HoCoPoLitSo Celebrates 50 Years at Annual Irish Evening Featuring Seán Hewitt and Cóilín Parsons
HoCoPoLitSo’s annual Evening of Irish Music and Poetry
on Saturday, February 15th, 2025, at 7:30 p.m. presents
The Language of Landscape:
Seán Hewitt on Place, Identity, and Belonging
featuring writer Seán Hewitt
in conversation with Cóilín Parsons,
and music by Poor Man’s Gambit.
In-person admission available for purchase now
HoCoPoLitSo’s 47th annual Evening of Irish Music and Poetry on Saturday, February 15th, 2025, at 7:30 p.m. presents The Language of Landscape: Seán Hewitt on Place, Identity, and Belonging, featuring poet, memoirist, novelist and literary critic Seán Hewitt, reading from his work including his memoir All Down Darkness Wide, followed by a conversation moderated by Cóilín Parsons, Georgetown University Associate Professor and Director of Global Irish Studies. The evening also features music by Poor Man’s Gambit; Ireland’s Deputy Ambassador to the United States, Fionnuala Quinlan, has been invited to continue the long-standing tradition of providing opening remarks.
The evening program commences at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, February 15th, 2025 in the Smith Theatre of the Horowitz Visual & Performing Arts Center on the campus of Howard Community College; guests may be seated starting at 7 p.m. Irish beverages will be offered for sale to patrons aged 21 and up at a CASH-ONLY bar in the lobby prior to the stage show, and during intermission. Non-alcoholic refreshments and scones will be provided free to attendees. A book signing follows the reading and discussion, and books by the featured authors will be available for purchase. After intermission, Poor Man’s Gambit will play a concert of traditional Irish music.
General in-person admission is available NOW for $50 up to the day of the event, with a discounted rate of $30 offered for educators and students, online or by calling the Horowitz Center Box Office at 443-518-1500, Wed.–Fri., 12–4 p.m. We hope you will join us for what is sure to be another memorable evening in February.
—
—
You can find more information on this year’s event, including artist biographies, as well as on the history of HoCoPoLitso’s Irish Evening on its dedicated page, here. All proceeds from the event are used to underwrite HoCoPoLitSo’s literary programs in the community, and the production of The Writing Life, a writer-to-writer talk show now seen worldwide by more than one million viewers on youtube.com/hocopolitso, and through Howard Community College’s Dragon Digital TV.
—
—
In-person event tickets:
https://ci.ovationtix.com/32275/production/1223209
HocoPoLitSo Marks 50 Years of Literary Programs and Activities

