RADAR Productions and Red Light Lit come together for this epic reading!
Thursday, December 14 2017
James Hormel Center Reading Room
Located on the 3rd Floor of the
San Francisco Public Library
100 Larkin Street
6PM
==FREE==
Hosted by Juliana Delgado Lopera
Reading followed by artist Q&A
Did we mention there will be cookies?
â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½ â½â³ â½
FEATURING...
Kar Johnson
Kar Joh...
RADAR Productions and Red Light Lit come together for this epic reading!
Thursday, December 14 2017
James Hormel Center Reading Room
Located on the 3rd Floor of the
San Francisco Public Library
100 Larkin Street
6PM
==FREE==
Hosted by Juliana Delgado Lopera
Reading followed by artist Q&A
Did we mention there will be cookies?
â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½â³ â½ â½â³ â½
FEATURING...
Kar Johnson
Kar Johnson is a writer, educator, and bookseller in San Francisco. Their writing-- exploring queerness, futurity, and a little bit of magic--has been featured in The Northridge Review, sPARKLE + bLINK, and Transfer, among others. Kar received their MFA from San Francisco State University, and are currently an Artist in Residence at the Ruth Asawa School of the Arts. They co-host the podcast Queers in Space.
Anand Vedawala
Anand is an Indian born queer writer, now based in San Francisco, who has spent the last 23 years of his life trying to figure out the complexities of assimilation and expectations from Indian and American cultures. Anand has been publishing zines since 2009, and his self-published first book 100 Years from Now Our Bones will be Different received a starred review from Publishers Weekly. Anand works with other writers and illustrators of color to publish works about people of color. His recent works have been autobiographical, focusing on his culture and upbringing. His newest zine is titled Hair.
Kim Pierce
Pierce is a non fiction story teller who writes humor into the darkest corners of life. Working with homeless people, attempts at queer love and not-so-queer love, a fundamentalist mother, a polygamist father, and mental illness are frequent themes in her work. Kim is one of the co-creators of Fro-Choice, a feminist yogurt company that doesn't sell yogurt. She is also one of the writers and co-creators for Steep Town, an upcoming web series about San Francisco. Kim is working on a compilation of personal essays.
Kimberly Reyes
Reyeshas received fellowships from the Poetry Foundation, Columbia University and San Francisco State University. Her chapbook Warning Coloration is forthcoming from Dancing Girl Press.
Accessibility Info:
______________________________________________________ The Main Library, including is accessible to people using wheelchairs and other mobility devices. Entrances on Larkin Street, Fulton Street and Grove Street all are accessible. The Grove Street entrance has a ramp just inside the inner door that leads to a landing where visitors can use an elevator for access to the Lower Level.
The closest accessible BART station is Civic Center. The accessible MUNI line serving this location is the #19 Polk. For information about Muni's accessible service, please call (415) 701-4485 Accessible parking is available at 355 McAllister, Civic Center Plaza Garage. Call (415) 863-1537. For inquiries or requests for other accommodations, please call (415) 557-4557