Women playwrights' reading | 4-6:30 pm March 29 | UNE Art Gallery, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | Free | 207.567.3437

Jennifer Egan reading | 6:30 pm April 3 | Abromson Community Center, USM, Portland | $5 | 207.807.4114

Monica Wood reading | 7 pm April 3 | Abplanalp Library, UNE, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | Free | 207.221.4324
In what is bound to be an energetic, wide-ranging event, nine local female playwrights will gather at the University of New England Art Gallery on March 29 to read selections from their work. The free event (donations accepted) is one of 100 events taking place internationally to commemorate the first-ever Support Women Artists Now (SWAN) Day, coordinated by the San Francisco-based Fund for Women Artists.

The Maine authors, who include Portland’s Carolyn Gage, Laura Emack of Prospect, and Joye Cook-Levy of Bangor, will present five- to 15-minute staged readings from their shows, which range from humorous to grave and touch on subjects like the Marden's Lady and Calamity Jane.

As luck would have it, this event will take place just days before two other acclaimed female authors — one from Maine, one not — read in Portland.

Monica Wood’s Any Bitter Thing (Ballantine, 2005) explored a disintegrating marriage, a fractured childhood, and the intricacies of emotional and physical healing that come in the wake of a false accusation and a terrible accident. It’s an absorbing read that loosely draws on Wood’s own childhood in Mexico, Maine, where she was raised in a family of avid storytellers and Irish Catholics. Wood has also penned three other novels, as well as two books about writing, including The Pocket Muse: Ideas and Inspirations for Writing (Writers Digest, 2002).

She’ll read from her latest novel-in-progress at the UNE Westbrook Campus in Portland on April 3, as part of the Maine Women Writers Collection author series (see “Morality Stories,” by Deirdre Fulton, February 29).

On the very same day, National Book Award finalist Jennifer Egan — whose second novel, The Keep (Knopf, 2006) was the first piece of fiction in years to make me gasp aloud in fear — will read and answer questions at the University of Southern Maine Hannaford Lecture Hall. The event is co-sponsored by Words and Images, USM’s 28-year-old journal of literary and visual arts, which will publish an interview with Egan next month.

“Besides being one of the finest writers working today, she manages to be restless and experimental in her work, while never letting that experimentation overwhelm the importance of involving characters and emotional storytelling,” says Benjamin Rybeck, Words and Images managing editor, of Egan’s truly divergent works.

Looks like supporting women artists now shouldn’t be too hard — this week.

On the Web
Swanday.org

Related: Cave dwelling, We heart these people, 5 Traverse is shutting its doors, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Entertainment, Special Interest Groups, Performing Arts,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY DEIRDRE FULTON
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   PINGREE CRUSADES AGAINST MILITARY SEXUAL ASSAULT  |  May 23, 2013
    Amid a seeming epidemic of military sexual assault — the Pentagon estimates that such incidents have increased 35 percent over the past two years, while at least two military officials assigned to sexual assault prevention units have themselves been charged with inappropriate sexual conduct — Congresswoman Chellie Pingree, a Democrat from Maine, is pushing President Barack Obama to "take further action to confront this crisis."
  •   CONGRESS SQUARE'S CONTROVERSIAL FACELIFT  |  May 23, 2013
    The fate of Congress Square Plaza, the hardscaped half-acre on the corner of Congress and High streets, is back on the table, with city officials and downtown stakeholders weighing a new proposal from the hotel developer that wants to buy and build on it.
  •   NOSTALGIC MEMOIR CELEBRATES DRINKING WITH MEN  |  May 23, 2013
    Every few years, the bar cars on Metro-North Railroad's New Haven line (which leads from New York City's Grand Central Station into Connecticut) become endangered by modern-day Puritans who believe commuter trains are inappropriate venues for after-work cocktails. Can you imagine?!  
  •   MAINE WOMEN’S FUND AWARDEES ARE BUILDING A NEW WORLD  |  May 16, 2013
    On the surface, they have little in common: An unassuming entrepreneur in her late 50s, an accomplished 38-year-old photojournalist, and a trio of energetic teenagers. But these women do exhibit several shared traits. They are plucky and passionate, clever and unpretentious. They are Mainers. And all five will be honored next Thursday, May 23, at the Maine Women's Fund's annual Leadership Luncheon, which honors those who are making life better for women and girls in this state and beyond.  
  •   UNION BATTLES CONTINUE  |  May 16, 2013
    An update on the state employees' union's dispute with the governor, plus union organizers' plans for medical-marijuana workers.

 See all articles by: DEIRDRE FULTON