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PALABRA @ The Cheech

Thu, Feb 05

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The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art

Donato Martinez hosts PALABRA at The Cheech featuring Barbara Fant, Anonymous1 and Ceasar K. Avelar.

PALABRA @ The Cheech
PALABRA @ The Cheech

Time & Location

Feb 05, 2026, 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM

The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art , 3581 Mission Inn Avenue, Riverside, CA 92501, USA

About the event

Donato Martinez hosts PALABRA at The Cheech featuring Barbara Fant, Anonymous1 and Ceasar K. Avelar.



PALABRA


Palabra at The Cheech is a new series that celebrates the wonderful tradition of floricanto, poesía, and the spoken word. Join us for our first open mic poetry series co-hosted by Donato Martinez, featuring poets Barbara Fant (@iambarbarafant), Anonymous 1 (@farmerstephenyorba), and Ceasar K. Avelar (@ceasarkavelar) Doors open at 6pm.


About the host


Donato Martinez (@donatomartinez1) was born in small pueblo, Garcia de la Cadena, Zacatecas, Mexico and immigrated to USA at six years old. He teaches English composition, Literature, and Creative Writing at Santa Ana College. He has also taught classes in Chicano Studies. He has also been a co-coordinator of the Puente Program for 25 years and has presented workshop sessions at both the regional and state level. He has also spoken at many motivational and educational conferences. He hosts and curates many artistic events that feature poetry and music at his campus or in the community. He is also a poet and writes about his barrio upbringing, his community, his culture, and his Chicano identity. He has a self-published collection with three other Inland Empire poets, Tacos de Lengua. His full length collection of poetry, Touch the Sky, was published in 2023 by El Martillo Press. He loves the outdoors and is inspired by music and books and other artistic expressions, and his children, Gabriel and Abigail. He was recently recognized as the Distinguished Faculty of the Year at Santa Ana College in 2024. Find Donato on Instagram.


Barbara Fant


Barbara Fant (@iambarbarafant) has been writing and performing for nearly 20 years. She has competed in 9 National Poetry Slam competitions, is a 7x Grand Slam Champion, and a World Poetry Slam finalist. She is the author of three poetry collections, Paint, Inside Out (2010), Mouths of Garden (2022), and Joy in the Belly of a Riot (2025). Her work has been featured in the Academy of American Poets, Electric Literature, McNeese Review, The Ohio State University Press, Button Poetry, and Def Poetry Jam, amongst others. She has received residencies in Havana, Cuba and Senegal, West Africa. For over 15 years, she had led healing-informed poetry workshops for both youth and adults who are incarcerated, those in community, adults in recovery, and survivors of human trafficking and domestic violence. She is a certified Healing Centered Engagement specialist and holds both an MFA in Poetry and a Master of Theology. She is a member of the Recording Academy’s 2025 New Member Class and a 2025-2026 Poetry Coalition Fellow through the Academy of American Poets. She is the founder of Bloom Life Arts, Bloom Life Foundation Inc., and the Black Women Rise Poetry Collective, and co-founder of The Senghor Project, West African International Artist Residency. Currently, she serves as the Program Director for the Homeboy Art Academy at Homeboy Industries and as a Youth Network Advisor for Cause Communications, both in Los Angeles, California.


Anonymous 1


Anonymous 1 (@farmerstephenyorba) is a farmer, community activist, and poet from Pomona, CA., where he is lead farmer, founder, and Executive Director of Lopez Urban Farm. Recently back from his second trip to Palestine, his book, Falastin Hurra!, captures his experience farming in the occupied West Bank. A1’s work as a farmer/poet seeks to pay homage to the Zapatistas of Chiapas and the Fellahin of Palestine. “For Land and Liberty” is his calling; a pen and pickaxe are his tools. A1 is a graduate of Cal State Fullerton, American University, and Claremont School of Theology where his academic focus was comparative religion, philosophy and theology, with an emphasis on social justice and participatory activism.


Ceasar K. Avelar


Ceasar K. Avelar (@ceasarkavelar) is a Central American poet and is the Writer in Residence of Cafe Con Libros in the Pomona Arts District, where the mission is to bring Literature to the community. Avelar runs and hosts an open mic every second Saturday during the Pomona Art Walk called Obsidian Tongues Open Mic, held at Cafe Con Libros Press in downtown Pomona. He also coordinates writing workshops and a poetry reading with an open mic at Lopez Urban Farms. His collection of poetry, God of The Air Hose and Other Blue-Collar Poems, was published in 2023 by El Martillo Press. His mission is to promote poetry with the youth and bring poetry to public spaces such as the public library and schools. He served as the poet laureate of Pomona from 2023-2024 and is the co-editor of ILL Anthology. He graduated from Cal Poly Pomona with a degree in Sociology.


El Martillo Press


Founded by Matt Sedillo and David A. Romero, El Martillo Press publishes writers whose pens strike the page with clear intent; words with purpose to pry apart assumed norms and to hammer away at injustice. El Martillo Press proactively publishes writers looking to pound the pavement to promote their work and the work of their fellow pressmates. El Martillo is the builder of bridges and the destroyer of walls.


