Lola
Koundakjian has been invited to read
her poetry at the International Poetry Festival in Lima, Peru. The young
festival, now in its second year, will run from July 4-7, 2013 in various
venues throughout Lima. One hundred fourteen poets representing 30 countries
have been invited to participate. Lola will be reading her work in the original
Armenian, followed by a local poet repeating her work in its Spanish
translation.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Saturday, May 18, 2013
A reading with the Zvartnots String Quartet, in New York City
Lola Koundakjian will be reading alongside the Zvartnots String Quartet, in a special program.
Sunday June 9, 2013, 1:30 PM
Holy Cross Church of Armenia
580 West 187th Street
New York, NY 10033
Zvartnots String Quartet members are: Cecee Pantikian, violin, Nikita Morozov, violin, Aleksandr Nazaryan, viola, and David Bakamjian, cello.
Special guests: Solange Merdinian, soprano, and, Lola Koundakjian, poet.
Sunday June 9, 2013, 1:30 PM
Holy Cross Church of Armenia
580 West 187th Street
New York, NY 10033
Zvartnots String Quartet members are: Cecee Pantikian, violin, Nikita Morozov, violin, Aleksandr Nazaryan, viola, and David Bakamjian, cello.
Special guests: Solange Merdinian, soprano, and, Lola Koundakjian, poet.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
An Evening of Poetry at the Zohrab Center, March 13, 2013
Nationally-acclaimed poet Gregory Djanikian
will read from his works at the Zohrab Center of March 13 at 7:30PM.
Three distinguished American-Armenian
poets will read from their works in a literary evening on Wednesday March 13,
2013 at the Zohrab Center in New York. Abraham Terian, Lola Koundakjian, and
Gregory Djanikian will read from their work in English and Armenian.
Dr. Abraham Terian, a
native of Jerusalem, is Professor Emeritus of Armenian Theology at St. Nersess
Armenian Seminary. An internationally renowned Armenologist and theologian, his
poetry represents an significant aspect of his creative output, if less well
known than his scholarly writings.
Lola Koundakjian is an internationally regarded
and published poet whose work has been translated into Ukrainian and
Spanish.
Gregory Djanikian,
Director of the Creative Writing Program at the University of Pennsylvania, and
a native of Alexandria Egypt, has been called “a gardener of the human spirit.”
His work has been published in several collections and has appeared in a number
of magazines and journals.
Conversation and refreshments will follow
the reading, along with the opportunity to purchase the authors’ books. The
poetry evening is open to the public. A $5 donation per person will support the
work of the Zohrab Center. Students with ID will be admitted free of
charge.
The Krikor and Clara Zohrab
Information Center is a resource and research facility housed at the
Diocesan Center in New York.
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
For information on the Zohrab Center,
contact its director, the Very Rev. Fr. Daniel Findikyan, at
(212) 686-0710.
(212) 686-0710.
http://zohrabcenter.org/2013/02/13/an-evening-of-poetry-at-the-zohrab-center/
Thursday, February 07, 2013
Reading in Minneapolis, MN - Cancelled appearance
Due to the blizzard expected over New York City from Friday, February 8 through Saturday, February 9th, Lola Koundakjian will not be able to fly out in time to make it to Minneapolis, MN.
___________________
On Saturday, February 9 at 7 p.m. at Open Book Lola Koundakjian will join other authors from the Twin Cities, greater Minnesota and around the country to celebrate the publication of the twenty-sixth issue of the only literary journal around dedicated to Arab American literature.
Journals will be available for purchase. And, of course, there will be a reception afterward! Co-sponsored by the Loft Literary Center.
___________________
On Saturday, February 9 at 7 p.m. at Open Book Lola Koundakjian will join other authors from the Twin Cities, greater Minnesota and around the country to celebrate the publication of the twenty-sixth issue of the only literary journal around dedicated to Arab American literature.
Journals will be available for purchase. And, of course, there will be a reception afterward! Co-sponsored by the Loft Literary Center.
AUTHOR READINGS BY
Andrea Assaf
Tami Mohamed Brown
Yahya Frederickson
Amir Hussain
Lola Koundakjian
Christina Najla LaRose
Shahé Mankerian
Sahar Mustafah
And more!
Artwork in this issue by Syrian artist Ismail Al Rifai
Saturday, February 9, 2013
7:00 p.m.
$5 General • $3 Students, Seniors, and Loft Members
Open Book • 1011 Washington Ave. S., Minneapolis 55415
Mizna's journal is supported by the Jerome Foundation and the Minnesota State Arts Board. State Arts Board funding is made possible through an appropriation by the Minnesota State Legislature from the State's arts and cultural heritage fund with money from the vote of the people of Minnesota on November 4, 2008
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
The Next Big Thing - January 16, 2013
I have been tagged by Liberian poet, Patricia
Jabbeh Wesley, to give this interview for an expanding blog project called The
Next Big Thing. She is the author of
several poetry collections, Where the
Road Turns, The River is Rising, Becoming Ebony, and Before the Palm Could
Bloom. You can read her interview by clicking on this link.
