WordstockProgram2010.. - Mountain Writers Series
Transcription
WordstockProgram2010.. - Mountain Writers Series
events Saturday, October 9 & Sunday, October 10 The Wordstock Book Fair @ the Oregon Convention Center 777 NE MLK Jr. Blvd. 10am – 6pm Friday, October 1 PNCA & Wordstock present The International Writers Project @ PNCA Main Campus Building Swigert Commons 1241 NW Johnson St. 6:30pm Monday, October 4 Profile Theater presents Chesapeake: The Playwright Performs Play reading and Q&A with Lee Blessing @ Reed College Mainstage Theatre 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd. 7:30pm Tuesday, October 5 Multnomah County Library and Wordstock present Young Adult Reading Showcase @ Central Library 810 SE 10th Ave. 6pm Tuesday, October 5 Powell’s and Oregon Public Broadcasting present Michele Norris @ McMenamins Bagdad Theater 3702 SE Hawthorne Blvd. 7pm Wednesday, October 6 Oregon Humanities presents Seeding a Sense of Place: Science, Stories and Smart Forest Policy @ Hoyt Arboretum 400 SW Fairview Blvd. 6pm Wednesday, October 6 Multnomah County Library and Wordstock present Nonfiction Reading Showcase @ Central Library 810 SE 10th Ave. 6pm Thursday, October 7 Oregon Historical Society and Oregon Encyclopedia present History Pub! @ McMenamins Kennedy School 5736 NE 33rd Ave. 7pm Thursday, October 7 Wordstock presents Mortified! @ McMenamins Bagdad Theater 3702 SE Hawthorne Blvd. 8pm Friday, October 8 Powell’s presents Steven Johnson @ McMenamins Bagdad Theater 3702 SE Hawthorne Blvd. 7pm Saturday, October 9 IPRC presents The 5th Annual Text Ball: “Text Appeal” @ p:ear Gallery 338 NW 6th Ave. 7pm Saturday, October 9 Live Wire presents The 6th Live Wire! Wordstock Extravaganza @ the Aladdin Theater 3017 SE Milwaukie Ave. 8pm wordstock 2010 what happened? 05 welcome 08 authors 18 conversations 34 wordstock for writers 38 wordstock for teachers 39 festival map 40 saturday schedule 42 sunday schedule 44 exhibitor list 45 exhibit hall map 46 sponsors Wordstock is Portland’s book and literary festival. Unless otherwise noted, the events listed in this guide take place at the Oregon Convention Center, 777 NE MLK Jr. Blvd., in Portland. Admission to the festival’s book fair is $7 for one day, $10 for both days. Children 13 and under are free. Visit wordstockfestival.com for final details on all Wordstock authors and events. wordstock 2010 executive director: Greg Netzer director of development & marketing: Nancy Ellis operations manager: Eden Bainter author coordinators: Eden Bainter, Sara Gundell, Mead Hunter, Mary Margaret Maitland children's area coordinators: Autumn Linde, Sarah Mussio exhibit coordinator: Gail Zuro emcee & presentations coordinator: Gail Zuro events manager: April Severson festival program coordinators: Abbey Gaterud, Kenny Hanour, Katie Shaw marketing coordinators: Spencer Cushing, Tatiana DeFigueiredo, Ayla Gilbert, Karla Starr stage & schedule coordinators: Melony Beaird volunteer coordinators: Bradi Grebien-Samkow, Megan Wellman, Dehlia McCobb workshop coordinators: Emily Patrice Cable, Aaron Furmanek, Lisa Voltolina wordstock board of directors Kevin Blada (Treasurer), Delap LLP Alice Cuprill-Comas, Ater Wynne LLP Gregory Dufault (Chair), Wells Fargo Advisors Kerry McClenahan, McBru Communications Regina Perata (President), Restoring Power Chris Price, Regence Josh Simko (Secretary), Nike Wordstock 810 SE Belmont St., Studio 5 Portland, Oregon 97214 ph: 503.549.7887 I fx: 503.549.7869 wordstockfestival.com wordstock 2010 | 5 wouldn’t you like to know… In the past, as we’ve promoted the Wordstock Festival to readers and writers like you, we’ve asked you to believe in the power of words, or to read purely, or to read in greater quantities and with more diversity than ever before. But this year, as we began to think of the three areas we’ll focus on at the 2010 festival—short fiction, humor and especially history—we found ourselves thinking more and more about where our desire to read came from. In the end, that motivation kept coming down to one simple, two-word question: What happened? That’s all we want to know, isn’t it? It’s why we turn the page, why we hang on every word an actor speaks, what we want to know as a co-worker recounts the weekend around the water cooler on Monday morning. We want to know what happened. It’s why we read and, for many of us, why we write. So this year we’ve filled our program with writers who answer that question in really interesting ways. This happens quickly in the history, short fiction and humor we’re featuring this year, of course, but really, it will happen during every reading, conversation and workshop because we have a great lineup. Thumb through this program quickly and you’ll see what I mean. It’s packed with phenomenal talent from around the world. We hope you enjoy it. By “we,” of course, I mean all the people listed on the page to the left, and all the people represented by the logos that grace the back cover of this program: our volunteers and sponsors. Simply put, Wordstock would not exist without their passion and dedication. I can’t thank them enough for their tireless work and hope you’ll thank them, too, when you see them at the festival’s many events. Greg Netzer Executive Director 6 | wordstock 2010 the wordstock book club: Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It Maile Meloy Powell’s Books Stage, Saturday, 2pm Rising star Maile Meloy’s latest collection, Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It (one of The New York Times’s “10 Best Books of 2009”), both expands and deepens the terrain she explored in her previous books—stories of opposites in collision. As described by the Los Angeles Times, “Meloy’s richest territory is the fork in the road at right and wrong, the moment when a person’s moral compass wavers.” Already the recipient of awards from The Paris Review and the American Academy of Arts and Letters, among others, this is a writer coming into her own as a chronicler of America’s maladies and triumphs. Her stories possess “a scope and maturity that at their most rigorous attain the grandeur of prophecy,” proclaims Slate magazine. Jonathan Lethem © Mara Faye Lethem Powell’s Books Stage, Saturday, 3pm If ever there was an author who resisted easy classification, it’s Jonathan Lethem. Throughout a boundary-crossing career that includes speculative fiction, crime fiction and autobiography—sometimes all within the same book—his avowed interest in “the taxonomy of genre” has garnered him a reputation as one of the headiest novelists writing in English today. His latest novel, Chronic City, is no exception. As The New York Times sees it, “This exuberant novel set in a drugaddled, alternate-reality Manhattan is at its heart a traditional story of moral and intellectual development.” A recipient of the coveted MacArthur Grant, Lethem is also a prolific essayist and short story writer. wordstock 2010 | 7 opening night! a special wordstock edition of Mortified! At Wordstock, we’re always looking for new ways to promote stories—the stories we read, the stories we hear, the stories we tell about our loved ones and ourselves. And in the spirit of hearing stories about ourselves, we’re bringing you a special, one-of-a-kind event featuring the national sensation Mortified. Mortified stars everyday people reading aloud their most embarrassing, pathetic and private teenage diary entries, poems, love letters, lyrics and locker notes...in front of total strangers. Witness “personal redemption through public humiliation” in a refreshing show that is equal parts comedic, cathartic and voyeuristic. Join us for an evening of sharing—that is, sharing some of the most hilarious moments you’ll ever hear. On a stage, anyway. Thursday, October 7 at 8pm McMenamins Bagdad Theater 3702 SE Hawthorne Blvd. $18, tickets available at wordstockfestival.com 8 | wordstock 2010 authors Stage abbreviations: C P T O M WK WS MW1 MW2 Columbia Sportswear Stage Powell’s Books Stage Target Children’s Stage The Oregon Education Assoc. Stage McMenamins Stage Wieden+Kennedy Stage Wordstock Community Stage Mountain Writers Stage 1 Mountain Writers Stage 2 Tim Barnes, Portland Community College teacher, wrote Definitions for a Lost Language and edits the Friends of William Stafford Newsletter. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 2pm Mac Barnett writes the Brixton Brothers mysteries and picture books, including Guess Again! and Oh No: Or How My Science Project Destroyed the World. (Children’s) T: Sat, 2pm; T: Sat, 5pm Howard Aaron received an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. He teaches creative writ- Dale E. Basye, recovering journalist and advering courses at Washington State University, tising copywriter, has written three books in Vancouver. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 3pm the Circles of Heck series: Heck, Rapacia, and Blimpo. (Children’s) T: Sat, 2pm Duane Ackerson has published several hundred poems, as well as fiction, prose, poetry and Bonny Becker is the author of a number of criticism, in various magazines and anthologies. award-winning picture books and middle-grade (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 4pm novels. She lives in Seattle. (Children’s) T: Sun, 12pm Carl Adamshick won the 2010 Walt Whitman Award. His book Curses and Wishes will be pub- Aimee Bender’s most recent book is The lished by LSU Press. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 2pm Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake. She loves visiting Portland. (Fiction) C: Sat, 12pm; P: Sat, John Addiego has published two novels, 1pm The Islands of Divine Music and Tears of the Mountain. He lives in Corvallis, Oregon. (Fiction) David Biespiel wrote Every Writer Has a Thousand Faces and The Book of Men and WK: Sat, 12pm Women and founded The Attic: A Haven for Kelli Russell Agodon is the author of Letters Writers. (Moderator) P: Sun, 11am; M: Sun, 3pm from the Emily Dickinson Room, Small Knots and Geography. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 3pm Lucy Jane Bledsoe is the author of several collections and novels, including The Big Bang Steve Almond is the author of eight books, Symphony: A Novel of Antarctica. (Fiction) WS: most recently Rock & Roll Will Save Your Life. Sat, 1pm (Nonfiction) C: Sat, 3pm; M: Sun, 2pm Matt Bors is a nationally syndicated editorial Joëlle Anthony, author of Restoring Harmony, cartoonist and graphic novelist living in Portland. currently lives in beautiful British Columbia, (Nonfiction) M: Sat, 11am; WK: Sat, 3pm where she writes young adult fiction. (YA) T: Sun, 4pm Tom Bremer’s most recent book of poetry is Just Once (2001). (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 12pm Judith Arcana’s most recent book is 4th Period English, a poetry chapbook in the voices of var- Wendy Burden is a confirmed New Yorker who, ious characters. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 4pm to her constant surprise, lives in Portland. Her wordstock 2010 | 9 book provides the reason. (Nonfiction) O: Sat, 2pm; WK: Sun, 1pm Suzanne Burns will read from The Widow, prose poems about an army wife whose husband goes missing in Iraq. (Fiction) MW2: Sat, 2pm Gabrielle Burton is the author of the novel Impatient with Desire (The Lost Journal of Tamsen Donner) and the memoir Searching for Tamsen Donner. (Fiction) O: Sun, 12pm; O: Sun, 3pm Bo Caldwell wrote the national bestseller The Distant Land of My Father. She’s been published in Ploughshares, Story and Epoch. (Fiction) WK: Sat, 12pm Eliza Canty-Jones is editor of the Oregon Historical Quarterly, a scholarly public-history journal published by the Oregon Historical Society. (Moderator) WS: Sun, 3pm Bill Carter has written two books: Fools Rush In and Red Summer. He also directed Miss Sarajevo, an awardwinning documentary. (Nonfiction) O: Sat, 5pm Cecil Castellucci’s two newest books are a young adult novel, Rose Sees Red, and her first picture book, Grandma’s Gloves. (YA) T: Sun, 4pm Greg Chaimov lives in Milwaukie, Oregon. His first full-length collection of poetry, Everything is Water, is forthcoming from Press 22. