Showing posts with label literary event. Show all posts
Showing posts with label literary event. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Book signing at Barnes & Noble (Creeks at Virginia Centre) 1-3pm

This Saturday, I’ll be doing a book signing at Barnes & Noble for my new book, Haunted Virginia Cemeteries, and kicking off the spooky season with a celebration of stories and shared passions. 🎃📚

I know how these events go. Some people will ask me where the bathroom is, or what books I recommend, assuming I work at the store. Others will avoid eye contact because they don’t want to feel pressured into buying a copy. And that’s okay, I’ve been teaching English for 25 years, and I’m prepared for all of it. I can recommend books and I know where the bathroom is. And people avoiding eye contact, not a problem at all.

For me, book events are about connecting with like-minded people, sharing enthusiasm for books, and engaging in conversations that remind us why we love stories in the first place.

If you’re around, stop by! Let’s talk books, writing, and maybe even a little bit of spooky season magic.



Saturday, August 23, 2025

World Frankenstein Day: An invitation to Gather through Blogging

Remember our old blog days, when we gave each other homework and set strange little challenges just to see what we’d do with them? When comment threads felt like hidden corridors where the real conversations lived? The Very Curious Dr. Z, I know you remember. In that spirit, I’m summoning the circle again.

The world has gone dark, and not in the delicious gothic way. I want connection, something real, something secret and shared even across the distance. So, here’s the triple dog dare: join me in celebrating World Frankenstein Day, on Saturday, August 30th, Mary Shelley’s birthday.

She gave us a tale of creation and rejection, a nameless creature both intelligent and unloved, wandering alone through storm and silence. He has always felt like a companion to me, misunderstood, but still alive with longing. Which is why my own celebration will be solitary.

"The monster was the best friend I ever had." - Boris Karloff

This year, my celebration will look a lot like my usual gothy routines, only charged with the spark of the occasion. I’ll be reading the Kolaj version of Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus that features seventy-six illustrations by International Collage Artists. I'll write poetry under flickering black candles (or most likely the sun), verses stitched from loneliness and lightning. I’ll probably wander into a cemetery. And, I’ll mix myself a cocktail to toast Mary Shelley and her nameless creation.

Frankenstein Cocktail

1 ounce Dry Vermouth for smooth, herbaceous gloom

1 ounce Gin for sharp botanical clarity

1/2 ounce Apricot Brandy for sweetness in the shadows

1/2 ounce Triple Sec for citrus lightning

Garnish with a cherry, red as a borrowed heart

Shaken, strained, and consumed like a pact.

I’m challenging you to take part in your own way. Read a passage from Frankenstein. Watch an old black-and-white horror film. Write something, stitch something, light a candle, pour a drink, summon the storm. Report back. Tell me how you kept the day.

Let’s make it feel like it used to: a secret society scattered across the map, bound together by shared ritual and words. On August 30th, I’ll be celebrating alone, just like the creature. But maybe, just maybe, we won’t be so alone if we do it together.

When you share your ritual, your poem, your candlelit toast, begin or end with these words, as though we are all whispering them into the same night:

“We are the children of Shelley, keepers of the storm. [Okay, I'm feeling a bit dramatic.] We gather though apart, stitched together by ink and shadow. On this night of Frankenstein, we honor the nameless and the misunderstood. Alone, yet not alone, we light the dark with words, with memory, with creation.”

Write it, speak it, or leave it hidden like a charm at the end of your message. Consider it our oath, our flicker of connection in the storm.

Monday, April 29, 2024

TLAN Virtual Salon


TLAN's Virtual Salon of April 7, 2024. 
Seven TLAN members -- writers and poets who use written, spoken, or sung word for personal and community transformation -- share their work. After the reading, there is an artist talk-back for questions and conversations with the audience. For more about TLAN: https://www.tlanetwork.org/

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Poe-it Like Poe Poetry Reading event by The 6 Degrees of Edgar Allan Poe

More details about the TLAN Virtual Salon!

Please join us this Sunday, April 7 for TLAN's 2024 Virtual Salon! Register to attend for FREE here: https://www.tlanetwork.org/event-5636336

This event will feature TLAN members, who all use the written, spoken, or sung word for personal and community transformation. TLAN members have incredibly generous spirits, and oftentimes their work in the community overshadows their personal writing and accomplishments. We are excited to provide a venue to feature TLAN members' artistic work to the general audience.