Patricia Jabbeh Wesley (L) and Lola Koundakjian (R) at the International Poetry Festival
in Medellin, Colombia. July 2010
TNBT: Where did the idea
come from for the book?
Lola: For about 20 years I was a visual artist and clay
was my medium. After making the leap to writing, I started working on my first
manuscript -- similar to preparing for an exhibit. That first manuscript wasn’t
picked up, which was good and bad simultaneously. Good because I needed more time
to work on my craft, and bad because I needed to have something at my readings.
TNBT: What genre does your book fall under?
Lola: Poetry
Cover of my first poetry collection, published in 2011
TNBT:
What languages do you write in?
I write in both English and Armenian, and I have a few of pieces in French.
TNBT: What actors would you choose to play the
part of your characters in a movie rendition?
Lola: I just got the news that my second manuscript was chosen (Jan 15, 2013) as a finalist
at the Orange Book Prize in Armenia. It’s bilingual -- Armenian and English --
and entitled Advice to a Poet. It evolves around a young author’s experiences,
and a muse who drops in once in a while. I would like Jake Gylenhaal to play
the author, and Salma Hayek to be the muse. For my other poems, I’d like Anouk
Aimee to play me.
TNBT:
What is the one sentence synopsis of your book?
Lola: Advice to a Poet is for those who need reassurance that
with time, with the right experiences and continuous hard work, our writing improves.
TNBT: Who or what inspired you to write this book?
Lola: It
followed a lengthy conversation with a poet overseas, who is about 10 years
younger than me.
TNBT:
How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
Lola: Two days.
TNBT:
What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?
Lola: It has tongue-in-cheek passages to
remind some of us to keep our sense of humour, and how to enjoy every moment of
life. And, every stanza is beautifully illustrated by Yelena Bryksenkova.
A plate from my manuscript, Advice to a poet.
Illustration by Yelena Bryksenkova
Will
your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
Lola: If I win the Orange prize,
they will publish 500 copies of it. Before
I found out about this competition, I started sending the manuscript to various
publishers in the United States. I hope to win, and negotiate a North American
edition in the near future.
The Writers I will be tagging include:
Shahe
Mankerian, California
Saturday, December 01, 2012
Saturday, December 15, 2012
NEW YORK: The Shevchenko Scientific Society will hold
its annual Literary Bazaar featuring poetry readings by Anna Frajlich-Zajac,
DeLana Dameron, Lola Koundakjian, Alexander
Motyl, and Vasyl Makhno, who will also
emcee the evening. The Bazaar will
be held at the Society, 63 Fourth Avenue
(between 9th and 10th Streets) at 5
p.m. For additional information call 212-254-5130. Copies of the authors' literary works
will be available for purchase.
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Lola Koundakjian: A trip to Egypt
Two friends announced they were planning
To discover Cairo and the desert
I said I’d go remembering my school trip there --
My twelve-old self touring Giza and the pyramids,
Stopping for tea at the Mena House,
Taking a boat ride to King Tut’s tomb,
An overnight train ride to Karnak-Luksor
and the Valley of the Kings.
The following week I sold my camera
a beautiful single lens reflex Nikon
with a gorgeous macro lens.
I was young, fearless and ready for heat stroke.
The men were giddy with excitement,
We talked about shots and malaria pills,
Eating great food on a student budget.
In my mind I visited the souk with endless
Stalls of ladies gallabiahs,
Ate dried dates coated in chocolate,
And bought books by the new Nobel laureate*.
But I never made it to the tarmac at JFK.
The camera paid that month’s rent.
Published in Mizna, Volume 13, Issue 2, 2012
* Naguib Mahfouz, Nobel Laureate in Literature, 1988.
To discover Cairo and the desert
I said I’d go remembering my school trip there --
My twelve-old self touring Giza and the pyramids,
Stopping for tea at the Mena House,
Taking a boat ride to King Tut’s tomb,
An overnight train ride to Karnak-Luksor
and the Valley of the Kings.
The following week I sold my camera
a beautiful single lens reflex Nikon
with a gorgeous macro lens.
I was young, fearless and ready for heat stroke.
The men were giddy with excitement,
We talked about shots and malaria pills,
Eating great food on a student budget.
In my mind I visited the souk with endless
Stalls of ladies gallabiahs,
Ate dried dates coated in chocolate,
And bought books by the new Nobel laureate*.
But I never made it to the tarmac at JFK.
The camera paid that month’s rent.
Published in Mizna, Volume 13, Issue 2, 2012
* Naguib Mahfouz, Nobel Laureate in Literature, 1988.
Sunday, November 04, 2012
London reading via Skype
On Saturday, November 3, 2012, Ms. Koundakjian read her work to an audience in London via Skype. This was made possible thanks to wireless network at the Saint Sarkis church in Kensington, London,
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Reading in London on November 3, 2012 _ WEATHER UPDATE
DUE TO HURRICAN SANDY, MS. KOUNDAKJIAN WILL NOT BE ABLE TO FLY TO LONDON TO READ IN PERSON. All NYC area airports are presently closed and thousands of flights were cancelled. This event may be rescheduled in 2013.
