Monday, November 23, 2015

December 2015 WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA

Get ready for two very exciting Women Writers of the Diaspora readings/discussions at Calabar Imports Harlem.  Women Writers of the Diaspora presents KEISHA-GAYE ANDERSON on Thursday, December 3, and ROSALIND KILKENNY MCLYMONT on December 17.  And—wait for it!—in addition to treating you to readings by two extraordinarily accomplished women writers, a $50 Calabar Imports Harlem gift certificate will be raffled after both December readings.  So, mark your calendars for Keisha-Gaye Anderson, 6pm, December 3 and Rosalind McLymont, 6pm, December 17.   See below for more information.

KEISHA-GAYE ANDERSON is a Jamaican-born a poet, creative writer, and screenwriter. She is the author of a collection of poetry titled Gathering the Waters (Jamii Publishing, December 2014).  In 2013, she was selected to participate in the Callaloo Creative Writing workshop for fiction at Brown University where she was chosen to be one of the program’s featured readers. In 2010, she was named a fellow by the North Country Institute for Writers of Color, and was short listed for the Small Axe literary competition. 
Anderson’s writing has appeared in a number of collections, anthologies, and literary magazines, including Renaissance Noire, The Killens Review of Arts and Letters, Small Axe Salon, Streetnotes: Cross Cultural Poetics, African Voices Magazine, Mosaic Literary Magazine, Captured by the City: Perspectives on Urban Culture, Poems on the Road to Peace: A Collective Tribute to Dr. King, Sometimes Rhythm, Sometimes Blues: Young African Americans on Love, Relationships, Sex, and the Search for Mr. Right, the Mom Egg, Caribbean in Transit Arts Journal, Women Writers in Bloom Poetry Salon blog, and Bet on Black: African American Women Celebrate Fatherhood in the Age of Barak Obama. She is also a founding poet with Poets for Ayiti. Proceeds from their 2010 chapbook, For the Crowns of Your Heads, helped to rebuild Bibliotheque du Soleil, a library razed during the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.
Her journalistic work includes news and documentary productions for CBS, PBS, and Japanese television (NHK, Nippon, and others), as well as feature articles for magazines like Psychology Today, Black Enterprise, Honey, and Teen People. As a screenwriter, she has written for Hallmark cable channel news programming and worked as a documentary film screenwriting consultant. Anderson is longstanding member of the Harlem Arts Alliance Screenwriting Workshop, led by award-winning screenwriters Jamal Joseph, Eddie Pomerantz, and Zach Sklar.
Anderson, who lives in Brooklyn, NY with her husband and two children, holds a B.A. from Syracuse University’s Newhouse School and College of Arts and Science and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from The City College, CUNY. For the past ten years, she has worked as a higher education communications and marketing manager.

