a framed silhouette of emily dickinson as a child and a lock of her bright red hair

Behind the Scenes with Emily Dickinson at the Frost Library’s Special Collections
September 14, 12-1:15pm

Virtual Program.

a framed silhouette of emily dickinson as a child and a lock of her bright red hair

 

Join us for a very special behind the scenes look at the holdings of Amherst College Frost Library’s Special Collections. Head of Archives and Special Collections, Mike Kelly, gives you an up close and personal look at this treasure trove of Dickinsonia, including original poetry manuscripts and letters, the famous daguerreotype of the poet as a teenager, and an original lock of the poet’s hair. Hear the stories these objects can tell and learn about recent work and acquisitions to the collection. A Q&A follows the presentation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

About the facilitator: Mike Kelly is the Head of the Archives & Special Collections at Amherst College, where he oversees the school’s collection of more than 80,000 rare books along with a host of archival and manuscript collections. He has worked in special collections for over twenty years; he spent eleven years as the Curator of Books at the Fales Library & Special Collections at New York University before coming to Amherst in 2009. He has held many positions within the Rare Books and Manuscripts Section of the American Library Association, including a term as RBMS Chair in 2011-12, and he is an active member of the Association of Tribal Archives, Libraries, and Museums (ATALM)He received his Master’s in Library Science from the University of Texas at Austin where he spent two years as an intern at the Harry Ransom Center; he also holds an MA in English from the University of Virginia. In 2016, he was awarded the Reese Fellowship for American Bibliography and the History of the Book in the Americas by the Bibliographical Society of America for his work on the bibliography of Samson Occom, a member of the Mohegan tribe of Connecticut. He co-curated (with Carolyn Vega) the exhibition “I’m Nobody! Who Are You? The Life and Poetry of Emily Dickinson” at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York which ran from January through May 2017. In the summer of 2018, Mike co-taught the course “A History of Native American Books & Indigenous Sovereignty” in Amherst for Rare Book School. He was elected to membership in the Grolier Club in 2005 and the American Antiquarian Society in 2016. 

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Facebook Video – Behind the Scenes with Emily Dickinson at the Frost Library’s Special Collections

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

The Emily Dickinson Marathon Emily Dickinson Museum 1 written in black text overlaid on a tinted yellow image of the Homestead

Emily Dickinson Marathon
Part 1

September 14, 9:30-11:30am

The Emily Dickinson Marathon Emily Dickinson Museum 1 written in black text overlaid on a tinted yellow image of the HomesteadJoin us for part 1 of the week-long Emily Dickinson Marathon! An Emily Dickinson Museum tradition, the Marathon is a group reading of all 1,789 poems by Emily Dickinson over the course of about 14 hours. For this year’s remote Festival, we are partnering with six other organizations to host the Marathon in two-hour sessions each day of this week. For the marathon, we will be reading from Ralph Franklin’s The Poems of Emily Dickinson: Reading Edition.

The first session of the Marathon will be hosted by the Emily Dickinson Museum, organizers and producers of the the Tell it Slant Poetry Festival. 

In this session we will begin with Franklin’s undated poems, numbered 1686-1789, and then circle back to poems numbered 1-148.

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

 

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

three headshots arranged in a grid with a fourth square reading "the common: a modern sense of place"

Poetry of Place: A Workshop with The Common for Amherst Regional High School

three headshots arranged in a grid with a fourth square reading "the common: a modern sense of place"New to the writing world? Join Editorial Assistants from The Common to learn how literary magazines offer formative spaces for up-and-coming writers, and discover what you can do to get involved and even publish your own work. With our curated writing exercises inspired by poems from the pages of our magazine, we’ll take you through the process of writing pieces with creative poetic structure, content, and themes so that you, too, can create poems with a unique sense of place.

This program serves students of Amherst Regional High School and is not open to the public.

 

 

 

 

 

 

About the facilitators: 

Whitney Bruno is a writer from Austin, Texas. She is a senior English and psychology double major at Amherst College, and her essays and fiction have been published in Make Muse. An Editorial Assistant at The Common, she additionally enjoys reading, baking, and embarking on nature trips when she’s not working or writing. Her literary interests vary by the month, but at the moment, she is particularly fascinated by black speculative fiction. Her favorite poet is Dionne Brand.

