Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

28
Mar
12

Madonna and Me… and me

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Madonna and Me writers at Busboys and Poets, Washington, DC. March 27, 2012

Just finished a sort of mini-tour for the Madonna and Me: Women Writers on the Queen of Pop anthology, edited by Laura Barcella. I can’t say enough positive things about this collection and the women I’ve met from it. My personal essay, “Articles of Faith,” is about the mixed messages I received about bodies and sexuality as a tomboyish teen trying Madonna-inspired clothing on for size in a small-town Catholic military environment. Jamia Wilson’s “Are You There God? It’s Me, Madonna” critiques and celebrates the singer’s spirituality and hypocrisy. Dana Rossi’s “In Costume” tells her story of being robbed at gunpoint while dressed as Madonna (during the singer’s pimp fashion phase). Kelly Keenan Trumpbour wrestles with an age-old question with “In the Name of a Mother,” examining her own contemplations of motherhood. Maria Raha brought a dose of incisive music criticism, recognizing real revolutionary women in rock with her own evolution. In “Our Lady of the Hotpants,” Kristin McGonigle makes a case for Like a Prayer as spiritual incantation, while editor Laura Barcella’s “My Pocket Madonna” evokes the icon-as-talisman, an image of strength to call upon in times of loneliness or depression.

In high school, there was this pack of mean girls—we called them the “Madonna-Wanna-Bes” for their imitation of the pop star’s look—and, as much I liked Madonna’s style, I never wanted to be associated with a group that picked on other girls. I’d forgotten about them until after this anthology was published. Meeting some of the inspiring writers found within this collection has been the exact opposite experience of high school—we cheered one another on at readings, signed each other’s books, shared the mic and spoke our truths. I only hope the “Madonna-wanna-bes” have since discovered the power of sisterhood somewhere.

29
Feb
12

PETA/Ms. article

ImageHappy to share my newest post on the Ms. Blog–a round-up of reactions to PETA’s latest ad campaign. At first I felt my worlds colliding with this one. I’ve been vegetarian for 23 years and recently transitioned to veganism. I identify as both a feminist and domestic violence survivor. I have a vegan husband and we have many friends at PETA. I risk losing some of my social support group in voicing dissent, but the truth is, this is not worlds colliding–we all live in the same world. I appreciate the hard work of animal rights activists. I admire shedding light on truth. The movement throws the phrase “cruelty-free” around, mostly in labeling food and fashion. I want cruelty-free ads, language, behavior and thoughts, as well. We are imperfect; these are qualities I am constantly working to nurture within myself. PETA can do better, too.

16
Oct
11

Tarnished Anthology

Tarnished Anthology by sugarfreak
Tarnished Anthology, a photo by sugarfreak on Flickr.

Hosted a fun reading at Atomic Books in Baltimore with my co-editor Cara Bruce last night. I read at Atomic (in their old location) on my first book tour, and have read there a few times over the years with various anthologies. It felt good to be there presenting the work of other writers, many of them thrilled to be published for the first time. Someone gave me an opportunity to share my words once; it’s a beautiful feeling to be able to do that for others, now. Long live lovely indie bookstores like Atomic, too.

28
Jun
11

editing projects

In my loads and loads of spare time (that’s sarcasm, people), sometimes I’m editing stuff. There’s been a lot of such “stuff” lately. Very happy to announce the second anthology I’ve co-edited with friend Cara Bruce for our indie publishing company, Pinchback Press. The collection’s called Tarnished: True Tales of Innocence Lost. I’m loving the cover (by artist Linas Garsys) and the juicy stories inside. Release party coming soon!

Juggling with my other eight hands, I also edited the June issue of Swedish film magazine, Cinema–its first ever all-English version and for the iPad, at that. Woo! Was cool to read a European p.o.v. for various releases and get the inside scoop on a new documentary being made about The Pirate Bay internet gangstas. And I feel fortunate to have at least visited Stockholm and Malmö, so I can visualize some of the places I’m reading about. The whole issue is here. Click. Download. Skål! Now if someone could please buy me an iPad, that’d be great. Tack så mycket. See? My Swenglish is improving.

30
May
11

my new punk book

Just back from New York AGAIN (yes, that’s twice in one month) as spectator/researcher, rather than performer, this time. My husband and I went to the Black and Blue Bowl to see many of our favorite New York hardcore bands but also to interview as many people as possible for a book we’re working on about the Safari Club–a now crumbling, boarded-up building that once  hosted hardcore matinees (including many of the bands gracing the stage at BNB 2011). We talked to a lot of old friends and made some new ones. DC and New York have always had what I’ve seen as a very sisterly relationship, musically.

Here’s an impromptu anecdote from Lars Frederiksen, who was at the show and game to share a memory. Thanks, Lars!

Interview excerpts will trickle into the Live at the Safari Club website over the next year or so. In the meantime, I’ve got a lot of transcribing to do!

17
May
11

Bowery Poetry

Fresh off the bus, back from reading at the Bowery Poetry Club in New York. I had THE  BEST time. No, really! Usually I dread these things. I dreaded this one. In fact, all the way there my friend Cara Bruce and I were bitching about how scary it is to read your work in front of people and wondering “why we put ourselves through this” again and again. We were excited about going to NY, “except for this whole reading thing.”