ROSALIND KILKENNY MCLYMONT is the executive editor of The Network Journal, a leading Black-owned and operated U.S. business magazine targeting an audience of Black professionals and business owners; CEO and publisher of AfricaStrictlyBusiness.com, an online Africa business news, analysis and resource platform for a targeted global audience of business owners, executives and students, investors, policymakers and academicians; and the author of the award-winning novel, Middle Ground, the first “rebranding Africa” novel on the market (See videos at www.youtube.com/watch?v=aag7JIvQtCY and www.youtube.com/watch?v=QeUXCmdu97Y); the new novel, The Guyana Contract; and the non-fiction title, Africa: Strictly Business, The Steady March to Prosperity.  
McLymont has more than 25 years’ experience as a journalist, writer, speaker and adviser to small and medium-sized companies on global business and entrepreneurship. She began her career in business journalism in the mid 1980s as an international trade reporter at The Journal of Commerce, a Knight-Ridder daily newspaper focused on global shipping, logistics and trade. (Founded by Samuel Morse in 1827, the paper was once considered America’s most prestigious paper.) McLymont became the paper’s first Black managing editor under ownership by The Economist Group, publishers of The Economist. In this role, she was the highest-ranking Black professional ever in the entire Economist Group. She left The Journal of Commerce in 1998, after 13 years in its employ, to work independently providing training for women entrepreneurs in Africa as a consultant to the United Nations Development Program (Africa Bureau)’s Gender Program, and for women entrepreneurs in Russia as a Citizen Ambassador to that country under the Alliance of Russian and American Women. She also provided expertise on accessing U.S. markets for the American and African Business Women's Alliance conference in Botswana in 2002.
As executive editor of The Network Journal, McLymont oversees the editorial content of both the print magazine and TNJ.com. She speaks on behalf of the publication at its annual “25 Influential Black Women in Business Awards” Luncheon, its “40 Under Forty Black Achievers Awards” Dinner, and represents the publication at high-level events with U.S. and non-U.S. business and civic leaders, government officials, and African heads of state. She has made several trips to Africa on behalf of The Network Journal and AfricaStrictlyBusines.com, most recently as a delegate to the 4th World Summit of Mayors and Leaders from Africa and of African Descent.      
McLymont has been featured in the annual Media Guide to America’s top financial writers. She appeared frequently on CNNfn financial news to comment on the monthly release of U.S. trade figures, and as a regular guest lecturer at New York University’s graduate program in Latin America and Caribbean studies. Her articles and columns on international trade appeared in such publications as The Journal of Commerce, The Congressional Record, America Economía, World Trade, Business Standards, Minority Business Entrepreneur, Transport Topics, Quality Digest, and Shipping Digest. Her Journal of Commerce articles, under the byline Rosalind Rachid, have been referenced in U.S. Congressional debates on trade policy, and worldwide in newspapers, books and scholarly research.
McLymont has also appeared on ABC TV’s Like It Is, GRITtv, at The Brecht Forum, and as a Literary Leader on Esther Armah’s radio show “Off The Page,” WBAI 99.5 FM, New York. She has also appeared on ABC TV’s Here And Now, hosted by Sandra Bookman; CUNYtv’s Independent Sources. She has also been a frequent guest speaker on international trade topics at colleges, universities and trade organizations.  
McLymont has served as an advisor to the Institute on African Affairs; founding vice president and subsequently president of the Caribbean Media Association; an executive board member of the Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation; and as a volunteer mentor at New York Women’s Foundation’s Girls Leadership Day. She is a founding member of the Advisory Board of York College (City University of New York) Journalism Program, currently serves as a member of the Council of Advisers to the Songhoy Paramount Chief; and served two terms as a member of the Sub-Saharan Africa Advisory Committee of the Export-Import Bank of the United States,   
McLymont taught English and French in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo from 1973 to 1980. An alumna of the prestigious European Community Visitors Program, she has been named a “Woman History Maker” by the Caribbean-American Chamber of Commerce and Industry, a “Phenomenal Woman in Media” by Our Time Press and Herbert Von King Park Cultural Arts Center, and one of “50 Power Women in Business” by MEA Magazine.
She has received commendations and awards from the New York Association of Black Journalists, the International Black Women’s Congress, the CEJJES Institute (Rockland County), the National Minority Business Council, the New York Regional Chapter of the National Association of Health Services Executives, the Office of the Comptroller of New York City, the Guyana Cultural Association, the National Association of Kawaida Organizations – New York Chapter (Malcolm X Unity Award), the Global Alliance of Mayors and Leaders from Africa and of African Descent and the New York City Council. In June 2015 she was awarded Guyana’s Golden Arrowhead Award of Achievement and Distinction and in October she was honored as Executive Editor of the Year by African American Women in Cinema (AAWIC). 
McLymont was born in Guyana and speaks French and Spanish. She has a master’s degree in journalism from New York University, a bachelor’s degree in French from The City College of New York, and a Certificate in Spanish Language and Literature from the Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain. She has a Black Belt in T’ai Chi, a Zumba™ Gold Instructor Certificate, and a Senior Instructor Certificate from the International Fitness Association. She has completed courses in Qi Gong at The New York Open Center. She created and teaches Trim Brulée, a fitness program incorporating all of the above disciplines. 
McLymont is married to Fritz-Earle McLymont, cofounder of the National Minority Business Council, Inc. (NMBC); founder/executive director of NMBC Global and NMBC Global Entrepreneurship Center; managing partner of McLymont, Kunda & Co.; and CEO of Brittonearth Energy Ltd. The couple resides in New York.
WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by DR. CELESTI COLDS FECHTER, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African Diasporan women. The venue, CALABAR IMPORTS HARLEM, is provided by ATIM OTUN, and the series is co-sponsored by MOSAIC LITERARY MAGAZINE.
We have an exciting lineup for 2016.  Mark your calendar for readings/discussions with Nigeria Lockley, Jan 7; Kaitlyn Greenidge, Jan 21; Kim Coleman Foote, Feb 4; Jacqueline Bishop, Feb 18; Amber Antiya, Mar 3; Yvette Louis, Mar 17; Pamela Booker, Apr 7, Farah Jasmine Griffin, Apr 21; Stephanie Renee Payne, May 5; Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, May 19, Cynthia Mannick, Jun 9.  Stay updated by following Women Writers of the Diaspora’s blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