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 2pm Lan Samantha Chang’s books are All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost; Inheritance; and Hunger. She is a 2008 Guggenheim Fellow. (Fiction) P: Sat, 1pm; M: Sat, 4pm Emily Chenoweth is the author of the novel Hello Goodbye. She publishes commercial and young adult fiction pseudonymously. (Fiction) WK: Sat, 1pm; C: Sun, 11am Margaret Chula has published six poetry collections. Her poems have appeared in Prairie Schooner, Kyoto Journal, Poet Lore, America’s Review and Runes. (Poetry) WS: Sat, 2pm Kelly Clarke is the Arts & Culture editor at Willamette Week. She writes about food, dance, books and all International Writers Project This is the second year that PNCA & Wordstock will host six writers through the International Writing Program, which, since its founding in 1967 at the University of Iowa, has brought together more than 1,000 rising and established literary stars from 120 countries to develop a community of writing to enhance international understanding. The writers’ week at PNCA includes both immersion in the campus curriculum along with collaborative public programming. The experience provides writers from around the world with a sense of American innovation and openness, and it exposes US readers, writers and artists to international perspectives on the art and process of writing. Friday, October 1 at 6:30pm PNCA Main Campus Building, Swigert Commons 1241 NW Johnson St. Free and open to the public 10 | wordstock 2010 Two Special Powell’s Books Events Michele Norris © Stephen Voss presented by Powell’s Books and OPB Tuesday, October 5 at 7pm With her new memoir, The Grace of Silence, Michele Norris, host of National Public Radio’s All Things Considered, set out to write a book about “the hidden conversation on race”—and in doing so unearthed painful family secrets. Extraordinary for Norris’s candor in examining her own complex racial legacy, The Grace of Silence observes the evolving attitudes toward race in America. Tickets are $24.95 and include admission and a copy of The Grace of Silence that will be distributed at the event. Steven Johnson © Nina Subin Friday, October 8 at 7pm Wired contributing editor Steven Johnson takes on— in exhilarating style—the question: Where do good ideas come from? With his book Where Good Ideas Come From, Johnson pairs the insight of his best-selling Everything Bad Is Good for You and the erudition of The Ghost Map to address a universal question: What sparks the flash of brilliance? Answering in his culturally omnivorous style, incorporating his fluency in fields from neurobiology to popular culture, Johnson provides the story of how we generate the ideas that push our careers, lives, society, and culture forward. Tickets are $26.95 and include admission and a copy of Where Good Ideas Come From that will be distributed at the event. Both events will be held at McMenamins Bagdad Theater at 3702 SE Hawthorne Blvd. in Portland. Tickets available at Ticketmaster, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom box office, and the Bagdad Theater. wordstock 2010 | 11 sorts of trashy, trashy cultural detritus. stories. He is a 2010 Guggenheim Fellow. (Moderator) M: Sat, 1pm (Fiction) C: Sat, 12pm; C: Sat, 2pm Nancy Coffelt is an artist and awardwinning writer. Her debut novel is Listen, published by WestSide Books. (YA) T: Sun, 3pm Kim Dower’s first poetry book, Air Kissing on Mars, is described by novelist Lisa See as “charming, compelling, accessible, profound.” (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 3pm; M: Sun, 12pm Arianne Cohen, 6'3", is a contributing editor at Woman’s Day. Her book The Sex Brian Doyle edits Portland Magazine at Diaries Project comes out in January. University of Portland and has authored (Nonfiction) WS: Sun, 2pm ten books, most recently the novel Mink River. (Fiction) 0: Sat, 3pm; WK: Sat, 4pm Robin Cody is the author of Ricochet River and Another Way the River Has. Monica Drake’s debut novel, Clown Girl, (Fiction) WK: Sat, 4pm; MW1: Sun, 1pm is published by Hawthorne Books. (Panel) WS: Sat, 3pm Larry Colton is a writer, teacher and the founder of Wordstock. (Nonfiction) C: Sat, Tim DuRoche is a writer/artist/cul1pm; P: Sun, 3pm tural advocate and currently Director of Programs for the World Affairs Council of Joey Comeau writes the comic A Softer Oregon. (Moderator) M: Sat, 11am World (with photographer Emily Horne). He’s author of One Bloody Thing After Heidi Durrow is the author of The Another. (Fiction) WK: Sun, 11am; C: Sun, Girl Who Fell From the Sky, chosen by 4pm Barbara Kingsolver for the Bellwether Prize. (Fiction) C: Sun, 11am; M: Sun, 3pm Thea Cooper is the co-author of Breakthrough: Elizabeth Hughes, the Timothy Egan wrote a riveting account Discovery of Insulin and the Making of of the biggest wildfire in American hisa Medical Miracle. She is a writer, edi- tory on its 100th anniversary. (Nonfiction) tor, playwright and teacher. (Nonfiction) P: Sun, 12pm WK: Sun, 2pm Stephen Elliott is the author of The Liz Crain, author of Food Lover’s Guide to Adderall Diaries and founding editor of Portland, is a writer and editor based in The Rumpus.net. (Fiction) WK: Sat, 11am; Portland, Oregon. (Nonfiction) M: Sat, 1pm C: Sat, 4pm Candace Dempsey is the award-winning Italian-American author of Murder in Italy, about convicted murderer Amanda Knox. (Nonfiction) WK: Sun, 12pm Carson Ellis, Portlander, is the illustrator of The Mysterious Benedict Society, The Composer Is Dead, and, most recently, Dillweed’s Revenge. (Children’s) T: Sun, 12pm Susan Denning is a poet and the director of programs at Literary Arts. (Moderator) Andrew Jay Epstein lives in Los WK: Sat, 4pm Angeles. Andrew Jacobson lives four traffic lights away. The Familiars is their Anthony Doerr is the author, most first book. (YA) M: Sat, 3pm; T: Sat, 4pm recently, of Memory Wall, a collection of 12 | wordstock 2010 the 6th Live Wire! wordstock extravaganza It’s time again for the brilliant wit, bright stars and big laughs of this year’s Wordstock edition of Live Wire! It’s a radio variety show recorded in front of a live audience and broadcast on Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB), and it includes original sketch comedy, live music and conversation with some of the fantastic authors joining us at Wordstock. This year’s show will feature comic and The Aristrocrats director Paul Provenza; essayist, humorist, and This American Life regular David Rakoff; indie rock icon Kristin Hersh; novelist Jonathan Lethem; and more. This show is always one of the highlights of the festival, and this one is going to be fantastic! Saturday, October 9 at 8pm Aladdin Theater 3017 SE Milwaukie Ave. Tickets: $25 for general admission and $35 for reserved seating, available at livewireradio.org. wordstock 2010 | 13 Kristin Hersh Columbia Sportswear Stage Saturday, 3pm Best known as the lead singer/songwriter for the cult rock bands Throwing Muses and 50 Foot Wave, Kristin Hersh’s intimate songs explore “rage, aggression, and mental chaos.” Her new memoir, Rat Girl, recalls a foundational year in the life of an indie rock icon who would go on to have a remarkably successful music career and help lead the movement for artists’ equity as co-founder of the Coalition of Artists and Stakeholders (CASH). Of Rat Girl, Mary Gaitskill remarks: “It is…awestruck—by music, feeling, perception, wild animals, mystery, dreams…. It is an original beauty.” David Rakoff © Paul Roosin Powell’s Books Stage, Saturday, 4pm David Rakoff is an essayist, journalist, and actor. Known for his humorous, sometimes autobiographical, and keenly observant stories, Rakoff loves words. His latest work, Half Empty, is a collection of essays on mankind’s foibles. Rakoff is a regular contributor to Public Radio International’s This American Life. He adapted the screenplay for and starred in Joachim Back’s film The New Tenants, which won the 2010 Academy Award for Best Live Action Short. 14 | wordstock 2010 Chesapeake: The Playwright Performs Play reading and Q&A with Lee Blessing Profile Theatre and Reed College present renowned playwright Lee Blessing reading his one-man show Chesapeake. This “brilliantly offkilter fantasy” (Newsday) is about a performance artist at war with a southern senator and Lucky, the senator’s Chesapeake Bay retriever. Chesapeake is a hilarious commentary about subsidies for controversial art and corruption in the US political system. Blessing has been a force in American theater for over thirty years. His plays have been produced across the country and have been nominated for Tony Awards and the Pulitzer Prize. Profile Theatre showcases one playwright each season, connecting the work of the author to what’s seen on stage. For more information on this event and Profile Theatre’s 2010-11 season, visit profiletheatre.org. Monday, October 4 at 7:30pm Reed College Mainstage Theatre 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd. Tickets: $35, available at profiletheatre.org or 503.242.0080 Harriet Fasenfest talks about “householding”—the growing and stowing of food as an act of environmental stewardship and economic justice. (Nonfiction) O: Sun, 4pm David Filer lives in Portland with his wife, Marlene Anderson, creator of the AIDS prevention program, The Imani Project. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 5pm Becca Fitzpatrick is the New York Times best-selling author of Hush, Hush and Crescendo. (Fiction/YA) T: Sun, 1pm; C: Sun, 4pm Heather Vogel Frederick’s Pies & Prejudice is the latest in her Mother-Daughter Book Club series. Babyberry Pie is her first picture book. (Fiction/YA) T: Sat, 3pm Wayne Garcia is the weeknight anchor for KPTV, Channel 12. (Moderator) M: Sun, 11am Martha Gies wrote a portrait of graveyard-shift workers called Up All Night, along with many published stories and essays. (Nonfiction) MW2: Sun, 4pm Michele Glazer’s new book is On Tact, & the Made Up World. She teaches in and directs PSU’s MFA Creative Writing program. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 2pm Myla Goldberg is the author of the best-selling Bee Season. Her new novel is called The False Friend. (Fiction) C: Sun, 3pm Charles Goodrich’s books include Going to Seed: Dispatches from the Garden, Insects of South Corvallis, and The Practice of Home. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 4pm Leanne Grabel is a writer, a performance artist, cofounder of Cafe Lena and a language arts teacher in a treatment center. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 12pm James Grabill writes poetry and nonfiction. He lives in Portland, Oregon, and teaches writing, literature and sustainability. (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 12pm Niall Griffiths, born in Liverpool and resident of midWales, has written six novels, three nonfiction collections, and travel pieces and reviews. (Fiction) O: Sat, 11am wordstock 2010 | 15 Peter Griffiths, born in Wales, lives in Myrlin A. Hermes, author of The Lunatic, Denver. His novel, Tongue Tied, is about the Lover, and the Poet and Careful What what it means to be Welsh. (Fiction) You Wish For, lives in Portland. (Fiction) WS: Sat, 1pm Tom Grimes, the author of Mentor: A Memoir, directs the MFA Program in Kristin Hersh is a songwriter and guitarCreative Writing at Texas State University. ist who founded and plays in two bands. (Nonfiction) O: Sat, 1pm; 0: Sat, 3pm Her memoir, Rat Girl, was published last year. (Nonfiction) C: Sat, 3pm Sara Gundell is a Wordstock author coordinator and a webmaster for the YA Nina Hess is the author of A Practical lit fan site NovelNovice.Com. (Moderator) Guide to Monsters, a New York Times C: Sun, 4pm bestseller. (Children’s) T: Sun, 11am Cindy Williams Gutiérrez performs poems of place about encounters with strangers. Publications include Borderlands, Calyx, Harvard’s JFSR, Portland Review, ZYZZYVA. