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		<title>Jan 2012 Italian American Writers Newsletter</title>
		<link>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2012/01/07/jan-2012-italian-american-writers-newsletter/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 07 Jan 2012 01:45:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dr. Vittoria Repetto</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter January 2012 P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215 www.iawa.net IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING. PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA . You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net Suggested donations: Membership $30 (students and seniors &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2012/01/07/jan-2012-italian-american-writers-newsletter/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=383&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter  January 2012<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
www.iawa.net</p>
<p>IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING.</p>
<p>PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA .</p>
<p>You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net</p>
<p>Suggested donations:<br />
Membership $30 (students and seniors $20)<br />
Associate $100-249<br />
Patron $250-499<br />
Founder $500-1000<br />
IAWA is a 501(c) (3) not-for-profit corporation. Donations are tax-deductible.</p>
<p>If you prefer to send a check, make it payable to “Italian American Writers Association,” and send it to the following address:</p>
<p>Treasurer, Italian American Writers Association,<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
Please share our Italian American Writer&#8217;s blog on your Facebook/Twitter account</p>
<p>As some of you know, we have a blog at http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/ And I hope that you have (or will) enjoyed the information and writing presented there. We now have a &#8220;Share&#8221; button on our blog so you can share the blog w/ your Facebook friends &amp; Twitter fans. So please help get the word out about our blog and click on the &#8220;Share&#8221; button so others can enjoy the blog. http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/italian-american-writers-assoc-newsletter-february-2011/<br />
______________________________________________________________<br />
Do you have a Linkedin page? Help Us get the word out about IAWA<br />
Connect to us on our Linkedin page: http://www.linkedin.com/in/italianamericanwritersassoc</p>
<p>Please send us announcements of readings and literary events by the 15th of the preceding month; this means if you have an event in January; send us it by Dec. 15th </p>
<p>Please format in THIRD PERSON and in this order for events: Day, Date, Type of event, Event and Name of Participants, Time, Place of event and address, Admission price; Contact information Web site </p>
<p>We do not open attachments; please put all announcements in the body of your email in plain text only; we can&#8217;t use jpg or anything in all caps</p>
<p>E-mail announcements to Vittoria repetto at iawanewsletter@aol.com<br />
______________________________________________________________<br />
Saturday, January 14th &#8211; 5:45 pm – 7:45pm.<br />
Poetry and Prose Feature plus Open Mike<br />
Cornelia St. Café, 29 Cornelia St., Manhattan<br />
212-989-9319; www.corneliastreetcafe.com<br />
$7 minimum includes one drink<br />
Come in time to sign up at 5:45 pm.<br />
Bring poetry Bring prose Bring script Bring a friend<br />
5 minute time limit for open mike</p>
<p>Feature Readers: John Keahey &amp; Tony Iovino</p>
<p>John Keahey first visited Sicily in 1986. Enchanted by what he found -he returned often while reporting and writing two travel narratives for Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin&#8217;s Press: A Sweet and Glorious Land: Revisiting the Ionian Sea and Venice Against the Sea: A City Besieged.<br />
His latest book, Seeking Sicily: A Cultural Journey Through Myth and Reality in the Heart of the Mediterranean, is a travel narrative that captures Sicily and its various cultures through his eyes and the eyes of Sicilian authors of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, most notably Leonardo Sciascia (1921-1989) of Racalmuto, province of Agrigento. Keahey describes it as his attempt to capture how Sicilians, or Mediterranean islanders, who claim to live north of Africa rather than south of Italy, differ from other Italians and how they have preserved their distinct culture. </p>
<p>Tony Iovino’s latest novel &#8212; Notary Public Enemy (Diversion Press) is a fast-paced murder mystery set on his native Long Island. Iovino is the founder and host of the Summer Gazebo Readings, an acclaimed outdoor series that features distinguished poets and authors each Monday in June, July &amp; August in Oceanside, N.Y. Iovino’s essays and poems have appeared in print and in on-line literary magazines and anthologies, including USA Today: The Journal of the Society for the Advancement of Education, BlogCritics Magazine, Poetry Cemetery, Stellar Showcase Journal, Subtle Tea, A Long Story Short, Clearfield Review, Meanderings:  A Collection of Poetic Verse, Long Island Sounds: 2009 An Anthology of Poetry From Maspeth to Montauk And Beyond, PPA Literary Review, the Long Island Quarterly and others. Visit http://notarypublicenemy.com/About_Us.html</p>
<p>Since 1991, the organization has given voice to writers through its Open Reading series at Cornelia St. Café every month.<br />
IAWA is a 501© (3) not-for-profit corporation; donations are tax deductible.</p>
<p>Visit the Italian American Writers Cafe blog</p>
<p>http://www.i-italy.org/bloggers/italian-american-writers-cafe</p>
<p>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/</p>
<p>Events:</p>
<p>Wednesday January 4 Reading: New Hungers for Old: One-Hundred Years of Italian-American Poetry Dennis Barone will host and the readers will be Elaine Equi, Mary Giaimo, George Guida, Peter Covino, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Ray DiPalma, Daniela Gioseffi, Matthew Longabucco, Jerome Mazzaro, J. T. Barbarese, Nick Piombino, Maria Terrone, David Cappella, Clare Rossini, Vittoria repetto and Paola Corso. 8pm Saint Marks Poetry Project, 10th St &amp; 2nd Ave, Manhattan, </p>
<p>Tuesday January 24 Reading: Women&#8217;s / Trans&#8217; Poetry Jam &amp; Open Mike:<br />
Feature Writers: Marisa Labozzetta &amp; Tsaurah Litzky In Marisa Labozzetta’s new collection of stories, Thieves Never Steal In The Rain, love and the supernatural drive these linked stories about the intertwining lives of five female cousins, who learn that loss, from the trivial to the most painful, is a constant force to be reckoned with.<br />
Tsaurah Litzky&#8217;s second poetry collection Cleaning The Duck is a must have for anyone who believes in the redemptive power of poetry.Hosted by Vittoria repetto 7pm Bluestockings Bookstore 172 Allen St. (between Staton &amp; Rivington) Manhattan  Take V or F train to 2nd Ave. and exit from the 1st Ave exit and walk south down Allen St. (aka. 1st Ave) 1 ½ blocks to the store $5 suggested donation 212-777-6028 http://www.bluestockings.com/</p>
<p>Members’ News:</p>
<p>Mary Bucci Bush received a positive book review for her new book Sweet Hope published by Guernica Editions in Publishers Weekly http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-1-55071-342-8  In her thoroughly researched and engaging novel, Bush sheds light on the little known fate of Italian immigrant laborers who came to America expecting opportunity, but ended up working alongside African-Americans as indentured servants on southern cotton plantations</p>
<p>Lousia Calio was interviewed http://www.nuovacultura.net/ojs/index.php/in_limine/article/view/221</p>
<p>Fred Gardaphe &amp; Dominic Candeloro have edited Reconstructing Italians in Chicago: Thirty Authors in Search of Roots and Branches Chicago history/culture with an Italian flair! There is something for everybody in this eclectic volume. Every reader will find a topic or a writer that s/he wants to know more about. Publication of Reconstructing Italians in Chicago is a major step toward making Chicago&#8217;s Italians the best documented (and best understood) in the nation. It is a gateway to both the academic and the personal exploration of Italians in Chicago, loaded with references that lead the reader to just about every source of information on the subject. Some of the writers include T Ardizzone,R Benedetti,A Bernardi,K Catrambone, J Colangelo, B DalCerro, P D&#8217;Agostino, T DeRosa, C Farella, T Guglielmo,B Lombardo,C Lombardo, R Lombardo, E Milani, R Miele, G Nardini, D Niemiec, P Pero,TRomano,V Romano,J Santacaterina, M Antonucci http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0983553807/sr=1-1/qid=1322495004/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&amp;me=&amp;qid=1322495004&amp;sr=1-1&amp;seller=</p>
<p>Thieves Never Steal In The Rain, new collection of Linked Stores about Loss, Love, and the Supernatural by Marisa Labozzetta is out. Love, humor, and the supernatural drive these stories about the intertwining lives of five female cousins, who learn that loss—from misplacing keys to confronting death—is a constant force to be reckoned with.  It is also now available as an eBook from Amazon. http://www.amazon.com/Thieves-Never-Linked-Stories-ebook/dp/B00637TR2Q/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1321326303&amp;sr=1-1 To order for computers, iPads, and other electronic devices, first download free applications by going to Kindle Store, then clicking on Kindle Store under Shop All Departments).</p>
<p>Three Spoken Word Pieces by Angelo Zeolla </p>
<p>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/17/three-spoken-word-pieces-by-angelo-zeolla/</p>
<p>Maria Terrone’s poem, “The Slain Wife of the Lighthouse Keeper Speaks,” first published in Italian Americana, is included in the recently published Knopf Everyman Series anthology, Killer Verse: Poems About Murder and Mayhem. This Amazon link leads to a list of all poems and authors included in this hard-cover book:<br />
http://www.amazon.com/Killer-Verse-Murder-Everymans-Library/dp/0307700933  Other recent publications include “Spaccanapoli,” in the fall issue of Hawaii Pacific Review; “Knives” (a reprint from The Hudson Review”) and “Missing the Names” in Poemeleon, http://www.poemeleon.org/; and<br />
“Introducing the Forest to Vivaldi” and “Words to Unpin Yourself from  the Wall” in Pirene’s Fountain http://www.pirenesfountain.com/  Recent acceptances include “BlackBerry Buzzing” (The Hudson Review); “A Hologram State of Mind” (Ploughshares); and “The Day After” (Poet Lore).</p>
<p>Gil Fagiani’s chapbook, Serfs of Psychiatry, is now being published by Finishing Line Press and should be available by mid-January, 2012.  “Fagiani’s poems tell the back story of the powerless and abandoned mentally ill and the equally powerless and abandoned low-level psychiatirc “serfs,” the attendants&#8211;the least-paid, least-respected workers, who are, pradoxically entrusted with the day-to-day care of severely disturbed, often violent patients…Move over Ken Kesey, we have another chronicler of the ‘Cuckoo’s Nest,’ Bronx-style.”  Kirsten Andersen, Ph.D.clinical psychologist / Adjunct Professor at The School of Visual Arts.<br />
To order copies, visit Finishing Line Press www.finishinglinepress.com and click on “NewReleasesandForthcomingTitles.htm.”</p>
<p>Anthony Buccino&#8217;s latest poetry collection, “Sometimes I Swear In Italian” is about growing up Italian American in New Jersey, and, much later, discovering the roots of his ancestors. Despite its title, “Sometimes I Swear In Italian” contains no profanity in any language. For more information visit http://www.anthonybuccino.com</p>
<p>Four books written by Dr. Marie Menna Pagliaro for educators have just been published by Rowman &amp; Littlefield. The titles are: Educator or Bully? Managing the 21st Century Classroom; Exemplary Classroom Questioning: Promoting Thinking and Learning; Differentiating Instruction: Matching Strategies with Objectives; and Research-Based Unit and Lesson Planning: Maximizing Student Achievement. These books by Marie Pagliaro are in addition to her novel, That Woman and the Mafia Don, the profits of which go to help prevent young people from joining all kinds of ethnic gangs. To view the covers, synopses, and endorsements, visit her website at www.mariepagliaro.com.</p>
<p>Daniel Quinn is the author of Organized Labor: Collected Poems (published by AuthorHouse), which covers four generations of American and family history, from the birth of his grandmother in NYC in 1887 to the fall of the Twin Towers in 2001. Like much of the poetry in this 46-page volume, the book&#8217;s title has multiple allusions: from poems that deal with the organized labor movement in America (most notably, the 1913 strike of 20,000 Paterson silk workers at Botto House in Haledon, NJ), to the labor of organizing&#8211;and reconciling&#8211;past and present (captured eloquently in the title poem, &#8216;Organized Labor&#8217;), to even the labor of preparing one&#8217;s poetry for publication. Contact Mr. Quinn dquinn711@msn.com for more information</p>
<p>Obituary: Diana Festa<br />
Poet and past IAWA feature, Diana Festa, died on June 8, 2011; yet some of her work has appeared posthumously such as in the current Feile Festa that can now be viewed online [http://www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/v006/poetry/festa.html]. Her poem End of Summer won The Fifth Annual John and Rose Petracca &amp; Family Award and appeared in the 2010 edition of Philadelphia Poets edited by Rosemary Cappello.<br />
Festa was the author of six poetry books, Arches to the West, Ice Sparrow, Thresholds, Bedrock, The Gathering and A Landscape of Time. She has also published four books on literary criticism, and a large number of poems and articles in various reviews and anthologies. She is the recipient of several poetry prizes, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Guizot Award from the French Academy.<br />
Festa, who was a French professor at Brooklyn College until her retirement, created a base for a group of authors known as the Madison Poets who gathered weekly for an evening of writing or editing their poems for over a decade. Her late evening banter and extravagant meals were legendary. Festa will be sorely missed by the Madison Poets and others who came into contact with her. A memorial is forthcoming and will be announced shortly.</p>
<p>&#8220;Biting into a morsel of Abruzzese soppresatta will never be the same after reading Anthony Di Renzo’s Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen&#8221; begins Maria Lisella&#8217;s review of Anthony Di Renzo&#8217;s Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen (SUNY Press), which was recently published in the 2011 edition of the literary journal, Feile-Festa, is now online. &#8220;Perhaps the key passage to the entire collection is: &#8216;Italian Americans can learn more about the heartbreak and horror of assimilation from soppressata than from any book&#8230;This particular sausage has gone from being a staple, to a treat, to a delicacy, to a swindle in less than thirty years. The phenomenon is a minor tragedy in our history – a minor tragedy, but a telling one.&#8217;&#8221; http://www.medcelt.org/feilefesta/v006/prose/lisella.html</p>
<p>Check out an interview with Tony Ardizzone in the journal Magna Grece http://magnagrece.blogspot.com/2011/09/fiction-as-life-interview-with-author.html </p>
<p>Publisher’s News/Book Reviews/Contest Winners/Awards:</p>
<p>Descant 154: Sicily, Land of Forgotten Dreams, a North American anthology of nearly fifty contributors is available from www.decant.ca ($15.) Guest Editors: Michelle Alfano and Venera Fazio. American literary contributors include Gioia Timpanelli, Maria Fama, Louisa Calio, Gaetano Cipolla, Gil Fagiani, Salvatore Marici, Gilda Morina Syverson, Tasha Cotter, Enriqueta Carrington, and Harry Groome. Photo essays by Vincenzo Pietropaolo, Erik Kruthoff and Stephen Adamian.</p>
<p>Guido: Italian/American Youth and Identity Politics edited by Letizia Airos &amp; Ottorino Cappelli and published by Bordighera Press includes essays on the phenomenon of the &#8220;guido&#8221;: its origins and its relationship to the Italian/American community. The writers share their own views on a phenomenon that, in December 2009/January 2010, was filling newspapers and television programs, in reaction to the then new reality show Jersey Shore. The community&#8217;s &#8220;dirty laundry&#8221; was finally aired in public, without maintaining the convention of bella figura, as a modern and pluralistic community does and should do.</p>
<p>Pulitzer Prize-nominated Italian American author, John Domini was interviewed in the journal Magna GRECE http://magnagrece.blogspot.com/2012/01/innovating-naples-interview-with-author.html</p>
<p>Italica Press has published out Medieval Naples A Documentary History, 400-1400 http://www.italicapress.com/index287.html and Torquato Tasso Love Poems for  Lucrezia Bendidio http://www.italicapress.com/index426.html For a complete catalog, </p>
<p>http://www.italicapress.com</p>
<p>Vittoria repetto has reviewed A New Map: The Poetry of Migrant Writers in Italy by Mia Lecomte and Luigi Bonaffini (Legas-2001) for VIA. This anthology is a bilingual edition of poetry by migrant writers living and working in Italy. These migrant writers hail from places like Somalia, Iran, Iraq, Romania, Holland, Brazil and Albania.</p>
<p>http://vittoriarepetto.wordpress.com/2011/10/29/review-of-a-new-way-the-poetry-of-migrant-writers-in-italy/</p>
<p>Idea Publication announces the publication of, Barbarossa&#8217;s Princess, a tale of intrigue, violence, sex, love and ultimate triumph, Elizabeth Vallone’s Barbarossa’s Princess  is also a tapestry of the customs of the Holy Roman Empire, the Norman-Sicilian Court and mores of life in the 12th century. Barbarossa’s Princess is a veritable page turner. From the very first line, we are swept away on an adventure through the corridors of power in the 12th century. We taste and smell the meals, we see the unusual medical practices, we hear all the raucous sounds of life in an age more refined and more coarse than even our own. At the center of this delightful tale is Constance de Hauteville, a woman drawn from a nunnery to become Empress of a continent. She becomes the bearer of the next Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. An innocent, along with her maid-servant, Constance enters the corridors of power and grows to become as forceful as those who would use her for their own gain. Vallone portrays Constance de Hauteville as a woman of chutzpah and humility, a mother who endures the humiliations of women in an earlier time, but who triumphs and endures”.  Patrick McGuire, Senior Lecturer of English. University of Wisconsin </p>
<p>The Spaghetti Set, Family Served Italian Style by Rose Marie Boyd Feel like a fly on the wall in the homes of two Italian-American families as a comedy of errors unfolds. The characters&#8217; irreverent, ludicrous and intimate behavior affirms the old adage: ”Family is family, like it or not!” http://thespaghettiset.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>A new collection of essays on the Italian American experience is now available in a Kindle edition from Amazon.com. These 12 essays were originally published in the online journal Suite 101, and some of them were rerpinted in Dante Society newsletters in Boston and Seattle  Towards a More Balanced View of Italian Americans by Anthony S. Maulucci</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released  released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations. Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition Author: Suzann M. Brucato<br />
ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6 | Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Available at www.MagCloud.com Web: www.MatriarchJourney.com  TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>Italica Press author (and Italian novelist, essayist, journalist, playwright and poet), Dacia Maraini, has been nominated for the 2011 Man Booker International Prize, the most prestigious literary award in the UK.<br />
The International Prize is awarded for an author’s life work; and Italica Press has played some part in bringing this work to English-speaking audiences. Over the years we’ve published an English edition of her Donna in guerra (Woman at War, 1988), translated by Mara Benetti and Elspeth Spottiswood; her short story “Maria,” translated by Martha King in our anthology New Italian Women (edited by Martha King in 1989); and selections from her poetry in our anthology Contemporary Italian Women Poets, edited and translated by Cinzia Sartini Blum and Lara Trubowitz (2001)</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published  his full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Print Format &#8211; $24.20; Digital Format &#8211; $14.29,Available at www.MagCloud.com www.MatriarchJourney.com Email: TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>For what’s new at Italica Press, please check out http://italicapressnews.blogspot.com/<br />
You can also visit Italica Press at http://www.italicapress.com/ </p>
<p>The Paterson Literary Review #38, 2009-2010 is out; this edition features Diane di Prima and includes a number of her poems and a short story Other poets/writers in this edition include Maria Fama, Vittoria repetto, Rachel Guido deVries, Maria Lisella, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, , Jennifer Gillan And Anthoy Buccino See http://old.pccc.edu/poetry/public.htm for price and order form.</p>
<p>Workshops &amp; Conferences: </p>
<p>Literary &amp; Research Queries:</p>
<p>Hofstra Entertainment is currently seeking to cast a staged reading (on book) of  Eduardo de Filippo&#8217;s comedy, Christmas in Naples. Casting 7-8 men, age range 20&#8242;s-50&#8242;s, and 4 women, age range 20&#8242;s -50&#8242;s. Reading will take place at Hofstra in the Helene Fortunoff Theater (Monroe Lecture Center), Thursday, November 17, 8 pm and is presented as part of a three day conference event exploring Naples. Directed by Bob Spiotto. Familiarity with Italian is not required as the piece is performed in English and without Italian accents. No pay. Send pix and resume to robert.t.spiotto@hofstra.edu</p>
<p>Linda Baldanzia is a student at Drew University in NJ. in a Poetry in Translation MFA program. I am looking for a translator to help me with literal translations of several short poems. I do not read Italian well. It would be best if the Translator has lived in Italy. The translating will begin this June 201-482-0597, lindabaldanzi@mac.com</p>
<p>Dom Giordano, talk show host with WPHT 1210 AM Radio in Philadelphia, is looking for contributors to the book- recipes, Feast of the Seven Fishes stories and other Italian/family traditions and recollections of the Christmas season. www.thefeastofthesevenfishes.com Contact  Askdomg@aol.com </p>
<p>Alexandra Maffei holds a Masters in Italian Linterature and runs two blogs, one in English breakingnewts.blogspot.com the other in Italian, telegrafite.blog.espresso.repubblica.it/telegrafite. “I&#8217;m an excellent translator, fully conversant in Italian and American cultures, so consider me, should you know of or need services” viridiana430@msn.com</p>
<p>R. D. Williams is writing about her immigrant experience, willing to meet other writers. Also,  seeking advice on how to obtain publisher. Contact: rosaria@gmail.com</p>
<p>Magazines, Contests &amp; Calls for Submissions:</p>
<p>7th Annual Accenti Magazine Writing Contest and 5th Annual Accenti Magazine Photo Competition<br />
Fee: $20 CND for the Writing Contest and $10 CND for the Photo Competition<br />
For rules and submission addresses, etc: https://www.accenti.ca/writing &amp; https://www.accenti.ca/photo-contest Deadline for submissions: February 7, 2012</p>
<p>The Una Vita Foundation is committed to capturing the essence of Italian and Italian-American life in its new online story anthology. If you are an Italian, Italian-American, or have an engaging story that relates to Italy, submit your writing in 2000 characters or less and read stories by other contributors at http://www.una-vita.org/. From the home page, click on the blue “Submit a Story” tab and write away! Every month a panel of judges will choose one outstanding story from our website submissions and its author will receive a $100 Nordstrom gift card. The story will also be translated into Italian and published in the Italian magazine Clarus, which is circulated in Southern Italy. mwright.unavita@gmail.com</p>
<p>Luigi Monteferrante is looking for a special edition on work by Italian/Italian American/Italian Canadian authors in the magazine: Chicago Quarterly Review http://www.chicagoquarterlyreview.com/ Work should be submitted to luigimonteferrante@yahoo.com</p>
<p>Feile-Festa is an annual publication that comes out in the spring of each year. Though our preference is for creative work related to Irish and Italian/Sicilian themes, we are open to other Mediterranean cultures, all of which can relate to the respective country of family origin or the diasporas to America, Canada, etc. We are also interested in writing that evokes life in New York City. The reading period starts October 1st and ends January 1st. Please do not send submissions outside the time frame mentioned in the guidelines. www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/index.html</p>
<p>The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute is happy to announce the re-launching of its bi-annual journal the Italian American Review (IAR). The IAR features articles about the history and culture of Italian Americans, as well as other aspects of the Italian diaspora.The journal embraces a wide range of professional concerns and theoretical orientations in the social sciences and in cultural studies. Information for contributors can be found at: http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/calandra/italrev/iarcont.html.</p>
<p>Journal of Italian Translation is a non-profit international journal devoted to the translation of literary works from and into Italian-English-Italian dialects. Subscription price is $25 per year. Submissions and inquiries should be sent to Luigi Bonaffini at l.bonaffini@att.net. All past issues can be downloaded from the journal’s website at www.jitonline.org</p>
<p>Pyramid Arts and Poetry Magazine – “Where Rome and New York Meet” Pyramid Arts and Poetry is divided into three sections: Visual Art; Poetry &amp; Literature; and Film. Listings of gallery exhibits, poetry readings, and film showings in New York and Rome accompany each section. For submission guidelines, visit http://www.pyramidmagazine.org</p>
<p>VIA, Voices in Italian Americana, is a semi-annual published in the spring and fall. Issues include sections of essays, fiction, poetry, review essays, reviews, and guest spots by prominent Italian/American writers. Subscriptions are $20.00 per year ($15.00 for seniors, students, and un[der]employed). For subscriptions &amp; advertising, contact Anthony Julian Tamburri at tamburri@bordigherapress.org</p>
<p>Italian Americana is the first and only cultural as well as historical review dedicated to the Italian experience in the New World; subscription price is $20 a year, $35 for two years, to: Italian Americana, University of Rhode Island/Providence, 80 Washington Street Providence, RI 02903-1803. Check out the new Website supplement to the journal at www.italianamericana.com</p>
<p>The Monday Night Playwrights’ Series is curated by Richard Fulco; interested playwrights could submit their work at richardfulco@aol.com</p>
<p>Theatre Submissions: Post Road Magazine (Boston, Ma), a literary/visual arts journal, is accepting theatre submissions of very short one-act plays, sketches, and monologues. david@postroadmag.com</p>
<p>The American Italian Historical Association Newsletter is now accepting submissions of book reviews. Please send all submissions Anthony.Tamburri@qc.cuny.edu.</p>
<p>Websites:</p>
<p>Italian Cultural Institute of New York, 686 Park Ave, Manhattan www.iicnewyork.esteri.it and click on their monthly newsletter available in digital format.</p>
<p>Casa Belvedere, The Italian Cultural Foundation, a unique 2.75 acre cultural campus and community center on Staten Island for all to enjoy, is a registered 501(c) (3) not for profit organization that seeks to preserve, promote and celebrate the rich heritage of Italy by encouraging an appreciation of the Italian language, arts, literature, history, fashion, cuisine, and commerce through educational programs, exhibits and events.  To subscribe to the mailing list and learn more about the upcoming events and programs, call 718-273-7660, e-mail info@casa-belvedere.org or click on to www.casa-belvedere.org. </p>
<p>Anthony Buccino has created a blog for New Jersey poets to post info about events, links to their web sites and publishers and literary magazines. You can get email notices- no strings attached – when new items are posted. http://njpoetspoetry.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>www.BigFatPrize.com lists over 500 Writing Contests and competition categories like Essay, Fiction, Poetry, Short Story, Young Writers, Songwriting, Screenwriting, Playwright and Journalism</p>
<p>Working Writer newsletter offers solid information with a good dose of humor and a spirit of writing camaraderie. WW is filled with articles on promotion, publishing, freelancing, different genres, how-to, and how-not-to, written by readers across the country. To receive a free copy (no obligation) by e-mail , send a request to workingwriters@aol.com. Or check out www.workingwriter1.com</p>
<p>I-Italy: The Italian American Digital Project (http://www.i-italy.org) is online. This site is a forum for discussion and debate over Italian American social and cultural issues, home to numerous Italian American blogs, and the place to read leading Italian American commentators columns on Italian American life.</p>