Today the Howard County Poetry and Literature Society (HoCoPoLitSo) is celebrating its 50th anniversary. For half a century it has been cultivating an appreciation for contemporary poetry and literature, celebrating a culturally diverse literary heritage, and broadening exposure to the literary arts for everyone.
HoCoPoLitSo was the brainchild of Ellen Conroy Kennedy, a translator of Negritude poetry who had moved to Columbia with her husband, Pat Kennedy, the first president of the Columbia Association. Building on Ellen’s idea for a local literary group, she recruited two like-minded neighbors to help establish the organization: the actress, playwright and poet Prudence Barry, and publicist Jean F. Moon, then a journalist. Ellen Kennedy, who provided direction for HoCoPoLitSo for decades, died in 2020. Barry died in 2021.
With a small $1,000 grant from the Maryland State Arts Council, HoCoPoLitSo was officially launched in 1974 with a visit by poets Lucille Clifton and Carolyn Kizer, who read at the Women’s Center at the Wilde Lake Interfaith Center in Columbia, then walked across the parking lot to meet with students at Wilde Lake High School. With that initial programming decision, HoCoPoLitSo embarked upon a half century of championing diverse voices and personal connections between authors and audiences.
The 50th Anniversary season features the schools-based residency of Nigerian American fiction writer and essayist Tope Folarin. In addition, the popular annual Evening of Irish Music and Poetry showcasing writer Sean Hewitt is slated for Feb. 15. Collaborations are set with Howard Community College to present the Blackbird Poetry Festival in April and with the Downtown Columbia Partnership to participate in the Books in Bloom festival in May.
“For the past 50 years, HoCoPoLitSo has distinguished itself with world-class literary programs. We are calling our anniversary year ‘Beyond Words, Beyond Borders’ in recognition of our desire to expand understanding and response to universal truths as expressed in the literature of extraordinary writers and thinkers,” said HoCoPoLitSo Co-Chair Tim Singleton.
“HoCoPoLitSo makes and holds space within our community for people to come together in recognition of our human need to connect through language, ideas, and common experiences. Literature is not only educational but enlightening, enlarging, elevating, and enjoyable. We greet each other in fields of words and learn we are not alone,” said HoCoPoLitSo Co-Chair Tara Hart.
HoCoPoLitSo has often partnered with other local institutions and nonprofit organizations, most notably with Howard Community College, where its programs are often presented and where its offices are located. Other partners have included Columbia Association, Columbia Festival of the Arts, Columbia Film Society, Columbia Pro Cantare, Downtown Columbia Partnership, Howard County Library System, Howard Hughes Holdings, Little Patuxent Review, The Mall in Columbia, Residences at Vantage Point, Toby’s Dinner Theatre, numerous faith communities and other organizations.
The Howard County Public School System has been a substantial beneficiary of HoCoPoLitSo, which has been providing literary artists for student programs for half a century. Through the years, local students heard and saw some of the finest writers and thinkers of the 20th century, including Derek Walcott, Gwendolyn Brooks, Issac Bashevis Singer, Saul Bellow, Richard Wilbur, Grace Paley, Robert Bly, Mark Strand, and Amira Baraka. More than 30 authors have taken part in what is today the Bauder Writer-in-Residence Program, offering visits to all 13 Howard County public high schools, the Homewood Center, and Howard Community College.
Most recently, HoCoPoLitSo has partnered with Howard County Government and the Howard County Arts Council in establishing a local Poet Laureate program. The inaugural appointee, Truth Thomas, was announced at the Blackbird Poetry Festival in April of this year. A Howard County Youth Poet Laureate, Oakland Mills High School junior Mai-Anh Nguyen, was announced in September by Howard County Executive Calvin Ball.
The HoCoPoLitSo Board of Directors has always served as the group’s programming and audience development arm. Members today include Co-Chairs Tara Hart and Tim Singleton, Recording Secretary Susan Thornton Hobby, Treasurer Marie Davidson, and member-at-large David H. Barrett, Kathleen Larson, Ryna May, Faye McCray, Anne Reis, E Welsh and Laura Yoo. Neal Goturi, a senior at River Hill High School, serves as a Bauder Youth on Board member. Judy R. Young coordinates the Bauder Writer-in-Residence Program as HoCoPoLitSo’s school liaison.
For more information, we welcome you to contact us at info@hocopolitso.org, or by phone at 443-518-4568.
Jean F. Moon
Founding Member, Director Emeritus & Honorary Chair of the 50th Anniversary Committee
Wilde Readers of November: Ona Gritz & Daniel Simpson

