Chicago Review 56:4 features Echolalia in Mrs. Piper, a new poem sequence by Susan Howe; a biographical essay on Ian Hamilton Finlay; and a photo gallery of sculptors with their work by photographer John McMahon.
This issue of Chicago Review also includes
POETRY by Tim Erickson, Karen Lepri, Cole Swensen, Brian Teare, and Kirsten Kaschock
FICTION by Breyten Breytenbach and Nancy Fumero
Jennifer Scappettone's TRANSLATIONS of Amelia Rosselli's poems and essay, "Metrical Spaces"
REVIEWS:
Ange Mlinko on Andrea Brady
Justin Parks on Donna Stonecipher
Keith Tuma on Linh Dinh
Holly Dupej on Steve Tomasula
Joel Calahan on Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo
NOTES on Paddy Galvin by David Lloyd, and Andrea Zanzotto by Peter Waterhouse and Patrick Barron
& COVER ART by John McMahon
CHICAGO REVIEW presents
TWO AUTUMN READINGS
Tom Pickard
Friday, October 5, 2012
5:00 PM
Taft House Reading Room
6016 Ingleside Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637
Taft House is located on the corner of 60th St and Ingleside Avenue, on the south side of the Midway Plaisance. Street parking is available along the Midway Plaisance. Parking map located here.

Tom Pickard lives in the North Pennine hills of the English-Scottish Border. His last three books of poetry, Hole in the Wall (New and Selected), The Dark Months of May, and Ballad of Jamie Allan were all published by Flood Editions. Ballad of Jamie Allan was a finalist in the National Book Critics Circle Awards. His part-memoir, More Pricks Than Prizes, was published by Pressed Wafer in 2010.

Tom Raworth
Friday, October 12, 2012
6:00 PM
Performance Penthouse, 9th Floor
Logan Center for the Arts
915 East 60th Street, Chicago, IL 60637
The Logan Center for the Arts is located on 60th St between Drexel Ave and Ingleside Avenue, on the south side of the Midway Plaisance. Street parking is available along the Midway Plaisance. Parking map located here.
This reading is part of the Logan Launch Festival, a three-day event celebrating the opening of the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts at the University of Chicago. Find more information about other events at the Festival here.

Tom Raworth was born in London in 1938. Since leaving school at 16 he has worked; occasionally taught; printed and published poetry by others in both magazines and books; lived in England, the United States and Mexico; had more than 40 books of his own (poetry and prose) published; been translated into many languages; exhibited his graphic work worldwide; collaborated with musicians, visual artists and other writers; and has given readings in more than twenty countries (most recently China and Mexico). Carcanet published his Collected Poems in 2003, and plan a Selected Poems for his 75th birthday next year. He wonders where it all went wrong and what he'll do when he grows up.
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