<p>Readers are requested to visit www.italianamericanpress.com to order or obtain information about the fascinating books listed below written by Italian Americans on a variety of interesting topics. At The Italian-American Press, there are links for finding translators, a literary marketplace, and writers’ guilds, aside from links such as Tools for Italian American Writers, Italian American Books, Italian American Publishers, and the Internet’s best selection of self-published Italian American Books (84 Titles).</p>
<p>KIT-Kairos Italy Theater’s mission is to create a cultural exchange program between Italy, the US and the international community, to unveil artistic and creative sides of these two countries to the world. http://www.kitheater.com/</p>
<p>New York Foundation for the Arts, Visit NYFA Source, the most comprehensive database of awards, services, and publications available to artists in all disciplines. www.nyfa.org/</p>
<p>The Write Stuff – Online Newsletter of Word Journeys at www.wordjourneys.com contains articles on self-publishing, new services and grist for the pen: tips.</p>
<p>The ACLS History E-Book Project www.historyebook.org is an electronic resource that includes over 1230 full-text, cross-searchable books in the field of history selected by historians for their continuing importance to students and scholars. Individuals can also subscribe through a membership in the American Historical Association or the Renaissance Society of America.</p>
<p>Accenti, The Canadian Magazine with an Italian Accent at www.accenti.ca/</p>
<p>The AA Independent Press Guide is a free, online resource for writers at http://www.thunderburst.co.uk. The guide has detailed listings on over 2,000 literary and genre magazines and publishers from around the world, plus links to over 750 Internet magazines.</p>
<p>www.virtualitalia.com is an online resource for Italians, Italian Americans and enthusiasts of Italian culture.</p>
<p>www.littap.org is a new resource for literary presenters, with tools such as Guidelines for Writers Fees. In addition to featuring Italian American, Italian Canadian and Italian writers, the site has reviews and links to the sites of writers of Italian Australian, Italian French and Italian Latino American origins.</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò, go to http://www.nyu.edu/pages/casaitaliana/events.html</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Italian Academy at Columbia University, go to http://www.italianacademy.columbia.edu/calendar/calendar.html</p>
<p>The Immigration History Research Center is at http://www.ihrc.umn.edu</p>
<p>See Poets &amp; Writers for leads to prizes for writers, and places to get away and write, links to grants, conferences and residencies. http://www.pw.org/toolsforwriters</p>
<p>www.ItalianAmericanWriters.com is an archive of samples of contemporary Italian Amerian writing; writers include Dennis Barone, Marisa Frasca, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Bob Viscusi, Anthony Tamburri, Fred Gardaphe, Stephen Massimilla, Alfredo de Palchi, Peter Covino, Paola Corso, Gil Fagiani, Louisa Calio, etc. Also check out the other website edited by Daniela Gioseffi &#8211; www.PoetsUSA.com/</p>
<p>Of Interest:</p>
<p>On October 25, 2011, the CinqueTerre towns of Monterosso &amp; Vernazza both UNESCO World Heritage sites visited annually by 2.5 million tourists were devastated by massive flooding and mudslides. Please go to http://www.rebuildmonterosso.com/2011/12/forza-monterosso.html?spref &amp; http://www.savevernazza.com</p>
<p>IAVANET Mentoring Program<br />
Founded in 2007, the Italian-American Visual Artists&#8217; Network (IAVANET) is a group of 18 painters, sculptors, photographers, and designers based in the greater New York City area. The collective credentials of the artists encompass the worlds of museum and gallery exhibitions, art education, and work in the marketplace of art and design. To view their portfolio, visit www.iavanet.org. Mindful of the great tradition of Italian excellence in the visual arts and its artistic heritage, the group is currently establishing a mentoring program for aspiring Italian-American visual artists of high school and college age. In the program participants will review and evaluate portfolios, offer advice on improving particular technical skills, and suggest projects that would be suited to the individual&#8217;s artistic personality. IAVANET will also curate shows of the work of students who participate in the program. Interested student artists can contact Richard Laurenzi at info@iavanet.org, specifying the area of mentoring they are seeking (painting, sculpture, photography, or design arts), to set up an interview. </p>
<p>Diasporic Continuities: A Salon Discussion Point on the Changing Face of Italian Unification on the Verge of its 150th Anniversaryhttp://disunification.blogspot.com/<br />
How you can join the conversation: Still a work in progress, for now, please join the conversation by commenting on one of the existing posts or become a follower of the discussions. If you would like to post something yourself (rather than comment), please email LauraRuberto (lruberto@peralta.edu) or Pasquale Verdicchio (pverdicchio@yahoo.com)</p>
<p>Association of Friends of Piedmont in New York<br />
We are a group of artists, professionals, scientists and business owners sharing an interest for the Piedmont Region, either because we were born there or because we appreciate the contribution that people from Piedmont have made to the arts, sciences and industry.You can learn more about the Association at http://piedmontinnewyork.blogspot.com </p>
<p>Vittoria repetto rents her charming vacation house in Framura, in the Ligurian region on a weekly to monthly basis at a reasonable price. It is the perfect place for vacation especially great if you are a writer or a painter. The occupancy is for 4 people; there are 2 bedrooms. The town is 3 towns north of the Cinqueterre towns. For detailed information and pictures, http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-rental/p211239</p>
<p>Italian American Writers, a Cablevision television series hosted by Vito De Simone, runs each month on many New York area and other Cablevision systems, including Manhattan, Long Island and some Brooklyn systems. Check local listings for channels and times.</p>
<p>The New York-based Italian-American Playwrights Forum meets at the Calandra Institute three Thursdays a month to develop plays and carry out discussions about Italian-American identity/themes. The work itself does not have to be about an Italian-American theme. Please contact Gian Di Donna gian@att.net for information.</p>
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		<description><![CDATA[IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter December 2011 P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215 www.iawa.net IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING. PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA . You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net Suggested donations: Membership $30 (students and seniors &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/12/01/dec-2011-italian-american-writers-assoc-newsletter/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=375&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter December 2011<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
www.iawa.net</p>
<p>IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING.</p>
<p>PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA .</p>
<p>You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net</p>
<p>Suggested donations:<br />
Membership $30 (students and seniors $20)<br />
Associate $100-249<br />
Patron $250-499<br />
Founder $500-1000<br />
IAWA is a 501(c) (3) not-for-profit corporation. Donations are tax-deductible.</p>
<p>If you prefer to send a check, make it payable to “Italian American Writers Association,” and send it to the following address:</p>
<p>Treasurer, Italian American Writers Association,<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
Please share our Italian American Writer&#8217;s blog on your Facebook/Twitter account</p>
<p>As some of you know, we have a blog at http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/ And I hope that you have (or will) enjoyed the information and writing presented there. We now have a &#8220;Share&#8221; button on our blog so you can share the blog w/ your Facebook friends &amp; Twitter fans. So please help get the word out about our blog and click on the &#8220;Share&#8221; button so others can enjoy the blog. http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/italian-american-writers-assoc-newsletter-february-2011/<br />
______________________________________________________________<br />
Do you have a Linkedin page? Help Us get the word out about IAWA<br />
Connect to us on our Linkedin page: http://www.linkedin.com/in/italianamericanwritersassoc</p>
<p>Please send us announcements of readings and literary events by the 15th of the preceding month; this means if you have an event in January; send us it by Dec. 15th </p>
<p>Please format in THIRD PERSON and in this order for events: Day, Date, Type of event, Event and Name of Participants, Time, Place of event and address, Admission price; Contact information Web site </p>
<p>We do not open attachments; please put all announcements in the body of your email in plain text only; we can&#8217;t use jpg or anything in all caps</p>
<p>E-mail announcements to Vittoria repetto at iawanewsletter@aol.com<br />
______________________________________________________________<br />
Saturday, December 10th &#8211; 5:45 pm – 7:45pm.<br />
Poetry and Prose Feature plus Open Mike<br />
Cornelia St. Café, 29 Cornelia St., Manhattan<br />
212-989-9319; www.corneliastreetcafe.com<br />
$7 minimum includes one drink<br />
Come in time to sign up at 5:45 pm.<br />
Bring poetry Bring prose Bring script Bring a friend<br />
5 minute time limit for open mike</p>
<p>Feature Readers: Anne Marie Macari &amp; Robert Viscusi</p>
<p>Anne Marie Macari&#8217;s most recent book, She Heads Into the Wilderness, was published in 2008 by Autumn House Press. She is also the author of Gloryland (Alice James, 2005) and Ivory Cradle which won the Apr/Honickman first book prize in 2000.<br />
Macari’s work has been widely published in magazines such as Poetry International, The American Poetry Review, and Five Points. Macari is the founder and director of the low-residency MFA program in poetry and poetry in translation at Drew University.</p>
<p>Robert Viscusi who teaches at Brooklyn College, has published Astoria: A Novel (Guernica, 1995; American Book Award 1996), An Oration upon the Most Recent Death of Christopher Columbus (VIA Folios, 1993), A New Geography of Time (Guernica , 2004), Buried Caesars, and Other Secrets of Italian American Writing (SUNY Press) which won the Premio Giuseppe Acerbi in 2008. His present project is an epic poem entitled Ellis Island, currently appearing in parts. One can read random sonnets based upon the whole text at www.ellisislandpoem.com. Bordighera Press will publish the full text in early 2012.</p>
<p>Since 1991, the organization has given voice to writers through its Open Reading series at Cornelia St. Café every month.<br />
IAWA is a 501© (3) not-for-profit corporation; donations are tax deductible.</p>
<p>Visit the Italian American Writers Cafe blog</p>
<p>http://www.i-italy.org/bloggers/italian-american-writers-cafe</p>
<p>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/</p>
<p>Events:</p>
<p>Monday, December 5 Discussion: Mafia Movies: A Roundtable Discussion Portrayals of the Italian and Italian-American Mafias have differed markedly over time and across multiple cultures&#8211;from The Godfather trilogy to Gomorrah. Mafia Movies: A Reader (University of Toronto Press,), edited by Dana Renga, provides a comprehensive exploration of the mythification of gangsters onscreen, identifying key features and connections to styles such as film noir, thrillers, and even westerns. This presentation consists of two roundtable discussions with several of the book&#8217;s contributors. The &#8220;Gender and Violence&#8221; panel features Rebecca Bauman George De Stefano, Lara Santoro, Jane Schneider, and Peter Schneider. Elizabeth Leake, Giancarlo Lombardi, and Nelson Moe  will discuss &#8220;Historicizing the Imagined Mafia.&#8221; 6pm. Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, Manhattan. Free Admission. Seating is limited. Please call (212) 642-2094 to pre-register with the Calandra Institute</p>
<p>Thursday, December 8 Reading: Tony Ardizzone reads from The Whale Chaser (Academy Chicago Publishers) The Whale Chaser is the story of Vince Sansone, the eldest child and only son in a large Italian-American family, who comes of age in 1960s Chicago. A constant disappointment to his embittered father, Vince finds solace in Marie Santangelo, the neighborhood butcher&#8217;s winsome daughter, and Lucy Sheehan, an older girl with a reputation. When Vince abruptly flees Chicago he ends up in Tofino, a fishing town on the rugged west coast of Vancouver Island in British Columbia. He finds a job gutting fish, then is hired by Tofino&#8217;s most colorful dealer, Mr. Zig-Zag, and joins the thriving marijuana trade. Through his friendship with an Ahousaht native named Ignatius George, he finds his calling as a whale guide. Ultimately, Vince comes to terms with the consequences of his own actions as well as the unspoken story of how his grandfather, like thousands of other Italian Americans, was evacuated from prohibited zones on the West Coast and interned in a prison camp after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. 6pm. Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, Manhattan. Free Admission. Seating is limited. Please call (212) 642-2094 to pre-register with the Calandra Institute</p>
<p>Tuesday December 27 Women&#8217;s / Trans&#8217; Poetry Jam &amp; Open Mike:<br />
Feature Writer: Roberta Satow Roberta Satow’s writing is about her relationship with her mother &#8211;as a child and also as her caregiver when she developed dementia. Hosted by Vittoria repetto 7pm Bluestockings Bookstore 172 Allen St. (between Staton &amp; Rivington) Manhattan  Take V or F train to 2nd Ave. and exit from the 1st Ave exit and walk south down Allen St. (aka. 1st Ave) 1 ½ blocks to the store $5 suggested donation 212-777-6028 http://www.bluestockings.com/</p>
<p>Wednesday January 4 Reading: New Hungers for Old: One-Hundred Years of Italian-American Poetry Dennis Barone will host and the readers will be Elaine Equi, Mary Giaimo, George Guida, Peter Covino, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Ray DiPalma, Daniela Gioseffi, Matthew Longabucco, Jerome Mazzaro, J. T. Barbarese, Nick Piombino, Maria Terrone, David Cappella, Clare Rossini, Vittoria repetto and Paola Corso. 8pm Saint Marks Poetry Project, 10th St &amp; 2nd Ave,  Manhattan, </p>
<p>Members’ News:</p>
<p>Fred Gardaphe &amp; Dominic Candeloro have edited Reconstructing Italians in Chicago: Thirty Authors in Search of Roots and Branches Chicago history/culture with an Italian flair! There is something for everybody in this eclectic volume. Every reader will find a topic or a writer that s/he wants to know more about. Publication of Reconstructing Italians in Chicago is a major step toward making Chicago&#8217;s Italians the best documented (and best understood) in the nation. It is a gateway to both the academic and the personal exploration of Italians in Chicago, loaded with references that lead the reader to just about every source of information on the subject. Some of the writers include T Ardizzone,R Benedetti,A Bernardi,K Catrambone, J Colangelo, B DalCerro, P D&#8217;Agostino, T DeRosa, C Farella, T Guglielmo,B Lombardo,C Lombardo, R Lombardo, E Milani, R Miele, G Nardini, D Niemiec, P Pero,TRomano,V Romano,J Santacaterina, M Antonucci http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0983553807/sr=1-1/qid=1322495004/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&amp;me=&amp;qid=1322495004&amp;sr=1-1&amp;seller=</p>
<p>Thieves Never Steal In The Rain, new collection of Linked Stores about Loss, Love, and the Supernatural by Marisa Labozzetta is out. Love, humor, and the supernatural drive these stories about the intertwining lives of five female cousins, who learn that loss—from misplacing keys to confronting death—is a constant force to be reckoned with.  It is also now available as an eBook from Amazon. http://www.amazon.com/Thieves-Never-Linked-Stories-ebook/dp/B00637TR2Q/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1321326303&amp;sr=1-1 To order for computers, iPads, and other electronic devices, first download free applications by going to Kindle Store, then clicking on Kindle Store under Shop All Departments).</p>
<p>Three Spoken Word Pieces by Angelo Zeolla </p>
<p>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/17/three-spoken-word-pieces-by-angelo-zeolla/</p>
<p>Maria Terrone’s poem, “The Slain Wife of the Lighthouse Keeper Speaks,” first published in Italian Americana, is included in the recently published Knopf Everyman Series anthology, Killer Verse: Poems About Murder and Mayhem. This Amazon link leads to a list of all poems and authors included in this hard-cover book:<br />
http://www.amazon.com/Killer-Verse-Murder-Everymans-Library/dp/0307700933  Other recent publications include “Spaccanapoli,” in the fall issue of Hawaii Pacific Review; “Knives” (a reprint from The Hudson Review”) and “Missing the Names” in Poemeleon, http://www.poemeleon.org/; and<br />
“Introducing the Forest to Vivaldi” and “Words to Unpin Yourself from  the Wall” in Pirene’s Fountain http://www.pirenesfountain.com/  Recent acceptances include “BlackBerry Buzzing” (The Hudson Review); “A Hologram State of Mind” (Ploughshares); and “The Day After” (Poet Lore).</p>
<p>Gil Fagiani’s chapbook, Serfs of Psychiatry, is now being published by Finishing Line Press and should be available by mid-January, 2012.  “Fagiani’s poems tell the back story of the powerless and abandoned mentally ill and the equally powerless and abandoned low-level psychiatirc “serfs,” the attendants&#8211;the least-paid, least-respected workers, who are, pradoxically entrusted with the day-to-day care of severely disturbed, often violent patients…Move over Ken Kesey, we have another chronicler of the ‘Cuckoo’s Nest,’ Bronx-style.”  Kirsten Andersen, Ph.D.clinical psychologist / Adjunct Professor at The School of Visual Arts.<br />
To order copies, visit Finishing Line Press www.finishinglinepress.com and click on “NewReleasesandForthcomingTitles.htm.”</p>
<p>Anthony Buccino&#8217;s latest poetry collection, “Sometimes I Swear In Italian” is about growing up Italian American in New Jersey, and, much later, discovering the roots of his ancestors. Despite its title, “Sometimes I Swear In Italian” contains no profanity in any language. For more information visit http://www.anthonybuccino.com</p>
<p>Three books written by Dr. Marie Menna Pagliaro for educators have just been published by Rowman &amp; Littlefield.  The titles are: Educator or Bully? Managing the 21st Century Classroom; Exemplary Classroom Questioning: Promoting Thinking and Learning; and Differentiating Instruction: Matching Strategies with Objectives.  A fourth book, Research-Based Unit and Lesson Planning: Maximizing Student Achievement is scheduled to be published in November.  These books by Marie Pagliaro are in addition to her novel, That Woman and the Mafia Don, the profits of which go to help prevent young people from joining all kinds of ethnic gangs. drmariepagliaro@gmail.com.</p>
<p>Daniel Quinn is the author of Organized Labor: Collected Poems (published by AuthorHouse), which covers four generations of American and family history, from the birth of his grandmother in NYC in 1887 to the fall of the Twin Towers in 2001. Like much of the poetry in this 46-page volume, the book&#8217;s title has multiple allusions: from poems that deal with the organized labor movement in America (most notably, the 1913 strike of 20,000 Paterson silk workers at Botto House in Haledon, NJ), to the labor of organizing&#8211;and reconciling&#8211;past and present (captured eloquently in the title poem, &#8216;Organized Labor&#8217;), to even the labor of preparing one&#8217;s poetry for publication. Contact Mr. Quinn dquinn711@msn.com for more information</p>
<p>Obituary: Diana Festa<br />
Poet and past IAWA feature, Diana Festa, died on June 8, 2011; yet some of her work has appeared posthumously such as in the current Feile Festa that can now be viewed online [http://www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/v006/poetry/festa.html]. Her poem End of Summer won The Fifth Annual John and Rose Petracca &amp; Family Award and appeared in the 2010 edition of Philadelphia Poets edited by Rosemary Cappello.<br />
Festa was the author of six poetry books, Arches to the West, Ice Sparrow, Thresholds, Bedrock, The Gathering and A Landscape of Time. She has also published four books on literary criticism, and a large number of poems and articles in various reviews and anthologies. She is the recipient of several poetry prizes, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Guizot Award from the French Academy.<br />
Festa, who was a French professor at Brooklyn College until her retirement, created a base for a group of authors known as the Madison Poets who gathered weekly for an evening of writing or editing their poems for over a decade. Her late evening banter and extravagant meals were legendary. Festa will be sorely missed by the Madison Poets and others who came into contact with her. A memorial is forthcoming and will be announced shortly.</p>
<p>&#8220;Biting into a morsel of Abruzzese soppresatta will never be the same after reading Anthony Di Renzo’s Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen&#8221; begins Maria Lisella&#8217;s review of Anthony Di Renzo&#8217;s Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen (SUNY Press), which was recently published in the 2011 edition of the literary journal, Feile-Festa, is now online. &#8220;Perhaps the key passage to the entire collection is: &#8216;Italian Americans can learn more about the heartbreak and horror of assimilation from soppressata than from any book&#8230;This particular sausage has gone from being a staple, to a treat, to a delicacy, to a swindle in less than thirty years. The phenomenon is a minor tragedy in our history – a minor tragedy, but a telling one.&#8217;&#8221; http://www.medcelt.org/feilefesta/v006/prose/lisella.html</p>
<p>Check out an interview with Tony Ardizzone in the journal Magna Grece http://magnagrece.blogspot.com/2011/09/fiction-as-life-interview-with-author.html </p>
<p>Publisher’s News/Book Reviews/Contest Winners/Awards:</p>
<p>Italica Press has published out Medieval Naples A Documentary History, 400-1400 http://www.italicapress.com/index287.html and Torquato Tasso Love Poems for  Lucrezia Bendidio http://www.italicapress.com/index426.html For a complete catalog, </p>
<p>http://www.italicapress.com</p>
<p>Vittoria repetto has reviewed A New Map: The Poetry of Migrant Writers in Italy by Mia Lecomte and Luigi Bonaffini (Legas-2001) for VIA. This anthology is a bilingual edition of poetry by migrant writers living and working in Italy. These migrant writers hail from places like Somalia, Iran, Iraq, Romania, Holland, Brazil and Albania.</p>
<p>http://vittoriarepetto.wordpress.com/2011/10/29/review-of-a-new-way-the-poetry-of-migrant-writers-in-italy/</p>
<p>Idea Publication announces the publication of, Barbarossa&#8217;s Princess, a tale of intrigue, violence, sex, love and ultimate triumph, Elizabeth Vallone’s Barbarossa’s Princess  is also a tapestry of the customs of the Holy Roman Empire, the Norman-Sicilian Court and mores of life in the 12th century. Barbarossa’s Princess is a veritable page turner. From the very first line, we are swept away on an adventure through the corridors of power in the 12th century. We taste and smell the meals, we see the unusual medical practices, we hear all the raucous sounds of life in an age more refined and more coarse than even our own. At the center of this delightful tale is Constance de Hauteville, a woman drawn from a nunnery to become Empress of a continent. She becomes the bearer of the next Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. An innocent, along with her maid-servant, Constance enters the corridors of power and grows to become as forceful as those who would use her for their own gain. Vallone portrays Constance de Hauteville as a woman of chutzpah and humility, a mother who endures the humiliations of women in an earlier time, but who triumphs and endures”.  Patrick McGuire, Senior Lecturer of English. University of Wisconsin </p>
<p>The Spaghetti Set, Family Served Italian Style by Rose Marie Boyd Feel like a fly on the wall in the homes of two Italian-American families as a comedy of errors unfolds. The characters&#8217; irreverent, ludicrous and intimate behavior affirms the old adage: ”Family is family, like it or not!” http://thespaghettiset.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>A new collection of essays on the Italian American experience is now available in a Kindle edition from Amazon.com. These 12 essays were originally published in the online journal Suite 101, and some of them were rerpinted in Dante Society newsletters in Boston and Seattle  Towards a More Balanced View of Italian Americans by Anthony S. Maulucci</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released  released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations. Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition Author: Suzann M. Brucato<br />
ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6 | Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Available at www.MagCloud.com Web: www.MatriarchJourney.com  TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>Italica Press author (and Italian novelist, essayist, journalist, playwright and poet), Dacia Maraini, has been nominated for the 2011 Man Booker International Prize, the most prestigious literary award in the UK.<br />
The International Prize is awarded for an author’s life work; and Italica Press has played some part in bringing this work to English-speaking audiences. Over the years we’ve published an English edition of her Donna in guerra (Woman at War, 1988), translated by Mara Benetti and Elspeth Spottiswood; her short story “Maria,” translated by Martha King in our anthology New Italian Women (edited by Martha King in 1989); and selections from her poetry in our anthology Contemporary Italian Women Poets, edited and translated by Cinzia Sartini Blum and Lara Trubowitz (2001)</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published  his full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Print Format &#8211; $24.20; Digital Format &#8211; $14.29,Available at www.MagCloud.com www.MatriarchJourney.com Email: TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>The Paterson Literary Review #38, 2009-2010 is out; this edition features Diane di Prima and includes a number of her poems and a short story Other poets/writers in this edition include Maria Fama, Vittoria repetto, Rachel Guido deVries, Maria Lisella, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, , Jennifer Gillan and Anthoy Buccino See http://old.pccc.edu/poetry/public.htm for price and order form.</p>
<p>Workshops &amp; Conferences: </p>
<p>Friday –Sunday December 9, 10 &amp; 11 Poetry Weekend Intensive w/ Maria Mazziotti Gillan &amp; Laura Boss Located at the convent of Saint John the Baptist, 82 West Main Street, Mendham, NJ Writing weekend poets will find:<br />
Support and encouragement * stimulating activities leading to the creation of new work   *<br />
Workshop leaders who are actively engaged in the writing life<br />
Opportunities to read their work aloud to the group<br />
A circle of writer friends<br />
Networking opportunities.\<br />
(This writing intensive is open to all writers over the age of 18.) 15 Professional development  credits granted. Fee Schedule: Total $375 Mail check payable to Maria Mazziotti Gillan  &#8211; 40 Post Ave., Hawthorne, NJ 07506<br />
For discounts, more information &amp; other questions? Call (973) 684-6555 or (973) 423-2921 or email mgillan@pccc.edu or mariagillan@verizon.net</p>
<p>Sat Nov 5th: New Directions in Italian and Italian-American History: A Conference in Honor of Philip Cannistraro   9am<br />
Location: John D. Calandra Italian-American Institute 25 West 43rd Street, 17th Floor, NYC, (212) 642-2094  Free Admission Please RSVP at calandra@qc.edu<br />
Keynote: Emilio Gentile, University of Rome, La Sapienza<br />
“Fabbrica del consenso o fabbrica del potere? Redefining Fascism and Totalitarianism”<br />
New Directions in Italian-American History<br />
Chair: Gerald Meyer, Hostos Community College, CUNY<br />
Charles Killinger, University of Central Florida, “Italian Antifascist Exiles and the Italian-American Community: Renato Poggioli and Gaetano Salvemini as Case Studies”<br />
Marcella Bencivenni, Hostos Community College, CUNY, “Re-examining Italian-American Radical History Through the Lens of Culture”<br />
Peter Vellon, Queens College, CUNY, “‘The humiliation of being treated like Negroes’: The Italian-American Education in Matters of Race”<br />
New Directions in Italian History, I<br />
Chair: Emily Braun, Hunter College &amp; The Graduate Center, CUNY<br />
Paul Corner, University of Siena, “Factories and their Products: A Comment on Phil Cannistraro’s La fabbrica del consenso”<br />
Ernest Ialongo, Hostos Community College, CUNY, “The Calculated Compromise: F.T. Marinetti and Fascism in the Twenties”<br />
William Adams, Hunter College, CUNY, “The politica dei ponti in the Republic of Salò”<br />
New Directions in Italian History, II<br />
Chair: John Davis, University of Connecticut<br />
Marta Petrusewicz, University of Calabria, “Fin-de-siècle Rome: A Republic of Collectors”<br />
Stanislao Pugliese, Hofstra University, “Dancing on a Volcano: Attempting a Popular History of Naples”<br />
David Aliano, College of Mount Saint Vincent, “Re-imagining the Nation: Italian National Narratives Abroad (1922-1945)” </p>
<p>Literary &amp; Research Queries:</p>