HoCoPoLitSo welcomes all to the November edition of the Wilde Readings Series, with Ona Gritz and Daniel Simpson, hosted by Laura Shovan. For 2024, please join us at our NEW venue, independent bookstore Queen Takes Book on Tuesday, November 12th at 7 p.m., at 6955 Oakland Mills Rd, Suite E, 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 via this online form.
Below, get to know Ona and Dan!
Who is the person in your life (past or present) that shows up most often in your writing?
Ona: My late sister Angie—sometimes as herself, sometimes in fictional form, always as a source of longing.
Dan: I’ve written the most poems about my father, but my identical twin brother Dave, my wife Ona Gritz, and a collection of guide dogs aren’t far behind.
Where is your favorite place to write?
Ona: In my home office.
Dan: In my office (a converted attic) of my 115-year-old house on a cul de sac. It gives the feeling of being slightly removed from the world.
Do you have any consistent pre-writing rituals?
Ona: I make a cup of tea, ensure I have chocolate nearby, and read the work of an author I feel will inspire the project I’m working on. Before all this, I procrastinate for longer than I care to admit.
Dan: Definitely breakfast first with maybe some music or a brief listen to the news, then immediately to my desk without checking email. I used to read before writing, but sometimes the reading was so good, I wasn’t getting to the writing, so have had to save that for afterward.
Who always gets a first read?
Ona: My husband, Dan Simpson.
Dan: When my brother was alive, it was often he, but now it’s Ona.
What is a book you’ve read more than twice (and would read again)?
Ona: Three Things I Know Are True by Betty Culley.
Dan: Ulysses by James Joyce.
What is the most memorable reading you have attended?
Ona: A reading by poet Gary Snyder back in 1981. Listening to him, I could feel my teenage self falling in love with poetry.
Dan: My brother Dave‘s last reading, just months before he died from ALS. It took Dave a superhuman effort to get there from Philadelphia, but I’ve never heard anyone more present, grounded, and connected to his audience during a reading. I’ll always be deeply grateful to Marie Howe, who arranged the reading at NYU and introduced Dave, with such love and appreciation.
• Ona Gritz’s new memoir, Everywhere I Look, won the Readers’ Choice Gold Award and is an Independent Book Review 2024 Must-Read. Her poems and essays have appeared in The New York Times, The Guardian, Ploughshares, Brevity, and elsewhere. She is the author of two 2024 YA verse novels, The Space You Left Behind, featured in The Children’s Book Council’s Hot Off the Press roundup of anticipated best sellers, and Take a Sad Song.
You can find Ona online at onagritz.com.
• Daniel Simpson’s latest book, Inside the Invisible, won the inaugural Propel Poetry Prize and was nominated for the American Academy of Poets Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize. His work has been anthologized in About Us: Essays from the Disability Series of the New York Times, Welcome to the Resistance: Poetry as Protest, and Beauty Is a Verb: The New Poetry of Disability, and has appeared in Prairie Schooner, The Cortland Review, and many other journals.
You can learn more and reach Dan at insidetheinvisible.wordpress.com, and on Facebook as Dan Simpson.

