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In Conversation: jason b. crawford, Nicholas Goodly, & Malcolm Tariq

January 10, 2023 @ 7:30 pm 9:00 pm EST

Poets jason b. crawford, Nicholas Goodly, & Malcolm Tariq join the Notebooks Collective for a conversation about poetry, the body, the South, and more.

Free

About jason

jason b. Crawford (They/Them) is a writer born in Washington DC, raised in Lansing, MI. Their debut Full-Length Year of the Unicorn Kidz is out from Sundress Publications. crawford holds a Bachelor of Science in Creative Writing from Eastern Michigan University and is the co-founder of The Knight’s Library Magazine. They are the winner of the Courtney Valentine Prize for Outstanding Work by a Millennial Artist, Vella Chapbook Contest, Variant Lit Chapbook Contest, and the 2021 OutWrite chapbook contest winner in poetry. crawford was a finalist for the Tom Howard/Margaret Reid 2021 Poetry Contest. Their work can be found in Split Lip Magazine, Glass Poetry, Four Way Review, Voicemail poems, FreezeRay Poetry, HAD, among others. They are a current poetry MFA candidate at The New School. 

About Nicholas

Nicholas Goodly is the author of Black Swim (Copper Canyon, 2022). They are a team member of the performing arts platform Fly on a Wall and assistant poetry editor for The Southeast Review. Nicholas was a finalist for the 2020 Jake Adam York Prize, runner-up for the 2019 Cave Canem Poetry Prize, and recipient of the 2017 Poetry Society of America Chapbook Fellowship, among other awards. Their work has appeared in The New YorkerBoston ReviewBOMBThe Poetry ProjectLambda LiteraryNarrative Magazine, and elsewhere.

About Malcolm

Malcolm Tariq is a poet and playwright from Savannah, Georgia. He is the author of Heed the Hollow (Graywolf, 2020), winner of the Cave Canem Poetry Prize and the 2020 Georgia Author of the Year Award in Poetry, and Extended Play (Gertrude Press, 2017). He was a 2016-2017 playwriting apprentice at Horizon Theatre Company and a 2020-2021 resident playwright with Liberation Theatre Company. A graduate of Emory University, Malcolm holds a PhD in English from the University of Michigan. He lives in Brooklyn, New York, and he is the senior manager of editorial projects for Prison and Justice Writing at PEN America.