<p>Hofstra Entertainment is currently seeking to cast a staged reading (on book) of  Eduardo de Filippo&#8217;s comedy, Christmas in Naples. Casting 7-8 men, age range 20&#8242;s-50&#8242;s, and 4 women, age range 20&#8242;s -50&#8242;s. Reading will take place at Hofstra in the Helene Fortunoff Theater (Monroe Lecture Center), Thursday, November 17, 8 pm and is presented as part of a three day conference event exploring Naples. Directed by Bob Spiotto. Familiarity with Italian is not required as the piece is performed in English and without Italian accents. No pay. Send pix and resume to robert.t.spiotto@hofstra.edu</p>
<p>Linda Baldanzia is a student at Drew University in NJ. in a Poetry in Translation MFA program. I am looking for a translator to help me with literal translations of several short poems. I do not read Italian well. It would be best if the Translator has lived in Italy. The translating will begin this June 201-482-0597, lindabaldanzi@mac.com</p>
<p>Magazines, Contests &amp; Calls for Submissions:</p>
<p>7th Annual Accenti Magazine Writing Contest and 5th Annual Accenti Magazine Photo Competition<br />
Fee: $20 CND for the Writing Contest and $10 CND for the Photo Competition<br />
For rules and submission addresses, etc: https://www.accenti.ca/writing &amp; https://www.accenti.ca/photo-contest Deadline for submissions: February 7, 2012</p>
<p>Luigi Monteferrante is looking for a special edition on work by Italian/Italian American/Italian Canadian authors in the magazine: Chicago Quarterly Review http://www.chicagoquarterlyreview.com/ Work should be submitted to luigimonteferrante@yahoo.com</p>
<p>Feile-Festa is an annual publication that comes out in the spring of each year. Though our preference is for creative work related to Irish and Italian/Sicilian themes, we are open to other Mediterranean cultures, all of which can relate to the respective country of family origin or the diasporas to America, Canada, etc. We are also interested in writing that evokes life in New York City. The reading period starts October 1st and ends January 1st. Please do not send submissions outside the time frame mentioned in the guidelines. www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/index.html</p>
<p>The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute  published the bi-annual journal the Italian American Review (IAR). The IAR features articles about the history and culture of Italian Americans, as well as other aspects of the Italian diaspora.The journal embraces a wide range of professional concerns and theoretical orientations in the social sciences and in cultural studies. Information for contributors can be found at: http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/calandra/italrev/iarcont.html.</p>
<p>Journal of Italian Translation is a non-profit international journal devoted to the translation of literary works from and into Italian-English-Italian dialects. Subscription price is $25 per year. Submissions and inquiries should be sent to Luigi Bonaffini at l.bonaffini@att.net. All past issues can be downloaded from the journal’s website at www.jitonline.org</p>
<p>Pyramid Arts and Poetry Magazine – “Where Rome and New York Meet” Pyramid Arts and Poetry is divided into three sections: Visual Art; Poetry &amp; Literature; and Film. Listings of gallery exhibits, poetry readings, and film showings in New York and Rome accompany each section. For submission guidelines, visit http://www.pyramidmagazine.org</p>
<p>VIA, Voices in Italian Americana, is a semi-annual published in the spring and fall. Issues include sections of essays, fiction, poetry, review essays, reviews, and guest spots by prominent Italian/American writers. Subscriptions are $20.00 per year ($15.00 for seniors, students, and un[der]employed). For subscriptions &amp; advertising, contact Anthony Julian Tamburri at tamburri@bordigherapress.org</p>
<p>Italian Americana is the first and only cultural as well as historical review dedicated to the Italian experience in the New World; subscription price is $20 a year, $35 for two years, to: Italian Americana, University of Rhode Island/Providence, 80 Washington Street Providence, RI 02903-1803. Check out the new Website supplement to the journal at www.italianamericana.com</p>
<p>The Monday Night Playwrights’ Series is curated by Richard Fulco; interested playwrights could submit their work at richardfulco@aol.com</p>
<p>Theatre Submissions: Post Road Magazine (Boston, Ma), a literary/visual arts journal, is accepting theatre submissions of very short one-act plays, sketches, and monologues. david@postroadmag.com</p>
<p>The American Italian Historical Association Newsletter is now accepting submissions of book reviews. Please send all submissions Anthony.Tamburri@qc.cuny.edu.</p>
<p>Websites:</p>
<p>Italian Cultural Institute of New York, 686 Park Ave, Manhattan www.iicnewyork.esteri.it and click on their monthly newsletter available in digital format.</p>
<p>Casa Belvedere, The Italian Cultural Foundation, a unique 2.75 acre cultural campus and community center on Staten Island for all to enjoy, is a registered 501(c) (3) not for profit organization that seeks to preserve, promote and celebrate the rich heritage of Italy by encouraging an appreciation of the Italian language, arts, literature, history, fashion, cuisine, and commerce through educational programs, exhibits and events.  To subscribe to the mailing list and learn more about the upcoming events and programs, call 718-273-7660, e-mail info@casa-belvedere.org or click on to www.casa-belvedere.org. </p>
<p>Anthony Buccino has created a blog for New Jersey poets to post info about events, links to their web sites and publishers and literary magazines. You can get email notices- no strings attached – when new items are posted. http://njpoetspoetry.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>www.BigFatPrize.com lists over 500 Writing Contests and competition categories like Essay, Fiction, Poetry, Short Story, Young Writers, Songwriting, Screenwriting, Playwright and Journalism</p>
<p>Working Writer newsletter offers solid information with a good dose of humor and a spirit of writing camaraderie. WW is filled with articles on promotion, publishing, freelancing, different genres, how-to, and how-not-to, written by readers across the country. To receive a free copy (no obligation) by e-mail , send a request to workingwriters@aol.com. Or check out www.workingwriter1.com</p>
<p>I-Italy: The Italian American Digital Project (http://www.i-italy.org) is online. This site is a forum for discussion and debate over Italian American social and cultural issues, home to numerous Italian American blogs, and the place to read leading Italian American commentators columns on Italian American life.</p>
<p>Readers are requested to visit www.italianamericanpress.com to order or obtain information about the fascinating books listed below written by Italian Americans on a variety of interesting topics. At The Italian-American Press, there are links for finding translators, a literary marketplace, and writers’ guilds, aside from links such as Tools for Italian American Writers, Italian American Books, Italian American Publishers, and the Internet’s best selection of self-published Italian American Books (84 Titles).</p>
<p>KIT-Kairos Italy Theater’s mission is to create a cultural exchange program between Italy, the US and the international community, to unveil artistic and creative sides of these two countries to the world. http://www.kitheater.com/</p>
<p>New York Foundation for the Arts, Visit NYFA Source, the most comprehensive database of awards, services, and publications available to artists in all disciplines. www.nyfa.org/</p>
<p>The Write Stuff – Online Newsletter of Word Journeys at www.wordjourneys.com contains articles on self-publishing, new services and grist for the pen: tips.</p>
<p>The ACLS History E-Book Project www.historyebook.org is an electronic resource that includes over 1230 full-text, cross-searchable books in the field of history selected by historians for their continuing importance to students and scholars. Individuals can also subscribe through a membership in the American Historical Association or the Renaissance Society of America.</p>
<p>Accenti, The Canadian Magazine with an Italian Accent at www.accenti.ca/</p>
<p>The AA Independent Press Guide is a free, online resource for writers at http://www.thunderburst.co.uk. The guide has detailed listings on over 2,000 literary and genre magazines and publishers from around the world, plus links to over 750 Internet magazines.</p>
<p>www.virtualitalia.com is an online resource for Italians, Italian Americans and enthusiasts of Italian culture.</p>
<p>www.littap.org is a new resource for literary presenters, with tools such as Guidelines for Writers Fees. In addition to featuring Italian American, Italian Canadian and Italian writers, the site has reviews and links to the sites of writers of Italian Australian, Italian French and Italian Latino American origins.</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò, go to http://www.nyu.edu/pages/casaitaliana/events.html</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Italian Academy at Columbia University, go to http://www.italianacademy.columbia.edu/calendar/calendar.html</p>
<p>The Immigration History Research Center is at http://www.ihrc.umn.edu</p>
<p>See Poets &amp; Writers for leads to prizes for writers, and places to get away and write, links to grants, conferences and residencies. http://www.pw.org/toolsforwriters</p>
<p>www.ItalianAmericanWriters.com is an archive of samples of contemporary Italian Amerian writing; writers include Dennis Barone, Marisa Frasca, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Bob Viscusi, Anthony Tamburri, Fred Gardaphe, Stephen Massimilla, Alfredo de Palchi, Peter Covino, Paola Corso, Gil Fagiani, Louisa Calio, etc. Also check out the other website edited by Daniela Gioseffi &#8211; www.PoetsUSA.com/</p>
<p>Of Interest:</p>
<p>Monday, December 5th &#8220;Italy and the World Economy&#8221; In celebration of the 150th Anniversary of the Unification of Italy Please R.S.V.P. by opening the link: http://www.italianacademy.columbia.edu/events_calendar.html  selecting &#8220;Italy and the World Economy&#8221; event, clicking on RSVP and filling out the form The Italian Academy, 1161 Amsterdam Avenue (between 116th and 118th Streets)</p>
<p>The Neapolitan Solidarity Crèche &#8211; Presepio Della Solidarietà”Casa Belvedere-The Italian Cultural Foundation to open a very special exhibit of<br />
“Il Presepio Della Solidarietà”The Solidarity Crèche, on December 11, 2011 at 3pm. It will be on display at Casa Belvedere from December 11, 2011 – January 7, 2012. The exhibit is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.For exhibit hours, to schedule a group visit, or to subscribe to the mailing list and learn more about Casa Belvedere&#8217;s upcoming events and programs, call 718-273-7660, e-mail info@casa-belvedere.org or click on to www.casa-belvedere.org</p>
<p>Drums of Illumination: Southern Italian, Brazilian, and Native American Ritual Drumming and Dance for World Peace to Celebrate the Winter Solstice<br />
Monday &amp; Tuesday, December 19 &amp; 20 at 8 pm Theater for the New City, 155 First Avenue (between 9th &amp; 10th Streets) Tickets: $25 Reservations: Smarttix at 212.868.4444 or www.smarttix.com </p>
<p>Elvin Serrano’s Photo Show of Caribbean at 1840 Ivanhoe Historic Building, 4 Spruce St, Paterson, NJ. Opening reception Friday 12/9/11 7pm-10pm, Photo&#8217;s will be on display until until 1/9/12. Parking available at Visitor Center or Great Falls parking lot at McBride Av and Spruce St intersection..</p>
<p>IAVANET Mentoring Program<br />
Founded in 2007, the Italian-American Visual Artists&#8217; Network (IAVANET) is a group of 18 painters, sculptors, photographers, and designers based in the greater New York City area. The collective credentials of the artists encompass the worlds of museum and gallery exhibitions, art education, and work in the marketplace of art and design. To view their portfolio, visit www.iavanet.org. Mindful of the great tradition of Italian excellence in the visual arts and its artistic heritage, the group is currently establishing a mentoring program for aspiring Italian-American visual artists of high school and college age. In the program participants will review and evaluate portfolios, offer advice on improving particular technical skills, and suggest projects that would be suited to the individual&#8217;s artistic personality. IAVANET will also curate shows of the work of students who participate in the program. Interested student artists can contact Richard Laurenzi at info@iavanet.org, specifying the area of mentoring they are seeking (painting, sculpture, photography, or design arts), to set up an interview. </p>
<p>Diasporic Continuities: A Salon Discussion Point on the Changing Face of Italian Unification on the Verge of its 150th Anniversaryhttp://disunification.blogspot.com/<br />
How you can join the conversation: Still a work in progress, for now, please join the conversation by commenting on one of the existing posts or become a follower of the discussions. If you would like to post something yourself (rather than comment), please email LauraRuberto (lruberto@peralta.edu) or Pasquale Verdicchio (pverdicchio@yahoo.com)</p>
<p>Association of Friends of Piedmont in New York<br />
We are a group of artists, professionals, scientists and business owners sharing an interest for the Piedmont Region, either because we were born there or because we appreciate the contribution that people from Piedmont have made to the arts, sciences and industry. You can learn more about the Association at http://piedmontinnewyork.blogspot.com </p>
<p>Vittoria repetto rents her charming vacation house in Framura, in the Ligurian region on a weekly to monthly basis at a reasonable price. It is the perfect place for vacation especially great if you are a writer or a painter. The occupancy is for 4 people; there are 2 bedrooms. The town is 3 towns north of the Cinqueterre towns. For detailed information and pictures, http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-rental/p211239</p>
<p>Italian American Writers, a Cablevision television series hosted by Vito De Simone, runs each month on many New York area and other Cablevision systems, including Manhattan, Long Island and some Brooklyn systems. Check local listings for channels and times.</p>
<p>The New York-based Italian-American Playwrights Forum meets at the Calandra Institute three Thursdays a month to develop plays and carry out discussions about Italian-American identity/themes. The work itself does not have to be about an Italian-American theme. Please contact Gian Di Donna gian@att.net for information.</p>
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		<description><![CDATA[IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter November 2011 P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215 www.iawa.net IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING. PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA . You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net Suggested donations: Membership $30 (students and seniors &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/11/01/nov-2011-iawa-newsletter/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=370&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter November 2011<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
www.iawa.net</p>
<p>IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING.</p>
<p>PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA .</p>
<p>You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net</p>
<p>Suggested donations:<br />
Membership $30 (students and seniors $20)<br />
Associate $100-249<br />
Patron $250-499<br />
Founder $500-1000<br />
IAWA is a 501(c) (3) not-for-profit corporation. Donations are tax-deductible.</p>
<p>If you prefer to send a check, make it payable to “Italian American Writers Association,” and send it to the following address:</p>
<p>Treasurer, Italian American Writers Association,<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
Please share our Italian American Writer&#8217;s blog on your Facebook/Twitter account</p>
<p>As some of you know, we have a blog at http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/ And I hope that you have (or will) enjoyed the information and writing presented there. We now have a &#8220;Share&#8221; button on our blog so you can share the blog w/ your Facebook friends &amp; Twitter fans. So please help get the word out about our blog and click on the &#8220;Share&#8221; button so others can enjoy the blog. http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/italian-american-writers-assoc-newsletter-february-2011/<br />
______________________________________________________________<br />
Do you have a Linkedin page? Help Us get the word out about IAWA<br />
Connect to us on our Linkedin page: http://www.linkedin.com/in/italianamericanwritersassoc</p>
<p>Please send us announcements of readings and literary events by the 15th of the preceding month; this means if you have an event in January; send us it by Dec. 15th </p>
<p>Please format in THIRD PERSON and in this order for events: Day, Date, Type of event, Event and Name of Participants, Time, Place of event and address, Admission price; Contact information Web site </p>
<p>We do not open attachments; please put all announcements in the body of your email in plain text only; we can&#8217;t use jpg or anything in all caps</p>
<p>E-mail announcements to Vittoria repetto at iawanewsletter@aol.com<br />
______________________________________________________________<br />
Saturday, November 12th &#8211; 5:45 pm – 7:45pm.<br />
Poetry and Prose Feature plus Open Mike<br />
Cornelia St. Café, 29 Cornelia St., Manhattan<br />
212-989-9319; www.corneliastreetcafe.com<br />
$7 minimum includes one drink<br />
Come in time to sign up at 5:45 pm.<br />
Bring poetry Bring prose Bring script Bring a friend<br />
5 minute time limit for open mike</p>
<p>Feature Readers: Jessica Femiani &amp; Susan Marc Lawley</p>
<p>Jessica Femiani’s poems have been published in the Paterson Literary Review and she was a finalist for the American Voice In Poetry Prize, Paterson, NJ, 2009. This past summer she read at the first annual New York Poetry Festival. She is currently at work on her chapbook, At the Foot of a Volcano. A graduate student of English at Brooklyn College, Femiani is writing her thesis on a topic within Italian American literature. By day, she is an English teacher at the Leonardo da Vinci Middle School in Corona, Queens. She is also an IAWA Board member and has a BA in English from Wesleyan University and an MS in Education from St. John’s University.</p>
<p>Dr. Susan Marc Lawley is a leadership and life coach, award-winning entrepreneur, writing instructor and founder of Sisters in Script, a non-profit organization devoted to the professional and personal development of women writers. Hieroglyphics of the Heart is Sue&#8217;s first poetry collection but she is already hard at work on her next, The Calligraphy of Courage forthcoming in 2012.<br />
Through Sisters in Script Lawley conducts her Keepsake Conversations workshop in which participants bring a treasured memento or family heirloom and write about the object using a six-part model she developed. Since 2009, Sisters in Script has awarded an annual grant to support an author who wishes to self-publish her debut manuscript. Information about workshops or applications for the self-publishing grant can be found on her website; www.sistersinscript.org</p>
<p>Since 1991, the organization has given voice to writers through its Open Reading series at Cornelia St. Café every month.<br />
IAWA is a 501© (3) not-for-profit corporation; donations are tax deductible.</p>
<p>Visit the Italian American Writers Cafe blog</p>
<p>http://www.i-italy.org/bloggers/italian-american-writers-cafe</p>
<p>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/</p>
<p>Events:</p>
<p>Tuesday, November 1 Conversation: novelist Erri De Luca, moderated by Silvia Bizio, U.S. Correspondent forL&#8217;Espresso and La Repubblica 6pm Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimó, 24 W. 12thSt., Manhattan</p>
<p>Thursday, November 3 Conversation with novelist Erri De Luca, moderated by Silvia Bizio, U.S. Correspondent forL&#8217;Espresso and La Repubblica 5pm Harvard University, Department of Linguistics, Fong Auditorium (Boylston Hall), Cambridge, Mass</p>
<p>Thursday, November 3 Reading: Claudine D&#8217;Angelo-Dotzman&#8217;s upcoming novel, Of Asphalt and Earth. Grounded in the true history of Italian immigrants from the Abruzzo of the mid-Twentieth century, the hopes and struggles of the novel&#8217;s main characters speaks not only to the Italian American experience but to that of anyone whose storia began far from American shores 6:30pm Italian American Museum 155 Mulberry Street Manhattan</p>
<p>Thursday November 3 Book Awards &amp; Reading: 2011 Bordighera Annual Poetry Awards 2011 winner: Driving West on the Pulaski Skyway by John Ortenzio Bargowski  2010 Winner: A Boat that can Carry Two by Matthew Cariello 6:30pm John D. Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 W. 43rd St. 17th floor. Manhattan between 5th &amp; 6th Ave Free Admission Refreshments to be served 212 642-2094 </p>
<p>Friday November 4 Reading: Women&#8217;s Poetry Event w/ Vittoria repetto, Chocolate Waters, Chavisa Woods, Dorothy Friedman August &amp; Roxanne Hoffman plus an open mic from 8pm -9:30pm . A reception will follow Masyrik Hall – downstairs at Jan Hus Church located at 351 E 74th St. Manhattan [between 1st and 2nd Avenue]. Tickets &#8211; $12.</p>
<p>Friday, November 4 Conversation with novelist Erri De Luca, moderated by Silvia Bizio, U.S. Correspondent forL&#8217;Espresso and La Repubblica 4pm UMass Amherst and Smith College</p>
<p>Tuesday, November 8 Reading: Adriana Trigiani reads from Don&#8217;t Sing at the Table: Life Lessons from My Grandmothers (Harper Paperbacks, 2011) Best-selling author Adriana Trigiani has gathered estimable lessons from her two grandmothers, revealing how their values have shaped her own life. In Don&#8217;t Sing at the Table, she introduces Lucia Spada Bonicelli (Lucy) and Yolanda Perin Trigiani (Viola), a pair of feisty, intelligent, and strong women. Between them, Lucy and Viola have lived through the twentieth century from beginning to end, surviving immigration, young widowhood, single motherhood, four wars, and the Great Depression. From the factory line to the family table, they set an example for their granddaughter in their fearless approach to overcoming obstacles. Sharing her grandmothers&#8217; wisdom, Trigiani offers answers to the questions that define the challenges women face today at work and at home. 6pm. Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, Manhattan. Free Admission. Seating is limited. Please call (212) 642-2094 to pre-register with the Calandra Institute</p>
<p>Wednesday, November 9 Conversation with novelist Erri De Luca, moderated by Silvia Bizio, U.S. Correspondent forL&#8217;Espresso and La Repubblica , introduced by Antonio Monda 5:30pm Rizzoli Book Store, 31 West 57th St., New York, NY</p>
<p>Friday, November 11 Conversation with novelist Erri De Luca, moderated by Silvia Bizio, U.S. Correspondent forL&#8217;Espresso and La Repubblica 7pm Book Court, 163 Court St., Brooklyn, NY</p>
<p>Monday, November 14 Discussion: Singing, Nostalgia, and Local Migration in a French-Italian Border Village w/ Cyril Isnart, Universidade de Évora The Alpine border village of Tende, once a part of Italy, has been a French commune since 1947. Piemontese migration to the area began at the end of the nineteenth century. The native Tendasques looked down on the poor, working-class migrants and in particular their Piedmontese-style singing and dancing, which was perceived as a cultural stigma. Today, these musical practices are instead highly valorized as a source for a collective Tende identity and a symbol of an authentic, idealized past. In his presentation, anthropologist Cyril Isnart discusses the ways musical expression and nostalgia are used to foster a micro-cultural identity. 6pm . Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, Manhattan. Free Admission. Seating is limited. Please call (212) 642-2094 to pre-register with the Calandra Institute</p>
<p>Wednesday, November 16 Roundtable Discussion  “Naples-New York with Pellegrino D’Acierno, Mary Brown, Charles Sant’Elia, Simona Frasca/Jason Pine, Ernesto Rossi and B. Amore. 5:30 – 7pm This is part of the conference “Delirious Naples &#8211; For a Cultural, Intellectual and Urban History of the City of the Sun.”Rochelle and Irwin Lowenfeld Conference and Exhibition Hall, Axinn Library Building, 1st floor, 123 Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549. Free Admission</p>
<p>Friday, November 18 Reading: Maria Lisella will feature with Poets Wear Prada press authors George Held, Erik La Prade and Juanita Torrence Thompson. 8pm Left Bank Books, #17 8th Avenue (Near W. 12th Street) Manhattan 10014, 212.924.5638 www.leftbankbooksny.com</p>
<p>Tuesday November 29 Women&#8217;s / Trans&#8217; Poetry Jam &amp; Open Mike: Feature Writers: Kelli Dunham &amp; Phyllis Capello<br />
Kelli Dunham, comic, writer &amp; ex-nun on the run, will be reading from Shut Up and Be Devastated, a work in progress about why grief sucks.<br />
Phyllis Capello&#8217;s poems and stories are about women and their work. They often have mythological references or origins.Hosted by Vittoria repetto 7pm Bluestockings Bookstore 172 Allen St. (between Staton &amp; Rivington) Manhattan  Take V or F train to 2nd Ave. and exit from the 1st Ave exit and walk south down Allen St. (aka. 1st Ave) 1 ½ blocks to the store $5 suggested donation 212-777-6028 http://www.bluestockings.com/</p>
<p>Tuesday, November 29 Film: Mi Pogolotti Querido  Enrica Viola, director Mi Pogolotti Querido tells the story of Dino Pogolotti and the barrio in Havana, Cuba, that bears his name. Born in Giaveno (Turin province), Pogolotti immigrated to New York in 1895 and moved to Cuba with his wife Grace Joyce upon his appointment as secretary to the United States Consul. With money inherited from his father-in-law, he purchased large tracts of land on the outskirts of Havana and in 1911 developed a neighborhood modeled on European social housing. The first working-class neighborhood in Havana, Barrio Pogolotti is also known for its Afro-Cuban cultural identity. In this documentary, Enrica Viola offers portraits of life-long residents of Pogolotti who describe the significance the neighborhood holds for them. The film also shows the Pogolotti family narrative&#8211;from Dino to his son Marcelo, a modernist painter, to his granddaughter Graziella, a prominent Cuban essayist. 6pm . Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, Manhattan. Free Admission. Seating is limited. Please call (212) 642-2094 to pre-register with the Calandra Institute</p>
<p>Members’ News:</p>
<p>Three Spoken Word Pieces by Angelo Zeolla </p>
<p>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/17/three-spoken-word-pieces-by-angelo-zeolla/</p>
<p>Maria Terrone’s poem, “The Slain Wife of the Lighthouse Keeper Speaks,” first published in Italian Americana, is included in the recently published Knopf Everyman Series anthology, Killer Verse: Poems About Murder and Mayhem. This Amazon link leads to a list of all poems and authors included in this hard-cover book:<br />
http://www.amazon.com/Killer-Verse-Murder-Everymans-Library/dp/0307700933  Other recent publications include “Spaccanapoli,” in the fall issue of Hawaii Pacific Review; “Knives” (a reprint from The Hudson Review”) and “Missing the Names” in Poemeleon, http://www.poemeleon.org/; and<br />
“Introducing the Forest to Vivaldi” and “Words to Unpin Yourself from  the Wall” in Pirene’s Fountain http://www.pirenesfountain.com/  Recent acceptances include “BlackBerry Buzzing” (The Hudson Review); “A Hologram State of Mind” (Ploughshares); and “The Day After” (Poet Lore).<br />
On September 11, she was one of nine poets invited by the West Chester Poetry Center to participate in a memorial reading at its Poets House.</p>
<p>Gil Fagiani’s chapbook, Serfs of Psychiatry, is now being published by Finishing Line Press and should be available by mid-January, 2012.  “Fagiani’s poems tell the back story of the powerless and abandoned mentally ill and the equally powerless and abandoned low-level psychiatirc “serfs,” the attendants&#8211;the least-paid, least-respected workers, who are, pradoxically entrusted with the day-to-day care of severely disturbed, often violent patients…Move over Ken Kesey, we have another chronicler of the ‘Cuckoo’s Nest,’ Bronx-style.”  Kirsten Andersen, Ph.D.clinical psychologist / Adjunct Professor at The School of Visual Arts.<br />
To order copies, visit Finishing Line Press www.finishinglinepress.com and click on “NewReleasesandForthcomingTitles.htm.”</p>
<p>Anthony Buccino&#8217;s latest poetry collection, “Sometimes I Swear In Italian” is about growing up Italian American in New Jersey, and, much later, discovering the roots of his ancestors. Despite its title, “Sometimes I Swear In Italian” contains no profanity in any language. For more information visit http://www.anthonybuccino.com</p>
<p>Three books written by Dr. Marie Menna Pagliaro for educators have just been published by Rowman &amp; Littlefield.  The titles are: Educator or Bully? Managing the 21st Century Classroom; Exemplary Classroom Questioning: Promoting Thinking and Learning; and Differentiating Instruction: Matching Strategies with Objectives.  A fourth book, Research-Based Unit and Lesson Planning: Maximizing Student Achievement is scheduled to be published in November.  These books by Marie Pagliaro are in addition to her novel, That Woman and the Mafia Don, the profits of which go to help prevent young people from joining all kinds of ethnic gangs. drmariepagliaro@gmail.com.</p>
