“Author, poet, tarot legend, and organizer Michelle Tea has long been known as a fairy godmother of the millennial queer set, and in this blazing new memoir, she approaches the subject of parenthood (and all the poking, prodding, jaw-dropping expense, and nosy questions that it can entail for LGBTQ+ parents) with her signature verve.” — Vogue

Michelle Tea is the author of over a dozen books of memoir, fiction, poetry and children’s lit — including her latest, Knocking Myself Up. Her memoir Valencia won the Lambda Literary Award for Best Lesbian Fiction, even though it was obviously all true. It was also made into a sprawling, feature-length art film using nearly 20 different directors and different Michelles. Her recent-ish essay collection, Against Memoir, was awarded the PEN/America Diamonstein-Speilvogel Award for the Art of the Essay. She is also the recipient of the legendary Rona Jaffe Awards, and a 2021 Guggenheim Fellow.

In addition to her writing, Michelle has instigated many cultural interventions aimed at increasing access and visibility for queer writers and artists. She is the founder of RADAR Productions, the Bay Area literary non-profit, and worked as Executive Director for over a decade, running a monthly reading and conversation series at the San Francisco Public Library, organizing a free, queer literary retreat in the Yucatan, operating an annual poetry chapbook contest, and many other events. Michelle’s last move as ED was to conceptualize Drag Queen Story Hour, the kid’s lit event that has since become a global sensation. She is the co-founder of the international performance tour Sister Spit, and founding editor-at-large for the online parenting zine Mutha.

Tea created and edited the Sister Spit Books imprint at City Lights Publishers, putting out work such as Lennelle Moise’s PEN-award winning Haiti Glass, and the best seller  Rad American Women A-Z. She went on to establish the Amethyst Editions series at The Feminist Press, an imprint which continues to bring out award-winning work by  queer voices.

Michelle produces and hosts the mystical Spotify podcast Your Magic, and fronts a weekly live tarot show on Spotify Live. Her 30-plus years as a tarot reader is encapsulated in her popular how-to book, Modern Tarot.

Michelle's Featured Titles

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A Seat at the (Kid's) Table

With the legalization of gay marriage and the increased accessibility of artificial reproductive technologies, increasing numbers of LGBTQ individuals are finding their way towards family-making. In this talk, I share my experience – funny and frustrating, inspiring and thought-provoking – of being both a queer mom and the founder of Drag Queen Story Hour. I’ll discuss why LGBTQ+ family has long been such an important issue in our culture, and share possible paths forward for queers and allies.

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All Good Witches

Witches get a bad rap. Yet, in spite of a smear campaign that has spanned millenia, bringing us everything from the ghastly Salem Witch Trials to the Wicked Witch of the East, the practice – a non-hierarchical spiritual practice that honors nature and the unknown – has been having a major renaissance, in particular among women, young people and LGBTQ+ folks. What does it all mean? In this talk I will take us back to the beginning – a global history of earth-based magic – ’til today, when a popular interest in self-care has led to a willingness to embrace once-spooky practices such as tarot, astrology, crystals and energy work. With humor, pop culture and wild history, this talk aims to reveal reveal the contemporary interest in folk magic to be not a passing trent but the reclaiming of an enduring human tradition.

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Welcome To Your Big Queer Lifethrough

LGBTQ+ youth today are entering a world unlike any their predessors have seen, a world simultaneously rife with positive media representation and political gains, but also with shocking backlash and attempts to roll back progress. In this talk I use my own experience coming of age as a queer person to share what I have learned about being a good queer citizen; using humor, I give tips and tricks for navigating challenges specific to queer life and individuals, and I use examples from LGBTQ+ history to dazzle and inspire. A pep talk disguised as a stand-up set, the real point of this talk is to help queer young people know they are not alone – not now, and not through history – and that theur queerness is a gift, both to them and to our world.

