Archive for the ‘Speakers’ Category

Kerrytown BookFest announces winner for new awards

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

The Kerrytown BookFest has announced three new annual awards to be presented at its Ninth event September 11, 2011 at the Farmers Market in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

The Book Exhibitor of the Year is open to booksellers, publishers, and printers who have consistently participated in the BookFest and added to the success and enjoyment of the festival, said Gene Alloway, president of the Kerrytown BookFest Board.

“Our first winner of this award is Magina Books of Lincoln Park Michigan, owned by second generation bookseller Steven Magina,” Alloway said.

“Magina Books has been with the BookFest from its first event in 2003, though its own history is much longer,” Alloway said. Established by George Magina, the open shop still remains in the same building that the family built in 1948. The shop has prospered under his son Steven, and today has more than 50,000 books in its renovated space and on its own website at www.maginabooks.com.

The Artisan Exhibitor of the Year Award which covers book artists, paper makers, binders, and media artists was awarded to Randy Asplund Illustration of Ann Arbor Michigan.

“Randy Asplund has been showing his illuminations and bookwork with the BookFest since 2005 and his medieval book work, such as his exceptional miniature illuminated Life of Jeanne d’Arc is well known in our region,” Alloway said.

In addition to his Fine Arts work, Asplund has also done book illustration for science fiction and fantasy novels and historical art, as well as classes and demonstrations of his techniques, Alloway said.

The third new annual award does not yet have a winner. The Best Booth of the Year will be chosen at the BookFest and is given to the exhibitor who has the most attractive and engaging presentation. The Kerrytown BookFest’s Exhibitor Coordinator, Lynn Yates and noted artist, designer and teacher Susan Skarsgard will judge this award, and will present the award at noon on the day of the event.

All winners receive an award and a free booth at the 2012 BookFest. Reflecting the event’s focus on the book arts, each award is made by hand in the style of a book cover with gilt lettering and its own stand. Both work and materials are being donated by Bessenberg Bindery of Dexter, Michigan.

For more information on the 9th Kerrytown BookFest, visit their website at www.kerrytownbookfest.org The Kerrytown BookFest is in part

M.L. Liebler will join writers to talk about “working voices”

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

M. L. Liebler has a lot friends. Liebler who has taught English, Labor Studies and the art of the working class at Wayne State University for more than 30 years was not shy in calling upon them for a little something to include in “Working Words: Punching the Clock and Kicking out the Jams”, an anthology of poems, short fiction, memoirs and song lyrics which tell the story of the working class.

Some of Liebler’s friend’s will be joining him at the Kerrytown BookFest for a panel on “working voices”. 

The panel “Working Voices” brings together a diverse group of writers who write about the world of the working man and woman. M.L. Liebler, a poet and writer, and most recently the editor of the literary anthology, “Punching the Clock and Kicking out the Jams”, will be joined by writer Jeff Vande Zande, recently editor of “On the Clock: Contemporary Short Stories of Work”, and poet Ken Meisel, poet and the author of “Beautiful Rust: Poems, part of Bottom Dog Press”. The discussion will be led by author Lolita Hernandez, also a contributor to “On the Clock”.

The first thing you notice about the book, which was named a 2011 Michigan Notable Book,  is its heft, more than 450 pages, just right for the hands of a steelworker or Michael Moore, one of the contributors,  who called the book “inspiring” and said “The book is kind of a spark we need these days.”

Moore contributed “Horatio Alger Must Die” an excerpt from “Dude: Where’s My Country?” Moore is one of the scores of authors, poets and songwriters with Michigan ties who routinely pop up in the book which Liebler says is nearly one-of-a-kind.

Liebler, who edited this impressive collection, said he was inspired by being forced to Xerox material for his students in a class in Labor Studies he teaches at Wayne State.

“There never was a collection like this and that gave me an idea to compile one.”

And what a collection he has compiled. There are poets (Amiri Baraka, Stewart Francke); filmmakers (Moore,); Pulitzer Prize Winners (Philip Levine) and novelists (Stephen Crane, Willa Cather).

“There wasn’t anyone I wanted who said no,” Liebler said.

“Everybody, surprisingly and willingly, participated in the process.”

And everyone would include the likes of Bob Dylan, and Detroiter’s Eminem and Jack White whose lyrics are included in the anthology.

“The guys who I thought would be the most difficult were the easiest.”