<p>Daniel Quinn is the author of Organized Labor: Collected Poems (published by AuthorHouse), which covers four generations of American and family history, from the birth of his grandmother in NYC in 1887 to the fall of the Twin Towers in 2001. Like much of the poetry in this 46-page volume, the book&#8217;s title has multiple allusions: from poems that deal with the organized labor movement in America (most notably, the 1913 strike of 20,000 Paterson silk workers at Botto House in Haledon, NJ), to the labor of organizing&#8211;and reconciling&#8211;past and present (captured eloquently in the title poem, &#8216;Organized Labor&#8217;), to even the labor of preparing one&#8217;s poetry for publication. Contact Mr. Quinn dquinn711@msn.com for more information</p>
<p>Obituary: Diana Festa<br />
Poet and past IAWA feature, Diana Festa, died on June 8, 2011; yet some of her work has appeared posthumously such as in the current Feile Festa that can now be viewed online [http://www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/v006/poetry/festa.html]. Her poem End of Summer won The Fifth Annual John and Rose Petracca &amp; Family Award and appeared in the 2010 edition of Philadelphia Poets edited by Rosemary Cappello.<br />
Festa was the author of six poetry books, Arches to the West, Ice Sparrow, Thresholds, Bedrock, The Gathering and A Landscape of Time. She has also published four books on literary criticism, and a large number of poems and articles in various reviews and anthologies. She is the recipient of several poetry prizes, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Guizot Award from the French Academy.<br />
Festa, who was a French professor at Brooklyn College until her retirement, created a base for a group of authors known as the Madison Poets who gathered weekly for an evening of writing or editing their poems for over a decade. Her late evening banter and extravagant meals were legendary. Festa will be sorely missed by the Madison Poets and others who came into contact with her. A memorial is forthcoming and will be announced shortly.</p>
<p>&#8220;Biting into a morsel of Abruzzese soppresatta will never be the same after reading Anthony Di Renzo’s Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen&#8221; begins Maria Lisella&#8217;s review of Anthony Di Renzo&#8217;s Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen (SUNY Press), which was recently published in the 2011 edition of the literary journal, Feile-Festa, is now online. &#8220;Perhaps the key passage to the entire collection is: &#8216;Italian Americans can learn more about the heartbreak and horror of assimilation from soppressata than from any book&#8230;This particular sausage has gone from being a staple, to a treat, to a delicacy, to a swindle in less than thirty years. The phenomenon is a minor tragedy in our history – a minor tragedy, but a telling one.&#8217;&#8221; http://www.medcelt.org/feilefesta/v006/prose/lisella.html</p>
<p>Check out an interview with Tony Ardizzone in the journal Magna Grece http://magnagrece.blogspot.com/2011/09/fiction-as-life-interview-with-author.html </p>
<p>Three books written by Dr. Marie Menna Pagliaro for educators have just been published by Rowman &amp; Littlefield. The titles are: Educator or Bully? Managing the 21st Century Classroom; Exemplary Classroom Questioning: Promoting Thinking and Learning; and Differentiating Instruction: Matching Strategies with Objectives.  A fourth book, Research-Based Unit and Lesson Planning: Maximizing Student Achievement is scheduled to be published in November.  These books by Marie Pagliaro are in addition to her novel, That Woman and the Mafia Don, the profits of which go to help prevent young people from joining all kinds of ethnic gangs.</p>
<p>Daniela Gioseffi has published reviews of Gil Fagiani&#8217;s A Blanquito in El Barrio and Maria Lisella’s Amore on Hope St. in the current issue of VIA: Voices in Italian Americana. </p>
<p>Disturbing Youth (ISBN 1463730535), a novel by Melissa Pizirusso, tells the story of CJ Melfino, a boy kidnapped by his mother and then abandoned as a toddler, and his father Jace, who spends ten years trying to locate his son. Forced to live with elderly strangers from an early age, CJ&#8217;s childhood is filled with few bright spots besides his friendship with Ashley, the little girl who lives in the trailer across the street. The influences of his environment push him away from the rules of society and towards criminality. When Jace finds his son ten years after he last saw him, he hopes for closeness but finds only resentment and a dangerous outlook. Jace must win CJ&#8217;s trust and show him the value of a better life before the two can become close again. Inspired by the true-life story of a troubled youth, Pizirusso created the fictional character of CJ and filled his life with problems often faced by children in difficult circumstances, including divorce, teen pregnancy, racism and gang life. Written to engage and inspire thought about social pressures, the novel is targeted at all readers interested in rich, character-driven drama. Disturbing Youth is available for sale online at Amazon.com</p>
<p>Nick Matros won a month-long grant through the National Endowment for the Humanities to participate in the NEH’s Summer Institute course The Art of Teaching Italian through Art in Rome, Italy.</p>
<p>Stephen Sangirardi, former Iona adjunct in English, New Yorker, and Multiple Sclerosis patient, has released his second novel&#8212;A Shakespearean View of Freud. Like his first novel Monday Afternoon, this second book is also published by Night Reading in the UK and is available on Amazon.com and Kindle. The novel is about a librarian&#8211;Rob Conti&#8212;whose jealousy and fetishes ruin his two marriages. The setting takes place in New York and Missouri. The author’s picture is again on the back cover of the book, and his email is Bard715@aol.com.</p>
<p>Kathleen Gerard has a novel forthcoming in May, In Transit (Five Star/Gale-Cengage-Thorndike Press) is a woman-in-jeopardy story that features a contemporary Italian-American protagonist. The story delves into the ordinary lives of NYPD career cops and how their fates are determined by people who hold secrets as dark and as labyrinthine as the New York City Subway System. Kathleen was the recipient of the Perillo Prize for Italian-American Literature (IAWA, 2007). To learn more about the novel visit: http://intransit-thenovel.blogspot.com</p>
<p>Louisa Calio, director of the Poets and Writers Piazza for Hofstra&#8217;s Italian Experience is a featured poet this month at www.Mythopoetry.com. Just click on their facebook link to see her work. She will host the 10th anniversary of the Poets and Writers Piazza this Sept.18th at Hofstra. Look out for details. Her poem &#8220;Meet Joe, My Sicilian Father&#8221; will be in Descant a literary magazine published in Canada this coming winter and her story &#8220;Churchillo&#8221; will be published in a collection of humorous tales by Ed Maruggi of Winston Publications. Her poem &#8221; Signifyin Woman&#8221; is now available in Sweet Lemons 2 an anthology of writings with a Sicilian flavor available through Legas Press.</p>
<p>Playbill announced the world premiere of Richard Vetere’s play Last Day, on Gloucester Stage&#8217;s summer 2011 season in Gloucester, MA, running July 21-Aug. 7, and is billed as &#8220;a dark, delicious and mysterious love story set in a Long Island cemetery where not all secrets are underground.” Stage, screen and television writer Richard Vetere is the author of past Gloucester Stage hits Gangster Apparel and First Love. For furtherinformation and to purchase tickets, call the Gloucester Stage Box<br />
Office at (978) 281-4433 or visit www.gloucesterstage.org</p>
<p>Dennis Barone has two new books out: Field Report, twenty stories from Quale Press (and with a cover by poet Elaine Equi), and Parallel Lines, a volume of selected poems including work from over thirty years and with an Italian section. Information can be found on the new site: www.dennisbarone.wordpress.com.</p>
<p>Publisher’s News/Book Reviews/Contest Winners/Awards:</p>
<p>Vittoria repetto has reviewed A New Map: The Poetry of Migrant Writers in Italy by Mia Lecomte and Luigi Bonaffini (Legas-2001) for VIA. This anthology is a bilingual edition of poetry by migrant writers living and working in Italy. These migrant writers hail from places like Somalia, Iran, Iraq, Romania, Holland, Brazil and Albania.</p>
<p>http://vittoriarepetto.wordpress.com/2011/10/29/review-of-a-new-way-the-poetry-of-migrant-writers-in-italy/</p>
<p>Idea Publication announces the publication of, Barbarossa&#8217;s Princess, a tale of intrigue, violence, sex, love and ultimate triumph, Elizabeth Vallone’s Barbarossa’s Princess  is also a tapestry of the customs of the Holy Roman Empire, the Norman-Sicilian Court and mores of life in the 12th century. Barbarossa’s Princess is a veritable page turner. From the very first line, we are swept away on an adventure through the corridors of power in the 12th century. We taste and smell the meals, we see the unusual medical practices, we hear all the raucous sounds of life in an age more refined and more coarse than even our own. At the center of this delightful tale is Constance de Hauteville, a woman drawn from a nunnery to become Empress of a continent. She becomes the bearer of the next Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. An innocent, along with her maid-servant, Constance enters the corridors of power and grows to become as forceful as those who would use her for their own gain. Vallone portrays Constance de Hauteville as a woman of chutzpah and humility, a mother who endures the humiliations of women in an earlier time, but who triumphs and endures”.  Patrick McGuire, Senior Lecturer of English. University of Wisconsin </p>
<p>The Spaghetti Set, Family Served Italian Style by Rose Marie Boyd Feel like a fly on the wall in the homes of two Italian-American families as a comedy of errors unfolds. The characters&#8217; irreverent, ludicrous and intimate behavior affirms the old adage: ”Family is family, like it or not!” http://thespaghettiset.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>A new collection of essays on the Italian American experience is now available in a Kindle edition from Amazon.com. These 12 essays were originally published in the online journal Suite 101, and some of them were rerpinted in Dante Society newsletters in Boston and Seattle  Towards a More Balanced View of Italian Americans by Anthony S. Maulucci</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released  released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations. Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition Author: Suzann M. Brucato<br />
ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6 | Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Available at www.MagCloud.com Web: www.MatriarchJourney.com  TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>Italica Press author (and Italian novelist, essayist, journalist, playwright and poet), Dacia Maraini, has been nominated for the 2011 Man Booker International Prize, the most prestigious literary award in the UK.<br />
The International Prize is awarded for an author’s life work; and Italica Press has played some part in bringing this work to English-speaking audiences. Over the years we’ve published an English edition of her Donna in guerra (Woman at War, 1988), translated by Mara Benetti and Elspeth Spottiswood; her short story “Maria,” translated by Martha King in our anthology New Italian Women (edited by Martha King in 1989); and selections from her poetry in our anthology Contemporary Italian Women Poets, edited and translated by Cinzia Sartini Blum and Lara Trubowitz (2001)</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published  his full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Print Format &#8211; $24.20; Digital Format &#8211; $14.29,Available at www.MagCloud.com www.MatriarchJourney.com Email: TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>For what’s new at Italica Press, please check out http://italicapressnews.blogspot.com/<br />
You can also visit Italica Press at http://www.italicapress.com/ </p>
<p>The Paterson Literary Review #38, 2009-2010 is out; this edition features Diane di Prima and includes a number of her poems and a short story Other poets/writers in this edition include Maria Fama, Vittoria repetto, Rachel Guido deVries, Maria Lisella, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, , Jennifer Gillan And Anthoy Buccino See http://old.pccc.edu/poetry/public.htm for price and order form.</p>
<p>Workshops &amp; Conferences: </p>
<p>Friday –Sunday December 9, 10 &amp; 11 Poetry Weekend Intensive w/ Maria Mazziotti Gillan &amp; Laura Boss Located at the convent of Saint John the Baptist, 82 West Main Street, Mendham, NJ Writing weekend poets will find:<br />
Support and encouragement * stimulating activities leading to the creation of new work   *<br />
Workshop leaders who are actively engaged in the writing life<br />
Opportunities to read their work aloud to the group<br />
A circle of writer friends<br />
Networking opportunities.\<br />
(This writing intensive is open to all writers over the age of 18.) 15 Professional development  credits granted. Fee Schedule: Total $375 Mail check payable to Maria Mazziotti Gillan  &#8211; 40 Post Ave., Hawthorne, NJ 07506<br />
For discounts, more information &amp; other questions? Call (973) 684-6555 or (973) 423-2921 or email mgillan@pccc.edu or mariagillan@verizon.net</p>
<p>Sat Nov 5th: New Directions in Italian and Italian-American History: A Conference in Honor of Philip Cannistraro   9am<br />
Location: John D. Calandra Italian-American Institute 25 West 43rd Street, 17th Floor, NYC, (212) 642-2094  Free Admission Please RSVP at calandra@qc.edu<br />
Keynote: Emilio Gentile, University of Rome, La Sapienza<br />
“Fabbrica del consenso o fabbrica del potere? Redefining Fascism and Totalitarianism”<br />
New Directions in Italian-American History<br />
Chair: Gerald Meyer, Hostos Community College, CUNY<br />
Charles Killinger, University of Central Florida, “Italian Antifascist Exiles and the Italian-American Community: Renato Poggioli and Gaetano Salvemini as Case Studies”<br />
Marcella Bencivenni, Hostos Community College, CUNY, “Re-examining Italian-American Radical History Through the Lens of Culture”<br />
Peter Vellon, Queens College, CUNY, “‘The humiliation of being treated like Negroes’: The Italian-American Education in Matters of Race”<br />
New Directions in Italian History, I<br />
Chair: Emily Braun, Hunter College &amp; The Graduate Center, CUNY<br />
Paul Corner, University of Siena, “Factories and their Products: A Comment on Phil Cannistraro’s La fabbrica del consenso”<br />
Ernest Ialongo, Hostos Community College, CUNY, “The Calculated Compromise: F.T. Marinetti and Fascism in the Twenties”<br />
William Adams, Hunter College, CUNY, “The politica dei ponti in the Republic of Salò”<br />
New Directions in Italian History, II<br />
Chair: John Davis, University of Connecticut<br />
Marta Petrusewicz, University of Calabria, “Fin-de-siècle Rome: A Republic of Collectors”<br />
Stanislao Pugliese, Hofstra University, “Dancing on a Volcano: Attempting a Popular History of Naples”<br />
David Aliano, College of Mount Saint Vincent, “Re-imagining the Nation: Italian National Narratives Abroad (1922-1945)” </p>
<p>Literary &amp; Research Queries:</p>
<p>Hofstra Entertainment is currently seeking to cast a staged reading (on book) of  Eduardo de Filippo&#8217;s comedy, Christmas in Naples. Casting 7-8 men, age range 20&#8242;s-50&#8242;s, and 4 women, age range 20&#8242;s -50&#8242;s. Reading will take place at Hofstra in the Helene Fortunoff Theater (Monroe Lecture Center), Thursday, November 17, 8 pm and is presented as part of a three day conference event exploring Naples. Directed by Bob Spiotto. Familiarity with Italian is not required as the piece is performed in English and without Italian accents. No pay. Send pix and resume to robert.t.spiotto@hofstra.edu</p>
<p>Linda Baldanzia is a student at Drew University in NJ. in a Poetry in Translation MFA program. I am looking for a translator to help me with literal translations of several short poems. I do not read Italian well. It would be best if the Translator has lived in Italy. The translating will begin this June 201-482-0597, lindabaldanzi@mac.com</p>
<p>Dom Giordano, talk show host with WPHT 1210 AM Radio in Philadelphia, is looking for contributors to the book- recipes, Feast of the Seven Fishes stories and other Italian/family traditions and recollections of the Christmas season. www.thefeastofthesevenfishes.com Contact  Askdomg@aol.com </p>
<p>Alexandra Maffei holds a Masters in Italian Linterature and runs two blogs, one in English breakingnewts.blogspot.com the other in Italian, telegrafite.blog.espresso.repubblica.it/telegrafite. “I&#8217;m an excellent translator, fully conversant in Italian and American cultures, so consider me, should you know of or need services” viridiana430@msn.com</p>
<p>R. D. Williams is writing about her immigrant experience, willing to meet other writers. Also,  seeking advice on how to obtain publisher. Contact: rosaria@gmail.com</p>
<p>Magazines, Contests &amp; Calls for Submissions:</p>
<p>7th Annual Accenti Magazine Writing Contest and 5th Annual Accenti Magazine Photo Competition<br />
Fee: $20 CND for the Writing Contest and $10 CND for the Photo Competition<br />
For rules and submission addresses, etc: https://www.accenti.ca/writing &amp; https://www.accenti.ca/photo-contest Deadline for submissions: February 7, 2012</p>
<p>The Una Vita Foundation is committed to capturing the essence of Italian and Italian-American life in its new online story anthology. If you are an Italian, Italian-American, or have an engaging story that relates to Italy, submit your writing in 2000 characters or less and read stories by other contributors at http://www.una-vita.org/. From the home page, click on the blue “Submit a Story” tab and write away! Every month a panel of judges will choose one outstanding story from our website submissions and its author will receive a $100 Nordstrom gift card. The story will also be translated into Italian and published in the Italian magazine Clarus, which is circulated in Southern Italy. mwright.unavita@gmail.com</p>
<p>Luigi Monteferrante is looking for a special edition on work by Italian/Italian American/Italian Canadian authors in the magazine: Chicago Quarterly Review http://www.chicagoquarterlyreview.com/ Work should be submitted to luigimonteferrante@yahoo.com</p>
<p>Feile-Festa is an annual publication that comes out in the spring of each year. Though our preference is for creative work related to Irish and Italian/Sicilian themes, we are open to other Mediterranean cultures, all of which can relate to the respective country of family origin or the diasporas to America, Canada, etc. We are also interested in writing that evokes life in New York City. The reading period starts October 1st and ends January 1st. Please do not send submissions outside the time frame mentioned in the guidelines. www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/index.html</p>
<p>The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute is happy to announce the re-launching of its bi-annual journal the Italian American Review (IAR). The IAR features articles about the history and culture of Italian Americans, as well as other aspects of the Italian diaspora.The journal embraces a wide range of professional concerns and theoretical orientations in the social sciences and in cultural studies. Information for contributors can be found at: http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/calandra/italrev/iarcont.html.</p>
<p>Journal of Italian Translation is a non-profit international journal devoted to the translation of literary works from and into Italian-English-Italian dialects. Subscription price is $25 per year. Submissions and inquiries should be sent to Luigi Bonaffini at l.bonaffini@att.net. All past issues can be downloaded from the journal’s website at www.jitonline.org</p>
<p>Pyramid Arts and Poetry Magazine – “Where Rome and New York Meet” Pyramid Arts and Poetry is divided into three sections: Visual Art; Poetry &amp; Literature; and Film. Listings of gallery exhibits, poetry readings, and film showings in New York and Rome accompany each section. For submission guidelines, visit http://www.pyramidmagazine.org</p>
<p>VIA, Voices in Italian Americana, is a semi-annual published in the spring and fall. Issues include sections of essays, fiction, poetry, review essays, reviews, and guest spots by prominent Italian/American writers. Subscriptions are $20.00 per year ($15.00 for seniors, students, and un[der]employed). For subscriptions &amp; advertising, contact Anthony Julian Tamburri at tamburri@bordigherapress.org</p>
<p>Italian Americana is the first and only cultural as well as historical review dedicated to the Italian experience in the New World; subscription price is $20 a year, $35 for two years, to: Italian Americana, University of Rhode Island/Providence, 80 Washington Street Providence, RI 02903-1803. Check out the new Website supplement to the journal at www.italianamericana.com</p>
<p>The Monday Night Playwrights’ Series is curated by Richard Fulco; interested playwrights could submit their work at richardfulco@aol.com</p>
<p>Theatre Submissions: Post Road Magazine (Boston, Ma), a literary/visual arts journal, is accepting theatre submissions of very short one-act plays, sketches, and monologues. david@postroadmag.com</p>
<p>The American Italian Historical Association Newsletter is now accepting submissions of book reviews. Please send all submissions Anthony.Tamburri@qc.cuny.edu.</p>
<p>Websites:</p>
<p>Italian Cultural Institute of New York, 686 Park Ave, Manhattan www.iicnewyork.esteri.it and click on their monthly newsletter available in digital format.</p>
<p>Casa Belvedere, The Italian Cultural Foundation, a unique 2.75 acre cultural campus and community center on Staten Island for all to enjoy, is a registered 501(c) (3) not for profit organization that seeks to preserve, promote and celebrate the rich heritage of Italy by encouraging an appreciation of the Italian language, arts, literature, history, fashion, cuisine, and commerce through educational programs, exhibits and events.  To subscribe to the mailing list and learn more about the upcoming events and programs, call 718-273-7660, e-mail info@casa-belvedere.org or click on to www.casa-belvedere.org. </p>
<p>Anthony Buccino has created a blog for New Jersey poets to post info about events, links to their web sites and publishers and literary magazines. You can get email notices- no strings attached – when new items are posted. http://njpoetspoetry.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>www.BigFatPrize.com lists over 500 Writing Contests and competition categories like Essay, Fiction, Poetry, Short Story, Young Writers, Songwriting, Screenwriting, Playwright and Journalism</p>
<p>Working Writer newsletter offers solid information with a good dose of humor and a spirit of writing camaraderie. WW is filled with articles on promotion, publishing, freelancing, different genres, how-to, and how-not-to, written by readers across the country. To receive a free copy (no obligation) by e-mail , send a request to workingwriters@aol.com. Or check out www.workingwriter1.com</p>
<p>I-Italy: The Italian American Digital Project (http://www.i-italy.org) is online. This site is a forum for discussion and debate over Italian American social and cultural issues, home to numerous Italian American blogs, and the place to read leading Italian American commentators columns on Italian American life.</p>
<p>Readers are requested to visit www.italianamericanpress.com to order or obtain information about the fascinating books listed below written by Italian Americans on a variety of interesting topics. At The Italian-American Press, there are links for finding translators, a literary marketplace, and writers’ guilds, aside from links such as Tools for Italian American Writers, Italian American Books, Italian American Publishers, and the Internet’s best selection of self-published Italian American Books (84 Titles).</p>
<p>KIT-Kairos Italy Theater’s mission is to create a cultural exchange program between Italy, the US and the international community, to unveil artistic and creative sides of these two countries to the world. http://www.kitheater.com/</p>
<p>New York Foundation for the Arts, Visit NYFA Source, the most comprehensive database of awards, services, and publications available to artists in all disciplines. www.nyfa.org/</p>
<p>The Write Stuff – Online Newsletter of Word Journeys at www.wordjourneys.com contains articles on self-publishing, new services and grist for the pen: tips.</p>
<p>The ACLS History E-Book Project www.historyebook.org is an electronic resource that includes over 1230 full-text, cross-searchable books in the field of history selected by historians for their continuing importance to students and scholars. Individuals can also subscribe through a membership in the American Historical Association or the Renaissance Society of America.</p>
<p>Accenti, The Canadian Magazine with an Italian Accent at www.accenti.ca/</p>
<p>The AA Independent Press Guide is a free, online resource for writers at http://www.thunderburst.co.uk. The guide has detailed listings on over 2,000 literary and genre magazines and publishers from around the world, plus links to over 750 Internet magazines.</p>
<p>www.virtualitalia.com is an online resource for Italians, Italian Americans and enthusiasts of Italian culture.</p>
<p>www.littap.org is a new resource for literary presenters, with tools such as Guidelines for Writers Fees. In addition to featuring Italian American, Italian Canadian and Italian writers, the site has reviews and links to the sites of writers of Italian Australian, Italian French and Italian Latino American origins.</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò, go to http://www.nyu.edu/pages/casaitaliana/events.html</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Italian Academy at Columbia University, go to http://www.italianacademy.columbia.edu/calendar/calendar.html</p>
<p>The Immigration History Research Center is at http://www.ihrc.umn.edu</p>
<p>See Poets &amp; Writers for leads to prizes for writers, and places to get away and write, links to grants, conferences and residencies. http://www.pw.org/toolsforwriters</p>
<p>www.ItalianAmericanWriters.com is an archive of samples of contemporary Italian Amerian writing; writers include Dennis Barone, Marisa Frasca, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Bob Viscusi, Anthony Tamburri, Fred Gardaphe, Stephen Massimilla, Alfredo de Palchi, Peter Covino, Paola Corso, Gil Fagiani, Louisa Calio, etc. Also check out the other website edited by Daniela Gioseffi &#8211; www.PoetsUSA.com/</p>
<p>Of Interest:</p>
<p>Pre-Holiday Meet &amp; Greet<br />
Join the National Organization of Italian American Women for happy hour to kick-off the holidays and launch a new season of Metro New York events: Tuesday, November 15 6:00pm &#8211; 8:00pm at Vapiano Union Square &#8211; 113 University Place New York, NY 10003 NOIAW Members first drink is complimentary Non-Members and Friends Welcome Refreshments will be served Please RSVP to noiaw@noiaw.org or 212-642-2003 by Nov. 14th </p>
<p>IAVANET Mentoring Program<br />
Founded in 2007, the Italian-American Visual Artists&#8217; Network (IAVANET) is a group of 18 painters, sculptors, photographers, and designers based in the greater New York City area. The collective credentials of the artists encompass the worlds of museum and gallery exhibitions, art education, and work in the marketplace of art and design. To view their portfolio, visit www.iavanet.org. Mindful of the great tradition of Italian excellence in the visual arts and its artistic heritage, the group is currently establishing a mentoring program for aspiring Italian-American visual artists of high school and college age. In the program participants will review and evaluate portfolios, offer advice on improving particular technical skills, and suggest projects that would be suited to the individual&#8217;s artistic personality. IAVANET will also curate shows of the work of students who participate in the program. Interested student artists can contact Richard Laurenzi at info@iavanet.org, specifying the area of mentoring they are seeking (painting, sculpture, photography, or design arts), to set up an interview. </p>
<p>Diasporic Continuities: A Salon Discussion Point on the Changing Face of Italian Unification on the Verge of its 150th Anniversaryhttp://disunification.blogspot.com/<br />
How you can join the conversation: Still a work in progress, for now, please join the conversation by commenting on one of the existing posts or become a follower of the discussions. If you would like to post something yourself (rather than comment), please email LauraRuberto (lruberto@peralta.edu) or Pasquale Verdicchio (pverdicchio@yahoo.com)</p>
<p>Association of Friends of Piedmont in New York<br />
We are a group of artists, professionals, scientists and business owners sharing an interest for the Piedmont Region, either because we were born there or because we appreciate the contribution that people from Piedmont have made to the arts, sciences and industry.You can learn more about the Association at http://piedmontinnewyork.blogspot.com </p>
<p>Vittoria repetto rents her charming vacation house in Framura, in the Ligurian region on a weekly to monthly basis at a reasonable price. It is the perfect place for vacation especially great if you are a writer or a painter. The occupancy is for 4 people; there are 2 bedrooms. The town is 3 towns north of the Cinqueterre towns. For detailed information and pictures, http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-rental/p211239</p>
<p>Italian American Writers, a Cablevision television series hosted by Vito De Simone, runs each month on many New York area and other Cablevision systems, including Manhattan, Long Island and some Brooklyn systems. Check local listings for channels and times.</p>
<p>The New York-based Italian-American Playwrights Forum meets at the Calandra Institute three Thursdays a month to develop plays and carry out discussions about Italian-American identity/themes. The work itself does not have to be about an Italian-American theme. Please contact Gian Di Donna gian@att.net for in</p>
