Janice Erlbaum

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Janice Erlbaum
Born New York City, NY
Occupation Author, Poet, Novelist
Genres Memoir, Poetry, Fiction
Notable work(s) GirlBomb: A Halfway Homeless Memoir
Have You Found Her: A Memoir

girlbomb.com

Janice Erlbaum is an American slam poet from New York City who is the author of GirlBomb: A Halfway Homeless Memoir [1] and Have You Found Her: A Memoir.[2] Her poetry and prose have been featured in anthologies including Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Café, The Bust Guide to the New Girl Order, The Best American Erotic Poems From 1800 to the Present, and Verses that Hurt.

She lives in her native New York City with her domestic partner, Bill Scurry.[3]

Early life

As chronicled in her memoir GirlBomb: A Halfway Homeless Memoir, after running away from home at age 15 Erlbaum spent years going from youth shelter to shelter, a self-described "halfway homeless" high school student afflicted with a taste for hard drugs and risky choices, while attending Bayard Rustin High School for the Humanities.[4]

Poetry

Published for the first time at the age of 20 in New York Press, where she was a frequent contributor of personal essays and short features from 1991 through 1995, Janice Erlbaum was a prominent fixture on the early ‘90s New York slam poetry scene, performing as a member of the feminist collective Pussy Poets, and earning a spot on MTV’s “Sex in the ‘90s: Love Sucks” special, as well as the cover of the Nuyorican anthology. She was a featured poet on the Lollapalooza ’94 tour, and performed and hosted at Woodstock 94. Pussy Poets and Erlbaum’s solo act were seen at venues including Dixon Place, the Kitchen, St. Mark's Poetry Project, and Fez.

Novels

In 2006, Villard/Random House published her first book, Girlbomb: A Halfway Homeless Memoir. An explicit look back at her teenage years spent in shelters and group homes, Girlbomb was praised[citation needed] in venues including the New York Times and Elle magazine, and awarded several honors, including a spot on the New York Public Library’s “25 to Remember” list for 2006. It was simultaneously published in the UK as The Runaway by Ebury Press, and under its original name by Random House Australia. Her second memoir, Have You Found Her, was published by Villard/Random House in 2008; it details her return to the shelter as an adult volunteer, and the deep relationship she forged with a brilliant, damaged girl she called “Samantha.” She has also contributed, in recent years, to McSweeneys.org, Nerve.com, and Nextbook.

Other Work and Activism

In 1996, she was hired at noted dot com art factory Pseudo.com (subject of the documentary We Live in Public), and rose to the position of Executive Producer before departing in 1999. Janice was the Editor-at-Large at POPsmear magazine and a contributor to BUST magazine from 1994 through 2007.

She served on the board of Girls Write Now, an organization that pairs at-risk high school girls with writing mentors, and volunteers at GEMS,[5] which helps young women who have been victims of sexual exploitation. As of July 2011,[3] Erlbaum is teaching memoir writing, and has addressed audiences at colleges, bookstores, coffee houses, and theaters across the US.

References

  1. Girlbomb: A Halfway Homeless Memoir (Villard, March 2006)
  2. Have You Found Her: A Memoir (Villard, Feb. 2008)
  3. 3.0 3.1 Author « Girlbomb : Janice Erlbaum. Girlbomb.com (2006-03-07). Retrieved on 2011-11-07.
  4. McKinley, Will. "Janice Erlbaum and the girl in her memoir." The Villager Volume 76, Number 47 | April 18–24, 2007
  5. Fictionaut Five: Janice Erlbaum. Blog.fictionaut.com (2009-05-04). Retrieved on 2011-11-07.
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