In this edition of Madison Book Beat, host Lisa Malawski talks with Angela Trudell Vasquez, who until recently, was the City of Madison Poet Laureate.
Trudell Vasquez is a poet, writer, performer, and activist. Her most recent chapbook, My People Redux (2022, Finishing Line Press) honors her heritage, contending with generational hardships immigrant families face in making a life in America. The chapbook won first place in the Wisconsin Fellowship of Poets Chapbook Contest for 2022.
Angie began writing seriously when she was seven years old. Her grandmother purchased a diary for her, and this is where she would write her first few lines. Angie tells us that she learned the power of words make her feel whole, well-fed, and warm.
Lisa discusses Angie’s position as the former Madison Poet Laureate, poetry on the Madison Transit buses, Art Night Books, Angela’s day job as Director of Human Resources for End Domestic Abuse Wisconsin, and her work on her memoir.
Additionally, Lisa jokes with Angie about some things she has learned about her, such as her love for Etta James and why she sometimes wears two different colored tights to a poetry reading.
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Madison Poet Cynthia Marie Hoffman On “Exploding Head”
Bending Granite Tells Tales Of Leading Organizational Change
Ann Garvin On Writing Her First Book At Age Fifty
Cynthia Simmons On The “Wrong Kind Of Paper”
Fragile Institutions: Shibani Mahtani And Timothy McLaughlin on the 2019 Protests in Hong Kong
Jacquelyn Mitchard On The Importance of Titles
A conversation with Greg Mickells, retiring director of Madison Public Library
It’s Not Nothing: Essayist Peter Coviello on How Our Favorite Books and Songs Help Us Make Worlds Together
Madison's Shoshauna Shy on bringing poetry to the public
Heather Swan’s Lyrical Language Of Beauty And Devastation
Thomas Pearson, Author Of An Ordinary Future, On Disability And Difference
The Dane County Farmers' Market Cookbook With Food Writer Terese Allen
Prof. Stephen Kantrowitz, ”Citizens Of A Stolen Land: A Ho-Chunk History Of The 19th Century United States.”
The Life And Music Of Al Jarreau
Poet Tacey M. Atsitty on Risking Your Heart and Being Swallowed Up
UW Prof. Stephen Kantrowitz, "Citizens of a Stolen Land: A Ho-Chunk History of the 19th Century United States "
Alison Townsend On The Spirit Of Place
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