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		<title>Sat Nov 5th:New Directions in Italian and Italian-American History: A Conference in Honor of Philip Cannistraro</title>
		<link>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/27/sat-nov-5thnew-directions-in-italian-and-italian-american-history-a-conference-in-honor-of-philip-cannistraro/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Oct 2011 01:50:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dr. Vittoria Repetto</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Date: Saturday, November 05, 2011 9:00 AM Location: John D. Calandra Italian-American Institute 25 West 43rd Street, 17th Floor, NYC, (212) 642-2094 Details: Keynote Emilio Gentile, University of Rome, La Sapienza “Fabbrica del consenso o fabbrica del potere? Redefining Fascism &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/27/sat-nov-5thnew-directions-in-italian-and-italian-american-history-a-conference-in-honor-of-philip-cannistraro/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=367&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Date:<br />
Saturday, November 05, 2011 9:00 AM</p>
<p>Location:<br />
John D. Calandra Italian-American Institute 25 West 43rd Street, 17th Floor, NYC, (212) 642-2094 </p>
<p>Details:</p>
<p>Keynote </p>
<p>Emilio Gentile, University of Rome, La Sapienza<br />
“Fabbrica del consenso o fabbrica del potere?  Redefining Fascism and Totalitarianism” </p>
<p>New Directions in Italian-American History </p>
<p>Chair:  Gerald Meyer, Hostos Community College, CUNY </p>
<p>Charles Killinger, University of Central Florida, “Italian Antifascist Exiles and the Italian-American Community:  Renato Poggioli and Gaetano Salvemini as Case Studies”<br />
Marcella Bencivenni, Hostos Community College, CUNY, “Re-examining Italian-American Radical History Through the Lens of Culture”<br />
Peter Vellon, Queens College, CUNY,  “‘The humiliation of being treated like Negroes’:  The Italian-American Education in Matters of Race”</p>
<p>New Directions in Italian History, I  </p>
<p>Chair:  Emily Braun, Hunter College &amp; The Graduate Center, CUNY </p>
<p>Paul Corner, University of Siena, “Factories and their Products:  A Comment on Phil Cannistraro&#8217;s La fabbrica del consenso”<br />
Ernest Ialongo, Hostos Community College, CUNY, “The Calculated Compromise:  F.T. Marinetti and Fascism in the Twenties”<br />
William Adams, Hunter College, CUNY, “The politica dei ponti in the Republic of Salò”</p>
<p>New Directions in Italian History, II </p>
<p>Chair:  John Davis, University of Connecticut </p>
<p>Marta Petrusewicz, University of Calabria, “Fin-de-siècle Rome:  A Republic of Collectors”<br />
Stanislao Pugliese, Hofstra University, “Dancing on a Volcano: Attempting a Popular History of Naples”<br />
David Aliano, College of Mount Saint Vincent, “Re-imagining the Nation: Italian National Narratives Abroad (1922-1945)” </p>
<p>Please RSVP at calandra@qc.edu</p>
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		<title>Three Spoken Word Pieces by Angelo Zeolla</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Oct 2011 22:12:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dr. Vittoria Repetto</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Guido Poetics&#8221; All you Sucker Bards and skeptics, Premature ejaculators and narcoleptics Open up your ears while the glint off this Malocchio gold horn smacks you in the face as if shit hit the fan, and when things get a &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/17/three-spoken-word-pieces-by-angelo-zeolla/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=354&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>&#8220;Guido Poetics&#8221;</p>
<p>All you Sucker Bards and skeptics,<br />
Premature ejaculators and narcoleptics<br />
Open up your ears while the glint off this<br />
Malocchio gold<br />
horn smacks you in the face<br />
as if shit hit the fan,<br />
and when things get a little hectic in this place<br />
where are you Sucker Bards gonna stand<br />
if not  on some street corner copping pleas,<br />
shouting demands<br />
to the effect<br />
that these Guido Poetics<br />
spit vicious<br />
be put in check: </p>
<p>Locked up in a cage somewhere<br />
magari down a Santo Spirito<br />
oancoramegliogiu’ a Union Square?</p>
<p>MACOSA CAZZO PUOI DIRMI<br />
IF I TOLD YOU WHAT MADE UP THIS<br />
RHYTHM-LIKE COMBINAZIONE?</p>
<p>SCIABLACONE,<br />
in bitter tones this guido<br />
verse dethrones you<br />
like sly corleonese blasting<br />
mustachepete in his voice box<br />
in mulberry street tenement<br />
with make shift rivoltella<br />
that breaks apart over roof tops<br />
mentre young turks<br />
se la filano.</p>
<p>Ti sbagli di grossopero<br />
if you think these Guido Poetics<br />
are a type of flow<br />
capable only of<br />
conjuring up visions that drift thru<br />
the mind’s eye like smoke off<br />
amontecristo<br />
that drifts in the air<br />
in front of store front social clubs<br />
in late ferr’agosto<br />
down on Belmont Ave<br />
right off of centottantatsette.</p>
<p>I say this flow blows thru your<br />
banal banter with candor that<br />
defames your legacy and leaves<br />
relatives reticent&#8212;</p>
<p>the fact is you can’t fuck with<br />
this sentiment<br />
that’s remnant of<br />
viatassoinscriptions—yeah I said it.</p>
<p>Don’t blame me if you’re scandalized<br />
Because these guido poetics<br />
went off and set it<br />
Worse than Crocco e NincoNanco<br />
Whose brigantaggio theatrics<br />
were anything<br />
but slapstick<br />
and pathetic </p>
<p>Sucker Bard, this verse<br />
A confrontoiltuo, ‘simoscio e stanco,<br />
Non siaquellosolito d’un saltimbanco<br />
As a matter of fact:</p>
<p>The secret of these poetics<br />
is fundamental<br />
Like acrobatics<br />
and calisthenics</p>
<p>Therefore it’s genetic<br />
that this<br />
Guido verse packs static of the<br />
Same aesthetics as<br />
South Brain Tree processi<br />
that shocked<br />
the Red Scare epoch tragic  </p>
<p>Before you get dramatic<br />
Think twice before you declare<br />
that you’ve had it up to here<br />
with these<br />
comportamentianarchici<br />
filled with loathing and fear<br />
That even puts laurelled poets<br />
in a panic<br />
ovvero<br />
unafrenesia<br />
that’s manic</p>
<p>Face it Sucker Bards<br />
Your strophes </p>
<p>shatter too easily<br />
Under poetic mass so titanic<br />
You bust your shit on<br />
Icebergs massicci,<br />
never  slim<br />
thus branding yourselves<br />
the biggest sfigati ever<br />
seen on this side of such<br />
a rotten planet,<br />
victim of these guido poetics<br />
that upstage your sucker’s hymn,<br />
regaling all its cantors with<br />
knuckle<br />
sandwiches and<br />
attacks asthmatic<br />
as they saunter off stage<br />
befuddled and<br />
bruised<br />
all the way up top<br />
from rearranged faces<br />
down to busted shins,<br />
looking to lay themselves<br />
out on adjustable<br />
bedscraftmatic. </p>
<p>“Stoop Dub”</p>
<p>As beads<br />
Of sweat trickle down<br />
the flesh of this mid-summer<br />
night</p>
<p>The six train softly<br />
Crawls down the elevated<br />
towards Pelham Bay Station<br />
echoing along sognid’oro<br />
side street of Mahan Ave twilight </p>
<p>Where wide eyed jazzmatazz<br />
minded poet puffs a toscanello<br />
in child-like emulation<br />
Of those long gone<br />
Birds of Passage </p>
<p>whom he struggles to remember<br />
in black &amp; white contemplating<br />
their possible exploits in<br />
earlynovecento Pittsburgh<br />
on 3 in the morning front stoop</p>
<p>Amidst ambivalent outer-borough</p>
<p>Banter about M5 beamers<br />
Dark tints and a chromed out<br />
set of new shoes—</p>
<p> The moon looms overhead<br />
Knocked for six because the<br />
Stars won’t come out and play </p>
<p>Cigar smoke drifts sheepishly<br />
In the mix and guidos curse<br />
The pungent stench it wreaks </p>
<p>They curse the poet decrying him<br />
him a freak stinking of  toscanello<br />
smoke who rocks a cheap<br />
pair of  penguin<br />
chucktaylors whose ideal world<br />
is one in which all the banks are<br />
razed down to their last glowing ember<br />
and the only currency in circulation<br />
is that raw poetry found at the bottom<br />
of one’s soul that causes cats to be<br />
one with the machinery of </p>
<p>night floating across roof tops<br />
contemplating bop and always<br />
remembering that BIRD LIVES</p>
<p>E BRIGANTE SE MORE! </p>
<p>Where one only needs to<br />
be content with the<br />
rumble of barreling six train<br />
toward<br />
metropolitan<br />
sublime infinity </p>
<p>Where all this neighborhood<br />
bullshit goes up in smoke<br />
like puffs off a freshly lit<br />
toscanello<br />
and the jazzmatazz<br />
minded poet is enlightened<br />
by tumultuous twisted<br />
metal<br />
gallop of six train iron stallion<br />
booking it double time for<br />
heavenlyBleeker St.<br />
so Dago Bards can recite<br />
some poetry and make<br />
eyes at doll faced<br />
subterranean<br />
sirens that whisper<br />
sonnets heavenly. </p>
<p>“Mondrayork”</p>
<p>Saturday night<br />
Ngoperumol a Mondragone<br />
Emcees rhyme these versiimmacolati<br />
defamingcosidettisfigati<br />
For even picking up a microphone,</p>
<p>Motorinifly by purring in the distance<br />
and the skaters are the shit<br />
nel stare a mostro con i loro trick<br />
e per la stradasivedono<br />
passareguaglioncelle,<br />
condeilorosguardi da stelle,<br />
chevanno di modavesitetutte chic. </p>
<p>And one cat over by the kebab<br />
truck sheepishly asks another:</p>
<p>O Fra’ ma ‘a canna ‘a tieni?</p>
<p>Other cat siesce fore’ con unpezzo—<br />
tipo un mattone,<br />
a fat chunk he copped<br />
Over a ruterz’munn’<br />
Si fastapinta, </p>
<p>it gets sparked<br />
And soon ognuno<br />
se ne va<br />
A chiedere:  </p>
<p>Ma stutir’ se po’ fa’ o no?</p>
<p>A red moon draped in malinconia peeks down<br />
at streets that stay littered con spazzatura</p>
<p>As i caramba drive by<br />
with  their ice grills that<br />
make blood chill,<br />
cio’e’ fannopaura,</p>
<p>the perfume of tainted Mediterranean air<br />
lingers thru the scene<br />
and nocturnal writers throw up a wild style piece<br />
that declares to new arrivals<br />
that peep every street sign,<br />
in wonder,<br />
as they bewilderedly walk:<br />
Benvenuti a MondraYork!   </strong></p>
<p>© &#8211; 2011 Angelo Zeolla</p>
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		<title>Italian American Writer &amp; Activist Gil Fagiani on Community Organizing &amp; the 2nd American Revolution</title>
		<link>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/07/italian-american-writer-activist-gil-fagiani-on-community-organizing-the-2nd-american-revolution/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Oct 2011 22:41:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dr. Vittoria Repetto</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Saturday October 15th, 2011 7pm The Rainbow Rebooted: Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times Book Party. Reading at Melville House Publishing (Ground floor of Verso Press Building), 145 Plymouth Street, Brooklyn. Readings from &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/07/italian-american-writer-activist-gil-fagiani-on-community-organizing-the-2nd-american-revolution/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=350&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Saturday October 15th, 2011 7pm<br />
The Rainbow Rebooted:<br />
Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times Book Party. Reading at Melville House Publishing (Ground floor of Verso Press Building), 145 Plymouth Street, Brooklyn. Readings from authors Amy Sonnie and James Tracy Special guest respondents: Carlito Rovira (Young Lords), Lynn Lewis (Picture the Homeless), Brenda Stokely (Labor and Civil Rights Organizer), Esther Wang (CAAV), Gil Fagiani (White Lightning).</p>
<p>Sunday October 16th, 2pm<br />
American Revolution II and Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times.  Special afternoon screening of American Revolution II, a documentary about the aftermath of the Chicago Democratic Convention protests. ARII features footages of the Black Panther Party building the original (pre-Jesse Jackson) Rainbow Coalition in dialogue with the poor white Young Patriots Organization. James Tracy and Amy Sonnie, co-authors of the new book &#8220;Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times&#8221; (Melville House Publishers) will be on hand to read and introduce the film. Gil Fagiani and other former members of White Lightning, one of the organizations in the book have been invited to speak. Brecht Forum 451 West Street (between Bank &amp; Bethune Streets, New York, NY 10014   Phone: (212) 242-4201 &#8211; Email: brechtforum at brechtforum.org. Sliding scale: $6/$10/$15. Free for Brecht Forum Subscribers</strong></p>
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		<title>Between Two Shores: Italian American Reading &amp; Exhibition</title>
		<link>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/07/between-two-shores-italian-american-reading-exhibition/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Oct 2011 22:09:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dr. Vittoria Repetto</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Saturday, October 15, 2 pm. Between Two Shores, a poetry reading featuring poems that touch upon the life and cultures of both Naples and New York, on October 15, 2011 at 2 p.m. in the David Filderman Gallery. The chosen &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/10/07/between-two-shores-italian-american-reading-exhibition/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=346&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Saturday, October 15, 2 pm.<br />
Between Two Shores, a poetry reading featuring poems that touch upon the life and cultures of both Naples and New York, on October 15, 2011 at 2 p.m. in the David Filderman Gallery. The chosen poems will be read by B.Amore as well as invited guest poets of Italian-American descent including Louisa Calio, Pellegrino D’Acierno, Fred Gardaphe, George Guida, and Robert Viscusi.</p>
<p>This reading is coordinate with Hofstra University Museum’s exhibition  “B. Amore: Naples – New York” Exhibition Includes Site-Specific Installations Exploring the Connections Between Naples and New York.  Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY – “on view from September 30 through December 4, 2011 in the Hofstra University Museum’s David Filderman Gallery, will feature two site-specific installations and over 18 other mixed media works B. Amore has created for this original exhibition, focusing on the cultural and historic connections between Naples, Italy and New York, NY and examining connections between peoples and issues of assimilation, specifically those experiences linking Italy to America.“B. Amore weaves together, in her installations and wall mounted works, the ephemera, music, and other historic, cultural and artistic elements that bring to life, for the viewer, the Italian-American immigrant experience,” said Hofstra University Museum Executive Director Beth E. Levinthal. “Her talents are quite evident in this unique and vibrant exhibition.” A fully illustrated four-color catalogue with an essay by Hofstra University Professor of Comparative Literature and Languages Pellegrino D’Acierno accompanies the exhibit.</p>
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		<title>October 2011 IAWA Newsletter</title>
		<link>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/09/30/october-2011-iawa-newsletter/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Sep 2011 22:57:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dr. Vittoria Repetto</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter October 2011 P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215 www.iawa.net IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING. PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA . You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net Suggested donations: Membership $30 (students and seniors &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/09/30/october-2011-iawa-newsletter/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=344&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter October 2011<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
www.iawa.net</p>
<p>IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING.</p>
<p>PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA .</p>
<p>You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net</p>
<p>Suggested donations:<br />
Membership $30 (students and seniors $20)<br />
Associate $100-249<br />
Patron $250-499<br />
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IAWA is a 501(c) (3) not-for-profit corporation. Donations are tax-deductible.</p>
<p>If you prefer to send a check, make it payable to “Italian American Writers Association,” and send it to the following address:</p>
<p>Treasurer, Italian American Writers Association,<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
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<p>As some of you know, we have a blog at http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/ And I hope that you have (or will) enjoyed the information and writing presented there. We now have a &#8220;Share&#8221; button on our blog so you can share the blog w/ your Facebook friends &amp; Twitter fans. So please help get the word out about our blog and click on the &#8220;Share&#8221; button so others can enjoy the blog. http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/italian-american-writers-assoc-newsletter-february-2011/<br />
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<p>Please send us announcements of readings and literary events by the 15th of the preceding month; this means if you have an event in January; send us it by Dec. 15th </p>
<p>Please format in THIRD PERSON and in this order for events: Day, Date, Type of event, Event and Name of Participants, Time, Place of event and address, Admission price; Contact information Web site </p>
<p>We do not open attachments; please put all announcements in the body of your email in plain text only; we can&#8217;t use jpg or anything in all caps</p>
<p>E-mail announcements to Vittoria repetto at iawanewsletter@aol.com<br />
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Saturday, October 8thth &#8211; 5:45 pm – 7:45pm.<br />
Poetry and Prose Feature plus Open Mike<br />
Cornelia St. Café, 29 Cornelia St., Manhattan<br />
212-989-9319; www.corneliastreetcafe.com<br />
$7 minimum includes one drink<br />
Come in time to sign up at 5:45 pm.<br />
Bring poetry Bring prose Bring script Bring a friend<br />
5 minute time limit for open mike</p>
<p>Feature Readers: Joanna Clapps Herman &amp; Richard Vetere</p>
<p>Joanna Clapps Herman’s memoir, The Anarchist Bastard: Growing Up Italian in America is considered a “domestic epic.” Of Anarchist, Maria Laurino, author of Old World Daughter, New World Mother and Were You Always an Italian calls Clapps Herman, “A clever alchemist and gifted storyteller, she mixes humor and sadness, anger and tenderness, extracting wisdom from every ounce of pain. Along the way, the reader inhales the rich aroma of simmering espresso, savors the sweet pasticceria, follows the needle that threads their lives…<br />
Clapps Herman has co-edited two anthologies Wild Dreams and Our Roots Are Deep with Passion. Her essays have appeared in The Milk of Almonds, Don’t Tell Mama, Oral History, Oral Culture,and Italian Americans, Lavandaria.<br />
She has published extensively fiction, poems and creative non-fiction. She has won the Bruno Arcudi Prize, the Henry Paoloucci prize. The Litchfield Review awarded her their medal for Literary Excellence. She teaches at The City College (CUNY) Center for Worker Education and is on the Graduate Writing Faculty of Manhattanville College http://www.joannaclappsherman.com</p>
<p>Richard Vetere’s play Last Day had its world premiere at Gloucester Stage this year  and his first young adult play, Bird Brain (Dramatic Publishing ) was just released. His latest novel Baroque was published by Bordighera Press; his poetry collections include Memories of Human Hands and A Dream of Angels.<br />
Vetere’s critically-acclaimed novel, The Third Miracle was adapted into a screenplay he co-wrote. Produced by Francis Ford Coppola, directed by Agneiszka Holland, and starring Ed Harris and Anne Heche, the film was screened at MOMA. His other films include How to Go Out on a Date in Queens,<br />
Currently, he teaches a playwriting workshop in the master’s program at NYU; is a member of the NY Playwright’s Lab, Author’s Guild and Dramatist Guild. Stony Brook University created the Richard Vetere Collection and his archives are displayed in the Frank Melville Library. http://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Vetere</p>
<p>Since 1991, the organization has given voice to writers through its Open Reading series at Cornelia St. Café every month.<br />
IAWA is a 501© (3) not-for-profit corporation; donations are tax deductible.</p>
<p>Visit the Italian American Writers Cafe blog</p>
<p>http://www.i-italy.org/bloggers/italian-american-writers-cafe</p>
<p>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/</p>
<p>Events:</p>
<p>Saturday October 1 &#8211; Tuesday November 1 Exhibition: Aldo Tambellini&#8217;s work including sculpture, film video, poetry, painting, lumagrams &amp; video grams. Opening Reception: Thursday, October 6 at 5pm Special Performance of Black Zero:Thursday, October 20 6pm Chelsea Art Museum, 556 W 22nd St (11th Ave) Manhattan Free Admission www.chelseaartmuseum.org or 212-255-0719</p>
<p>Monday, October 3 Film: The Anatomy of Vince Guaraldi (2010), Andrew Thomas and Toby Gleason, dirs The Anatomy of Vince Guaraldi is a music-filled exploration of the celebrated composer who pioneered the crossover of jazz and pop. Vince Guaraldi&#8217;s accomplishments include his celebrated scores for the Peanuts animations, his mega-hit &#8220;Cast Your Fate to the Wind,&#8221; his performances at San Francisco&#8217;s North Beach nightclub the hungry i, and his groundbreaking Jazz Mass at Grace Cathedral. The film features recently discovered and restored footage of Guaraldi&#8217;s appearances and recording sessions captured by noted jazz writer and Rolling Stone co-founder Ralph J. Gleason, as well as new performances and insights from Dave Brubeck, Dick Gregory, Paul Krassner, Paul Mazursky, and more. 6pm . Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, Manhattan. Free Admission. Seating is limited. Please call (212) 642-2094 to pre-register with the Calandra Institute</p>
<p>Thursday, October 13 Seminar: Italian Immigrant Radical Culture by Marcella Bencivenni. Italian Americans possess a vibrant, if largely forgotten, radical past. In this presentation, Marcella Bencivenni, author of Italian Immigrant Radical Culture: The Idealism of the Sovversivi in the United States, 1890-1940 (New York University Press, 2011), delves into the history of the sovversivi, a transnational generation of social rebels, and offers a fascinating portrait of their political struggle as well as their milieu and artistic creativity in the United States. Forming their own alternative press, institutions, and working class organizations, these groups created a vigorous movement and counterculture that constituted a significant part of the American Left until World War II. Historian Nunzio Pernicone will join Bencivenni in a discussion of her book. 6pm . Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, Manhattan. Free Admission. Seating is limited. Please call (212) 642-2094 to pre-register with the Calandra Institute</p>
<p>Tuesday, October 18 Reading: Suzanne Corso reads from Brooklyn Story.  It is the summer of 1978. Half-Jewish, half-Italian Samantha Bonti is fifteen years old and living in Bensonhurst with her mother Joan, a cynic scarred by a ruinous marriage and shackled with drug and alcohol addictions, and her Grandma Ruth, an opinionated source of encouragement. They survive on food stamps and welfare checks, while Samantha dreams of graduating, moving to Manhattan, and becoming a writer. But when she begins dating Tony Kroon&#8211;twenty-years-old, charismatic, and an aspiring mobster&#8211;she finds herself navigating a perilous relationship that threatens to jeopardize her hopes for a better life. Told from an adult perspective, Brooklyn Story is a true-to-life novel about finding the courage to break from the past and the strength to pursue the promise of a better future. 6pm . Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, Manhattan. Free Admission. Seating is limited. Please call (212) 642-2094 to pre-register with the Calandra Institute</p>
<p>Wednesday, October 19 Reading: Page Meets Stage: Maria Mazziotti Gillan meets Sean Thomas Dougherty 8pm Bowery Poetry Club, 308 Bowery, Manhattan $12 admission/$6 students (tickets available at the door) For more info call: 917-743-6911</p>
<p>Friday, October 21 Vino &amp; Verdi: A Wine and Food Tasting Featuring Italy’s Emilia-Romagna Region with a special Presentation Celebrating its Favorite Son – Giuseppe Verdi 7pm Casa Belvedere, The Italian Cultural Foundation, Inc. 79 Howard Avenue Staten Island Admission &#8211; $50 718-273-7660 info@casa-belvedere.org<br />
www.casa-belvedere.org</p>
<p>Tuesday, October 25 Reading: Women&#8217;s / Trans’ Poetry Jam &amp; Open Mike, Featured Reader Geri DeLuca Hosted by Vittoria repetto 7pm. Bluestockings, 172 Allen St. (between Stanton &amp; Rivington), Manhattan. $5 suggested donation. For further information call (212) 777-6028 or email Vittoriar@aol.com </p>
<p>Friday, October 28 Film Premier&amp; Reading; &#8220;Ferlinghetti&#8221; by Chris Felver. Michael Palma will introduce the reading w/ Daniela Gioseffi, and Paul Mariani to celebrate Italian Culture &amp; Heritage Month. Ferlinghetti, Gioseffi &amp; Mariani are winners of The John Ciardi Award for Lifetime Achievement in Poetry during Michael Palma&#8217;s poetry editorship of Italian Americana 7pm Poets House, 10 River Terrace, Manhattan. Reception with free refreshments follows for Daniela&#8217;s 70th birthday year. Free admission. Information: daniela@tellurian.com/ http://www.ItalianAmericanWriters.com Directions: www.poetshouse.org/</p>
<p>Thursday November 3 Book Awards &amp; Reading: 2011 Bordighera Annual Poetry Awards 2011 winner: Driving West on the Pulaski Skyway by John Ortenzio Bargowski  2010 Winner: A Boat that can Carry Two by Matthew Cariello 6:30pm John D. Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 W. 43rd St. 17th floor. Manhattan between 5th &amp; 6th Ave Free Admission  Refreshments to be served 212 642-2094 </p>
<p>Members’ News:</p>
<p>Obituary: Diana Festa<br />
Poet and past IAWA feature, Diana Festa, died on June 8, 2011; yet some of her work has appeared posthumously such as in the current Feile Festa that can now be viewed online [http://www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/v006/poetry/festa.html]. Her poem End of Summer won The Fifth Annual John and Rose Petracca &amp; Family Award and appeared in the 2010 edition of Philadelphia Poets edited by Rosemary Cappello.<br />
Festa was the author of six poetry books, Arches to the West, Ice Sparrow, Thresholds, Bedrock, The Gathering and A Landscape of Time. She has also published four books on literary criticism, and a large number of poems and articles in various reviews and anthologies. She is the recipient of several poetry prizes, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Guizot Award from the French Academy.<br />
Festa, who was a French professor at Brooklyn College until her retirement, created a base for a group of authors known as the Madison Poets who gathered weekly for an evening of writing or editing their poems for over a decade. Her late evening banter and extravagant meals were legendary. Festa will be sorely missed by the Madison Poets and others who came into contact with her. A memorial is forthcoming and will be announced shortly.</p>
<p>&#8220;Biting into a morsel of Abruzzese soppresatta will never be the same after reading Anthony Di Renzo’s Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen&#8221; begins Maria Lisella&#8217;s review of Anthony Di Renzo&#8217;s Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen (SUNY Press), which was recently published in the 2011 edition of the literary journal, Feile-Festa, is now online. &#8220;Perhaps the key passage to the entire collection is: &#8216;Italian Americans can learn more about the heartbreak and horror of assimilation from soppressata than from any book&#8230;This particular sausage has gone from being a staple, to a treat, to a delicacy, to a swindle in less than thirty years. The phenomenon is a minor tragedy in our history – a minor tragedy, but a telling one.&#8217;&#8221; http://www.medcelt.org/feilefesta/v006/prose/lisella.html</p>
<p>Check out an interview with Tony Ardizzone in the journal Magna Grece http://magnagrece.blogspot.com/2011/09/fiction-as-life-interview-with-author.html </p>
<p>Three books written by Dr. Marie Menna Pagliaro for educators have just been published by Rowman &amp; Littlefield. The titles are: Educator or Bully? Managing the 21st Century Classroom; Exemplary Classroom Questioning: Promoting Thinking and Learning; and Differentiating Instruction: Matching Strategies with Objectives.  A fourth book, Research-Based Unit and Lesson Planning: Maximizing Student Achievement is scheduled to be published in November.  These books by Marie Pagliaro are in addition to her novel, That Woman and the Mafia Don, the profits of which go to help prevent young people from joining all kinds of ethnic gangs.</p>
<p>Daniela Gioseffi has published reviews of Gil Fagiani&#8217;s A Blanquito in El Barrio and Maria Lisella’s Amore on Hope St. in the current issue of VIA: Voices in Italian Americana. </p>