Wilde Readers of October: Rahne Alexander & Maritza Rivera

HoCoPoLitSo welcomes all to the October edition of the Wilde Readings Series, with Rahne Alexander and Maritza Rivera (or Mariposa), hosted by Linda Joy Burke. For 2024, please join us at our NEW venue, independent bookstore Queen Takes Book on Tuesday, October 8th at 7 p.m., at 6955 Oakland Mills Rd, Suite E, 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 via this online form.
Below, get to know Rahne and Maritza!
Who is the person in your life (past or present) that shows up most often in your writing?
Rahne: I don’t know if this is for me to say! My recent MFA project was centered on my mother, so the last several years, she’s been the dominant force. In the wake of that project, I’ve been thinking about so many of my mentors, those who nurtured me in some way—materially, culturally, spiritually or otherwise. But over the years I’ve also spent a lot of time and energy writing about jerks. Are any of them the same guy? I’ll never tell.
Maritza: My grandmother, AKA abuela, was a very influential figure in my life and often appears in my work.
Where is your favorite place to write?
Rahne: They used to have these places called cafés where you could sit at a little table and order coffee all day long. Some of them would even be open until midnight! There were a whole bunch of them, each with a different vibe and it was great. You could go there with your little moleskine notebook and look off into the mid-distance, maybe order a little sandwich or a pastry. Then Starbucks came along and now every place closes at 3 p.m.
Maritza: On the beach in Puerto Rico, my happy place.
Do you have any consistent pre-writing rituals?
Rahne: I have a tried and true ritual: I start by checking my to-do calendar so I can remember how much past deadline I am and rekindle how bad I feel about myself. Then I take the empty glasses and plates from my desk to the kitchen where I do some dishes, and the running water makes me need to run to the bathroom, which pressingly needs cleaning and if so I do that too. Since I’m going back downstairs anyway I take a load of laundry to the basement where, what the heck, since I’m down here why not get a load started. Then I go back up to the kitchen where I get that kombucha I drank half of yesterday and return up to my desk, where an email has arrived that I must respond to forthwith, and so I do. Then I’m tired. I go lie down for a moment to rest my strained eyes, but also maybe it’s my turn on my favorite little word game app which is called WELDER, and the cat comes along for a snuggle and she insists I put my phone down to pet her. I doze off for five to thirty minutes and wake with a start — the cat is gone and my phone battery is drained. I plug in my phone, return the warmed kombucha to the fridge and start a coffee to perk me up. While the water boils, I go down to switch over the laundry, bring up a load of clothes from the dryer, and then I’m usually ready to write, immediately after I check Twitter.
Maritza: I don’t really have a ritual except that I write everything by hand first. I then type and edit on the computer. I wrote a poem once about Rita Dove’s ritual but I don’t have one like hers.
Who always gets a first read?
Rahne: It’s usually just me, and in the best of cases, the audience. Since the days of dial-up BBSes through blogging and microblogging to now, I love going direct to the audience. When I hit that sweet spot, the cathexis between performance and writing—for me, that’s where the magic is.
Maritza: My children, Maria Teresa and Antonio Roberto are always the first to read and hear my poetry. They don’t cringe and run away anymore. LOL!
What is a book you’ve read more than twice (and would read again)?
Rahne: I don’t re-read books very often, so it’s funny to be asked that at this moment, in which I’m concurrently re-reading three. I was recently given a 1928 reprint of Dorothy Parker’s Enough Rope so I’ve been spending time with some of my oldest favorite poems; and I’m revisiting Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower because that story began in 2024. I’ve also been re-reading James Baldwin’s The Devil Finds Work, his memoir of the cinema. It’s among my favorites of his writings.
Maritza: Pinecrest Rest Haven by Grace Cavalieri and Meeting Bone Man by Joseph Ross. Please don’t make me choose.
What is the most memorable reading you have attended?
Rahne: There are so many I could mention here, so I’ll keep to the one that came to mind first, which was seeing Diane DiPrima at Bookshop Santa Cruz circa 2000. She was spectacular, and helped clarify my perspective on the beat poets.
Maritza: When Grace Cavalieri read from Pinecrest Rest Haven at The Writer’s Center, I laughed and cried. It was very emotional for me. This was many years ago but when I think about it, I still feel the impact of her words.
• Rahne Alexander is an intermedia artist and writer from Baltimore, Maryland. She holds an MFA in Intermedia+Digital Arts from UMBC, and her visual and performance works have been exhibited across the U.S. and around the world. Her writing has appeared in BmoreArt, The Hopkins Review and the Lambda Literary Award-winning anthology Take Me There: Trans and Genderqueer Erotica. Her essay chapbook Heretic to Housewife was awarded the 2019 OutWrite nonfiction prize.
Rahne can be found on most social media platforms as @rahnealexander. Her personal website, which is going through some changes as of this writing, is rahne.com, and she publishes a blog called Paradise Is Not For Sale.
• Marita Rivera, AKA Mariposa is a Puerto Rican poet and Army veteran who resides in Rockville, MD and San Juan, PR. She has been writing poetry for over fifty years and is the creator of a short form of poetry called Blackjack. Maritza is the author of About You; A Mother’s War; Baker’s Dozen; Twenty-One: Blackjack Poems and the Blackjack Poetry Playing Cards. Since 2011, she hosts the Mariposa Poetry Retreat and the Mariposa Reunion Reading. Her work appears in literary magazines, online publications, and the public arts project, Meet Me At the Triangles located in Wheaton, MD. In 2022 Maritza and Jeffrey Banks co-edited Diaspora Café: DC, an Afro-LatinX anthology published by Day Eight. In 2023 she translated the poetry collection, Inquilinos Mudos/Silent Tenents by Alberto Roblest from Spanish into English.
Maritza is on Facebook under her name, The Blackjack Poets Group and the Mariposa Poetry Retreat. Poems from A Mother’s War can be found on milspeak.org.
The Lucille Clifton Reading Series 2024 — Writing the Land featuring Patti Ross, Naomi Ayala, and Hiram Larew

On November 19th, 1974, Lucille Clifton joined Carolyn Kizer to headline HoCoPoLitSo’s first-ever event, reading from their work and discussing their lives as writers to adult and student audiences in Wilde Lake. Lucille would go on to be Poet Laureate of Maryland, 1979–1985, and a cherished long-time friend and artistic advisor to HoCoPoLitSo. Since her passing in 2010, HoCoPoLitSo has held the annual Lucille Clifton Reading Series, each year highlighting poets, topics, and partners that Lucille would have been proud to champion, as we are proud to open our 50th anniversary season in her memory.
We hope you will join us for our 2024 Lucille Reading Series offering: Writing the Land, presented in partnership with Howard County Conservancy. The event features poet Patti Ross, who through the national Writing the Land project wrote two poems for the Conservancy and its land, reading from her work along with poets Naomi Ayala and Hiram Larew. All three will read nature poems in the Conservancy’s garden amphitheater, amid the beauty of our natural environment. A print anthology featuring Ross’s poetry and essays about the Conservancy, will be available for purchase and signing. Wine and apple cider will be sold.
📅 Sunday, October 27
🕜 1 p.m. (in-person)
📍 10520 Old Frederick Road, Woodstock, MD 21163
FREE registration is required to attend this public event to ensure adequate seating:
http://bit.ly/writingtheland
Bauder Writer-in-Residence Tope Folarin: Writer’s Life is “Grist” for Fiction & Teaching