Contact us at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com.  

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Rosalind Kilkenny McLymont

Rosalind Kilkenny McLymont

Thursday, December 17, 2015, 6:00-7:15 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030

Rosalind Kilkenny McLymont is the executive editor of The Network Journal, a leading Black-owned and operated U.S. business magazine targeting an audience of Black professionals and business owners; CEO and publisher of AfricaStrictlyBusiness.com, an online Africa business news, analysis and resource platform for a targeted global audience of business owners, executives and students, investors, policymakers and academicians; and the author of the award-winning novel, Middle Ground, the first “rebranding Africa” novel on the market (See videos at www.youtube.com/watch?v=aag7JIvQtCY and www.youtube.com/watch?v=QeUXCmdu97Y); the new novel, The Guyana Contract; and the non-fiction title, Africa: Strictly Business, The Steady March to Prosperity.  

McLymont has more than 25 years’ experience as a journalist, writer, speaker and adviser to small and medium-sized companies on global business and entrepreneurship. She began her career in business journalism in the mid 1980s as an international trade reporter at The Journal of Commerce, a Knight-Ridder daily newspaper focused on global shipping, logistics and trade. (Founded by Samuel Morse in 1827, the paper was once considered America’s most prestigious paper.) McLymont became the paper’s first Black managing editor under ownership by The Economist Group, publishers of The Economist. In this role, she was the highest-ranking Black professional ever in the entire Economist Group. She left The Journal of Commerce in 1998, after 13 years in its employ, to work independently providing training for women entrepreneurs in Africa as a consultant to the United Nations Development Program (Africa Bureau)’s Gender Program, and for women entrepreneurs in Russia as a Citizen Ambassador to that country under the Alliance of Russian and American Women. She also provided expertise on accessing U.S. markets for the American and African Business Women's Alliance conference in Botswana in 2002.

As executive editor of The Network Journal, McLymont oversees the editorial content of both the print magazine and TNJ.com. She speaks on behalf of the publication at its annual “25 Influential Black Women in Business Awards” Luncheon, its “40 Under Forty Black Achievers Awards” Dinner, and represents the publication at high-level events with U.S. and non-U.S. business and civic leaders, government officials, and African heads of state. She has made several trips to Africa on behalf of The Network Journal and AfricaStrictlyBusines.com, most recently as a delegate to the 4th World Summit of Mayors and Leaders from Africa and of African Descent.     
 
McLymont has been featured in the annual Media Guide to America’s top financial writers. She appeared frequently on CNNfn financial news to comment on the monthly release of U.S. trade figures, and as a regular guest lecturer at New York University’s graduate program in Latin America and Caribbean studies. Her articles and columns on international trade appeared in such publications as The Journal of Commerce, The Congressional Record, America Economía, World Trade, Business Standards, Minority Business Entrepreneur, Transport Topics, Quality Digest, and Shipping Digest. Her Journal of Commerce articles, under the byline Rosalind Rachid, have been referenced in U.S. Congressional debates on trade policy, and worldwide in newspapers, books and scholarly research.
McLymont has also appeared on ABC TV’s Like It Is, GRITtv, at The Brecht Forum, and as a Literary Leader on Esther Armah’s radio show “Off The Page,” WBAI 99.5 FM, New York. She has also appeared on ABC TV’s Here And Now, hosted by Sandra Bookman; CUNYtv’s Independent Sources. She has also been a frequent guest speaker on international trade topics at colleges, universities and trade organizations.  