<p>Disturbing Youth (ISBN 1463730535), a novel by Melissa Pizirusso, tells the story of CJ Melfino, a boy kidnapped by his mother and then abandoned as a toddler, and his father Jace, who spends ten years trying to locate his son. Forced to live with elderly strangers from an early age, CJ&#8217;s childhood is filled with few bright spots besides his friendship with Ashley, the little girl who lives in the trailer across the street. The influences of his environment push him away from the rules of society and towards criminality. When Jace finds his son ten years after he last saw him, he hopes for closeness but finds only resentment and a dangerous outlook. Jace must win CJ&#8217;s trust and show him the value of a better life before the two can become close again. Inspired by the true-life story of a troubled youth, Pizirusso created the fictional character of CJ and filled his life with problems often faced by children in difficult circumstances, including divorce, teen pregnancy, racism and gang life. Written to engage and inspire thought about social pressures, the novel is targeted at all readers interested in rich, character-driven drama. Disturbing Youth is available for sale online at Amazon.com</p>
<p>Nick Matros won a month-long grant through the National Endowment for the Humanities to participate in the NEH’s Summer Institute course The Art of Teaching Italian through Art in Rome, Italy.</p>
<p>Stephen Sangirardi, former Iona adjunct in English, New Yorker, and Multiple Sclerosis patient, has released his second novel&#8212;A Shakespearean View of Freud. Like his first novel Monday Afternoon, this second book is also published by Night Reading in the UK and is available on Amazon.com and Kindle. The novel is about a librarian&#8211;Rob Conti&#8212;whose jealousy and fetishes ruin his two marriages. The setting takes place in New York and Missouri. The author’s picture is again on the back cover of the book, and his email is Bard715@aol.com.</p>
<p>Kathleen Gerard has a novel forthcoming in May, In Transit (Five Star/Gale-Cengage-Thorndike Press) is a woman-in-jeopardy story that features a contemporary Italian-American protagonist. The story delves into the ordinary lives of NYPD career cops and how their fates are determined by people who hold secrets as dark and as labyrinthine as the New York City Subway System. Kathleen was the recipient of the Perillo Prize for Italian-American Literature (IAWA, 2007). To learn more about the novel visit: http://intransit-thenovel.blogspot.com</p>
<p>Louisa Calio, director of the Poets and Writers Piazza for Hofstra&#8217;s Italian Experience is a featured poet this month at www.Mythopoetry.com. Just click on their facebook link to see her work. She will host the 10th anniversary of the Poets and Writers Piazza this Sept.18th at Hofstra. Look out for details. Her poem &#8220;Meet Joe, My Sicilian Father&#8221; will be in Descant a literary magazine published in Canada this coming winter and her story &#8220;Churchillo&#8221; will be published in a collection of humorous tales by Ed Maruggi of Winston Publications. Her poem &#8221; Signifyin Woman&#8221; is now available in Sweet Lemons 2 an anthology of writings with a Sicilian flavor available through Legas Press.</p>
<p>Playbill announced the world premiere of Richard Vetere’s play Last Day, on Gloucester Stage&#8217;s summer 2011 season in Gloucester, MA, running July 21-Aug. 7, and is billed as &#8220;a dark, delicious and mysterious love story set in a Long Island cemetery where not all secrets are underground.” Stage, screen and television writer Richard Vetere is the author of past Gloucester Stage hits Gangster Apparel and First Love. For furtherinformation and to purchase tickets, call the Gloucester Stage Box<br />
Office at (978) 281-4433 or visit www.gloucesterstage.org</p>
<p>Dennis Barone has two new books out: Field Report, twenty stories from Quale Press (and with a cover by poet Elaine Equi), and Parallel Lines, a volume of selected poems including work from over thirty years and with an Italian section. Information can be found on the new site: www.dennisbarone.wordpress.com.</p>
<p>Maria Terrone’s poem, “Ferdinandea,” about a Sicilian ghost-island, is the opening poem in the April debut issue of The Common, published by Amherst College. Another Italian-themed poem, “Spaccanapoli,” was recently accepted by Hawaii Pacific Review.<br />
On Wednesday, April 20, her appearance on Nota Bene, a monthly internet webcast, can be accessed at www.livestream.com/Italics (the interview will also be archived). Every month, Fred Gardaphe,  Distinguished Professor of Italian American Studies at Queens College, conducts a lively discussion with artists and scholars of Italian American culture for Nota Bene.  The April issue of Clarion, the newspaper for the CUNY Professional Staff Congress union, published three of her poems related to the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire. </p>
<p>Barbara Fragoletti Hoffman’s recent publications are “Name Dropping” and “Cape May in January” published in the current Winter 2011 issue of Italian Americana.  Her poems, “All the Birds Cried,” The Amish Mother” and “Split” are in the recently published anthology Toward Forgiveness.   Her poem “Riffs on Samantha” appears in the anthology Child of My Child. Forthcoming are the poems “My Sister’s Words” in the fall issue of the Monadnock Writers’ Group memory-themed anthology, “Yellow” in a 2011 issue of The Long Island Quarterly and “Relic” in a 2011 issue of The Paterson Review.</p>
<p>Darlene Madott is pleased to announce her website &#8220;Blog&#8221; has been updated, with reference to recent publications, and forthcoming work. You are invited to visit her website at  http://darlenemadott.com/blog.php</p>
<p>Review of Hush in The Daily Beast: Libretto adapted by Emelise Aleandri, Italian play by Etta Cascini Composed/Directed by Charles Mandracchia http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2011-02-23/midwinter-madness-in-new-york-2011-john-chattertons-festival/?cid=hp:beastoriginalsC2<br />
www.hushthemusical.com</p>
<p>Publisher’s News/Book Reviews/Contest Winners/Awards:</p>
<p>A new collection of essays on the Italian American experience is now available in a Kindle edition from Amazon.com. These 12 essays were originally published in the online journal Suite 101, and some of them were rerpinted in Dante Society newsletters in Boston and Seattle  Towards a More Balanced View of Italian Americans by Anthony S. Maulucci</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released  released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations. Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition Author: Suzann M. Brucato<br />
ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6 | Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Available at www.MagCloud.com Web: www.MatriarchJourney.com  TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>Italica Press author (and Italian novelist, essayist, journalist, playwright and poet), Dacia Maraini, has been nominated for the 2011 Man Booker International Prize, the most prestigious literary award in the UK.<br />
The International Prize is awarded for an author’s life work; and Italica Press has played some part in bringing this work to English-speaking audiences. Over the years we’ve published an English edition of her Donna in guerra (Woman at War, 1988), translated by Mara Benetti and Elspeth Spottiswood; her short story “Maria,” translated by Martha King in our anthology New Italian Women (edited by Martha King in 1989); and selections from her poetry in our anthology Contemporary Italian Women Poets, edited and translated by Cinzia Sartini Blum and Lara Trubowitz (2001)</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Print Format &#8211; $24.20; Digital Format &#8211; $14.29,Available at www.MagCloud.com www.MatriarchJourney.com Email: TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>For what’s new at Italica Press, please check out http://italicapressnews.blogspot.com/<br />
You can also visit Italica Press at http://www.italicapress.com/ </p>
<p>The Paterson Literary Review #38, 2009-2010 is out; this edition features Diane di Prima and includes a number of her poems and a short story Other poets/writers in this edition include Maria Fama, Vittoria repetto, Rachel Guido deVries, Maria Lisella, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, , Jennifer Gillan And Anthoy Buccino See http://old.pccc.edu/poetry/public.htm for price and order form.</p>
<p>Literary &amp; Research Queries:</p>
<p>Hofstra Entertainment is currently seeking to cast a staged reading (on book) of  Eduardo de Filippo&#8217;s comedy, Christmas in Naples. Casting 7-8 men, age range 20&#8242;s-50&#8242;s, and 4 women, age range 20&#8242;s -50&#8242;s. Reading will take place at Hofstra in the Helene Fortunoff Theater (Monroe Lecture Center), Thursday, November 17, 8 pm and is presented as part of a three day conference event exploring Naples. Directed by Bob Spiotto. Familiarity with Italian is not required as the piece is performed in English and without Italian accents. No pay. Send pix and resume to robert.t.spiotto@hofstra.edu</p>
<p>Linda Baldanzia is a student at Drew University in NJ. in a Poetry in Translation MFA program. I am looking for a translator to help me with literal translations of several short poems. I do not read Italian well. It would be best if the Translator has lived in Italy. The translating will begin this June 201-482-0597, lindabaldanzi@mac.com</p>
<p>Dom Giordano, talk show host with WPHT 1210 AM Radio in Philadelphia, is looking for contributors to the book- recipes, Feast of the Seven Fishes stories and other Italian/family traditions and recollections of the Christmas season. www.thefeastofthesevenfishes.com Contact  Askdomg@aol.com </p>
<p>Alexandra Maffei holds a Masters in Italian Linterature and runs two blogs, one in English breakingnewts.blogspot.com the other in Italian, telegrafite.blog.espresso.repubblica.it/telegrafite. “I&#8217;m an excellent translator, fully conversant in Italian and American cultures, so consider me, should you know of or need services” viridiana430@msn.com</p>
<p>R. D. Williams is writing about her immigrant experience, willing to meet other writers. Also, seeking advice on how to obtain publisher. Contact: rosaria@gmail.com</p>
<p>Magazines, Contests &amp; Calls for Submissions:</p>
<p>The Una Vita Foundation is committed to capturing the essence of Italian and Italian-American life in its new online story anthology. If you are an Italian, Italian-American, or have an engaging story that relates to Italy, submit your writing in 2000 characters or less and read stories by other contributors at http://www.una-vita.org/. From the home page, click on the blue “Submit a Story” tab and write away! Every month a panel of judges will choose one outstanding story from our website submissions and its author will receive a $100 Nordstrom gift card. The story will also be translated into Italian and published in the Italian magazine Clarus, which is circulated in Southern Italy. mwright.unavita@gmail.com</p>
<p>Luigi Monteferrante is looking for a special edition on work by Italian/Italian American/Italian Canadian authors in the magazine: Chicago Quarterly Review http://www.chicagoquarterlyreview.com/ Work should be submitted to luigimonteferrante@yahoo.com</p>
<p>Feile-Festa is an annual publication that comes out in the spring of each year. Though our preference is for creative work related to Irish and Italian/Sicilian themes, we are open to other Mediterranean cultures, all of which can relate to the respective country of family origin or the diasporas to America, Canada, etc. We are also interested in writing that evokes life in New York City. The reading period starts October 1st and ends January 1st. Please do not send submissions outside the time frame mentioned in the guidelines. www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/index.html</p>
<p>The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute is happy to announce the re-launching of its bi-annual journal the Italian American Review (IAR). The IAR features articles about the history and culture of Italian Americans, as well as other aspects of the Italian diaspora.The journal embraces a wide range of professional concerns and theoretical orientations in the social sciences and in cultural studies. Information for contributors can be found at: http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/calandra/italrev/iarcont.html.</p>
<p>Journal of Italian Translation is a non-profit international journal devoted to the translation of literary works from and into Italian-English-Italian dialects. Subscription price is $25 per year. Submissions and inquiries should be sent to Luigi Bonaffini at l.bonaffini@att.net. All past issues can be downloaded from the journal’s website at www.jitonline.org</p>
<p>Pyramid Arts and Poetry Magazine – “Where Rome and New York Meet” Pyramid Arts and Poetry is divided into three sections: Visual Art; Poetry &amp; Literature; and Film. Listings of gallery exhibits, poetry readings, and film showings in New York and Rome accompany each section. For submission guidelines, visit http://www.pyramidmagazine.org</p>
<p>VIA, Voices in Italian Americana, is a semi-annual published in the spring and fall. Issues include sections of essays, fiction, poetry, review essays, reviews, and guest spots by prominent Italian/American writers. Subscriptions are $20.00 per year ($15.00 for seniors, students, and un[der]employed). For subscriptions &amp; advertising, contact Anthony Julian Tamburri at tamburri@bordigherapress.org</p>
<p>Italian Americana is the first and only cultural as well as historical review dedicated to the Italian experience in the New World; subscription price is $20 a year, $35 for two years, to: Italian Americana, University of Rhode Island/Providence, 80 Washington Street Providence, RI 02903-1803. Check out the new Website supplement to the journal at www.italianamericana.com</p>
<p>The Monday Night Playwrights’ Series is curated by Richard Fulco; interested playwrights could submit their work at richardfulco@aol.com</p>
<p>Theatre Submissions: Post Road Magazine (Boston, Ma), a literary/visual arts journal, is accepting theatre submissions of very short one-act plays, sketches, and monologues. david@postroadmag.com</p>
<p>The American Italian Historical Association Newsletter is now accepting submissions of book reviews. Please send all submissions Anthony.Tamburri@qc.cuny.edu.</p>
<p>Websites:</p>
<p>Italian Cultural Institute of New York, 686 Park Ave, Manhattan www.iicnewyork.esteri.it and click on their monthly newsletter available in digital format.</p>
<p>Casa Belvedere, The Italian Cultural Foundation, a unique 2.75 acre cultural campus and community center on Staten Island for all to enjoy, is a registered 501(c) (3) not for profit organization that seeks to preserve, promote and celebrate the rich heritage of Italy by encouraging an appreciation of the Italian language, arts, literature, history, fashion, cuisine, and commerce through educational programs, exhibits and events.  To subscribe to the mailing list and learn more about the upcoming events and programs, call 718-273-7660, e-mail info@casa-belvedere.org or click on to www.casa-belvedere.org. </p>
<p>Anthony Buccino has created a blog for New Jersey poets to post info about events, links to their web sites and publishers and literary magazines. You can get email notices- no strings attached – when new items are posted. http://njpoetspoetry.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>www.BigFatPrize.com lists over 500 Writing Contests and competition categories like Essay, Fiction, Poetry, Short Story, Young Writers, Songwriting, Screenwriting, Playwright and Journalism</p>
<p>Working Writer newsletter offers solid information with a good dose of humor and a spirit of writing camaraderie. WW is filled with articles on promotion, publishing, freelancing, different genres, how-to, and how-not-to, written by readers across the country. To receive a free copy (no obligation) by e-mail , send a request to workingwriters@aol.com. Or check out www.workingwriter1.com</p>
<p>I-Italy: The Italian American Digital Project (http://www.i-italy.org) is online. This site is a forum for discussion and debate over Italian American social and cultural issues, home to numerous Italian American blogs, and the place to read leading Italian American commentators columns on Italian American life.</p>
<p>Readers are requested to visit www.italianamericanpress.com to order or obtain information about the fascinating books listed below written by Italian Americans on a variety of interesting topics. At The Italian-American Press, there are links for finding translators, a literary marketplace, and writers’ guilds, aside from links such as Tools for Italian American Writers, Italian American Books, Italian American Publishers, and the Internet’s best selection of self-published Italian American Books (84 Titles).</p>
<p>KIT-Kairos Italy Theater’s mission is to create a cultural exchange program between Italy, the US and the international community, to unveil artistic and creative sides of these two countries to the world. http://www.kitheater.com/</p>
<p>New York Foundation for the Arts, Visit NYFA Source, the most comprehensive database of awards, services, and publications available to artists in all disciplines. www.nyfa.org/</p>
<p>The Write Stuff – Online Newsletter of Word Journeys at www.wordjourneys.com contains articles on self-publishing, new services and grist for the pen: tips.</p>
<p>The ACLS History E-Book Project www.historyebook.org is an electronic resource that includes over 1230 full-text, cross-searchable books in the field of history selected by historians for their continuing importance to students and scholars. Individuals can also subscribe through a membership in the American Historical Association or the Renaissance Society of America.</p>
<p>Accenti, The Canadian Magazine with an Italian Accent at www.accenti.ca/</p>
<p>The AA Independent Press Guide is a free, online resource for writers at http://www.thunderburst.co.uk. The guide has detailed listings on over 2,000 literary and genre magazines and publishers from around the world, plus links to over 750 Internet magazines.</p>
<p>www.virtualitalia.com is an online resource for Italians, Italian Americans and enthusiasts of Italian culture.</p>
<p>www.littap.org is a new resource for literary presenters, with tools such as Guidelines for Writers Fees. In addition to featuring Italian American, Italian Canadian and Italian writers, the site has reviews and links to the sites of writers of Italian Australian, Italian French and Italian Latino American origins.</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò, go to http://www.nyu.edu/pages/casaitaliana/events.html</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Italian Academy at Columbia University, go to http://www.italianacademy.columbia.edu/calendar/calendar.html</p>
<p>The Immigration History Research Center is at http://www.ihrc.umn.edu</p>
<p>See Poets &amp; Writers for leads to prizes for writers, and places to get away and write, links to grants, conferences and residencies. http://www.pw.org/toolsforwriters</p>
<p>www.ItalianAmericanWriters.com is an archive of samples of contemporary Italian Amerian writing; writers include Dennis Barone, Marisa Frasca, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Bob Viscusi, Anthony Tamburri, Fred Gardaphe, Stephen Massimilla, Alfredo de Palchi, Peter Covino, Paola Corso, Gil Fagiani, Louisa Calio, etc. Also check out the other website edited by Daniela Gioseffi &#8211; www.PoetsUSA.com/</p>
<p>Of Interest:</p>
<p>Sunday, October 9th, 4pm<br />
Concert celebrating the 150th Anniversary of the Unification of Italy: The Columbus Citizens Foundation in collaboration with The Italian Cultural Institute of New York presents The Petruzzelli Theater Orchestra from Bari, Italy Conducted by Maestro Alberto Veronesi Featuring Soprano Marina Shaguch and Tenor Massimiliano Pisapia Debut of Coloratura Soprano Caroline Jones Rose Theater in Frederick P. Rose Hall, Lincoln Center Tickets on sale now Contact the Box Office: (212) 258 &#8211; 9501 </p>
<p>Two events w/ Gil Fagiani Saturday October 15 7pm The Rainbow Rebooted:Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times Book Party Reading at Melville House Publishing (Ground floor of Verso Press Building) 145 Plymouth Street, Brooklyn Readings from authors Amy Sonnie and James TracySpecial guest respondants: Carlito Rovira (Young Lords), Lynn Lewis (Pticture the Homeless), Brenda Stokely (Labor and Civil Rights Organizer)  Esther Wang (CAAV), Gil Fagiani (White Lightning)<br />
Sunday October 16th, 2pm American Revolution II and Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times Brecht Forum<br />
451 West Street (between Bank &amp; Bethune Streets, New York, NY 10014 Phone: (212) 242-4201 &#8211; Email: brechtforum at brechtforum.org Join us for a special afternoon screening of American Revolution II, a documentary about the aftermath of the Chicago Democratic Convention protests. ARII features footages of the Black Panther Party building the original (pre-Jesse Jackson) Rainbow Coaltiion in dialogue with the poor white Young Patriots Organization. James Tracy and Amy Sonnie, co-authors of the new book &#8220;Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times&#8221; (Melville House Publishers) will be on hand to read and introduce the film. Former members&#8211;including Gil Fagiani&#8211; of White Lightning, one of the organizations in the book have been invited to speak. Sliding scale: $6/$10/$15<br />Free for Brecht Forum Subscribers</p>
<p>IAVANET Mentoring Program<br />
Founded in 2007, the Italian-American Visual Artists&#8217; Network (IAVANET) is a group of 18 painters, sculptors, photographers, and designers based in the greater New York City area. The collective credentials of the artists encompass the worlds of museum and gallery exhibitions, art education, and work in the marketplace of art and design. To view their portfolio, visit www.iavanet.org. Mindful of the great tradition of Italian excellence in the visual arts and its artistic heritage, the group is currently establishing a mentoring program for aspiring Italian-American visual artists of high school and college age. In the program participants will review and evaluate portfolios, offer advice on improving particular technical skills, and suggest projects that would be suited to the individual&#8217;s artistic personality. IAVANET will also curate shows of the work of students who participate in the program. Interested student artists can contact Richard Laurenzi at info@iavanet.org, specifying the area of mentoring they are seeking (painting, sculpture, photography, or design arts), to set up an interview. </p>
<p>Diasporic Continuities: A Salon Discussion Point on the Changing Face of Italian Unification on the Verge of its 150th Anniversaryhttp://disunification.blogspot.com/<br />
How you can join the conversation: Still a work in progress, for now, please join the conversation by commenting on one of the existing posts or become a follower of the discussions. If you would like to post something yourself (rather than comment), please email LauraRuberto (lruberto@peralta.edu) or Pasquale Verdicchio (pverdicchio@yahoo.com)</p>
<p>Association of Friends of Piedmont in New York<br />
We are a group of artists, professionals, scientists and business owners sharing an interest for the Piedmont Region, either because we were born there or because we appreciate the contribution that people from Piedmont have made to the arts, sciences and industry.You can learn more about the Association at http://piedmontinnewyork.blogspot.com </p>
<p>Vittoria repetto rents her charming vacation house in Framura, in the Ligurian region on a weekly to monthly basis at a reasonable price. It is the perfect place for vacation especially great if you are a writer or a painter. The occupancy is for 4 people; there are 2 bedrooms. The town is 3 towns north of the Cinqueterre towns. For detailed information and pictures, http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-rental/p211239</p>
<p>Italian American Writers, a Cablevision television series hosted by Vito De Simone, runs each month on many New York area and other Cablevision systems, including Manhattan, Long Island and some Brooklyn systems. Check local listings for channels and times.</p>
<p>The New York-based Italian-American Playwrights Forum meets at the Calandra Institute three Thursdays a month to develop plays and carry out discussions about Italian-American identity/themes. The work itself does not have to be about an Italian-American theme. Please contact Gian Di Donna gian@att.net for information.</p>
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		<title>Aug 2011 IAWA Newsletter</title>
		<link>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/08/01/aug-2011-iawa-newsletter/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Aug 2011 19:40:05 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter August 2011 P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215 www.iawa.net IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING. PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA . You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net Suggested donations: Membership $30 (students and seniors &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/08/01/aug-2011-iawa-newsletter/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=332&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter August 2011<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
www.iawa.net</p>
<p>IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING.</p>
<p>PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA .</p>
<p>You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net</p>
<p>Suggested donations:<br />
Membership $30 (students and seniors $20)<br />
Associate $100-249<br />
Patron $250-499<br />
Founder $500-1000<br />
IAWA is a 501(c) (3) not-for-profit corporation. Donations are tax-deductible.</p>
<p>If you prefer to send a check, make it payable to “Italian American Writers Association,” and send it to the following address:</p>
<p>Treasurer, Italian American Writers Association,<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
Please share our Italian American Writer&#8217;s blog on your Facebook/Twitter account</p>
<p>As some of you know, we have a blog at http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/ And I hope that you have (or will) enjoyed the information and writing presented there. We now have a &#8220;Share&#8221; button on our blog so you can share the blog w/ your Facebook friends &amp; Twitter fans. So please help get the word out about our blog and click on the &#8220;Share&#8221; button so others can enjoy the blog. http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/italian-american-writers-assoc-newsletter-february-2011/<br />
_______________________________________________________________<br />
Do you have a Linkedin page? Help Us get the word out about IAWA<br />
Connect to us on our Linkedin page: http://www.linkedin.com/in/italianamericanwritersassoc</p>
<p>Please send us announcements of readings and literary events by the 15th of the preceding month; this means if you have an event in January; send us it by Dec. 15th </p>
<p>Please format in THIRD PERSON and in this order for events: Day, Date, Type of event, Event and Name of Participants, Time, Place of event and address, Admission price; Contact information Web site </p>
<p>We do not open attachments; please put all announcements in the body of your email in plain text only; we can&#8217;t use jpg or anything in all caps</p>
<p>E-mail announcements to Vittoria repetto at iawanewsletter@aol.com<br />
______________________________________________________________<br />
Saturday August 13thth &#8211; 5:45 pm – 7:45pm.<br />
Poetry and Prose Feature plus Open Mike<br />
Cornelia St. Café, 29 Cornelia St., Manhattan<br />
212-989-9319; www.corneliastreetcafe.com<br />
$7 minimum includes one drink<br />
Come in time to sign up at 5:45 pm.<br />
Bring poetry Bring prose Bring script Bring a friend<br />
5 minute time limit for open mike</p>
<p>Feature Readers: Kathryn M. Fazio and Gabriella Belfiglio</p>
<p>The reading takes place Saturday, August 13th, 5:45 p.m. to 7:45 p.m., at the Cornelia St. Café, 29 Cornelia Street, Manhattan, 212-989-9319. The evening starts with Open Mike readings of five minutes each.</p>
<p>Kathryn Marie Fazio, whose work has been published internationally, is a poet and fine artist. She was awarded the Ferrara Scholarship from the Performing and Creative Arts Department of the College of Staten Island CUNY, and named its Poet Laureate. Her book, A Taste of Hybrid Vigor: new poems of War, Passion, and Social Significance, contains poems and pictures of her original oil paintings and her poem &#8220;War&#8221; in the collection, won her the First Ed-Rehberg Prize for poetry, which was translated into French and televised in Haiti by the Education Committee of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce. </p>
<p>Fazio participated in a FUSE event to raise money for the aftermath of Katrina, was a poet for telethon to support public television in Kingston, NY. and has recited on the Brooklyn Waterfront in Red Hook for Creative Arts Therapy Outreach and Awareness. Fazio was coined a Bowery Woman, appearing in the only Bowery Women Anthology ever published.<br />
Fazio credits her close relationship with Robert Dunn for encouraging her to participate in the 5th World Congress of Poets for Poetry Research and Recitation where she represented the U.S., and was awarded the Silla Gold Crown World Peace Literature Prize from Korea. Fazio edited a collection of poems Our World in an Onion and is currently a poet at a Wellness Center in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.</p>
<p>Gabriella M. Belfiglio was born in Philadelphia, PA. She holds a BA in Creative Writing from Antioch College as well as an MFA in Poetry from American University.Her writing has appeared in several journals and anthologies, including Folio, The Centrifugal Eye, the award-winning Poetic Voices without Borders, and Avanti Popolo. She is one of five emerging Brooklyn writers featured in the anthology The Dream Catcher’s Song.<br />
