The Mad Poets Blog

news & chatter from the Mad Poets Society

Posts filed under Uncategorized

Steel City

SINGER SONGWRITERS NICK FILONE + TOM MULLIAN  WILL KICK OFF THE FIRST MAD POETS STEEL CITY OPEN MIC NIGHT ON FEB. 5TH AT 7  PM!  Hosted by Eileen D’Angelo!  BRING YOUR POEMS AND  SIGN UP FOR THE OPEN MIKE!
Join us for dinner .. we’ll be out there early.. 

Below is the “forward” from Steel City’s announcement about this - and other events; address at the bottom:

Tuesdays- All New in Feb.
1st Tuesday:  Mad Poets Society Poetry Reading & Open Mic:  The Mad Poets Society is moving their reading to Tuesdays Nights at 7:00 PM, hosted by Eileen D’Angelo.  The Mad Poets Society welcomes all poets and musicians to share in this exciting night. 
FREE EVENT

All other Tuesdays in Feb.- Tuesday Night Open Music Jam
Calling all musicians . . . stop in and jam with your fellow musicians in our cozy coffeehouse.
FREE EVENT

Every Tuesday is Student Night
Students from high school or college can get $1.00 off any food or beverage by showing their high school or college ID

This weekend @ Steel City

John Flynn & Greg Greenway
Saturday, Feb. 2 @ 8:30 pm [$12 ADV / $15 DOS]

John Flynn returns to Steel City and he’s bringing a friend – Greg Greenway.  John has been featured on our stage many times and we consistently get requests to bring him back.  For those of you not familiar with his work, he is a gifted lyricist and musician who creates emotional social poetry set to a pure country folk beat.  Greg Greenway is also a powerful folk poet with traces of Gospel, rock, blues, jazz and world music in his soulfully sung songs.

Rent Steel City Coffee House for Any Occasion: Birthdays, Anniversaries, Office Parties, Graduations. Rates starting at $400.00 Contact Jane @ steelcitycoffee@aol.com for more info.

Coming Soon
Alexander Gunn & Kiwi Band (2/6)
Pat Wictor & Toby Walker (2/8)
Jim Boggia w/Curtis Eller (2/9)
Andy Bopp & Cliff Hillis (2/13)
Dirk Quinn Band w/Anibal Rojas (2/15)
Jeffrey Gaines (2/16) 

STEEL CITY COFFEE HOUSE
203 Bridge Street, Phoenixville, PA
www.steelcitycoffeehouse.com
610-933-4043 

Talking with Frank Sherlock

Frank Sherlock Frank Sherlock and the Philadelphia Poetry scene are synonymous. His work has been published widely in the small and electronic press. He is the author of Wounds in an Imaginary Nature Show, (Night Flag Press), Spring Diet of Flowers at Night, (Mooncalf Press), ISO, (furniture press) and 13, (ixnay press). Past collaborations include work with CAConrad, Jennifer Coleman and sound artist Alex Welsh. Publication of his most recent collaborative poem with Brett Evans, entitled Ready-to-Eat Individual is forthcoming in the near future. Frank has hosted a number of poetry series in the city, the latest The Night Flag Series and is a regular contributor to The Philly Sound Blog. You can visit with Frank at  http://franksherlock.blogspot.com/ 

What Others Say About Frank Sherlock:  

“I’ve been lucky enough to see Frank’s work evolve for more than a decade now, and we’ve been even luckier to publish a fair chunk of it here at ixnay press as well. His writing is equal parts body, brain, & spirit - the poems negotiate both the darkest avenues & brighest skies of our fair city, always with the keenest eye, the sharpest wit, the sexiest strut. & by the way, the man can break a line like no one else in the business.” -  Chris McCreary- co-editor, ixnay press 

 “Frank Sherlock’s poetry uses a poetic composting system, where thoughts and noticings which might evaporate or be discarded from the mind are collected and made into an area of material where perceptions and insights can grow. Like Buck Downs, he uses a kind of poetic witness protection program to relocate micro-social speech rhythms, self-reflective process descriptions and figures of speech” - Drew Gardner’s Blog 

The Interview:

Q. You recently survived a battle with meningitis and other health issues as a result of the meningitis. How are you feeling now and what effect did winning this battle have on your outlook on life?  