Elly Hong is the Thomas E. Wood ’61 Fellow at The Common and a senior English major at Amherst College. She is from Pasadena, California. When she’s not writing, you can find her fencing, drawing, or looking for a dog to pet. She enjoys all genres of literature but is particularly fond of speculative fiction. Her favorite poem is “Notes on Staying” by Hieu Minh Nguyen.

Sofia Belimova is an English major from New York City and an Editorial Assistant at The Common. Currently a junior at Amherst College, her areas of literary interest are poetry, literary criticism, Gothic fiction, and folklore. Outside of class, Sofia composes music, explores hiking trails, knits, and catches up on much-needed reading.

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

the words "The Emily Dickinson Marathon: Amherst-Pelham Regional High School 5 in white overlaid on an image of the high school in blue

Emily Dickinson Marathon
Part 5: Amherst-Pelham Regional High School

September 18, 2-4pm

the words "The Emily Dickinson Marathon: Amherst-Pelham Regional High School 5 in white overlaid on an image of the high school in blueJoin us for part 5 of the week-long Emily Dickinson Marathon! An Emily Dickinson Museum tradition, the Marathon is a group reading of all 1,789 poems by Emily Dickinson over the course of about 14 hours. For this year’s remote Festival, we are partnering with six other organizations to host the marathon in two-hour sessions each day of this week. For the Marathon, we will be reading from Ralph Franklin’s The Poems of Emily Dickinson: Reading Edition.

Our part 5 partner is Amherst-Pelham Regional High School, a four-year comprehensive regional public school serving the towns of Amherst, Pelham, Leverett, and Shutesbury, Massachusetts.

In this session we will read poems numbered 919-1175 in the Franklin.

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

picture of Franny Choi, dressed in black, leaning back in a chair. Franny has long black hair, clear glasses, and bright red lipstick and is smiling

Poetry Open Mic & Franny Choi
September 18, 7-8:45pm

Virtual Program.
picture of Franny Choi, dressed in black, leaning back in a chair. Franny has long black hair, clear glasses, and bright red lipstick and is smiling

photo credit: Qurissy Lopez

Let your voice be heard at our Festival open mic night! If you have longed to share your poetry in a safe and encouraging environment in the time of Covid-19, this is your chance. If you’d like to hear a wide variety of poets bravely sharing their work, be sure to tune in. Following the open mic, participants will be treated to a poetry reading by Festival headliner, Franny Choi.

READERS: Reader spots are full!

*A note about Rosh Hashanah: We apologize that this event falls on the occasion of the Jewish New Year. The Festival has historically been scheduled in the third week of September for consistency and to avoid overlap with other local events. Franny Choi’s reading will be recorded and made available to view following the event itself. Please register to receive information on how to view the recording. Shanah Tovah! 

About Franny Choi: 

Franny Choi is a queer, Korean-American poet, playwright, teacher, organizer, pottymouth, GryffinClaw, & general overachiever.  She is the author of two poetry collections, Soft Science (Alice James Books, 2019) & Floating, Brilliant, Gone (Write Bloody Publishing, 2014), as well as a chapbook, Death by Sex Machine (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2017). She has received awards from the Poetry Foundation & the Helen Zell Writers Program, as well as fellowships from the Vermont Studio Center & the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts. Her poems have appeared in journals including POETRY magazine, American Poetry Review, & New England Review, and her work has been featured by HuffPost, Ms. Magazine, PBS NewsHour, and Angry Asian Man.

A Kundiman Fellow & graduate of the VONA Workshop, in 2016 she founded the Brew & Forge Book Fair, a fundraising project that brings together poetry readers & writers to build capacity in social justice community organizations. 

Franny is the author of two plays: Mask Dances, which was produced as part of the 2011 Writing is Live Festival in Providence, RI, and Family Style, which was given several staged readings in Chicago in 2017. Aside from writing and teaching, Franny is a Senior News Editor for Hyphen Magazine & hosts the Poetry Foundation podcast VS along with fellow poet Danez Smith.

