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Christopher Luna by Alisha Jucevic for the Columbian

Christopher Luna by Alisha Jucevic for the Columbian
Christopher Luna by Alisha Jucevic for the Columbian

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Sketches from Paper Tiger Coffee Open Mic Poetry Reading on Thursday, November 18 (by Christopher Luna)

Here are some sketches I made of the participants
in last Thursday's open mic poetry reading
at Paper Tiger Coffee in Vancouver, WA,
hosted by Dan Nelson
and featuring Steve Williams
and Constance Hall 

Thanks to Dan, Steve, Constance, Zach,
and all of the open mic readers
for another great night of poetry in the 'Couve!

-Christopher Luna


Thursday, November 18, 2010

Dear Gilbert Sorrentino & Other Poems By Jack Lorts available now from Finishing Line Press


A POEM FROM THE BOOK:



(On Dan's cover painting)

Daniel Robinson's Morning View

I know canyons,
tho they be
the other
side the river,
shadows hiding
in distant brown,
a vineyard,
a winery perhaps,
sliding into the river
just west of
where the picture ends.

Shadows reflect
in water
the world beyond the river,
light from the east,
as always,
in early morning—
an arm extending
into the east/west flow,
blocking Siddhartha
who becomes
the distant brown.

A slender palisade
beckons in the distance,
to become one
with the sky,
with the river,
as clouds hide
the brightest blue.

The artist sits
atop Blaylock Ridge
looking across the river,
into distant brown.

Dear Gilbert Sorrentino & Other Poems, by Jack e Lorts will be published by Finishing Line Press March 4, 2011. This is a limited edition collection, priced at $14, plus $1 shipping, and pre-publication sales will determine the press run, so please reserve your copy now. To order, you may mail this completed form, along with payment, to Finishing Line Press at the address below, or you may visit www.finishinglinepress.com and click on "New Releases and Forthcoming Titles"

Please send me ______ copy/copies of Dear Gilbert Sorrentino & Other Poems by Jack e Lorts, for $14.00 each
(Shipping is only $1 per copy!).

Name _____________________________________________________________________________

Address ___________________________________________________________________________

City, State, Zip Code _________________________________________________________________

Finishing Line Press
PO Box 1626
Georgetown, Kentucky 40324

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

THE WORK POETRY NEWSLETTER NOVEMBER 2010

THE WORK POETRY NEWSLETTER
NOVEMBER 2010
BY CHRISTOPHER LUNA
My monthly workshop continues on Saturday, November 13. We will listen to spoken word recordings, discuss poetry and the poet’s role in the community, and do some writing together. Let me know if you’d like to speak to a former participant of the workshop to determine whether it would be right for you. The workshop will take place in the newly opened Niche, a wine bar owned and operated by Angst Gallery Director Leah Jackson. Niche is located at 1013 Main, right next door to the gallery. The workshop costs $20 and will take place from noon to 2:30 on Saturday, November 13. Hope to see you there.
Kazim Ali

On November St. Johns Booksellers and I present Kazim Ali, poet and author of a great new book of prose poetry, “Bright Felon.” Joins us at 8622 Lombard at 2pm Sunday, November 21 for what is sure to be a great afternoon of poetry. See item 7 below for more info.

On November 30 I will proudly serve as guest host for surrealist superhero Dan Raphael’s reading at Barnes and Noble in Vancouver. Dan’s reading from his new book, “Impulse and Warp: The Selected 20th Century Poems” will be followed by an open mic. See item 1 below for more info on Dan’s upcoming readings.

Photos of the fire at Mojos and
Cover to Cover Books 
by Olinka Broadfoot 
October 11, 2010



On October 11, just as our monthly open mic poetry reading was about to begin, there was a fire at Mojo’s, the bar and grill next door to Cover to Cover Books. No one was hurt, and much of the bookstore’s inventory was saved; however, it will be several months before Cover to Cover Books (http://covertocoverbooks.net/) will be open for business. Our thoughts are with Mel Sanders, her employees, and her family during this difficult time. We eagerly await our return to the bookstore, but until then the Cover to Cover open mic will be touring the downtown area, visiting a different venue every month. Email me or consult my blog (http://christopherluna-poetry.blogpsot.com/) for updates on our Ghost Town Poetry Tour.

I’d like to thank Leah Jackson for allowing us to use Angst Gallery for October’s reading with Carlos Reyes. I’m proud to report that it was a great evening of poetry, with several new participants including Portland writers Mike G., Bob, and Jeff Ettlin, who entertained us with his hilarious Star Wars poems.

The first stop on our Ghost Town Poetry Tour will be The Stray Gallery, which is located at 1706 Columbia (between 17th and McLoughlin), just two short blocks west of the bookstore. I would like to thank Kori Sayer and Matt LeMieux for opening up their home to us. Because The Stray Gallery is a private residence, it is not handicapped accessible. However, we’d be happy to help people up the two steps that lead into the house.

You may want to bring a folding chair or two, as seating will be limited. Snacks and drinks are also welcome.

As always, the open mic will spotlight one of the area’s best published poets. Our featured reader for November is Penelope Scambly Schott.

Open Mic Poetry hosted by
Christopher Luna
7:00pm Thursday,
November 11, 2010
At a special location
The Stray Gallery
1706 Columbia, Vancouver
(between 17th & McLoughlin)
For more info call 360-910-1066

Penelope Scambly Schott's newest book Crow Mercies (Calyx Press, $14.95) was awarded the Sarah Lantz Memorial Prize. As one critic wrote, "To read these poems is to fall in love (again) with poetry." Schott's verse biography of Anne Hutchinson, A is for Anne: Mistress Hutchinson Disturbs the Commonwealth (Turning Point, $17.00) won the Oregon Book Award for Poetry in 2008. Along with the aforementioned, Schott’s Six Lips (Mayapple Press, $15.95) and Under Taos Mountain: The Terrible Quarrel of Magpie and Tia ($10.00) will also be available for sale at the reading. Anyone who buys one of these books will also receive a copy of a collaborative chapbook. In addition to writing, Penelope grades papers, paints, hikes with her girl gang, and spoils her family, particularly the lovely Ms. Lily Schott Sweetdog.

