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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 !!!!    

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.

From Amy Laub

Dear Poets,

As Eileen D’Angelo likes to say, COME OUT AND PLAY!  Laugh, beam, giggle, grin, titter, roar, smile, smirk, and let it all hang out at another fun meeting of the Mad Poets Society Critique Circle THIS Wednesday September 5, 2007 at 7:00 pm.

Bring your sense of humor and 10 copies of an original poem in progress for positive, constructive feedback on your writing, and the company of other local poets.

   9 East State Street, Media, PA 19063 (across State Street from Trader Joe’s)
    Jim Pierson, Manager
    JPierson@Harvestbooks .com, 
www.HarvestBooks.com, 610-566-3191

Come early and shop — many books are only $1 or $2 — you can’t afford to NOT shop here!

If you have any questions, please call or email me. See you there!

Links to over 800 poets

Poet Dee Rimbaud has recently added a new feature to his website. He has links and photographs of over 800 poets and writers, past and present. It is worth a look and the link is

http://www.rimbaud.org.uk/links3.html

If you have a website you would like  Dee to consider adding you can contact him at

dee.rimbaud@googlemail.com

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.

Fredonia Poet Vincent Quatroche- An Interview

1-0000.jpg  Vincent Quatroche has been a member of the Communication and English Department @ JCC since 1997. He has BA in English and Master of Science in Education from SUNY @ Fredonia. In addition to his adjunct position with JCC,  Vincent has been a member of the faculty in the Communication Department @ Fredonia State since the late 80s. Mr. Quatroche is also an Instructor in Adult Education for Erie-2 Chautauqua-Cattaraugus BOCES @ the Chautauqua County Jail since 1996. He is a published author of numerous creative projects, including audio recordings and books. His poetry has been distributed widely throughout the United States and abroad. A profile of his work appeared on PBS in 1998. Mr. Quatroche’s professional credentials and accomplishments are recognized and included in the 25th edition of the International Biographic Center’s Dictionary of Who’s Who in the Field of Education, Cambridge CB2 #QP United Kingdom, England. Please visit www.rubbereden.com to see the works of Vincent Quatroche.

What others say about Vincent Quatroche:

“When Vincent Quatroche’s voice begins to scratch the groove, you realize you’ve had an itch you didn’t know about. Maybe you would rather not know that itch; but Vincent does not care. Either way he’s going to keep doing what he’s been doing these past couple decades –putting down the best writing in the United States, unassuming, cutting, hilarious. Real poems from a real poet.” - Bob Holman, Nuyorican Poet, NYC

“Quatroche is primarily an oral poet, influenced by and working in the tradition of Whitman, Sandburg, Ginseberg, Ferlinghetti, Ken Nordine, Tom Waits, Charles Bukowski and similar experimenters in the American oral tradition. His work expresses a strong element of social criticism–sometimes angry, sometimes ironic or absurd, with the element of the highly personal and lyrical. One of his greatest strengths is the effective use of telling details and powerful images and metaphors to bring us face to face with our foibles, our failures and our loves.’- David Lunde.

The Interview:

Q. You read for the Mad Poets at the old Newtown series last year. Did you enjoy your visit? 

 Very much so. Totally unique experience. Quite an intimate setting, all of us sitting around the old huge oak table in the shadows under the glower of that huge painting of William Penn hanging in the Newton Library. As I remarked at the time Newton during the Christmas season reminds me as something straight out of central casting from an old Frank Capra Movie. How could you not dig a roving Glee Club of clean cut, handsome young college boys singing Carols in the downtown streets. Strange beer laws however, seems you can only buy suds by the case, usually I embrace the volume principle, but wasnt going to be in town that long. I would like to go back there and read again someday.     

Q. Over the last year you have read in York, Pa., Buffalo, NYC and
Newtown to name a number of cities you have visited. Is it important for a poet to read their work in public?  

   Well I think so. More a matter of opinion here. Im an old school Oral Tradition guy (in more ways than one) from way back. Kind of depends on the poet. Some of the great ones had really lousy reading voices. I remember hearing a compilation of some really big names years ago and thinking they might have been better off sticking to the page. No sense naming names, its all a subjective judgment call anyway. I just think it is like you have a voice in your head that the writer invokes with their printed words from the page, that you surrender your stream of consciousness to. Sometimes upon hearing the actual voice, in real time audio they just dont match up. A lot like the DJ effect (which I was once on Public Radio for years) youre always getting that, Hey….you dont look anything like your voice remark.      