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 11am Charles Heying, author of Brew to Bikes: Portland’s Artisan Economy, is associate professor of urban studies and planning at Portland State University. (Nonfiction) M: Sat, 1pm Tad Hills lives in Brooklyn with his wife, Courtenay Hameister is a freelance two kids and dog named Rocket who writer and the host and head writer of can’t read...yet. (Children’s) T: Sat, 1pm Live Wire! Radio. (Moderator) M: Sun, 2pm Kerry Cohen Hoffman is the author of Diane Hammond, author of critically Loose Girl: A Memoir of Promiscuity, Easy, acclaimed novels Seeing Stars, Hannah’s The Good Girl and It’s Not You, It’s Me. (YA) Dream, Homesick Creek, and Going to T: Sat, 3pm Bend, lives in Bend, Oregon. (Fiction) WS: Sat, 11am Matthew Holm, Portland native, is the co-creator of the award-winning Graham Hancock is known for best- Babymouse series of graphic novels selling investigations of historical mys- from Random House Children’s Books. teries. His first novel is the fantasy- (Children’s) T: Sat, 1pm adventure epic Entangled. (Fiction) C: Sun, 5pm Karen Holmberg’s poems from her finished manuscript, “Axis Mundi,” have Lesley Hazleton, aka The Accidental appeared in Southern Poetry Review, Theologist, works at the volatile inter- Quarterly West, West Branch and section of religion and politics, narrative Subtropics. (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 2pm history and current events. (Nonfiction) C: Sat, 11am Jeff Houghtaling is an author/artist/pug owner living in Portland, Oregon. Jeff April Henry is the New York Times best- researches design, color and applicaselling author of mysteries and thrill- tion through artistic pursuits. (Children’s) ers for adults and teens, including Girl, T: Sat, 11am Stolen. (Fiction) T: Sun, 3pm 16 | wordstock 2010 Lan Samantha Chang © Miranda Meyer Powell’s Books Stage, Saturday, 1pm Lan Samantha Chang is the very definition of “fast out of the gate.” Her earliest short stories (later collected in Hunger) were published in such celebrated publications as The Atlantic Monthly and New House. Her second book, Inheritance, received worldwide exposure, was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection, and won the PEN Beyond Margins Award for the Novel from the PEN American Center. Since then, Chang has received numerous awards for her elegant, spare prose, and in 2006 she became the director of the prestigious Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Chang brings her latest book to Wordstock—All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost—a profoundly elegiac story of three poets whose paths to artistic and personal fulfillment take divergent routes. Aimee Bender Powell’s Books Stage, Saturday, 1pm To read the surreal fiction of Aimee Bender is to find yourself worried for the fates of potato children, royal swans, finger-sized men in cages and in her most recent novel, a young girl who can taste the emotions of her food. The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake, Bender’s fourth book, came out in June and was an Indiespensable pick for Powell’s. Her short fiction has been published in Granta, GQ, McSweeney’s, Tin House, The Paris Review and more, as well as heard on Selected Shorts and This American Life. She lives in Los Angeles and teaches creative writing at USC. wordstock 2010 | 17 Trevor J. Houser’s stories have appeared in Story Quarterly, ZYZZYVA and Pindeldyboyz, among others. He lives in San Francisco. (Fiction) M: Sat, 4pm Amanda Howells is the author of the young adult novel The Summer of Skinny Dipping. (Fiction/YA) WK: Sat, 1pm; T: Sun, 2pm Christopher Howell’s most recent book, Dreamless and Possible: Poems New and Selected, was published in 2010. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 3pm Rhonda Hughes is an editor and publisher at Hawthorne Books. (Panel) M: Sun, 4pm Tim Hunt, in Fault Lines, writes poems where the rocks and thistle are not yet digital. Hunt is a fourth-generation Californian. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 12pm Scott Jacobson is an Emmy-winning writer and founding member of comedy writing group The Pleasure Syndicate. (Nonfiction) P: Sun, 4pm Dave Jarecki is a 2010 Fishtrap Fellow, facilitates writing workshops and features interviews with poets and writers on DaveJarecki.com. (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 3pm Jessica Francis Kane is the author of the story collection Bending Heaven and novel The Report, just published by Graywolf Press. (Fiction) O: Sun, 12pm; O: Sun, 3pm Karen Karbo is the author of The Gospel According to Coco Chanel, plus a bunch of other books. (Nonfiction) M: Sun, 3pm; M: Sun, 12pm Jesse Katz is author of The Opposite Field, a memoir of fathers and sons, good love and failed love and baseball. (Nonfiction) C: Sun, 2pm Marianne Keddington-Lang is an acquiring editor at University of Washington Press and managing editor of the Oregon Encyclopedia. (Nonfiction) WS: Sun, 3pm Chris Keil, a novelist living in Wales but travelling widely, is interested in memory, desire, loss and imagination. (Fiction) O: Sat, 11am A Special Wordstock Conversation Project: Seeding a Sense of Place: Science, Stories and Smart Forest Policy Join Oregon Humanities and Gail Wells for a special Wordstock event on Wednesday, October 6. Wells, an awardwinning writer and editor specializing in history and natural-resource science, will lead a conversation about the meanings we build into places individually and collectively through storytelling and public policy. Oregon Humanities connects Oregonians to ideas that change lives and transform communities. For more information about our program and publications, please visit oregonhumanities.org Wednesday, October 6 at 6pm Hoyt Arboretum, Bill deWeese Classroom 4000 SW Fairview Blvd. Free and open to the public 18 | wordstock 2010 conversations A listing of all the places at Wordstock where writers will convene to discuss topics in contemporary literature. Stage abbreviations: C P T O M WK WS MW1 MW2 Columbia Sportswear Stage Powell’s Books Stage Target Children’s Stage The Oregon Education Assoc. Stage McMenamins Stage Wieden+Kennedy Stage Wordstock Community Stage Mountain Writers Stage 1 Mountain Writers Stage 2 From the Front Lines Matt Bors, Tatjana Soli, Kilong Ung (moderated by Tim DuRoche) M: Sat, 11am Wartime stories must successfully explain the chaos of war—shifting landscapes, conflicting viewpoints and historical facts—without eclipsing their main character’s personal journey. Writing Good History Larry Lipan, Marianne Keddington-Lang, Bill Lang (moderated by Eliza Canty-Jones) WS: Sun, 3pm History is no longer written only by the winners, making stories of the past more compelling and complex than ever before. What succeeds, and what doesn’t? Three writers discuss the challenges involved with getting that laugh-out-loud moment in print. Why Write Short? Anthony Doerr, David Vann, Aimee Bender (moderated by Meg Storey) C: Sat, 12pm Pop culture says that you’re not really a writer till you’ve published a novel, but many writers find themselves drawn to short fiction’s artistic challenge and intensity. The State of the Story Trevor Houser, Maile Meloy, Mary Rechner, Lan Samantha Chang (moderated by Joel Lovell) M: Sat, 4pm Four contemporary writers at various stages of their careers talk about the popularity and importance of the short story in the literary culture. Capturing the Regional Voice Robin Cody, Matt Love, Benjamin Percy, Brian Doyle (moderated by Susan Denning) WK: Sat, 4pm Sometimes a town, a river or a mood emerges as a major character in a narrative. Four Northwest writers discuss how they express our region. Imagining the Past Joseph Skibell, Gabrielle Burton, Jessica Francis Kane (moderated by Myrlin A. Hermes O: Sun, 12pm Authors use larger-than-life historical events—the Donner Party, Freud and a WWII subway explosion—to weave together fact and fiction and tell an entirely new story. First Book, First Person Wendy Burden, Sarahlee Lawrence, Gemma Whelan (moderated by Andrew Proctor) WK: Sun, 1pm A revealing look at the process of writing a first novel and the trusted first person narrator each of these debut novelists found to bring their story to life. Cracking Up Is Hard To Do Steve Almond, Jess Walter (moderated by Courtenay Hameister) M: Sun, 2pm Writing humor takes work. As a writer, humor rests exclusively on the power of your words. YA Gets Real Patrick Ness, L.K. Madigan, Conrad Wesselhoeft (moderated by Lisa Schroeder) M: Sat, 12pm Forget about vampires and boy wizards. Hear wordstock 2010 | 19 from three young adult authors who tackle seri- Status Update ous, real-life subject matters and how they relate Matt Stewart, Kaleb Nation, Cheryl Strayed (moderated by Liz Prato) WK: Sun, 4pm to teens. What are the advantages and pitfalls when Creature Feature authors use social media to self-promote? Most Becca Fitzpatrick, Rick Yancey, Joey Comeau no longer wrestle over whether they should use (moderated by Sara Gundell) C: Sun, 4pm these tools, but which tools are best. The supernatural is huge these days. We’ll talk to three authors about why the supernatural Writer, Editor & Agent: How a Book is Made is so popular and how they make their stories Larry Colton, Richard Pine, Sydny Miner C: Sat, 3pm believable. An author, his agent and his editor discuss the Literary Lives long road from writing to selling to publishing. Monica Drake, Viva Las Vegas, Willy Vlautin Receive a behind-the-scenes look at the process (moderated by Kevin Sampsell) WS: Sat, and all that is involved before you read a book. 3pm Portland is a largely under-the-radar spot to build What Works for Me a literary career—and that’s why these three Karen Karbo, Joanna Smith Rakoff, Heidi W. Durrow (moderated by David Biespiel) M: Sun, authors choose to call Stumptown home. 3pm The Rules of Writing Nonfiction Creatively Three authors discuss their daily routines, techCraig Welch, Douglas Perry, Ander Monson niques and superstitions for getting the words (moderated by Wayne Garcia) M: Sun, 11am on the page. This genre is currently defined by its lack of established conventions. While it uses literary Selling the Movie Rights elements and embellished style instead of just Phil Margolin, Jon Raymond, Adam Jay reporting facts, where is the line between cre- Epstein, Andrew Jacobson M: Sat, 3pm ative nonfiction and fiction? The ins and outs of selling your book to Hollywood. Authors discuss this exciting and Modern Memoir sometimes frustrating negotiation. Glenn Rockowitz, Tom Grimes (moderated by Robin Romm) O: Sat, 12pm The Ghosts with the Most Memoir is one of the most popular genres of Amanda Howells, Emily Chenoweth, Vanessa writing today. How does an author decide that Veselka (moderated by Pema Teeter) WK: Sat, his or her personal story is better than fiction— 1pm and how do authors craft their story in a way that The secret’s out: ghostwriting can be lucrative, rings true with their