for First Thursday Poetry at the GoggleWorks on August 6th at 6 pm.
She will be reading selections from her new project "the labors of our fingertips:
poems from manufacturing history in Berks County."
First Floor Cafe, 201 Washington Street, Reading
Open Mic
Liz Stanley
Berks Bards
Biography
Jennifer Hetrick considers herself a
language thrower of sorts. Having graduated from Clarion University with
a bachelor of arts degree in philosophy and a minor in English writing,
she contributes to Berks County
Living Magazine, The Reading Eagle, and the Copper Development
Association’s Copper in the Arts and other publications. And she
occasionally does farm blogging for Weaver’s Orchard and Wolff's Apple
House.
In the past, she wrote for Bucks Life
Magazine, The Merchandiser, Lancaster Farming, Berks-Mont Newspapers,
the Limerick-Royersford-Spring City and Perkiomen Valley Patch sites,
growindie.com, phillyecocity.com,
the Boyertown Bulletin, and MidAtlantic Farm Credit's Leader.
She has also interviewed poets from Israel and Turkey as well as from different parts of the U.S.
Hetrick is currently managing a three-year poetry project called the labors of our fingertips: poems from manufacturing history in berks county.
The project involves interviewing
older seniors who worked in Berks County’s factories and mills, creating
poems from their memories, and publishing three volumes of books with
the content. Each of the books will include 25 poems. The first book
will be released through Foothills Publishing
in Kanona, New York in August 2015. The project is funded in part by
grants from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Berks Arts
Council.
In 2010, she
started her own positive-only local news publication known as News, Not
Blues, based out of Boyertown, Berks County. Throughout each year, she
donates contemporary poetry books
to the Boyertown Community Library through News, Not Blues, including
books by Berks County poets. Invited to the first annual writers'
festival at the Chautauqua Institution through a scholarship she
received in 2004, she workshopped with Syracuse University's
respected poet Bruce Smith. In 2011, she had a creative nonfiction essay
about her mother published in the book Western Pennsylvania Reflections: Stories from the Alleghenies to Lake Erie through
a call for submissions from at the University of Pennsylvania.
She and good friend fellow poet Frank Wolfe of Royersford, Montgomery
County used to attend and read at Otherwise Poetry, a monthly poetry
reading at the Towne Book Center & Cafe in Collegeville, sponsored
by The Mad Poets Society based in Media, Delaware County.
She has studied under Berks County’s third poet laureate, Heather
Thomas, and followed its fourth poet laureate, Craig Czury, on his
Marcellus Shale poetry project in Northeastern Pennsylvania in 2012. She
plans to teach poetry classes as well as river poems
workshops and poetry workshops for seniors at retirement homes around
the region in the future. Her blog, The Garden Harlot, easily explains
her penchant for hiking and photographing scenes of plants from
unexpected viewpoints. A lot of her freelance writing
involves putting positives in front of people in a way which the world
needs more than it will ever need or benefit from what's negative.
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