The Howard County Poetry and Literature Society this year celebrates its 50th anniversary of presenting nationally— and internationally— renowned literary artists and emerging writers to our local and worldwide audiences. In that half-century of service to the community, we at HoCoPoLitSo are perhaps most proud of our youth- and student-focused offerings, and our enduring partnerships with Howard County schools going back to our founding in 1974. Each year, HoCoPoLitSo invites an active professional writer to participate in a residency in Howard County, visiting county students for readings and workshops in their classrooms. More than 30 authors of diverse backgrounds have taken part in what is today the Bauder Writer-in-Residence program, offering visits to all 13 Howard County public high schools, the Homewood Center, and Howard Community College.
This year’s writer-in-residence, Tope Folarin, kicked off his season of presentations for the 2024–2025 academic year on August 19th, at Howard County Public Schools’ Professional Learning Day, speaking to an engaged audience of professional educators on the winding path that led him to find his literary voice, and his excitement to help young aspiring writers find their own. Susan Thornton Hobby, HoCoPoLitSo’s recording secretary, attended the session and penned the following.

Author Tope Folarin describes parts of his life as “the craziest kind of whiplash.” Here’s just a little of his life story, which he told to county English teachers and others at their professional development day on August 19 as part of his introduction as this year’s Bauder Writer-in-Residence.
Folarin’s Nigerian parents move to Utah, where he and his brother are born. His mother falls ill and returns to Nigeria and the Folarin boys spend their early years in a mostly White, mostly Mormon area, being raised by their father. Soon they were moving across the country following their father’s search for a job.
Folarin wins a scholarship to Morehouse University. After a semester in Capetown, he loses his scholarship on a technicality and survives on friends’ couches. One day, watching Spike Lee’s Malcom X movie from one of those couches, he notices a list of funders in the credits and writes appeal letters to every one. Oprah Winfrey responds and pays for him to complete his senior year at Morehouse.
After earning two master’s degrees (Public Policy and African Studies) at Oxford on a Rhodes Scholarship, Folarin writes a thesis on the immigrant experience, which makes its way to a friend-of-a-friend at Google. Folarin is hired and works for two years at Google. In his free time he writes about his childhood, eventually realizing that his writing “wants” to be a novel about a young Nigerian man raised in Utah. He quits his job at Google to focus on fiction and racks up 543 rejections for his work. He shoves a short story into the hands of a writer he’s interviewing, who submits the story to a contest. Folarin wins the Caine Prize for African Writing. Then his semi-autobiographical novel, A Particular Kind of Black Man, wins the Whiting Prize for Fiction.
Whiplash, indeed.
HoCoPoLitSo has brought more than 30 renowned authors into Howard County schools, in an effort to show students that authors are real people. Folarin, who is now the executive director of the Institute for Policy Studies, as well as the Lannan Creative Writing Visiting Lecturer at Georgetown University, couldn’t be more real.
Now, he’ll be talking with students about writing, about his life, and about finding their own voices, like he found his. “All your life is grist,” Folarin told the teachers. He’d like to tell their students how to write their own compelling stories. “I support the idea of radical freedom when you’re writing.”

To learn more about the writer-in-residence, or to schedule a visit to your own classroom, please contact HoCoPoLitSo’s High School Liaison Judy Young, at judy_young@hcpss.org, or contact the HoCoPoLitSo offices at info@hocopolitso.org, or by phone, (443)518-4568 during regular business hours. An interview with Folarin will be published in January in the Little Patuxent Review.

