Tag: readings

Queer + Catholic NYC Readings

Posted by on August 14, 2008

I’ll be reading with other Queer + Catholic authors on September 4th & 5th in NY. Do come!

Queer and Catholic is an essay collection that examines the culture of how being raised Catholic informs and influences, positively or negatively, our queerness and how our queerness affects our Catholicism, our vestigial Catholic nature or even our flight from and continued struggle with the ʽthe Church of Rome.ʼ  Whether we embrace or reject our Catholic upbringings, they affect and shape who we are and bump up against our queer identities. Examining the culture of Catholicism, rather than the dogma or letter of it, these essays and short stories do not seek to address whether or not queers and the Catholic Church can reconcile or how and why the church should change, but instead explore the impact that growing up Catholic and queer has on us as individuals, writers, and political agents.

Join editor Amie M. Evans and contributors Helen Boyd, Joseph de Marco, Anthony Easton, Stephen Greco, Vince Sgambati, Charlie Vazquez and Emanuel Xavier as they read from their contributions to the anthology.

  • Thursday, September 4 at 6:30PM, CUNY Grad Center, 365 5th Avenue, Skylight Room, (Rm 9100, T. 212-817-7000)
  • Friday, September 5th at 7PM, Bluestockings, 172 Allen St (btwn Rivington and Stanton Street).

edited to add: the San Francisco reading is tonight at SF’s Main Library, 100 Larkin Street, 6PM.

GenderCrash Cancelled

Posted by on December 13, 2007

Just so people know, GenderCrash is cancelled tonight. Not just me, but the whole event, due to the weather.

& I’m still waiting for Betty to get to Andover, sadly. She’s been driving since 10:30, but everyone got on the road once the snow started coming down, so traffic has been hellacious.

I’m going to try not to panic in the meanwhile.

Gender Crash!

Posted by on December 12, 2007

I’ll be at Gender Crash! in Boston tomorrow night, doing what I do at one of the coolest events the trans community has to offer.

  • Where: Spontaneous Celebrations, 45 Danforth St, Jamaica Plain
  • When: Tonight, 12/13, at 7:30 PM

It seemed like a good way to end my semester up in Andover.

Crossdressing Erotica Tonight

Posted by on November 29, 2007

Tonight, do come to a crossdressing event at the LGBT Center in NYC. Rachel Kramer Bussel’s Crossdressing: Erotic Stories book is the reason for the gathering. I’ll be reading, as will Miss Vera, amongst others.

Do come! It should be a fun night!

FanFair Workshops

Posted by on October 18, 2007

I’ll be presenting a workshop on Queering Your Sexuality today (Thursday 10/18) at FanFair, from 3-4:30, and then presenting my keynote on The Middle Path tomorrow, Friday 10/19. Finally, on Saturday, I do a reading and Q&A about She’s Not the Man I Married. You can check out the full schedule at the FanFair site.

Crossdressing: Erotic Stories Reading

Posted by on October 3, 2007

Two months from today, there’s be an event based on Rachel Kramer Bussel’s Crossdressing: Erotic Stories book, which Veronica Vera wrote the forward to & which includes a story by me. I’ll be reading, as will Miss Vera, amongst others.

  • Where: LGBT Center, West 13th Street, www.gaycenter.org
  • When: Thursday, November 29th, 7PM

Do come! It should be a fun night!

Seal Press Feminism

Posted by on June 5, 2007

Tomorrow night I’m doing a reading with a few other Seal Press authors at the McNally Robinson bookstore here in New York:

Do come.

(& Because of this reading, the Trans Partners Drop-In Group at the Center will be meeting next Wednesday, 6/13, instead.) More…

Women & Children First

Posted by on May 30, 2007

I read a few years ago at Women & Children First, and I’m happy to say I’m going back to do a reading from She’s Not the Man I Married, since it became one of my favorite bookstores in the few hours I got to visit last time around. (They’re the women’s bookstore that has a shelf of “Men’s Books.” The idea still kills me.)

  • When: Thursday, May 31st, 7PM
  • Where: 5233 N. Clark Street

Being the cool & groovy bookstore they are, they even have a list of places you can eat dinner nearby beforehand.