McLymont has served as an advisor to the Institute on African Affairs; founding vice president and subsequently president of the Caribbean Media Association; an executive board member of the Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation; and as a volunteer mentor at New York Women’s Foundation’s Girls Leadership Day. She is a founding member of the Advisory Board of York College (City University of New York) Journalism Program, currently serves as a member of the Council of Advisers to the Songhoy Paramount Chief; and served two terms as a member of the Sub-Saharan Africa Advisory Committee of the Export-Import Bank of the United States,   

McLymont taught English and French in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo from 1973 to 1980. An alumna of the prestigious European Community Visitors Program, she has been named a “Woman History Maker” by the Caribbean-American Chamber of Commerce and Industry, a “Phenomenal Woman in Media” by Our Time Press and Herbert Von King Park Cultural Arts Center, and one of “50 Power Women in Business” by MEA Magazine.

She has received commendations and awards from the New York Association of Black Journalists, the International Black Women’s Congress, the CEJJES Institute (Rockland County), the National Minority Business Council, the New York Regional Chapter of the National Association of Health Services Executives, the Office of the Comptroller of New York City, the Guyana Cultural Association, the National Association of Kawaida Organizations – New York Chapter (Malcolm X Unity Award), the Global Alliance of Mayors and Leaders from Africa and of African Descent and the New York City Council. In June 2015 she was awarded Guyana’s Golden Arrowhead Award of Achievement and Distinction and in October she was honored as Executive Editor of the Year by African American Women in Cinema (AAWIC). 

McLymont was born in Guyana and speaks French and Spanish. She has a master’s degree in journalism from New York University, a bachelor’s degree in French from The City College of New York, and a Certificate in Spanish Language and Literature from the Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain. She has a Black Belt in T’ai Chi, a Zumba™ Gold Instructor Certificate, and a Senior Instructor Certificate from the International Fitness Association. She has completed courses in Qi Gong at The New York Open Center. She created and teaches Trim Brulée, a fitness program incorporating all of the above disciplines. 

McLymont is married to Fritz-Earle McLymont, cofounder of the National Minority Business Council, Inc. (NMBC); founder/executive director of NMBC Global and NMBC Global Entrepreneurship Center; managing partner of McLymont, Kunda & Co.; and CEO of Brittonearth Energy Ltd. The couple resides in New York.

WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by DR. CELESTI COLDS FECHTER, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African diasporan women. The venue, CALABAR IMPORTS HARLEM, is provided by ATIM OTUN, and the series is co-sponsored by MOSAIC LITERARY MAGAZINE.

We have an exciting lineup for 2016.  Mark your calendar for readings/discussions with Nigeria Lockley, January 7; Kaitlyn Greenidge, January 21; Kim Coleman Foote, February 4; Jacqueline Bishop, February 18; Amber Atiya, March 3; Yvette Louis, March 17; Pamela Booker, April 7, Farah Jasmine Griffin, April 21; Stephanie Renee Payne, May 5; Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, May 19, Cynthia Manick, June 9; Celeste Rita Baker, June 23.Stay updated by following Women Writers of the Diaspora’s blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

Contact us for information or to RSVP at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com


Saturday, October 3, 2015

Women Writers of the Diaspora presents

Jacqueline Bishop

Thursday, February 18, 2016, 6:00-7:15 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030

JACQUELINE BISHOP is an award-winning photographer-painter-writer born and raised in Jamaica, who now lives and works in New York City (“Jamaica’s 15th Parish”). She has twice been awarded Fulbright Fellowships, including a year-long grant to Morocco; her work exhibits widely in North America, Europe and North Africa. She teaches in the Liberal Studies Program at New York University; is the founding editor of Calabash: A Journal of Caribbean Art & Letters; and author of The River's Song, a novel about growing up in Jamaica. The Gymnasts & Other Positions: Stories, Interviews, Essays is forthcoming in the fall from Peepal Tree Press.


WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by DR. CELESTI COLDS FECHTER, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African diasporan women.



Be sure to mark your calendar for Amber Atiya, Mar 3; Yvette Louis, Mar 17; Farah Jasmine Griffin, Apr. 21; Stephanie Renee Payne, May 5; Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, May 19;  Cynthia Manick, June 9; Celeste Rita Baker, June 23.  