The Virtual Salon is free and open to the public, and will take place online via Zoom. 
After the reading, there will be an artist talkback and time for questions and engagement from the audience. 

You must register if you would like to attend: a Zoom link will be sent to all registrants the day before the event. We look forward to seeing you there!

Presenters include:

  • Emilee Baum:  Emilee is a researcher and writer based in Atlanta, GA. A former chair of the TLA Network, she was introduced to TLA at Goddard College where she completed her MA in Embodiment Studies. She is continuing her studies in Expressive Arts at the European Graduate School in Switzerland. Her book The Agency of Bliss was published in 2012.
  • Chad Gurley: A poet and artist. After witnessing the tragedy of 9/11 and the trauma of violent loss, Chad began writing poetry and short stories to promote peace, hope, and understanding. "Though a poet and artist, I am foremost an Advocate for Love, for Love is the one thing that buoys my life above all the currents of its bad."
  • Autumn Konopka: Autumn Konopka is an award-winning writer, a runner, and a trauma-informed teaching artist. A former
    poet laureate of Montgomery County, PA (2016), Autumn’s poetry chapbook a chain of paperdolls was
    published in 2014, and her debut novel Pheidippides Didn’t Die was released in 2023. "I write serious things, but don't take myself seriously." 
  • Tanya Lewis: Tanya Lewis loves words and playing with language. She believes authenticity and imagination are superpowers. Her creative work includes poetry and Moth-style true stories. Recently she has been immersed in exploring ways in which poetry and reflections on word meaning can support trauma recovery. She is committed to using creativity to inspire, empower, and uplift. "I am a courageous extroverted introvert, a seeker, and a recovering perfectionist committed to exploring life with a joyous open heart." 
  • Oyah!: A Transformative Language Artist, Soothesayer and Inspirational Speaker whose words and rhythmic voice provide an easy road to travel through the difficult stories she tells.
  • Sharon Pajka: professor of English at Gallaudet University. She is the author of Women Writers Buried in Virginia (2021) and The Souls Close to Edgar Allan Poe: Graves of his family, friends, and foes (2023). "My writing combines my love of words and the stories of those who came before us."
  • John L. Swainston: Poet, TLAN Board Member, retired Finance Executive, College Adjunct Professor, and Army Veteran. "I never imagined that I would embrace the title of “poet,” but writing and reading poetry as well as studying the craft of poetry and connecting with other poets has become the mainstay of my life."

Wednesday, March 27, 2024

TLAN Virtual Salon

Join me on April 7, 2024 (5pm ET) for the Transformative Language Arts Network Virtual Salon! I'll be reading my poem, "The Cemetery Kitten's Meow" about the cat family living in Shockoe Hill Cemetery. 


Want to watch? 

Registration is FREE and open to anyone, not just members of TLAN. 

Register for the Virtual Salon.

@tlanetwork

Not familiar with the Shockoe Hill Cemetery Kittens and Cat Momma Situation, check out this post: 

Saturday, February 17, 2024

Tuesday, January 2, 2024

January 18 Hanover Tavern Speaker Series: “The Souls Close To Edgar Allan Poe”

Saturday January 6th, 2024 Pop-Up Book Fair and Meet & Greet at Hatch Local Food

Pop-Up Book Fair and Meet & Greet 
Saturday January 6th, 2024 @ 12:00PM - 4:00 PM 

 Signing books and chatting with folks at a casual meet & greet. 

Grab lunch and some signed books to support local business and authors! Location: Hatch Local Food Hall 400/414 Hull St Richmond VA 23224 
 

Monday, November 13, 2023

Hanover Book Expo 2023

Last Saturday was the Hanover Book Expo at the VFW. There were more than 40 of Virginia's authors in attendance who were discussing, signing, and selling our latest books. 


Here I am pictured with author Luis Gil Armendariz. We had tables next to one another. 

The Expo is a not-for-profit community event presented by the Hanover Writers Chapter of the Virginia Writers Club. The Hanover Book Festival began in 2006 as a project to promote reading. 

For more details and news about next year's schedule, visit: http://www.hanoverbookfestival.com/home.html

Saturday, October 7, 2023

Hunter House Victorian Museum

 I had such a good time presenting on Friday and then returning for their Poe event on Saturday night. 