__________________________________________________________________
Saturday, November 3, 2012
ARMENIAN EVENING AT ST. SARKIS
DINNER WITH POET LOLA KOUNDAKJIAN. Participants will meet
poet Lola Koundakjian from New York. She will read a selection from
her recent book. Armenian music and singing. An exciting cultural and
social evening in the Nvart Gulbenkian Hall. Donation: £15. Advance
reservation highly recommended.
St. Sarkis Armenian Church, Iverna Gardens, Kensington, London W8 6TP, UK
__________________________________________________________________
Saturday, November 3, 2012
ARMENIAN EVENING AT ST. SARKIS
DINNER WITH POET LOLA KOUNDAKJIAN. Participants will meet
poet Lola Koundakjian from New York. She will read a selection from
her recent book. Armenian music and singing. An exciting cultural and
social evening in the Nvart Gulbenkian Hall. Donation: £15. Advance
reservation highly recommended.
St. Sarkis Armenian Church, Iverna Gardens, Kensington, London W8 6TP, UK
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Reading in Boston
Armenian
International Women’s Association
cordially invites you to attend
“A
Literary Afternoon”
With
three Armenian-American authors
Sunday
October 14, 2012 at 2:30pm
with
Sylva
Boyadjian-Haddad, poet, writer, and professor of English and Comparative
Literature at New England College in Henniker, N.H. She is the founder and
Editor-in-Chief of Entelechy
International/A Journal of Contemporary Ideas. Her collection of poems
entitled Salt was released in 2011.
Born in Beirut of Armenian parents, she now resides in Concord, N.H.
Lola
Koundakjian,
curator for the online Armenian Poetry
Project. Her first collection of poetry, The Accidental Observer, appeared in 2011. She has read her work in
various venues in New York, Los Angeles, and Rhode Island as well as at the 20th
international poetry festival in Medellin Colombia. A native of Beirut, she has
lived in New York City since 1979.
Seta
Terzian,
author of the recently released novel, Two Girls from Heliopolis. The book is
based on her life growing up in a small suburb of Cairo, Egypt. After an
idyllic childhood she came of age against the backdrop of the North African
campaign during World War II, and later began life anew in the United States.
She now lives in Dedham, Mass.
Armenian Cultural Foundation
441 Mystic Street, Arlington, Mass.
Open to the
public. Free of charge.
Sunday, July 01, 2012
Reviews of our April reading
«Գրական Գոհարներ Եւ Գինի»՝ Ժամանակակից Կին Գրողներու Գործերը Նիւ Եորքի Մէջ
Asbarez, June 27, 2012

ՆԻՒ ԵՈՐՔ.- Հինգշաբթի, Ապրիլ 12ին, Նիւ Եորքի Հայ կեդրոնի սրահին մէջ չորս արդի գրողներ իրենց ստեղծագործութիւնները ներկայացուցին Համազգային Կրթական եւ Մշակութային Միութեան Նիւ Եորքի մասնաճիւղի «Գրական Գոհարներ եւ Գինի» ծրագիրին ընթացքին: Այս անգամ, սակայն, աւանդական չէր բովանդակութիւնը, որովհետեւ առաջին անգամն էր, որ արդի գրողներ կը ներկայանային համայնքին:
Նորա Արմանի, Լուսին Գասբարեան, Լօլա Քոնդաքճեան եւ Այտա Զիլելեան-Սիլաք ըներցեցին իրենց մարդկային հոգեվիճակի բարդութիւնները բացայայտող ստեղծագործութիւնները:
Իր բացման խօսքին մէջ Արեւիկ Գաբրիէլեան նշեց. «Պայման չէ, որ այս գրողները ճանաչուեն հայկական միջավայրից դուրս, որպէսզի պարծանքի առարկայ նկատուեն մեր ժաղովուրդի համար: Առաւել, մեծ սխալ է ակնկալել, որ սփիւռքում ծնուած 3րդ կամ 4րդ սերնդի գրողներն անպայման հայերէնով ստեղծագործեն: Թէեւ Համազգայինը հաւատարիմ կը մնայ իր առաքելութեանը՝ պահպանելու եւ տարածելու ազգային արուեստն ու գրականութիւնը, միաժամանակ պէտք է քայլ պահի ժամանակի ու Սփիւռքի անխուսափելի փոփոխութիւնների հետ: Հետեւաբար, միութիւնս ողջունում է ժամանակակից հայ հեղինակներին»:
Գրողնրը ներկայացնելէ ետք, ան շեշտեց. «Ազգի իւրայատուկ ինքնութիւնը նրա արուեստն ու գրականութիւնն են, որոնց պահպանումը եւ զարգացումը անչափելիօրէն կարեւոր են առհասարակ, ի մասնաւորի՝ Սփիւռքում»:
Դերասանուհի, գրող ու շարժապատկերներու հեղինակ Նորա Արմանի կարդաց իր անտիպ եւ հրատարակուած («In Our Own Words: A Generation Defining Itself») գործերէն, նաեւ հատուած մը՝ տակաւին անաւարտ վէպէն՝ աշխարհի չորս ծագերը ցրուած քոյրերու մասին: Աւարտին, ան լսել տուաւ ձայնագրութիւն մը, որուն բառերը առնուած էին տեղահանութեան մասին գրուած բանաստեղծութենէ մը:
