Poetry Reading

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Date/Time
Date(s) - September 12, 2025
6:00 PM - 7:30 PM

Categories


Friday, September 12
From 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Orangerie Plaza

Partnership –
Free admission—no reservation required!

To mark the end ofMonopolis, American poetAnne Boyerwill be joining us for a public reading of her poems in the beautiful setting of the Jardin des Plantes in Montpellier. In the exhibition hosted at Mécènes du Sud, Anne Boyer presents acollection of poemstitled*Money City As Fuck*, excerpts of which have been co-translated into French by Lou Ferrand, Manon Michèle, and Mona Varichon, accompanied by her resignation letter from her position as poetry editor at *The New York Times Magazine*.

In 2014, Anne Boyer was diagnosed with a highly aggressive form of triple-negative breast cancer, which led her to focus on healthcare policy in an era of economic insecurity. Her book about the illness,*Those Who Do Not Die*, was awarded the highly prestigiousPulitzer Prize. According to critic Chris Strofollino, Boyer’s work “pushes the boundaries of poetry and memoir as we know them.”

Biography of Anne Boyer

Anne Boyer is a North American poet and essayist originally from Kansas who now lives in Scotland. Her works include*A Handbook of Disappointed Fate* and *Garments Against Women*, which Maureen McLane described in *The New York Times* as “a sad, beautiful, and passionate book that captures the political economy of literature and life itself,” as well as*Those Who Do Not Die*, which won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Nonfiction. Until November 16, 2023, Anne Boyer was the poetry editor of The New York Times Magazine, from which she resigned in protest against the publication’s editorial stance, which endorses the U.S. government’s policy of apartheid toward the Palestinian people.

→ Learn more about theMonopolis exhibition
An exhibition running from May 22 to September 13, 2025
Curated by: LouFerrand
Featuring:Anne Boyer, Mira Calix, Thelma Cappello, Anne-Lise Coste (Uruk), Penny Goring, Rafael Moreno, Mona Varichon, and the Women’s History Museum