Well, having the opportunity to have an outlook on life has done wonders for my outlook on life. I think about it less as a battle than a surf outing. Just without the water, the temptations, the sun, or the speedo. But I did have an assless gown in the hospital, which was less comfortable and even less flattering, if you can believe that. Surfing in a hospital bed in late January takes some imagination- or in this case, sick delusions & hallucinogenic painkillers.  I remember being in the hospital bed and imagining watching myself surf on television- like the end of Basquiat, one of my favorite films. But I tried with mixed results to imagine the soundtrack differently because I thought it would change the outcome. As you might remember, things didn’t end well for Jean-Michel. But I don’t want to diminish the seriousness of the situation, because it was serious and there were a lot of friends who were very serious about helping me live. And they did. They helped me live. Battle… This is something to think about. Because I wanted/wished that I was battle-ready, but I was really just surviving- riding this out and hopefully getting through this. And I want to come back to the soundtrack of it all, because it was soundtracked. For days in the ICU, I would awaken in the middle of the night alone, and Jimmy Cliff’s “Many Rivers to Cross” just played over and over in my head. And I love that song, but I didn’t want it in my head. Not for this. It’s a pretty sad song, after all. I wanted something more defiant, a kind of F U anthem. I tried to get The Pogues’ “If I Should Fall from Grace with God” to stick, but it just wouldn’t. So I surrendered to the sadness and just tried to make it through. I won’t be the same when I hear that song again. I hear a snippet whenever I lay down to sleep alone.

  Q. Over the years you have become entwined in the poetry fabric of the city. Your work is enjoyed by academics and blue collar types. To what do you attribute this appeal?  

Academy, meet the street. Street, meet the academy. Talk to each other already. I would like to talk more about blue collars, but they’ve gotten so hard to find here. In the boom of Sixth Boroughness, the homeless population has doubled in the last four years. But I appreciate the notion of appealing to blue collar types because I like to talk to ghosts. My favorite poems are written w/ Slovenian philosophers and Irish bartenders. I am attracted to the genius they’re willing to share. The poems I put my name on are collaborations of encounter. I’m a thief without record, and so I continue to steal. But when they work, the poems are acts of exchange. I have never really written a poem all by myself.
America has enough specialists. Narrowing in becomes a kind of cultural compulsion that I’ve never been so much interested in. If the poems do appeal across academic/everyday folk divides, I’d like to think it’s because they write poems with me, and can hear/see traces of themselves in the speech, in the voiceprints. Maybe that’s the appeal. But a lot of people seem to like my shoes too, so you never really know. 

 Q. It’s two in the morning and you are at the door at Dirty Franks Bar and a poet enters the bar that you recognize and admire; who would that be?

You’d better be pretty special to walk into the bar at two in the morning. That’s my time to go home. So I want to say no one. Nobody’s that special. Okay, that’s a lie. My people are my people, so they’re always welcome on some level, just maybe a little less so at that hour. But there’s at least one person who can show up any time. It will never happen of course, but should she walk through that doorway into the bar & out of the bizarro world, Alice Notley is welcome anywhere I am anytime she feels like. Her combination of integrity & of course her poems are an ongoing source of inspiration for me. And she’s the only poet who ever made me cry during a reading. I look to Alice as a model of the possible. Too many artists get a bit of popularity doing a particular thing, writing in a particular way. They spend the last thirty years of their lives writing more or less the same poem with diminishing drive & effectiveness.
Alice dismantled & rebuilt. She dismantles over & over again coming back to us w/ these beautiful new machines made from the parts surrounding us. These parts are not shiny & new. They’re older than all of us. But they’re functioning in new ways.   A few years ago, I met up w/Alice in Paris at a Vietnamese place for coffee. I remember honing my imaginary poetics, philosophy & mythology speak before we met in preparation for our conversation. Now, she’s family because her biological sons are poetry brothers to me. But family can be the most intimidating, right? We mostly just talked about sex & the police, but that’s not important, let me come back. She has been very generous to my companeros who are writing the most important poetry in the world right now. She’s smart enough to not be too smart for the generations that come after her. This is probably why she can dismantle & rebuild while so many older poets are left watching their own work age. The dedication of her new book reads, “for my sons and their friends.” Come on in, Alice!