 

Saturday, September 30, 2023

Ashland Museum guided walking tours and HistoryTalks

 
Click image for the Ashland Museum Facebook page

On Tuesday, Nov 7, Sharon Pajka, literature professor and cemetery historian, will talk about her book Women Writers Buried in Virginia. The HistoryTalk also takes place in Brock Commons SunTrust Theater [Randolph-Macon College] at 6p.m.

Thursday, September 21, 2023

October 21st, from 5:30 - 8pm at Old City Cemetery- Last Night of their Candlelight Tours


 "Announcing a Very Special Guest on October 21st, from 5:30 - 8pm! Dr. Sharon Pajka, author of Women Writers Buried in Virginia, will be joining us to chat about her book, and sign copies for anyone who is interested! Her book features (among lots of incredible women) the writing & life of Lizzie Chambers Hall, who rests here at OCC, and who is a character in this year's Candlelight Tours" 

Saturday, October 21- Writers Round Up at the Goochland Branch Library, Pamunkey Regional Library

 

Click image for more details

Saturday, October 28: Book Signing at Old Town Books in Alexandria

 

Click image for more details

Thursday, September 14, 2023

Wednesday, September 13, 2023- Mechanicsville-Ashland Local, Vol. 49, No. 34, p. 12

Since my book is inspired by the newspaper clippings from my father, it was fun to clip out this piece in our local newspaper about my book party for my dad. 




 

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

My Book Release Party at The Poe Museum

Click image to view portfolio by Michael Cope Photography

I held a book release party at The Poe Museum in Richmond, VA on Sunday, August 20th with entertainment including historical interpreter Debbie Phillips as Elmira Royster Shelton, Poe's first and last fiancée along with poetry recitations by Dean Knight which were interpreted by Miako Villanueva. Guests could take a self-guided tour of The Poe Museum and have their photo taken by photographer Michael Cope. Here is the portfolio of those pictures. 

The museum is gorgeous! The shrine and memorial garden incorporate aspects of Poe’s life and works and were inspired by his poem “To One in Paradise.” I also shared that if black cats crossed their path, pet them! They're the museum cats, Edgar and Pluto!

I invited friends from various time periods of my life so the folks in the enchanted garden on that day and time were some of the coolest humans and my favorites. It was overwhelming. The enchanted garden, where I have stood, sat, and walked through for so many events over so many decades, including presentations that I have given for the museum and where I helped weed during a gardening event, was the very place that held us all. Some people don't believe in magic. I have a hard time not believing in it on days like that. 

This was the biggest event that I have ever thrown for myself. It felt extravagant. Even my friend, Southern noir crime fiction writer S. A. Cosby, an Anthony Award-winning writer from Southeastern, Virginia attended. I wrote about our connection previously here

I asked guests to dress in their Poe-attire finest whatever that meant to them and to remember that it was going to be a hot day. I explained part of my outfit in an earlier post. I was the newspaper article about the scene in Westminster Burying Ground after the Poe Toaster visited and left his tributes. My tiny hat was by Sew Truly Me. I adore her hats! The custom design included a small Victorian style top hat with a gold raven and small rose buttons to represent the roses that were left at Poe's grave by the Toaster. I also modified a small Martell cognac bottle keychain into a brooch; again, to represent the tokens left by the Toaster. My necklaces included a cemetery gate, a small raven, and a lily of the valley with a skull inside a crystal coffin-shaped stone. My black shirt was sparkly to match the stars in the sky and my dress was black to show the darkest hours the Toaster would visit the grave. I had a newspaper print purse and even made my only newspaper article about the outfit.  

The amazing bouquets (I'm still dying about how gorgeous the flowers were!) were by Flowers by Zoie. The signature on her website reads, "storytelling through floral designs..." She completely understood my vision. The flowers included purple and wine Anemones with black centers, Black Magic Roses, (they are every bit as lovely as I could have imagined!), Black Callas,  lavender roses, Fiddleheads! and deep wine ranunculus. She also made the loveliest corsage for me to wear.   

The caterer was Groovin' Gourmets

And, the tables, linens, and cute tent were from Party Perfect

If I look cranky, I assure it that it is just my resting face. I was very happy.