Today 2025 October19 (Sun) 04:48 Etc/GMT-9

2025/10/29 11:00~2025/10/29 12:30

Alison Luterman reads from her new collection of poems, Hard Listening

Alison Luterman reads from her new volume of poetry, Hard Listening (Wildhouse Publishing, 2025).  Hard Listening focuses on women's voices raised up in song, poetry, and activism. Spiritual teacher and writer Mirabai Starr has said, “Alison Luterman is one of my favorite poetic voices. The poems in this collection are luminous." During the pandemic, Alison started taking voice lessons in order to sing with her musician husband. She did not start out with a firm grasp of pitch or a great sense of rhythm, but had a lot of enthusiasm, a wonderful teacher, and a willingness to work hard. Learning to "speak music"—her husband's primary language—was the key that opened them up to an unexpected depth of intimacy. The process of learning to sing reminded her of all the singers she had idolized from a young age. She began to listen to those women again, this time with a better understanding of  their skills, and she also began to research  what  their real  lives  were like. It became clear to Alison that beyond the glamour lay a world of challenges and sometimes heartbreak that she had not fully reckoned  with  before.  The poems she wrote in homage to those great women singers form the core of Hard Listening. As this investigation was going on, the United  States fell to fascism.  Alison wrote poems  that  reflected  these fraught  politics  and  redefined  her  calling  as  a  poet. These poems strive to be in service to all of us who are fighting for democracy, kindness, decency and justice. Alison Luterman's four books of poems prior to this one are The Largest Possible Life, See How  We Almost  Fly; Desire  Zoo and In  the  Time of  Great Fires. She has published  poems in The New York  Times Magazine, The  Sun  Magazine,  Prairie  Schooner, Nimrod,  Rattle,  The  Atlanta Review, Main  Street  Rag,  and many  other  journals  and anthologies. Two of her poems are included in Billy Collins' Poetry 180 project at the Library of Congress. Alison lives in Oakland where she has deep and lasting ties with the creative community in the region. Read more about Alison and her work at this link: alisonluterman.net Leslie Absher will join Alison in conversation. Leslie is a journalist and a writer of true stories, personal essays, and memoir; this usually means disclosing things she's not “supposed to," whether it’s about growing up with a CIA dad, swimming with sharks in the San Francisco Bay, or facing cancer and how she chose to move with it instead of “fighting it.” She seeks to cultivate compassion and truth in all her writing. Leslie's father joined the CIA before she was born, and shortly afterwards her family moved to Athens, Greece, just in time for a coup. She has spent years trying to learn what her Cold War father’s role was in that event. And though she left when she was still a child, Greece is a place she returns to often. She moved around frequently after Athens until she landed in Boston for college. She received a master’s in education from Harvard and taught G.E.D. to high school dropouts. After years apart, she reconnected with her college flame, Susan, a writer and graphic novelist, and moved to Oakland.