For Immediate Release

Contact:
City Art Director Joel Long: joeltlong@yahoo.com

Zach Haber and Laura Stott to read for Wild Words: a special City Art summer event

Antelope Island State Park

Wednesday June 26th, 7:00—8:00 P.M. with a pre-reading event talk on the Great Salt Lake at 5:30
 
Zack Haber and Laura Stott will read from their works on Monday, June 26th at 7:00 p.m. at the White Rock Campground on Antelope Island as part of Wild Words: a City Art special summer event. This event is free and open to the public.  Please bring fold out chairs and plenty of beverages and snacks.  Following the reading, stick around for the sunset.   Note:  there is an entrance fee for Antelope Island to help support this beautiful, unique state park. 
 
Great Salt Lake Talk: Prior to the reading, join us at 5:30 PM for a discussion of the ecology of the area as well as the environmental and literary history of the Great Salt Lake with Jaimi Butler from the Great Salt Lake Institute and Michael McLane from Utah Humanities. Butler and McLane have been leading daytrips to Antelope Island over the last year in order to help visitors and residents better understand the complexities of the region and to integrate both science and the humanities in an understanding of place.
 
Zack Haber is an organizer of poetics. Some of his work can be found in Datableed Zine, Armed Cell, The Capalino Review, 580 Split, Eleven Eleven, Sierra Nevada Review and other places. His little book, if you want to be one of them playing in the streets…, was published in 2014 by Quiet Lightning and Tiny Splendor. He’s hosted poetry readings and performances through The Other Fabulous Reading Series and other projects in the Bay Area since 2012. He works at Martin Luther King Elementary School in West Oakland. He’s currently writing a book called Horrible Places.
 
Laura Stott is the author of the book of poems, In the Museum of Coming and Going (New Issues Poetry & Prose, 2014). Her poems can also be found or are forthcoming in publications such as Copper Nickel, Bellingham Review, Memorious, Cutbank, Sugarhouse Review, Rock and Sling, Western Humanities Review, and All We Can Hold: Poems of Motherhood. Laura’s summer project is her Blue Nude Migration manuscript, a poetry and painting collaboration with her sister, Katheryn Stott.  She is an Instructor of English at Weber State University and is on the board for Writers@Work. 

The event is free and open to the public.  City Art is sponsored by the Utah Arts Council, the Salt Lake City Arts Council, Zoo, Arts, and Parks, X-mission, and audience donations.  Wild Words is also supported by the Utah Humanities Council. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Joel Long