readers? fun and even tone creative muscle. Hear how three successful ghostwriters traded bylines for Brave New World profit while continuing to write their own books. Lauren Kessler, Rhonda Hughes, Kevin Smokler (moderated by Richard Meeker) M: Writing for Children Sun, 4pm Mark Williams, Mac Barnett, Renee Technology is impacting all aspects of publish- Watson T: Sat, 5pm ing—the way books are published, distributed, Kids are picky about everything—their food, their sold and read. An author, a publisher and an clothes and their books. Three children’s authors entrepreneur discuss how technology affects will discuss what it takes to write a book that publishing and literature. kids will love. 20 | wordstock 2010 conversations continued The Long Story Joel Lovell, Randy Gragg C: Sun, 1pm Welsh Identity in Literature: From Dylan In long-form narrative journalism, the writer’s Thomas to Doctor Who talent and the reporter’s skill combine to create Niall Griffiths, Chris Keil, Harrison Solow, a unique work of narrative art. It’s a vibrant part Peter Griffiths (moderated by Ceri Shaw) O: of American journalism, particularly in national Sat, 11am magazines. What is its future? What is Anglo-Welsh literature and why should anyone care? How Wales strives to reinvent Food & Craft its cultural identity with every new generation. Liz Crain, Charles Heying (moderated by Kelly Clarke) M: Sat, 1pm The Future of Reading Growing numbers of Portlanders make specialty Ursula K. Le Guin, Michael Schaub, Matthew foods and crafts from scratch and make them Stadler (moderated by David Biespiel) P: works of art. Learn about these lively artisan Sun, 11am communities by authors of two recent works Is reading on the decline? Many think so. on the subject. Writers, booksellers, librarians and reviewers all have a stake in the evolving culture of reading, Vern Rutsala: The Poet and His Work however no one has more to gain or lose than (moderated by Peter Sears) MW1: Sat, 5pm readers. A National Book Critics Circle panel. A conversation by regional poets, hosted by Peter Sears, will follow Rutsala’s reading. Writers in the Schools (introduced by Mary Rechner) O: Sun, The Bear Deluxe Speaks 11am Jim Lynch, Jon Raymond C: Sun, 12pm Writers in the Schools (WITS) is a program of In celebration of the Doug Fir Fiction Award, Literary Arts that cultivates young writers and Orlo welcomes Jim Lynch (2010 judge) and supports Oregon authors through semester- Jon Raymond (2009 judge), who will read curlong writing residencies in the Portland public rent work and discuss “place-based writing.” high schools. Writing in Communities Steve Lieber, Stephen Elliot (moderated by Jeffrey Selin) WK: Sat, 11am Members of The Grotto, San Francisco’s famous writers’ community, and Periscope, a Portland comic artist community, discuss their shared experience of creation, procrastination and collaboration that counters the typical loneliness of writing. Everything You Always Wanted to Know about Book Promotion But Were Afraid to Ask Karen Karbo, Kim Dower M: Sun, 12pm It takes more than talent and a great book to gain an audience these days, but what does it take? A writer and publicist/poet discuss the steps, stumbling blocks, downfalls, and successes to making a book a hit. wordstock 2010 | 21 Karl Marlantes © Devin Boswell Powell’s Books Stage Saturday, 12pm Karl Marlantes began his novel about a terrified 21-year-old soldier in Vietnam not long after leaving the military and finished it the year he turned 32. Now he’s 65. What happened in the intervening 33 years? Marlantes, a Yale graduate and Rhodes Scholar who was awarded the Navy Cross, the Bronze Star, two Navy Commendation Medals for valor, two Purple Hearts, and ten air medals for his service in Vietnam, kept rewriting and revising, and the final result—Matterhorn—is an exceptional first novel. Don’t miss this riveting story that The Washington Post claims “reads like adventure and yet…makes even the toughest war stories seem a little pale by comparison.” Mona Simpson © Gaspar Triangle Powell’s Books Stage Saturday, 5pm Mona Simpson tackles the difficult subjects of dysfunctional family relationships with powerful, simple and often beautifully poetic prose. A former editor of The Paris Review, Simpson wrote her first novel, Anywhere But Here (a modern motherdaughter classic), at the age of 29, which won her literary acclaim and a wide following. The Lost Father, A Regular Guy, and Off Keck Road followed. The long-awaited My Hollywood—classic Simpson, this time from the perspective of the mother—is her first novel in ten years. 22 | wordstock 2010 Lauren Kessler, narrative nonfiction writer, is author of six books including My Teenage Werewolf, Dancing with Rose and Stubborn Twig. (Nonfiction) C: Sun, 2pm; M: Sun, 4pm History Pub! From the 40-year struggle to gain the right to vote to the campaign for ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, Oregon’s political and civic landscape has been shaped by women. On October 7, historian Kimberly Jensen, political scientist Melody Rose and activist and former Oregon legislator and both county and city commissioner Gretchen Kafoury will tell the stories of the political challenges Oregon women faced and the victories they won at a special edition of History Pub. Each month, the Oregon Historical Society, Holy Names Heritage Center and Oregon Encyclopedia organize history talks at McMenamins Kennedy School in Northeast Portland, Cornelius Pass Roadhouse in Hillsboro and Edgefield in Troutdale. Join us for beer and history! Thursday, October 7 at 7pm McMenamins Kennedy School 5736 NE 33rd Ave. Free and open to the public Ger Killeen’s books of poetry include A Stone That Will Leap Over the Waves and Signs Following. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 12pm Barbara LaMorticella co-hosts KBOO’s Talking Earth. She participates in Portland poetry from a perch in a fir outside the city. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 11am Bill Lang, history professor at Portland State University, is author of six Northwest history books, including Two Centuries of Lewis and Clark. (Nonfiction) WS: Sun, 3pm Sarahlee Lawrence, after traveling and earning an MS in environmental science and writing, returned to her ranch in hometown Terrabonne, Oregon. (Nonfiction) WK: Sun, 1pm; O: Sun, 4pm Ursula K. Le Guin has published 21 novels and received accolades including the National Book Award. She lives in Portland, Oregon. (Panel) P: Sun, 11am Jonathan Lethem is the author of Chronic City and Motherless Brooklyn. (Fiction) P: Sat, 3pm Todd Levin was a writer for The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien, and we all know how that turned out. P: Sun, 4pm Steve Lieber is an award-winning comic book artist and co-founder of Periscope Studio in Portland, Oregon. (Panel) WK: Sat, 11am Lawrence Lipin is professor of history at Pacific University and an overly satisfied resident of Portland’s Sellwood neighborhood. (Nonfiction) WS: Sun, 3pm Jack Lorts, author of The Meeting-Place of Words, has published widely, if infrequently, in magazines. He’s also mayor of Fossil, Oregon. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 1pm Matt Love, author of Gimme Refuge: The Education of a Caretaker, won the Stewart H. Holbrook Award in 2009. (Nonfiction) M: Sat, 2pm; WK: Sat, 4pm wordstock 2010 | 23 Joel Lovell has been editor at The New forthcoming from Airlie Press in October York Times, Harper’s and GQ. He teaches 2010. (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 11am in the University of Pittsburgh MFA program. (Nonfiction) M: Sat, 4pm; C: Sun, 1pm Richard Meeker is publisher of Portland’s award-winning newsweekly Willamette Jim Lynch has written two novels, Border Week and author of Newspaperman: SI Songs and The Highest Tide, which won Newhouse and the Business of News. the Pacific Northwest Bookseller Award. (Moderator) M: Sun, 4pm C: Sun, 12pm Maile Meloy has written four books, Annabel Lyon’s The Golden Mean is an most recently the story collection Both award winner and bestseller. She lives in Ways Is the Only Way I Want It. (Fiction) British Columbia with her husband and P: Sat, 2pm; M: Sat, 4pm children. (Fiction) WK: Sat, 2pm Jane Mendle is the author of Kissing L.K. Madigan is the author of The in Technicolor, Better off Famous?, and Mermaid’s Mirror and Flash Burnout, win- My Ultimate Sister Disaster. (Fiction/YA) ner of the 2010 Morris YA Debut Award. T: Sat, 4pm (Fiction/YA) M: Sat, 12pm; T: Sun, 1pm Paul Merchant is the William Stafford Karl Marlantes, graduate of Yale Archivist. He was a finalist for the 2007 University and Rhodes Scholar at Oxford Oregon Book Award in Poetry. (Poetry) University, served as a US Marine in MW1: Sat, 12pm Vietnam. (Fiction) P: Sat, 12pm Nathan Meyer is a working writer, Phillip Margolin is the New York Times 40-year-old father of four, unabashed best-selling author of Supreme Justice fanboy of reading in all its forms. and fourteen other legal thrillers and a (Children’s) T: Sun, 11am former criminal defense attorney. (Fiction) M: Sat, 3pm; WK: Sat, 5pm Sydny Miner is Vice President, Executive Editor of Crown Archetype. She edited No Guy Maynard is a writer and editor liv- Ordinary Joes by Larry Colton. (Panel) ing in Eugene, Oregon. The Risk of Being C: Sat, 1pm Ridiculous is his first novel. (Fiction) M: Sun, 1pm Gary Miranda, a Northwest native, has published four collections of poetry and a Win McCormack is currently the editor translation of Rainer Maria Rilke’s Duino in chief of Tin House magazine. He has Elegies. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 3pm written for publications including The Nation. (Nonfiction) M: Sat, 5pm Ander Monson is the author of five books, most recently The Available Adrienne McDonnell has taught at the World and Vanishing Point: Not a Memoir. University of California, Berkeley. The (Nonfiction) C: Sat, 4pm; M: Sun, 11am Doctor and the Diva is her first novel. (Fiction) WK: Sun, 2pm Judith H. Montgomery is the author of Passion (Oregon Book Award for Carter McKenzie teaches, edits and pub- Poetry, 2000), Red Jess, and Pulse & lishes poetry. Her book Out of Refusal is Constellation. