PiP 168: Sarah Levine & Adam Gianforcaro

Poets in Pajamas brings you Adam Giannforcaro and Sarah Levine at 7 pm Eastern (4 pm Pacific) on Sunday, April 21st with two 20-minute live readings, immediately followed by a short Q&A. The event will be held over the Poets in Pajamas Zoom and streamed on the Poets in Pajamas Facebook page.

Sarah Levine’s debut poetry collection, Each Knuckle with Sugar won the 2022 Driftwood Press Open Reading Contest. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee, author of two chapbooks, Take Me Home (Finishing Line Press, 2020) and Her Man (New Megaphone Press, 2014) and her poems have appeared in Passages North, Best New Poets anthology, Green Mountains Review among other publications. She holds an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College and has received support from the National Endowment for Humanities and Martha’s Vineyard Institute for Creative Writing. Levine is also a licensed educator and has taught English and Creative Writing for over a decade in a variety of places including Valhalla Correctional Facility and Pioneer Valley Chinese Immersion Charter School. In 2017, Levine won the Barnes and Noble Regional Favorite Teacher Contest and is a 2023- 2024 Teachers for Global Classrooms Fulbright award recipient. She now teaches 7th Grade ELA and 12th Grade AP Literature at Williston Northampton School where she currently holds the Richard C. Gregory Endowed Chair.

Forgotten Thingsthe Paris American

Three Poems Poets & Writers

Adam Gianforcaro is the author of the poetry collection Every Living Day (Thirty West, 2023). His poems can be found in The Offing, Foglifter, Poet Lore, Third Coast, Northwest Review, and elsewhere. He lives in Delaware.

WhistleblowerCouplet Poetry

Every Living Day” The Lumiere Review

This reading series is hosted courtesy of Sundress Publications. The land on which Sundress Publications operates is part of the traditional territory of the Tsalagi peoples (now Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, and United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians) and Tsoyaha peoples (Yuchi, Muscogee Creek).