For Colored Boys…

…well, not just for colored boys! Come to the Tenth Anniversary Reunion Reading of  “For Colored Boys… who have considered s-curls when the hot comb was enuf.” This staged reading, based on the poetry of Fire & Ink board member Marvin K. White, reunites several of the original cast members from the Theatre Rhinoceros performance in 2001, including Marlon M. Bailey, Cedric Brown, Derek Lassiter and Duran Rutledge (and Marvin K. White!). This event will also feature new solo and ensemble work. All proceeds benefit Fire & Ink!

The Berkeley Marsh, 2120 Allston Way @ Shattuck, Berkeley, CA

2 p.m. Sunday, May 22, 2011

$10 suggested donation (but no one will be turned away!)

A good time will be had by all!

WRITES OF SPRING!

You’re invited to

WRITES OF SPRING: A BENEFIT FOR FIRE & INK!
featuring
STACEYANN CHIN and CARL HANCOCK RUX


Saturday April 30, 2011, 7-11pm
213 Taaffe Place #114 * Brooklyn, NY 11205

Enjoy an evening of food, festivities, music and a special reading
by the talented STACEYANN CHIN and CARL HANCOCK RUX!

Co-hosted by Steven G Fullwood and Reginald Harris

$25.00 per person

Advance tickets are available HERE!

Unapologetically Caribbean and Black, Asian and lesbian, woman and New Yorker,

STACEYANN CHIN is the author of the memoir,

The Other Side of Paradise.

Award-winning poet, playwright, novelist, essayist and recording artist,

CARL HANCOCK RUX is the author of

Asphalt and Pagan Operetta.

All proceeds benefit FIRE & INK, INC.

For additional information, please contact:

Steven G Fullwood at stevengfullwood@gmail.com or

Reginald Harris at rmharris2001@hotmail.com

Come hear some “Grown Ass Men.”

In the Bay Area? Sugartruck Recordings, with the cooperation of Black Funk, present “Grown Ass Men: Soliloquies of Solemnity and Silliness on Sex, Soul and Spirit,” a benefit for Fire & Ink! Featuring readings by Dr. Herukhuti, Marvin K. White, and Juba Kalamka. Wednesday, March 30, 2011 at 7 p.m. at Z Cafe, Bar and Restaurant, 2735 Broadway @ 27th St. in Oakland. Light refreshments, cash bar; suggested donation $5-$100. Come one, come all!

Will You Help Us?

Fire & Ink is embarking on our first pledge drive!

Your support will allow us to keep doing the important work of shaping the future of LGBTQ/SGL writers of African descent.

Every bit helps, small and large. Learn more about the why and how here.

Donate to Fire & Ink, Incorporated today!

Call and Response

CallandResponse_130pm

For immediate release

Call and Response: The Black GLBT Literary Community Adds to the Dialogue on Bishop Eddie Long and New Birth Missionary Baptist Church

Hyattsville, MD (September 28, 2010)—The fallout about recent allegations regarding Bishop Eddie Long, leader of the New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Atlanta, and sexual coercion of teenaged males has created an opportunity for dialogue across communities about gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and queer (GLBTQ) people and homophobia in the black church; sexual abuse; and power.

To further inform the discussion, Fire & Ink board members Lisa C. Moore and Steven G. Fullwood and MC Books publisher Michael Christopher have compiled a list of literature by GLBTQ people of African descent that explores the complex issues being talked about in recent days.

This list is not all-inclusive, but represents significant contributions of GLBTQ people of African descent in the 20th and 21st Centuries to the present conversation about Bishop Eddie Long and the climate of the black church. We encourage you to become informed readers.

Selected reader list

In the Life: A Black Gay Anthology, ed. by Joseph Beam (RedBone Press)

I Was Born This Way: A Gay Preacher’s Journey Through Gospel Music, Disco Stardom and a Ministry in Christ, by Archbishop Carl Bean with David Ritz (Simon & Schuster)

Beyond the Down Low: Sex, Lies and Denial in Black America, by Keith Boykin (Da Capo Press)

Unspeakable, by Michael Christopher (MC Books)

The Days of Good Looks: The Prose and Poetry of Cheryl Clarke, 1980 to 2005, by Cheryl Clarke – includes the essay, “The Failure to Transform: Homophobia in the Black Community” (Da Capo Press)

A Whosoever Church: Welcoming Lesbians and Gay Men into African American Congregations, by Gary David Comstock (Westminster John Knox Press)

