events

Lisa Hsiao Chen’s ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING out now!

The Artist is often asked how much he suffered to make the piece. He replied that he didn’t suffer. I have pleasure to do the piece. Some who have written about Time Clock Piece point out how exhausted the Artist looks. Yet when Alice looks closely at the Artist’s face — in the film, in the photo stills — she doesn’t see it. What she sees is the will of a man stitching himself into time. Only after the piece was completed was the Artist disconsolate. He felt that way after all his pieces ended, he said, because it meant returning to the life of an ordinary man.

from ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING by Lisa Chen.

“beguiling and brilliant” -Viet Thanh Nguyen

“fiercely honest, and exhilarating” -Claire Messud

_______________________

Join us in celebrating this incredible book’s publication next week on April 21 at 7:30PM. IN PERSON! This will be at Greenlight Bookstore in Brooklyn. Info here: https://www.greenlightbookstore.com/event/lisa-hsiao-chen-eugene-lim
[VIRTUAL] In Conversation: Lisa Hsiao Chen and Anelise Chen
Also, tonight, at 7PM, Lisa will be speaking with Anelise Chen at AAWW. Info here: https://aaww.org/curation/virtual-in-conversation-lisa-hsiao-chen-and-anelise-chen/


in 2018, Lisa Chen, Anelise Chen, and I had the great honor of visiting the maestro refusenik, undocumented but amnestied immigrant, godfather of performance art, and secular saint Tehching Hsieh at his Brooklyn studio. this was for The Believer, and here’s the interview that resulted. Here’s my favorite part:

Tehching Hsieh: In the beginning I couldn’t meet your kind of people. Your kind of people would say, “What is this guy, a stranger, an illegal?” Because your kind of people—this is the first time I’ve been interviewed by your kind of people in 42 years.

BLVR: Really? Wait, what do you mean, us “kind of people”?

TH: Asian American. [Laughter.] You get it! This is the first time. I’m not trying to make it an issue.

BLVR: You say this is the first time Asian Americans are interviewing you, which I find both surprising and not, but, you should know, for us, you are a very important precedent, a groundbreaker.

TH: I just wanted to say that it’s come late. Forty-two years late.

AAWW podcast: Patty Yumi Cottrell, Anelise Chen, Eugene Lim, & Lisa Chen

AAWW radio episode 20

On this episode of our AAWW podcast, we’re featuring Patty Yumi Cottrell, Eugene Lim, and Anelise Chen, three thrilling experimental novelists whose books are about pushing forward against life-killing forces, whether it’s capitalism, the political status quo, or more existential threats like grief and suicide. After reading from their work, poet Lisa Chen moderates a conversation about survival strategies, self-awareness, and the balance of tension in the books. Listen below:

Apple: https://itunes.apple.com/…/aaww-radio-new-asi…/id1297736720…

Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/m/Ivrhmd2kann66vbbqahjtqi5wwe

Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=154895

TuneIn Radio: http://tun.in/piGyv

Ellipsis Press will be at TWO bookfests in Brooklyn this weekend.

Ellipsis Press and Harp & Altar at the

3rd Annual Boog City Festival.

Saturday & Sunday, September 12th and 13th, 2009

at Unnameable Books | 600 Vanderbilt Ave. in Brooklyn

Books–including new titles by Joanna Ruocco and Norman Lock–will be on sale.

Harp & Altar contributor and new Ellipsis Press editor Corey Frost will be reading at 1:40PM on Saturday.

Also hear further astonishments by these other Harp & Altar contributors:

Jill Magi will be reading at 12:30 on Saturday.

Joanna Sondheim will be reading at around 12:30PM on Sunday.

Eileen Myles will be speaking on a panel at 2:45PM on Sunday.

See full schedule at: http://welcometoboogcity.com/bc59.pdf

. . .


Ellipsis Press will be at the Brooklyn Book Festival

at Brooklyn Borough Hall.

Brooklyn Book Festival Directions


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