Via Maytha over at Kabobfest
Some Ann Arbor Love
25 MayI was driving down Main and saw a guy in cutoff jeans on a bicycle. He was wearing a leather vest, and in the center of the back of the vest was a sign which he’d duct-taped on. It said: STOP Bedwetting. I likes this town.
Short Stories
23 MayMy plan for the following four weeks is to start revising some of the short stories I wrote last year. There are officially nine of them, and unofficially thirteen. The goal is to have the collection “done” in the coming few months. I’m simultaneously excited and exhausted about this!
Siniora likes Palestinian poetry (but not kids)
22 MayA ceasefire has been called by the militants inside the camp, but bombings, bloodshed and bullshit continue in Nahr el Bared. Shame on the Lebanese troops for shelling a camp full of kids and women and innocent men, and shame on Fatah al-Islam for hiding amongst them like the cowards they are.
Dar al-Hayat interviews Fouad Siniora. An excerpt:
I met Fouad Siniora in his hotel suite. He was reading the latest book by poet Mahmoud Darwish, ‘Fi Hadret al-Ghiyab’ (In The Presence of Absence). I maliciously said that he was trying to navigate in Darwish’s beautiful, brilliant and tense vocabulary to forget the terms being repeated in the opposition campaigns against the government and the prime minister. I wished opposition leaders, as well, went to a book fair along with the necessary novels and collections of poems to give the Lebanese people the chance of spending the last summer of President Emile Lahoud’s era. Unfortunately, they will not. It seems that the Lebanese people are called on to spend the summer on a razor’s edge, just to use a euphemism.
UPDATE: What happens when refugees seek refuge from refugee camps???
RAWI
18 MayIt’s on. Naomi Shihab Nye and Rabih Alameddine read today, and rocked the house. The next couple days it’s panels, more readings, screenings, and general fun.
Duck & Herring
17 MayThe Duck & Herring Co. has a new website. They’re an awesome literary magazine…every single issue is funny, smart, and good. I highly recommend a subscription, and if you write, a submission.
"Maps of War," Maps of Home
16 MayFrom ElectronicIraq.net:
I have a friend, an Iraqi, who was a civil engineer in Baghdad until work dried up in 1992. He worked as a driver through more than a decade until, in 2005, he left Iraq to brush up on his field in a graduate program. Shortly after his arrival in the US, I brought a map of Baghdad with me to meet him at a coffee shop. I wanted him to help me clear up what seemed to be some inaccuracies in the map.I laid the map out and his eyes sort of glazed over. He looked at the map as if he had never seen a map of Baghdad before.
He hadn’t.
Read the rest here.
[Thanks to Michelle for the link!]
Reading @ The Zeitgeist This Wednesday, 5/16
14 MayHey Guys:
On May 16th, the night before the RAWI conference officially starts, Arab American writers Hayan Charara and Randa Jarrar will read together in Detroit, at the Zeitgeist Gallery.Charara is the author of two poetry books, The Alchemist’s Diary and The Sadness of Others, and editor of the forthcoming anthology Contemporary Arab American Poetry. Jarrar is the author of the novel A Map of Home. Her award-winning fiction has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. Her translations from Arabic into English are also widely published. A native of Detroit, Charara now lives in Texas. Jarrar, a long-time resident of Texas, now lives in Michigan.
The reading is smoke-free and admission free, though donations are accepted, and wine will be served for a fee.
In addition to readings, the Zeitgeist Gallery also features artwork and stages theatrical productions.
The Zeitgeist is located at 2661 Michigan Avenue, Detroit MI.
For more information, please visit: www.zeitgeistdetroit.org
Happy Mama’s Day!
13 MayI’ve been a Mama for a decade. It’s been good and bad, fun and boring, lovely and annoying. I love my kid and I can’t stand him, I adore him and I abhor him. Ah, motherhood.
We went to an outdoor science center this morning and saw a bunch of owls. That’s when I found out that, since they are nocturnal, they shut down one side of their brain and one of their eyes during the day, and they keep the other side, and the other eye, open. Sometimes that’s what being a single mom is like. You’re asleep and awake, half young chica, half old mom lady. And I like it.