Where the Edge Gathers: Building a Community of Radical Inclusion, by Rev. Yvette Flunder (Pilgrim Press)

Their Own Receive Them Not: African American Lesbians & Gays in Black Churches, by Horace L. Griffin (Pilgrim Press)

Brother to Brother: New Writings by Black Gay Men, ed. by Essex Hemphill (RedBone Press)

Ceremonies: Prose and Poetry, by Essex Hemphill (Cleis Press)

Conjuring Black Funk, by Herukhuti (Vintage Entity Press)

Shaming the Devil, by G. Winston James — includes the story, “Church” (Top Pen Press)

Spirited: Affirming the Soul and Black Gay/Lesbian Identity, ed. by G. Winston James and Lisa C. Moore (RedBone Press)

Sweet Tea: Black Gay Men of the South, by E. Patrick Johnson (University of North Carolina Press)

The Cross of Redemption: Uncollected Writings by James Baldwin, ed. by Randall Kenan (Pantheon)

does your mama know? An Anthology of Black Lesbian Coming Out Stories, ed. by Lisa C. Moore (RedBone Press)

Say Jesus and Come to Me, by Ann Allen Shockley (Naiad Press)

###

Fire & Ink is a nonprofit organization devoted to increasing the understanding, visibility and awareness of the works of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender writers of African descent and heritage. http://fireandink.org

MC Books is owned by author, illustrator and photographer Michael-Christopher. http://www.michael-christopher.com

CallandResponse_130pm

Thank you!

… to the hundreds of attendees, presenters, vendors, sponsors, and the city of Austin for making Fire & Ink III: Cotillion a smashing success!

Stay tuned here for photos, videos, and more information about all that happened. Also, keep an eye out for Nikky Finney’s rousing Keynote Address, which will be uploaded here soon.

Were you there? Please click over to the Fire & Ink Facebook Group to share your experience, and upload your pics and videos to the Group where those who couldn’t make it – and those who could – can relive the wonderful time we all created together.

Keep an eye out for more information about future Fire & Ink events coming soon …

In the meantime, Fire & Ink still needs your support now more than ever! Click here to find out how you can help us keep the momentum going now and into the future!

Most of all — thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

-Fire & Ink, Inc.

Fire & Ink Presents! at Hotter Than July!

Fire & Ink Presents!

7-9:30 p.m. Friday, July 24, 2009

Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center (Host Hotel)

Renaissance Center

330 E. Jefferson Ave.

Detroit, MI 48207

Pride season 2009 continues with Hotter Than July’s Authors’ Café this Friday evening, July 24, 2009 in Detroit. Come experience some hot words from some hot writers! Reading from their latest works are:

Raynell Hicks (Closed Wounds)

G. Winston James (Shaming the Devil)

Clarence Nero (Too Much of a Good Thing Ain’t Bad)

Kimberly “Q” (Orchids III: Lesbian Funk)

Skyy (Consequences)

with Detroit’s own Kalimah Johnson hosting!

Raynell Hicks

Raynell Hicks

Raynell Hicks is a Detroit native. Hicks survived an abusive childhood to become a high school dropout, thief, drug dealer and single parent of three at the age of 21. Time in jail and away from her children forced her to reconsider her past and future; after her release, Hicks later obtained her high school diploma, regained her children, enrolled in college and began writing her memories. Hicks is a certified nursing assistant, college student and proud parent. Closed Wounds is her first novel.

Closed Wounds is a semi-autobiographical tale of of Punkin’, a young girl who grows up fast in the ghetto streets of Detroit. The generational drug family she comes from keeps Punkin’ looking for love in all the wrong places; she tries to escape mental and physical abuse at home by hanging in the ’hood. Travel with Punkin’ as she goes from abused and abandoned to strong and secure in Closed Wounds.

G. Winston James

G. Winston James

G. Winston James is a Jamaican-born poet, author, essayist and editor. He holds an MFA in fiction from Brooklyn College and is the author of the collections Shaming the Devil: Collected Short Stories, The Damaged Good: Poems Around Love and the Lambda Literary Award finalist collection Lyric: Poems Along a Broken Road. James is also co-editor of the historic anthologies, Voices Rising: Celebrating 20 Years of Black Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Writing and the Lambda Literary Award finalist Spirited: Affirming the Soul and Black Gay/Lesbian Identity.

