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news & chatter from the Mad Poets Society

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Newsletter

From Eileen D’Angelo

Hello, All!   JUST A HEADS UP … The MAD POETS REVIEW Book Release Party that was scheduled for THIS SATURDAY. October 27th HAS BEEN POSTPONED !!!!   The new date is SAT. DECEMBER 1st 11:00 a.m. at the Delaware County Institute of Science, 11 Veterans Square in Media.  I absolutely hated having to do this - but it was inevitable, due to the wild schedule of Mad Poets since September 1st.  The new issue is shaping up to be amazing, and features work by RENEE ASHLEY, BARB CROOKER, DAVID KOZINSKI, MARIA FAMA, ANNA EVANS, RACHEL BUNTING, COURTNEY BAMBRICK, PAUL MARTIN, HARRY HUMES, LOUIS McKEE, CA CONRAD, FRANK SHERLOCK,  and others. Special thanks to Amy Laub for doing a large portion of the typing, and to Missy Grotz and Dave Worrell, for their dedicated assistance.  See you on December 1st !

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WINNERS OF THE 2007 MAD POETS REVIEW COMPETITION !

KATE NORTHROP (Bio below) was our esteemed Judge for the 2007 Mad Poets Competition.  The winners will appear in Volume 21, scheduled to be released on December 1st.  In a field of 425 poems, Kate chose 12 to recognize.  Here are this year’s talented winners:

1ST PRIZE - KATE WILDING

2ND PRIZE - KIM GEK LIN SHORT

3RD PRIZE - BARBARA TORODE

4TH PRIZE - TAMMY PAOLINO

5TH PRIZE - MARGARET ROBINSON

6TH PRIZE - ASHRAF OSMAN

7TH PRIZE - RICHARD S. BANK

8TH PRIZE - KATE WILDING

9TH PRIZE - CAMILLE NORVAISAS

10TH PRIZE - DIANE GUARNIERI

11TH PRIZE - MARGARET ROBINSON

12TH PRIZE - HANOCH GUY

*If you sent an SASE for results, copies of the winners’ flyer is going out ASAP. (The MPR Winner’s List flyers got packed away after the mad poets festival –and are in one of the boxes in the garage! Hence the delay).

WED., OCTOBER 24TH - 7 PM, MAD POETS OPEN MIKE NIGHT AT THE GRYPHON CAFE - hosted by Richard Moyer in the upstairs room. Bring your poems, or your favorite poets’ work !  Musicians welcome.  Come for a cozy circle of sharing poetry or music ! Last chance for 2007 !

OCTOBER 28TH at 1 pm - Mad Poets at STEEL CITY COFFEEHOUSE - Featured poets LYNN BLUE + MARIA LIGOS, followed by an open. Hosted by Noah Cutler. Steel City is located at 203 Bridge St., Phoenixville, PA 19460.  Store # is 610-933-4043. Be there or be square!

OCTOBER 29TH 8 PM - Mad Poets Presents a special reading at ST. JOSEPH’S UNIVERSITY featuring APRIL LINDNER, ANTHONY PALMA AND BROOKE PALMA !  Details on the room at St. Joe’s and full bio info to come.  MARK YOUR CALENDAR NOW, and don’t miss these fine poets. 

THURS. NOVEMBER 1ST - 7 PM - MAD POETS AT MILK BOY COFFEE features COURTNEY BAMBRICK and BARBARA TORODE plus an open mike to follow, hosted by Autumn Konopka.  Milk Boy is at 824 W. Lancaster Ave., in the Bryn mawr Film Institute (the old theatre) in Bryn Mawr. (Not to be confused with Milk Boy’s other Ardmore location. This series will continue in 2008, but will move to second Thursdays).  (Note: Courtney Bambrick is working on running a series of Mad Poets Workshops in 2008, stay tuned ! And Barbara Torode is one of our 2007 Mad Poet Winners !!)

ALSO - ON NOVEMBER 1ST  at 7 pm !!!

ALL YOU BUCKS COUNTY POETS !!  A NEW MAD POETS SERIES IN BUCKS COUNTY AT DOYLESTOWN LIBRARY !!!

A-MUSE POETRY SERIES will begin on November 1st at 7 pm, at the Doylestown Library Panel Discussion with Bucks County Poet Laureate, Marie Kane and Montco Poet Laureate David Simpson, including Q & A.  This new MPS Series is moderated/organized and coordinated by Mad Poets:  Joanne Leva, Bill Wunder and Camille Norvaisis !!! 

Doylestown Library is at 150 S. Pine St., Doylestown, PA 18901, Phone: 215-348-9081. Emails for info, for Bill Wunder and Camille: billybaloney02@yahoo.com, Camille525@aol.com  (Joanne’s is a work email, so until I get her OK, I can’t release it).   So! For all you Bucks County poets without a Mad Poets “home” - you can’t get better than this !!  Special thanks to Bill, Joanne and Camille, for all their hard work !!!!! 