Նշենք, որ 2012ի Քաննի փառատօնին զուգահեռ ֆիլմի շուկային մէջ, Արմանի ներկայացուց իր «Moving Stories» կարճ շարժապատկերը, իսկ աշնան հանդէս պիտի գայ CBS հեռատեսիլի կայանի փորձնական (pilot) «Golden Boys» ծրագիրին մէջ:
Գրող, թղթակից եւ տաղանդաւոր քաղաքական ծաղրանկարիչ Լուսին Գասբար կարդաց երկու կարճ պատմուածքներ: Առաջինը՝ «A Subway Tautology»՝ ընկերային ու փիլիսոփայական, իսկ երկրորդը՝ «Elixir in Exile», հայ գերդաստանի մը կողմէ Տիգրանակերտէն բերուած «մոգական» ըմպելիի մը բաղադրիչներու որոնման ժամանակագրութիւնն է: Սակայն այս յուզիչ, երբեմն ալ զաւեշտական պատմութիւնը այլ ինչ չէ, եթէ ոչ խլուած ծննդավայրի հանդէպ անհուն կարօտ, հայրենական օճախի որոնում:
Բանաստեղծ եւ արուեստագէտ Լօլա Քոնտաքչեան քանի մը գործեր կարդաց հայերէնով եւ անգլերէնով, ներառեալ «Գալով Անցեալին» եւ «Մազերդ» բանաստեղծութիւնները, որոնք կ՛արտացոլեն սիրելիներու հետ անցուցած թանկ պահեր: «In Search of Rilke-at the Metropolitan Museum of Art» խոհական բանաստեղծութիւնը գեղեցիկ յետադարձ հայեացք մըն էր, մինչ «Անոնք Մեռան» գործը եւ «The Armenian Artists In New York City»ն, որ ձօնուած է Արշիլ Կորքիի, Ռուբէն Նաքեանի եւ Մարկոս Գրիգորեանի յիշատակին համար են:
Նիւ-եորքաբնակ գրող եւ խմբագիր Այտա Զիլելեան-Սիլաք անգլերէնով կարդաց կարճ պատմուածք մը՝ «He՛s the One for Her»ը, որ կը նկարագրէ իրավիճակ մը, ուր հայ օրիորդ մը կը փորձէ հայախօս ու գեղադէմ հայ երիտասարդի մը սիրտը գրաւել:
Վերոյիշեալ գրողներուն հետ կարելի է կապուիլ եւ իրենց ստեղծագործութիւններուն ծանօթանալ հետեւեալ կայքէջերուն միջոցաւ՝ www.noraarmani.com, www.lucinekasbarian.com, www.lolakoundakjian.com, www.aidazilelian.com:
Contemporary Armenian Women Writers Read their
Works in New York
Armenian Mirror-Spectator, June 30, 2012
WOODSIDE, N.Y. — On Thursday, April 12, at the Armenian Center here, four female writers of the diaspora presented their works at Literary Gems and Wine — a program sponsored by the New York Chapter of the Hamazkayin Cultural Association.
Nora Armani, Lucine Kasbarian, Lola Koundakjian and Aida Zilelian-Silak shared writings that explored the rich complexities of the human condition. The collective result was an eclectic compilation of vocal pieces that reflected a poignant and contemplative look at life in the diaspora.
In her introduction, program organizer, rare book librarian and literary devotée Arevik Caprielian expressed her satisfaction in showcasing accomplished Armenian “creatives.” “These writers need not be heralded beyond the Armenian milieu in order to be recognized as credits to the global Armenian nation,” she said. “While Hamazkayin remains true to its mission of preserving and disseminating Armenian traditional literature and arts, it also moves forward with the times and inevitable changes in diaspora,” she continued. “Therefore, it embraces contemporary authors writing in various languages, considering them contributors to the body of Armenian literature.” Caprielian concluded by affirming, “A nation maintains its distinction through arts and literature.”
Actress and storyteller Armani read, in English, the opening chapter from an untitled novel-in-progress. She also read an excerpt from her unpublished novel, The Armoire, about four Armenian sisters flung to the four corners of the earth, and a short story, “Waiting to Arrive,” about journeys, memories and being, published in an anthology called In Our Own Words: A Generation Defining Itself. To close, she played a musical recording whose lyrics contained her poem about exile. Armani acted in, directed and co-produced the award-winning play, “Sojourn at Ararat.” This year, Armani co-stars in the CBS television pilot program, “Golden Boy,” and her film, “Moving Stories,” was screened in the Short Film Corner at the Cannes Film Festival.
Writer and political cartoonist Kasbarian read, in English, two short stories. The first, “A Subway Tautology,” explored the social and philosophical underpinnings of an absurd train travel incident. The second, “Elixir in Exile,” chronicled her suspenseful quest to locate an ancestral family recipe, and will be published in r.kv.ry Literary Journal. Her latest published work is an illustrated children’s book, The Greedy Sparrow, an Armenian folktale retold which will be performed at children’s literature workshops and a children’s book festival.