How easy? A friend put him touch with a key Dylan contact and basically on the spot, Liebler said, he was given permission to use anything he wanted.

The result is that three Dylan songs are included in the collection including “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll.” Dylan appears with the lyrics of Detroiter’s Jack White (“The Big Three Killed My Baby”) and Eminem (“Lose Yourself”) along with one of the original working-class ballads, Woody Guthrie’s “1913 Massacre”.

There are also selections from the usual suspects such as Walt Whitman and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, but they are accompanied with contributions from eminent American literary figures such as Emily Dickinson and Willa Cather and social activists the likes of Dorothy Day and Daniel Berrigan.

It seems natural that many of Liebler’s friends are from Michigan and paging through the collection the familiar names of David Marsh, Philip Levine, Jeff Vande Zande, Dudley Randall, Jim Ray Daniels, Lolita Hernandez, Anne Marie Oomen and Stewart Francke leap out.

Some contributors’ names tug at the cobwebs of memory and you find yourself asking where have I heard that name as you read Diane di Prima’s “Revolutionary Letter # 19” or Michael McClure’s “Beginning With a Line by di Prima.”

Both are survivors of the beats with bragging rights about their connections with Kerouac and Ginsburg.

Michigan State University Professor Diane Wakoski also holds that candle and contributed “The Butcher’s Apron” which begins “Red Stains on the Clean White Bib.”

The 2010 National Book Award Finalist Bonnie Jo Campbell contributed her short fiction piece “Selling Manure” and another Michigan finalist Thomas Lynch loaned Liebler “the Undertaking” and famed rock critic and former editor of Creem Magazine David Marsh writes of his recollections growing up in industrialized Pontiac Michigan in the excerpt from “Fortunate Son”.

Liebler says part of the inspiration for the book comes from his own Detroit area roots.

“I come out of the working class. My grandfather was in the 1937 Sitdown strike.

I guess you could say it’s in my DNA.”

Liebler contributes two of his own poems to the collection: “Making It Right” and in “On the Scrap” he writes:

“Just another Detroit man beaten

Down by the tortured years

Of Depression, World Wars”

And then Liebler tips his hat to Woody and Calumet in “On the Scrap” which ends with:

“And inspiration through their friend Big Annie whose

courageous Spirit drifted skyward past

a lone child’s picket sign that read

“My papa’s striking for us”

(more…)

Civil War panel to highlight nation’s commemoration

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011
Michigan has embarked on a four year commemoration of the Civil War to recognize the tremendous contribution the state’s men and women provided in preserving the Union and ending slavery. You can follow the commemorative events and exhibits here. According to Sandra Clark, director of the Michigan Historical Center, the Center is planning several exhibits on Michigan and the Civil War. The first,  “Plowshares into Swords” begins with Michigan on the eve of war—an agrarian state just beginning to develop its mining and lumbering resources, but a state already steeped in the national debate over slavery.  It traces the personal and community transitions that war brought and then uses our amazing Civil War flag collection to focus on a state and its citizens settling into war. The exhibit runs to February 5, 2012. The four year commemoration will end with an exhibit on the war’s end and aftermath.
On the state’s official Civil War website there is a calendar of events, flicker, facebook, blogs, and the ability to search all of the Civil War documents held in the Archives of Michigan.  For example, type in Ann Arbor in the search box and you’ll find photographs of Ann Arbor area residents who served in the war.  Select Civil War manuscripts as the collection to search and you’ll find the Ann Arbor collections.  It’s a tremendous resource for citizens especially school-age children.

You can also expect a number of new books on Michigan and the Civil War. One of the first books “Michigan and the Civil War” is by Jack Dempsey of Ann Arbor Michigan and it provides an overview of Michigan’s role in the war. Dempsey’s book underlines the importance of the state’s role in the war without which it may have been lost. He starts with the dramatic shelling at Sumter where a Michigan man risks his life to raise the fallen flag. Read a review of the book at Dome Magazine. 

Dempsey moderate a panel discussion with three other Michigan Civil War writers at the Kerrytown BookFest Sunday September 11 in Ann Arbor Michigan. Joining Dempsey are Rick Liblong, author of “Answering the Call to Duty”, and Kim Crawford and Martin Bertera, authors of the ”4th Michigan Infantry in the Civil War.”

