Author Archive
Portland Arts & Lectures is honored to host Ruth Reichl, author of Not Becoming My Mother, on March 28, 2010. Reichl was editor-in-chief of Gourmet magazine from 1999 until the magazine sadly announced its last issue would hit stands this past November. She also was previously the resident restaurant critic for The New York Times and Los Angeles Times.
Reichl was known throughout the culinary world as a no-nonsense critic with a knack for calling out five-star restaurants for their service, cuisine, and treatment of patrons; celebrity or not.
Now it seems Reichl can turn her attention to her budding career writing books. Her repertoire includes her four memoirs Tender at the Bone (1998), Comfort Me with Apples (2001), Garlic and Sapphires (2005), and her most recent installment Not Becoming My Mother (2009).
A true foodie to the core, Reichl has been raved by The New York Times as “A real food journalist who, through a combination of caprice and canny career management, has had a front-row seat for some of the greatest American culinary developments over the last 30 years.” In addition, famous chef Alice Waters states, “She understands that food is about nourishment and it’s precious; she feels a great responsibility to educate people with the right information.”
Please join Literary Arts in welcoming Ruth Reichl to our fare city of Portland, a developing foodie capital, for her presentation at Portland Arts and Lectures on March 28, 2010.
Tags: Portland Arts & Lectures, Ruth Reichl
Posted in Events |
Don’t forget that your donation to Literary Arts in the Give!Guide is tax -deductible.
Who likes to pay more on their income taxes?
No one.
There’s no better way to lower your income tax than to give to Literary Arts during the Give!Guide. We’re sure you’ll be happy and merry during the holiday season knowing you gave to our fantastic organization and lowered your income taxes at the same time.
Hooray for filling out those tax forms in April! Wait…
At least you know your Literary Arts donation is deductible. Smile for that.
Good day.
Tags: donation, G!G, Give!Guide
Posted in Literary Arts |
On January 5, Literary Arts is bringing Christopher Hitchens, an outspoken controversial English-American journalist, to the Arlene Schnizter Concert Hall as part of its Portland Arts & Lectures series. Get a pair of free tickets (reserved seats) with a Give!Guide donation of $100 or more to Literary Arts!
Hitchens has been a columnist and literary critic at such publications as Vanity Fair, Slate, The Nation, and The Atlantic. His most recent book, God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (published in 2007), was received with mixed reviews.
New York Times critic Michael Kinsley celebrated Hitchens’ “…logical flourishes and conundrums, many of them entertaining to the nonbeliever,” whereas Bruce DeSilva of the Associated Press said that “Hitchens has nothing new to say, although it must be acknowledged that he says it exceptionally well.”
Literary Arts is excited to welcome this prominent author and activist and we invite you to join us for what promises to be an entertaining evening hosted by the self-described “contrarian.”
Tickets for the remaining 3 lectures in the 2009-2010 Portland Arts & Lectures series (speakers include Christopher Hitchens, Ruth Reichl, and Edwidge Danticat) are available now as part of a Holiday package for as little as $60. You also have the opportunity to win 1 of 6 tickets to the remainder of the series by participating in our various Give!Guide Facebook and Twitter contests being held throughout December.
Visit www.give.literary-arts.org for more information.
Tags: Christopher Hitchens, Portland Arts & Lectures
Posted in Events |
Literary Arts is proud to bring the Moth to Portland! Comedian Tom Shillue will host the event, Made to Be Broken: Stories of Disobedience, on January 18, 2010 at the Gerding Theater at the Armory.
Beginning in 1997, the Moth is a story telling experience based in New York City. Founded by poet and novelist, George Dawes Green wanted to recreate his life in Georgia, where telling and sharing stories with his friends was a routine and interactive occurrence.
The first Moth evening took place in Mr. Green’s apartment and has become one of the most subscribed to and celebrated podcasts in the nation and on the web. Notable writers, actors, and scholars regularly perform and most shows sell out 48 hours after tickets are released.
The Times of London says The Moth is, “one of the hottest events in town… performances are enthralling, funny and moving.” Another rave review is from The Wall Street Journal, which calls The Moth “New York’s hottest and hippest literary ticket.”
UPDATE: Tickets for the event have sold out. We are glad to have many Give!Guide donors at the event through a ticket incentive. There are no more tickets available for this special donation incentive.