Poet and artist Koundakjian read several works in Armenian and English, including “Kalov Antsyalin” and “Mazerut,” describing times spent with loved ones. She then read a thought piece called, “In search of Rilke at the Metropolitan Museum of Art,” and “Anonk Meran,” memorializing those lost to mass murder. Her tribute, “Three Armenian Artists in New York City” recalled Arshile Gorky, Reuben Nakian and Marcos Gregorian. And her inspiring, lyrical prose poem, “Khurad Hay Panasdeghdzin,” counseled writers struggling to find their muse. Koundakjian’s latest published work is a collection of poems called The Accidental Observer. Founder of the Dead Armenian Poets Society, she is also the curator of the Armenian Poetry Project, which presents classic and contemporary Armenian poetry and other writings on Armenian topics.
New York writer and editor Zilelian-Silak read, in English, her short story, “He’s the One For Her.” This narrative piece deconstructed the ambitions of a young Armenian woman searching for an elusive, Armenian-speaking mate, and first appeared in Ararat. Her stories have been featured in journals such as Pen Pusher, Slushpile and Wilderness House Literary Review. Her novel, The Hollowing Moon, was one of five finalists for the 2011 Mercer Street Books Fiction Prize. Aida organizes an ongoing reading series she established in Queens, NY called Boundless Tales.
The writers can be reached at: noraarmani.com, lucinekasbarian.com, lolakoundakjian.com and aidazilelian.com.
In the future, the New York Chapter of Hamazkayin hopes to launch an ongoing reading series spotlighting contemporary Armenian writers.
Asbarez, June 27, 2012
ՆԻՒ ԵՈՐՔ.- Հինգշաբթի, Ապրիլ 12ին, Նիւ Եորքի Հայ կեդրոնի սրահին մէջ չորս արդի գրողներ իրենց ստեղծագործութիւնները ներկայացուցին Համազգային Կրթական եւ Մշակութային Միութեան Նիւ Եորքի մասնաճիւղի «Գրական Գոհարներ եւ Գինի» ծրագիրին ընթացքին: Այս անգամ, սակայն, աւանդական չէր բովանդակութիւնը, որովհետեւ առաջին անգամն էր, որ արդի գրողներ կը ներկայանային համայնքին:
Նորա Արմանի, Լուսին Գասբարեան, Լօլա Քոնդաքճեան եւ Այտա Զիլելեան-Սիլաք ըներցեցին իրենց մարդկային հոգեվիճակի բարդութիւնները բացայայտող ստեղծագործութիւնները:
Իր բացման խօսքին մէջ Արեւիկ Գաբրիէլեան նշեց. «Պայման չէ, որ այս գրողները ճանաչուեն հայկական միջավայրից դուրս, որպէսզի պարծանքի առարկայ նկատուեն մեր ժաղովուրդի համար: Առաւել, մեծ սխալ է ակնկալել, որ սփիւռքում ծնուած 3րդ կամ 4րդ սերնդի գրողներն անպայման հայերէնով ստեղծագործեն: Թէեւ Համազգայինը հաւատարիմ կը մնայ իր առաքելութեանը՝ պահպանելու եւ տարածելու ազգային արուեստն ու գրականութիւնը, միաժամանակ պէտք է քայլ պահի ժամանակի ու Սփիւռքի անխուսափելի փոփոխութիւնների հետ: Հետեւաբար, միութիւնս ողջունում է ժամանակակից հայ հեղինակներին»:
Գրողնրը ներկայացնելէ ետք, ան շեշտեց. «Ազգի իւրայատուկ ինքնութիւնը նրա արուեստն ու գրականութիւնն են, որոնց պահպանումը եւ զարգացումը անչափելիօրէն կարեւոր են առհասարակ, ի մասնաւորի՝ Սփիւռքում»:
Դերասանուհի, գրող ու շարժապատկերներու հեղինակ Նորա Արմանի կարդաց իր անտիպ եւ հրատարակուած («In Our Own Words: A Generation Defining Itself») գործերէն, նաեւ հատուած մը՝ տակաւին անաւարտ վէպէն՝ աշխարհի չորս ծագերը ցրուած քոյրերու մասին: Աւարտին, ան լսել տուաւ ձայնագրութիւն մը, որուն բառերը առնուած էին տեղահանութեան մասին գրուած բանաստեղծութենէ մը:
Նշենք, որ 2012ի Քաննի փառատօնին զուգահեռ ֆիլմի շուկային մէջ, Արմանի ներկայացուց իր «Moving Stories» կարճ շարժապատկերը, իսկ աշնան հանդէս պիտի գայ CBS հեռատեսիլի կայանի փորձնական (pilot) «Golden Boys» ծրագիրին մէջ:
Գրող, թղթակից եւ տաղանդաւոր քաղաքական ծաղրանկարիչ Լուսին Գասբար կարդաց երկու կարճ պատմուածքներ: Առաջինը՝ «A Subway Tautology»՝ ընկերային ու փիլիսոփայական, իսկ երկրորդը՝ «Elixir in Exile», հայ գերդաստանի մը կողմէ Տիգրանակերտէն բերուած «մոգական» ըմպելիի մը բաղադրիչներու որոնման ժամանակագրութիւնն է: Սակայն այս յուզիչ, երբեմն ալ զաւեշտական պատմութիւնը այլ ինչ չէ, եթէ ոչ խլուած ծննդավայրի հանդէպ անհուն կարօտ, հայրենական օճախի որոնում:
Բանաստեղծ եւ արուեստագէտ Լօլա Քոնտաքչեան քանի մը գործեր կարդաց հայերէնով եւ անգլերէնով, ներառեալ «Գալով Անցեալին» եւ «Մազերդ» բանաստեղծութիւնները, որոնք կ՛արտացոլեն սիրելիներու հետ անցուցած թանկ պահեր: «In Search of Rilke-at the Metropolitan Museum of Art» խոհական բանաստեղծութիւնը գեղեցիկ յետադարձ հայեացք մըն էր, մինչ «Անոնք Մեռան» գործը եւ «The Armenian Artists In New York City»ն, որ ձօնուած է Արշիլ Կորքիի, Ռուբէն Նաքեանի եւ Մարկոս Գրիգորեանի յիշատակին համար են:
