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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260327T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260327T200000
DTSTAMP:20260523T032734
CREATED:20251206T001758Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260306T001756Z
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SUMMARY:Nature is What We Come To in the Practice of Remembering
DESCRIPTION:Guests Lazarus Letcher\, Erica Vital-Lazare\, Claytee D. White\, and host Saretta Morgan will reflect on their personal eco-histories.\n\n\nThis conversation opens a space to celebrate the rich perspectives of Black artists\, social change makers\, and everyday folks who’ve deepened our capacities to feel\, observe\, and be present to natural worlds that are often weaponized against us as Black people shaped in various ways by the U.S. South (east/west). \nComing from a range of disciplines and movements—music\, poetry\, oral history\, birding\, land stewardship\, water protection\, sobriety\, demilitarization\, and more—guests Lazarus Letcher\, Erica Vital-Lazare\, Claytee D. White\, and host Saretta Morgan will reflect on their personal eco-histories and share literature\, songs\, photos\, and ephemera that speak to how they’ve come to understand their sense of place and possibility in ever-shifting and contested geographies. \nThis event is co-presented with The Library District. \nSaretta Morgan is the author of Alt-Nature (Coffee House Press\, 2024)\, and the chapbooks Feeling Upon Arrival (Ugly Duckling\, 2018)\, and room for a counter interior (Portable Press at Yo-Yo Labs\, 2017). \nHer work engages ecologies and forms of connectivity that develop alongside processes of U.S. militarization. Over the past decade she has participated in veteran-led organizing with Veterans for Peace (NYC) and About Face: Veterans Against the War\, as well as the humanitarian aid work of No More Deaths Phoenix\, which provides direct support to address the death and suffering of migrants in the Sonoran Desert. Additionally\, she has been fortunate to participate in\, and learn from\, Indigenous-led water protection and food sovereignty work\, Black-led community healing initiatives\, and trans-led support for detained migrants. She believes in a Free Palestine as part of the broader inevitability of LAND BACK for Indigenous peoples across the earth. \nBorn in Appalachia and raised on military installations\, she is a daughter of the South (east & west). She lives on Muscogee lands in Atlanta\, GA where she trains in Capoeira and wild bird rehabilitation. \nLazarus Letcher (they/them) is a Ph.D. candidate in American Studies at the University of New Mexico\, focusing on linking homophobia and transphobia to white supremacy culture and examining art as resistance. Letcher has written for Autostraddle\, them\, El Palacio\, and the occasional dry academic journal or rad zine. They’ve taught courses like Southwest Studies\, Race and Ethnic Studies\, and Peace and Justice Studies. \nLetcher plays viola in the environmental justice folk band Eileen & the In-Betweens and for art installations/durational performances with the group Stages of Tectonic Blackness. With the support of a National Performance Network Grant\, Stages of Tectonic Blackness set out to the New Mexico desert to create a film\, Blackdom\, performing on and connecting with the land of an abandoned all-Black ghost town. While working on Blackdom\, the group connected with descendants of this former utopian experiment and shared their stories in an exhibit at New Mexico State University. Stages of Tectonic Blackness’ work has been shown at the NMSU Art Museum\, Armory Center for the Arts\, the National Hispanic Cultural Center\, and other museums across the U.S. \nIn addition to this work\, Letcher is a trainer for Sins Invalid\, a performance-based disability justice organization. After surviving a murder attempt involving an assault weapon in 2023\, Letcher has used their voice to push for gun safety and to support other survivors of gun violence. \nErica Vital-Lazare is a Southern-born writer living in Las Vegas where she teaches Creative Writing and Marginalized Voices in Dystopian Literature at the College of Southern Nevada. She is cofounder of The Obodo Collective\, a nonprofit dedicated to combatting multigenerational poverty\, and founder of Our Mothers’ Gardens Book Festival at Obodo Urban Farm\, now in its third year. She is co-producer of the photo-narrative exhibition\, Obsidian & Neon:Building Black Life in Las Vegas and editor of the literary series\, Of the Diaspora with McSweeney’s Press. \nClaytee D. White is the inaugural director of the Oral History Research Center for the University of Nevada\, Las Vegas Libraries. She collects the history of Las Vegas and the surrounding area by gathering memories of events and experiences from longtime residents. Her projects include early health care in the city\, history of the John S. Park Neighborhood\, The Boyer Early Las Vegas Oral History Project\, and a study of musicians who played with some of the greats in the entertainment field. White currently serves on the Board of Women of Diversity\, the UNLV Presidential Debate Planning Committee\, and the Historic Preservation Commission. White has also served on the Historic Preservation Commission for the city of Las Vegas\, Nevada Humanities executive board\, and is the past president of the Southwest Oral History Association. \nParking/getting there: The New West Las Vegas Library is located at 1861 N. Martin Luther King Blvd. Las Vegas\, NV 89106. Free parking is available on-site.
