Art Workshop International’s Dinitia Smith’s new play

February 28th, 2010

Dinitia Smith’s new play “Dirty Pictures” just had a highly-successful reading at the Actors Studio, with the well-known theater actor actor, Austin Pendleton, in the lead role. There are hopes for a production the play soon.

“Dirty Pictures” is the story of a little-known piece of American history, the arrest in 1960 of the gay literary critic Newton Arvin and two younger colleagues at Smith College as part of a government crackdown on homosexuals that occurred at the end of the McCarthy period. Gays were targeted as security risks because they were supposedly vulnerable to blackmail by Communists. Prior to the arrests of Arvin and his friends, nearly 1,000 Federal workers in Washington, D.C. had lost their jobs for “sexual perversion” under Executive Order 10450 from President Eisenhower.

The play is a reimagining of these incidents based on interviews, trial transcripts, and historical documents.

NOTE: A leading agent is now taking the lead. We will watch for upcoming developments! — Chris Spencer

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Art Workshop International alumna Diana Woodcock’s Poetry Chapbook published!

February 27th, 2010

FootHills Publishing is pleased to announce the release of
Mandala by Diana Woodcock, the 14th book in FootHills Poets on Peace Series.
(Release Date, December 8)

From the book:

FOR LHASA

March 17, 2008 I could not shake
the thought of you in flames.
Throughout the day whispering
the names of those I know still
living in your center, on your
periphery. Felt your misery.
Smelled burning shops, overturned cars,
Chinese flags. Saw smoke rising like

incense over the Potala and Jokhang.
Heard the rumblings of a hundred
tanks moving through your hallowed
streets. Remembered the soldier
who narrowly missed me, knocking
me down-bicycle and body sprawled
on the ground as he sped past laughing.
Today I said it out loud to no one

in particular, to the nameless faces
in the crowd, “I never left you nor
loved any city more.” So tonight
I’ll fill seven prayer bowls, make a
mandala out of Arabian desert sand,
remember as I dangle my feet in Gulf
waters the source of the Ganges,
and wonder if indeed I am a certain

lama’s reincarnation. I’ll take that
long flight back, walk the famished,
enflamed road leading to the holy
city where I’ll rise up like incense,
a faithful wife burning on her husband’s
pyre because I can’t forget
you, most fragile tragic city of Tibet.

Mandala
is a 40 page hand-stitched chapbook.
$10.00

For comments about the book, cover image,
another poem, author bio
or to order on-line go to:
http://foothillspublishing.com/2009/id69.htm

To order through mail send total price plus $1.75 Shipping and Handling
($2.75 in Canada; $5.00 other countries) for each address sent to.
(NYS Residents please add $1.20 Sales Tax per book)

Send orders to:

FootHills Publishing
PO Box 68
Kanona, NY 14856

(This is a one-time only mailing. Your address was supplied by the poet
and will not be used in any other mailing.)


***************************
www.foothillspublishing.com
“Never Stop Asking for Poems”

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Private Eye Fiction by S.J. Rozan, Art Workshop International instructor

February 7th, 2010

A Tale About a Tiger and Other Mysterious Events from “The American Culture”

Crippen & Landru Publishers
Paper: 243 pages
ISBN (cloth): 978-1-932009-89-7 … (paper): 978-1-932009-90-3
$42.00 (cloth) … $17.00 (paper)

Multiple-award-winning private eye (p.i.) author S. J. Rozan is equally at home writing novels or short stories. Crippen & Landru has collected together some prime examples of her work in the short form.

Rozan’s tone in these stories varies from decidedly grim to lightly humorous, but she never strays very far from what is usually called the “real” world — or at least the world typically envisioned by private eye authors (i.e., that environment of unremitting sin and corruption in high and low places which p.i. writers have created by common consent and inhabited with sinful and corrupt characters who are never more than one step removed from being stereotypes) — a world, in brief, that is as real and yet as unreal as Middle Earth.