Excerpt of poem from Six Lips:

from "Counting the Body" section 6:

6. Six Lips

Six lips to sip the sublime,
two for the mouth and four for the vulva,
plump as succulents and shining with dew--
ah youth; ah, time.


Christopher again.

My thanks to Olin Unterwegner, Zachary Gray, Chris Stevens, and the staff at Paper Tiger Coffee and Northwest Shirts for hosting this year’s Culture Control event. Poets Alex Birkett, Jenney Pauer, Rick J., and Dan Nelson shared their well-crafted and thought-provoking words with an appreciative crowd from 5 to 6pm last Saturday. Remember that the art exhibit will be up for the rest of the month, including my apocalyptic tribute to the Godfather of Soul, “The Second Coming of the Sex Machine.” You can also see work by many local artists including Chelsea Rose, Olin Unterwegner, Pablito, and Toni Partington. Congratulations to Olin for a great event—planning and executing an all day concert in two venues is not easy.

I’m very grateful to Kate Dyer-Seeley and the Vancouver Voice for their favorable story on me and my role in the local poetry community. And special thanks to local photography genius Anni Becker for the head shot that accompanies the story: http://www.vanvoice.com/article?articleTitle=%27couv+connections%3a+some+things+are+better+live--1287421254--424


Please read my recent column for Sage Cohen’s “Writing the Life Poetic E-Zine” (link and article in item 9 below). Then take a look at my first review for the newly launched New York Journal of Books: http://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/review/sarah%E2%80%94-fragments-and-lines. There is more info about the website in item 11 below.

St. Mark’s Poetry Project in New York has posted some great audio from some of their recent readings including David Shapiro, Laura Moriarty, my Kerouac School friend Cedar Sigo (see item 10 below for more info on his new book from City Lights), and filmmaker Jonas Mekas’s description of Allen Ginsberg’s death in 1997: http://poetryproject.org/multimedia/audio

Finally, check out “A Monk’s Tale,” Sam Hamill’s account of founding Poets Against the War: http://kagean.blogspot.com/2010/10/monks-tale.html

Smoke and fire won’t stop us
from slinging verbiage,
Christopher Luna

THE WORK
November 2010

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Upcoming readings to celebrate Dan Raphael’s selected poems, “Impulse & Warp” (Vancouver and Portland)

2. The Studio Series Poetry Reading John Morrison and Jessica Lamb + Open Mic Nov. 14 (Portland)

3. Figures of Speech with Penelope Scambly Schott and David Axelrod at 100th Monkey Studios hosted by Steve Williams and Constance Hall Nov. 17/ Looking Glass Critique Group (Portland)

4. Steve Williams and Constance Hall + open mic at Paper Tiger Coffee Nov. 18 (Vancouver)

5. Oregon Poet Laureate Paulann Petersen’s upcoming readings to celebrate her new book, “The Voluptuary” (Portland)

6. Break Into Business Writing: A Workshop with Sage Cohen and PDX Writers Nov. 20 at Tabor Space (Portland)

7. Kazim Ali, author of “Bright Felon: Autobiography and Cities” at St. Johns Booksellers Nov. 21 (Portland)

8. Moonstruck Chocolate Poetry Reading November 21 (Lake Oswego)

9. “How to Launch an Open Mic Poetry Reading” by Christopher Luna, from Sage Cohen’s “Writing the Life Poetic” E-Zine

10. Three Friends Reading Series is accepting proposals through December 3

11. New York Journal of Books Launch Announcement

12. City Lights Spotlight Series presents a new book by Cedar Sigo

13. Margin L, new poetry by Vernon Frazer

SUBMISSION CALLS

1.

Upcoming readings with Dan Raphael, in celebration of his new book, “Impulse & Warp: The Selected 20th Century Poems:”

Wednesday, 11/10, 7:00 @ Milwaukie Library’s pond house, just Dan reading for 45 minutes or so, followed by Q and A/discussion.

Tuesday, 11/30 7:00 @ Barnes and Noble Vancouver (7700 NE Fourth Plain Blvd., 98662)

Dan Raphael + open mic with guest host Christopher Luna

Barnes and Noble emcee Shawn Sorensen’s announcement: Barnes & Noble Vancouver is honored to host open mic icon DAN RAPHAEL for its last Tuesdays monthly Poetry Group. Poetry Northwest magazine voted Raphael one of the top 150 poets in Oregon's history. Come see why and read your own work during our open mic portion of the evening. Order Raphael's new greatest hits collection Impulse & Warp: Selected 20th Century Poems at www.bn.com or at the info. desk in the middle of our bookstore at least a week before the event. Barnes & Noble Poetry Group, Nov. 30th, 7-8:30 pm, 7700 NE Fourth Plain Blvd., 98662; more info. from regular host Shawn Sorensen, who will be at the 11/30 event: crm2679@bn.com. Special guest host: Christopher Luna.

2.
The Studio Series
Poetry Reading and Open Mic

This month, the Studio Series will feature
John Morrison and Jessica Lamb - see bios below

Sunday, November 14
7-9 pm
Stonehenge Studios
3508 SW Corbett Avenue, Portland 97239

Free and open to the public, The Studio Series is held monthly on second Sundays. For more information, please contact organizer and host Leah Stenson at leahstenson@comcast.net

3.
From Steve Williams and Constance Hall:

Our critique group meetings will be November 14th and December 12th, both at 5 p.m. at Looking Glass Books. Bring yourself and 8-10 copies of a poem.