2024 Ellen Conroy Kennedy Poetry Prize Application Deadline Extended to October 15

Out of consideration for the busyness at the start of the academic year among many writers, the deadline for application to the 2024 Ellen Conroy Kennedy Poetry Prize has been extended to Tuesday, October 15th, at 11:59 p.m. There is no change in the date of the award, which will be communicated by no later than November 15th. We hope that you will join us in sharing your words.
Held annually in loving memory of HoCoPoLitSo’s co-founder, the 2024 Ellen Conroy Kennedy Poetry Prize is open to all entrants— whether you are a life-time poet or have never written a line before, we invite you to share with us whatever moves you to poetry.
The author of the poem selected for first place will be awarded a cash prize of $500, celebrated on HoCoPoLitSo’s website, social media, and in our annual report— and have their winning poem published in The Little Patuxent Review and right here on HoCoPoLitSo’s front page.
To enter, click here, or visit the contest’s page to learn more or to read past winners’ poems. A reading fee of $10 per entrant supports a panel of fair and balanced judges.
Howard County Youth Poet Laureate Announcement

Following the announcement of Truth Thomas as the inaugural adult poet laureate of Howard County at the Blackbird Poetry Festival this past April, HoCoPoLitSo— together with our partners at Howard County Arts Council and the Office of County Executive Calvin Ball— invites one and all to attend the announcement of the first local young writer to be selected as Howard County Youth Poet Laureate, to be held Monday, September 23rd, from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at Busboys and Poets in Columbia.
The Youth Poet Laureate program, announced in fall of 2023, is an honorary one-year position selecting a young author from the Howard County area, ages 14–21, who demonstrates a passion for poetry and its power to connect our communities through local public readings and participation in civic events. Applications were accepted April to May this year, and reviewed by an independent panel organized by HoCoPoLitSo and made up of local poets and educators Joseph Ross, Naomi Ayala, and Steven Leyva. Acting on the panel’s recommendation, the Youth Poet Laureate will be formally appointed by the County Executive to act as an ambassador for literacy, arts, and youth expression.
This event is free and open to the public, but requires registration to attend: please click here to register.
Wilde Readers of September: Austin S. Camacho & Grace Cavalieri

HoCoPoLitSo welcomes all to the September edition of the Wilde Readings Series, with Austin S. Camacho and Grace Cavalieri, hosted by Ann Bracken. For 2024, please join us at our NEW venue, independent bookstore Queen Takes Book on Tuesday, September 10th at 7 p.m., at 6955 Oakland Mills Rd, Suite E, 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 via this online form.
Below, get to know Austin and Grace!
Who is the person in your life (past or present) that shows up most often in your writing?
Austin: I’ve never used real people in my writing although, I will admit that my fictional private detective Hannibal Jones is at least partly based on my son Adam.
Grace: Husband Ken Flynn.
Where is your favorite place to write?
Austin: In my home office at my big, glass-topped desk. But I can write anyplace as long there’s a chair that gives me good support and it’s quiet enough to hear the tunes in my earbuds.
Grace: In bed or at desk.
Do you have any consistent pre-writing rituals?
Austin: Earbuds in place and a small bowl of snacks to nibble on (usually cashews.)
Grace: silence
Who always gets a first read?
Austin: I always make the offer to my wife but most often it’s members of my critique group.
Grace: I do not share.
What is a book you’ve read more than twice (and would read again)?
Austin: I rarely re-read a book but The Lady in the Lake by Raymond Chandler is one of the few exceptions.
Grace: Beloved.
What is the most memorable reading you have attended?
Austin: A Noir at the Bar in Washington DC which included James Grady, S.A. Cosby and Cheryl Head. Three absolute masters of crime fiction!
Grace: Louise Gluck at the Library of Congress.
• Austin S. Camacho is the author of eight novels about Washington DC-based private eye Hannibal Jones, five in the Stark and O’Brien international thriller series, and the detective novel, Beyond Blue. His short stories have been featured in several anthologies. He is featured in the Edgar-nominated African American Mystery Writers: A Historical and Thematic Study by Frankie Y. Bailey, and helps produce the Creatures, Crimes & Creativity literary conference here in Columbia.
His personal homepage is https://ascamacho.com, and he can also be found on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and Twitter. The C3 con is scheduled to be the weekend of September 13–15 at the Doubletree Hilton Hotel in Columbia.
• Grace Cavalieri was Maryland’s tenth poet laureate (2018–2024). She founded and still produces “the Poet and the Poem” for public radio, now from the Library of Congress, celebrating 47 years on-air in 2024. She holds two Allen Ginsberg Awards; The Paterson Award; the AWP George Garrett, Columbia, Bordighera, AAUW Awards; National Commission on Working Women Award, and the CPB Silver Medal, plus others. She’s an Academy of American Poets Fellow. Her podcasts were sent to the moon.
Grace can be found online at https://gracecavalieri.com, which also hosts an extensive backlog of her writer-to-writer interview podcast, “The Poet and the Poem.”

