The Milwaukie Poetry Series
Seventeenth Season!
A Reading by Armin Tolentino
In person at the Ledding Library in Milwaukie and LiveStreamed on the Ledding Library YouTube Channel
Wednesday, July 10, 2024 at 6:00 PM
The Milwaukie Poetry Series is delighted to continue our Seventeenth Season with a reading by Armin Tolentino on Wednesday, July 10, 2024. His reading will be in the Community Room at the Ledding Library of Milwaukie at 10660 SE Main St. In Milwaukie, OR 97222 at 6 PM. It will also be livestreamed on the Ledding Library YouTube Channel. The reading will then be available for viewing on demand on the Ledding Library YouTube Channel
Armin Tolentino is the author of the collection We Meant to Bring It Home Alive (Alternating Current Press) and served as poet laureate for Clark County from 2021-2024. He earned an MFA at Rutgers University-Newark and his writing has appeared in journals including Rigorous, Gobshite Quarterly, Portland Magazine, and Pontoon Poetry. He is a phenomenal clapper, a passable ukulele player, and a bumbling, but enthusiastic, fisherman. More info at www.armintolentino.com.
Come along to the reading in-person. If you’re not able to do that. just register on our website at https://milwaukiepoetryseries.com/ You’ll receive a link for the event.
We hope you are all safe and well in this difficult time of the Covid-19 pandemic. We ask that you maintain social distance and wear masks as necessary.
A huge thanks to the Ledding Library of Milwaukie, Willamette Falls Media Center and to all the volunteers who make this reading possible.
For information or questions about the reading and to join the group list, please contact the Series Coordinator Tom Hogan at 503.819.8367 or tomhogan2@comcast.net. Please forward this email to anyone that you feel might have an interest. Thanks for your support.
Seventeen years enriching Milwaukie one poem at a time
*This project is supported in part by a grant from the Clackamas County Cultural Coalition (managed by the Clackamas County Arts Alliance), and made possible by funding from the Oregon Cultural Trust.