Belfiglio is an artist and social activist.  She is a member of the Malìa Collective of Italian American Women and recently participated in the Centennial commemoration of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. </p>
<p>Since 1991, the organization has given voice to writers through its Open Reading series at Cornelia St. Café every month.<br />
IAWA is a 501© (3) not-for-profit corporation; donations are tax deductible.  </p>
<p>. Visit the Italian American Writers Cafe blog</p>
<p>http://www.i-italy.org/bloggers/italian-american-writers-cafe</p>
<p>http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/</p>
<p>Events:</p>
<p>Tuesday, August 2 Reading: Claudine D’Angelo-Dotzman will read from her debut novel, Of Asphalt and Earth. A story of immigration and finding one’s place in a new land for generations. She will be joined by Dan Pope, author of In the Cherry Tree. 7pm Westside Classroom Building, Room 218 Western Connecticut State University Westside Campus, 3 Lake Avenue Ext,. Danbury, CT 06811</p>
<p>Saturday, August 6 Play: Soliloquy For A Seamstress: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire A One-Act three character drama written and performed by LuLu LoLo In this play LuLu LoLo portrays the young seamstress Sarafina Saracino who shares drudgery and dreams with her little sister Teresina unaware they are about to perish in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire; their Italian immigrant mother; and a young reporter William Gunn Shepherd who witnessed the fire and speaks of the infamous trail that acquitted the factory owners of any blame for the tragedy.  http://www.lululolo.com/theater/soliliquy.html 2pm<br />
Seward Park Library, 192 East Broadway (at Jefferson St.) Manhattan (212) 477-6770<br />
http://www.nypl.org/locations/tid/67/node/124158?lref=67%2Fcalendar Free Admission</p>
<p>Saturday, August 13 Musical: Hush the Musical, a production from Charles “Rocco” Mandracchia in association with the Frizzi &amp; Lazzi Musical Theatre Company. Hush is set in the VIP waiting room at LaGuardia airport during a blinding snowstorm which has halted all departures. Several stranded, eccentric characters and their opposing philosophies are forced into comical confrontations with delightfully humorous consequences. Georgia, a New Age Buddhist meditation instructor encounters a successful, materialistic businessman, Othello Salviati. They are joined by an inept Hit Man, a kooky Stewardess, Othello’s Wife Vittoria and various passengers. Music for Hush is composed/co-conceived by Charles Mandracchia, who also directs and produces. The libretto was adapted by Emelise Aleandri, Artistic Director of Frizzi &amp; Lazzi, from Etta Cascini&#8217;s original one-act comedy, SHHHH!  3:30pm Le Poisson Rouge 158 Bleecker Street Manhattan 10012<br />
Other Shows: Tues 8/16 @ 7pm, Tue 8/23 @ 5pm, Wed 8/24 @ 7pm, Thurs 8/25 @6:30pm www.hushthemusical.com For tickets visit www.FringeNYC.org</p>
<p>Sunday, August 14 Play: &#8220;Anna Nicole: Blonde Glory,&#8221; a poignant and witty play award-winning poet and playwright. Grace Cavalieri, will be presented by The Dream Up Festival at Theater for the New City for five performances between August14-September 4. An imagined panorama of Anna Nicole Smith&#8217;s life. The cast of six stars Mary Riley as Anna Nicole-a portrayal seemingly channeled from the model herself. Composer Jon Tomlinson creates a sound score and a cheer-leading production number for Anna to sing and dance. Cino Theater, 155 First Avenue  Manhattan  10003 $15.00www.smarttix.com  Performance dates/times: August 21 7pm, August 24 7pm, August 26 9pm, August 27 2pm matinee, August 28 7pm</p>
<p>Members’ News:</p>
<p>Mary Bucci Bush&#8217;s long-awaited novel Sweet Hope about Italians imported illegally to the Mississippi Delta 1901-1906 and working as contract laborers/ indentured servants alongside African American sharecroppers, will be published this fall 2011 by Guernica Editions.  You can learn more about the novel and other work by Mary, plus read an excerpt from the novel and her other work, at www.marybuccibush.com Sweet Hope is an ideal novel to teach in Italian American Studies, American Studies, American History, Southern History, African American History, American literature, and other courses, especially those looking at immigration or race relations, etc. Chapters from this novel have appeared in numerous anthologies and literary journals. This is the untold story of the &#8220;Italian Colony Experiment&#8221; and of a bittersweet friendship between one Italian and one African American family.</p>
<p>Interview with Fred Gardaphe: http://magnagrece.blogspot.com/ by Olivia Kate Cerrone</p>
<p>Gil Fagiani and Maria Lisella were the recent subjects of a Huffington Post article by Nancy Ruhling: Astoria Characters: The Couplets Couple in which the reporter explores their dual development as writers sharing a private life and a public commitment to Italian American culture and political activism.<br />
www.huffingtonpost.com/&#8230;/astoria-characters-the-couplets-couple_b_866581.html</p>
<p>“Between Two Shores – Poets read at the Naples/New York Exhibit”: You are invited to attend and read at B. Amore’s exhibit, Naples/New York on Saturday, October 15th, 2-5 PM. The exhibit and event will be held at the David Filderman Gallery of the Hofstra University Museum. The gallery is in the Axinn Library Building, 9th floor, 123 Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY 11549. Please send bio to B. Amore (amoreb@earthlink.net) if you’d like to read or just come and be part of an open mic. Hope to see you!!!</p>
<p>Paul Giaimo is proud to announce the publication of his reader&#8217;s guide to Don DeLillo&#8217;s fiction: Appreciating Don DeLillo:The Moral Force Of A Writer&#8217;s Work. Pre-orders of the ebook are hopping and the paper book should hit the shelves on 7/31/2011. If anyone wishes to review the book, please contact DrMojiah@aol.com http://www.amazon.com/Appreciating-Don-DeLillo-Moral-Writers/dp/0313386242</p>
<p>A &#8220;lionhearted debut&#8221; (Ada Limon) in two parts, Diorama is written by Lisa Marie Basile and Alyssa Morhardt-Goldstein. Praised for being &#8220;super smart, bold, and a little scary&#8221; Lisa Marie Basile www.lisamariebasile.com</p>
<p>Nick Matros won a month-long grant through the National Endowment for the Humanities to participate in the NEH’s Summer Institute course The Art of Teaching Italian through Art in Rome, Italy.</p>
<p>Stephen Sangirardi, former Iona adjunct in English, New Yorker, and Multiple Sclerosis patient, has released his second novel&#8212;A Shakespearean View of Freud. Like his first novel Monday Afternoon, this second book is also published by Night Reading in the UK and is available on Amazon.com and Kindle. The novel is about a librarian&#8211;Rob Conti&#8212;whose jealousy and fetishes ruin his two marriages. The setting takes place in New York and Missouri. The author’s picture is again on the back cover of the book, and his email is Bard715@aol.com.</p>
<p>Kathleen Gerard has a novel forthcoming in May, In Transit (Five Star/Gale-Cengage-Thorndike Press) is a woman-in-jeopardy story that features a contemporary Italian-American protagonist. The story delves into the ordinary lives of NYPD career cops and how their fates are determined by people who hold secrets as dark and as labyrinthine as the New York City Subway System. Kathleen was the recipient of the Perillo Prize for Italian-American Literature (IAWA, 2007). To learn more about the novel visit: http://intransit-thenovel.blogspot.com</p>
<p>Louisa Calio, director of the Poets and Writers Piazza for Hofstra&#8217;s Italian Experience is a featured poet this month at www.Mythopoetry.com. Just click on their facebook link to see her work. She will host the 10th anniversary of the Poets and Writers Piazza this Sept.18th at Hofstra. Look out for details. Her poem &#8220;Meet Joe, My Sicilian Father&#8221; will be in Descant a literary magazine published in Canada this coming winter and her story &#8220;Churchillo&#8221; will be published in a collection of humorous tales by Ed Maruggi of Winston Publications. Her poem &#8221; Signifyin Woman&#8221; is now available in Sweet Lemons 2 an anthology of writings with a Sicilian flavor available through Legas Press.</p>
<p>Playbill announced the world premiere of Richard Vetere’s play Last Day, on Gloucester Stage&#8217;s summer 2011 season in Gloucester, MA, running July 21-Aug. 7, and is billed as &#8220;a dark, delicious and mysterious love story set in a Long Island cemetery where not all secrets are underground.” Stage, screen and television writer Richard Vetere is the author of past Gloucester Stage hits Gangster Apparel and First Love. For furtherinformation and to purchase tickets, call the Gloucester Stage Box<br />
Office at (978) 281-4433 or visit www.gloucesterstage.org</p>
<p>Dennis Barone has two new books out: Field Report, twenty stories from Quale Press (and with a cover by poet Elaine Equi), and Parallel Lines, a volume of selected poems including work from over thirty years and with an Italian section. Information can be found on the new site: www.dennisbarone.wordpress.com.</p>
<p>Maria Terrone’s poem, “Ferdinandea,” about a Sicilian ghost-island, is the opening poem in the April debut issue of The Common, published by Amherst College. Another Italian-themed poem, “Spaccanapoli,” was recently accepted by Hawaii Pacific Review.<br />
On Wednesday, April 20, her appearance on Nota Bene, a monthly internet webcast, can be accessed at www.livestream.com/Italics (the interview will also be archived). Every month, Fred Gardaphe,  Distinguished Professor of Italian American Studies at Queens College, conducts a lively discussion with artists and scholars of Italian American culture for Nota Bene.  The April issue of Clarion, the newspaper for the CUNY Professional Staff Congress union, published three of her poems related to the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire. </p>
<p>Barbara Fragoletti Hoffman’s recent publications are “Name Dropping” and “Cape May in January” published in the current Winter 2011 issue of Italian Americana.  Her poems, “All the Birds Cried,” The Amish Mother” and “Split” are in the recently published anthology Toward Forgiveness.   Her poem “Riffs on Samantha” appears in the anthology Child of My Child. Forthcoming are the poems “My Sister’s Words” in the fall issue of the Monadnock Writers’ Group memory-themed anthology, “Yellow” in a 2011 issue of The Long Island Quarterly and “Relic” in a 2011 issue of The Paterson Review.</p>
<p>Darlene Madott is pleased to announce her website &#8220;Blog&#8221; has been updated, with reference to recent publications, and forthcoming work. You are invited to visit her website at  http://darlenemadott.com/blog.php</p>
<p>Review of Hush in The Daily Beast: Libretto adapted by Emelise Aleandri, Italian play by Etta Cascini Composed/Directed by Charles Mandracchia http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2011-02-23/midwinter-madness-in-new-york-2011-john-chattertons-festival/?cid=hp:beastoriginalsC2<br />
www.hushthemusical.com</p>
<p>Beyond DiMaggio: Italian Americans in Baseball by Lawrence Baldassaro<br />
Foreword by Dom DiMaggio hardcover ISBN: 978-0-8032-1705-8 $34.95 from the<br />
University of Nebraska Press Lawrence Baldassaro tells the stories of Italian Americans’ contributions to the game, from Joe DiMaggio, who transcended his ethnic identity to become an American icon, to A. Bartlett Giamatti, who served as commissioner of baseball, to Mike Piazza, considered the greatest hitting catcher ever. Baldassaro conducted more than fifty interviews with players, coaches, managers, and executives—some with careers dating back to the thirties—in order to put all these figures and their stories into the historical context of baseball, Italian Americans, and, finally, the culture of American sports.</p>
<p>Dr. Marie Menna Pagliaro’s novel, That Woman and the Mafia Don, conveys the rejection of Mafia values by proud Italian-Americans. The novel is available at Barnes and Noble (www.bn.com ) or amazon.com with book sale profits going to help prevent young people from joining all kinds of ethnic gangs. That Woman and the Mafia Don was selected to launch the Il Circolo Book Club of Palm Beach because the novel covers four generations of Italian women, providing a focus for discussions on Il Circolo’s theme for this season, Italian American Women. To learn more about the novel, visit<br />
Dr. Pagliaro&#8217;s website at www.mariepagliaro.com.</p>
<p>Publisher’s News/Book Reviews/Contest Winners/Awards:</p>
<p>A new collection of essays on the Italian American experience is now available in a Kindle edition from Amazon.com. These 12 essays were originally published in the online journal Suite 101, and some of them were rerpinted in Dante Society newsletters in Boston and Seattle  Towards a More Balanced View of Italian Americans by Anthony S. Maulucci</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released  released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations. Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition Author: Suzann M. Brucato<br />
ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6 | Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Available at www.MagCloud.com Web: www.MatriarchJourney.com  TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>Italica Press author (and Italian novelist, essayist, journalist, playwright and poet), Dacia Maraini, has been nominated for the 2011 Man Booker International Prize, the most prestigious literary award in the UK.<br />
The International Prize is awarded for an author’s life work; and Italica Press has played some part in bringing this work to English-speaking audiences. Over the years we’ve published an English edition of her Donna in guerra (Woman at War, 1988), translated by Mara Benetti and Elspeth Spottiswood; her short story “Maria,” translated by Martha King in our anthology New Italian Women (edited by Martha King in 1989); and selections from her poetry in our anthology Contemporary Italian Women Poets, edited and translated by Cinzia Sartini Blum and Lara Trubowitz (2001)</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Print Format &#8211; $24.20; Digital Format &#8211; $14.29,Available at www.MagCloud.com www.MatriarchJourney.com Email: TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>For what’s new at Italica Press, please check out http://italicapressnews.blogspot.com/<br />
You can also visit Italica Press at http://www.italicapress.com/ </p>
<p>The Paterson Literary Review #38, 2009-2010 is out; this edition features Diane di Prima and includes a number of her poems and a short story Other poets/writers in this edition include Maria Fama, Vittoria repetto, Rachel Guido deVries, Maria Lisella, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, , Jennifer Gillan And Anthoy Buccino See http://old.pccc.edu/poetry/public.htm for price and order form.</p>
<p>Literary &amp; Research Queries:</p>
<p>Linda Baldanzia is a student at Drew University in NJ. in a Poetry in Translation MFA program. I am looking for a translator to help me with literal translations of several short poems. I do not read Italian well. It would be best if the Translator has lived in Italy. The translating will begin this June 201-482-0597, lindabaldanzi@mac.com</p>
<p>Dom Giordano, talk show host with WPHT 1210 AM Radio in Philadelphia, is looking for contributors to the book- recipes, Feast of the Seven Fishes stories and other Italian/family traditions and recollections of the Christmas season. www.thefeastofthesevenfishes.com Contact  Askdomg@aol.com </p>
<p>Alexandra Maffei holds a Masters in Italian Linterature and runs two blogs, one in English breakingnewts.blogspot.com the other in Italian, telegrafite.blog.espresso.repubblica.it/telegrafite. “I&#8217;m an excellent translator, fully conversant in Italian and American cultures, so consider me, should you know of or need services” viridiana430@msn.com</p>
<p>R. D. Williams is writing about her immigrant experience, willing to meet other writers. Also, seeking advice on how to obtain publisher. Contact: rosaria@gmail.com</p>
<p>Lachrista Greco is currently working on a book proposal for an anthology on young (20-something) Italian American women and the search for identity. She is looking for women to write on identity, feminism, sexuality, activism, etc. You may submit poetry and/or nonfiction. This book will be using a feminist framework. olive.grrrl@gmail.com</p>
<p>Magazines, Contests &amp; Calls for Submissions:</p>
<p>Luigi Monteferrante is looking for a special edition on work by Italian/Italian American/Italian Canadian authors in the magazine: Chicago Quarterly Review http://www.chicagoquarterlyreview.com/ Work should be submitted to luigimonteferrante@yahoo.com</p>
<p>Feile-Festa is an annual publication that comes out in the spring of each year. Though our preference is for creative work related to Irish and Italian/Sicilian themes, we are open to other Mediterranean cultures, all of which can relate to the respective country of family origin or the diasporas to America, Canada, etc. We are also interested in writing that evokes life in New York City. The reading period starts October 1st and ends January 1st. Please do not send submissions outside the time frame mentioned in the guidelines. www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/index.html</p>
<p>The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute is happy to announce the re-launching of its bi-annual journal the Italian American Review (IAR). The IAR features articles about the history and culture of Italian Americans, as well as other aspects of the Italian diaspora.The journal embraces a wide range of professional concerns and theoretical orientations in the social sciences and in cultural studies. Information for contributors can be found at: http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/calandra/italrev/iarcont.html.</p>
<p>Journal of Italian Translation is a non-profit international journal devoted to the translation of literary works from and into Italian-English-Italian dialects. Subscription price is $25 per year. Submissions and inquiries should be sent to Luigi Bonaffini at l.bonaffini@att.net. All past issues can be downloaded from the journal’s website at www.jitonline.org</p>
<p>Pyramid Arts and Poetry Magazine – “Where Rome and New York Meet” Pyramid Arts and Poetry is divided into three sections: Visual Art; Poetry &amp; Literature; and Film. Listings of gallery exhibits, poetry readings, and film showings in New York and Rome accompany each section. For submission guidelines, visit http://www.pyramidmagazine.org</p>
<p>VIA, Voices in Italian Americana, is a semi-annual published in the spring and fall. Issues include sections of essays, fiction, poetry, review essays, reviews, and guest spots by prominent Italian/American writers. Subscriptions are $20.00 per year ($15.00 for seniors, students, and un[der]employed). For subscriptions &amp; advertising, contact Anthony Julian Tamburri at tamburri@bordigherapress.org</p>
<p>Italian Americana is the first and only cultural as well as historical review dedicated to the Italian experience in the New World; subscription price is $20 a year, $35 for two years, to: Italian Americana, University of Rhode Island/Providence, 80 Washington Street Providence, RI 02903-1803. Check out the new Website supplement to the journal at www.italianamericana.com</p>
<p>The Monday Night Playwrights’ Series is curated by Richard Fulco; interested playwrights could submit their work at richardfulco@aol.com</p>
<p>Theatre Submissions: Post Road Magazine (Boston, Ma), a literary/visual arts journal, is accepting theatre submissions of very short one-act plays, sketches, and monologues. david@postroadmag.com</p>
<p>The American Italian Historical Association Newsletter is now accepting submissions of book reviews. Please send all submissions Anthony.Tamburri@qc.cuny.edu.</p>
<p>Call for Papers:</p>
<p>Courses:</p>
<p>Conferences and Workshops:</p>
<p>Websites:</p>
<p>Casa Belvedere, The Italian Cultural Foundation, a unique 2.75 acre cultural campus and community center on Staten Island for all to enjoy, is a registered 501(c) (3) not for profit organization that seeks to preserve, promote and celebrate the rich heritage of Italy by encouraging an appreciation of the Italian language, arts, literature, history, fashion, cuisine, and commerce through educational programs, exhibits and events.  To subscribe to the mailing list and learn more about the upcoming events and programs, call 718-273-7660, e-mail info@casa-belvedere.org or click on to www.casa-belvedere.org. </p>
<p>Anthony Buccino has created a blog for New Jersey poets to post info about events, links to their web sites and publishers and literary magazines. You can get email notices- no strings attached – when new items are posted. http://njpoetspoetry.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>www.BigFatPrize.com lists over 500 Writing Contests and competition categories like Essay, Fiction, Poetry, Short Story, Young Writers, Songwriting, Screenwriting, Playwright and Journalism</p>
<p>Working Writer newsletter offers solid information with a good dose of humor and a spirit of writing camaraderie. WW is filled with articles on promotion, publishing, freelancing, different genres, how-to, and how-not-to, written by readers across the country. To receive a free copy (no obligation) by e-mail , send a request to workingwriters@aol.com. Or check out www.workingwriter1.com</p>
<p>I-Italy: The Italian American Digital Project (http://www.i-italy.org) is online. This site is a forum for discussion and debate over Italian American social and cultural issues, home to numerous Italian American blogs, and the place to read leading Italian American commentators columns on Italian American life.</p>
<p>Readers are requested to visit www.italianamericanpress.com to order or obtain information about the fascinating books listed below written by Italian Americans on a variety of interesting topics. At The Italian-American Press, there are links for finding translators, a literary marketplace, and writers’ guilds, aside from links such as Tools for Italian American Writers, Italian American Books, Italian American Publishers, and the Internet’s best selection of self-published Italian American Books (84 Titles).</p>
<p>KIT-Kairos Italy Theater’s mission is to create a cultural exchange program between Italy, the US and the international community, to unveil artistic and creative sides of these two countries to the world. http://www.kitheater.com/</p>
<p>New York Foundation for the Arts, Visit NYFA Source, the most comprehensive database of awards, services, and publications available to artists in all disciplines. www.nyfa.org/</p>
<p>The Write Stuff – Online Newsletter of Word Journeys at www.wordjourneys.com contains articles on self-publishing, new services and grist for the pen: tips.</p>
<p>The ACLS History E-Book Project www.historyebook.org is an electronic resource that includes over 1230 full-text, cross-searchable books in the field of history selected by historians for their continuing importance to students and scholars. Individuals can also subscribe through a membership in the American Historical Association or the Renaissance Society of America.</p>
<p>Accenti, The Canadian Magazine with an Italian Accent at www.accenti.ca/</p>
<p>The AA Independent Press Guide is a free, online resource for writers at http://www.thunderburst.co.uk. The guide has detailed listings on over 2,000 literary and genre magazines and publishers from around the world, plus links to over 750 Internet magazines.</p>
<p>www.virtualitalia.com is an online resource for Italians, Italian Americans and enthusiasts of Italian culture.</p>
<p>www.littap.org is a new resource for literary presenters, with tools such as Guidelines for Writers Fees. In addition to featuring Italian American, Italian Canadian and Italian writers, the site has reviews and links to the sites of writers of Italian Australian, Italian French and Italian Latino American origins.</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò, go to http://www.nyu.edu/pages/casaitaliana/events.html</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Italian Academy at Columbia University, go to http://www.italianacademy.columbia.edu/calendar/calendar.html</p>
<p>The Immigration History Research Center is at http://www.ihrc.umn.edu</p>
<p>See Poets &amp; Writers for leads to prizes for writers, and places to get away and write, links to grants, conferences and residencies. http://www.pw.org/toolsforwriters</p>
<p>www.ItalianAmericanWriters.com is an archive of samples of contemporary Italian Amerian writing; writers include Dennis Barone, Marisa Frasca, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Bob Viscusi, Anthony Tamburri, Fred Gardaphe, Stephen Massimilla, Alfredo de Palchi, Peter Covino, Paola Corso, Gil Fagiani, Louisa Calio, etc. Also check out the other website edited by Daniela Gioseffi &#8211; www.PoetsUSA.com/</p>
<p>Of Interest:</p>
<p>Diasporic Continuities: A Salon Discussion Point on the Changing Face of Italian Unification on the Verge of its 150th Anniversaryhttp://disunification.blogspot.com/<br />
How you can join the conversation: Still a work in progress, for now, please join the conversation by commenting on one of the existing posts or become a follower of the discussions. If you would like to post something yourself (rather than comment), please email LauraRuberto (lruberto@peralta.edu) or Pasquale Verdicchio (pverdicchio@yahoo.com)</p>
<p>Association of Friends of Piedmont in New York<br />
We are a group of artists, professionals, scientists and business owners sharing an interest for the Piedmont Region, either because we were born there or because we appreciate the contribution that people from Piedmont have made to the arts, sciences and industry.You can learn more about the Association at http://piedmontinnewyork.blogspot.com </p>
<p>Vittoria repetto rents her charming vacation house in Framura, in the Ligurian region on a weekly to monthly basis at a reasonable price. It is the perfect place for vacation especially great if you are a writer or a painter. The occupancy is for 4 people; there are 2 bedrooms. The town is 3 towns north of the Cinqueterre towns. For detailed information and pictures, http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-rental/p211239</p>
<p>Italian American Writers, a Cablevision television series hosted by Vito De Simone, runs each month on many New York area and other Cablevision systems, including Manhattan, Long Island and some Brooklyn systems. Check local listings for channels and times.</p>
<p>The New York-based Italian-American Playwrights Forum meets at the Calandra Institute three Thursdays a month to develop plays and carry out discussions about Italian-American identity/themes. The work itself does not have to be about an Italian-American theme. Please contact Gian Di Donna gian@att.net for information.</strong></p>
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		<title>July 2011 IAWA Newsletter</title>
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		<description><![CDATA[IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter July 2011 P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215 www.iawa.net IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING. PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA . You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net Suggested donations: Membership $30 (students and seniors &#8230; <a href="http://italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com/2011/06/30/jul-2011-iawa-newsletter/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=italianamericanwritersassoc.wordpress.com&amp;blog=12535993&amp;post=321&amp;subd=italianamericanwritersassoc&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>IAWA Italian American Writers Association Newsletter July 2011<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
www.iawa.net</p>
<p>IAWA SUPPORTS ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITING.</p>
<p>PLEASE SUPPORT IAWA .</p>
<p>You can make a donation through Paypal at www.iawa.net</p>
<p>Suggested donations:<br />
Membership $30 (students and seniors $20)<br />
Associate $100-249<br />
Patron $250-499<br />
Founder $500-1000<br />
IAWA is a 501(c) (3) not-for-profit corporation. Donations are tax-deductible.</p>
<p>If you prefer to send a check, make it payable to “Italian American Writers Association,” and send it to the following address:</p>
<p>Treasurer, Italian American Writers Association,<br />
P.O. Box 418, Brooklyn, NY 11215<br />
PLEASE SHARE OUR ITALIAN AMERICAN WRITER&#8217;S BLOG ON YOUR FACEBOOK/TWITTER ACCOUNT</p>
<p>HTTP://ITALIANAMERICANWRITERSASSOC.WORDPRESS.COM/</p>
<p>_______________________________________________________________<br />
DO YOU HAVE A LINKEDIN PAGE? HELP US GET THE WORD OUT ABOUT IAWA<br />
Connect to us on our Linkedin page: http://www.linkedin.com/in/italianamericanwritersassoc<br />
___________________________________________________________________________</p>
<p>Please send us announcements of readings and literary events by the 15th of the preceding month; this means if you have an event in January; send us it by Dec. 15th </p>
<p>Please format in THIRD PERSON and in this order for events: Day, Date, Type of event, Event and Name of Participants, Time, Place of event and address, Admission price; Contact information Web site </p>
<p>We do not open attachments; please put all announcements in the body of your email in plain text only; we can&#8217;t use jpg or anything in all caps</p>
<p>E-mail announcements to Vittoria repetto at iawanewsletter@aol.com<br />
______________________________________________________________<br />
Saturday, July 9thth &#8211; 5:45 pm – 7:45pm.<br />
Poetry and Prose Feature plus Open Mike<br />
Cornelia St. Café, 29 Cornelia St., Manhattan<br />
212-989-9319; www.corneliastreetcafe.com<br />
$7 minimum includes one drink<br />
Come in time to sign up at 5:45 pm.<br />