Available now:

The Enemy Sleeps by David A. Romero | El Martillo Press
www.elmartillopress.com
The Enemy Sleeps by David A. Romero | El Martillo Press
Who killed Eliza Vazquez? As a Mexican-American family moves from Boyle Heights, Los Angeles into the sleepy suburban town of Harper, they are met with suspicion. Who is the so-called "Harper Murderer?" Is it Michael Martinez, a construction supervisor with a quick temper and an anti-immigrant bias, Robert Parsons, a known racist with a number of secrets kept from his family and community, or Kenton Weaver, a disgraced former teacher who is haunted by the ghost of one of his former students? Grievances both new and old emerge as members of the Martinez family, the Parsons family, and Weaver become tangled in a disastrous chain of events before a shocking conclusion. Original cover art by Arthur Carrillo. "Weaving complex characters, supernatural elements, murder, racism, and suburban melodrama, The Enemy Sleeps is a rousing, ghastly debut novel." —Pedro Iniguez, Bram Stoker Award winner and author of Fever Dreams of a Parasite "Who knew the East San Gabriel Valley needed a noir story to excavate its darkness, humanity and complexity? In his debut novel, The Enemy Sleeps, David A. Romero explores how the ones closest to us may be the people we need to fear the most." —Naomi Hirahara, the Mary Higgins Clark Award-winning author of Clark and Division and Evergreen "The Enemy Sleeps is a searing blast of genuine, straight-shooting prose from a writer whose fearless pen stakes its claim in L.A.'s underground and scrawls truth across the face of this country's tired suburban pop melodramas. From the same tierra that produced hard-hitting storytellers like John Rechy, Luis J. Rodriguez, Fante, and Bukowski." —Tim Z. Hernandez, author of They Call You Back: A Lost History, A Search, A Memoir "This surprising debut novel by spoken word artist, poet, editor, and publisher, David A. Romero, is a complex layered unfolding of interwoven portraits presenting a slice of life in the USA today. Speaking to class, culture, ethnicity, sexuality, religion, morality, friendship y famila, power, and the power of the dead, Romero does to the suburbs of Southern California what Sherwood Anderson did to Winesburg, Ohio. Nothing is as it seems. To reduce The Enemy Sleeps to a psychological thriller would be an injustice to its many nuances. Simply haunting." —Lorna Dee Cervantes, author of Emplumada, winner of the American Book Award and From the Cables of Genocide: Poems on Love and Hunger, winner of the Latino Literature Prize and the Paterson Poetry Prize “Watch out, DJ Waldie: we just might have a new bard of Los Angeles.” —Gustavo Arellano, LA Times columnist and author of Ask a Mexican "Like a Chicanx American Psycho for the Trump era, The Enemy Sleeps undertakes a disturbing but page-turning rumination on the sociopathies of whiteness and settler colonialism at the core of all urban development. Known for his slam poetry, Romero brings the music and weight of his words to the whodunnit form, skillfully guiding his storytelling so that in the end we’re all forced to disrupt the violence we may not have caused, but which we all inherit just by living our lives on stolen lands." —Marisol Cortez, author of Luz at Midnight (FlowerSong Press, 2020), Winner of the 2021 Sergio Troncoso Award for Best First Book of Fiction, and The Bird Church (Finishing Line Press, 2025) "David A. Romero’s The Enemy Sleeps is a haunting, lyrical, and powerfully layered novel that confronts the myths of progress, community, and the American dream. With razor-sharp prose and cinematic detail, Romero renders a California suburb where gentrification collides with ghosts of the past—both literal and figurative. The Enemy Sleeps is a vital and beautifully unsettling portrait of a place that could be anywhere—and of people you’ll never forget." —Claudia D. Hernández-Warwas, author of If I Lose My Mind (FlowerSong Press, 2025) "David A. Romero brings lyrical depth and haunting insight in his debut novel, The Enemy Sleeps. His characters breathe, hurt, and hope on the page. A breakthrough achievement by one of our contemporary poets crossing genres with brilliance." —Edward Vidaurre, author of El Viejo (El Martillo Press, 2025) and publisher of FlowerSong Press "Romero's mesmerizing debut is a terrific, well-paced read, with a gritty realism reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy, that will leave you uncomfortable as you delve into the dark secrets of a quiet town rocked by racial tensions and murders." —Natalie Sierra, 3rd Poet Laureate of Pomona, author of the novels Charlie Forever and Ever and Beyond the Grace of God David A. Romero is a Mexican-American spoken word artist from Diamond Bar, CA. He is the co-founder and editor-in-chief of El Martillo Press. Romero is the author of My Name Is Romero (FlowerSong Press, 2020) and Diamond Bars 2 (Moon Tide Press, 2024). Romero has received honorariums from nearly a hundred colleges and universities in thirty-four different states in the USA and has also performed live in Mexico, Italy, and France. His poem, "You Were Born a Tree" was sent to the Moon by NASA in 2025 as part of the Lunar Codex. Romero's work has been published in literary magazines and anthologies in the United States, Mexico, England, Cuba, Scotland, Canada, and Hungary. Romero has opened for Latin Grammy winning bands Ozomatli and La Santa Cecilia. Romero's work has been published in anthologies alongside poets laureate Joy Harjo, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Luis J. Rodriguez, Jack Hirschman, and Tongo Eisen-Martin. Romero has won the Uptown Slam at the historic Green Mill in Chicago; the birthplace of slam poetry. Art Carrillo is a photorealist painter from Los Angeles. He received his bachelor's degree in graphic design from the Art Institute of California-Hollywood in 2011. Art's fire for painting reignited while in school and he has never looked back. He focused on painting instead of graphic design and has been exhibiting since 2012. Art paints about everything. “Sticking to one subject is boring. There is just so much to paint about. I speak with my paintings and there is a lot to say.” Art paints about everything from burritos and Mexican piggy banks to Mexican American ICE agents manhandling people from Mexican American communities. “I hope to give people strength and courage through my artwork.” artcart9.com


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