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8TH AT 7 PM - MAD POETS PRESENTS:   EMILIANO MARTIN, KASIA NEWCOMER AND FERESHTEH SHOLEVAR at the HAVERFORD PUBLIC LIBRARY, in the Community Room downstairs. An Open Mike will follow. The library is at 1601 Darby Rd. Havertown, PA 19083; their number is 610-446-3082. Hosted by Eileen D’Angelo (unfortunately, Peter Krok who was scheduled to host this reading will not be able to join us).

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15TH  - 7:30 PM - MAD POETS PRESENTS LAWRENCE DUGAN + RICHARD MOYER AT THE DELCO INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE, 11 Veterans Square, Media, PA 19063; Open reading follows!  Hosted by Eileen D’Angelo.  Bring your poems!

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17TH - ROBERT ZALLER WILL RUN A MAD POETS WORKSHOP at the Delco Institute of Science, 11 Veterans Square.  Workshop begins at 10:30 a.m. - 1:00 pm - Lunch is catered and brought to us at 1 pm - and Robert Zaller will read from his work at 2 pm.  There’s a $50 fee for the workshop.  The class is open for 8-12 participants.  SIGN UP NOW..   The Deadline is Saturday, November 3rd, for registrations; to allow Robert time to review two poems of each participant by email, prior to the workshop on Nov. 17th.  EMAIL MADPOETS@COMCAST.NET with ZALLER WORKSHOP in the subject line, and mail your check for $50 made payable to “Mad Poets Society”, to Mad Poets Society, P.O. Box 1248, Media, PA 19063-8248 - TIME IS RUNNING OUT !!!!    

Last Word Bookshop Series Ends With A Blast

Ish Klein, Amy Ouzooian and Robyn Alter-BielanaAmy OuzooianRobyn Alter-BielanaIsh KleinThe final reading of 2007 at the Last Word Bookshop in University City was a blast. Leonard Gontarek, the host, presented a diverse group of poets consisting of Robyn Alter-Bielana, Ish Klein & Amy Ouzooian. Philadelphia poets Amy Small McKinney and Louis McKee were also in attendance with the standing room crowd. It was a good evening of poetry in University City.

20TH ANNUAL MAD POETS SOCIETY FESTIVAL

FROM EILEEN D’ANGELO

TOMORROW - OCTOBER 7th!  NOON TO FIVE PM ! 

    The 20th ANNUAL MAD POETS FESTIVAL !

All day poetry readings between noon and five, reception follows, light refreshments served all day.  Special Guest: Daniel Hoffman will read at five pm. Check the line-up of incredible poets below ! Don’t miss a minute of this annual mad poets party !  Held in in Parlor at  MEDIA BOROUGH HALL, which is between 3rd and 4th Streets and Jackson & Monroe Streets in Media.  ()Don’t feed the meters, the meter maids are OFF!)    This event is held in conjunction with the Media Food & Arts Festival on State Street in Media.  There are bands in the streets, arts, crafts, and all the local restaurants put out booths with fantastic food for this festival.  We are 2 blocks back at Media Borough Hall. 

    State St. is closed to traffic, but you can take MONROE STREET , back to the Media Borough Hall, and cross through the street fair. Monroe will not be closed, but Jackson Street will be closed.  Below the Festlval Schedule will be directions.  HOPE TO SEE YOU ALL THERE !  Be well, Eileen

2007 MAD POETS FESTIVAL SCHEDULE – APPROX. TIMES

FIRST SET HOSTED BY G. EMIL REUTTER

    BETWEEN NOON AND 1 PM

ROCKY MARCELLUS

KRYSTLE MARCELLUS

DANIEL MARCELLUS

JOY ROSE

LYNN BLUE

DUYEN DeGAIN

KASIA NEWCOMER

ALICE WOOTSON

CHRISTOPHER BROADBELT

DAVID KOZINSKI

SHORT BREAK  (No more than 10 min.)