For more info on The Moth please visit…
www.themoth.org
Posted in Events |
Are you looking for a way to donate this holiday season? Making good money for the first time in your life? Why not consider skipping a few of those Starbucks holiday drinks or that beer at the end of the night, and give to Literary Arts or another non-profit of your choice. Yup, those few skipped peppermint mochas can make a positive impact on various programs and fellowships.
Donations from $10 to $500 have a distinct, positive impact to readers and writers. For instance, $15 covers the postage and envelopes to mail awards to Oregon Literary Fellowship recipients. A few more nights in and you can make a $35 donation to send a box of poetry or books across the country to be judged for the Oregon Book Awards.
Feeling really giving? $45 supports an hour of one-on-one writing skills mentoring and $75 sponsors one student for Writers in the Schools. Larger donations of $100 would provide free copies of the Writers in the Schools Student Anthology to featured students, so they can see their hard work in print, and $1000 is enough to send a local writer into a Portland Public Schools classroom for a whole semester.
Whatever way you decide to save, your donation ensures that Literary Arts can continue to bring literature and literacy to Oregon.
Posted in Uncategorized |

Welcome to another of our author profile features. Today we’d like to introduce WITS writer in residence Natalie Serber, who grew up in Santa Cruz, California, but currently resides here in Portland, Oregon.
What was the most recent book you read?
A Gate at the Stairs, by Lorrie Moore
What are you currently working on?
I am currently working on a novel, set in Boring, Oregon, about a mildly unhappy family, struggling with their changing geometry. Parents coping with the landscape of a marriage shadowed by cancer, teenagers who no longer need or want them in the immediate way they once did, teenagers who make their own, sometimes hilarious, sometimes catastrophic, decisions.
What are you currently reading?
Two books by Deborahs; Twilight of the Superheroes, by Deborah Eisenberg, and Curious Attractions, by Debra Spark. If you know another good Debra book, please tell me.
What did you read growing up?
I read Harriet the Spy, Laura Ingalls Wilder books (for a while I carried around an onion wrapped in a dishtowel, pretending it was my doll.) Nancy Drew, The Chronicles of Narnia, and Kurt Vonnegut.
A Recent Favorite book?
Lush Life, by Richard Price
Authors?
Lorrie Moore, Alice Munro, Jhumpa Lahiri, E.M. Forster, Tony Hoagland, Junot Diaz, Deborah Eisenberg
How does Oregon influence your writing?
My novel is set in Boring, Oregon and in Portland.
How did you get involved with Literary Arts?
When I moved to Portland, six years ago, I was thrilled about the Arts and Lectures Series and bought season tickets. The first one I attended was Jeffrey Eugenides and I was ecstatic to see so many people walking toward the Schnitz. There were traffic control people with those lit wands as if it was a Stones Concert, and I thought to myself, this is the perfect place for me to live–people take writing and literature seriously.
How is Literary Arts important for writers?
Literary Arts supports writers in multiple ways, first, they give us the opportunity to go into a classroom and share our passion with students. Some writers say that teaching saps them for their own creative work, I find that I am invigorated by my work with students, by their energy, and by the fresh way they look at things.
Where do you go to do your writing?
Reed College Library
When writing, do you set goals for yourself (i.e. ten pages per day)?
Gasp! 10 pages per day….I am so depressed right now. I am happy if I write 2 pages per day. I am painfully slow and deliberate in my writing.
What’s one piece of advice you would give to aspiring writers?
Carry a pen and paper with you wherever you go. Pay attention to the world. And, by all means, read, read, read widely.
Did you write in high school?
Yes I did, but I never had a creative writing class or a visiting writer. I think my high school career would have been much more successful if I’d been exposed to writing, to a wider range of authors, to understanding that what I had to say was valid and worthwhile.
What does WITS do for the student?
Writers in the Schools puts a working artist in the classroom. We come in, we share with the students how we work, how we translate our life experiences in our writing, and hopefully we create a little crack, a little ‘aha’ moment, opening the students to possibilities, to trusting that their ideas are unique and important. When my students share their work aloud, I can see in their faces both fear and pride. It is powerful.
What school do you teach at?
I will be at Marshall this spring.
What has been the biggest reward about doing WITS?
I want to describe that time in the classroom, when I have given the students a prompt, whether it is a piece of music, a phrase, an image, or a line from a poem and we all begin to write, often hesitantly at first, but then, I look up, and I see bent heads and hear pens moving, and everyone is writing–something happens to the air in the room and we become unified, we are all having the same experience, putting down our ideas. I love that.