Նիւ-եորքաբնակ գրող եւ խմբագիր Այտա Զիլելեան-Սիլաք անգլերէնով կարդաց կարճ պատմուածք մը՝ «He՛s the One for Her»ը, որ կը նկարագրէ իրավիճակ մը, ուր հայ օրիորդ մը կը փորձէ հայախօս ու գեղադէմ հայ երիտասարդի մը սիրտը գրաւել:
Վերոյիշեալ գրողներուն հետ կարելի է կապուիլ եւ իրենց ստեղծագործութիւններուն ծանօթանալ հետեւեալ կայքէջերուն միջոցաւ՝ www.noraarmani.com, www.lucinekasbarian.com, www.lolakoundakjian.com, www.aidazilelian.com:
Contemporary Armenian Women Writers Read their
Works in New York
Armenian Mirror-Spectator, June 30, 2012
WOODSIDE, N.Y. — On Thursday, April 12, at the Armenian Center here, four female writers of the diaspora presented their works at Literary Gems and Wine — a program sponsored by the New York Chapter of the Hamazkayin Cultural Association.
Nora Armani, Lucine Kasbarian, Lola Koundakjian and Aida Zilelian-Silak shared writings that explored the rich complexities of the human condition. The collective result was an eclectic compilation of vocal pieces that reflected a poignant and contemplative look at life in the diaspora.
In her introduction, program organizer, rare book librarian and literary devotée Arevik Caprielian expressed her satisfaction in showcasing accomplished Armenian “creatives.” “These writers need not be heralded beyond the Armenian milieu in order to be recognized as credits to the global Armenian nation,” she said. “While Hamazkayin remains true to its mission of preserving and disseminating Armenian traditional literature and arts, it also moves forward with the times and inevitable changes in diaspora,” she continued. “Therefore, it embraces contemporary authors writing in various languages, considering them contributors to the body of Armenian literature.” Caprielian concluded by affirming, “A nation maintains its distinction through arts and literature.”
Actress and storyteller Armani read, in English, the opening chapter from an untitled novel-in-progress. She also read an excerpt from her unpublished novel, The Armoire, about four Armenian sisters flung to the four corners of the earth, and a short story, “Waiting to Arrive,” about journeys, memories and being, published in an anthology called In Our Own Words: A Generation Defining Itself. To close, she played a musical recording whose lyrics contained her poem about exile. Armani acted in, directed and co-produced the award-winning play, “Sojourn at Ararat.” This year, Armani co-stars in the CBS television pilot program, “Golden Boy,” and her film, “Moving Stories,” was screened in the Short Film Corner at the Cannes Film Festival.
Writer and political cartoonist Kasbarian read, in English, two short stories. The first, “A Subway Tautology,” explored the social and philosophical underpinnings of an absurd train travel incident. The second, “Elixir in Exile,” chronicled her suspenseful quest to locate an ancestral family recipe, and will be published in r.kv.ry Literary Journal. Her latest published work is an illustrated children’s book, The Greedy Sparrow, an Armenian folktale retold which will be performed at children’s literature workshops and a children’s book festival.
Poet and artist Koundakjian read several works in Armenian and English, including “Kalov Antsyalin” and “Mazerut,” describing times spent with loved ones. She then read a thought piece called, “In search of Rilke at the Metropolitan Museum of Art,” and “Anonk Meran,” memorializing those lost to mass murder. Her tribute, “Three Armenian Artists in New York City” recalled Arshile Gorky, Reuben Nakian and Marcos Gregorian. And her inspiring, lyrical prose poem, “Khurad Hay Panasdeghdzin,” counseled writers struggling to find their muse. Koundakjian’s latest published work is a collection of poems called The Accidental Observer. Founder of the Dead Armenian Poets Society, she is also the curator of the Armenian Poetry Project, which presents classic and contemporary Armenian poetry and other writings on Armenian topics.