On November 17th, we have Penelope Scambly Schott and David Axelrod at the Figures of Speech reading in the 100th Monkey Studio located at 110 SE 16th. Festivities start at 7 p.m. More info at www.figuresofspeechpdx.wordpress.com/about

The next evening (November 18th), Constance and I will be featured readers as a duo at a reading in Vancouver. The location is Paper Tiger coffee shop at 7 p.m. Address is 703 Grand Blvd. Directions and map available by clicking the above link 'paper tiger.' This is a well attended reading so come early to get a chair. :)

Our hearts go out to Mel at Cover to Cover books in Downtown Vancouver who is closed due to a fire in the restaurant next to her store. Chris Luna has up to date info. on the situation and where he will be moving his reading until Mel can get open again. Our last info. is that insurance is helping her out and she will be able to salvage 70% of her inventory. However, the process of cleaning the smoke out of books is not quick, plus the building needs repairs. The last estimate we heard is the store will re-open in Feb-March, 2011.

all for now

warmly,
s and c

4.
From Daniel Nelson

Welcome back, poetry fans,
Thanks to all the folks who promoted or attended last month's Poetry Night. It was a rousing success with a great time had by all. Special gratitude goes out to Ric Vrana for his inspired verse on being a not so ugly American in Central America, which made me want to buy a plane ticket south.

This month's 3rd Thursday, November 25th, at 7pm at Paper Tiger, 703 Grand Blvd in Vancouver, (between Evergreen and Mill Plain about a mile east of I-5) we will be featuring the dynamic duo of Constance Hall and Steve Williams. Steve lives and works in Portland, Oregon with a lovely woman who writes and edits much better than he, but refuses to admit it. Together they do literary community work for VoiceCatcher, OSPA, their own reading series (www.figuresofspeechpdx.wordpress.com), and a creative writing class as Regency Park Assisted Living Center. His chapbook, Skin Stretched Around the Hollow, was published by Rattlesnake press in 2007. You can find his work online at Stirring, Rose and Thorn, and most recently, two contest winning poems at www.scratchcontest.net. In addition, they own and operate an online critique forum at www.wildpoetryforum.com which has been operating with a world-wide membership since 1998.

Constance Hall writes under the penname M. Her work has appeared in Rattle, Harpur Palate, Pedestal, The Dirty Napkin, Babelfruit, and others – and will appear again in the Winter 2010 issue of Rattle. She has served for over a decade as an Associate Poetry Editor for an online poetry journal called Stirring: A Literary Collection. In addition, she’s an Administrator of an online poetry critique forum; Co-Chair of the Portland Unit of the Oregon State Poetry Association; Co-host of a monthly reading series/open mic called Figures of Speech; and Managing Editor/Board Member for VoiceCatcher, a non-profit collective that produces an annual anthology of Portland/Vancouver area women’s prose, poetry, and artwork.

Hope you will all join us and bring something to read during our open mic section showcasing the talents of some of the finest poets in the NW. Come on out an partake of great beverages and great minds. Here is a poem by M which will require any lover of great verse to attend our gathering to hear more.

Dan Nelson
360-334-1129
nelsondaniel59@yahoo.com

Salt
by M

In this room down a hall
at the Hopewell House
every Wednesday
from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m.,
the widowed have agreed to meet
to lick the salt block.
My name tag reads
Albino deer (recessive rarity): widow at 35.
Dun-colored Helen and Marie
mistake me for a sheep or a goat
as we draw our chairs into a circle
of circumstance. Muscles in their aged faces
twitch with the greed of suspicion.
In the larger world,
Jean and I would sit in adjoining streetcar seats,
read our newspapers,
and never share a headline.
Even Doris, who drags the remains
of a personal god at the bottom
of her purse, tucked next to non-prescription
reading glasses she bought on sale at Walmart,
shrinks from my pink eyes.
Louise has ten grandchildren,
three she and Harry were raising
because her daughter is, well, you know,
she doesn’t want to say. She won’t tell you either
that when Harry up and died like that,
some small part of her wished
he’d had the decency to take those kids with him,
but he never even took them to the park.
Betty lost a husband and found
a lump. Elsie says when the ambulance
comes to the Ridgewood Nursing Home,
they don’t turn on the sirens
for fear they’ll incite a riot
of dying. Ida says yeah, she knows.
She’s lost two of them that way. I nod.
Judith’s raised eyebrow asks
What could one with hooves so pale know of loss?
A marriage must be long
to be 40-years deep,
and grief is a black market business
best kept to themselves. If I taste it,
others will want it.
Young bucks will be dying in droves.
In war, in the streets,
in flaming buildings.
Or quietly in a bed next to me at night.
That sting in the wound, that particular tang
on the tongue, are theirs.
Keep me away from the salt.
Their old ones are sanctified,
their sorrow is sacred,
denial alive in the hide.

© 2009 M
Featured in the Winter 2009 issue of Rattle, Issue #32

5.
From Oregon Poet Laureate Paulann Petersen

My latest book of poems, THE VOLUPTUARY, has arrived from Lost Horse Press, and I'm set to give some readings to help launch it.

I hope you can come to one of these. Christine Holbert---the Lost Horse Press publisher, editor, and book designer---has made a beautiful home for these poems dedicated to Walt Whitman and my parents, Grace and Paul Whitman. (Yes, my birth name is Whitman...........)

I do hope one of these readings will find a spot on your busy fall calendar.

POWELL'S on Burnside
Thursday, November 18th, 7:30 pm

ANNIE BLOOM'S
Monday, November 22nd, 7:30 pm

BROADWAY BOOKS
Tuesday, November 23rd, 7 pm

LOOKING GLASS
Thursday, December 2nd, 7 pm

And please, as you think about shopping for gifts this holiday season, remember to support our local independent book stores. Recently, I've been buying book store gift certificates to give as gifts. As much as I like picking out a book for a friend, I also like the idea of that friend being able to make his or her own pick from the treasures our book sellers have on hand.