Tags: Literary Arts, Natalie Serber, Portland Arts & Lectures, WITS
Posted in Author Profile |

Welcome to another of our author profile features. Today we’ll hear from prize-winning author Virginia Euwer Wolff. Raised in Parkdale, Oregon, Virginia now resides in Oregon City.
Last book read:
Nation by Terry Pratchett
What are you currently working on?
A novel that spans several generations in a family.
What are you currently reading?
Faulkner’s Light in August, Rita Dove’s Sonata Mulattica, and poetry by Lawson Fusao Inada.
What did you read growing up?
Books that were read to me: All the Pooh stories and A.A. Milne poems, Greek myths, Kipling’s Jungle Book, lots of others. Books I read: The Betsy-Tacy books, Nancy Drew, comic books, Mickey Spillane, J.D. Salinger, Charlotte Brontë, Dickens.
Favorite book?
It’s a tie between War and Peace and David Copperfield.
Favorite author?
Alice Munro and so many others.
Favorite poet?
Shakespeare and so many others.
How does Oregon influence your writing?
I see every landscape through the eyes of a native Oregonian, so that the most cacophonous of cities and the most dramatic of world monuments have to pass through my lens of a childhood spent in orchard and woods on the north slope of Mt. Hood. And every tonality in literature has to pass through my basic song of wind through cedar trees, summer sunrises, winter snow blowing. I feel like a newcomer everywhere else, even though I’ve lived in east coast cities for years at a time. So: When I’ve written about inner city lives (in three books), my touch is that of an immigrant who watched and listened, mouth pretty much agape, when, as a young college graduate, I moved to New York City and suddenly began to learn the bumpy vocabulary of concrete, subways, blinking neon everywhere, scores of foreign languages, museums I kept getting lost in, foods I’d never heard of, and, at night, never complete silent dark. Shaun Tan’s book The Arrival illuminates this kind of experience.
It’s said that stories for kids are often about home and away: The journey out, the thrilling and terrifying things to be learned en route, and the return home enlightened by the daunting hugeness of the great world outside–or, if not an actual return home, the discovery of some new place to make a home. I didn’t intend to live this pattern, but it has sort of attached itself to me.
How did you get involved with Literary Arts?
Through the Oregon Book Awards.
Why is Literary Arts important for Portland? Oregon?
Literary Arts brings to our attention the need for language to try to clarify and promote thoughtful living through poetry and prose, lyric and story. We live our lives in narrative, and if we read enough, we may find exactly our own. Literary Arts helps remind us of that.
How is Literary Arts important for writers?
Its arms reach out to every genre, and, through Writers in the Schools, it introduces adult working writers to kids who may be exploring writing for the first time. Its annual Fellowships have helped several authors over barriers between their manuscripts and publication. And the annual Book Awards bring to our attention books we might never have known about. (I’m not sure why playwrights were not included recently, though.)
Opinion of Oregon’s literary scene?
Oh, I think it’s beautifully fluid: sometimes celebrating the sanctity of our trees, hillsides, roaring ocean waves, many-headed weather, and eventful sky—and at other times worshiping urban hipness and Edge. With room for many other literatures in between. Oregon’s literary scene shifts, bends, opens itself to new forms, tonal shades, sensibilities. I still wish there were more connection between children’s authors and grownup authors, but this kind of acknowledgment takes time, and perhaps the appearance of graphic novels (some by Oregonians) can help build that connecting path.
What inspired you to start writing?
The huge search for the precise words to try to get at the astonishing sensations of existence, and the scary attempt to get the cruelty and beauty of life on paper. Somewhere, Virginia Woolf spoke of it as trying to catch the butterfly of existence by throwing a net over it.
What are your three favorite books?
As I said above, two of them are War and Peace and David Copperfield. So many could go in third place, but Crockett Johnson’s Harold and the Purple Crayon is a strong contender.
Where do you go to do your writing?
Into my beautiful studio with views of western red cedar trees, squirrels, birds, and sky just outside every window.
When writing, do you set goals for yourself (i.e. ten pages per day)?