A member of the Dark Noise Collective, Franny is a 2019 Ruth Lilly & Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellow & the Gaius Bolin Fellow in English at Williams College.

Michael Medeiros appears with a gray cat on his shoulder.

 

 

About our Open Mic Host:

Michael Medeiros is the managing editor of jubilat. A third-year student in the University of Massachusetts Amherst’s MFA for Poets and Writers program, he is a co-founder of the Amherst Poetry Festival and a member of the Tell It Slant Festival Steering Committee. 

 

 

 

Open Mic Readers:

Anes Ahmed (Instagram: @anesahmed99)
Crystal Senter-Brown
Sebastian Merrill
Aishvarya Arora (Instagram: @diving_woman_)
Emily Dean (Instagram: @emlaurendean)
Daria Sysoeva
Jeff Davis
Bryan Franco (Instagram: @gnrlsmo)
Dr. Jazz Normand
Kylie Gellatly (http://www.kyliegellatly.com/ or Instagram: @kyliegolightly)
Rob Linsley
Kalidas Shanti
Jessica Harvey
Amy Bilodeau (Instagram: @amys_birds)
Raquel Perez de Alderete (Instagram: @rid.inskinned)

 

 

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Facebook Video – Poetry Open Mic & Franny Choi

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

Studio Sessions

“A Mighty Room” Studio Session: Bedroom
September 19, 10-11am

Virtual Program

Sweet image of a small desk with lamp in front of a paned windowhours have perished here;

This is a mighty room;

Within its precincts hopes have played, —

Now shadows in the tomb.  

-J1767 

Spend a “sweet hour” in Emily Dickinson’s creative space where she penned her startling poetry. Whether you are a writer, an artist, a composer, or a poet, you’ll find solace and inspiration for your artistic output in Emily Dickinson’s bedroom. Let this quiet virtual experience jumpstart your next creative journey. 

 

 

 

 

What to expect: As one of a limited number of participants, you will need to find a quiet spot with a good internet connection from which to be immersed in a live feed from Emily Dickinson’s south west bedroom in the Homestead. A facilitator in the room gently welcomes you and guides you through three inspirational prompts to help you explore this unique physical and psychic space and unleash your own creativity over the course of the hour. No share-outs will occur in this session, but participants may choose to share materials with the group after the program if desired.

Space in this program is filled.

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

The words "The Emily Dickinson Marathon Emily Dickinson International Society 6" in white overlaid on a tinted green image of Emily Dickinson

Emily Dickinson Marathon Part 6: Emily Dickinson International Society
September 19, 11am-1pm

The words "The Emily Dickinson Marathon Emily Dickinson International Society 6" in white overlaid on a tinted green image of Emily DickinsonJoin us for part 6 of the week-long Emily Dickinson Marathon! An Emily Dickinson Museum tradition, the Marathon is a group reading of all 1,789 poems by Emily Dickinson over the course of about 14 hours. For this year’s remote Festival, we are partnering with six other organizations to host the Marathon in two-hour sessions each day of this week. For the Marathon, we will be reading from Ralph Franklin’s The Poems of Emily Dickinson: Reading Edition.

Our part 6 partner is the Emily Dickinson International Society (EDIS). EDIS is an international organization founded to “Promote, perpetuate and enhance the study and appreciation of Emily Dickinson worldwide.” The society publishes The Emily Dickinson Journal and The Emily Dickinson International Society Bulletin, as well as holding annual meetings and international conferences. 

In this session we will read poems numbered 1176-1413 in the Franklin.

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

 

picture of Jericho Brown: a black man wearing a yellow t-shirt smiles in front of some daffodils

Poetry Masterclass with Jericho Brown
September 19, 1-2:30pm

picture of Jericho Brown: a black man wearing a yellow t-shirt smiles in front of some daffodils

Hone your craft with Pulitzer Prize–winning poet, Jericho Brown. In the “Jumpstart Your Engines” Poetry Workshop, Jericho Brown helps writers generate new work through a set of unconventional exercises that keep our ears open and our fingers moving. The workshop engenders new ideas about writing, and as there is a profound relationship between reading poetry and writing it, we participants read, discuss, and even recite the work of several poets whose examples might lead us to a further honing of our craft.  As a virtual participant you will engage in writing prompts and exercises at home alongside a panel of students selected to share their work along the way.