Stay updated by following the WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

The venue, CALABAR IMPORTS HARLEM, is provided by ATIM ANETTE OTUN.  The series is also co-sponsored by MOSAIC LITERARY MAGAZINE.

Questions, comments, suggestions:  womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com


Women Writers of the Diaspora presents

Kim Coleman Foote

Thursday, February 4, 2016, 6:00-7:15 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030



Photo by Rachel Eliza Griffiths
KIM COLEMAN FOOTE is a writer of fiction, essays, and experimental prose. In addition to a 2015 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in fiction and a 2014 National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship, she has received fellowships from Vermont Studio Center, Hedgebrook, the Illinois Arts Council, and elsewhere. Her work has appeared in Obsidian, Black Renaissance Noire, Crab Orchard Review, The Literary Review, and elsewhere. She is currently working on a novel about the trans­-Atlantic slave trade and a story collection about her family's experience of the Great Migration from Alabama to New Jersey. She lives in Brooklyn. For more information, visit www.kimcolemanfoote.com.


WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by DR. CELESTI COLDS FECHTER, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African diasporan women.



Be sure to mark your calendar for readings/discussions with Jacqueline Bishop, Feb 18; Amber Atiya, Mar 3; Yvette Louis, Mar 17; Pamela Booker, Apr. 7; Farah Jasmine Griffin, Apr. 21; Stephanie Renee Payne, May 5; Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, May 19;  Cynthia Mannick, June 9.  

Stay updated by following the WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

The venue, CALABAR IMPORTS HARLEM, is provided by ATIM ANETTE OTUN.  The series is also co-sponsored by MOSAIC LITERARY MAGAZINE
Questions, comments, suggestions:  womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com

KAITLYN GREENIDGE

Thursday, January 21, 2016, 6:00-7:15 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030

KAITLYN GREENIDGE is originally from Boston. A graduate of Hunter College's MFA Fiction program, she currently lives in Brooklyn. Her work has appeared in American Short Fiction, Virginia Quarterly Review, Kweli Journal, The Believer, Guernica and other places. Her debut novel, We Love You, Charlie Freeman will be published by Algonquin Press in March 2016.

WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by DR. CELESTI COLDS FECHTER, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African diasporan women.


Be sure to mark your calendar for readings/discussions with Kim Coleman Foote, Feb. 4; Jacqueline Bishop, Feb 18; Amber Atiya, Mar 3; Yvette Louis, Mar 17; Pamela Booker, Apr. 7; Farah Jasmine Griffin, Apr. 21; Stephanie Renee Payne, May 5; Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, May 19;  Cynthia Mannick, June 9.  

Stay updated by following the WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

The venue, CALABAR IMPORTS HARLEM, is provided by ATIM ANETTE OTUN.  The series is also co-sponsored by MOSAIC LITERARY MAGAZINE
Questions, comments, suggestions:  womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com


Wednesday, September 30, 2015

NIGERIA LOCKLEY


Thursday, January 7, 2016, 6:00-7:15 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030

NIGERIA LOCKLEY holds two master's degrees, one in English secondary education, which she utilizes as an educator with the New York City Department of Education. Her second master's degree is in creative writing.  Nigeria's debut novel, Born at Dawn received the 2015 Phillis Wheatley Award for First Fiction. Nigeria serves as the Vice President of Bridges Family Services, a not-for-profit organization that assists student parents interested in pursuing a degree in higher education. She is also the deaconess and clerk for her spiritual home, King of Kings and Lord of Lords Church of God.  Nigeria is a New York native who resides in Harlem with her husband and two daughters.

WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by DR. CELESTI COLDS FECHTER, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African diasporan women.

Be sure to mark your calendar for readings/discussions with Kaitlyn Greenidge, January 21 Kim Coleman Foote, Feb. 4; Jacqueline Bishop, Feb 18; Amber Atiya, Mar 3; Yvette Louis, Mar 17; Pamela Booker, Apr. 7; Farah Jasmine Griffin, Apr. 21; Stephanie Renee Payne, May 5; Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, May 19;  Cynthia Mannick, June 9.  