Yes, but it’s amount of time, not number of pages. Weekday mornings are for writing only. Nothing interrupts that schedule, except the rare trip to the veterinarian. And I keep a work calendar; I make myself write a phrase or so, summarizing the progress I made on each day’s rectangle on the page; if I got no work done, a diagonal line goes through that box. At the end of a month, if there are quite a few diagonal lines, they’re a symptom of something gone wrong. As a veteran writer, I know it’s more complicated than simple sloth. My work motto: Millimeters of progress. I save the calendars so I can go back through the years that I spent on a specific book and trace the book’s trajectory (perhaps that’s too generous a word for a process that is nearly invisible to the naked eye). Each book takes me years to write; each lecture, speech, or essay takes months.
I was glad to find Anchee Min’s description of her writing process, because it is mine: “Like a long line of ants walking for blocks carrying a crooked cricket leg.”
What’s one piece of advice you would give to aspiring writers?
Go to museums. Museums of many different kinds. Because museums force us to ask questions we would not otherwise have asked. (“What’s that?” “Why would anybody want to sculpt that?” “Is that art?” “What makes it art?” “Am I allowed to laugh at it?” “Is that supposed to be a house or a poodle?” “They invented that in 1777?” “How did they think that up?” “They made that in Nigeria?” “That really came from an Egyptian tomb?” “What am I learning in this instant?”) And make notes. Everywhere.
Tags: Literary Arts, Virginia Wolff
Posted in Author Profile |
Poetry in Motion is one way Literary Arts makes its voice heard in and around Portland everyday.
If you’ve ever seen those poems on Trimet buses and Max train, you’ve seen our work. For over 10 years, Poetry in Motion has brought poetry to the public while on their daily commute.

Many of the poems on Portland buses and trains are from Oregon poets, who we are honored to support.
Your donation will help keep this program going and nurture Oregon poetry for years to come.
Check out our website for past poems and more information on Poetry in Motion.
http://www.literary-arts.org/pim/
Tags: Literary Arts, Poetry in Motion, Trimet
Posted in Literary Arts |
Looking for tickets to the sold out Greg Mortenson event on Dec. 14? Desperate to see The Moth perform on Jan. 18? Now’s your chance!
Donate $120 or more through Willamette Week’s Give!Guide and get a free pair of tickets to see Greg Mortenson or The Moth (based on availability).
Remember, your donation is also tax deductible!
UPDATE (12/14): There are no longer tickets available for Greg Mortenson nor The Moth. These events are sold-out, and we have run out of the tickets set aside for the Give!Guide campaign. Thank you to everyone who has contributed so far!
Tags: Greg Mortenson, incentives, The Moth, Tickets
Posted in Events, Literary Arts |

As part of our ongoing author profile series we’re happy to feature Mark Pomeroy, a local Portlander and Writers in the Schools resident.
What is the most recent book you enjoyed?
Last Night at the Lobster by Stewart O’Nan.
What are you currently reading?
The Devil’s Highway by Luis Urrea
How is Literary Arts important for writers?
It not only supports writers, financially and emotionally, through its fellowships and awards, it also connects them to neighborhood communities, gets them out and sharing their passion for the word.
What does WITS do for students?
It exposes them to people who work hard to try to make art. People who consider words as sacred, often piercing, sometimes healing things, prone to bolstering lives and making us feel less alone. It also helps kids build confidence; for some, the creative writing is a lifeline.
What school do you teach at?
Cleveland currently. In past years, Madison, Franklin, and Roosevelt. Lots of terrific kids in each school. In a culture where many people are scared of teenagers, the WITS work reveals an often heartening reality.
How does Oregon influence your writing?
Places like the coast, the Salmon River near Brightwood, the High Desert near Bend are all in my blood. As a writer, part of my job is to try to be open to all places that I experience – and to honor those that shape me.
Opinion of Oregon’s literary scene?
Scenes are good for community-building and a bit of excitement, and Oregon’s is among the best. But then it comes back to sitting in a room, quieting down, getting some work done.
What motivated you to do this program?
I love writing, I love teaching, and Literary Arts is a first-rate organization, one I’m proud to be associated with.
What’s one piece of advice you would give to aspiring writers
If you really believe in your work, put in the time at your desk.
What have been the biggest rewards while doing WITS?
Feeling the current of electricity in a classroom when a poem or story just clobbers kids. I love that. Seeing kids stand up at public readings and deliver knockout performances of their work. Seeing them open up to writing and, in many cases, life.
Posted in Author Profile |