Detroit counter culture to be highlighted at Kerrytown BookFest

Sunday, July 31st, 2011
The 2011 Kerrytown BookFest will feature a discussion on the “Counterculture Voices”  of Detroit, focusing on underground newspapers and music. The speakers include Brett Callwood, author of “MC-5 Sonically Speaking”. In the fall he will also have a new book out about the influential band The Stooges. Joining Brett will be Susan Whitall, former editor of Creem Magazine and presently a writer for The Detroit News and author of  “Fever: The Fast Life and Mysterious Death of Little Willie John and the Birth of Soul”. The final “voice” will be Ken Wachsberger, founder of the Azenphony Press, which publishes books on the underground press of the Vietnam era, the First Amendment, the Holocaust, and many other subjects. His newest book, “Voices from the Underground” is the first volume of a history on the underground press in America. The discussion will be moderated by the multi-talented Harvey Ovshinsky of Ann Arbor who was the founder of “The Fifth Estate, an underground newspaper in Detroit which continues to this day. Ovshinsky is currently the CEO of HKO Media a film production and consulting firm. He has won a Peabody Award and a Emmy Award.

After writer Ken Wachsberger was released from jail for the first time in 1970 during his senior year at Michigan State University, he was a changed man and had emerged a radical. Watch a question and answer session with Wachsberger here.

“Jail changes you; it gives you a whole new perspective,” said the 61-year-old from Ann Arbor, who was one of 132 students arrested in 1970 at MSU for being in the MSU Union after hours. “Going to school wasn’t relevant anymore, with (the Vietnam War) going on and people being drafted and dying for no reason.”

This experience transformed him into a vocal anti-war protester and he dropped out of college (he did return to finish his bachelor’s degree at MSU and later got his master’s degree, also at MSU). He became a fixture in the underground journalism movement and was a mainstay at the Lansing-based independent newspaper called Joint Issue.

According to Wachsberger, the underground press was the independent, anti-war press of the Vietnam era that told the true story — which the corporate and mainstream newspapers suppressed — of what the U.S. government was doing to the Vietnamese people behind Americans’ backs, in the name of democracy and with U.S. tax dollars.

These underground newspapers became the impetus of a four-volume set of books, “Voices from the Underground.” Originally, this set of books was supposed to be an article.

“I was asked by the editor of the Lansing Star, which was a successor paper to Joint Issue, to write a history of the local underground press. Nobody on the Lansing Star had been part of Joint Issue except me, so I was asked to write the history.

“Because I was so close to the event — it was such a major part of my life and such an exciting part of my life — I wasn’t able to write a history condensed into 1,000 words.”

Wachsberger had too much to tell in too little time and space.

“I worked on it real hard, and by deadline, I wasn’t even near done. So I said to the editor, ‘Take what I’ve got so far and call it Part One. I’ll continue to work on it and finish it up next week.’”

However, as it turned out, he still wasn’t done by the next deadline: What he submitted was Part Two. It subsequently became a three-part series of articles.

“It was an exciting story,” Wachsberger said. “For the first time to put down the history of the underground press — and it was a very intense history — the Lansing area has a really exciting history from the 1960s period. This was the first time we were able to put down the underground press history on paper.”

Flash-forward to the early 1990s: Wachsberger activated his old network of people who were part of the underground and compiled/edited the first volume of “Voices from the Underground,” which was first published in 1993 through an Ann Arbor publishing house called Incredible Librarian Books. However, the book went out-of-print early on; what has recently been published is a revised, updated and expanded edition.

“I wasn’t able to get it back into print for financial reasons until now,” he said.

“People loved it. I struck a chord, way more than I ever anticipated.”

The revised edition features forewords by Abe Peck, who wrote for the Chicago Seed, an underground newspaper; the late William Kunstler, a self-proclaimed “radical lawyer”; and Markos Moulitsas, founder of dailykos.com, a progressive blog site. In fact, Wachsberger pointed out, blogs such as Moulitsas’ and The Huffington Post are successors to the underground journalism movement.

“With our country bankrupted by two wars, the timing couldn’t be better to read these stories,” Wachsberger said. “Markos’ foreword connects yesterday’s underground press generation with today’s blogger generation.

“It’s time to listen again to the poets and visionaries of the independent, alternative press. It’s a spiritual connection between the two generations. Many have no idea about the underground press; it’s a high point of American journalism. Bloggers look at the book and pay attention to it and, frankly, blow it out into the blogosphere.”