Q. Please tell us about “Spring Diet of Flowers at Night” published by Mooncalf Press.  

The poem is dedicated to lovers in wartime. It was commissioned as part of Poetry, Politics & Proximity: the Third Annual Kerry Sherin Wright Prize for an event at UPenn’s Kelly Writers House. It’s a kind of micro-environmental read on political engagement, or a kind of politic of everyday life. Living in the empire is a daily negotiation, creating willful capacities to engage in acts that both oppress and resist oppression all day long. It is a mad age, and trying to live a dignified life within this time is a maddening pursuit. And a necessary one. Not out of the goodness of our hearts, or even some imperialist patronage, but for our very survival as people we’d like to meet if we could meet ourselves on the street. That’s what Spring Diet of Flowers at Night is about for me today. It was about something else when it was written. And it’ll be about something else when you read it again I hope.  

 Q. Who were major influences on you as a developing poet and why?

 There are many of course, but I’d like to talk about my old friend Caesar. He is a high school drop-out & a genius. Our friendship was one founded on argument. Over the years we’d have protracted arguments for hours at a time over the restoration of the Peacock Throne, pornography or the end of the Roman Empire. We argued through science and art, music and history. It was through argument that I came to poetry. He was always, always reading back then. I read a good bit, but I had to really study to make new arguments, and to keep up with him. He is a true autodidact who develops a reputation for his erudition, then rejects any notion of official respect and moves in a totally different direction. When you have someone close to you who isn’t afraid to change their life, it gives you a courage you didn’t know you had until you see it in front of you. He lives the Coltrane adage, “You can learn anything from anyone at any time.” Nothing is dismissed if there is knowledge to be found. He embraces the lesson &/or the joke, whether it comes from a prostitute or a Marine Sergeant or a homeless Lakota man he met on the Broad Street Line. I wasn’t intimidated by the arts because he taught me to apply art through the ages to our everyday lives. His integration of literature in everyday life is without pretense and with great enthusiasm. He spoke of the Iliad’s relevance to the punk rock vs. corner-boy wars around South Street. He noted the Dickensian conditions of Sixth Street below Washington, in the area that was South Philly. He’d see Rasputin at the Woolworth’s counter, and an Ezra Pound look-alike lurking by the peepshows with a large manuscript under his arm. He continues to be an influence because the people I encounter in the city we share are influences as well.

Q. Are you working on any new projects and are there any new works ready for release you would like to share with us?   

Daybook of Perversities & Main Events was recently released on Cy Gist Press. It is called a privilege to grow skeletons that grow to become something. Gunfire resumes. Over Here is a chapbook just out by Katalanche Press. Our true stories have always been different than their true stories. The oven’s been exploded. The bread is still expected. This is for you. Let’s eat.  Anyday now, a collaborative piece I wrote w/ Brett Evans in New Orleans in 2006 called Ready-to-Eat Individual will be released on Lavender Ink Books. It’s a NOLA journal & State-of-the-City poem for the Year 1 A.K. (After Katrina). And this spring, Factory School will be releasing The City Real & Imagined:
Philadelphia Poems. It’s a collaborative wander piece with CAConrad that jumps off at LOVE Park & explores the not-yet histories & archaic futures of Philly that haven’t yet been sold to the New York Times.
 

Thanks so much, George. Cheers!

Elizabeth McFarland’s Poetry

BOOK LAUNCH READING OF ELIZABETH McFARLAND’S POETRY COLLECTION,

“OVER THE SUMMER WATER

      On Thursday, January 31st, 2008 at 7:30 p.m., the Mad Poets Society will present a special event celebrating the posthumous release of a first book of poems by Elizabeth McFarland, Over the Summer Water, from Orchises Press. The event will be held at The Main Line Art Center, located at Old Buck Road and Lancaster Ave. in Haverford (Old Buck Rd. runs next to Wilke Lexus dealership/across from Wendy’s.)

 Elizabeth McFarland (1922-2005) is the poet who brought poetry into the lives of millions. As poetry editor of The Ladies’ Home Journal from 1948 to 1961, she published new work by many noted poets, W.H. Auden, Marianne Moore, Theodore Roethke, among others; and by the soon-to-be famous young poets, among them Maxine Kumin, Adrienne Rich and Sylvia Plath. Her poems embody purity of feeling in purity of diction and musical structure, and have the fingerprint of her individual style. Rachel Hadas writes, “I am intrigued by the wit that knows what to put in and what to leave out, and the curbed but no less strong sensuality.”