New York writer and editor Zilelian-Silak read, in English, her short story, “He’s the One For Her.” This narrative piece deconstructed the ambitions of a young Armenian woman searching for an elusive, Armenian-speaking mate, and first appeared in Ararat. Her stories have been featured in journals such as Pen Pusher, Slushpile and Wilderness House Literary Review. Her novel, The Hollowing Moon, was one of five finalists for the 2011 Mercer Street Books Fiction Prize. Aida organizes an ongoing reading series she established in Queens, NY called Boundless Tales.
The writers can be reached at: noraarmani.com, lucinekasbarian.com, lolakoundakjian.com and aidazilelian.com.
In the future, the New York Chapter of Hamazkayin hopes to launch an ongoing reading series spotlighting contemporary Armenian writers.
Saturday, June 09, 2012
Coming up in June, a reading at the Cornelia Street Café
The Greek-American Writers Association presents
Jacqueline de Weever, Nick Johnson
and Lola Koundakjian
Hosted by Dean Kostos
6-7:30 PM,
Saturday, June 16th, 2012
The
Cornelia Street Café
29 Cornelia Street (Between West 4th
& Bleecker Streets)
(212) 989-9319
A $7.00
entry fee includes one complimentary house drink.
Sunday, April 01, 2012
World Poetry Movement event in NYC
World Poetry Movement:
a New York celebration
Nancy Agabian, host
Amir Parsa Sandra A. García- Betancourt
Lola Koundakjian Vasyl Makhno
Alan Semerdjian Alhaji Papa Susso
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
7:00PM
@ the Nuyurican Poets Café
236 East 3rd Street, New York, NY 10009
$10 entrance
The World Poetry Movement was founded during the World Gathering of Directors from 37 International Poetry Festivals, held in Medellin, Colombia, July 4-8th, 2011. The New York event will bring together poets in support of this newly established organization, whose aim is “the relationship between poetry and peace and reconstruction of the human spirit, nature reconciliation and recovery, unity and cultural diversity of the peoples, material misery and poetic justice, and actions to take towards the globalization of poetry”.
For more information visit, http://www.wpm2011.org/
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Reading in Queens, New York
Organized by the New York Chapter of HAMAZKAYIN
ԳՐԱԿԱՆ ԳՈՀԱՐՆԵՐ ԵՒ ԳԻՆԻ
ՄԵՐ ԺԱՄԱՆԱԿԱԿԻՑ ՀԵՂԻՆԱԿՆԵՐԸ ԿԸ ՆԵՐԿԱՅԱՑՆԵՆ ԻՐԵՆՑ ՍՏԵՂԾԱԳՈՐԾՈՒԹԻՒՆՆԵՐԸ
LITERARY GEMS AND WINE
Contemporary authors read their works
Nora Armani
Lucine Kasbarian
Lola Koundakjian
Aida Zilelian-Silak
Հինգշաբթի, Ապրիլ 12, 2012, եր. ժ. 8:00-ին
Thursday, April 12, 2012 at 8:00 p.m.
Հայ Կեդրոն - The Armenian Center
69-23 47th Avenue
Woodside, NY
Մուտքի նուեր՝ $5.00
Suggested donation: $5.00
For more information, please contact newyork@hamazkayin-usa.org
Monday, March 05, 2012
Washington Heights Free Radio to broadcast March 4 readings
Washington Heights Free Radio recorded the Sunday Best readings on March 4, 2012.
The Radio's link is http://www.whfr.org/ . All past SUNDAY BEST archives can be found on the website.
Click here for the entire March 4, 2012 recording.
The Radio's link is http://www.whfr.org/ . All past SUNDAY BEST archives can be found on the website.
Click here for the entire March 4, 2012 recording.
Monday, February 20, 2012
Festival of the Word in Northern Manhattan
A Double Header
Sunday, March 4th
1:30 – 3:30 p.m.
Cake Mix: Instant Theatre
A workshop for youngsters 12 and up with Mino Lora, artistic director of the People’s Theatre Project, and Veronica Liu, director of Seven Stories Institute. Theme: “My Neighborhood”
4:00 p.m.
Readings by 2012 Literary Grantees of the Northern Manhattan Arts Alliance
Lola Koundakjian
Veronica Liu
Paquita Suárez Coalla
Suggested donation of $7 for adults includes free drinks and snacks and reception to meet the writers. Kids free.
Donation covers both events and will benefit Voces/Voices, a theatre and writing program for teens co-developed by People’s Theatre Project and Seven Stories Institute.
Sunday Best Reading Series
Performances by fiction writers, poets, dramatists, memoir writers and spoken-word composers
The Lounge at Hudson View Gardens
Pinehurst Avenue and 183rd Street
Performances by fiction writers, poets, dramatists, memoir writers and spoken-word composers
The Lounge at Hudson View Gardens
Pinehurst Avenue and 183rd Street
Lola Koundakjian is an Armenian poet who has lived in New York City since 1979. She is the author of The Accidental Observer, a book of poems in three languages—Armenian, Spanish, and English. Her poetry has appeared online in alpialdelapalabra (Argentina), Armenian Poetry Project (New York City), The Literary Groong (University of Southern California),Mediterranean.nu (Sweden) and UniVerse (Chicago). Poems have also appeared in theAnthology Memoria del XX Festival Internacional de Poesía de Medellin (Colombia), Armenian Weekly (Boston) and Pakin (Beirut, Lebanon). Lola has read her work in Los Angeles, Rhode Island and New York City's Cornelia Street Café, Bowery Poetry Club, UN Correspondents Association, the Northern Manhattan's Art Alliance's 2010 Art Stroll, and the Above The Bridge series on Bennett Avenue. Her work was translated into Spanish for the 20th International Poetry Festival in Medellín, Colombia where she read in 2010. For the past 20 years, Lola has organized evenings dedicated to the Dead Armenian Poets' Society, and since 2006 has produced and edited text and audio for the multi-lingual Armenian Poetry Project.