Stay updated by following the WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

The venue, CALABAR IMPORTS HARLEM, is provided by ATIM OTUN, and the series is co-sponsored by MOSAIC LITERARY MAGAZINE

 Questions, comments, suggestions, RSVP: womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com


Saturday, September 26, 2015

Women Writers of the Diaspora presents

KEISHA-GAYE ANDERSON

Thursday, December 3, 2015, 6:00-7:15 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030

Keisha-Gaye Anderson is Jamaican-born a poet, creative writer, and screenwriter. She is the author of a collection of poetry titled Gathering the Waters (Jamii Publishing, December 2014).  In 2013, she was selected to participate in the Callaloo Creative Writing workshop for fiction at Brown University where she was chosen to be one of the program’s featured readers. In 2010, she was named a fellow by the North Country Institute for Writers of Color, and was short listed for the Small Axe literary competition.  
Keisha’s writing has appeared in a number of collections, anthologies, and literary magazines, including Renaissance Noire, The Killens Review of Arts and Letters, Small Axe Salon, Streetnotes: Cross Cultural Poetics, African Voices Magazine, Mosaic Literary Magazine, Captured by the City: Perspectives on Urban Culture, Poems on the Road to Peace: A Collective Tribute to Dr. King, Sometimes Rhythm, Sometimes Blues: Young African Americans on Love, Relationships, Sex, and the Search for Mr. Right, the Mom Egg, Caribbean in Transit Arts Journal, Women Writers in Bloom Poetry Salon blog, and Bet on Black: African American Women Celebrate Fatherhood in the Age of Barak Obama. She is also a founding poet with Poets for Ayiti. Proceeds from their 2010 chapbook, For the Crowns of Your Heads, helped to rebuild Bibliotheque du Soleil, a library razed during the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.

Her journalistic work includes news and documentary productions for CBS, PBS, and Japanese television (NHK, Nippon, and others), as well as feature articles for magazines like Psychology Today, Black Enterprise, Honey, and Teen People. As a screenwriter, she has written for Hallmark cable channel news programming and worked as a documentary film screenwriting consultant. Keisha is longstanding member of the Harlem Arts Alliance Screenwriting Workshop, led by award-winning screenwriters Jamal Joseph, Eddie Pomerantz, and Zach Sklar.

Keisha, who lives in Brooklyn, NY with her husband and two children, holds a B.A. from Syracuse University’s Newhouse School and College of Arts and Science and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from The City College, CUNY. For the past ten years, she has worked as a higher education communications and marketing manager.

WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by DR. CELESTI COLDS FECHTER, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  Women Writers of the Diaspora features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African diasporan women.


We have a great lineup for 2016, starting with Nigeria Lockley, Thursday, January 7, and Kaitlyn Greenidge, Thursday, January 21.  Be sure to follow my blog to find out about our other readers: http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

The venue, CALABAR IMPORTS HARLEM, is provided by ATIM OTUN, and the series is co-sponsored by MOSAIC LITERARY MAGAZINE. 

For information, suggestions, or to RSVP email me at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com

Women Writers of the Diaspora presents

LORRAINE CURRELLEY

Thursday, November 19, 6:00-7:15 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030


Lorraine Currelley is a poet, writer and member of the Pearls of Wisdom Storytellers. She’s widely anthologized and her numerous awards include the 2015 Arts for A Lifetime Grant by the New York Public Library, a Bronx Council for the Arts 2014 Seniors Partnering with the Arts Citywide Residency (  S.P.A.R.C), BinderCon Scholar Grants for 2014 and 2015 and the WWBPS Certificate of Appreciation in 2014.  Currelley is the former and only president of the Harlem Arts Fund and is a board member at Pen To Mind Books & Child Development Concepts, Inc., Bronx Book Fair Committee member and a Writing for Peace, Inc. adviser. She was featured in an interview in DoveTales “Nature”, An International Journal of the Arts 2015. Poets & Writers Inc. featured her organization Poets Network & Exchange, Inc. in their 2015 Cross Cultural reading and the Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP) featured her in its June 2015 member Spotlight.
Currelley is mental health counselor with a specialization in thanatology. She also writes in her professional capacity and incorporates her knowledge in this area to advocate for mental health and self-care.  She is also editor of The Currelley Literary Journal, a blog where she writes articles, commentaries, reviews and interviews focusing on the African diaspora.

WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by DR. CELESTI COLDS FECHTER, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  Women Writers of the Diaspora features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African diasporan women.


Save the dates a reading/discusson with Keisha-Gaye Anderson, Thursday, December 3.  And, remember that we have an exciting lineup for 2016, starting with Nigeria Lockley, Thursday, January 7 and Kaitlyn Greenidge, Thursday, January 21, so please be sure to follow my blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.


The venue, CALABAR IMPORTS HARLEM, is provided by ATIM OTUN, and the series is co-sponsored by MOSAIC LITERARY MAGAZINE

Space is limited.  Please RSVP at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com


Tuesday, September 22, 2015

HOLD THE DATE: Eartha Watts-Hicks - Thursday, November 5, 2015

Women Writers of the Diaspora presents Eartha Watts-Hicks
Thursday, November 5, 6:00-7:15 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030

EARTHA WATTS-HICKS is the former director of publications for Cultivating Our Sisterhood International Association (COSIA), as well as a member of Project Enterprise, the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP), and the legendary Harlem Writers Guild. A fellow of the North Country Institute and Retreat for Writers of Color, Eartha's writings have appeared in several online publications, including Harlem World Magazine, TheUrbanBookSource.com, and Future Executives.org. In June of 2013, she received the Just R.E.A.D. Award in the fiction category from the NYCHA branch of the NAACP and was named New York City literacy ambassador.


Women Writers of the Diaspora is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by Dr. Celesti Colds Fechter, Exec. Director of Education Success Services, LLC and Prof. of Org. Behavior at King Graduate School in New Rochelle, NY. Women Writers of the Diaspora features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, and urban writing by African and African  Diasporan women.

Don't forget to mark your calendars for readings by Lorraine Currelley on November 19, Keisha-Gaye Andereson on December 3, and Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa on December 17!  We also have an exciting lineup of writers for 2016, so please be sure to follow my blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.


The venue, Calabar Imports Harlem, is provided by Atim Otun, and the series is co-sponsored by Mosaic Literary Magazine.  


Space is limited.  Please RSVP at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com

Monday, August 24, 2015

Women Writers of the Diaspora presents JP Howard...


Thursday, October 15, 6:00-7:30 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030


JP Howard, aka Juliet P. Howard will read and  dicuss poetry from her debut collection, SAY/MIRROR (The Operating System, 2015) and will present a mini-exhibit of some of vintage 1940s-1950s photos of her mother, one of the first black high-fashion models. 

JP is a Cave Canem graduate fellow and , author of SAY/MIRROR, a debut poetry collection published by The Operating currator of  Women Writers in Bloom Poetry Salon (WWBPS), a forum that celebrates a diverse array of women poets and includes a large LGBTQ POC membership.  She thrives on collaboration and community and believes her salon has blossomed due to enormous support from community.  She is an alum of the VONA/Voices Writers Workshop, as well as a Lambda Literary Foundation Emerging LGBT Voices Fellow, and was a finalist in The Feminist Wire’s 2014 1st Poetry Contest. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in The Feminist Wire, Split this Rock, Nepantla: A Journal for Queer Poets of Color, Muzzle Magazine, Adrienne: A Poetry Journal of Queer Women, The Best American Poetry Blog, MiPOesias, The Mom Egg, Talking Writing and Connotation Press. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the City College of New York and a BA from Barnard College.  Join us for a great evening with Juliet P. Howard!

Women Writers of the Diaspora has a great lineup for the rest of the year: Mark your calendars for Eartha Watts-Hicks, November 5, Lorraine Currelley, November 19, Keisha-Gaye Anderson December 3, and Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa, December 17.   We also have an exciting lineup for 2016, so please be sure to follow my blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

Women Writers of the Diaspora is a reading/discussion series created and moderated by Dr. Celesti Colds Fechter, Exec. Director of Education Success Services and Prof., Org. Behavior, King Graduate School, New Rochelle.  Women Writers of the Diaspora features poetry, prose, memoir, essay, reportage, urban writing by African and African Diasporan women.

The venue, Calabar Imports Harlem, is provided by Atim Otun, and the series is co-sponsored by Mosaic Literary Magazine.  