Bring poetry Bring prose Bring script Bring a friend<br />
5 minute time limit for open mike</p>
<p>Feature Readers: Marisa Marcelli &amp; Charles Sant’Elia<br />
Multicultural Readings of Italian Poetry</p>
<p>The reading takes place Saturday, July 9th, 5:45 p.m. to 7:45 p.m., at the Cornelia St. Café, 29 Cornelia Street, Manhattan, 212-989-9319. The evening starts with Open Mike readings of five minutes each.</p>
<p>Marisa Marcelli’s first book of poems, Orfee was published in Rome in 2009; and was awarded the prestigious Lerici-Pea Prize in La Spezia, Italy. She has completed a collection of short stories and a one-act play Idola . Her work has appeared in Italian journals such as Gradiva and other journals, and anthologized in Italian Poets in America (Gradiva, 1992) and Binding the Land (Cadmo, 1999). In 2005 she was among the finalists for Sonnet writing.<br />
She worked in the archives at Poets` House, assisted with organizing literary events including readings. A graduate of CUNY’s Brooklyn College, Marcelli teaches Italian for the New York Public School system.</p>
<p>Charles Sant’Elia is an attorney and translator who is the CEO of Enotria Translations, a Manhattan-based multi-service translation firm. He has lived in Naples and Florence, Italy studying dialectology and literature in the U.S. and Italy. He will read from a body of some 900 pieces and his chapbook as well as his translations of Luciano Somma’s book, Cristo Napulitano.<br />
Currently he is translating the Neapolitan poems of Rosetta Fidora Ruiz into English as he continues to work on an etymological Neapolitan-Italian-English dictionary, which he began as a hobby. He is also currently serving on a task force for the Italian Language Foundation, which seeks to promote the study and knowledge of Italian in the United States.</p>
<p>Since 1991, the organization has given voice to writers through its Open Reading series at Cornelia St. Café every month.<br />
IAWA is a 501© (3) not-for-profit corporation; donations are tax deductible.</p>
<p>Events:</p>
<p>Tuesday, July 26 Reading: Women&#8217;s / Trans’ Poetry Jam &amp; Open Mike, Featured Readers: Raphael Moser &amp; Stephanie Schroeder<br />
Raphael Moser’s poetry investigates the world as a chaotic layering of subtext and conflict, it evokes a painterly or sculptural sense of the tension in relationship. The individual committed to a greater community is beholden to a transformation of the self to demarcate an ethical stance which explores the balance in justice.<br />
In Stephanie Schroeder’s darkly humorous and sometimes perverse memoir, Beautiful Wreck: Sex, Lies &amp; Suicide, she chronicles 20 years of misadventures as a transplanted Midwestern lesbian with undiagnosed Tourette Syndrome and bipolar disease in turn-of-the-millennium New York City. From being staffer in a shelter to being locked in a ward, it is a raw account of fifteen yrs both marred and informed by mental illness.<br />
Hosted by Vittoria repetto 7pm. Bluestockings, 172 Allen St. (between Stanton &amp; Rivington), Manhattan. $5 suggested donation. For further information call (212) 777-6028 or email Vittoriar@aol.com </p>
<p>Members’ News:</p>
<p>Playwright Frank Canino had three readings in New York recently. On Feb 22, his newest script, Passing Through Forbidden Places, had its first public reading in the New Approach Playwright Festival. On April 25, The Drawing Board, a group of theatre professionalsk, did a reading of A Fine Week in Goa, the screenplay which won first place in WildSound Canada’s international competition last year.<br />
Theatre of the Elephant staged an invitational reading of 16671 for Holocaust Remembrance Day, Sunday, May 1,at the Roy Arias Studio. Admission was free as a gift to the GLBT community, and their families &amp; friends, in honor of the day. Passing Through Forbidden Places was a semi-finalist for the Eugene O’Neill Playwrights Conference this summer. It was also a finalist in Pandora Productions of Louisville, KY New Play Series and a semi-finalist in the Phoenix Theatre [AZ] New Works Festival<br />
Sara Plays Her Game was an Honorable Mention winner in the International Playwriting Festival at the Camino Real Playhouse in California.</p>
<p>Towards a More Balanced View of Italian Americans, a collection of 12 essays on the Italian American experience by Anthony S. Maulucci, is now available in a Kindle edition from Amazon.com for $2.99. These essays were originally published in the online journal Suite 101, and some of them were rerpinted in Dante Society newsletters in Boston and Seattle. Price: $2.99. The topics covered include: The Assimilation Syndrome; Embracing the Media Myths; Saints, Miracles, and the Virgin Mary; How Italian American Culture Can Be Saved; The Body in Italian American Culture; Blood Ties and Civic Consciousness; Old Wine, New Identities; World War II and Italian Americans: a psycho-social profile; Beyond Recognition: Lovers, Thugs, Buffoons, and Gangsters; and The Persistence of Paganism. Anthony S. Maulucci is a former college professor and the author of several novels, short story collections, and books of poetry. He founded Lorenzo Press (http://www.lorenzopress.com) in 1995 to help support the literary work of authentic Italian American authors. In 2002, he initiated a letter-writing campaign to petition Amazon.com to establish a special category for Italian American literature. </p>
<p>Louisa Calio, award winning poet and writer&#8217;s poetry and as well as a review of Frank Ingrasciottta’s Blood Type Ragu will appear the current issue of Feile- Festa. Her poems “The Desert Speaks” and “The Dance of Gold” appear in the current issue of Philadelphia Poets Vol. 17, edited by Rosemary Capello. “Churchillo” a short story was accepted for publication by publisher Ed Maruggi for his new anthology on Italian humor. “ Meet Joe Calio, My Sicilian Father” will be published by Descant, a Canadian Literary Journal this Winter. Ms. Calio will again direct and host a 10th Anniversary of the Poets and Writers Piazza for Hofstra’s Italian Experience, now sponsored by Arba Sicula. She is joined by Gaetano Cipolla, Nino Provenzano, Anthony Tamburri, as well as Robert Viscusi, a featured author who will read from his new work “Ellis Island.” Calio will read her long song poem “Signifyin Woman” from Sweet Lemons 2 (Legas Press) The day will be filled  by a wonderful cast of talented authors: Sunday, Sept. 18, 2011 at Hofstra’s south campus. Look out for more details.</p>
<p>Richard Vetere is receiving the Pietro Di Danato and John Fante Literary Award from the Sons of Italy and his new volume of poetry Selected Poems will be published by Bordighera Press this summer.</p>
<p>Nick Matros won a month-long grant through the National Endowment for the Humanities to participate in the NEH’s Summer Institute course The Art of Teaching Italian through Art in Rome, Italy.</p>
<p>Stephen Sangirardi, former Iona adjunct in English, New Yorker, and Multiple Sclerosis patient, has released his second novel&#8212;A Shakespearean View of Freud. Like his first novel Monday Afternoon, this second book is also published by Night Reading in the UK and is available on Amazon.com and Kindle. The novel is about a librarian&#8211;Rob Conti&#8212;whose jealousy and fetishes ruin his two marriages. The setting takes place in New York and Missouri. The author’s picture is again on the back cover of the book, and his email is Bard715@aol.com.</p>
<p>Kathleen Gerard has a novel forthcoming in May, In Transit (Five Star/Gale-Cengage-Thorndike Press) is a woman-in-jeopardy story that features a contemporary Italian-American protagonist. The story delves into the ordinary lives of NYPD career cops and how their fates are determined by people who hold secrets as dark and as labyrinthine as the New York City Subway System. Kathleen was the recipient of the Perillo Prize for Italian-American Literature (IAWA, 2007). To learn more about the novel visit: http://intransit-thenovel.blogspot.com</p>
<p>Louisa Calio, director of the Poets and Writers Piazza for Hofstra&#8217;s Italian Experience is a featured poet this month at www.Mythopoetry.com. Just click on their facebook link to see her work. She will host the 10th anniversary of the Poets and Writers Piazza this Sept.18th at Hofstra. Look out for details. Her poem &#8220;Meet Joe, My Sicilian Father&#8221; will be in Descant a literary magazine published in Canada this coming winter and her story &#8220;Churchillo&#8221; will be published in a collection of humorous tales by Ed Maruggi of Winston Publications. Her poem &#8221; Signifyin Woman&#8221; is now available in Sweet Lemons 2 an anthology of writings with a Sicilian flavor available through Legas Press.</p>
<p>Playbill announced the world premiere of Richard Vetere’s play Last Day, on Gloucester Stage&#8217;s summer 2011 season in Gloucester, MA, running July 21-Aug. 7, and is billed as &#8220;a dark, delicious and mysterious love story set in a Long Island cemetery where not all secrets are underground.” Stage, screen and television writer Richard Vetere is the author of past Gloucester Stage hits Gangster Apparel and First Love. For furtherinformation and to purchase tickets, call the Gloucester Stage Box<br />
Office at (978) 281-4433 or visit www.gloucesterstage.org</p>
<p>Dennis Barone has two new books out: Field Report, twenty stories from Quale Press (and with a cover by poet Elaine Equi), and Parallel Lines, a volume of selected poems including work from over thirty years and with an Italian section. Information can be found on the new site: www.dennisbarone.wordpress.com.</p>
<p>Dr. Marie Menna Pagliaro’s novel, That Woman and the Mafia Don, conveys the rejection of Mafia values by proud Italian-Americans. The novel is available at Barnes and Noble (www.bn.com) or amazon.com with book sale profits going to help prevent young people from joining all kinds of ethnic gangs. To learn more about this novel and to see what readers have said about it, visit Dr. Pagliaro&#8217;s website at www.mariepagliaro.com.</p>
<p>Publisher’s News/Book Reviews/Contest Winners/Awards:</p>
<p>Richard P. Moffa has published two novels about an Italian-American fighter pilot in WWII. &#8220;The Vaulted Sky&#8221; (iUniverse, R.P. Moffa, ISBN 978-1-4401-5251-1) takes kid from New York into the Royal Air Force and the desert war in Egypt. &#8220;The Sky Suspended&#8221; (iUniverse, R.P. Moffa, ISBN 978-1-4502-2380-5) follows him into the U.S. Army Air Force and on to Tunisia, Sicily, Corsica and finally, Italy, where the love of his life finds him. www.thevaultedsky.com, www.iuniverse.com</p>
<p>Rose Marie Maisto Boyd has written The Spaghetti Set. The Italian-Americans embroiled in this realistic comedy of errors affirm the old adage, ”Family is family, like it or not!” Previews of Chapters 1 and 2 are available at: http://thespaghettiset.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations. Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition Author: Suzann M. Brucato<br />
ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6 | Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Available at www.MagCloud.com Web: www.MatriarchJourney.com  TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>Italica Press author (and Italian novelist, essayist, journalist, playwright and poet), Dacia Maraini, has been nominated for the 2011 Man Booker International Prize, the most prestigious literary award in the UK.<br />
The International Prize is awarded for an author’s life work; and Italica Press has played some part in bringing this work to English-speaking audiences. Over the years we’ve published an English edition of her Donna in guerra (Woman at War, 1988), translated by Mara Benetti and Elspeth Spottiswood; her short story “Maria,” translated by Martha King in our anthology New Italian Women (edited by Martha King in 1989); and selections from her poetry in our anthology Contemporary Italian Women Poets, edited and translated by Cinzia Sartini Blum and Lara Trubowitz (2001)</p>
<p>Matriarch ~ A Journey Through Tradition (Work Smarter Now, $24.20) was released on April 24, 2011. An Italian-American woman residing in central New Jersey, Suzann Brucato has created a photo journal as a tribute to motherhood, family, and heritage. Work Smarter Now has published this full-length collection of poems where Mrs. Brucato conveys the importance of family traditions as a contribution to ensuing generations ISBN: 978-0-615-47832-6  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011927566 Print Format &#8211; $24.20; Digital Format &#8211; $14.29,Available at www.MagCloud.com www.MatriarchJourney.com Email: TheFaceOfPoetry@mindspring.com </p>
<p>Stephen Sangirardi has released his second novel&#8212;A Shakespearean View of Freud. Like his first novel Monday Afternoon, this second book is also published by Night Reading in the UK and is available on Amazon.com and Kindle. The novel is about a librarian&#8211;Rob Conti&#8212;whose jealousy and fetishes ruin his two marriages. The setting takes place in New York and Missouri.</p>
<p>For what’s new at Italica Press, please check out http://italicapressnews.blogspot.com/<br />
You can also visit Italica Press at http://www.italicapress.com/ </p>
<p>The Paterson Literary Review #38, 2009-2010 is out; this edition features Diane di Prima and includes a number of her poems and a short story Other poets/writers in this edition include Maria Fama, Vittoria repetto, Rachel Guido deVries, Maria Lisella, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, , Jennifer Gillan And Anthoy Buccino See http://old.pccc.edu/poetry/public.htm for price and order form.</p>
<p>Literary &amp; Research Queries:</p>
<p>For a documentary film about the making of the 1937-1940 ILGWU play Pins and Needles, the producers Leslie Berman and Barbara Toennies would like to hear from anyone with recordings or photographs, programs, reminiscences, information, opinions and commentary, and/or leads to others, including anyone with a connection to the performances. Pins and Needles was created by and for the International Ladies Garment Worker&#8217;s Union in 1937, and union members performed in the show which became a hit, transferred to Broadway, playing 1108 performances there, which made it the longest running play of its era. We believe there were Italian immigrants among the garment worker union membership who may have appeared in the play, or may have had relatives or friends who appeared in the play, and certainly some of those members must have seen the play if nothing more. We know that the Italian contingent in the ILGWU were staunch unionists, and we believe that if we can find the right connection to the elderly Italian community members, we might find those who could speak to us and fill in gaps in our knowledge for this film. Please reach Pins and Needles Documentary by email leslie@leslieberman.com; by phone (516) 492-5116; or PO Box 630 Woodmere NY 11598.</p>
<p>Linda Baldanzia is a student at Drew University in NJ. in a Poetry in Translation MFA program. I am looking for a translator to help me with literal translations of several short poems. I do not read Italian well. It would be best if the Translator has lived in Italy. The translating will begin this June 201-482-0597, lindabaldanzi@mac.com</p>
<p>Dom Giordano, talk show host with WPHT 1210 AM Radio in Philadelphia, is looking for contributors to the book- recipes, Feast of the Seven Fishes stories and other Italian/family traditions and recollections of the Christmas season. www.thefeastofthesevenfishes.com Contact  Askdomg@aol.com </p>
<p>Alexandra Maffei holds a Masters in Italian Linterature and runs two blogs, one in English breakingnewts.blogspot.com the other in Italian, telegrafite.blog.espresso.repubblica.it/telegrafite. “I&#8217;m an excellent translator, fully conversant in Italian and American cultures, so consider me, should you know of or need services” viridiana430@msn.com</p>
<p>Magazines, Contests &amp; Calls for Submissions:</p>
<p>Luigi Monteferrante is looking for a special edition on work by Italian/Italian American/Italian Canadian authors in the magazine: Chicago Quarterly Review http://www.chicagoquarterlyreview.com/ Work should be submitted to luigimonteferrante@yahoo.com</p>
<p>Feile-Festa is an annual publication that comes out in the spring of each year. Though our preference is for creative work related to Irish and Italian/Sicilian themes, we are open to other Mediterranean cultures, all of which can relate to the respective country of family origin or the diasporas to America, Canada, etc. We are also interested in writing that evokes life in New York City. The reading period starts October 1st and ends January 1st. Please do not send submissions outside the time frame mentioned in the guidelines. www.medcelt.org/feile-festa/index.html</p>
<p>The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute is happy to announce the re-launching of its bi-annual journal the Italian American Review (IAR). The IAR features articles about the history and culture of Italian Americans, as well as other aspects of the Italian diaspora.The journal embraces a wide range of professional concerns and theoretical orientations in the social sciences and in cultural studies. Information for contributors can be found at: http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/calandra/italrev/iarcont.html.</p>
<p>Journal of Italian Translation is a non-profit international journal devoted to the translation of literary works from and into Italian-English-Italian dialects. Subscription price is $25 per year. Submissions and inquiries should be sent to Luigi Bonaffini at l.bonaffini@att.net. All past issues can be downloaded from the journal’s website at www.jitonline.org</p>
<p>Pyramid Arts and Poetry Magazine – “Where Rome and New York Meet” Pyramid Arts and Poetry is divided into three sections: Visual Art; Poetry &amp; Literature; and Film. Listings of gallery exhibits, poetry readings, and film showings in New York and Rome accompany each section. For submission guidelines, visit http://www.pyramidmagazine.org</p>
<p>VIA, Voices in Italian Americana, is a semi-annual published in the spring and fall. Issues include sections of essays, fiction, poetry, review essays, reviews, and guest spots by prominent Italian/American writers. Subscriptions are $20.00 per year ($15.00 for seniors, students, and un[der]employed). For subscriptions &amp; advertising, contact Anthony Julian Tamburri at tamburri@bordigherapress.org</p>
<p>Italian Americana is the first and only cultural as well as historical review dedicated to the Italian experience in the New World; subscription price is $20 a year, $35 for two years, to: Italian Americana, University of Rhode Island/Providence, 80 Washington Street Providence, RI 02903-1803. Check out the new Website supplement to the journal at www.italianamericana.com</p>
<p>The Monday Night Playwrights’ Series is curated by Richard Fulco; interested playwrights could submit their work at richardfulco@aol.com</p>
<p>Theatre Submissions: Post Road Magazine (Boston, Ma), a literary/visual arts journal, is accepting theatre submissions of very short one-act plays, sketches, and monologues. david@postroadmag.com</p>
<p>The American Italian Historical Association Newsletter is now accepting submissions of book reviews. Please send all submissions Anthony.Tamburri@qc.cuny.edu.</p>
<p>Call for Papers:</p>
<p>Courses:</p>
<p>Conferences and Workshops:</p>
<p>International Poetry Festival<br />
Dear Poet,<br />
We would like to invite you to be a participant in the first International Poetry Festival, which is a collaboration between The Seventh Quarry Swansea Poetry Magazine and Cross-Cultural Communications, New York, taking place in Swansea, Wales, U.K., from 15–19 June, 2011.<br />
Please contact: Stanley Barkan , 239 Wynsum Avenue, Merrick, NY 115566 Tel: 516-868-5635 cccpoetry@aol.com </p>
<p>Websites:</p>
<p>Casa Belvedere, The Italian Cultural Foundation, a unique 2.75 acre cultural campus and community center on Staten Island for all to enjoy, is a registered 501(c) (3) not for profit organization that seeks to preserve, promote and celebrate the rich heritage of Italy by encouraging an appreciation of the Italian language, arts, literature, history, fashion, cuisine, and commerce through educational programs, exhibits and events.  To subscribe to the mailing list and learn more about the upcoming events and programs, call 718-273-7660, e-mail info@casa-belvedere.org or click on to www.casa-belvedere.org. </p>
<p>Anthony Buccino has created a blog for New Jersey poets to post info about events, links to their web sites and publishers and literary magazines. You can get email notices- no strings attached – when new items are posted. http://njpoetspoetry.blogspot.com/</p>
<p>www.BigFatPrize.com lists over 500 Writing Contests and competition categories like Essay, Fiction, Poetry, Short Story, Young Writers, Songwriting, Screenwriting, Playwright and Journalism</p>
<p>Working Writer newsletter offers solid information with a good dose of humor and a spirit of writing camaraderie. WW is filled with articles on promotion, publishing, freelancing, different genres, how-to, and how-not-to, written by readers across the country. To receive a free copy (no obligation) by e-mail , send a request to workingwriters@aol.com. Or check out www.workingwriter1.com</p>
<p>I-Italy: The Italian American Digital Project (http://www.i-italy.org) is online. This site is a forum for discussion and debate over Italian American social and cultural issues, home to numerous Italian American blogs, and the place to read leading Italian American commentators columns on Italian American life.</p>
<p>Readers are requested to visit www.italianamericanpress.com to order or obtain information about the fascinating books listed below written by Italian Americans on a variety of interesting topics. At The Italian-American Press, there are links for finding translators, a literary marketplace, and writers’ guilds, aside from links such as Tools for Italian American Writers, Italian American Books, Italian American Publishers, and the Internet’s best selection of self-published Italian American Books (84 Titles).</p>
<p>KIT-Kairos Italy Theater’s mission is to create a cultural exchange program between Italy, the US and the international community, to unveil artistic and creative sides of these two countries to the world. http://www.kitheater.com/</p>
<p>New York Foundation for the Arts, Visit NYFA Source, the most comprehensive database of awards, services, and publications available to artists in all disciplines. www.nyfa.org/</p>
<p>The Write Stuff – Online Newsletter of Word Journeys at www.wordjourneys.com contains articles on self-publishing, new services and grist for the pen: tips.</p>
<p>The ACLS History E-Book Project www.historyebook.org is an electronic resource that includes over 1230 full-text, cross-searchable books in the field of history selected by historians for their continuing importance to students and scholars. Individuals can also subscribe through a membership in the American Historical Association or the Renaissance Society of America.</p>
<p>Accenti, The Canadian Magazine with an Italian Accent at www.accenti.ca/</p>
<p>The AA Independent Press Guide is a free, online resource for writers at http://www.thunderburst.co.uk. The guide has detailed listings on over 2,000 literary and genre magazines and publishers from around the world, plus links to over 750 Internet magazines.</p>
<p>www.virtualitalia.com is an online resource for Italians, Italian Americans and enthusiasts of Italian culture.</p>
<p>www.littap.org is a new resource for literary presenters, with tools such as Guidelines for Writers Fees. In addition to featuring Italian American, Italian Canadian and Italian writers, the site has reviews and links to the sites of writers of Italian Australian, Italian French and Italian Latino American origins.</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò, go to http://www.nyu.edu/pages/casaitaliana/events.html</p>
<p>For the calendar of events for the Italian Academy at Columbia University, go to http://www.italianacademy.columbia.edu/calendar/calendar.html</p>
<p>The Immigration History Research Center is at http://www.ihrc.umn.edu</p>
<p>See Poets &amp; Writers for leads to prizes for writers, and places to get away and write, links to grants, conferences and residencies. http://www.pw.org/toolsforwriters</p>
<p>www.ItalianAmericanWriters.com is an archive of samples of contemporary Italian Amerian writing; writers include Dennis Barone, Marisa Frasca, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Bob Viscusi, Anthony Tamburri, Fred Gardaphe, Stephen Massimilla, Alfredo de Palchi, Peter Covino, Paola Corso, Gil Fagiani, Louisa Calio, etc. Also check out the other website edited by Daniela Gioseffi &#8211; www.PoetsUSA.com/</p>
<p>Of Interest:</p>
<p>Casa Belvedere, The Italian Cultural Foundation Presents Cinema Sotto Le Stelle<br />
Friday Night “Outdoor” Italian Film Festival Fridays, July 8, 15, 22 &amp; 29 @ 8 pm<br />
Four evenings filled with Italian-style Comedy, Romance, Suspense, and Drama Featuring Films by Noted Directors Silvio Soldini, Gabriele Salvatores and Gianni Di Gregorio<br />
The films that will be featured are:<br />
July 8 &#8211; Agata and The Storm (2004) Agata e la Tempesta  Silvio Soldini – Director Agata feels secure in her bookshop, but actually it’s as though she’s been inadvertently thrown into the plot of a story in a strange book: the unexpected passion for a lively and perhaps too self-assured young boy, the accidental discovery that her beloved brother Gustavo isn’t really her brother, and the light bulbs that mysteriously blow up when she walks past.<br />
July 15 &#8211; I&#8217;m Not Scared (2003) Io Non Ho Paura Gabriele Salvatores – Director While playing outside one day, nine-year-old Michele discovers Filippo, who is chained to the ground at the bottom of a hole. Michele witnesses town baddie Felice nearby and suspects something bad is happening. Michele is unsure whom he should tell about his discovery, eventually spilling the beans to his closest friend. Michele&#8217;s parents learn of his discovery and warn him to forget whatever he saw.<br />
July 22 &#8211; Bread &amp; Tulips (2000) Pane e Tulipani Silvio Soldini &#8211; Director Silvio Soldino directs this gentle comedy about a housewife who temporarily flees from the grinding tedium of her household duties and drifts into a world of amicable weirdos. When Rosalba is accidentally forgotten by her tour bus at a roadside restaurant, she does not wait there as instructed. She decides to hitchhike home, but on a whim, she ends up in Venice instead. Quietly exhilarated at the prospect of being alone for a spell, she checks into an inn run by a kindly yet eccentric Icelander (Bruno Ganz). Her plans to return the next day are thwarted when she misses her train and does not have enough money to buy another ticket. Soon she is gainfully employed at a flower shop run by an irascible old anarchist. Though her teenage sons do not seem all that bothered by their mom&#8217;s absence, Rosalba&#8217;s husband grows increasing agitated at the interruption in his routine, so he hires a bumbling detective to track her down.<br />
July 29 &#8211; Mid-August Lunch (2008) Pranzo di Ferragosto Gianni Di Gregorio – Director Gianni is a middle-aged man living in Rome with his imposing and demanding elderly mother. His only outlet from her and the increasing debt into which they are sinking are the increasingly frequent quiet sessions at the local tavern. As an Oriental saying goes, &#8216;Moments of crisis are moments of opportunities&#8217;. These appear during the celebration of the holiday of Ferragosto on 15 August. That&#8217;s when everybody leaves town to have fun. Opportunity knocks on Gianni&#8217;s door in the most unexpected way.<br />
Admission is free and everyone is encouraged to bring a beach chair or a blanket. Donations are welcome and appreciated.  79 Howard Avenue, Staten Island, NY 10301 For information and to subscribe to the mailing list to learn more about the upcoming events please call 718.273.7660, e-mail info@casa-belvedere.org or visit the website at www.casa-belvedere.org.<br />
www.casa-belvedere.org</p>
<p>Diasporic Continuities: A Salon Discussion Point on the Changing Face of Italian Unification on the Verge of its 150th Anniversaryhttp://disunification.blogspot.com/<br />
How you can join the conversation: Still a work in progress, for now, please join the conversation by commenting on one of the existing posts or become a follower of the discussions. If you would like to post something yourself (rather than comment), please email LauraRuberto (lruberto@peralta.edu) or Pasquale Verdicchio (pverdicchio@yahoo.com)</p>
<p>Association of Friends of Piedmont in New York<br />
We are a group of artists, professionals, scientists and business owners sharing an interest for the Piedmont Region, either because we were born there or because we appreciate the contribution that people from Piedmont have made to the arts, sciences and industry.You can learn more about the Association at http://piedmontinnewyork.blogspot.com </p>
<p>Vittoria repetto rents her charming vacation house in Framura, in the Ligurian region on a weekly to monthly basis at a reasonable price. It is the perfect place for vacation especially great if you are a writer or a painter. The occupancy is for 4 people; there are 2 bedrooms. The town is 3 towns north of the Cinqueterre towns. For detailed information and pictures, http://www.homeaway.com/vacation-rental/p211239</p>
<p>Italian American Writers, a Cablevision television series hosted by Vito De Simone, runs each month on many New York area and other Cablevision systems, including Manhattan, Long Island and some Brooklyn systems. Check local listings for channels and times.</p>
<p>The New York-based Italian-American Playwrights Forum meets at the Calandra Institute three Thursdays a month to develop plays and carry out discussions about Italian-American identity/themes. The work itself does not have to be about an Italian-American theme. Please contact Gian Di Donna gian@att.net for information.</strong></p>
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