Publication Party: Julia Stein’s 5th book and Lionel Rolfe’s memoir
Skylight Bookstore 1818 No. Vermont Los Angeles Saturday March 30, 2013, 5:00 323-660-1175
Julia Stein’s poems in What Were They Like? look at lives—Iraqi lives, Afghan lives, and U.S. lives—caught up in the Iraq and Afghan. wars. Her book is inspired by Whitman’s “Drum-Taps,” poems the Civil War. At the end the Stein’s poems imagine peace and healing. Stein writes as if Whitman met up with Sumerian myths by way of Hemingway.
What Were They Like? is Julia Stein’s fifth book of poetry. From the feminist poetry work of her first book Under the Ladder to Heaven (1984) to the love poems and poems about teaching in SouthCentral during the 1992 troubles in Walker Woman (2004), Stein’s poetry ranges from love lyric to explorations of war, peace, women’s lives, and work.
Rolfe grew up in Los Angeles; his mother Yaltah was a concert pianist and the sister of the famed violinist-prodigy Yehudi Menuhin. His first book The Menuhins: A Family Odyssey, in 1978. He has written Literary L.A., which is now the basis of a film titled Literary LA about Los Angeles writers. In the early 90's Rolfe co-researched and co-wrote Bread and Hyacinths: The Rise and Fall of Utopian Los Angeles, on turn-of-the-century urban politics and the life of Socialist politician Job Harriman.
I’m doing readings for my new book “What Are They Like?” from S.F. to Los Angeles but if you can’t get to the readings
you can order Julia Stein’s books directly from CC.Marimbo by emailing or writing to us at our post office box. “What Were They Like?” is $14. C.C. Marimbo also has “Walking Through a River of Fire:
100 Years of Traingle Fire Poetry” edited by J. Stein for $12. And C.C. Marimbo has a website and has page for Triangle fire book and will shortly put up info on “What Were They Like?
CC.Marimbo
P.O. Box 933
Berkeley, CA 94701 U.S.A. ccmarimbo@yahoo.com