All the best,
Paulann

6.
Break Into Business Writing: A Workshop with Sage Cohen and PDX Writers

You can write for love AND for money--and each type of writing can benefit the other! This workshop for writers of all genres will offer all of the basics for how to get started as a copywriter--from finding clients to establishing a scope of practice to setting prices to building long-term relationships. Through a series of guided exercises, you'll plant the first seeds of your copywriting future and prepare for next steps. You'll leave informed about what it takes to break into copywriting for businesses and inspired to get started.

Date/Time: Saturday, November 20, 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Cost: $40.
Location: TaborSpace, 5441 SE Belmont, Portland, Oregon

Learn more:
http://writingthelifepoetic.typepad.com/writing_the_life_poetic/2010/10/break-into-business-writing-boost-your-income-and-creativity.html

Register:
https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07e31hn0a6bc90168d&oseq=

7.
Kazim Ali, poet and author of
“Bright Felon: Autobniography and Cities”
2pm
Sunday, November 21
St. Johns Booksellers
8622 N. LOMBARD ST., PORTLAND
Contact:
Christopher Luna 360-910-1066
Nena Rawdah 503-283-0032


Bright Felon: Autobiography and Cities

This groundbreaking transgenre work—part detective story, part literary memoir, part imagined past—is intensely autobiographical and confessional. Proceeding sentence by sentence, city by city, and backwards in time, poet and essayist Kazim Ali details the struggle of coming of age between cultures, and overcoming personal and family strictures. The text is comprised of sentences that alternate in time, ranging from discursive essay to memoir to prose poetry. Art, history, politics, geography, love, sexuality, writing, and religion, and the role silence plays in each, are its interwoven themes. Bright Felon is literally “autobiography” because the text itself becomes a form of writing the life, revealing secrets, and then, amid the shards and fragments of experience, dealing with the aftermath of such revelations. Bright Felon offers a new and active form of autobiography alongside such texts as Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s Dictee, Lyn Hejinian’s My Life, and Etel Adnan’s In the Heart of the Heart of Another Country.

Bio: Kazim Ali is the author of two books of poetry, The Far Mosque (Alice James Books), winner of Alice James Books' New England/New York Award, and The Fortieth Day (BOA Editions, 2008).


He is also the author of the novel Quinn’s Passage (blazeVox books), named one of "The Best Books of 2005" by Chronogram magazine;The Disappearance of Seth (Etruscan Press, 2009); Bright Felon: Autobiography and Cities (Wesleyan University Press, 2009); and Orange Alert: Essays on Poetry, Art and the Architecture of Silence (University of Michigan Press, 2010).

He is an assistant professor of Creative Writing at Oberlin College and teaches in the low-residency MFA program of the University of Southern Maine. His work has been featured in many national journals such as Best American Poetry 2007, American Poetry Review, Boston Review, Barrow Street, jubilat and Massachusetts Review. He teaches at Oberlin College and the Stonecoast MFA program and is a founding editor of Nightboat Books.

http://www.kazimali.com/
http://www.youtube.com/PoetryisNews

Praise for Bright Felon

“Bright Felon will steal your heart and outrage your poetics. Part memoir, part trip book, part literary discourse, there is in it an urgent sense of a life lived in words. The tale is one of both innocence and experience. Rigorous, romantic, experimental, true, and yet mysterious, it is a book for the ages.”
—Laura Moriarty

“Kazim Ali writes in Bright Felon a prose shaped by the various cities he has lived and loved in. This is a book that it so much more than memoir or autobiography. It is embodied and questioning and it carries through its politics a grace and generosity."
—Juliana Spahr

8.
GIVING THANKS THROUGH WORDS

On Sunday, November 21 at 6:30 PM, four local authors will read from their manuscripts or books of poetry at Moonstruck Chocolate Cafe, 45 S. State Street in downtown Lake Oswego.

Featured are Greg Chaimov, author of EVERYTHING IS WATER, Vincent Fitzgerald, author of BATHLESS, Noel Hanlon, author of BLUE ABUNDANCE, and Shelley Reece, previous English department chairperson and editor of FIREWEED.

The program is hosted by Joan Maiers, writing instructor at Marylhurst University.

The program is free and open to the public.

Proceeds from Vince Fitzgerald's book will be donated to the local Parkinson's Resource Group.

Arriving by 6 PM is recommended for prompt beverage service and best seating.

9.
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs010/1100476723030/archive/1103754989972.html

How to Launch an Open Mic Poetry Reading
By Christopher Luna

Christopher Luna
in David Madgalene's film
"Cities of the Dead"

Don't know if your community is welcoming to the arts? Not sure how to discover who the likeminded folks are? One good way to find out is by creating an event which provides a space for poets to share their work.

When I founded my open mic poetry reading at Ice Cream Renaissance in late 2004, I was new to Vancouver, Washington. Although the series was well attended from the beginning, it took a few years before the larger community was aware of our existence. I moved the reading to Cover to Cover Books in January 2007, and things really took off.

Today, we consistently draw between 20 and 40 people every month. I have a loyal group of regulars, and draw new readers every month. Nearly every month I have the great privilege of introducing people who are reading their poetry in public for the first time. We also have about half-a-dozen people who come just to listen. This is particularly gratifying; it is often very difficult to convince non-writers to attend a poetry reading. With the support of the community, the Cover to Cover open mic is a successful series that continues to evolve.

Most of the work one has to do to create such an event takes place at the beginning of the process. Dr. Timothy Leary wrote of the importance of "set and setting" when embarking on a psychedelic exploration. Similarly, a poetry reading has the potential to expand one's consciousness and alter one's mood. Think about the tone you would like to set. What kind of atmosphere would you like to create? Will there be a time limit for each reader? Will each reading have a theme? Will you invite featured readers to present their work?

