Short Line Reading Series
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The Short Line Reading Series is a free literary event that takes place at The Railway Club in Vancouver, British Columbia—a venue historical for showcasing local artistic talent.
Hosted by Memewar Magazine, the Short Line is advertised as “a space where artists from different circles can connect, debate and collaborate”—an idea that its organizers keep in mind while constructing diverse line-ups of readers. At each event, members from various Vancouver-based literary groups read short selections of their work (ie: poetry, prose, essays, performance). Short Line events often include readings by prominent upcoming voices and well-established guest readers.
The Short Line began on January 9th, 2007 with a reading by Michael Turner, author of “Hardcore Logo” and organizer of The Reading Railroad—a regular literary event of the mid-1990s, and inspiration for the founders of the Short Line.
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[edit] History
The Short Line reading series was founded in November 2006 after conversations between Vancouver writer Carmen Papalia and Vancouver poet and musician Andrew Lee. The two drew their inspiration from author Michael Turner’s Reading Railroad series—a similar event of the mid-1990s which featured readings by various, and often conflicting, literary and musical artists.
Instead of presenting a mixture of starkly contrasting genres and styles as Turner did, the Short Line was designed to “connect” various prominent literary groups in Vancouver. A statement on the Memewar Magazine website reads, “In the spirit of this mixing of genres, the Short Line will include readings by artists from different Vancouver-based literary circles.”
[edit] Origin of Name
The name “Short Line” refers to the “Short Line Railroad”, one of the four railroads in the popular board game Monopoly. The other railroads found on a standard Monopoly board include: B&O Railroad, Pennsylvania Railroad and Reading Railroad—the last being the name of Michael Turner’s popular reading series of the mid-1990s.
The term “short line railroad” is used to describe an independent railroad company which runs a short distance, and often “connects” different industries. The tagline of the Short Line reading series: “A space where artists from different circles can connect, debate and collaborate” perhaps refers to this quality of “connecting”.
Both “Short Line” and “Reading Railroad” also refer to “The Railway Club”, the Vancouver music venue which is famous for the miniature trains that run along its walls.
[edit] List of Readers (by date)
January 9, 2007: Mette Bach, Ryan Flowers, Danielle LaFrance, Andrew Lee, Garry T. Morse, Carmen Papalia, Michael Turner, Sean Wilson
February 13, 2007: Roger Farr, Emily Fedoruk, Liam Ford, Reg Johanson, Elliott Lummin, Tracy Stefanucci, Irene Zafiris
March 13, 2007: Phinder Dulai, Patrick Friesen, McKinley M. Hellenes, Dave Morris, Natalie Simpson, Aubyn Rader
April 10, 2007: Andrea Actis, Clint Burnham, Andrew Lee, Garry T. Morse, Thor Polukoshko, Michael V. Smith
September 17, 2007: Elizabeth Bachinsky, George K. Ilsley, Brendan McLeod, Patrick Morrison, Kevin Murray, Amanda Ryan
October 22, 2007: Rhoda Hodjati, Matt Hogan, Donato Mancini, Garry T. Morse, Anne Stone, Rita Wong
November 19, 2007: Jeff Derksen, Stephen Collis, Jason Christie, Nicholas Perrin, Elliott Lummin
January 29, 2008: Indran Amirthanayagam, Emily Fedoruk, Fiona Lam, Loretta Seto, Jane Silcott
February 26, 2008: Claire Huot, Robert Majzels, Cecily Nicholson, Carmen Papalia
March 25, 2008: Sonia Capriceru, Jacqueline Turner, Kim Minkus, Louis Rastelli
April 29, 2008 Garry T. Morse, Matt Hogan, Sachiko Murakami, Ivan Drury
[edit] List of Musical Guests (alphabetical)
Jon Anderson (of Jonathan Inc.), Ken Beady (of Radiogram), Triple “A”
[edit] References
- Beattie, Deanne. "Lit: SFU Profs Enrich Community Chest." The Peak 13.127 (November 26, 2007). [1]
- Memewar Magazine. "Short Line Reading Series." Memewar Online. [2]
- Millar, Erin. "Memewar." Canadian Dimension. 41.4 (July/August 2007).
- Ryan, Amanda. "A Platform for Emerging Writers at Memewar Magazine." Scene Not Herd. 22 January, 2008. [3]
- Tournemille, Harry. "Local Event: The Short Line Reading Series." The Writing Threshold. 5 March, 2007. [4]