To submit your event to the Independent's Literary Events Calendar email events at wirobooks dot com
Elizabeth T. Gray Jr. and Arden Levine Poetry Reading
| Location | Kramers, 1517 Connecticut Ave., NW, Washington, DC
|
|---|---|
| Date | Wednesday, September 24, 2025 at 7:00pm - 8:00pm |
| Duration | 1 hours |
| Link | https://www.kramers.com/events/3082120250924 |
| RSVP on Facebook | |
| Repeats? | No |
| Details |
Elizabeth T. Gray Jr.'s After the Operation reports from the No Man's Land she wandered following eight hours of surgery to remove a brain tumor. What does the mind feel like after something has been taken out of your skull? "An uninhabited coast," or "all shatter and thoroughfare?" These spare poems interweave medical documents, journal entries, and memories, assembling a polyvocal chorus to document the surgery itself and the recuperation process. The decentralized perspective of After the Operation allows the reader to see the procedure holistically--medically, from the doctor's perspective; subjectively, from the author's; and vicariously, from her caretakers', family's, and friends'--while approximating the disassociation the patient feels as she navigates unexpected cognitive and emotional side effects. Sometimes bleak but always gorgeous, After the Operation does us a great service in illuminating and articulating the complexities of a serious medical event. This tangible chronicle of Gray's terror, isolation, bafflement, desolation, love, loss, relief and gratitude serves as a beacon for all of us who will one day, as Susan Sontag says, find ourselves dwelling in "the kingdom of the sick." Gray makes valiant use of her citizenship there, asking, "When they come for you, when the unfamiliar roar comes, and a sudden opening, and light pours in, when what had kept you safe, what had always been, is breached, pried open, and light pours in, what do you want to have been writing then?" After the Operation is her triumphant answer. An abecedary, or alphabet book, teaches letters, the primary pieces of language and of story-making. In Arden Levine's Ladies' Abecedary, each letter is a woman, each woman is a poem, and each poem is a narrative of female identity. These micro-biographies-in-verse present a series of anonymous characters (historical and mythological, contemporary and composite, unique and universal) in a collection that reveals "the diverse and complex nature of women's interior and external lives." Letter by letter, Ladies' Abecedary "exemplifies the importance of the project to reclaim voice, agency, and equality for women," and raises a remark about how a woman's story is told. |
Logged In/Out Testing & Debugging
- Are you Logged in?: Your are Logged Out
- Currently Logged in Member ID: 0
- Currently Logged in Username:
- Currently Logged in Screen Name:
- Currently Logged in Member Group ID: 3