If you do not have a space of your own that would be suitable for a poetry reading, you must do a bit of research to find a venue. It is important to discuss your philosophy about the types of people and writing that may be featured with the owner of the space--because you don't want to waste a lot of time and energy planning an event for a business that does not share your perspective.

Once you have found a venue, you must decide how often the reading will take place. Do your best to choose a date that does not conflict with another reading in town. In my experience, monthly readings have more staying power than weekly readings, for a variety of reasons, one of the most important being that they're less exhausting for the organizer.

Also, open mics attract both experienced readers as well as new writers, and most people do not write fast enough to have new poems every week. This can lead weekly events to become boring or repetitive. With effective publicity and good word of mouth, a monthly reading can become a special event that people will look forward to all month.

Once you know where and when the event will take place, begin getting the word out. Create a blog or website for the event. Make postcards and flyers. Begin building a list of people who would like to receive email notices of such events; invite everyone who attends to sign up for future announcements. Research the local press and make a list of email addresses of newspaper and magazine writers and editors. Then keep in touch regularly with pertinent news about your events.

A poetry reading is a bit like tending a garden. You plant a seed, nurture it, and watch it grow.

* * * * *
Christopher Luna is a poet, editor, artist, teacher, and graduate of the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics. Publications include Cadillac Cicatrix, eye-rhyme, Exquisite Corpse, and the @tached document. Chapbooks include tributes and ruminations, On the Beam (with David Madgalene), and Sketches for a Paranoid Picture Book on Memory. GHOST TOWN, USA, which features poems and observations of Vancouver, WA, is available through Cover to Cover Books and Angst Gallery, or from the author.

Email: christopherjluna@gmail.com
Blog: www.christopherluna-poetry.blogspot.com

10.
From Melissa Sillitoe:

Hi boys and girls,

Good grief...it's already time to think about Winter Semester even as we continue to dream up love poems under Autumn leave and to write inspiring election-y lyrics. But hey, you've performed on our small yet sufficient stage before, and we haven't forgotten you.

As you know, all of us at Show and Tell are artists and volunteers who love to provide an informal and nurturing forum for emerging beginners, seasoned amateurs and consummate professionals alike. We produce events that are collaborative, affordable, unpretentious; we like events that mix poetry or prose with music and other mediums. We’re about art, caffeine, community and good times. We’ve created a huge archive of local artists performances.

And here's your chance to submit to Portland's only invite-yourself invited series. And here's the Three Friends Mondays format: You and two creative friends have 60 minutes to perform poems, stories, songs, etc. We provide a basic sound set-up and we podcast any original material. The stage is small, but it’s big enough to hold three performers, if needed. Three Friends Coffee House holds about 50 people.

Show and Tell Gallery is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit that is run by unpaid volunteers. Any money we bring in through donations or grants is spent on web hosting, publicity and batteries.

Show and Tell Gallery wants to be as inclusive as possible – we welcome all genres and mediums. You can say anything you want on our stage, as long as your words are not hateful towards any persons or groups of people. You can play any music you like, but please be aware that this small venue has a chill SE vibe.

We are interested from hearing from poets, short story writers, slam poets, musicians of all stripes, dancers, actors… however you call what it is that you do.

We are especially interested in booking shows that have a collaborative theme, such as poets and musicians who create something together, or perform some of the set as a pair or trio.

To apply: please tell us about you and your two chosen creative collaborators and how you plan to spend your 60 minutes of performance time. You’re encouraged to include links to your blog, band page, or include poems in the submission line. Email your proposal to showandtellevents@gmail.com – The deadline for January and February 2010 dates is Friday, December 3.

If your proposal is accepted, please be prepared to provide photos and biographical material for us to include in the website listing for your event.

We look forward to hearing from you, and meanwhile have fun making your art!

Hugs,
Melissa, Luke, Nikia, Christine and Wayne
Show and Tell Gallery

11.
new york journal of books
http://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/

New York Journal of Books Launches to Fill a Gap

New York, NY, October 11, 2010 — Book lovers everywhere now have an exciting new resource for book reviews they can trust. The New York Journal of Books (www.nyjournalofbooks.com) launched on October 6 to meet the need for original online reviews of the same quality as disappearing print reviews.

“We intend to fill the gap that has resulted from the contraction, and in some cases the total elimination, of esteemed print book reviews,” says founder Ted Sturtz. “Unrestrained by page counts and printing costs, we are dedicated to delivering the most comprehensive detailed book reviews in North America written by credentialed reviewers whose knowledge, insight, voice, and measure of the written word permeate our book profiles.”

Thanks to the broad expertise of the NYJB’s team of reviewers, the free site features an eclectic selection of titles sourced from independent publishers as well as imprints of the largest publishers. To help readers make their book selections, reviews are enhanced with rich media, such as video, audio and book browsing.

Visitors to NYJB will also enjoy the immediacy possible only online. Going forward, reviews will be posted at midnight on the date a book is released. When users discover books they want to read, they’ll find that the ability to purchase is conveniently a click away for a truly one-stop experience.

NYJB Publisher, Lisa Rojany Buccieri, author of more than 100 books for children and young adults, lead author of Writing Children's Books for Dummies, and owner of Editorial Services of Los Angeles, noted “fierce attention to the editing and new reviewer selection process will ensure that, as the volume of reviews grows, the quality of reviews will be maintained.” She added, “At the same time, we also take great joy in the panorama of reviewers on our panel and their truly unique voices. They don’t simply judge books. They engage, inform, and even entertain our readers.”

Advertisers on the site have the choice of appearing on major landing pages to reach a broad audience, or appearing in specific genres (for example, romance or military) that reach a highly targeted demographic or enthusiasts and professionals (for example, cooking, wine, or technology).

