke Drummond's Place
Full Month Long (May 24-June 21, 2008) Hawthornden Castle Writer Fellowship Residency.


A. A. Hedge Coke Bamboo 1 China July 2-July 16, 2008


A. A. Hedge Coke Fruit Bat 1

2008 Indigenous Poets & Writers Retreat, Soul Mountain Retreat, co-hosting with LeAnne Howe. Courtesy of the phenomenal poet and human being, Marilyn Nelson and her working group: Rhonda Ward and Giddeon, LeAnne Howe, Lara Mann, Santee Frazier, and I are all taking in the beauty of Old Lyme Connecticut here where dozens of turtles rise up and down the pond waters, split by skeins of Canadian Geese, alongside lush banks huddled over by an always eager marmot and several early robins. The air is ripe with poetry, writing, and much needed rest and community support. Santee has proven his worth as a chef as well as poet. LeAnne is providing great insight, intelligence, and terrific comic relief. Lara is ever-present with her Sedaris in-hand for belly laughs to carry her through the rigorous poetry drive she has committed to. We hope to see Orlando White within the next day or so and are reeling in the joyous gifts of retreat space in the meanwhile. We read in Central Gallery in Old Saybrook with Rhonda on Saturday. LeAnne's blog http://mikokings.wordpress.com/ has a photo and updates.

With what is happening in the world, with the weather turned on its head, people in turmoil and the over drawn-out campaign primary madness, this break is welcome welcome.

Marilyn runs a great retreat here open to poets/writers of various communities. www.soulmountainretreat.com


University of Nebraska MFA Intensive Residency July 16-July 20, 2008

Paul Hanly Furfey Lecture for the Association of the Sociology of Religions Conference Park Plaza Hotel Boston August 1st, 2008


A. A. Hedge Coke Nebraska Clouds 1




Allison Hedge Coke, Arts Corr Residency, Incarcerated Youth Facility, South Dakota. August 18-22.

Allison Hedge Coke, Wang Ping and MacAlester students. Boundary Waters. Aug. 29.

Allison Hedge Coke Reading, Elements, Uptown Arts Festival Reading. September 6.

Allison Hedge Coke Reading, Wayne State Reading. September 16

Allison Hedge Coke Reading, Northeast Community College, Norfolk. September 17

Allison Hedge Coke Reads at the South Dakota Festival of Books. Sioux Falls. September 24-26

Bowery Poetry Project NYC, Allison Hedge Coke Reading with LaTasha Diggs. 2-3:30PM. October 11.

LaTasha's myspace
LaTasha's homepage

Nebraska Book Festival. October 18.

Oxnard Community College Scholars Lecture Series. November 5.

SUNY Fredonia. November 18.

December 9 Macalester College, River Reading, St. Paul.

Stumble Upon Toolbar


http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=120170200614
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=27235631598&ref=ts

AWP Conference, two panels, February 11th-14th, 2009

BLACK EARTH INSTITUTE THINK TANK PANEL:
Patricia Monaghan (Chair), Annie Finch, Allison Hedge Coke, Linda Hogan, Richard Cambridge, Deborah Holton
Event Title #2: The Poet as Oracle. Oratory
Scheduled Day: Thursday, February 12
Scheduled Time: 12:00-1:15 pm
Scheduled Room: Chicago Hilton, Grand Ballroom


Title: Indigenous AWP Poets & Writers Read for the Chicago American Indian Center
Date & time: February 12th, 2009. 6-8:00 PM
Location: Chicago American Indian Center, Trickster Gallery
http://www.aic-chicago.org/trickster.html
www.aic-chicago.org
1630 W Wilson Ave
Chicago, IL 60640
(773) 275-5871
Free and open to the public

AWP Saturday February 14
Waldorf, 3rd Floor S167
Brain Power: Processing the Beautiful and the Horrendous. (Allison Hedge Coke, Peggy Shumaker, Linda Hogan, & Mira Bartok) Brain injury presents uniquely significant challenges to creative process, yet affords uniquely stimulating conceptualized possibility in a simultaneous manner. Each of the panelists included on this panel have cajoled memoir and life-story from revelations made apparent through their climb up and down the noodled rungs of brain trauma or neurological dilemma. We will consider the work presenting panelists and of Maxine Kumin and Floyd Skloot who support this panel.

Environmental Policy Panel February 18th 4pm
Ruth Stricker Dayton Campus Center
1600 Grand Ave.
St. Paul, MN
651.696.6249
http://www.citypages.com/events/environmental-policy-forum-will-steger-mark-dayton-allison-hedge-coke-763087/