  2ND SET HOSTED BY EILEEN D’ANGELO

    BETWEEN  1 PM AND 2 PM  

BETH PHILLIPS BROWN

NATHALIE ANDERSON

RICHARD MOYER

CLAUDIA BEECHMAN

BRIAN SAMMOND

WILLIAM HETZNECKER

STEVE CONCERT

CAROL CLARK WILLIAMS

JOANNE LEVAN

SHORT BREAK

* 3RD SET HOSTED BY EMILIANO MARTIN  

BETWEEN 2 PM AND 3 PM  

DIANE GUARNIERI

TAMARA OAKMAN

LINDA FISCHER

GLENN McLAUGHLIN

STEVE DELIA

JOE DORAZIO

NAIMA LESLIE WILLIAMS

BROOKE PALMA

ANTHONY PALMA

SHORT BREAK * 

4TH SET HOSTED BY GLENN McLAUGHLIN

BETWEEN 3 AND 4 PM

EMILIANO MARTIN

G. EMIL REUTTER

JOYCE MEYERS

ED KRIZEK

AMY LAUB

PETER BAROTH

THERESE HALSCHEID

DAVE WORRELL

KIM GEK LIN SHORT

SHORT BREAK *

5th set  HOSTED BY JOANNE LEVA

BETWEEN 4 AND 5 PM

KATE WILDING

RAY GREENBLATT

RICHARD S. BANK

JC TODD

LEONARD GONTAREK

DANIEL MOORE

AAREN Y. PERRY
LOUIS McKEE

WD EHRHART

DANIEL HOFFMAN

RECEPTION FOLLOWS*  /MINGLING / MUNCHIES

PACKED HOUSE AT MILKBOYS

Adam CobenAnna MendozaAlla VilnyanshkayaAnna Mendoza, Alla Vilnyanshkaya and Adam Coben wowed a packed house at Milk Boys in Bryn Mawr on Thursday evening. The standing room only crowd of over 70 enjoyed the poetry of the trio of features and an outstanding open mic.  The event was hosted by the effervescent Autumn Konopka who kept the evening flowing. There are many events this month offered by the Mad Poets Society, please check out the calendar over here and come out and enjoy>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Talking with Nathalie F. Anderson

1-00005.jpg Nathalie F. Anderson’s first book, Following Fred Astaire, won the 1998 Washington Prize from The Word Works. Her poems have been singled out for prizes and special recognition from the Joseph Campbell Society, The Cumberland Poetry Review, Inkwell Magazine, The Madison Review, New Millennium Writings, Nimrod, North American Review, and Southern Anthology, and have also appeared in APR’s Philly Edition, Cimarron Review, Cross Connect, Denver Quarterly, DoubleTake, The Louisville Review, Natural Bridge, The Paris Review, Prairie Schooner, The Recorder, Southern Poetry Review, Spazio Humano, and in the Ulster Museum’s collection of visual art and poetry, A Conversation Piece. A 1993 Pew Fellow, Anderson currently serves as Poet in Residence at the Rosenbach Museum and Library, and she teaches at Swarthmore College, where she is a Professor in the Department of English Literature and directs the Program in Creative Writing.

What others say about Nathalie Anderson: 

          “Nathalie Anderson’s poetry brings to my mind what John Logan’s called “a ballet of the ear.” She appreciates rich, textured language, and has a consciousness of sound as well as movement, elements more rare that you might think in contemporary poets. Her investigations of phobias, in particular, are smart, witty, and—haunting’  –Louis McKee

“Philadelphia poets owe Nathalie Anderson endless thanks for her tireless dedication to all that we do here in our city. No one has ever stepped forward with such indivisible scope in such a divisible environment as the poetry of Philadelphia. Her support and sincerity are the lessons for all poets to shift and widen the world view as much and as often as possible. Nothing but the best of thanks to Nathalie Anderson.” – CAConrad

The Interview:

Q. You have written that “anxiety — especially sexual anxiety — is my most frequent subject”. Is there a cause and effect? 

I’m not certain what you mean by “cause and effect” here, but I do believe that anxiety inexorably turns a person self-conscious, and a self-conscious person inevitably becomes a more obsessed observer, so *maybe* the more anxious we are, the more likely we are to be able to perceive the structures supporting our anxieties, analyze them, display them.  When I wrote this statement, almost 15 years ago, I was especially conscious of the double bind society imposes on women, punishing either pliancy or self-reliance, beauty or plainness, intelligence or air-headedness: as John Berger writes so chillingly, “a woman must continually watch herself.”  I still try to write through my own anxieties, but my poems these days – in the wake of my father’s death from Alzheimer’s — probably focus more on anxious aging than on anxious sexuality or sexual politics. 

Q. In the poem “The Miser” the male subject requests you not write about him, yet you do in images that could make the heart race a bit. Do you often refer to life events in your poetry? 

 I guess my poems nearly always arise from something I’ve experienced or observed, but – nearly always – I twist and intensify the inciting incident or perception until someone who’d been with me at the time might well not recognize it anymore.  I like the force, the immediacy, that comes with the pronoun “I” – though, maybe ironically, that intensity sometimes leads me to write in the second or third person to soften the insistence of apparent confession.  If “she” did it, after all, we’re all detached observers; and if “you” did it, then we’re all equally culpable!  But I like what happens when an “I” enters a poem: I think the reader pays attention in a more engaged way. 

 Q. Your book “Following Fred Astaire” has been described as fine writing, wry humor, and relevant. Released in 1999 by Word Works; could you tell us how the book was developed? 

Well, one answer would be that I wrote a bunch of poems, arranged them and re-arranged them and added to them obsessively over several years, realized finally that the conglomeration had become unwieldy, broke it in two, rearranged the poems again, and finally got lucky with a publisher!    But a better answer is that the poems in this book do focus on anxiety – especially the sequence about peculiar phobias, the dream poems that punctuate the four sections, and the many poems where longing and apprehensiveness intertwine (like “Red Sea,” maybe about junior high school crushes; or “Gossip,” maybe about friends so intimate they’re perceived as – might as well be – adulterers).  I think the book finally came together for me when I decided it was going to be about anxious desire, and so dropped from the manuscript most of the poems, however effective, that stood to the side of that topic.  I like arranging poems in different arrays, to see what happens when they rub against new neighbors, and this book must have gone through at least 30 permutations before The Word Works chose it for their Washington Prize.