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 1pm 24 | wordstock 2010 Target Children’s Stage and Activity Area The Target Children’s Stage and Activity Area at Wordstock invites kids to celebrate reading and writing through engaging activities that encourage all levels of readers to develop and explore the writer’s craft. In addition to hosting readings by children’s authors and illustrators, kids can cozy up with a book in our Story Corner, write a great tale of adventure at the Young Author’s Writing Table or participate in a wide variety of other activities including bookmaking, word games, puzzles and much more! In addition, we have special events featured all weekend: Cosmic Monkey Comic Workshops (Sat/Sun): Come check out these comics workshops for kids, led by Christina “Blue” Crow and Katy Ellis O’Brien! Blue and Katy have been offering a series of workshops for kids at Cosmic Monkey Comics and are excited to share their passion for helping kids create at Wordstock this year! Essential materials are provided, but bringing additional materials (such as a sketchbook or collage materials) is encouraged. Mother-Daughter Book Club (Sat): Cindy Hudson is the author of Book by Book: The Complete Guide to Creating Mother-Daughter Book Clubs (Seal Press, October 2009). She will be here to share her expertise on how mothers can get started with their own mother-daughter book club, including advice and activities on who to invite, where to meet, how to run the meeting and how to choose the books. Dave Hall (Sat): Come take a rollicking ramble down the hootenanny highway with David Hall, Portland’s favorite family musician! Described as “Woody Guthrie meets Raffi on sugar,” David writes, records and performs a variety of original folk songs to entertain and educate children and parents alike. Read to the Dogs (Sun): Help your child gain skills and confidence by reading to a relaxed, non-judgmental, furry friend! Delta Society Pet Partners teams, sponsored by DoveLewis, will be available for your child to experience the joy of reading in a supportive environment. wordstock 2010 | 25 Becca Fitzpatrick © Ali Eisenson Target Children’s Stage, Sunday, 1pm One might say Becca Fitzpatrick was born to tell stories. Despite a detour in college (she got her degree in health), Fitzpatrick has gone from making up plotlines late at night with her older sister to penning the New York Times best-selling young adult novel Hush, Hush. Released at the peak of the supernatural romance buzz in YA, Hush, Hush—the story of a human who falls in love with a fallen angel—was met with huge success. In fact, one might say that fallen angels are the new vampires. Readers’ desires for more from the characters in Hush, Hush helped fuel its sequel, Crescendo, and if the shocking ending is any indication, a third book is likely on the way, as well. Patrick Ness © Debbie Smyth Columbia Sportswear Stage, Saturday, 5pm After conquering audiences in his adoptive home in England, American-born author Patrick Ness is about to take the world by storm. With a huge following overseas, his audience of readers in the US is quickly growing and will only continue after the release of Monsters of Men, the final book in his best-selling Chaos Walking trilogy. A dystopian thriller in the classic sense, the series has drawn widespread comparisons to Suzanne Collins’s best-selling Hunger Games trilogy and has been called “one of the outstanding literary achievements” of this century by London’s The Guardian. Anyone who reads Ness’s Chaos Walking series will quickly agree that it is soon to become a modern literary masterpiece. 26 | wordstock 2010 Susan Morris is a fantasy book writer and editor based in Washington. Her other loves are coffee, acrobatics and debate. (Children’s) T: Sun, 11am The 5th Annual Text Ball The Text Ball is Portland’s celebration of all things text, where attendees are encouraged to come dressed with text-influenced evening attire. This year’s theme is “Text Appeal,” so expect some creative and sexy costumes. Along with live music, dancing and text-based refreshments, attendees can enjoy word games, giant crossword puzzles and “Speech-e-oke,” as well as a costume parade with literary prizes for best outfits. Wordstock attendees can purchase discounted tickets for $8. Otherwise, tickets are $12 in advance and $15 at the door. To buy tickets or view photos from last year’s ball, visit iprc.org. Costumes are encouraged but not required. All proceeds benefit the IPRC’s mission to facilitate creative expression, identity and community by providing access to self-publishing tools and resources. Saturday October 9, 7–11pm at p:ear Gallery 338 NW 6th Ave. Tickets: $8–$15, available at iprc.org Sponsored by Portland Wine Storage John Morrison’s Heaven of the Moment won the 2006 Gorsline Poetry prize and was finalist for the 2008 Oregon Book Award. (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 3pm MrsP.com is an award-winning interactive digital storybook website for children starring TV actress Kathy Kinney. (Children’s) T: Sun, 12pm Joanne B. Mulcahy, author of Remedios: The Healing Life of Eva Castellanoz, has published essays in numerous journals and anthologies. (Nonfiction) WS: Sun, 12pm Kaleb Nation is the author of the Bran Hambric series and lives in southern California. (Fiction/YA) WK: Sun, 4pm; T: Sun, 5pm Patrick Ness is the author of the multi-award-winning Chaos Walking trilogy. Raised in Puyallup, Washington, he currently lives in England. (Fiction/YA) M: Sat, 12pm; C: Sat, 5pm Lars Nordström works as a translator and author, and farms wine grapes in Beavercreek, Oregon. (Prose) MW1: Sat, 1pm Joseph O’Neill’s works include Netherland, which won the PEN/Faulkner Award for fiction, This Is the Life and The Breezes. (Fiction) P: Sun, 2pm Benjamin Percy was raised in central Oregon. He writes for Esquire, and his most recent novel is The Wilding. (Fiction) C: Sat, 2pm Douglas Perry is an award-winning writer. His latest book is The Girls of Murder City: Fame, Lust, and the Beautiful Killers Who Inspired Chicago. (Nonfiction) M: Sun, 11am; W: Sun, 12pm Paulann Petersen’s latest collection of poems is The Voluptuary from Lost Horse Press. She is Oregon’s sixth Poet Laureate. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 11am Richard Pine, founding partner of InkWell Management, has been responsible for nurturing the careers of a number of best-selling authors. (Panel) C: Sat, 1pm wordstock 2010 | 27 Andrew Proctor is the executive director Threshold, won the 2009 Crab Orchard of Literary Arts. (Moderator) WK: Sun, 1pm Series Open Competition and was published in April 2010. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 4pm Robert Michael Pyle, Burroughs Medalist and Guggenheim Fellow, writes Richard Robbins grew up in Southern essay, poetry and fiction along Gray’s California and Montana. His new book of River, deep in southwest Washington. poems is Other Americas, published by (Nonfiction) O: Sun, 5pm Blueroad Press. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 5pm Julia Quinn is the #1 New York Times Glenn Rockowitz is a writer, comebest-selling author of twenty historical dian and four-time cancer survivor. His romance novels. (Fiction) M: Sun, 5pm memoir Rodeo in Joliet is his first book. (Nonfiction) O: Sat, 12pm; WK: Sun, 11am David Rakoff is the author of, most recently, the book Half Empty. He lives John G. Rodwan, Jr., is the author of in New York City. (Nonfiction) P: Sat, 4pm Fighters & Writers, a collection of essays. He lives in Portland, Oregon. (Nonfiction) Joanna Smith Rakoff’s best-selling M: Sat, 2pm novel, A Fortunate Age, won the 2010 Goldberg Prize for Emerging Fiction. Jason Roeder is a staff writer for The (Fiction) O: Sat, 4pm Onion. He has also been published in The New Yorker, Salon, McSweeney’s Ted Rall, winner of the Robert F. Kennedy and elsewhere. P: Sun, 4pm Journalism Award and a Pulitzer Prize finalist, is a political cartoonist, opinion Larry Rohter, author of Brazil on the columnist, graphic novelist and war cor- Rise, spent 14 years in Brazil reporting respondent. (Nonfiction) WK: Sat, 3pm for The New York Times and Newsweek. (Nonfiction) C: Sat, 11am Jarold Ramsey’s four poetry books and most of his prose are grounded in Robin Romm is the author of two books, the Oregon range country east of the The Mother Garden (short stories), and Cascades. (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 5pm The Mercy Papers (memoir). (Nonfiction) P: Sat, 11am; O: Sat, 12pm Jon Raymond is the author of The HalfLife, a novel, and Livability, a collection Vern Rutsala’s twelve poetry collections of stories. (Fiction) M: Sat, 3pm; C: Sun, include A Moment’s Equation, a National 12pm Book Award finalist, and How We Spent Our Time. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 5pm Mary Rechner is a fiction writer who lives and works in Portland, Oregon. Scott Sadil lives with his family in Hood (Fiction) O: Sat, 1pm; M: Sat, 4pm River, Oregon, where he writes, teaches and navigates a fishing life. (Fiction) WS: Susan Rich’s three collections of poems Sun, 11am include The Alchemist’s Kitchen. Her work appears in Poetry International Kevin Sampsell is an influential figure and The Southern Review. (Poetry) MW1: in small press publishing and the author Sat, 3pm of the memoir A Common Pornography. (Nonfiction) P: Sat, 11am; WS: Sat, 3pm Jennifer Richter’s first poetry collection, 28 | wordstock 2010 Michael Schaub is the managing editor Moon and The English Disease. (Fiction) of Bookslut.com and a book reviewer for O: Sun, 12pm; O: Sun, 1pm NPR. (Panel) P: Sun, 11am Floyd Skloot has won three Pushcart Penelope Scambly Schott’s Crow Prizes, two PNBA Book Awards, two Mercies won the first Sarah Lantz prize Oregon Book Awards and a PEN USA from Calyx Press. Schott received a 2008 Literary Award. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 2pm Oregon Book Award for Poetry. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 4pm Sledgehammer Writing Contest: Listen to this year’s word-crafting champions Matt Schumacher’s second book, The read the stories that won the latest Fire Diaries, and first book, Spilling the 36-hour challenge. Don’t miss the prizeMoon, were published by Wordcraft of package unveiling! (Group) WS: Sat, 12pm Oregon. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 11am Barry Smith is a retired college professor Jeffrey Selin is a writer and the founder living in Iowa. He just published his first of the Writers’ Dojo. (Moderator) WK: Sat, novel, Only Milo. (Fiction) WS: Sun, 11am 11am Kevin Smokler is co-founder and CEO David Shannon is the internationally of BookTour.com, which provided affordacclaimed creator of more than 20 picture able tools for authors promoting books. books, including No, David!, a Caldecott He lives in San Francisco. (Panel) M: Sun, Honor Book. (Children’s) T: Sat, 12pm 4pm Heather Sharfeddin is the author of four novels: Mineral Spirits, Windless Summer, Sweetwater Burning and the upcoming Damaged Goods. (Fiction) O: Sun, 1pm Ceri Shaw, graduate of University College Cardiff, South Wales, former teacher and Welsh ex-pat, resides in Portland, Oregon. (Moderator) O: Sat, 11am Mary E. Soden has lived in Oregon since the 1960s. She lives in Mosier, where she writes and watches the river. (Prose) MW2: Sun, 1pm Tatjana Soli’s debut novel is The Lotus Eaters. Her short stories are cited in BAAS and nominated for the Pushcart Prize. (Fiction) M: Sat, 11am; WK: Sat, 2pm Harrison Solow is a Pushcart Prize–winning author, university professor and writer Scot Siegel, urban planner and author in residence. Her newest book is Felicity & of three poetry books, is known for his Barbara Pym. (Fiction) O: Sat, 11am innovative lyricism and engaging reading style. (Poetry) MW2: Sat, 5pm Ana Maria Spagna, of Stehekin, Washington, is the author of Test Ride Mona Simpson is author of Anywhere on the Sunnyland Bus and Now Go Home. But Here, The Lost Father, A Regular Guy, (Nonfiction) M: Sat, 5pm Off Keck Road and My Hollywood. (Fiction) P: Sat, 5pm Brie Spangler is an author-illustrator from Portland, Oregon. When not drawJoseph Skibell is the author of the nov- ing pictures or writing words, she avoids els A Curable Romantic, A Blessing on the direct sunlight. (Children’s) T: Sat, 1pm wordstock 2010 | 29 Wordstock at the Library Join Wordstock and the Multnomah County Library for two free festival “sneak-peek” events at the Central Library. Young Adult Reading Showcase Tuesday, October 5 | 6pm | Central Library | 810 SW 10th Ave. Three of Portland’s most popular young adult authors will read from their newest books. • Heather Vogel Frederick, Pies & Prejudice • Amanda Howells, The Summer of Skinny Dipping • Nancy Coffelt, Listen Nonfiction Reading Showcase Wednesday, October 6 | 6pm | Central Library | 810 SW 10th Ave. Join Wordstock founder Larry Colton and friends for new nonfiction readings by Portland’s finest writers of the craft. • Larry Colton, No Ordinary Joes: The Extraordinary True Story of Four Submariners in War and Love and Life • Wendy Burden, Dead End Gene Pool: A Memoir • Kevin Sampsell, A Common Pornography: A Memoir 30 | wordstock 2010 Kim Stafford is founding director of the Northwest Writing Institute and author of a dozen books of poetry and prose. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 5pm Kilong Ung is a Cambodian genocide survivor, Reed College alumnus, author, founder of Golden Leaf Education Foundation and much more. (Nonfiction) M: Sat, 11am; WS: Sat, 2pm Matt Stewart’s first novel, The French Revolution, has been called “wildly imaginative” and “brilliant.” It originally debuted on Twitter. (Fiction) M: Sun, 1pm; WK: Sun, 4pm David Vann’s Legend of a Suicide won seven awards, is translated into nine languages, and is a New Yorker Book Club book. (Fiction) C: Sat, 12pm; O: Sat, 1pm Loretta Stinson, recipient of an Oregon Literary Fellowship in 2008. Her first novel, Little Green, was published by Hawthorne Books. (Fiction) O: Sat, 4pm Jodi Varon is author of Drawing to an Inside Straight: The Legacy of an Absent Father, translator, teacher and editor. (Prose) MW1: Sat, 1pm Cheryl Strayed is the author of the novel Viva Las Vegas is a stripper, author, Torch and the forthcoming memoir Wild. actor, breast cancer survivor and Williams (Panel) WK: Sun, 4pm College graduate. She is beloved, dynamic, insightful. (Nonfiction) WS: Sat, Anita Sullivan has tuned pianos, 3pm; WS: Sun, 2pm arranged literary events, gardened and written poems and essays in the Vanessa Veselka, Portlander, has been Willamette Valley since 1981. (Poetry) published in Bust, Bitch, Yeti Magazine MW1: Sun, 11am and Tin House. Zazen, her first novel, is forthcoming. (Fiction) WK: Sat, 1pm Ron Talney has published five poetry books, most recently A Secret Weeping Willy Vlautin, born and raised in Reno, of Stones from Plain View Press. (Poetry) Nevada, has published three novels, The MW1: Sat, 2pm Motel Life, Northline, and Lean on Pete. (Fiction) WS: Sat, 3pm; WK: Sun, 3pm Pema Teeter is a story coach, editor, copywriter, blogger, playwright, imagi- Voicecatcher is a nonprofit women’s narium. (Moderator) WK: Sat, 1pm collective that provides the local writing community with publishing opportuniTIME OUT™: The Mother of all Comedy ties, writing scholarships and editorial Shows is a fresh entertainment alterna- guidance. (Group) WS: Sun, 1pm tive for moms to perform intelligent comedy. (Group) WK: Sun, 5pm Jess Walter has been a National Book Award finalist, an Edgar Allan Poe Karen Braucher (K.B.) Tobin is the Award winner and America’s worst catauthor of Poetic License To Kill, a humor- tle rancher. (Fiction) P: Sun, 1pm; M: Sun, ous murder mystery set in Portland, 2pm Oregon. (Fiction/YA) MW2: Sun, 12pm Renée Watson, author, teaches creative Zoe Trope published her high school writing in New York and facilitates crememoir, Please Don’t Kill the Freshman, ative arts workshops with children who when she was 17 years old. (Prose) MW1: have experienced trauma. (Children’s) T: Sun, 5pm Sat, 11am; T: Sat, 5pm wordstock 2010 | 31 Paul Provenza Powell’s Books Stage, Sunday, 5pm Paul Provenza spent decades as an actor and stand-up comic, with stints on TV shows like Northern Exposure and West Wing. But with his turn as producer and director of the nowclassic The Aristocrats, Provenza discovered he was quite good at interviewing other comics. He started doing so in green rooms at festivals around the world, and this year Showtime began airing The Green Room, a series in which Provenza interviews the likes of Martin Mull, Sandra Bernhard and Eddie Izzard. In his new book—Satiristas: Comedians, Contrarians, Raconteurs and Vulgarians— Provenza interviews some of the best satirists to critique American culture, like Margaret Cho, Stephen Colbert, Lewis Black, Lily Tomlin and George Carlin. Jess Walter Powell’s Books Stage, Sunday, 1pm Spokane’s Jess Walter is that rare writer whose work seems so effortless that it’s hard to imagine how it can be so funny. At least that’s the case with his latest novel, The Financial Lives of the Poets, in which the main character, having gambled his family’s livelihood on a ridiculous website that dispenses financial advice in blank verse, decides the way out of his massive debt is to deal pot to his middle-aged friends. Hilarity ensues, but that’s not to say that hilarity is Walter’s only talent: His noir novel, Citizen Vince, won the 2005 Edgar Award, and his post-9/11 satire, The Zero, was a finalist for the National Book Award. 32 | wordstock 2010 Joseph O’Neill © Lisa Ackerman Powell’s Books Stage, Sunday, 2pm The Irish-born writer Joseph O’Neill, who was raised in Mozambique, South Africa, Turkey, Iran and Holland, and now makes his home in New York City, is perhaps more attuned to the subtleties of cultural identity than the rest of us. These sensibilities are on brilliant display in Netherland, his PEN/Faulkner Award–winning novel of expatriates in America in the shadow of 9/11. He now trains that sensibility on his own forebears in Blood-Dark Track, a family history that centers on his grandfathers—one an Irish farmer and member of the IRA, the other a Turkish hotelier jailed by the British on suspicion of being a spy. The result is a compelling exploration of politics, ethnicity and family. Ted Rall © Ted Rall Wieden+Kennedy Stage, Saturday, 3pm Ted Rall, a Pulitzer Prize finalist and two-time winner of the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for outstanding coverage of the problems of the disadvantaged, is a well-known political cartoonist, opinion columnist, award-wining graphic novelist and occasional war correspondent. Called “the most controversial cartoonist in America,” Rall is fearless and keeps the public informed and aware of difficult issues that effect their lives. Publishers Weekly states, “Rall is known first and foremost for his political cartoons, but, man, he knows how to tell a story, too.” His 2010 book, Anti-American Manifesto, arguably his most radical book published in decades, argues that it is up to us—not those prepared to fill the power vacuum from a collapsing US for their own benefit—to effect change, opening our minds to the possibility of creating a radically different form of government and economic infrastructure. He is currently reporting from Afghanistan. wordstock 2010 | 33 Kary Wayson’s poems have appeared in Crazyhorse, Poetry Northwest, The Nation, The Best American Poetry and the Pushcart Prize anthology. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 11am Robert Weaver taught poetry writing at Oregon State University for a number of years and found travel shaped his poetry. (Poetry) MW2: Sun, 1pm Craig Welch is the author of the nonfiction detective story Shell Games: Rogues, Smugglers, and the Hunt for Nature’s Bounty. (Nonfiction) M: Sun, 11am; WS: Sun, 12pm Conrad Wesselhoeft is the author of Adios, Nirvana. He lives with his three children and poodle in west Seattle. (Fiction/YA) M: Sat, 12pm; T: Sun, 2pm Gemma Whelan is an award-winning director, screenwriter and educator. Fiona: Stolen Child is her first novel. (Fiction) WK: Sun, 1pm; O: Sun, 2pm David Wiesner is the Caldecott medal–winning author of Tuesday, The Three Pigs and Flotsam. He lives near Philadelphia. (Children’s) T: Sat, 12pm Crystal Williams is a poet and a native of Detroit, Michigan. (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 1pm Mark London Williams writes YA fiction and is a contributor to the anthology Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out. (Children’s) T: Sat, 11am; T: Sat, 5pm Laura Winter’s love for improvised music informs her use of language and performance. Her work is widely published, translated and set to music. (Poetry) MW1: Sun, 4pm Patty Wixon’s chapbook, Airing the Sheets, is forthcoming from Finishing Line Press. She’s a researcher in the William Stafford Archives. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 12pm Elizabeth Woody (Navajo/Warm Springs/Wasco/ Yakama) has published poetry, short fiction and essays; she is also a visual artist. (Poetry) MW1: Sat, 12pm Comics at the Crossroads In recent years comics have moved from the cultural fringes into the artistic and literary mainstream. Here in the Pacific Northwest, a growing community of comic artists, including more than half a dozen major comic publishing houses and many smaller ones, are making a major impact on the genre. The exhibition Comics at the Crossroads: Art of the Graphic Novel examines this vibrant and evolving art form with a focus on 40 Northwest artists who are established stars and emerging lights in the comic art universe. See a selection of the pieces from Comics at the Crossroads in the Stumptown Comics Garden at the Wordstock Book Fair. On view now through November 15, 2010 at Maryhill Museum of Art 35 Maryhill Museum Drive Goldendale, WA 98620 www.maryhillmuseum.org Rick Yancey is the author of the award-winning The Monstrumologist Series. (Fiction/YA) C: Sun, 4pm; T: Sun, 5pm For more Wordstock information, including extended author bios, photos and the most current schedule, go to wordstockfestival.com. 34 | wordstock 2010 wordstock for writers Wordstock for Writers is a series of workshops on the craft of writing that will take place during the book festival on Saturday, October 9, and Sunday, October 10, at the Oregon Convention Center. Writers of all levels of experience and all genres will have the opportunity to work with some of the finest writers in the country. All Wordstock for Writers workshops will be in Oregon Convention Center rooms B117–B119, just outside the main exhibit hall. COST: $35 for the first workshop, $60 for two, and $20 each additional. Register for workshops and see times and locations at wordstockfestival.com. saturday workshops Point of View: You, Me & Everyone We Know The Writing Life: A Serious Pursuit of Liz Prato Self-Definition In this information-packed talk we’ll examine Harrison Solow contemporary examples of the ways POV In this seminar, we will address writing works in fiction and nonfiction, opening up under a variety of conditions, about a new worlds that will transform your writing. variety of subjects, under the guise of 10:30–11:45am, Room B119 ourselves and alter egos, in company and in isolation. 15 Techniques: The Secrets to Better 9–10:15am, Room B118 Protagonists Janice Hussein Write Yourself into Fiction She’ll show you 15 techniques of Heidi Durrow characterization, so that your readers The old adage says “write what you empathize with your protagonist and know,” but it can be tricky to build a fiction continue to turn the pages of your novel. structure on real life experiences and 12–1:15pm, Room B118 emotions. How do you fictionalize life? 9–10:15am, Room B119 Meaningful Repetition: Tropes in Fiction and Nonfiction Starting a Series: What You Need to Ben Percy Know Before You Sit Down to Write Consider the orange. In The Godfather, April Henry every time one appears, bad things Come learn her secrets for setting up a happen. In this workshop, we’ll examine series that will continue to work three, five tropes as the building blocks of plot, or even eleven books down the line. character and thematic development. 10:30–11:45am, Room B118 12–1:15pm, Room B119 wordstock 2010 | 35 Writing from Experience Stephen Elliott We’ll talk about the meaning of honesty, who owns your story and the difference between being honest and letting the truth get in the way of the story. 1:30–2:45pm, Room B118 seriously and relies on solid facts. 