      Her husband of fifty-seven years, Daniel Hoffman, will describe her extraordinary and unique editorial career, and define the distinctive lyric virtues of her poems, of which their daughter, Kate Hoffman Siddiqi, will read a selection. 

      Daniel Hoffman is a former United States Poet Laureate (the appointment previously was known as “Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress”, 1973 to 1974) and is a Chancellor Emeritus of The Academy of American Poets. He has published eleven books of poetry, most recently from Braziller Press, Makes You Stop and Think: Sonnets.  He is the Felix E. Schelling Professor of English Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania.

      A wine and cheese reception will follow. 

      For information on this special event, contact Eileen D’Angelo at 610-586-9318, email: madpoets@comcast.net; Website: www.madpoetssociety.com.

Diane Sahms-Guarnieri and Tom Devaney at Milkboys Reading Series

Diane Sahms-Guarnieri Reads IIDiane Sahms-Guarnieri Read ITom Devaney Reads IITom Devaney ReadsAutumn Konopka lays down the law with approval from Arlene BernsteinDiane Sahms-Guarnieri and Tom DevaneyTom Devaney and Louis McKeeEileen D’Angelo and Louis Mckee

Those in attendance Thursday evening at Milkboys Café were treated to the poetry of featured poets Daine Sahms-Guarnieri and Tom Devaney.  The reading hosted by Autumn Konopka and Arlene Bernstein was the last of the 2007 series. In addition to the talented features the audience was treated to an outstanding open mic. Special thanks to all those who read in the open!  Mad Poets in attendance included Linda Fischer, Anthony and Brooke Palma, Joe Dorazio, Steve Delia, Louis McKee and Eileen D’Angelo. If I missed you, my apologies.  Special congratulations to the Konopka’s !!!

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 !

*********************

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 !!!!    

Petition Asking Amazon.com To Have An Alternative Literature Category

This comes from Victor Schwartzman at the Guild of Outsider Writers. If you have been published in the small press or operate a small or alternative press you may want to check this out. The link is  http://www.outsiderwriters.org/content/view/508/1/

To go directly to the petition site click here: http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/amazoncom-should-create-an-alternative-literature-section

Philly Poetry Calender

Mad Poet Ashraf Osman maintains a poetry calender that includes Mad Poet Events as well as other Philadelphia area poetry events. If you would like to see what is going on please visit the calender here: http://freecal.brownbearsw.com/PhillyPoetry If you want to add an event please follow the directions or contact Ashraf. You can also visit the Philly Poetry Site at : http://www.phillypoetry.com/

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.

OPEN MIC IN WAYNE

Wednesday Sept. 26th 7PM TO 8:45PM

Mad Poets Society Open Mic

Hosted by Richard Moyer

Gryphon Café [Directions]
105 W. Lancaster Avenue (Rt. 30)
Wayne, PA 19087
(Next to the Anthony Wayne Theatre)
610-688-1988

A Tribute to Sandy Crimmins

Sandy Crimmins at Mad Poets Festival-2006 

Tuesday September 11, 6pm – Poetry-Robins Book Store- 108 S. 13th,
Philadelphia, Pa.

A Tribute to Sandy Crimmins Readers: Michelle Belluomini, Dan Collins, Eileen D’Angelo, Denise Larrabee, Jim Mancinelli, stevenallenmay, Dennis O’Donnell, Maria Raha, Joy Stocke

Michele A. Belluomini is a poet, storyteller, and librarian. Her work has been published in many journals including Poetry Motel, The MadPoets Review, American Writing, APR: Philly Edition, Philadelphia Poets and, most recently, in the anthology, COMMONWEALTH: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania, as well as in Philly Ink. She has read in many places throughout the area, for the NJ Council on the Arts, and in New York. She helps to coordinate the Monday Poets reading series at the Free Library of Philadelphia.