June 6

Posted by on May 26, 2007

Next week I’ll be doing a reading with a few other Seal Press authors at the McNally Robinson bookstore here in New York. I’m pleased to get to meet both of my fellow authors: Jessica Valenti, of Feministing, and author of Full Frontal Feminism, and Audacia Ray, who wrote Naked on the Internet.

Do come.

My Workshops at IFGE

Posted by on April 12, 2007

We’re at the IFGE Transgender 2007 Conference in Philadelphia, and just so people know, I’ll be doing two workshops:

  • On Friday, Trans Sex & Identity, 2 - 3:15PM
  • On Saturday, a reading/discussion/Q&A of She’s Not the Man I Married, 2 - 3:15PM.

Otherwise, we’ll be around, so do say hello. A bunch of us who post on the mHB boards have been planning a get-together, too.

Queerish?

Posted by on March 25, 2007

On Wednesday night, I did the Nobody Passes reading at Bluestockings, the radical/feminist LES bookstore. As the room was filling up I leaned over to Betty and said, “I feel like I’m in a Williamsburg subway station” because of the multiple piercedness in the room. It’s the punk in me, maybe; I have an old punk rocker friend who likes to yell “freak!” at people with multiple piercings and green hair, because he figured - as it was when we were doing it - that was the point. I mean if you weren’t shocking someone’s suburban sense of normality with your non-conformity, then you weren’t doing it right, but in Williamsburg sometimes it’s like having facial piercings IS normality.

& I say all that with a kind of fondness, love, and a little bit of envy, because I don’t have the energy to look like that anymore. I prefer passing as more mainstream these days, because I like the little shock people express when I launch into a diatribe about the exclusion of crossdressers from trans politics 12 minutes later.

The idea we were discussing was passing - as one thing or another: passing as white, or black, when you have parents who are both; passing as female when you aren’t; passing as female when you are. It was very heady, indeed.

But what was most interesting to me was that to some people, I wasn’t passing at all. One person registered something like scorn every time I answered one of the Q&A questions. The conversation tended around issues of queer community, and LGBT politics & media, which I guess was predictable - Mattilda is the editor of the anthology & all - but still, the book does cover many types of passing - passing as middle class when you’re working class, or the other way around - & yet there were no questions - or assumptions - about class while there was an assumption that everyone in the room was LGBT. & I had a moment - I think of it now as social Tourette’s, but it’s basically just my punk rock spirit moving in mysterious ways - of wanting to say the word “heterosexual” as many times as I could. Why? Because when I did, people twitched. It’s a funny feeling to talk about community and “scenes” and queerness in a group of people who you can bet don’t all consider you part of their “us.” I’m used to that, mostly, except when I find someone copping an attitude toward me, that I’m not properly queer because I don’t fuck girls per se, or for whatever reason they’re not telling me. & That’s okay with me, actually — Betty & I exist at the intersection of most identities and often feel excluded from one community or another — except when it highlights the irony of being branded “not queer enough” in a room of people talking about inclusion.

On Thursday afternoon, as a kind of counterpoint, I did an interview with a journalist from an online magazine, and at some point, she stopped, a little flabbergasted after I was talking about sex with Betty, and said, “You are so queer - I mean, you’re talking about sex between bodies that are heterosexual and you can’t see it that way at all, can you?”

& I thought, Well no, I can’t, but if you ask a couple of people who were at Bluestockings Wednesday night, they might tell you otherwise. & That, folks, is the nature of passing: sometimes you do, with some people, & sometimes you don’t, with other people, & we’ve gotten to the point where we never know which it’s going to be.

My thanks to the journalist for her compliment, and also to Mattilda for hosting and Liz Rosenfeld for reading and especially to Rocko Bulldagger for hir essay (which is largely about feeling ‘not genderqueer enough’) and conversation, and to Kate and Barbara and all the other lovely souls in attendance.

Nobody Passes NYC Reading Tomorow

Posted by on March 20, 2007

I contributed to a book by Mattilda called Nobody Passes, and I will be doing a reading on Wednesday, March 21st with other contributors tomorrow at the bookstore Bluestockings at 7PM.

& In the meantime, Namoli Brennett is playing Mo Pitkins on Tuesday night, 3/20, $5 cover.