 Q. My favorite lines from the poem, “The Troll” is “Dunk her or drown her, she pops right back up with her havoc and hoodoo. She’s the mange in your manger, iceberg in your bath.”  What was the inspiration for this poem? 

Thanks!  I’ll mention for people who may not know that this poem appears in the Endicott Studio’s on-line Journal of Mythic Arts, one of several poems of mine that they’ve kindly picked up during the last couple of years: here’s the URL: http://www.endicott-studio.com/cofhs/chTroll.html  I got the idea for the poem during a bout of extreme end-of-semester grouchiness when I appalled myself by responding with fury when a couple of people asked very small favors of me – I guess my own minor version of road rage.  I felt like a troll, and started playing with the idea of a creature that would relish that rage rather than feeling shamed by it.  There’s a lot of word-play in the poem, which I hope both softens its nastiness and also makes it more disturbing, moving from the familiar “thorn in the flesh” and “skeleton at the feast” towards more peculiar associations, like the mange and the iceberg. 

Q. Ashland Poetry Press released “Crawlers” in 2006. Could you describe the book for us?   

Here’s a version of what I’ve been saying to introduce the book at readings:  Crawlers found its shape in the last years of my father’s life, and, as he lost himself to Alzheimer’s – as he forgot how to speak, how to eat, how to walk, how to stand – it made me think about what a struggle it is to learn how to do those things in the first place.  So Crawlers poses poems about a child’s coming into consciousness with the complications surrounding the father’s loss of consciousness, drawing connections between a child’s ways of coping with bereavement – my mother died when I was three – and the father’s disappearance as he ages.   In this book, too, I’m interested in the subtleties of domestic atrocity, the daily stinging cruelties hidden behind the wall of family.  All our fairy tales – with their disregarded younger brothers, their murderous stepmothers, their Cinderellas – map this terrain, and the book plays with those archetypes – but it also skitters with arthropods: bugs, insects, crawlers. We share the earth with insects.  They own our yards, our houses.  Rather like our families, we can’t evade them.  

I’m also interested here in the distinction that the literary and cultural critic Edward Said has made between filiation – accepting or acquiescing to the family and the world-view we’re born to – and affiliation – in which we actively choose our associates and our beliefs, even if they are the ones we were born into.  Affiliation seems to me to extend the idea of standing on our own two feet, and in the book, I’ve used travel as a metaphor for getting beyond the limitations of the self. So, although the riddle of the sphinx doesn’t actually appear in the book, I think it makes use of the implications of walking on four legs, two legs, three. 

Q. You maintain a poetry events list that is without equal in the Delaware Valley and beyond. How did you get involved with the list and how does one person manage so much material?

 The list began on a much smaller scale: I wanted my students to know about literary events in the Philadelphia area, and eventually began to pass along the information I was gathering, to friends and then to friends of friends, and so on.  I now send announcements to upwards of 450 people, not counting my students.  How does one person manage so much material?  Ineptly, alas!  I try to keep up with events at local colleges and universities, but otherwise the task of keeping current with every reading series inevitably gets beyond me. I used to make up calendars periodically, but that labor quickly became overwhelming too, so now I’m more a conduit than a compiler: people send me their announcements, and I pass them along. I’m thus dependent on the list itself for its effectiveness, and I thank you ALL for assisting me so admirably!  For anyone who’s not yet signed up, my e-mail address is nanders1@swarthmore.edu.  I should mention that there’s another, frankly more professional list in the area, a list run by Kathye Fetsko Petrie that leans more towards fiction than poetry.  It costs money to access, but it’s a lot more comprehensive: book clubs, book reviews, book advertisements.  I believe Kathye’s e-address is kpwriting@comcast.net. 

Q. You have written libretti for several operas. Where is your love of opera rooted and are there any new projects in this area? 

I actually came late to opera.  My former colleague at Swarthmore, Sue Snyder, would sometimes invite me to performances at the Met, and I was blown away by the force of the emotion those singers could project.  Even for a novice, operas are laced with familiar melodies, so that suddenly an aria will snap the plot into clarity, suffusing happenstance with implication. It’s been thrilling to work with this material, to put together the little verbal skeletons that music will flesh out and bring to life on stage.  Thomas Whitman and I are bringing a new project to completion soon: a version of Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes story, “A Scandal in Bohemia,” where Holmes is bested (as Watson puts it) “by a woman’s wit.”  We’re going to try out some scenes at Swarthmore this coming spring; and Orchestra 2001 plans to present the opera in concert during their 2008-9 season.   

Q. The poem, “Country Night,County Donegal” describes a country western night in an Irish Bar. I did not know the Irish enjoyed country music let alone a professor from Swarthmore. Do tell? 

The year I wrote that poem, Garth Brooks was the top-selling musical artist in Ireland: amazing, I agree!  If you go to a local pub in, say, Connemara or Donegal, where various local people regularly get up to sing, they’ll typically serenade you with Johnny Cash or Patsy Cline!  I confess I prefer Irish traditional music to just about any other kind, but I grew up in the South, where that tradition turned itself into Bluegrass, and I enjoy especially the edgy area between country and rock: the Band, Roseanne Cash, kd lang. 