URL:https://create.vegas/event/nature-is-what-we-come-to-in-the-practice-of-remembering/
LOCATION:1861 N M.L.K. Blvd\, 1861 North Martin Luther King Boulevard\, Las Vegas\, NV\, 89106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Literary & Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://create.vegas/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/4dfc66d66872e9bf982a54f64dad5edc.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260228T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260228T180000
DTSTAMP:20260523T032734
CREATED:20251206T001755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260204T001756Z
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SUMMARY:Writing the Book You Needed featuring George M. Johnson and KB Brookins
DESCRIPTION:Join BMI Shearing Fellow KB Brookins for an evening with George M. Johnson\, author of All Boys Aren’t Blue.\n\n\nJoin BMI Shearing Fellow KB Brookins for an evening with George M. Johnson\, author of All Boys Aren’t Blue. Following a reading of Johnson’s work\, Brookins will lead a conversation with Johndon about the craft of writing — including but not limited to structure\, hybrid genre writing (both authors use creative nonfiction\, poetry\, visual art\, and letters in their work)\, influence of other Black queer authors\, literary journalism\, and audience. They will discuss these topics through centering Johnson’s critically acclaimed books All Boys Aren’t Blue\,The Flamboyants\, and their upcoming debut romance novel\, There’s Always Next Year. After the program\, books by both writers will be available for purchase and signing. \nThis event is co-presented with The Library District and co-sponsored by The LGBTQ+ Center. \nGeorge M. Johnson is an Award-Winning Black Non-Binary Writer\, Author\, and Executive Producer located in the LA area. They are the New York Times Bestselling Author of the Young Adult memoir All Boys Aren’t Blue discussing their adolescence growing up as a young Black Queer boy in New Jersey through a series of powerful essays. The book was optioned for Television by Gabrielle Union in 2020\, and as of 2024 is the #1 most banned and challenged book in the United States. \nIn 2018\, George served as a NY State Spokesperson for the HIV stops with me Campaign. George was listed on The Root 100 Most Influential African Americans in 2020. The Out 100 Most Influential LGBTQ People in 2021. And in 2022 was honored as one of the TIME100 Next Most Influential People in the World for their fight against censorship in the United States. \nIn 2021 they wrote and Executive Produced the Dramatic Reading of All Boys Aren’t Blue starring Jenifer Lewis and Dyllon Burnside which received a 2022 Special Recognition Award from GLAAD\, and a 2023 Emmy Nomination for Outstanding Daytime Special. \nAs a former journalist\, George has written for over 50 major outlets including Teen Vogue\, Entertainment Tonight\, NBC\, and Buzzfeed and Huffpost. In 2019 George was awarded the Salute to Excellence Award by the National Association of Black Journalists for their article “When Racism Anchors your Health” in Vice Magazine. \nTheir second memoir WE ARE NOT BROKEN was released in September of 2021. It received the Carter G. Woodson Award which recognizes books that “accurately and sensitively depict the experience of one or more historically marginalized racial/ethnic groups in the United States”. The book also received the Nonfiction Honor Book in the YA category from the International Literacy Association. \nTheir third book Flamboyants the Queer Harlem Renaissance I wish I’d Known was released in September of 2024. It was an instant Indie Bestseller\, receiving 5 starred reviews and an Audie Award Nomination for best Audiobook for Young Adults. \nTheir first fiction book co-written with bestselling author Leah Johnson\, THERE’S ALWAYS NEXT YEAR will be released December of 2025\, already receiving a Starred Review from Booklist. \nGeorge is also a proud HBCU alum twice over\, and a member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Incorporated. \nKB Brookins is a Black queer and trans writer\, educator\, and cultural worker from Texas. KB’s chapbook How To Identify Yourself with a Wound won the Saguaro Poetry Prize\, a Writer’s League of Texas Discovery Prize\, and a Stonewall Honor Book Award. Their debut collection Freedom House won the American Library Association Barbara Gittings Literature Award and the Texas Institute of Letters Award for Best First Book of Poetry. KB’s memoir Pretty (Alfred A. Knopf\, 2024) won the Great Lakes Colleges Association New Writers Award and the Dorothy Allison/Felice Picano Emerging Writer Award. \nParking/getting there: The New West Las Vegas Library is located at 1861 N. Martin Luther King Blvd. Las Vegas\, NV 89106. Free parking is available on-site.
URL:https://create.vegas/event/writing-the-book-you-needed-featuring-george-m-johnson-and-kb-brookins/
LOCATION:1861 N M.L.K. Blvd\, 1861 North Martin Luther King Boulevard\, Las Vegas\, NV\, 89106\, United States
CATEGORIES:Literary & Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://create.vegas/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/eed4c491ce90ec986d76d3315d5a11e1.jpg
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