Sweet Pea Project
Presents Coffee & Conversation with Catherine Bayly
Sweet Pea Project invites
bereaved parents of our community to join them in the Loft Ballroom at downtown
Lancaster's Mulberry Art Studios on Friday, March 8th, 2013 from 6:30pm
until 8pm for an evening with poet and professor, Catherine
Bayly. Catherine, a bereaved mother herself, will speak about
her experience and her writing. Guests will have the opportunity to
participate in a writing workshop, or they may choose to simply enjoy coffee
and dessert.
This event is free to all
bereaved individuals in our community. As always, donations are greatly
appreciated so that we may continue to offer serve our community's grieving
families. Seating is limited and registration
is required. Reserve your spot online at
www.sweetpeaproject.org/coffee. Registration will remain open until Feb 15, as long as space is available.
Catherine Bayly studied
English Literature and Creative Writing at University of Maryland, College
Park. She is currently an adjunct professor at that same
university. In addition to teaching English, Catherine is a journal
editor and runs occasional bereavement writing workshops at Howard County
General Hospital in Columbia, MD.
Catherine began writing
poetry in earnest after her daughter's death in 2005. Since losing
Sophie, Catherine has had two healthy daughters and completed graduate
school. Grieving, raising children, and theorizing on literature
simultaneously was most fascinating in its blend of the very real and the very
abstract. So, although much brilliant, if distant, theorizing is done in
academia, Catherine's greatest scholarly interest lies in the intersection of
literature and deep feeling--and she refuses to see the two as ever disconnected.
Catherine's work can be
found in Exhale magazine, as well as moonlighting on Youtube and The
Lifespan of Butterflies. Her poems are currently under review at
The Little Patuxent Review, and she is working on a collection of poems which
traces the connected, relentless processes of grief and craft.
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