Born and raised in the Dominican Republic, Mino Lora has been living and working as an actor, director, teaching artist and arts administrator in NYC since 2000. During her tenure with People’s Theatre Project, which she co-founded, the organization has won the prestigious Union Square Arts Award and Lora has received The Creative Power of Women Award from State Senator Bill Perkins for her “Outstanding work as a woman in the Arts”. She has been featured in newspaper and magazine publications in New York City and the Dominican Republic and has been invited to speak on various panels throughout New York City to share her experience as a Latina artist working to build community through theatre. Mino received her BA in English Literature and Theatre from Manhattanville College and her MA in Peace Studies and Conflict Transformation from the Graduate Institute. She also holds a certification as a peace mediator from the Washington Heights-Inwood Coalition. Mino and the People’s Theatre Project “firmly believe in theatre as a means for social change and are committed to creating a more just and peaceful world through powerful art.”
Veronica Liu’s writing, comics, photography, and silkscreen prints have been published inBroken Pencil, Quick Fiction, Get Ahead, and Pax Americana. Her short films have been screened at LadyFest East and the Arlene Grocery Picture Show, and her radio show Far Too Canadian was featured in the Village Voice Best of New York 2001. An audio collage piece that Veronica created in 2008 in St. Petersburg and Moscow will be released on Palanquin Records in the near future. Locally, she has presented her work at KGB Bar, South Street Seaport’s Melville Gallery, Bowery Poetry Club, Cornelia Street Café, Pete’s Candy Store, Happy Ending, and La Pregunta. She has received grants from Northern Manhattan Arts Alliance, Manhattan Community Arts Fund, New Yorkers for Better Neighborhoods/Citizens Committee of New York City, and the Goodman Fund, and she has been a finalist for Glimmer Train’s Very Short Fiction and Family Matters awards. Veronica is cofounder of Fractious Press, Word Up community bookshop, and Washington Heights Free Radio (WHFR.org). She has been on the organizing committee for the New York State Council on the Arts’s literature division convenings since 2007, and director of the non-profit Seven Stories Institute since 2010. By day, she works as an editor at Seven Stories Press.
Paquita Suárez Coalla is a Spanish writer and a professor at Borough of Manhattan Community College (City University of New York). She is co-founder of Latino Artists Round Table (LART), a cultural group that organizes readings and conferences of Hispanic writers from all the different regions of Latin America, the United States and Spain. She has published two books of short stories in Asturian, her native language. Pa nun escaeceme has been translated into Spanish--Para que no se me olvide--and English--So I Won’t Forget. El día que nos llevaron al cine has been translated into Spanish--La mio vida ye una novela. It is based on testimonies depicting the life of rural women from Asturias. Paquita is also the editor of the anthology Aquí me tocó escribir, an anthology of New York Latino writers; her work has been included in the anthology Dos orillas: Voces en la narrativa lésbica / Two Shores: Voices in Lesbian Narrative. As a literary critic she published in 1994, in México, the book La literatura fantástica en la obra de Adolfo Bioy Casares.
*********
Sunday Best Curator, Patrizia Eakins, 212-923-7800, x1342
Wines donated by Vines on Pine.
Videography: Art by DJ Boy.
Podcasts of Sunday Best events at www.whfr.org/
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Reading at Cornelia Street Café March 17, 2012 POSTPONED!
This reading will be rescheduled
GREEK AMERICAN WRITERS
GREEK AMERICAN WRITERS
Dean Kostos, host
Lili Bita; John "Yianni" Fotiadis; Anna Angelidakis; Lola Koundakjian
Saturday, March 17, 2012, 6:00-8:00 PM
$7 includes a drink
$7 includes a drink
Cornelia Street Café, 29 Cornelia Street, New York, NY 10014
Phone: 212.989.9319
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Reading at Le Cheile - in Washington Heights - Feb 7, 2012
The Local Word Reading Series is a fortnightly live literary event that takes place in Washington Heights, in the art space of Le Cheile, 839 W. 181st St, New York, NY 10033
The next reading is from 8:00 PM to 10:00 pm on Tuesday, February 7, 2012 and will feature novelist and playwright Colin Broderick, and poets Joel Allegretti, Lola Koundakjian and Dahlia Colman. Eryn Lynn is the host.
The next reading is from 8:00 PM to 10:00 pm on Tuesday, February 7, 2012 and will feature novelist and playwright Colin Broderick, and poets Joel Allegretti, Lola Koundakjian and Dahlia Colman. Eryn Lynn is the host.
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