Home » Uncategorized » Wilde Readers of September: Adina Ferguson & Edward Belfar

Wilde Readers of September: Adina Ferguson & Edward Belfar

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HoCoPoLitSo welcomes all to the September edition of the Wilde Readings Series, with Adina Ferguson and Edward Belfar, hosted by Ann Bracken. Join us at the Columbia Art Center on Tuesday, September 12th at 7 p.m., at 6100 Foreland Garth, Columbia, MD 21045. Please spread the word— bring your friends, family and students! Light refreshments will be served and books by the readers available for sale.

An open mic follows the featured authors and we encourage you to participate. Please prepare no more than five minutes of performance time, about two poems. Sign up when you arrive, or in advance by calling the Columbia Arts Center at (410)-730-0075.

Below, get to know Adina and Edward!


Who is the person in your life (past or present) that shows up most often in your writing?

Adina: I’d have to say my Mom shows up in my work a lot (more). Whether it’s a paragraph or whole essay, Connie is getting her shine (LOL). I’m often writing about growing into womanhood and my mom has definitely had an influence in that area. And of late, my therapist has become a character in my work. So much so that she’ll slide in a “It’s fine. You can write about me in your next story” when we have a “heavy” session and I want to quit her.

Edward: I am primarily a fiction writer, and all my characters are composites, drawn from various sources, including direct experience, things I heard about second- or third-hand, my reading of fiction and nonfiction, and my imagination. There is never a one-to-one correspondence in my fiction, such that Character X equals Real Person Y. The closest I might come to that is imagining how someone like Real Person Y might respond to a situation faced by Character X, but when I do that, I often find that Character X surprises me in a way that Real Person Y probably would not.

Where is your favorite place to write?

Adina: The Purple Room aka my home office/guestroom is my writing sanctuary. I was very intentional with the artwork I put on the walls, the photos I have on the bookshelf, my goal board, the color scheme.

Edward: I have made part of our basement into an office, in which I have a desktop, a printer, and many reference books. I do most of my drafting there. I like to edit on paper, though, and I often do that at the dining room table.

Do you have any consistent pre-writing rituals?

Adina: Before I can get in a good writing groove, I like to listen to one of my Spotify playlists of R&B songs and then I’ll switch to YouTube to watch a few Jodeci videos. I’m a big 90s/2000s R&B fan. And so I pretty much have a little mini concert before I finally get down to business (professional procrastinator here). All the while there’s a candle burning in the background. I like tapping into a few senses first.

Edward: I do not.

Who always gets a first read?

Adina: I’ll drop a message in the group chat with my best friends, Davie and Marquetta. But the way everyone’s lives are set up, it comes down to whichever of them is available. We went to the same arts high school and were in the same department. So, I value their feedback as fellow writers who happen to be my sisters for life.

Edward: My wife Kathleen always gets a first read. Without her support and encouragement, I doubt that I would have been able to persevere through all the rejection, disappointment, and frustration to publish two books. At the same time, she is an astute critic and will not hesitate to tell me if she finds a false note in something I have written.

What is a book you’ve read more than twice (and would read again)?

Edward: Many books fit that description. One that comes readily to mind, because it is both eerily prescient and hilarious, is Walker Percy’s Love in the Ruins. It was very much on my mind when I was writing my novel A Very Innocent Man.

What is the most memorable reading you have attended?

Adina: Oooh, that’s a great question! I can’t narrow it down to one event but I will say I always have a great time when I attend Zora’s Den’s “In Our Own Words” Reading series in Baltimore. There’s an indescribable feeling when you hear Black women share their lives with you. The voices, styles, experiences are so eclectic. I’m always finding new writers to fangirl over and honestly, it’s just a whole vibe of sistahood!

Edward: It is hard to pick one, as I have attended many memorable readings, both in person and online. One that does stand out in my mind, though, even after many years, was given by the late Amiri Baraka when I was in graduate school at SUNY/Stony Brook. He was as great a performer as he was a poet. Without singing a note, he made an instrument of his voice and transformed the poems that he read into music. Until that night, I don’t think I had realized the power of the spoken word.


• Adina Ferguson is a Pushcart Prize nominated essayist, humorist, content writer and proud DC native. Her work centers around being black and woman and a single 30-something navigating life with therapy, old school TV, friends and family. She is the author of the essay collection, I Don’t Want to Be Your Bridesmaid, and has been published in Hippocampus Magazine, The Fire Inside Volume II, Midnight & Indigo, Very Smart Brothas, Defenestration, and more. Adina currently resides in Columbia, MD with her french bulldog, Kobi. You can find Adina at adinathewriter.com, on Instagram @adinathewriter or on the couch watching Good Times reruns.

• Edward Belfar is the author of two books of fiction. His novel A Very Innocent Man was published by Flexible Press in 2023. Wanderers, a collection of short stories, was published by Stephen F. Austin State University Press in 2012. His fiction and essays have appeared in numerous journals, including Shenandoah, The Baltimore Review, Potpourri, Confrontation, Schuylkill Valley Journal, and Tampa Review. He lives with his wife in Maryland and can be reached through his website at edwardbelfar.com.


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