Dan Collins has been a performing poet with the grassroots collective Compassionately Stoneground Books (Ithaca, NY) since 1993. His first publication from Plan B Press, of go & why, was released in the spring of 2007. He’s performed his poetry recently at Live at the Kelly Writers’ House on WXPN Philadelphia, Wolfgang Books (Phoenixville, PA), Robin’s Bookstore (Philadelphia), Chaplin’s Music Cafe (Spring City), the Delaware Art Museum, Wells College (NY), and Moosewood Cafe Ithaca, NY). Dan’s primary influences are his fellow C. Stoneground and Plan B Press poets, including Glen Ahart, Joshua McCardle, Maria Raha, Daniel J. Kiely, Liam F. O’Kane, James Feenaughty, Lee Francis III, stevenallenmay, Lamont B. Steptoe, Sandy Crimmins, Shane Tea French, John Sinclair, and many more.

Jim Mancinelli is a Philadelphia poet, schooled in the alleyways of South Philly, listening to Italian folk tales, looking at people upside-down, and freed by a beat with a beat. Jim has published in Sea Change, the Schuylkill Valley Journal for the Arts, in multiple issues of Philadelphia Poets, in NOW! (then), a poetry anthology comprised of poets who have read for the Eternal NOW! poetry series at Robin’s Bookstore, and in Poetry Ink, an anthology of Philadelphia poets published in 2006 by Plan B Press. He has been a featured reader for Poets + Prophets, Giovanni’s Room, Voices and Visions, and at Robin’s Bookstore for the Eternal Now! Poetry Series in Philadelphia. Jim represented Robin’s Bookstore’s Eternal Now! Poetry Series at the 2nd Annual Philadelphia Poetry Festival at the Central Library. He has read in Wilmington at the Buzz Café and was invited to read at the Italian-American Festival on June 6, 2004 in Philadelphia. In March of 2006, Jim was a featured reader in the Monday Night Series at the Central Library. In 2005 and in 2006, Jim was part of the 215 Literary Festival. His first chapbook, Primer, is self-published. A collection of poems, In Deep, was published by Plan B Press appeared in August, 2004. Two poetic political broadsides, A Bundle of Sticks, and A Proud Son Writes Home, are self-published indictments of the Bush administration’s policies and the oppression of the GLBT community. Jim has also been a judge for three consecutive years in the Plan B Press poetry chapbook contest and the short fiction contest. Jim has an ongoing series of poems he calls daliesques informed by the work of Salvador Dalí. He is currently at work on a new series of spiritual pieces, The Bartimeus Poems. Jim proudly lives in Philadelphia with his partner Dave, his three guitars, and Petey the Needy, their dog.

Maria Raha is an editor, and author of the nonfiction book Cinderella’s Big Score: Women of the Punk and Indie Underground, published by Seal Press in 2005. She also contributes to Bitch: Feminist Response to Pop Culture, and is working on her second nonfiction book, to be published by Seal in 2008. Her poetry has been published in a many a long-forgotten ‘zine. New to Philadelphia, her life continues to be an unbridled, passionate pursuit of outsiders, fellow cowgirls and politicized art.

Joy E. Stocke is Executive Editor of the online magazine, Wild River Review,www.wildriverreview.com In addition, she is founding partner of Writers Corner USA www.writerscornerusa.com, where she consults with writers at all levels, specializing in book proposals and book length manuscripts.

Eileen D’Angelo a paralegal by day and a mad poet at night, has been nominated for a Governor’s Award in the Arts and a Pushcart Prize in Poetry.  She judged
Philadelphia area poets in open auditions for the HBO pilot/series, Def Poetry Jam  and also for the Four State Poetry Slam, sponsored by Minority Business Focus, at New Market Caberet in Philadelphia.   Her manuscript, True Tales from the Home Front, was a finalist in both the
University of North Carolina’s Palanquin Press Chapbook Competition and Byline Chapbook Competition.  She has read her work on several television arts programs — most recently on “Poet’s Pause” on BCTV-Berks County Community Television, WXPN’s (88.5 fm) World Cafe Live, and Cafe Improve, a live television broadcast in Princeton, NJ, and surrounding areas. She was interviewed by Kenn Michael for WBIY (88.1 fm) for the Lehigh Valley and by Dee Patel of KYW-1060 News Radio in
Philadelphia. A two time finalist in the Allen Ginsberg Competition sponsored by the Paterson Literary Review, Eileen has been the Director of the Mad Poets Society since 1988 and has coordinated hundreds of events, over 60 poetry readings per year since 1990.  She has served as Editor of the Mad Poets Review since the first issue in 1990, and has been a Contributing Editor for the literary journal, HELLAS, A Journal of Arts and Humanities.