For more info: media@nyjournalobooks.com

About NYJB Reviewers

Our more than 130 credentialed reviewers have published: 4,000+ book reviews, 500+ books, 500+ short stories, 20,000+ articles, 12+ screenplays and 24+ plays. They have received more than 75 literary and professional awards.

Meet a few:

• Kenneth Allard is a former army colonel, West Point faculty member and dean of the National War College. For almost a decade, he served as an on-air military analyst with NBC News and is the author of four books and an occasional contributor to The Daily Beast.

• Dorothy Seymour Mills is the author of Chasing Baseball: Our Obsession with Its History, Numbers, People and Places (McFarland, 2010). Her late husband was the acclaimed author of many baseball history titles, yet it was recently revealed that Dorothy was the actual author of much of the content of those books. As a result, Oxford University Press, for the first time in its history, changed the attribution of a scholarly work (actually three of them) to include Dorothy's name as an author.

• Andrew Rosenbaum has been a journalist for twenty years at Euromoney, Time, MSN Money, covering politics, business, and finance. He currently resides in France

• Jon Land is the bestselling author of dozens of books in the crime/thriller genre, including The Seven Sins, Strong Enough to Die and Strong Justice.

• Pól Ó Conghaile is a travel writer based in Ireland who has published in CondeNet, Guardian/Observer, Irish Independent, The Globe & Mail (Canada), The Irish Echo (US), Village Magazine and others. He has three times been named Irish Travel Journalist of the Year.

• Lezlie Patterson, is a syndicated romance novel reviewer for McClatchy newspapers.

• Vinton McCabe is the author of seven works of nonfiction on the subject of health and healing, including the now-standard tome Practical Homeopathy, The Healing Enigma, and most recently, The Healing Echo.

12.
The City Lights Spotlight Series is proud to announce the release of
Stranger in Town
by Cedar Sigo


Redolent of John Wieners, Philip Whalen, and Philip Lamantia, Stranger in Town is the second coming of the SF Renaissance.

SERIOUSLY UNDERDRESSED

by Cedar Sigo

Acid washed

Jeans, bitten down

Fingernails, I’ve been

Uptight all

This week wishing

Invisibility,

Scented tissue

I can tease

Into flowers, same

As ever My heart-
shaped collapsible

Locket is still

Missing & I miss

Wearing it open,

I remember a black

Fog inside so

Combed through, trapped

And willingly

Shining me on
 
"In this new century, there is without doubt further territory for poetry to enter into, and Sigo embraces what is currently available and holds out an offering for the future." —Patrick Dunagan

"Themes of love, ecstasy, darkness, and light are wrestled away from sentimental tourists and into the arms of Cedar Sigo, resident genius of this rare, honest romance." —Lisa Jarnot

"A reality made of poetry is all one could ask for, and here it is-created of skillful, elegant, lyric moments and lines." —Joanne Kyger

ISBN-13: 9780872865365
List Price $13.95
Buy it online for 30% off the cover price at www.citylights.com

13.
Margin L, poetry by Vernon Frazer: http://www.lulu.com/product/ebook/margin-l/13042003

"“The roots of Vernon Frazer's textual poetry lie as much in the free jazz of John Coltrane, Cecil Taylor and their successors as they do in language-centered poetry, Surrealism, Dada and abstract expressionism. In Margin L, Frazer's words and concepts play over the page until they create a sense that something has happened during each poem’s movement. The poems, however, leave their interpretation of what precisely has happened up to the reader.”

Featured writer in Counterexample Poetics: http://www.counterexamplepoetics.com/2010/10/vernon-frazer-featured-artist.html

BELLICOSE WARBLING blog update: NEW WORK, EBOOKS AND FELINO SORIANO

Portions of Conversational Assemblies by Felino Soriano. Highly recommended:
http://www.lulu.com/product/ebook/portions-of-conversational-assemblies/12105086

j

SUBMISSION CALLS
1.
Raft, a new spoken-word literary journal, is now online, at: www.raftmagazineonline.com Issue 1 features new work from: Scott Abels Niamh Bagnell Susan Powers Bourne Ric Carfagna Jan Carson Joel Chace Arkava Das Mark DuCharme Iris Jamahl Dunkle Bonnie Emerick Michael Farrell Adam Fieled Thomas Fink Vernon Frazer R. Jess Lavolette David Mohan Debrah Morkun Paul Nelson Francis Raven Chad Scheel Sam Schild Brian Seabolt Adam Strauss Mark Stricker Samuel Day Wharton Karena Youtz Raft is currently accepting new work for issue 2 (deadline: December 16, 2010). Best– Brian Seabolt Raft Magazine http://www.raftmagazineonline.com/

2.
Circlet Press is seeking submissions for its new ebook anthology LIKE A CUNNING PLAN, erotic trickster tales, edited by Michael M. Jones.http://www.circlet.com/?p=1670#more-1670

Everyone loves a good trickster, and every culture has that one guy/gal/deity who insists on breaking the rules, challenging expectations, pushing boundaries, and questioning social mores. Coyote. Puck. Loki. Heyoka. Anansi. Odysseus. Bugs Bunny. Relying on their wits and the foolishness of others, they’re often amoral, capricious, and whimsical, pursuing their own goals no matter what the cost to themselves or others and crossing boundaries that no one else would dare to. So what happens when a trickster decides to have a little carnal fun? Will it be a good-natured romp in the hay, or will someone get their come-uppance? Will they get away scot-free, or will someone learn a valuable lesson? Make it interesting, playful, thoughtful, and above all, sexy. Choose an established trickster, or make one up, retell an old favorite tale or tell us a new one for the modern era. Just make sure you’re not the one being tricked!