4:30–5:45pm, Room B119 sunday workshops Crafting a Writing Life Lauren Kessler This workshop will help you get serious about your writing life, from figuring out a daily schedule to keeping self-sabotage at bay. 9–10:15am, Room B118 How to Pitch a Magazine Story Joel Lovell This course covers how to send story queries to magazine editors, including considering the magazine’s audience, framing and presenting your idea and more. Every Word Matters! Making 1:30–2:45pm, Room B119 Sentences that Scream Matt Stewart Where Stories Converge In this workshop, you’ll learn the strategies Ana Maria Spagna and techniques to turbocharge your We’ll explore the advantages of sentences so they’ll leap off the page. telling multiple stories to create 9–10:15am, Room B119 unexpected connections, both actual and metaphorical, that add depth and Funny Is the New Deep resonance to your work. Steve Almond 3–4:15pm, Room B118 Writing funny doesn’t mean sacrificing depth. We’ll look at the work of Simon Jumping Tracks: Character and Rich, Ian Frazier, George Saunders and Authority in the Narrative Voice others to show how you can be funny and Vanessa Veselka break hearts while doing it. Authentic character voice goes well 10:30–11:45am, Room B118 beyond dialogue and descriptive flair; it lies in how characters order their thoughts Creative Nonfiction: The Literature and what they think of next. of Fact 3–4:15pm, Room B119 Jesse Katz Participants will be invited to employ the Writing Naked: Memoir Writing for the techniques of the finest fiction—character, Brave plot, setting, dialogue, suspense—while Kerry Cohen Hoffman adhering to rigorous standards of truth Get to the exposed, gritty truth in your and observation. stories and get feedback to help to isolate 10:30–11:45am, Room B119 strengths and areas to improve. 4:30–5:45pm, Room B118 Omigod! I Just Self-Published! (Is That Allowed?) Fair but Biased: Fact-Based Opinion Steve Almond Writing in the Age of Blogs In this session, we’ll discuss the risks Ted Rall and opportunities afforded by the printWriters have the opportunity to rise to the on-demand revolution and what it means top of their field—by presenting their points to build a readership from the bottom up. of view in a way that takes opponents 12–1:15pm, Room B118 36 | wordstock 2010 wordstock for writers cont. Words Alive! Jumping from Page to Stage like A Pro The Poet’s Palate VoiceCatcher Willa Schneberg Want to present your work during a literary We will feed our poetic appetites and event? Join us to learn how to prepare and awaken our palates on the page. We’ll use practice so that your performance delights poems by major contemporary poets to every audience! create new poems good enough to eat. 4:30–5:45pm, Room B118 12–1:15pm, Room B119 The Actor’s Studio Method of Character Fund Your Project: Grant Writing for Development: Knowing Your Characters the Literary Artist Inside-Out Gigi Rosenberg Joanna Smith Rakoff Literary artists learn to write compelling We’ll look at an approach to character and lively grant applications to fund their development informed by Method acting, writing projects. Discover how to research in which the writer strives to get to know her funding, decode application questions characters as deeply and fully as possible. and let the grant-writing process focus 4:30–5:45pm, Room B119 career goals. 1:30–2:45pm, Room B118 Please note that times listed below are subject to change. Go to wordstockfes- Writing Dialogue in the Novel tival.com for the most current schedule Chris Keil and room assignments. This workshop contains lecture, discussion, examples and participation in writing—all focused on technical characteristics of dialogue in order to intensify mood, express emotional connections and more. 1:30–2:45pm, Room B119 From Blog to Book Deal Candace Dempsey In this workshop, learn how to create a blog that will get you noticed, secure a literary agent and choose the book deal that’s right for you. 3–4:15pm, Room B118 Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Texts, but Were Afraid to Ask: or Five Keys to Textual Healing Joseph Skibell This workshop will cover definition of dramatic action, working in scenes, consistent point of view, starting near the end and plot vs. narrative. 3–4:15pm, Room B119 wordstock 2010 | 37 Larry Colton Powell’s Books Stage, Sunday, 3pm Professional baseball player. High school teacher. Weekly columnist. Pulitzer nominee. (And, of course, founder of Wordstock.) Portland’s Larry Colton has already lived his share of lives, but as spectacular as they have been, none compare to those of the four soldiers he chronicles in No Ordinary Joes: The Extraordinary True Story of Four Submariners in War and Love and Life. In his first book since Counting Coup in 2000, Colton shares the remarkable history of four men changed forever by their time together in the extreme circumstance of war. As devastating as it is heartening, No Ordinary Joes cements Colton’s stature as a master of character study and a born storyteller. Colton will be interviewed by Dr. Jack Ramsay, a WWII veteran and former coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, along with Tim McCoy, the last surviving soldier Colton writes about in his book Timothy Egan © Sophie Egan Powell’s Books Stage, Sunday, 12pm A winner of both the National Book Award (for his book on the Dust Bowl, The Worst Hard Time) and a Pulitzer Prize (during his time as a reporter), as well as a columnist for The New York Times and a regular contributor to the BBC, Timothy Egan is one of the most productive and celebrated writers in the US. His newest book, The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt and the Fire that Saved America, trains his eye for narrative history on one of the formative events of the Pacific Northwest. Don’t miss this chance to hear from one of the most astute chroniclers of contemporary America. 38 | wordstock 2010 wordstock for teachers presents: Classroom Publishing Erick Gordon Classroom publishing involves more than printing a book. It allows students to use their individual talents to create something that can actually support their community. In this one-day conference, educators and publishing experts from around the country will show how publishing is within reach for students of all grade and skill levels. These workshops will showcase hands-on lessons to make reading and writing exciting for everyone. Teachers will have the opportunity to work with publishing, education and artistic professionals who use their chosen mediums—comics, poetry, photography and art—to create one-of-a-kind publishing experiences for students. The instructors will discuss strategies to encourage students to write with purpose and for an audience. The keynote speaker will be Erick Gordon, nationally recognized classroom-publishing expert and founder of the Student Press Initiative at Teachers College, Columbia University. Friday, October 8 (Oregon Statewide In-Service Day) 8am–4pm The Ambridge Event Center 1333 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Portland, OR 97232 Cost: $225, which includes a copy of Classroom Publishing: A Practical Guide for Teachers, lunch and more. Eight seat hours; one-credit option available through University of Oregon. Space is limited. For more information or to register, go to wordstockfestival.com. Wordstock for Teachers is a professional development program designed to help K–8 teachers improve their writing instruction and their students’ writing achievement. Since 1997 it has helped over 1,700 teachers throughout Oregon and southwest Washington. Wordstock for Teachers is sponsored by the Oregon Education Association. wordstock 2010 | 39 wordstock book festival map The Wordstock Exhibit Hall holds all exhibitors and three stages: Target Children’s Stage (T) Powell’s Books Stage (P) Columbia Sportswear Stage (C) Six stages are located in meeting rooms located just outside the Exhibit Hall: C123 — McMenamins Stage (M) C124 — Wieden + Kennedy Stage (WK) C120–C121 — Oregon Education Association Stage (O) C122 — Wordstock Community Stage (WS) C126 — Mountain Writers Stage 1 (MW1) C125 — Mountain Writers Stage 2 (MW2) Wordstock for Writers workshops will be held in meeting rooms B117–B119, located outside the Exhibit Hall. wordstock exhibit hall B119 B118 B117 C120 C121 C122 C126 C123 C125 C124 40 | wordstock 2010 wordstock saturday schedule Columbia Sportswear Stage (C) Powell’s Books Stage (P) Target Children’s Stage (T) OEA Stage (O) Kevin Sampsell & Robin Romm Jeff Houghtaling, Renee Watson & Mark Williams Welsh Identity in Literature Niall Griffiths, Chris Keil, Harrison Solow, Peter Griffiths Mod. Ceri Shaw Modern Memoir Glenn Rockowitz, Tom Grimes Mod. Robin Romm 11:00 Lesley Hazelton & Larry Rohter 12:00 Why Write Short? Anthony Doerr, David Vann, Aimee Bender Mod. Meg Story Karl Marlantes David Wiesner & David Shannon 1:00 Writer, Editor & Agent Larry Colton, Sydny Miner, Richard Pine Aimee Bender & Lan Samantha Chang Tad Hills, Matt Holm & Brie Spangler David Vann & Mary Rechner 2:00 Anthony Doerr & Benjamin Percy Maile Meloy Dale E. Basye & Mac Barnett Wendy Burden 3:00 Steve Almond & Kristin Hersh Jonathan Lethem Kerry Cohen Hoffman & Heather Vogel Frederick Tom Grimes & Brian Doyle 4:00 Stephen Elliott & Ander Monson David Rakoff 5:00 Patrick Ness Mona Simpson Jane Mendle, Adam Joanna Smith Rakoff Jay Epstein & & Loretta Stinson Andrew Jacobson Writing for Children Mac Barnett, Renee Watson, Mark Williams Mod. Dana Plautz Bill Carter * Items in red denote a panel or conversation. See page 18 for complete listings. ** All times and stages subject to change. Please visit wordstockfestival.com for complete and up-to-date information. wordstock 2010 | 41 McMenamins Stage (M) Wieden+Kennedy Wordstock Stage Mountain Writers Mountain Writers Stage (WK) (WS) Stage 1 (MW1) Stage 2 (MW2) From the Writing in Front Lines Communities Matt Bors, Tatjana Steve Lieber, Soli, Kilong Ung Stephen Elloit Mod. Tim Mod. Jeffrey Selin DuRoche Diane Hammond Paulann Petersen Kary Wayson & Matt Schumacher Sledgehammer Patty Wixon & Paul Merchant Ger Killeen & Tim Hunt The Ghosts with Food & Craft the Most Myrlin A. Hermes Liz Crain, Charles Amanda Howells, & Lucy Jane Heying Emily Chenoweth, Bledsoe Mod. Kelly Clarke Vanessa Veselka Mod. Pema Teeter Jodi Varon & Lars Nordström Roger Weaver & Jack Lorts Matt Love & John G. Rodwan, Jr. YA Gets Real Patrick Ness, L.K. Madigan, Conrad Wesselhoeft, Mod. Anne Osterlund Selling the Movie Rights Phillip Margolin, Jon Raymond, Adam Jay Epstein, Andrew Jacobson John Addiego & Bo Caldwell Tatjana Soli & Annabel Lyon Margaret Chula & Kilong Ung Floyd Skloot & Greg Chaimov Suzanne Burns & Michele Glazer Matt Bors & Ted Rall Literary Lives Monica Drake, Viva Las Vegas, Willy Vlautin Mod. Kevin Sampsell Susan Rich & Kelli Russell Agodon Kim Dower & Christopher Howell The Attic Writers Workshop: A Showcase Charles Goodrich & Jennifer Richter Judith Arcana & Duane Ackerson Vern Rutsala Scott Siegel & David Filer State of Story Regional Voices Trevor Houser, Robin Cody, Matt Mary Rechner, Love, Benjamin Maile Meloy, Lan Percy, Brian Doyle Samantha Chang Mod. Susan Mod. Joel Lovell Denning Win McCormack & Ana Maria Spagna Phillip Margolin 42 | wordstock 2010 wordstock sunday schedule Columbia Sportswear Stage (C) Powell’s Books Stage (P) Target Children’s Stage (T) OEA Stage (O) 11:00 Emily Chenoweth & Heidi Durrow The Future of Reading Ursula K. Le Guin, Michael Schaub, Matthew Stadler Mod. David Biespiel Nina Hess, Susan Morris & Nathan Meyer Writers in the Schools 12:00 Orlo/Bear Deluxe’s Doug Fir Fiction Award Jon Raymond & Jim Lynch Timothy Egan Bonny Becker, Carson Ellis & Mrs. P Imagining the Past Joseph Skibell, Gabrielle Burton, Jessica Francis Kane Mod. Barbara Mahony 1:00 The Long Story Joel Lovell & Randy Gragg Jess Walter L.K. Madigan & Becca