The 2024 Bauder Lecture, featuring Elizabeth Acevedo & celeste doaks

Coming next month, on September 19th, 2024, HoCoPoLitSo proudly presents in partnership with Howard Community College and the Howard County Library System, the 2024 installment of the Bauder Lecture Series, featuring a keynote from Elizabeth Acevedo, distinguished bestselling author of “Clap When You Land,” followed by an in-depth conversation hosted by celeste doaks, editor, journalist, and author of “Cornrows and Cornfields.”
Join us for this free and public event, in person at the Horowitz Visual and Performing Arts Center on the HCC campus, or online streamed live via Vimeo at this link. The hybrid event will include sign-language interpretation for patrons joining us both in person and via Vimeo. The day’s events begin with a reading, keynote and stage conversation at 12:30 p.m., followed by a brief reception; a second session follows at 6:00 p.m. HoCoPoLitSo offers books from both authors for purchase and signing, to in-person attendees following both presentations.
In Clap When You Land, Camino Rios lives in the Dominican Republic and yearns to go to Columbia University in New York City, where her father works most of the year. Yahaira Rios, who lives in New York City, hasn’t spoken to her dad since the previous summer, when she found out he has another wife in the Dominican Republic. Their lives collide when this man, their dad, dies in an airplane crash with hundreds of other passengers heading to the island.
Elizabeth Acevedo is the New York Times-bestselling author of “The Poet X“, which won the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature, the Michael L. Printz Award, the Pura Belpré Award, the Carnegie medal, the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, and the Walter Award. She is also the author of numerous other titles including “Family Lore“; “With the Fire on High“, which was named a best book of the year by the New York Public Library, NPR, Publishers Weekly, and School Library Journal; and “Clap When You Land“, a Boston Globe–Horn Book Honor book and a Kirkus finalist. Acevedo has been a fellow of Cave Canem, Cantomundo, and a participant in the Callaloo Writer’s Workshops. In 2022, The Poetry Foundation selected Elizabeth Acevedo as the Young People’s Poet Laureate. She is a National Poetry Slam Champion, and resides in Washington, DC with her husband.
celeste doaks is the author of “Cornrows and Cornfields“, and editor of the poetry anthology “Not Without Our Laughter.” Her chapbook, “American Herstory“, was Backbone Press’s first-place winner in 2018. Herstory contains poems—which have been featured at the Whitney Museum of American art, Brooklyn Museum, and most recently the Smithsonian American Art Museum— about the artwork former First Lady Michelle Obama chose for the White House. doaks is a Carolina African American Writers’ Collective (CAAWC) member and has received fellowships and residencies from Yaddo, Atlantic Center of the Arts, Community of Writers Squaw Valley, and the Fine Arts Work Center. doaks is a three-time Pushcart award nominee and a creative writing professor for over a decade. Her poems, reviews, and cultural essays have appeared in multiple US and UK on-line and print publications including “Ms. Magazine”, “The Rumpus”, “The Millions”, “Huffington Post”, “Chicago Quarterly Review”, “Obsidian: Literature and Arts in the African Diaspora”, “The Hopkins Review, Bmore Art Magazine”, “Asheville Poetry Review” and many others.
The annual Bauder Lecture Series is made possible by a generous grant from Dr. Lillian Bauder, a community leader and Columbia resident. Each year, the Howard County Book Connection— a partnership of HoCoPoLitSo and representatives from most departments of Howard Community College— selects one book, whose author is invited to headline the lecture; HoCoPoLitSo provides for a local author to join as a special guest, moderating an on-stage writer-to-writer conversation, and audience Q&A. In addition, up to two Howard Community College students are honored with the presentation of the Don Bauder Awards, for their response to the chosen book in an essay or other creative format. The awards honor the memory of Don Bauder, late husband of Dr. Lillian Bauder and a champion of civil rights and social justice causes.
For more information, or to view recordings of past years’ lectures, please visit Howard Community College’s Bauder Lecture Series event listing, or the home page of the Howard County Book Connection.