TransNYC Tonight

Posted by on March 8, 2007

I’ll be doing a reading and presentation of She’s Not the Man I Married tonight for the TransNYC group. Please do come, if you can.

For those of you who can’t come, apparently Access Hollywood is doing a clip about the AMC show.

NYC: Reading Tonight!

Posted by on January 17, 2007

Tonight I’ll be reading from She’s Not the Man I Married as part of Rachel Kramer Bussel’s In the Flesh Erotic Reading Series at the Happy Ending Lounge.

Check our calendar for more info, or check RKB’s website.

NYC: Erotic Memoirs on 1/17

Posted by on January 10, 2007

I’ll be reading from She’s Not the Man I Married on Wednesday, January 17th as part of Rachel Kramer Bussel’s In the Flesh Erotic Reading Series at the Happy Ending Lounge.

Details are here (or below). Get there by 7:30 to assure a seat, and definitely get there by 8PM if you’re coming to here me - I’m up right after the introductory words!
More…

Nobody Passes NYC Reading

Posted by on January 3, 2007

I contributed to a book by Mattilda called Nobody Passes, and I will be doing a reading with other contributors here in New York, on March 21st, at the bookstore Bluestockings.

(Other upcoming readings for Nobody Passes below the break.)
More…

HB: In the Flesh

Posted by on December 19, 2006

I just received the final lineup for the Erotic Memoirs Reading I’ll be doing for Rachel Kramer Bussel’s In the Flesh series on January 17th.

Confirmed Events

Posted by on November 25, 2006

I will have the extreme pleasure and honor of introducing Leslie Feinberg at the State Museum of New York in Albany, this coming February 3rd.

Betty and I will also be attending IFGE 2007, in Philly, where I’ll be presenting both my Trans Sex & Identity workshop (on Friday) and doing an additional workshop on She’s Not the Man I Married (on Saturday).

& That is in addition to my being the keynote speaker for First Event this year and doing an erotic memoir reading for Rachel Kramer Bussel here in NYC.
More to come, no doubt!

Voices of New York

Posted by on May 20, 2005

Last night I had the pleasure of reading with 7 other Lammy nominees at the Center, and it was a very cool event. (Aaron Krach, author of Half-Life, commented that he wished all readings had been like last night’s: five minutes, no Q&A, with a bunch of queer, friendly people in the audience.) I’m really thankful for Lambda Lit, because as I sat there listening to the readers, it occurred to me how stupid it is that there is so little room in mainstream publishing for GLBT writers. The stories were remarkable: one about an older man who’d fallen in love with a man with Downs Syndrome (Perry Brass, from Serendipity); another about a married man whose male lovers were being killed by a murderer (Gary Zebrun’s Someone You Know); another about a young Irish lad’s meeting with his priest at his mother’s behest (Damian McNicholl’s A Son Called Gabriel, and whose blog I just checked out); another a confrontation between a lesbian of color and her father (Laurinda D. Brown’s Fire & Brimstone).

me readingThey were all powerful stories, they were all stories that went beyond some definition of GLBT. They were about what stories are supposed to be about, the quiet little ways we suffer and rejoice in being our lovely, pathetic selves. But at the same time, without the Lammies, who would recognize a wife’s story of her trans husband’s beauty? Where else would I meet people who’d tell me about the tranny they knew, growing up?

It was a lovely night. I’m not 100% better, not yet, but I was damned glad I wasn’t still contagious, and could be there. I regret having missed the reading in DC even moreso now, but I am very much looking forward to the Awards Night at on June 2nd.

Lambda Literary Awards - Finalist Reading

Posted by on May 16, 2005

I’ll be reading this Thursday, May 19th, as part of the Lambda Literary reading for Awards’ Finalists, starting at 7 PM, at the Center.

Here’s the complete bill:

Mickey Small - Up All Night
Perry Brass - Serendipity
Gary Zebrun - Someone You Know
Kristie Helms - Dish It Up, Baby!
Damian McNicholl - A Son Called Gabriel
Laurinda D. Brown - Fire & Brimstone
Aaron Krach - Half-Life
Helen Boyd - My Husband Betty
Han Ong - The Disinherited
Alison Smith - Name All The Animals

I’ll be reading at around 8 PM, but the event starts at 7 PM.
Location: New York Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Center, 208 West 13th St.