Live captioning will be available for this event!

*A note about Rosh Hashanah: We apologize that this event falls on the occasion of the Jewish New Year. The Festival has historically been scheduled in the third week of September for consistency and to avoid overlap with other local events. Every effort will be made in future to avoid overlap with this Holiday. While this event will not be recorded, Jericho’s reading with Ada Limón on Saturday evening will be. Visit that event page to learn how to access the recording. Shanah Tovah! 

About the facilitator: Jericho Brown is the author of three books of poetry. His third collection, The Tradition (Copper Canyon, 2019), won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. His poems have appeared in The Nation, The New Republic, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Time, and several volumes of the The Best American Poetry anthologies. Brown earned a PhD from the University of Houston, an MFA from the University of New Orleans, and a BA from Dillard University. He is the recipient of the Whiting Writers’ Award and fellowships from the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Guggenheim Foundation. Brown is an associate professor and the director of the Creative Writing program at Emory University in Atlanta. Be sure to check out his Festival headliner reading later this evening!

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

the inside of the homestead library

“A Mighty Room” Studio Session: Library
September 20, 11:30am-12:30pm

Virtual Program
the inside of the homestead library

photo by Jeff Morgan

Sweet hours have perished here;

This is a mighty room;

Within its precincts hopes have played, —

Now shadows in the tomb.  

-J1767 

Spend a “sweet hour” in Emily Dickinson’s creative space where she penned her startling poetry. Whether you are a writer, an artist, a composer, or a poet, you’ll find solace and inspiration for your artistic output in Emily Dickinson’s library. Let this quiet virtual experience jumpstart your next creative journey. 

 

 

What to expect: As one of a limited number of participants, you will need to find a quiet spot with a good internet connection from which to be immersed in a live feed from the library of Emily Dickinson’s Homestead. In this room were gathered Dickinson’s favorite books, her “Kinsmen of the Shelves” that “carried her to lands away.” A facilitator in the room gently welcomes you and guides you through three inspirational prompts to help you explore this unique physical and psychic space and unleash your own creativity over the course of the hour. No share-outs will occur in this session, but participants may choose to share materials with the group after the program if desired.

Space is limited for this program. This program is full. 

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule

conservatory

“A Mighty Room” Studio Session: Conservatory
September 19, 3:30-4:30pm

Virtual Program

conservatory

Sweet hours have perished here;

This is a mighty room;

Within its precincts hopes have played,—

Now shadows in the tomb.  

-J1767 

 

Spend a “sweet hour” in Emily Dickinson’s creative space where she penned her startling poetry. Whether you are a writer, an artist, a composer, or a poet, you’ll find solace and inspiration for your artistic output in Emily Dickinson’s conservatory. Let this quiet virtual experience jump-start your next creative journey. 

What to expect: As one of a limited number of participants, you will need to find a quiet spot with a good internet connection from which to be immersed in a live feed from Emily Dickinson’s sunny greenhouse on the south facade of the Homestead. In this small glass structure, Dickinson tended flowers “near and foreign,” forging a deep connection that permeated her poetry and daily life. A facilitator in the room gently welcomes you and guides you through three inspirational prompts to help you explore this unique physical and psychic space and unleash your own creativity over the course of the hour. No share-outs will occur in this session, but participants may choose to share materials with the group after the program if desired.

Space is limited for this program. This program is now full. 

Support The Tell It Slant Poetry Festival and Honor Someone Special:
Admission to all Festival events is free, but online donations, especially those made in honor or memory of family, friends, or colleagues are heartily encouraged and vital to the future of this beloved annual event. All gifts are tax deductible and will be recognized as part of the Festival.

2020 Tell It Slant Schedule