Q. Could you describe your experience and responsibilities as the “Poet in Residence” at the Rosenbach Museum and Library?  

A little over eight years ago, the Rosenbach decided, as part of their community outreach programming, to sponsor poetry workshops at local centers for the elderly.  Although they approached a number of individuals and organizations, I was the only person to carry through: I’ve been leading workshops at the JCCs Stiffel Center in South Philly for the Rosenbach every spring since then; in fact, this summer the Museum is publishing a small anthology of poems by the workshop participants, which I’ve helped to edit.  During my second year with the program, the folks at the Rosenbach asked if I’d like to be “Poet in Residence” in recognition of the work I was doing, and of course I leaped at the chance.  As the resident poet, I’ve also had the great pleasure of putting together readings at the Museum in conjunction with their exhibitions: an evening celebrating literary parodies; poets’ responses to early photographs or maps; poems wrestling with spiritual and secular rituals, occasioned by the exhibition of Judaica that’s up right now.  The Rosenbach has put together small collections of the poems written for two of these events – 26 Letters, 26 Poets (poems commissioned for the exhibition “R is for Rosenbach,” celebrating the Museum’s 50th anniversary) and Conscious Mapping: Poets Journey through Verbal Geography – and should have one out any day for the Chosen exhibition. They also invite me to read nicely juicy passages on Bloomsday, which is such a cool thing! 

Q. What direction do you see poetry moving in the first decade of this century? 

Oh golly, I don’t know!  One of the most exciting aspects of poetry these days, I believe, is that so many different styles seem to be flourishing at once.  As I read through the journals, though, I’m struck lately by a return to what one might call lyric mystery – breath-taking phrases, often in disjointed, even surreal relation to one another.  I think maybe this tendency springs (paradoxically?) from theory-intensive movements like LANGUAGE poetry: in denying subjectivity, side-stepping master narratives, and disguising its cerebral side, this sort of work sometimes begins to look surprisingly like Symboliste poetry, without the formal constraints. 

Q. What poets were early influences on you and who do you read out of the current crop of poets? 

I began my poetic initiation through my mother’s college poetry text, Louis Untermeyer’s anthology of modern British and American writers, and took especially to Hopkins, Yeats, Stevens, HD, Eliot – ironically, the very people I most frequently teach today – plus women writers like Christina Rosetti, Mary Elizabeth Coleridge, Charlotte Mew, Edith Sitwell, Emily Dickinson, Amy Lowell, Edna St. Vincent Millay.  These days, I especially relish the contemporary Irish writers  (Heaney, Longley, Muldoon, Boland, McGuckian, ni Dhomhnaill etc etc etc).  I read a lot, but feel like I only scratch the surface of what’s available.  Poets I’ve read this summer include Michael Dumanis (My Soviet Union), Jessica Fisher (my former student! whose book Frail-Craft won the Yale Prize for 2006; she’ll be reading at Swarthmore this spring), Terrance Hayes (Wind in a Box), HL Hix (Chromatic), Dorianne Laux (Facts about the Moon), and Natasha Trethewey (Native Guard). 

Q. You were a fellow at Yaddo, awarded a Pew Fellowship and your books have received wide acclaim.  What advice would you give poets who are applying for fellowships, grants and submitting work for publication? 

I’d say, keep trying, and don’t take rejection personally.  Not that I manage to avoid getting down at the mouth myself, but I try to look at these competitions as if they’re the lottery: winning is so unlikely that you can’t, you CANNOT, feel bad about not receiving notice!  And if it happens that you do succeed, remember to reassure your fellow writers even as you celebrate, because – however wonderful your work – believe me, luck was part of that success!   

Q. In addition to publishing your poetry you have read at a number of venues around the country.  What are the benefits for a poet to share their work in public and specifically what is the benefit for you? 

I love to read.  I think the poet’s voice can raise the words off the page to grip the reader, and there’s something especially satisfying in seeing, actually seeing, people respond to your words.  With so many people writing (and – alas – not so many people buying) poetry these days, poetry readings offer a space where you can introduce yourself to a wider audience.  I know some poets are execrable readers of their own work – yes, I too have heard them – and I know that a lot gets lost when we try to take complications in by ear.  But I think readings are dynamic, potent opportunities to extend our reach. 

Q. Your work has been published widely in print and on the internet.  There is a school of thought that the internet via online magazines has provided an outlet for poetry that no longer exists in the print form.  The other school of thought is that the internet has reduced the quality of poetry that is available to readers.  Do you have any thoughts on this? 

I’m more a print person than an internet person, and haven’t often submitted my work to on-line zines.  But I’ve seen simplistic work in magazines, and compelling work on-line, so I don’t believe that either medium is by definition dangerous or sustaining to what we do.  I’ll often chance on a poem on-line and then go looking for that person’s books; on the other hand, if I read something awful on-line, I’ve educated myself about that poet pretty cheaply! 

