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DESCRIPTION:OK, I say this every month, but THIS time, Writers With Drinks really has 
 an *all-star lineup*. Check it out!\n\nWhen: Saturday, Feb. 11 from 7:30 PM 
 to 9:30 PM, doors open 6:30 PM\nWhat: WRITERS WITH DRINKS!\nWho: Tom 
 Tomorrow, Sarah Schulman, Sean Carroll, Jennifer Ouellette, Tongo 
 Eisen-Martin, and Alia Volz!\nHow much: $5 to $20, all proceeds benefit the 
 Center for Sex & Culture\nWhere: The Make Out Room, 3225 22nd. St., San 
 Francisco, CA\n\nAbout the readers/performers:\n\nTom Tomorrow is the 
 creator of the weekly political cartoon, This Modern World, which appears 
 in approximately 80 newspapers across the U.S., and on websites such as 
 Daily Kos, Truthout and Credo. His work has appeared in publications 
 including The New York Times, The New Yorker, Spin, Mother Jones, Esquire, 
 The Economist, The Nation, U.S. News and World Report, and The American 
 Prospect, and has been featured on Countdown with Keith Olbermann. In 2011, 
 he ended a 16 year run at Salon to create and edit a new comics section at 
 Daily Kos. He has published nine anthologies of his work: Greetings From 
 This Modern World, Tune in Tomorrow, The Wrath of Sparky, Penguin Soup for 
 the Soul, When Penguins Attack, The Great Big Book of Tomorrow, Hell in a 
 Handbasket, The Future’s So Bright I Can’t Bear to Look, and Too Much 
 Crazy. He is also the author of a book for children, The Very Silly Mayor. 
 He was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 2015. He was also the winner of the 
 2013 Herblock award, a 2015 Society of Illustrators Silver Medal; the first 
 place AAN award for cartooning in 2015, and the Robert F. Kennedy Award for 
 Excellence in Journalism in 1998 and in 2003.\n\nSarah Schulman's latest 
 book is Conflict is Not Abuse: Overstating Harm, Community Responsibility 
 and the Duty of Repair. Her recent novel The Cosmopolitans was picked as 
 one of the "Best Books of 2016" by Publishers' Weekly. Her other 
 non-fiction publications include Israel/Palestine and the Queer 
 International, The Gentrification of the Mind: Witness to a Lost 
 Imagination, Ties That Bind: Familial Homophobia and Its Consequences, 
 Stagestruck: Theater, AIDS and the Marketing of Gay America, and My 
 American History: Lesbian and Gay Life During the Reagan/Bush Years. Her 
 novels include The Mere Future, The Child, Shimmer, Empathy, Rat Bohemia, 
 People In Trouble, After Delores, Girls Visions and Everything, and The 
 Sophie Horowitz Story. Her plays include Carson McCullers, Manic Flight 
 Reaction, and the theatrical adaptation of Isaac Singer's Enemies: A Love 
 Story. Her screenplays include The Owls (co-written with director Cheryl 
 Dunye), Mommy is Coming (co-written with director Cheryl Dunye), and Jason 
 and Shirley. She's a co-producer of the documentary United in Anger: A 
 History of ACT UP. Her essays have appeared in The New York Times, The 
 Nation, and Interview. She has won a Guggenheim Fellowship in 
 Playwrighting, a Fullbright in Judaic Studies, two American Library 
 Association Book Awards, and is the 2009 recipient of the Kessler Prize for 
 sustained contribution to LGBT studies. Sarah is Distinguished Professor at 
 the City University of New York, College of State Island, and a Fellow of 
 the New York Institute for the Humanities at New York University.\n\nSean 
 Carroll is a theoretical physicist at the California Institute of 
 Technology. He's the author of the books The Particle at the End of the 
 Universe, From Eternity to Here: The Quest for the Ultimate Theory of Time, 
 and Spacetime and Geometry: An Introduction to General Relativity. He has 
 been awarded prizes and fellowships by the National Science Foundation, 
 NASA, the Sloan Foundation, the Packard Foundation, the American Physical 
 Society, the American Institute of Physics, and the Royal Society of 
 London. Carroll has appeared on TV shows such as The Colbert Report, PBS's 
 NOVA, and Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman, and frequently serves 
 as a science consultant for film and television.\n\nJennifer Ouellette is 
 the author of four popular science books for the general public: Me, Myself 