G. Winston James’ stories examine the individual, familial, and societal complexities of desire. Candidly rendered, they unabashedly consider the formation of personal and sexual identity in a world in which the carnal is highly policed, variously dangerous and all too often denied. Says reviewer Stanley Bennett Clay, “Shaming the Devil [is] a collection of short stories that examine black, predominantly homoerotic experiences with beauty, passion and a boldness that renders it both transcendental and deeply personal.” Shaming the Devil is an erotic, brutal, emotional and thoroughly thought-provoking debut collection that is likely to arouse, inspire and disturb readers, even as they continue to turn its astonishing pages.

Clarence Nero

Clarence Nero

Clarence Nero, author, screenwriter and educator, grew up in New Orleans’ Ninth Ward and earned a B.S. degree at Howard University. His first novel, Cheekie: A Child Out of the Desire, was critically acclaimed and praised by Dr. Maya Angelou. His screenplay of the same name was recently endorsed by Jonathan Demme, Academy Award-winning director of Silence of the Lambs, and was a finalist at the Sundance Lab. Nero has an MFA in creative writing from Louisiana State University. He teaches at Baton Rouge Community College.

How far will you go for love? In this daring sequel to Three Sides to Every Story, acclaimed writer Clarence Nero takes us back into the lives of main characters Johnny and James, who once again must battle their demons and the drama they can’t seem to escape. Post-Katrina, Johnny and his family are relocated to Washington, D.C., and move in with Johnny’s older brother Calvin. Johnny’s lover, James, soon follows. But Calvin and his wife conspire to break Johnny and James apart, and James’ new boss wants him fired for being gay. When James gets wind of Johnny’s family’s intentions to tear them apart, he vows to stop at nothing to save his relationship. Told in three narrative voices and the virtuosic style that readers have come to expect and love, Too Much of a Good Thing Ain’t Bad is an original tale of love, heartache and drama that won’t disappoint.

Kimberly \"Q\" Kimberly “Q” aka the Lesbian Goddess is a self-published author, actress, singer and 3-time AUDELCO award winner. She has had two of her plays produced by various production companies in various cities; J’ai Deux Amours…A Journey with Josephine Baker, (winner of The Best Lead Actress award from AUDELCO) and The “Q” Stands for Queer. Her final installment of the Orchids erotic series, Lesbian Funk: A Journey into the Oblivion, is enticing, disturbing and explosive. The previous Orchids, Orchids I: African American Lesbian Erotica One Night Stands and Orchids II: Reality or Fantasy, broadened the thoughts, actions and creativity of the lesbian sexual experience. Her motto: Luxuriate in the positive stimulus of your sensuousness! It will enhance your ultimate fantasies!

Orchids III: Lesbian Funk, the final episode of the Orchids collection, is one woman’s search for the ultimate euphoric bliss. Her quest takes her on seven uniquely random journeys culminating in sexual oblivion. Lesbian Funk is enticing, disturbing, explosive and unexplainable; be warned that it may produce head shaking, stomach fluttering, dewy droplets of endless obscurity—not to mention a blown mind, a numb body, loss of memory, convulsions and a blackout!

Skyy

Skyy

Skyy is a 26-year-old writer from Memphis, Tenn. Her first novel, Choices, was released in 2007 and quickly gained popularity both within the gay and lesbian community and with lovers of urban fiction. Her highly anticipated 2009 sequel, Consequences, was released to high praise and rocketed to the top 10 in bestseller lists on Amazon.com and at independent bookstores across the United States. Skyy’s books resonate with truisms among African-American women of all ages and gender identities.

School’s back in session at the fictional HBCU Freedom University, and there’s a lot of unfinished business for Lena, Denise, Cooley and Carmen to handle. As Lena prepares for her wedding day, she can’t help but think about Denise, her sexy b-ball roommate who almost stole her away. And Denise just can’t shake the feelings she’s developed for soon-to-be-married Lena. Should she go for what she wants or leave well enough alone? Meanwhile Cooley let Misha walk away, but she can’t take no for an answer. Will her determination to win back her first love bring Misha back or push her further away? Carmen worked hard to get her life back on track… but will fears of the past wreck her future with new love Nic? Consequences will leave you on an emotional rollercoaster you won’t want to get off.

Meet us in Detroit on Friday night!

(And afterward, check out EchoVerse Poetry’s Hotter Than July poetry slam starting at 10 p.m. at 1515 Broadway in Detroit!)

Thanks Philly!

We had a fantastic time at Fire & Ink’s Literary Cafe during Philadelphia Black Pride! Thanks everyone for coming out, and for sharing your wonderful work and spirits!

Check out these wonderful pictures.

