Brad Richard
Brad Richard is the author of Habitations, Butcher’s Sugar, and Parasite Kingdom. His 2022 chapbook, In Place, was chosen for the Robin Becker Series from Seven Kitchens Press. He has taught creative writing at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts, The Willow School (whose creative writing program he founded and directed), Louisiana State University, Tulane University, and for the Kenyon Review summer workshops. The series editor of the Hilary Tham Capital Collection from The Word Works, he lives, writes, and gardens in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Schedule
9:00 am to 10:00 am
Outside Museum, West Tent
The Louisiana Poet Laureate Presents Louisiana Poets, Volume 1
Ralph Adamo, All Fall Down: Poems 2020-2024
Catharine Savage Brosman, Metates and Other Poems
Elizabeth Burk, Unmoored: Poems
David Middleton, Time Will Tell: Collected Poems
Brad Richard, Turned Earth: Poems and Motion Studies: Second Edition
Ed Ruzicka, In the Wind: Poems
with Gina Ferrara
10:15 am to 11:00 am
Cavalier House Books Tent
Book Signing
11:15 am to Noon
Outside Museum, West Tent
Hurricanes Katrina & Rita at 20: An Anthology of Louisiana Poetry with Art
Featuring contributors Malaika Favorite, J. Bruce Fuller, Merrill Guillory, Patrice Melnick, Benjamin Morris, Michelle (M.A.) Nicholson, Valentine Pierce, Karisma Price, and Brad Richard, with editors Mona Lisa Saloy and John Warner Smith
12:15 pm to 1:00 pm
Cavalier House Books Tent
Book Signing
Turned Earth: Poems
Turned Earth, the fifth collection of poems by Brad Richard, offers a portrait of the artist as a grieving son who is also a husband, teacher, gardener, and attentive witness to our precarious world. Navigating life after his mother’s death, the speaker uses memory and imagination to understand, as one poem’s title declares, “How I Came to This.” Tender and trenchant, elegiac yet often livened by humor, Richard’s poems affirm the sustaining power of hope and love.
Motion Studies: Second Edition with New Poems and Commentary
Poetry. Winner of the Washington Prize. Second edition, with foreword by Skye Jackson and new poems plus an afterword by the author.
In poems that relive the New Orleans catastrophe of Katrina, a century of losses incurred by the competing forces of weather, racial injustice, and complex family dynamics, Brad Richard conjures a unique journey through the human soul put to its greatest tests. Nicole Colley calls it "a book about vision, about what it truly means to see." And Mathew Dickman assures us that "From the broken spaces of our cities, bodies, and hearts, Brad Richard has come to mend."
Says Major Jackson: "The poems in Motion Studies steady our ears and ignite our imagination on the dazzling workings of language and verbal song. With superb intellect, Brad Richard draws a wondrous and discursive line between history and art, and along the way, brightens our bodies and hearts, as he says in one poem, to the fullness of each other and our cultural inheritances."
Hurricanes Katrina & Rita at 20: An Anthology of Louisiana Poetry with Art
The year 2025 marks the 20th anniversary of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Two esteemed, award-winning former Poet Laureates of Louisiana, one a native of New Orleans, Mona Lisa Saloy, and the other a native of Lake Charles, John Warner Smith, worked together to commemorate those historic events by creating a forum for published and emerging poets as well as nine artists of Louisiana to share art and poems of their experiences, feelings, and reflections of Katrina and Rita as seen through their eyes and the lives that the disasters impacted.
"Hurricanes, Katrina and Rita at 20 is jazz funeral second line through and through. The poems rise like white handkerchiefs of hope waving over the heads and hearts of witnesses who know grief and loss and terror and how to dance the dance of passing through. Kudos to Saloy and Smith for bringing us these songs of rupture and repair."--Darrell Bourque, Louisiana Poet Laureate, 2007-2011
"If you’ve lived through them, storms like Katrina and Rita draw a hard line in your history, like BC and AD, between the before and the after times. For some, the in-between time before life regains normalcy takes hours, for some whole decades, and each moment on that hard line has countless voices. Those voices are exactly what Hurricanes Katrina and Rita at 20 brings to light. Curated by two of the most accomplished poets Louisiana has produced, Poet Laureates Mona Lisa Saloy and John Warner Smith, and filled with some of the Gulf South’s finest voices, this anthology takes us from the levees to the backwaters, into cities and beyond, chronicling pain and loss and spirit and hope through all the voices that helped us push through that hard line into our future."--Jack B. Bedell, author of Ghost Forest, Louisiana Poet Laureate 2017-2019