Katie Manning

Katie Manning (Poetry) | San Diego, CA

Booking Fee:

Negotiable

Will Travel:

Anywhere

Contact:

KatMannat_sign_13x20gmail.com

Website:

http://www.katiemanningpoet.com/

Katie Manning is the author of three poetry chapbooks, including The Gospel of the Bleeding Woman. She has received The Nassau Review Author Award for Poetry, and her writing has been published in Fairy Tale Review, New Letters, Poet Lore, So to Speak, and elsewhere. She is the founding Editor-in-Chief of Whale Road Review, and she is an Assistant Professor of Writing at Point Loma Nazarene University in San Diego.

Books

The Gospel of the Bleeding Woman (Point Loma Press, 2013)
The Gospel of the Bleeding Woman (Point Loma Press, 2013)

Chapbooks

A Door with a Voice (Mourning House / Agape Editions, 2016)
A Door with a Voice (Mourning House / Agape Editions, 2016)
Tea With Ezra (Boneset Books, 2013). Limited edition.
Tea With Ezra (Boneset Books, 2013). Limited edition.
I Awake in My Womb (Yellow Flag Press, 2013)
I Awake in My Womb (Yellow Flag Press, 2013), Limited edition.

Press & Reviews

“High energy, compressed, unashamed, daring and delightfully inventive, Katie Manning’s Gospel takes on an old ritually enforced belief in woman’s blood as unclean, unholy. Brief biblical reference to the healing of a nameless bleeding woman becomes Nura (“light”), resurrected through the miracle of text becoming memory in a living woman, contemporary in her fearless candor, her ironies, her sense that we can still be healed by a love that we do not pretend to understand.”
—Eleanor Wilner, author of Tourist in Hell and The Girl with Bees in Her Hair

“With precision and vigor, Katie Manning steps into biblical history to retrieve the story of the woman with an issue of blood. What great conjecture. What a solid collection of varying form and tone woven with a strong voice. Manning’s voice is so accurate, it sounds like it’s straight from the woman’s mouth.”
—Diane Glancy, author of It Was Then and Stories of the Driven World

“Katie Manning’s The Gospel of the Bleeding Woman is technically brilliant and the poems coalesce as more than the sum of their parts. The “modern” section is risky, but the risk pays off—I feel a spiritual joy and literary destiny here.”
—Rick Hill, author of No Hands and We’re All From Somewhere Else


Additional Commentary

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