Q. Where will others be able to hear your poetry in the near future? 

I’ve been reading a lot this past year, with Crawlers hot off the press, but haven’t set much up for the coming year yet.  I’ll be reading new poems at Swarthmore sometime in the fall, and hope to be reading soon for the MAD Poets, as well.  On November 3, I’ll be leading a workshop for the Montgomery
County Community College literary festival, and hope many of you will join me. 

Contributor Note- Nathalie Anderson is our last interview of the summer season. It has been a pleasure to interview the poets who have appeared here, all unique, talented and inspirational in their own right. I hope you enjoyed getting to know them as I have. Enjoy the rest of the summer!  - G Emil Reutter.

A LITTLE SUMMER MADNESS

FROM EILEEN D’ANGELO

FRIDAY, JULY 13TH - 7 PM.

MAD POETS PRESENT:

A LITTLE SUMMER MADNESS: A SAMPLING OF MAD POETS! AT LORI COSGROVE DESIGN, 643 Chester Pike, Prospect Park, PA 19076. 6 FEATURED POETS AND GUEST MUSICIAN TOM MULLIAN !

Check ouT local talented poets: DAVID KOZINSKI, AMY E. LAUB, JOYCE MEYERS, LYNN BLUE, MEL BRAKE & DOCENA BLYDEN. Hosted by ARLENE BERNSTEIN. TOM MULLIAN is a fantastic musician/songwriter/guitarist.

All this PLUS snacks!

Wine + Cheese, etc.

Hope to see you all there! There’s a great Italian Restaurant called THE TRIESTE, right next door, fantastic, reasonable food, and that’s the dinner meeting spot for the Cosgrove readings. Let us know if you are joining us for dinner, so we get a table big enough. I love surprises, though - so if you don’t get a chance, we’re still happy to have you! Parking is ACROSS THE STREET from Cosgrove Design, DO NOT PARK BEHIND THE RESTAURANT. You will have to move your car.

There’s a big lot right across the street.

This is going to be a FUN night !

HERE’S HOPING I SEE ALL OF YOU!

COME OUT AND PLAY !! Be well, Eileen

Got Milkboy?

I’m SO happy to report that the Mad Poets Series at the Barnes & Noble in Bryn Mawr has found a new home at Milkboy Acoustic Cafe in Bryn Mawr.

Although we had a good deal of notice that B&N was closing its doors at the beginning of this month, we had a hard time finding a new venue that could take it on for the same day & time — so the series was still on the verge of homelessness.  Thankfully, Jaime & the other good folks at Milkboy have welcomed us with open arms.  We’ll be keeping the schedule & line up of readers — 1st Thursdays at 7pm.  In fact, in addition to our regular gig (which starts tonight!), they’ve also asked the Mad Poets to provide some poetry tomorrow night for Ardmore first Friday.  Yay for poetry-friendly venues!!!

Tonight we settle into our new home with poets John Timpane & Alison Hicks.  More about them after the jump…

–>John Timpane is the Associate Editor of the Editorial Board of the Philadelphia Inquirer and a publishing poet. His work has appeared in Sequoia, 5_Trope, Wild River Review, Bucks County Writer, Eight Millennial Voices, Live Oak, the Kelsey Review, and elsewhere. He is author of four books, including (with Nancy H. Packer) Writing Worth Reading (NY: St. Martin, 1994); It Could Be Verse (Berkeley: Ten Speed, 1995); (with Maureen Watts and the Poetry Center at San Francisco State) Poetry for Dummies (NY: Hungry Minds, 2000); and (with Roland Reisely) Usonia, NY: Building a Community with Frank Lloyd Wright (NY: Princeton Architectural Press). Last year he was honored to edit and write the forward for

Voices and Visions Closing

1-00001.jpgI received word via Bob Small of Poets and Prophets that Angie will be closing the Voices and Visions Bookstore in early June.  Philadelphia will be losing a fine independent book store and the arts community a beautiful venue.  Bob said it best in his email : “…Anyway, try and get there and buy some books before they close and thank Angie for fighting the good fight.”

I have had the pleasure to read some of my work at Voices and Visions. To say the least this closing is a major loss to the literary community in Philadelphia. We like to write about corporate control of publishing and the arts yet we continue to see these fine stores close due to a lack of support. Dust off your wallets and stop by V&V at 4th and Market in the Bourse Building, buy a few books and thank Angie.

Skin Radio Poetry Slam

On Thursday night, Skin Radio had a poetry (and music) slam at the Manayunk Brewery that several members of this blog were part of. It is perhaps only appropriate that I write the report on this event; not only was I the only member of this blog in attendance that wasn’t reading, but it was also an opportunity for me to genuinely exorcise this blog from the cynicism of my last post. (And having a digital camera in tow didn’t hurt either, though it didn’t exactly help, as you can see from the mediocre results.) See, somehow this event was all the reassurance I needed, beyond words, that poetry is alive and well. For, after all, it seemed to me that it doesn’t matter much who cares about poetry, poetry does pretty well by itself. I got the kind of reassurance that statistics can’t provide, the kind that you can only get after a couple of beers, with the big hall emptying of people, but the words still hanging in the air, pregnant and heavy, and somehow self-sufficing. No wonder it was difficult to wipe that huge grin plastered on my face.