Fire & Ink Presents! Philly Black Gay Pride Writers Corner

Fire & Ink Presents!

11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday, April 25, 2009

Crowne Plaza Hotel, Ballroom A

4100 Presidential Blvd., Philadelphia, PA 19131

Welcome to Pride season 2009! To ring in this year’s Pride calendar, Philly Black Gay Pride hosts Fire & Ink Presents! this coming Saturday, April 25, 2009. Come on out and get a taste of the latest writing from black gay and lesbian authors. Reading from their works are:

 

 

 

 

With a reading/tribute to Philadelphia writers Joseph Beam and Becky Birtha by host Lisa C. Moore!

Lamar Ariel

Lamar Ariel

 

Lamar Ariel describes himself as a not-to-typical mid-Western boy who was easily seduced by the energy of New York City. Originally from Chicago, Ariel received a BS from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a master’s of arts management from Carnegie Mellon University. He lives in Manhattan. Ready to Male is his first published book.

            Ready to Male provides fictional elaborations of memories, experiences and thoughts with a primary focus on Ariel’s journey through the “complicated realm” of his twenties. “I like to think of Ready to Male as a memoir in as well as a memoir of progress. When I go back and read what I felt, believed or wanted and then compare those moments to what my life is writing now, it’s a wonderful tool to document personal growth. I can read a letter like “Dear Funny Valentine” or a chapter of the book like “Is It Me or Is It New?” and always find a striking difference between the mental space that was ‘home’ at that particular space and time, versus the mental space which exists as my ‘home’ now,” says Ariel.

Marcel Emerson

Marcel Emerson

 

Marcel Emerson has a degree in biology from the University of Washington, and an MBA from Trinity University. Emerson lives in Washington, D.C., where is works as a property manager for commercial real estate. My Eyes Are Green is his first novel. 

            In My Eyes Are Green, Jennifer Peele and Dontae Erickson have just entered the prestigious world of Georgetown University’s elite law school. A chance meeting brings them together and they realize they have a lot more in common than their green eyes. Personal tragedies have made them kindred spirits, both seeking to fill the empty space left by the deaths of their mothers. Dontae falls under the spell of a charming law student, Darrel, only to have Darrel quickly leave after the death of his father. When Darrel resurfaces later with a pregnant wife in tow, will Dontae accept Darrel’s offer of continuing their relationship? With My Eyes Are Green, Marcel Emerson makes a stunning literary debut with a gripping tale of passion, pain and the promise of love.

Kimberly \"Q\"

 

Kimberly “Q” aka the Lesbian Goddess is a self-published author, actress, singer and 3-time AUDELCO award winner. She has had two of her plays produced by various production companies in various cities; J’ai Deux Amours…A Journey with Josephine Baker, (winner of The Best Lead Actress award from AUDELCO) and The “Q” Stands for Queer. Her final installment of the Orchids erotic series, Lesbian Funk: A Journey into the Oblivion, is enticing, disturbing and explosive. The previous Orchids, Orchids I: African American Lesbian Erotica One Night Stands and Orchids II: Reality or Fantasy, broadened the thoughts, actions and creativity of the lesbian sexual experience. Her motto: Luxuriate in the positive stimulus of your sensuousness! It will enhance your ultimate fantasies!

            Orchids III: Lesbian Funk, the final episode of the Orchids collection, is one woman’s search for the ultimate euphoric bliss. Her quest takes her on seven uniquely random journeys culminating in sexual oblivion. Lesbian Funk is enticing, disturbing, explosive and unexplainable; be warned that it may produce head shaking, stomach fluttering, dewy droplets of endless obscurity—not to mention a blown mind, a numb body, loss of memory, convulsions and a blackout!

 

H.L. Sudler

H.L. Sudler

 

 

H.L. Sudler has been an editor, columnist, essayist and publisher. He is the president of Archer Media Networks, and has won the PATHS Humanitarian Writing Award for his short story on depression titled “The Way of All Flesh.” Sudler has completed work on his new books Man to Gentleman and Man to Gentleman’s Inspirational Diary, and is currently at work on two new books, Man to Gentleman’s Novice Chef and Patriarch, a memoir through essays. “Yesterdays and Tomorrows,” a quiet meditation on friends lost to AIDS, is a work from that collection. Sudler is a native of Philadelphia now residing in Washington, D.C.

            Patriarch is a memoir in progress. “Yesterdays and Tomorrows,” an essay from Patriarch, is a quiet meditation on friends lost to AIDS.

 

We’ll see you in Philly!