Fitzpatrick Joseph Skibell & Heather Sharfeddin 2:00 Lauren Kessler & Jesse Katz Joseph O’Neill Conrad Wesselhoeft & Amanda Howells Gemma Whelan & Kathleen Wakefield 3:00 Myla Goldberg Larry Colton (with Dr. Jack Ramsay and Tim McCoy) Nancy Coffelt & April Henry Gabrielle Burton & Jessica Francis Kane 4:00 Creature Feature Becca Fitzpatrick, Rick Yancey, Joey Comeau Mod. Sara Gundell Scott Jacobson, Jason Roeder & Todd Levin Joelle Anthony & Cecil Castellucci Saralee Lawrence & Harriet Fasenfest 5:00 Graham Hancock Paul Provenza Kaleb Nation & Rick Yancey Robert Michael Pyle * Items in red denote a panel or conversation. See page 18 for complete listings. ** All times and stages subject to change. Please visit wordstockfestival.com for complete and up-to-date information. wordstock 2010 | 43 McMenamins Stage (M) Wieden+Kennedy Wordstock Stage Mountain Writers Mountain Writers Stage (WK) (WS) Stage 1 (MW1) Stage 2 (MW2) Writing Nonfiction Creatively Glenn Rockowitz Craig Welch, & Joey Comeau Douglas Perry, Ander Monson Scott Sadil & Barry Smith Carter McKenzie & Anita Sullivan Barbara LaMorticella & Cindy Williams Gutierrez Joanne Mulcahy & Craig Welch Tom Bremer & Jim Grabill K.B. Tobin & Leanne Grabel Voicecatcher Crystal Williams & Robin Cody Judith Montgomery & Mary Soden Arianne Cohen & Viva Las Vegas Ron Talney & Karen Holmberg Carl Adamschick & Tim Barnes Dave Jarecki & John Morrison Gary Miranda & Howard Aaron Mod. Wayne Garcia Book Promotion Karen Karbo & Kim Dower Candace Dempsey & Douglas Perry First Book, First Person Matt Stewart & Guy Maynard Cracking Up Is Hard To Do Jess Walter, Steve Almond Mod. Courtenay Hameister What Works for Me Karen Karbo, Joanna Smith Rakoff, Heidi W. Durrow Wendy Burden, Sarahlee Lawrence, Gemma Whelan Mod. Andrew Proctor Thea Cooper & Adrienne McDonnell Writing Good History Willy Vlautin & Jim Lynch Mod. David Biespiel Larry Lipan, Marianne Keddington-Lang, Bill Lang, Mod. Eliza Canty-Jones Brave New World Lauren Kessler, Rhonda Hughes, Kevin Smokler Mod. Richard Meeker Status Update Matt Stewart, Kaleb Nation, Cheryl Strayed Mod. Liz Prato Laura Winter & Elizabeth Woody Martha Gies & Penelope Scambly Smith Julia Quinn Time Out! Jarold Ramsey & Zoe Trope Kim Stafford & Richard Robbins 44 | wordstock 2010 wordstock exhibitor list Booth # Booth Name 419 Airlie Press Booth # Booth Name Booth # Booth Name 721 Ibex Studios: Adventures in Creative Writing 612 ALL Publications & The Mighty Pen, LLC 402 Pacific University Master of Fine Arts in Writing 904 Allport Editions 1002 Independent Publishing and Resource Center 602 Pathfinder Books Pathos Literary Magazine 318 Indigo Editing & Publications 205 620 Ameri Cymru - Anglo Welsh Literature 105 Piel Canela Peru Ink & Paper Group 805 604 Anvil Press Portland Public Schools Inkwater Press 618 712 Artifacts/Book Darts Portland Review 406 ithaka collage cards 417 204 Association of Personal Historians Portland Writers 718 James Boyle 406 405 The Attic: A Haven for Writers The Present Press 707 Jezebel Press 623 Profile Theatre 806 626 Propeller Books Bare Bones Press Just An Ordinary Little Dog 621 413 Barefoot Books 1007 Literary Arts 614 PSU’s MFA Program & the English Department 1013 Bath Fitter 621 Lumenhorse Press 321 RainTown Press 307 Black Heron Press 800 Mac Pac 905 Reading Local 305 Book-Buddy 726 Madrone Press LLC 309 Rose Alley Press 724 C-SPAN ST 422 Maryhill Museum of Art 415 616 C3 Publications 716 Calyx, Inc. 701 Marylhurst University English Literature & Writing Department Sitka Center for Art and Ecology 207 Soaring Sparrow Press 909 The Children’s Book Bank 108 The Starving Writer 624 McKenzie Books 1005 Chin Music Press 808 T.J. Blossom 705 Mt. Writers Series 717 Copper Canyon Press 908 Target ST 324 Cosmic Monkey Comics 713 319 418 Council of Literary Magazines & Presses Multnomah County Library Title Wave Used Bookstore Time Out Comedy presents: Words By Your Mama 613 Navillus Press 409 Tin House 719 Crab Creek Review 317 The New York Times 320 Unshelved ST 425 Dark Horse Comics 1009 907 Veronica Lane Books 806 Echoes of Avalon Northwest Association of Book Publishers 802 Vintage Journals 804 Edgar Font’s Adventure Series 417 VoiceCatcher 1006 703 Washington State University Press 901 West Coast Vinyl 421 304 807 OEA 617 Ooligan Press Exterminating Angel Press 606 Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission 1011 Film Action Oregon 1012 Oregon Cultural Trust 404 Fishtrap Inc. 303 Oregon Historical Society 308 Whirlwind Publishing (& Speaking Services) 313 Franklin Beedle & Associates 403 Oregon Humanities 615 Whispers from the Ashes 608 Oregon Library Association 600 Willamette Week Willamette Writers 1010 Oregon Poetry Association 720 301 Wordstock 709 Oregon State University Press 404 Write Around Portland 1004 Write Bloody Publishing 725 Writers Block Ltd. 109 Writers’ Dojo Note: ST=Stumptown Comics Garden 408 Friends of the Multnomah County Library 306 Goddard College 316 Golden Leaf 1003 Gorham Printing, shortrun book printer 312 Oregon Writers Colony 801 The Grove Review 416 Orlo 209 Happy Hour Guidebooks 401 p:ear 407 Hawthorne Books wordstock 2010 | 45 wordstock exhibit hall 100 102 104 106 108 105 107 109 204 206 208 205 207 209 304 306 308 312 314 316 318 320 Columbia Sportswear Stage 1000 1001 Beer Garden Concessions Free Books 322 324 326 Stumptown Comics Garden 1100 301 303 305 307 309 313 315 317 319 321 323 325 327 1101 400 402 404 406 408 412 414 416 418 420 422 424 426 1102 1103 401 403 405 407 409 413 415 417 419 421 425 427 500 Powell’s Stage 1002 1003 500 1004 1005 600 602 604 606 608 612 614 616 618 620 1007 601 603 605 607 609 613 615 617 619 621 1008 700 702 704 706 708 712 714 716 718 720 624 626 623 625 627 1105 722 724 726 1106 1006 1104 1107 1009 701 703 705 707 709 1010 800 802 804 806 808 1012 801 803 805 807 809 1013 900 902 904 906 908 901 903 905 907 909 713 715 717 719 721 725 727 729 1011 1014 1015 Target Children’s Corner Target Children’s Stage Stop by Willamette Week’s lounge in celebration of WordStock 2010 wweek.com WE FICTION GRAMMAR KNOWLEDGE PAGE TURNERS AUTHORS PROTAGONISTS CREATIVITY BOOKS The OREGON EDUCATION ASSOCIATION is proud to partner with WORDSTOCK in pursuit of lifelong learning. WES works! FAST • FRIENDLY • COMFORTABLE Why drive? Ride WES. WES Commuter Rail gives you time to read. •ComfortableseatsandwirelessInternet onboard •Lessstressfromnothavingtodeal withtraffic •EasyconnectionswithTriMetbusand MAX,andSMARTbuses,forservice throughouttheregion •ConnectionswithCherriotsandSMART forservicetoandfromSalem Plan your trip at trimet.org EAT SMART BUY LOCAL NEW SEASONS MARKET The friendliest store in town. Watch for our tenth location opening in October! 41st and SE Hawthorne • www.newseasonsmarket.com Mountain Writers Series is one of the nation’s longest run- ning literary series. In cooperation with a network of literary presenters throughout the Pacific Northwest, Mountain Writers Series works to bring writers to all communities in the region. Since 2005, Mountain Writers has sponsored Wordstock Festival for the Book by scheduling and hosting literary readings on two stages during the weekend events. MWS hosts not only the primary poetry stages, but also features fiction and nonfiction readings. During the history of Wordstock, Mountain Writers has presented over 200 of the finest writers on its stage http://www.mountainwriters.org pdxmws@mountainwriters.org Mountain Writers Series 2804 SE 27th Avenue, #2 Portland OR 97202 © 2008 Target Stores. The Bullseye Design, Target and the 5% Bullseye Design are trademarks of Target Brands, Inc. All rights reserved. 697454 D O G O O D E R When you shop at Target, we contribute 5% of our income to support education, the arts, and social services. Since 1946, we have supported our communities in small and large ways, from helping local nonprofits to providing disaster relief. Today that 5% adds up to over $3 million a week. Doing good is easy when doing good is automatic. DO 5% GOOD. TA R G E T. C O M / C O M M U N I T Y Wordstock is a nonprofit literary arts and education organization that celebrates and supports writing in the classroom and in the community. Our mission is to use the power of writing to effect positive change in people’s lives. Founded in 1997 as Community of Writers by author Larry Colton, Wordstock’s programs include: Wordstock for Teachers, a professional development program for K–12 teachers that seeks to improve student writing performance by training and supporting teachers of writing. Wordstock for Kids, our creative writing instruction program for K–8 students that works in the tri-county public schools. Wordstock is proud to be the literary arts provider for the Regional Arts & Culture Council’s Right Brain Initiative to reintegrate arts education into public elementary schools. Wordstock for Communities, our series of workshops on the craft of writing for practicing writers and community members. Wordstock’s Books-to-Film Festival, an annual weekend screening of movies adapted from literary works. Wordstock’s Red Chair Reading Series, a traveling series of spontaneous readings by writers, local celebrities and enthusiastic novice readers for impromptu audiences, such as gatherings of middle school students. Wordstock Festival, our annual book and literary festival in Portland, by far the largest such event in the Northwest, known nationwide simply as Wordstock. We believe this showcase of contemporary writers’ accomplishments is one of the most compelling examples of writing’s power that we can provide. Thank you! None of Wordstock’s programs would happen without your support. A core group of about 30 volunteers, listed by name with the Wordstock board and staff on page 4, is responsible for booking authors, coordinating volunteers, designing promotional materials, announcing the festival to the community, scheduling workshops and much more. Over 200 volunteers work the Book Fair each year, escorting authors, answering questions and running the show, really. Please join us in thanking the best volunteers in the Northwest and our generous sponsors and community partners for helping Wordstock celebrate writing in our classrooms and in our community all year long. Thank you! Columbia Sportswear Ooligan Press Profile Theatre CoolerEmail Oregon Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts ReadRollShow Oregon Education Association Right Brain Initiative IPRC Literary Arts Live Wire! MacPac McCormick & Schmick’s McMenamins Mortified Portland Mountain Writers Series Multnomah County Library New Seasons Market Oregon Historical Society Oregon Humanities Orlo/The Bear Deluxe PNCA Portland Art Museum Portland Monthly Powell’s Books Regional Arts & Culture Council Target The Ace Hotel The Attic TriMet Wieden + Kennedy Willamette Week Work for Art Write Around Portland To find out about sponsorship opportunities or to donate in-kind goods or services, please contact Wordstock’s Director of Development & Marketing at nancy@wordstockfestival.com. To support Wordstock’s mission and celebrate the release of Wordstock founder Larry Colton’s new book No Ordinary Joes, attend Wordstock’s Literary Feast and Book Release Party, Friday October 8, 2010, 6–9pm. Visit www.wordstockfestival.com for details. Become a Charter Member of Wordstock That’s right! Wordstock will kick off our new member benefits program at this year’s festival. Now you can show your support for Wordstock all year round! Help us promote the power of writing to effect positive change in people’s lives. Visit the Wordstock table at the Book Fair, October 9–10, 2010, to find out about special benefits for charter members.