Q. Sleeping Giant Records has produced your CDS. What was it like working with Dan Berggren?  

  Could never say enough good things about this rare individual  He is an extremely talented singer/song writer and performer who knows his way around the sound recording studio like few Ive ever worked with. His 25+ year career at the State University College @ Fredonia was a revelation to thousands of students he mentored (including myself) There ought to be a statue of him somewhere on that campus. He helped everybody. I first met Dan in the early 80s when I returned to the East from the Pacific Northwest to finish my education. We hit it off immediately even though we both were coming from very different directions musically. Sort of like jazz/Ambient/Advant-Garde meets Traditional Folk/Bluegrass/gospel. Ill let you figure out who was who. But creatively ? We spoke the same language. So almost thirty years later, after 4 cassettes, 2 CDs and countless gigs preforming with each other, we are still very much in touch. Hes retired now living in the foothills of his beloved  Adirondacks with his wife Nancy, still writing, performing and producing projects (like my last 2 CDs). He has a new release out on Sleeping Giant Records w/ Dan Duggan and Peggy Lynn entitled Jamcrackers Db is the man and I am Goddamn proud to be able to call him my friend.  

      Q. Jim Briggs of the NYC Sound Designer said of your work Matador From Another Planet; ‘’Quatroche can also can just spit it out, as he claims in opener Of the Aural and Visual. Taking dead aim and hitting the mark often, Quatroche simultaneously questions and embraces absurdity in his many takes on the “unfinished symphony of madness!   Is this the desired effect?      

Briggs is a very astute judge of musical composition and is on his way to being very influential in his career to the development of a lot of emerging young artists. His insights and reviews of the current music scene are usually dead on. Now his kind words about my stuff while very flattering make an interesting point about the nature of my work. Actually the line he quoted was from a piece on Matador from Another Planet and goes the unfinished symphony of contemporary madness. Its like adding more notes to the blaring cacophony of this really scary soundtrack to the terrible now. And we are all living/dancing to it. As for desired effect ? Certainly I have my creative intentions when I conceive the work to be presented in a specific way, but (and this is very important) the listener makes the final decision on just how it strikes/resonates with them based upon the world inside their heads that their ears are the doorways into.     

Q. I recently visited with you in Fredonia New York. I was amazed at the excellent interaction you have with your students. They also greatly enjoyed your work. Should we expect to see some developing poets out of Fredonia
New York?   

Well….most of my students anyway. You might get a few differences of opinion in certain college barrooms here in town. Regardless I love teaching at SUNY Fredonia as well as other education venues in Chautauqua County,(a community college and county jail). To answer your question there have been some very good poets to come out of this area over the years, most have just passed through. My old Friend, Poet & Translator David Lunde comes to mind. Perhaps one of the better known successful writers, Mark Brazill worked on ”That 70s Show”. His contributions to plot lines were based upon his experiences here during that time period attending school in area.   

Q. As many poets hit mid life it seems a continued fascination with Baseball and Jazz flourishes. A common trait you share with New Jersey Poet Dave Worrell. Why does the inspiration continue? 

   Ick. Mid-Life. Guess that means you are half over. Well guess it’s time to face the facts, I guess. Lets start with Jazz. I was raised on it. My Dad saw to that. He was my humanities teacher in music, art, theater and general aesthetics. Charlie Parker was my first baby sitter and I had a Jackson Pollock coloring book. To this day Jazz is always on in my house. For the record ? When Dexter Gordon speaks through that tenor ? I listen to the bone.  As for Baseball ? I dunno. Something about the game. Sure aspects of it have changed over the years. The human-growth league was quite an innovation, but really the event of a ball game is still great metaphorical rich stuff. Life lessons, history, drama, really you name it. Perhaps the pastoral 18th Century nature of the ritual endures and still attracts. Anything can happen in those nine innings, hell you might even get bonus panels, but just like life, it can be all over with one swing of the bat and the best, (as they say) fail 7 of 10 times. Sounds about like the daily odd-spread to me most days.  BTW thanks for the tip on Worrell. I’ll look him up. 

Q. You have several books published and a number of CDs. Where should folks look to find the works of Vincent Quatroche?  

  Any of my efforts can be ordered via the web. Im all over the place. Just type my name in to any search engine and all manner of stuff will come up. Best bet is just to check out my website www.rubbereden.com  and contact me directly.  Itll all be quicker and cheaper that way for anybody interested. Around New York  State you can find some of my work at St. Marks Books down in the East Village in NYC and at Rust Belt Books in the Allentown section of  Buffalo. 