First, however, allow me to say that more poetry events should be held at more adult venues, where not only is alcohol flowing, but more importantly where poets feel more at ease to speak like adults, to adults. Perhaps it’s because it doesn’t happen that often, given that our more traditional habitats tend to be bookstores and cafes, many of the readers pounced on the chance to read their more risqué poems: from Autumn Kanopka’s dirty, dirty ponies and Anna Evan’s meticulously metered expletives, to Arlene Bernstein’s freewheeling ride through Jersey and Eileen d’Angelo’s delicate sensuality, to Mike Cohen’s food fetish and Rachel Bunting’s explosive ending. There was enough skin in the poetry to justify the name of the radio station (not that that’s the intention of the station’s name). And even though the event was recorded and parts of it will be broadcast later, if you missed it live unfortunately you won’t be able to hear those naughty bits on air.

But it’s not just the rare naughty bits, or the venue, that made the event the pleasure that it was. The music was a good mix (especially the second act, by the Matt Gauss Band); though I could certainly have used less music and much more poetry. I am sure the fact that I knew most of the readers didn’t hurt either, but there was a certain feeling of glee in the air, not exactly justified by the attendance (which dwindled remarkably towards the end, thanks perhaps to the late start and the lengthy music segments). Still, there was something undeniably vivacious about the round-up. Perhaps it was the variety of it—which is one of the stated goals of the radio station—as there was truly something for everybody.

Anna Evans Eileen d’Angelo Autumn Kanopka Rachel Bunting

Women certainly dominated the scene, as you’ve probably already figured out by now, with Mike Cohen being the only male poet hanging on till the end. But hang on he did, making up for the under-representation with a bubbly liveliness and exuberance that was nothing less than contagious. Still, the women stole the night. Being a minority in color, Lynn Blue tackled the subject head on in her poetry. Aided by a voice velvety enough to get away with murder, Lynn delivered the most direct and refreshingly upfront thoughts about race without being in the least bit jarring or clichéd, renouncing the insincere “color blindness” for a more genuine “color acknowledgment”.

Anna Evans was perhaps a minority in accent (okay, so maybe I’m pushing this whole minority theme a bit further than it can reasonably go). Even though disguised by a new hairdo, there was no mistaking that lush British accent. Few guilty pleasures are as enjoyable as hearing the F word in that accent, and there was quite a number of occasions to do so in her second poem, “The F*** You Triolet”. Opening with “Mothers Boys“, a poem about ex-mothers-in-law, Anna (like Mike) made me think of metered and rhymed poetry as hip again, but perhaps more importantly as relevant still. Her closing down-to-earth sonnet, titled cheekily enough “Not a Sonnet“, is all a sonnet needs to be in the twenty-first century: cynical, self-effacing, highly aware of its artifice, which makes it all the more immediate.

My good friend Arlene Bernstein opened her act with a trip going on the platform, and it made me think of what I love about her poetry: it is consistently adorably off. There is something simply rebellious about it (and her). You are immediately aware of Arlene’s great command (and appreciation) of the language, as only a stolid long-time teacher of it has. You can tell she savor’s the words as she says them, ever so gingerly. But it is that facility with the words that enables her to juggle them playfully, push them to their limits, because she know very well when they break. It is like a roller-coaster, thrilling but trustful.

There is a certain delicacy about Eileen d’Angelo’s poetry that I don’t realize how much I’ve missed until I hear her again. It is perhaps because she never shies away from showing her fragility, her humanity in it. But it is a tender humanity, not in-your-face. I am always reminded of the feeling of a light fabric fluttering against the skin in the breeze: sometimes it takes only the lightest touch to remind us how lucky we are to live through another spring.

I always think of Eileen and Autumn Kanopka as counterparts; not only because I always tend to see them together, nor because they are diametrically opposite. But perhaps it is because I think of Autumn’s poetry as savage—in the most impassioned sense of the word—as Eileen’s is delicate. Not opposites, but sides of the same fragility, same humanity. There is something incredibly powerful about the awareness born of our close encounters with our breakability. And that is that “hush” in Autumn’s poetry: furious, overpowering, but also amazingly mature (like the most beautiful of sadness) and empowering.

It is that same breakability that overwhelmed me in Rachel Bunting’s closing poem. I had been acquainted with the earthy humanity of the mundane, the everyday in her work (as in her opening poem, “Finding the Root in San Francisco”), always with an undertone of that frailty that surfaces only in the company of our selves. But I was happy to witness that amplified into a scream, if not a howl, in her second poem, “Acceptance”, the anger turned almost sadistic in the acuity of its insight. It is that sense of profound hurt, coupled with the awareness of the poignant absences we leave behind, that is perhaps the biggest demonstration of the potency of poetry, and of us, poets.

But it wasn’t that heady realization that I enjoyed most. It was, as clichéd as it may seem, the company of such kindred spirits, laughing, acting, and sharing such good poetry. Who cares then if anybody cares?

