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Scrappy Reading Series

Published: August 18, 2024; Author: Julia Sonrisa

 August 23, 2024    07:00 PM-08:00 PM EDT

Address: 351 Van Brunt, Street Brooklyn, NY 11231, United States

Phone: +1 718-812-8824

Scrappy Reading Series

Five emerging and established readers will answer this question at this month’s edition of the Scrappy Reading Series, supported by the Red Hook Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library. Join us at Compère Collective as these writers share how they interpret “scrappy,” and how they embody this in their writing lives, personal lives, love lives, and any other type of life they are living.

Also enjoy the current exhibit, Scrappy Books by local artist Alexandra Jamieson, which features a mesmerizing collection of collages, altered books, and “Goth Girl Grimoires,” all crafted from found materials, discarded books, and vibrant New York City ephemera.

Inspired by the master’s series course, Scrappy: How To Build an Alternative Literary Life (offered by Off Assignment and led by author Chloé Caldwell), Brooklyn writer Farah Faye began this series to bring together published and unpublished writers to explore what it means to be scrappy.

Admission is free, scrappiness is required. Drinks and snacks will be served!

Space is limited — register to attend!

Reading by:

Nina St. Pierre is queer essayist and culture writer whose work has appeared in Elle, GQ, Harper’s Bazaar, The Cut, Gossamer, Outside, and more. She is a 2023 NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellow in Nonfiction Literature, holds an MFA from Rutgers and lives in New York City. Her debut memoir, love is a Burning Thing, a story of family, fire, and what it means to believe, is available everywhere now.

Gina Chung is a Korean American writer from New Jersey living in New York City. She is the author of the short story collection Green Frog (out March 12, 2024 from Vintage in the U.S. and June 6, 2024 from Picador in the U.K.), which was a Good Morning America Book Buzz Pick, and the novel Sea Change, which was longlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize, a 2023 B&N Discover Pick, an APALA Adult Fiction Honor Book, and a New York Times Most Anticipated Book. A recipient of the Pushcart Prize, she is a 2021-2022 Center for Fiction/Susan Kamil Emerging Writer Fellow and holds an MFA in fiction from The New School

Hannah Walker Finnie is from Northern California. Her first book, *It Could Always Be Like This* is available from Spoonbill & Sugartown Books. She lives and writes in New York City.

Dorsa Djalilzadeh is a writer based in Brooklyn, New York. She writes about the personal, the subversive, the minute, and the universal. Some of her passions include birds, a good cat-eye, the sun, Twilight, and hot Cheetos. Find her work at her Substack, Modest Thots.

Jessie Wayburn (she/her) is a comedian, storyteller, crafter, and human Swiss army knife (small with a lot of skills). She hosts If You Can Make It There, a stand-up show at Docky’s in Red Hook on the second Monday of the month. Her craft school is called Good Crafternoon and she teaches all kinds of crafts there. Visit the website for more info.Five emerging and established readers will answer this question at this month’s edition of the Scrappy Reading Series, supported by the Red Hook Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library. Join us at Compère Collective as these writers share how they interpret “scrappy,” and how they embody this in their writing lives, personal lives, love lives, and any other type of life they are living.

Also enjoy the current exhibit, “Las Sirenas Del Cañón Hudson” Isobath, presented by the Artmageddon Collective. An aquatic seascape, this group art exhibit presents a myriad of hanging sculptures, fine art painting, collage, and more in a simulated isobath.

Inspired by the master’s series course, Scrappy: How To Build an Alternative Literary Life (offered by Off Assignment and led by author Chloé Caldwell), Brooklyn writer Farah Faye began this series to bring together published and unpublished writers to explore what it means to be scrappy.

Admission is free, scrappiness required. Drinks and snacks will be served!

Space is limited — register to attend!

Reading my:

Barrie Miskin is the author of the debut memoir Hell Gate Bridge (Woodhall Press, 2024). Her writing has appeared in Romper, Hobart, Narrativelyand elsewhere and her interviews can be found in Write or Die magazine, where she is a regular contributor. Barrie lives in Queens, New York with her husband and daughter.

Bob Gower lives in Brooklyn with two cats; his wife Alex and stepson Laken live there too. He’s the author of two books and a bunch of small essays that tell stories from his half normal half unconventional life. Though he rarely leaves Fort Greene these days Bob has traveled the world and worked as a carpenter, cab driver, teacher, newspaper design director, high-priced consultant to CEOs, and stone mason. His next big project is a memoir about the two transformative years he was a core member of what turned out to be a sex cult.

Hyeseung Song is a first-generation Korean-American painter and the author of Docile: Memoirs of a Not-So-Perfect Asian Girl, from Simon & Schuster. She lives and works in Brooklyn and upstate New York. Learn more about her at hyeseungsong.com.

Sasha Fox Carney is a writer and editorial assistant from Ottawa, Ontario. They are a Tin House 2023 Autumn Workshop Scholar and two-time recipient of the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award. Their work was longlisted for the CBC Poetry Prize in 2019, and has been published in places including The Forge, Barren Magazine, Bullshit Lit, and GASHER. They live in Brooklyn.

Carly Ann Filbin

Time: 7:00-8:00 pm EST

Free!

Registration

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