It’s all about well-played tricks, cunning plans, disguises and fast talk, lies and half-truths. It’s about having fun and occasionally outwitting oneself. It’s about wondering what the hell just happened, but realizing you had a good time. Stories will be inspected for that subtle ‘heart’ that makes a trickster tale more than an asshole getting his way. In the best Circlet tradition, stories will be sex-positive and open to all sexualities and genders. Trickster is, after all, voracious and omnisexual and open to experimentation (or to having the tables turned on him/her/them).

Submission Details:
Deadline for submission is December 15th. Our preferred length is approximately 3500 to 7500 words, but we will consider the range from 2000 to 10,000 words. All submissions must be made via email to Michael M. Jones at the following address: Tricksterantho@gmail.com

More details: Submissions sent to other addresses/other editors at Circlet Press will not be considered. Standard manuscript formatting rules apply even though sending as an attachment (MS Word .doc or .rtf preferred). Please note that this means your name, address, and email contact must appear on the manuscript itself and not simply in your email message. (If you’re not sure what standard short story manuscript submission format should look like, Google is your friend.)

No simultaneous submissions (that is, don’t also send your story elsewhere at the same time, and don’t send it to multiple Circlet editors, either), and no multiple submissions to the same book. One story per author per anthology, thanks.

All stories must include explicit sexuality and erotic focus. Romantic content is welcome, but in a short story remember to keep the details on the action and its effects on the main character’s internal point of view. Whether first person or third person, a strong, singular narrative voice is our preference (no ‘head hopping’ or swapping points of view within scene).

For more details on our editorial preferences, see the general submission guidelines on circlet.com. We highly recommend reading the guidelines, especially the “do not send” list, to increase your chances of sending us something we’ll love. Try to avoid cliches. Fresh and direct language is preferred to overly euphemistic. Sex-positive, please, no rape/nonconsensuality/ necrophilia or other purposefully gross topics. We do not publish horror. Originals only, no reprints. We purchase first rights for inclusion in the ebook anthology for $25, with the additional rights to a print edition later which would also be paid $25 if a print edition happens. Authors retain the rights to the individual stories; Circlet exercises rights to the anthology as a whole.

3.
The February 2011 issue of the online poetry magazine Snakeskin, , will be a theme issue on food. Send up to six poems on the topic of food to guest editor Jessy Randall, (replace (at) with @). No previously-published poems. Simultaneous submissions are allowed. No attachments – poems should be in the body of the email. The deadline is December 15.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Monthly poetry workshop with Christopher Luna Saturday, October 9, 2010

Please join me tomorrow for my monthly workshop. This will be the first workshop held at Niche, Leah Lackson's new wine and art bar. Tomorrow we will celebrate John Lennon's birthday and listen to and read work from Allen Ginsberg, G.L.Morrison, and Akilah Oliver.


"The Work"
Poetry Workshop with Christopher Luna

Why do we write? What is the poet’s place in the world? What can we do to increase our ability to inspire and provoke with our words? How do we integrate our compulsion to create into our everyday lives? These and other questions and will be addressed in The Work, a workshop facilitated by Christopher Luna. From noon til 2:30 every second Saturday we will gather at Niche to listen to, discuss, and write poetry. The cost is $20 per session or $45 for three months in advance. Register now by contacting Christopher Luna at christopherjluna@gmail.com or 360-910-1066. See you Saturday, October 9.

For more information about Christopher Luna, and to learn about poetry events in Vancouver and Portland, go to http://christopherluna-poetry.blogspot.com.

Sponsored by Leah Jackson, Angst Gallery,
and Printed Matter Vancouver

Niche is located at
1013 Main Street
Vancouver, USA 98660

Well, while I'm here I'll
do the work –
and what's the work?
to ease the pain of living.
Everything else, drunken
dumbshow

Allen Ginsberg, “Memory Gardens”

Monday, October 4, 2010

THE WORK October 2010 monthly poetry newsletter by Christopher Luna


The autumn poetry harvest continues this month. On Saturday, October 9, my monthly poetry workshop, also known as “The Work,” continues in our new location: Niche: A Wine and Art Bar located at 1013 Main Street and owned and operated by Angst Gallery art maven Leah Jackson. Join us at noon on Saturday October 9. Please bring a poem to share with the group. Cost: $20 for one or $45 for three workshops.

Painter and Guerilla Media mastermind Olin Unterwegner has posted a psychedelicized video featuring excerpts from last month’s Paper Tiger open mic in Vancouver, WA. If you skip ahead to the nineteen minute mark, you can see/hear my son Angelo read a poem he wrote that night in collaboration with Toni Partington and his cousin Azure Compton. Toni follows him, and at around 29 minutes, I read excerpts from “more than we can bear,” my 100-page investigative collage poem about 9/11: http://www.vimeo.com/15265125. Olin has also posted my reading alone: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoJT8Zdrz04


I have a poem in the new issue of Night Bomb Review. You can find a copy of this publication at Powell’s Books, or through the publishers: http://www.nightbombpress.com/. On October 17, Night Bomb editors Chris and Amber Ridenour are hosting a release party at World Cup Coffee & Tea 1740 NW Glisan Street, 7:00-9:00 p.m.

VoiceCatcher 5, a local publication that showcases Portland-area women writers, will be released on October 9, and the collective has many exciting readings planned in the coming months. I am proud to announce that we will help launch the book with a reading at the Cover to Cover open mic in December. If you’d like to know more about upcoming VoiceCatcher events, see item 5 below.