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I Went to the Zine Revolution and All I Got Was This Lousy Self-Confidence

Finding Self-Confidence Through Personal Expression

Although ‘zines – self-published magazines filled with whatever the creator’s heart desires – have mostly given way to more high-tech modes of personal expression, they remain a touchstone of youthful self-expression and are having a renaissance. In this talk I share my personal experience discovering and creating zines in my early 20s, and talk about how the self-confidence and creative inspiration I found in both the form and the DIY community paved the way for the literary career I have today. A motivational speech disguised as a cultural history lesson, the real point of this talk is to help young people embrace their unique voices, and inspire them to work creatively to have those voices heard. This could include an actual zine-making workshop.

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I Was A Teenage Alcoholic | Sober. Curious.

We don’t know why some individuals can dabble, explore and emerge unscathed, and why others find themselves in over their head – the grip that alcohol and drugs get on some of us is confounding, mysterious, heartbreaking. I know, because I’ve been there. In this talk I share the wisdom and experience of both my twenty-five years of sobriety and my teenage years, which were spent finding confidence and community around drinking. Drinking means different things in different subcultures, and the way creativity, celebration, rebellion and outsider-ness has been codified by the myth of alcohol is a powerful one. I challenge these myths while affirming why young people feel the need to chemically check-out or augment their personality in the first place. Down-to-earth and full of humor, this talk aims to give young people real information about the psychology and the effects of alcohol and drugs as well as usable tools for self-care.

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It's All About You

Although many fiction writers load their novels with people, places and things they actually experienced, memoir writers bravely put their own life in the front and center of their work, owning the truth of their story. In this workshop I draw from thirty years of experience wrestling with the fears, doubts and vulnerability native to the genre, and work with students on how to work with the various challenges unique to personal narrative. In addition to the tricky issues of privacy and revelation, I will also share what I have learned to be the best craft practices for creating a memoir that draws a reader into your world as only you can. This can be a one-day workshop, lasting 2-5 hours (with break), as well as a multi-day workshop with sessions being about two hours long. Curriculum that is working with memoir, personal essay, critical writing, diary traditions and even thinly-veiled fictions could be easily connected to this workshop.

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Raising Misfits

Most parents presume that our offspring will be, more or less, like us – that they will check many of the same boxes, align with our tastes and values, want what we want. In this talk I lean into my experience as both a misfit daughter and the misfit mother of an exceptionally ‘normal’ child to talk about what happens when parent and child seem to come from parallel universes. Coming from the tradition of Non-Violent parenting, I will weave story, anecdote and theory to affirm the misfit – and the rule-follower – in all of us, and show how supporting individuality is the foundation for a healthy parent-child relationship, all done with humor and humility.

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CBS Mornings | Author Michelle Tea on new book, “Knocking Myself Up”

NYLON | Welcome To ‘Witch City’ With Michelle Tea

PEN America | Michelle Tea Wins the 2019 PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award

Podcast | Your Magic with Michelle Tea

Honors, Awards & Recognition

Loghaven Artist Residency Fellow, 2022
Guggenheim Fellow, 2021
PEN/America Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay, 2019
California Library Association Zoia Horn Intellectual Freedom Award, 2019
San Francisco Arts Commission Individual Artists Commission, 2007-2013
Center for Cultural Innovation, 2012
The Creative Work Fund; 2005, 2009, 2012
CEC Artslink, 2010
The Jim Duggins Outstanding Mid-Career Novelists Award, 2008
23rd Zale Writer-in-Residence; Tulane University, 2008
The James Irvine Foundation, 2007
The Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award, 1999
San Francisco Bay Guardian Outstanding Local Discovery Award, Literature; 2000
Lambda Literary Awards; Best Lesbian Fiction; 2001
The San Francisco Bay Guardian Best Local Writer, 2006
San Francisco Weekly Best Local Writer, 2006
Cable Car Award; Best Critic, 1997

Media Kit

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