All of which in no wise detracts from Rozan’s story-telling skill; when it comes to p.i. fiction, she may be one of its foremost contemporary practitioners.

“Night Court” takes us to an unexpected place, almost to another universe, yet it’s where we live daily:

Murph took his seat on the bench, after which the assembled multitudes, who had been bidden by Rossi to stand, sat also. Not that they were all that multitudinous: night court didn’t allow spectators. The only people here were directly connected with the case. The attorneys, the witnesses, Rossi, the guards. And the defendant. Murph watched Leopold squirm. The guy looked pale. Well, he ought to. He was in big trouble.

Rozan gives a p.i. named Smith in one story and Bill Smith in another two cases (“Hoops” and “Childhood”) keyed to the shortcomings of the social system:

”Why me?” I asked. “Curtis knows every piece of black slime that ever walked the earth, but he sent you a white detective. Why?”
”Cause the slime we looking for,” Raymond said evenly, “I don’t believe they black.”

“Passline” is a departure for Rozan, not a p.i. story but a character study of a man, a compulsive gambler, under extreme pressure:

And the people who built this place (not the first time, not the old days, but now), they knew, too. They built everything huge and so obviously fake because of it. No one talked about it (that was part of it, the shared secret) but they didn’t want you to forget it. They knew the rush was better because of the desert. They knew the illusion only worked because of the truth.
And the truth was, if he didn’t come home with $400,000 for Bennie, Taylor was a dead man.

In “Seeing the Moon,” Chinese-American private eye and fine art connoisseur Jack Lee gets involved in an art swindle:

”Molly told me he gives you the hives.”
”Hives, he makes me itch? Yah, that’s good, Jack! Yes, it’s bad enough, the people who buy and sell art as a commodity, with no love. But to cheat also, this is abhorrent. Such men must be avoided. You cannot win against a man like that.”

The remaining four stories in A Tale About a Tiger feature Rozan’s famous series character, Chinatown p.i. Lydia Chin, who sometimes joins forces with her “barbarian” partner Bill Smith. The first one is “Film at Eleven,” where Lydia is on the trail of a murderer who seems to have gotten away with it:

As it had been when our eyes first met, my skin crawled now, so near Mitch Ellman. The way he leaned a little too close; the way his teeth seemed pointed when he smiled; the way his eyes held mine too long every time they met: I wanted to get up and move, to put actual, physical distance between us.

In “Subway,” a rape case escalates into murder — of the witnesses:

“I told you, no one was sure-sure. Or if they were, they wouldn’t say. And they can’t get DNA without a court order if he don’t want to give it. They can’t get a court order unless they arrest him, which they can’t without probable cause. They got no conviction in the prior and no i.d., they got no probable cause. Besides,” she added, shaking her head, “they lost him.”
“What do you mean, lost him?”
“He disappeared. After the line-up. He’s scum but I guess he’s not stupid.”

With “A Tale About a Tiger,” folk lore leads to fraud — and also to gunplay:

“Fifteen, Ho. That’s a cool $135,000, in good American cash. Take it and run.”
“That will barely cover my expenses,” Ho objected, “much less compensate me for the risks I’ve taken in obtaining these items, and bringing them into this country.”
Meaning, I thought, bribing and poaching and smuggling.

Finally, in “Double-Crossing Delancey,” Lydia must outcon a consummate conman:

Well, that would be like Joe: giving away as little as possible, even to his business partner. Controlling the information minimizes the chance of error, misstep, or deliberate double-cross. As, for example, what Charlie and I were up to right now.

If you like your private eyes both hard- and soft-boiled but imbued with a social conscience, A Tale About a Tiger should satisfy you. S. J. Rozan strikes a fine balance between the extremes of Miss Marple and Mike Hammer, and for that reason — as well as her smooth prose — these stories will be of interest.

(Parental warning: Strong language, not for children.)

—Mike Gray

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