Q. You have been around the poetry scene since the 1970’s. What direction do you see poetry moving in? 

   Poverty. Confessional reflection, really anywhere the Post-Modern muse flows here in the Rubber Eden. Never seems that Poets/ Poetry ever go away in Gridville. Sure. We get marginalized, trivialized, ignored on a daily basis and I think the worst of us are celebrated and fawned over in the mainstream media. Most popular stuff is common denominator populist drivel specifically designed to move units (slim little booklets of sheer poop) Some days I get a little concerned that the imagination gene pool is drying up. (either the capacity to create or the ability or desire to appreciate)  Me ? Stick to the underground. I belong down here. More freedom. Less hate mail. Interesting fellow disenfranchised fellow poets, cheaper beer. Look all this should be really rewarding and fun, if not ? Why in hell bother ? You aren’t ever going to make any money with it all, in fact you can count on forking over dough just to be a part of it. Why not ? You sure can pay one hell of a lot more for much, much less in life.   

Q. Your poetry has been described as unique, where does your inspiration come from and who were your major influences? 

   My poetry has been described as a lot of things. Some even repeatable Truth is? Mostly I’ve been ignored. Best quote I ever heard about my work was something like it has traveled around the country like a pen stuck in the pocket of a shirt in the washer. So far the lid hasn’t come off…..yet. The only thing I dont want it tagged as is invisible. Inspiration ? Anything, everything. I have a special bonus card account for preferred consumers with the All for a Dollar/ 5 & 10 cent slightly damaged, dented, scratched retail “id” outlet of the 5 senses and a direct agreement with the devil for nightly shipments of the 6th. Influences ? The usual suspects..(well my usual ones anyway) All the Beats… Bukowski, Brautigan, Weldon Kees, Hurbet Shelly, Hemmingway, Stienbeck, Hurbet Shelly, Robert Stone, Tom Waits, Brian Eno, The Residents, Vivian Stanshall, Elvis Costello, Ken Nordine, Robert Mitchum, Edward Hopper, Elia Kazan, Sammuel Beckett, Frank O’Hara, John Berrymen, e.e. cummings, Walt Whitman, Rod Serling , Thomas Wolfe, Frank Zappa, the list could go on and on and on

Q. Do you have any projects in the works you can share with us?  

  Sure. Currently working on a recent collection of Po/Prose to be printed in the late Fall of this year. Number #4. And for the record ? Yes, I am self-published. And I make no apologies. At this point of my life after writing all these years Idl be Goddamn if Im waiting around for some validation from a snotty book division of some corporation or local “ham & egger” local poetry publisher . I know what my stuff intends to accomplish and its place/value and worth in this world. Period. That being said if some smarmy suit showed up with a big fact contract/check tomorrow ? Id be ass kissing all the way to the bank.    

Q. Isn’t Fredonia the country in the Marx Brothers movie ”Duck Soup”?      

Ok…..here we go. Heard this once years ago somewhere. According to sources that I cant substantiate the story goes something like this. The Marx Bros where touring upstate NY somewhere in the 1920s and had a gig in Buffalo. At this point they were a relatively unknown group of wild vaudevillian stage comedians. Somebody suggested they could pick up a few extra dollars in this little farm town about 35 miles southwest of the city. They decided to do it.  After performing at the local Opera House The manager refused to pay the guys explaining they werent funny and the crowd didnt like them. Word was Groucho was furious and swore revenge. So years later when it came time to name a ridiculous place where everybody was a fool in a movie guess what he came up with? Yup. He remembered. Smart too. Changed the spelling to Freedonia.  No lawsuit. Just as a foot note. Groucho probably knew that the opera house would someday become a movie house and maybe some of the same people who didnt like their act the first time would sit there actually having pay to watch the guys make fun of them. Might not be true. But never let truth stand in the way of a good story. Mark Twain didnt. His, ”The Man who Corrupted Hattiesburg”, was based on the pious, phony citizens of Fredonia in the 1800s. Sounds like people who wouldnt get  the Marx Brothers.       

Q. Any plans to be in the Philadelphia area? 

  Ahh…the City of  Brotherly love ? Love too. All you have to do is ask. Rent me by the hour or the pound. Call for prices.