I ended up having one of the best readings of my life. My hands didn’t sweat, my legs didn’t shake. I didn’t rush through the words. Hell, I even improv-ed a bit! Getting feedback from an expressive audience is a gift for any artist, and I was truly feeling it while onstage this time.  A man in the front row quietly recited my paraphrased Thoreau quote with me. People giggled in all the right places. The space, the audience, the other performers, friends in the crowd, and maybe just the combo of my age and experience all finally added up to an evening I am grateful for. Or maybe I am old enough not to take anything for granted anymore. How lucky am I, that I am asked to share my words in public sometimes? And that I can make someone laugh, cry or empathize? That someone would give something I’ve written any attention when there are a zillion TV shows, songs, movies and other books crying out for their time? Thank you, universe. Thank you, New York.

25
Jan
11

Bust Mag & Cherry Vanilla

Psyched to see my juicy interview with Warhol star/memoirist Cherry Vanilla in Bust Magazine hit the stands today! It’s an awesome issue full-o-goodness including profiles of sex bloggers, a fascinating history of women and body hair (“Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow”) and an in-depth interview with covergirl Portia de Rossi. Get it while it’s fresh!

24
Jan
11

Tourist in my own town

I geeked out at the Library of Congress over the weekend. My mother-in-law was in town; we were looking for things to do and decided on one of those things none of us had done while growing up in the DC area–visiting the Library of Congress. Our tour guide called this public archive a “treasure”  and I really can’t think of a more apt description. Being in this place that values intelligence, art, science, history, architecture and literature filled me with tears of appreciation a few times while wandering around.

I applied for a researcher’s card and requested my memoir, not knowing if it’d actually be there. (The guide had mentioned that “not everything is kept” and “some things are donated elsewhere.”) I was not sure how my book and its subject matter would be classified. A helpful librarian found it in their online catalog and guided me through the request process without batting an eye at the title. (I love librarians!) We lost ourselves in the stacks until the slender tome arrived, bound in the L.O.C. binding and paper to protect its softcover. It is filed under social sciences and remains housed in the Thomas Jefferson building. I’ve never needed the government’s validation of my work but I must share that I was thrilled and maybe even a little proud to see it preserved in such a respectful way in this prestigious collection. I strongly urge any author visiting the DC area to take the time to explore the Library of Congress. If you’ve got extra time and need an ego boost, look up your book while you’re at it. Trust me. You will thank me. Call me a simple-minded person but it’s often the little things in life that make us happiest, right?

 

27
Dec
10

“Looking Back on What We Shared…”

I haven’t felt much like writing lately, due to the death of my father just after Thanksgiving. Sure, we butted heads many times over the years, but he was my Dad and I see now that he did the best he could with the wild daughter he was dealt. Somehow his death has helped me to see him as his own entity, separate from me–a human being on his own journey, a trip I was just a part of. What once made me so angry is now easily forgiven. Funny how perspective works.

Though this year ends on a sad note for me, as Ian MacKaye once sang in Embrace, “there’s another one coming…aw shit!” I am looking forward to many of my own projects in 2011 and happy to hear about Riot on the Dance Floor, a film about City Gardens in its heyday. I was booking Safari Club in DC in the late 80s, hosting many of the NY/NJ City Gardens “regulars.” My friend/booking partner Pam and I will be interviewed for the documentary sometime next year and we are happy to help. The soundtrack samples and photos already posted on the website prove it’s going to be killer!

This photo was taken by Dave Brown at Safari Club in ’88 or ’89. That’s my husband Rich Dolinger on stage, singing along with Gorilla Biscuits (6 years after this picture was taken we actually met & started dating; 7 years after that, we married; now we’ve been together for 15). Looking back, we figure we must have been in the same rooms, going to the same shows, at least 500 times before actually meeting face to face. But I had a boyfriend and he had a girlfriend and neither of us knew the future, of course. Perspective is a funny thing. Maybe that’s why I like to get upside-down in yoga, doing headstands and handstands. Seeing things from another point of view can change everything.

25
Nov
10

Eat Me!

In the publishing world, the author rarely gets the book cover he or she wants. The first printing of I Was a Teenage Dominatrix was a valiant effort by a tiny press in Los Angeles–so tiny, in fact, that me, the publishers and my husband all ended up as models on the cover, pretending to be east coast college students on the campus of UCLA. Later, when a ‘zine called Cashiers du Cinemart came calling, they commissioned artist Nathan Kane to do a drawing of me for their cover, resulting in exactly the kind of pulp-y image I’d always envisioned. When my book was reprinted by Last Gasp, I was thrilled when they agreed to use the new image for the new printing.

Flash forward 10 years later–Cashiers du Cinemart is no more and my book is nearly out of print, but publisher/founder Mike White has his compendium, Impossibly Funky: A Cashiers du Cinemart Collection published. He tours around with the beautiful book. On his Baltimore stop at Atomic Books, his lovely wife surprises him with a stunning cake version of his book cover (made by the “Ace of Cakes” Charm City Cakes, no less!) I was not there for the unveiling but imagine my surprise (and delight) when I saw a little sugary version of the book-cover version of me on there! Complete with little handcuffs and everything! (Is this a trend? My friend Carol made this cake version of my book Imposters for a reading in Richmond a couple of years ago).

I caught up with Mike and Andrea in DC, on the last stop of the tour, where they presented me with the sexy little cake-topper version of myself. I could not believe it. I’ve always wanted an action figure of myself and this may be the closest I’ll ever get. I’ll take it! I’ll take the cake! I’m honored. I love it when art inspires more art.

Now…does anyone know how to preserve a gelatin-and-sugar doll forever and ever?




I’m Tweeting!

  • Someone just called me old Hollywood, qualified as "90s-era Hollywood." Haha. Everything's relative, I suppose. 47 minutes ago
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  • Gloss Nailspa just did a kick-ass job on my tows & feet! http://t.co/7OFo8GON 1 day ago

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