PEN Reads
The 2021 World Voices Festival: Power to the People
Tuesday 5/18 - Saturday 5/22
World Voices Festival: Power to the People

The PEN World Voices Festival is the premier celebration of international literature in the U.S., and this year's theme is "Power To The People." We'll be joined by distinguished guests like Jhumpa LahiriViet Thanh NguyenJoy HarjoRichard Flanagan, and many more. Check out the full lineup and get your tickets now »

FLASH SALE EXTENDED: For a limited time only, enter the code FLASH21WVF at checkout to receive 25 percent off. PEN America Members get a full 50 percent off. 
Get tickets now or learn more about becoming a PEN Member here ››

Worker Writers School 10th Anniversary Celebration and Book Release

Special Pre-Festival Event: Worker Writers School 10th Anniversary Celebration & Book Release
Saturday 5/1 | 8pm ET / 5pm PT 


On International Workers Day, and in anticipation of the World Voices Festival 2021, we’re celebrating the release of Coronavirus Haiku, an anthology of poetry made in collaboration with Workers Writers School, Kenning Editions, and Pilsen Community Books. Coronavirus Haiku brings together a selection of haikus from frontline workers during the COVID-19 pandemic that “convey moments of protest, solace, wonder, certainty, love, and strife.” Learn more and register here ››

Keeping It Local: Community Reporters Elevating Civil Discourse

Keeping it Local: Community Reporters Elevating Civil Discourse
Monday 5/3 | 8pm ET / 5pm PT

This World Press Freedom Day, we're spotlighting the work of a group of community-based journalists, editors, and publishers that demonstrate the necessity of local news. Join us as panelists Cierra Hinton (Scalawag Magazine), Sarah Rahal (Detroit News), Willoughby Mariano (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution), Trelaine Ito (Office of U.S. Senator Brian Schatz), and moderator Zach Stafford (MSNBC) will discuss their work, the importance of regional journalism, and how to support local news sources. Register here ››

Announcing Breathe into the Ground: 2020 Prison Writing Awards Anthology
Breathe into the Ground: 2020 Prison Writing Awards Anthology

PEN America's third annual Prison Writing Anthology, Breathe into the Ground, released earlier this month, honors path-breaking work—spanning poetry, nonfiction, and drama—from writers on the inside amid the devastating pandemic. 

This year, we include personal letters from the writers about their experience during the pandemic, and we introduce the PEN America/L’Engle-Rahman Award in Mentorship with moving letters from our mentorship pairs. Also included is original artwork accompanying pieces provided by incarcerated artists through the Justice Arts Coalition. Learn more and purchase your copy here ››

From Our Partners
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Call for Submissions: Love Letters in Light 
Love Letters in Light: Call for Submissions

Writers, join a public literary art project this May!

Submit a brief message of love that’s fifteen words or less. If selected, your message will be installed at one of the Library locations throughout Los Angeles County. Submissions due May 6.

Jurists for the contest include Los Angeles writers and poets Victoria Chang, féi hernandez, Yesika Salgado, Jerry Quickley, Imani Tolliver, and more. Learn more ››

The PEN Ten
Leone Ross

The PEN Ten with Leone Ross: "Fiction gives me an opportunity to express emotional truth by creating composite characters—bits of myself, inspired by other people, combined with made-up histories and newspaper headlines—and hoping readers relate deeply.”

Elissa Washuta

The PEN Ten with Elissa Washuta: "I don’t think of stories as being isolated works of intentional narrative construction—I think they are at the core of how we understand the concept of time and how we relate to it.”

The PEN Pod
Freedom to Write Index 2020

On PEN America's Freedom to Write Index: In this special episode of The PEN Pod, we speak with Karin Karlekar, director of Free Expression at Risk Programs, and Veronica Tien, assistant of Free Expression Programs, on the 2020 Freedom to Write Index from PEN America and the implications that these imprisonments have on citizens' freedom of expression. 

Kevin Roose

On Artificial Intelligence and What it Means for Society with Kevin Roose: "We are in charge ultimately of how these technologies are deployed and used and regulated, and we have done that throughout history. We have adapted technology to our needs and our priorities and made it work for us."

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