Space is limited.  Please RSVP at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com

Women Writers of the Diaspora

CHERYL BOYCE-TAYLOR

Thursday, October 1, 6:00-7:30 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030

Cheryl Boyce-Taylor is the Founder of The Calypso Muse Poetry Series. A poet and teaching artist, she creates community through poetry. Trinidad-born and Queens-bred, Cheryl Boyce Taylor is a poet, visual and teaching artist. The author of two collections of poetry, Raw Air and Night When Moon Follows, and recipient of the Partners in Writing Grant, Boyce-Taylor served as Poet in Residence during the 2003 season at the Caribbean Literary and Cultural Center in Brooklyn. Her poems have been anthologized in various publications including, including Def Poetry Jam's Bum Rush The Page, Poetry Nation, Rogue's Scholar, In Defense of Mumia, Bloom, Catch the Fire, Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Café, and upcoming in 2004 in The Paterson Literary Review, and Bullets and Butterflies. Boyce-Taylor holds Masters degrees in both Education, and Social Work, and is in private practice as a writing release and personal self care therapist.

Women Writers of the Diaspora, is a 13-year old reading/discussion series created and moderated by Dr. Celesti Colds Fechter, Prof. of Org. Behavior at King Graduate School in New Rochelle, NY, and Owner/Exec. Director of Education Success Services, LLC. The series provides a forum for writing--prose, poetry, memoir, reportage, essay, urban--by and about women of African and African Diasporan descent.  



Women Writers of the Diaspora has a great lineup for the rest of the year: Mark your calendars for JP Howard, October 15; Eartha Watts-Hicks, November 5; Lorraine Currelley, November 19;Keisha-Gaye Anderson December 3; and Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa, December 17.   We also have an exciting lineup for 2016, so please be sure to follow my blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/.

The venue, Calabar Imports Harlem, is provided by Atim Otun, and the series is co-sponsored by Mosaic Literary Magazine.  

Space is limited.  Please RSVP at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Women Writers of the Diaspora presents Jacqueline Johnson

Women Writers of the Diaspora
Presents JACQUELINE JOHNSON
Thursday, September 17, 6:00-7:30 pm
Calabar Imports Harlem
2504 Frederick Douglass Blvd. (at 134th St.)
Harlem, NY 10030


Jacqueline Johnson,  award-winning author of A Woman’s Season (Main Street Rag) and A Gathering of Mother Tongues (White Pine Press), will read and discuss her writings at Calabar Imports Harlem (corner of 134th Street & Frederick Douglass Blvd). 

Ms. Johnson is a Cave Canem fellow and winner of the Third Annual White Pine Press Poetry Award.  She has also received awards from the New York Foundation of the Arts, the Mid-Atlantic Writers Association, and the MacDowell Colony for the Arts. She has taught poetry at Pine Manor College, Poets House, Very Special Arts, Imani House, the Frederick Douglass Creative Arts Center, and African Voices.   

She has been published by Word Peace Journal, The Wide Shore: A Journal of Global Women’s Poetry; Fifth Wednesday Journal; Black Renaissance Noir; pluck! The Journal of Affrilachian Arts & Culture, “Cutting Down the Wrath Bearing Tree,” Callaloo: The Politics Issue; Johns Hopkins Press; Tempu Tupu, African American Women’s Poetry; African World Press; Saints of Hysteria: A Half Century of Collaborative American Poetry; Softskull Press; Streetlight: Illuminating Tale of the Urban Black Experience, and Viking Penguin.

She has previously read at Pratt Institute, Poetry Society of America, Creative Time, NuYorican Poets Café, New York University, Studio Museum in Harlem, Metropolitan Museum, and the Pan African Literary Forum in Accra, Ghana.
Ms. Johnson, a native Philadelphian who now resides in Brooklyn, is a graduate of New York University and the City University of New York.  She is currently working on a novel, The Privilege of Memory, and a collection of short stories, Songs of Ikari.

Women Writers of the Diaspora, created and moderated by Celesti Colds Fechter, Owner/Exec. Director of Education Success Services, is a 13-year-old series that highlights writing by African and African Diasporan women.  

Space is limited.  Please RSVP at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com