 and Why: Searching for the Science of Self, The Calculus Diaries: How Math 
 Can Help You Lose Weight, Win in Vegas, and Survive a Zombie Apocalypse, 
 The Physics of the Buffyverse, and Black Bodies and Quantum Cats: Tales 
 from the Annals of Physics. She's formerly the science editor at Gizmodo, 
 and also edited The Best Online Science Writing 2012. Jennifer's work has 
 appeared in the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, New York Times Book 
 Review, Slate, Smithsonian, Mental Floss, Pacific Standard, Discover, 
 Salon, Nature, BOOM, Physics Today, Symmetry, Physics World, and New 
 Scientist, among other venues. She maintains a personal science-and-culture 
 blog called Cocktail Party Physics, and has also written for Quanta, 
 Discovery News (2008-2012), NOVA's Nature of Reality blog, and Nautilus' 
 Facts So Romantic blog. Jennifer was the founding director of the Science & 
 Entertainment Exchange. She was also a Journalist in Residence at the Kavli 
 Institute of Theoretical Physics at the University of California, Santa 
 Barbara. She's also been an instructor at the Santa Fe Science Writing 
 Workshop, and was a journalist in residence at the University of Wisconsin, 
 Madison's journalism school.\n\nOriginally from San Francisco, Tongo 
 Eisen-Martin is a movement worker and educator who has organized against 
 mass incarceration and extra-judicial killing of Black people throughout 
 the United States. He has taught in detention centers from New York's 
 Rikers Island to California county jails. He designed curricula for 
 oppressed people’s education projects from San Francisco to South Africa. 
 His latest curriculum on extrajudicial killing of Black people, We Charge 
 Genocide Again, has been used as an educational and organizing tool 
 throughout the country. He is also a revolutionary poet who uses his craft 
 to create liberated territory wherever he performs and teaches. His latest 
 book of poems is titled, "Someone's Dead Already" was nominated for a 
 California Book Award. His next book titled "Heaven Is All Goodbyes" is 
 being published in the City Lights Pocket Poets Series.\n\nAlia Volz hosted 
 and produced the landmark reading series Literary Death Match – SF, from 
 2010-12. She is also an LDM champion; her story “Near Unison” brought 
 home the crown from Episode 42. She has been profiled in Dark Sky Magazine, 
 and SF Weekly, and has been a guest on the television show Lady Brain. San 
 Francisco’s Litquake Festival has recruited her to curate and/or host 
 several high-profile events—sometimes in disguise; for the good of 
 literature, she’s taken the stage as Anaïs Nin, Louise Brooks, and even 
 WWF World Champion Slick Ric Flair. In 2014, Alia placed second at The 
 MOTH’s San Francisco GrandSLAM Championship. She also received a 2014 
 award from SF Weekly for “Best San Francisco Writer Without a Book.” To 
 rectify that situation, she has recently completed her first novel, HOOF, a 
 contemporary western set in urban San Francisco. Alia’s stories and 
 essays are found in Tin House, The New York Times, Threepenny Review 
 (forthcoming), New England Review (forthcoming), Utne Reader, ZYZZYVA, 
 Huizache, The Rumpus, Narratively, Nerve, Literary Orphans, The Normal 
 School, Covered w/ Fur, Dark Sky Magazine, Defenestration, The Writing 
 Disorder’s “Best Nonfiction of 2012” anthology, and 
 elsewhere.\n\nAbout Writers With Drinks:\n\nWriters With Drinks has won 
 numerous "Best ofs" from local newspapers, and has been mentioned in 7x7, 
 Spin Magazine and one of Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City novels. The 
 spoken word "variety show" mixes genres to raise money for local causes. 
 The award-winning show includes poetry, stand-up comedy, science fiction, 
 fantasy, romance, mystery, literary fiction, erotica, memoir, zines and 
 blogs in a freewheeling format.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/02/08/18796276.php
SUMMARY:Writers With Drinks featuring Tom Tomorrow
LOCATION:The Make Out Room, 3225 22nd Street
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/02/08/18796276.php
DTSTART:20170212T033000Z
DTEND:20170212T053000Z
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