LitPDX seeks to amplify marginalized voices, and welcomes all, their ideas, their events, and their words.

For details regarding specific events please contact the organizers or venues. If you are an organizer or venue and would like to reach out to us please feel free to contact us or submit an event using our submission form. We’d love to hear from you!

Stranger in the Pen

Literary Arts 925 SW Washington Street, Portland, OR, United States

From Literary Arts's website: panel discussion featuring Mohamed Asem, Dana Ghazi, Ramzy Farouki, and Dr. Priya Kapoor  July, 2016: Three days after the terror attack on Bastille Day, Mohamed Asem is detained overnight by British immigration officials without cause. In an elegantly digressive, self-interrogative style, Asem describes the boredom and uncertainty of confinement, and how this specific kind of helplessness leads, inevitably, to a self-reckoning. What series of events has led to this moment? As a teenager, he was stranded in Paris with his mother during the first Gulf War, while his father remained in Kuwait. He spent his twenties dutifully trying to follow the blueprint for manhood back home in the Middle East, only to cast it all aside after his mother’s early death. Stranger in…

Free

Lisa Wells with Ashley Toliver & Mohamed Asem

Mother Foucault's Bookshop 523 SE Morrison St, Portland, OR, United States

Please join us on Thursday, December 6, for a reading with Lisa Wells from her recent book of poems, The Fix, from University of Iowa Press. Joining Lisa will be poet Ashley Toliver (Spectra, 2018) and nonfiction writer Mohamed Asem (Stranger in the Pen, 2018) Lisa Wells is a poet and nonfiction writer from Portland, Oregon. Her debut collection of poetry, The Fix, was selected by Brenda Shaughnessy for the 2017 Iowa Poetry Prize. A new book of nonfiction, Believers, is forthcoming from Farrar, Straus & Giroux in 2019. Her work has appeared in Harper’s Magazine, Granta, The Iowa Review, Best New Poets, The Believer, N+1, Denver Quarterly, Third Coast, and elsewhere. THE FIX reviewed at Publisher’sWeekly. An excerpt and short essay about Lisa’s book at Poetry Society of America. Ashley Toliver is the author of Spectra (Coffee House…

Free

Book Launch: Black Wings

Studio Faro 420 SW Washington St #302, Portland, OR, United States

Please join us for the official US release of Sehba Sarwar's novel BLACK WINGS, which was first published in Pakistan in 2004. Revised and updated, this new edition comes courtesy of El Paso's Veliz Books. Don't miss your opportunity to grab a copy of the book that Liliana Valenzuela describes as "a tale of family secrets, independent women, and a period of rapid change in Pakistan and post 9/11 America." Also reading: *** Mohamed Asem, the author of STRANGER IN THE PEN, "a timely real human story in the face of headlines everywhere," according to Oregon ArtsWatch *** Corinne Manning, the Seattle-based writer & editor whose work has appeared in Story Quarterly, The Oxford American, and been recognized as notable in Best American Essays 2016…

Free

Small Press Residency – Perfect Day Publishing

Rocking Frog Cafe 2511 SE Belmont St, Portland, OR, United States

Rocking Frog Cafe & NovaPDX present our Small Press Residency program starting this October. Every month, meet the people from local small press publishers involved in making great books. During the residency you can purchase the featured press’ books at Rocking Frog Cafe and meet the people behind them. This month our featured press is Perfect Day Publishing (www.perfectdaybooks.com). Join us on Thursday, October 24th with our guests Mohamed Asem, Alissa Hattman & Jack Lewis. ~ Mohamed Asem Mohamed Asem is the author of the memoir Stranger in the Pen (Perfect Day Publishing, 2018). His work has appeared in Oregon Humanities, Eunoia Review, the anthology What Lies Beneath (selected by Hilary Mantel and Bonnie Greer), and elsewhere. He has an MFA in creative writing from…

Free

A Nonfiction Reading by Mohamed Asem

Lewis & Clark - Frank Manor House 0615 SW Palatine Hill Road, Portland, OR, United States

Mohamed Asem - July, 2016: Three days after the terror attack on Bastille Day, Mohamed Asem is detained overnight by British immigration officials without cause. In an elegantly digressive, self-interrogative style, Asem describes the boredom and uncertainty of confinement, and how this specific kind of helplessness leads, inevitably, to a self-reckoning. What series of events has led to this moment? Stranger in the Pen examines the burden of being disconnected from one’s homeland, unpacks the emotional toll of racial profiling, and illuminates the quietly surprising ways in which grief can change one’s life. Asem will appear in conversation with his publisher, Michael Heald, of Perfect Day Publishing.

Free