Cambridge Author/Poet Timothy Gager

tgtimothygagerphoto2.jpgTimothy Gager has authored six collections of fiction and poetry. His work has been published widely in the small and electronic press. His poetry has been nominated twice for the Cambridge Poetry Award and recently his fiction was nominated for the 2006 Story South Million Writers Award. Gager is the editor of the Heat City Review, Founder and host of the Dire Literary Series and Co-Founder of the Sommerville News Writers Festival. He will appear with Jennifer McPherson on September 23rd at the Steel City Coffee House. To learn more about Timothy Gager please visit: http://www.timothygager.com/ 

Q. You are the host of the “Dire Literary Series” in Cambridge Mass. Please share how the series was created and its endurance. 

The Dire Series was created six years ago because at the time, the Boston/Cambridge area had many poetry open mic evenings but no nights for open fiction. Sure, there were book store readings for published authors but there were nothing for the short fiction writer to show their chops. At Dire we have three published features and a four-slot of 15 minute open mic…plus I get to attempt to entertain…it’s a lot of fun. 

Q. The Out of the Blue Art Gallery is one of my favorite venues. Your series is based there, what type of influence does the gallery have on the series? 

 I think the main influences are the features and the open readers that set the tone of the evening. Sometimes the out of town writers hear that it is taking place at an art gallery and they think the Metropolitan of Fine Art of something. The Out of the Blue is very charming and each series held there has its own identity. The Dire Series started in a bar and I had another host with me, at the time, John Bailey. We tried to do a variety show or something…drugs may have been involved(laughs),  I don’t know…we were told to not come back. 

Q. The Somerville News Writers Festival is a yearly event that you co-founded. Please describe the purpose of the festival and the atmosphere. 

The purpose of the festival is to get big writers in a large venue. We’ve had Michael MacDonald, Andre Dubus, Robert Olen-Butler, Franz Wright, Tom Perrotta and Steve Almond to name a few. My co-founder Doug Holder and myself with the gracious support of The Somerville News wanted to think “big” and the festival has achieved that purpose. 

Q. You began as a short fiction writer and eventually brought your poetry out of the closet with much success. What was your inspiration to share your poetry and what poets influenced you? 

It was more of a confidence issue. I had a very poor experience in college with poetry and was made to feel poetically inept. Confidence was very key and I’d say I’m happy with my current poems. 

Q. In addition to reading in the Boston Metro Area you have traveled a bit. How do you compare readings in other cities to those in Boston? 

It depends on the place and the particular night. It’s nice to see friends locally and meet people when I travel. Some folks I’ve known for years from on-line workshops. I once did a reading in Maine where the audience got pretty tanked and a fight broke out. That was fun. In July I’m reading in New York to promote a book of Red Sox Fiction…umm, I don’t know if that was too well thought out. I don’t mind reading even if the crowd is chanting “Boston Sucks”. When I read in Philadelphia it’s always a good time. It is a great city to read in plus Eileen D’Angelo does such a great job. I find the audience there very down to earth and welcoming. I went to school nearby so it’s a plus to see old friends. 

Q. Writer/Poet and also the co-editor of the Heat City Review and “Out of the Blue Writers Unite”.  Did you have to go through a transition from creating to editing?  

Not really, it would be like reading vs. writing or watching television. I’d be pretty rigid if I couldn’t make that adjustment, but then again my writing pretty much stops when I’m involved in an editing project.  

Q. You have published six collections of short fiction and poetry in addition to your work being published in over 20 journals. What do you attribute your success in getting your work published? 

I think I work hard on my writing and am persistent on sending work out. Often I feel like I’m fooling people when they publish me, but sometimes I actually like what I see of mine in print or on the web. I was honored with being named with a “notable story” in the 2006 Story South Million Writer Award. The winner hasn’t been announced yet, but I don’t think I’ll win. There are tons of good writers there. 

Q. Renee Angers of Brainpan Publishing said of your work, “… Gager hasn’t disappointed me yet…. his books are great reads. His books make me feel like I want to become involved in a fist fight…. I adore his work.”  Do you write for this type of reaction or do you write and await the reaction?

 Perhaps I used to. Nowadays I’m not looking for a reaction, I’m just looking to write what I want to write, whatever pops into my head, often quirky and sort of twisted. I would say there is a lot of versatility in my work and how I’m feeling about creating at any given time isn’t necessarily my strong suit, but perhaps a style I’m looking to work on. Being versatile is good, like in baseball you can be more valuable if you can play more positions.

Q. On September 23rd you will be reading at the Mad Poets Steel City Coffee House Series with Jennifer McPherson. As a fiction writer, poet and commentator on society will those in attendance see a particular side of Tim Gager? 

Yes, my best side….seriously, I’ll get there early get a feel for the place, the age group in attendance etc. and seeing that it’s scheduled for one o’clock in the afternoon on a Sunday, I think I’ll go with some of my more entertaining work rather than the darker stuff. That’s my plan, now…September is months away. Most of what I’ll read will not have been written yet.