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An Evening of Poetry with Alexa Patrick & Karisma Price

  • Blue Cypress 8123 Oak Street New Orleans, LA, 70118 United States (map)

Join us Thursday, April 18th at 6:30 pm for a night of poetry featuring Alexa Patrick and Karisma Price.

This event will be held in our upstairs event space and is free to attend.

Alexa Patrick is a poet and vocalist from Connecticut. She is a Cave Canem fellow and Tin House alumna. She has also been cast in the featured role of Unsung in We Shall Not Be Moved, an opera under the direction of Bill T. Jones. You may find Alexa’s work published in The Quarry, The Rumpus, CRWN Magazine, and The BreakBeat Poets Vol. 2: Black Girl Magic.

Purchase a Signed Copy of Remedies for Disappearing!

A collection of poetry that moves from family history and the heartbreaks of navigating a predominantly white high school into adulthood, exploring the ways the speaker’s experiences echo those of an expansive and intricate history of Black girls and women.
In this beautiful debut from an exciting new poet, Alexa Patrick’s Remedies for Disappearing memorializes Blackness in its quiet and unexpected forms, bringing the peripheral into focus. These poems muddy Black life and death, observe lineage and love stories, and question what “disappearing” teaches about Blackness and bodies.

Remedies for Disappearing is gritty, sharp, and formally inventive, demonstrating Patrick’s imaginative curiosity, lyrical restraint, and confidence in her handling of language. Moments of aphoristic confession are balanced with imagistic precision as the speaker recounts the ways her aunties, sisters, and even herself have disappeared in order to survive.

Patrick’s poetry is haunting and hopeful, striving to provide readers with the tools and context to acknowledge, define, and honor the complexity of Black girl/womanhood. Remedies for Disappearing connects Black girls and women to each other and to their own histories, and insists that they be fully and wholly seen.

Karisma Price is an assistant professor of English at Tulane University. A poet, screenwriter, and media artist, she is the author of I’m Always So Serious (Sarabande Books, 2023). Her work has appeared in publications including Poetry, Indiana Review, Oxford American, Four Way Review, Academy of American Poets Poem-A-Day Series, and elsewhere. She is a Cave Canem Fellow, was a finalist for the 2019 Manchester Poetry Prize, was awarded the 2020 J. Howard and Barbara M. J. Wood Prize from the Poetry Foundation, and is the 2023 winner of the Stanley Kunitz Memorial Prize from the American Poetry Review. A native New Orleanian, she holds an MFA in poetry from New York University, where she was a Writers in the Public Schools Fellow.

Purchase a Signed Copy of I’m Always So Serious!

I’m Always so Serious is brilliant.” –Terrance Hayes, winner of the National Book Award for Lighthead
Karisma Price’s stunning debut collection is an extended
meditation on Blackness, on family, on loss. Anchored in New Orleans and New
York City, these poems braid personal and public histories into a cultural
reckoning of past and present. James Booker speaks to Ringo Starr, a phone “Autocorrects
‘Nigga’ to Night, ‘” If Beale Street
Could Talk
 is recast with characters from The Odyssey. In these pages there is grief, there is absence, there
is violence–“We
know that mostly everything around us / is measured in blood.”–but there is
also immense love and truth. Karisma Price has created a serious masterpiece, a
book “so dark you have no other option but to call it / precious.”

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April 17

Poetry Reading at Xavier University

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May 1

First Church Presents: Dinner & A Talk at 6pm