If you’d like to hear a podcast featuring six of the spectacular authors from Voice Catcher 4, go to: http://multcolib.libsyn.org/voice_catcher_authors_reading

Thanks to everyone who came out to see Ed Coletti’s featured reading at Cover to Cover. Ed would like to hear from you. Check out these blogs and please leave a comment:

Ed Coletti's P3
http://edcolettip3.blogspot.com/

No Money in Poetry
http://edwardcolettispoetryblog.blogspot.com/



This month’s featured reader, Carlos Reyes, is a noted poet, writer and translator, and the publisher/editor of Trask House Books, Inc. In 2007 he was awarded a Heinrich Boll Fellowship to write on Achill Island, Ireland and in 2008 was awarded the Ethel Fortner Award from St Andrews College. He was recently the poet-in-Residence in the Joshua Tree National Park. Reyes lives in Portland but travels often to Ireland and is a frequent visitor to Spain and Ecuador. His latest book of poetry, The Book of Shadows; New and Selected Poems (2009) will be available at this month’s reading for $21.00. Other recent books include At the Edge of the Western Wave (2004; available for $16.95) and A Suitcase Full of Crows (1995) (a Bluestem Prize winner and finalist for 1996 Oregon Book Awards). His books of translations include Poemas de la Isla/ Island Poems by Josefina de la Torre (Eastern Washington University Press, 2000) the Obra poética completa (Complete Poetic Works) of the pre-eminent Ecuadorean poet Jorge Carrera Andrade, which was published in a bilingual edition in Ecuador in 2004. His translation of Ignacio Ruiz-Pérez' s "La señal del cuervo/The Sign of the Crow" is due out in Spring 2011.

According to Carolyn Kizer: “Mr. Reyes is one of our local and national treasures. His poetry is as clear and strong as his social conscience. One is always struck by his sensual and sensory qualities: the touch, taste, feel, color of things, and his ability to capture a mood, a world, in a handful of lines.”

Open Mic Poetry
hosted by Christopher Luna
7:00pm Thursday, October 14, 2010
& every second Thursday
Cover to Cover Books
1817 Main Street, Vancouver
McLoughlin Blvd. & Main Street
“always all ages and uncensored”
For more info call
360-514-0358 or 360-910-1066

Here is an example of Carlos’s work:

THE BUS, AGAIN

Just past midnight eight hours from Madrid,
the other passenger who speaks only Arabic

thinks he has bought a ticket to Almería.
But it says Mojácar insists the driver, stops

pushes the Arab from the bus.
The driver, whose looks could demand papers,

asks only to see my ticket again, says
to the darkness, to me, I hate people

who don’t know where they are going . . .
Repeats it to make sure I’ve understood

before I fall asleep . . . while the bus,
a beetle with flashing eyes,

rides the spine of a glistening black snake
on down the grade, toward Turre.

Guitars and voices crack the night.
Gypsy moths dance on the face of the moon.

From THE BOOK OF SHADOWS; NEW AND SELECTED POEMS (Lost Horse Press, 2009).

Finally, I am looking forward to a special reading I booked for St. Johns Booksellers October 22 that will feature local readers whose work appears in the new anthology from NY’s Uphook Press, “hell strung and crooked.” See item 9 for more details.

Hope to see you at one of these great events.

Your friend in poetry,
Christopher Luna

THE WORK
OCTOBER 2010
TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Mel Favara’s 1,000 Words Reading: Flight at the Waypost (Portland, OR) October 7
2. Poet Dan Raphael and sculptor Olinka Broadfoot at the Art Department (Portland) October 8
3. The Studio Series Poetry Reading and Open Mic (Portland) October 10
4. Readings featuring Shanna Germain (Portland) October 11 and 16
5. VoiceCatcher Authors read at Powell’s on Hawthorne (Portland) October 18/ VoiceCatcher Announcements for October-December
6. Leslie Marmon Silko and Molly Gloss at PSU October 18
7. Matthew Dickman and Judith Arcana + open mic at 100th Monkey Studios (Portland) October 20
8. Ric Vrana and open mic at Paper Tiger Coffee (Vancouver) October 21
9. Uphook Press Reading for “hell strung and crooked” at St. Johns Booksellers (Portland) October 22
10. Moonstruck Chocolate Poetry reading with Christopher Wicks, Nathan Warner, David Cook and Dan Raphael, and music by guitarist Debra Giannini October 24

SUBMISSION CALLS

1.
1,000 WORDS READING: FLIGHT

7PM sharp-9PM, Thursday, OCTOBER 7 AT THE WAYPOST, 3120 N. WILLIAMS AVE., PORTLAND (503-367-3182)

FREE

ALL-AGES VENUE; FOOD, BEER, AND WINE AVAILABLE

CONTACT: MEL FAVARA, 971-506-3340, mel.favara@gmail.com

2.
Collective Unconscious
myths, religion + fairy tales

with sculptor/painter
Olinka Broadfoot
+
poet Dan Raphael

Exhibition + Poetry Reading
Friday, October 8, 2010
6-8pm

Art Department
1315 se 9th avenue
artists in attendance

3.
The Studio Series
Poetry Reading and Open Mic
October's poetry night will feature Joe Soldati and Kate Gray
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Stonehenge Studios
3508 SW Corbett Avenue, Portland 97239
7-9 p.m.

Free and open to the public, the Studio Series is held monthly on second Sundays. For more information, please contact organizer and host Leah Stenson at leahstenson@comcast.net

4.


Portland erotica writer Shanna Germain has two readings this month:

Dirty Little Secrets Reading @ Three Friends Coffee House
201 SE 12th Avenue (Ash), October 11, 7-8 p.m.

Listen. We want to whisper in your ears, expose our innermost desires, and give you glimpse of those dirty spaces between our ears. Will you let us?

We invite you to come and take a peek into the very unclean minds of authors Kerry Cohen, James Bernard Frost and Shanna Germain. Whether we're exploring our inner fears and fantasies, or delighting in our sexual coming-of-age, we promise you'll be delighted, intrigued, aroused, amused, or, at the very least, aghast at the things we have to share. If that's not enough, during the Writers' Q&A, we'll be exposing all the dirty little secrets of being writers. And your own dirty secrets -- written anonymously on pretty pieces of paper -- will become part of an instant, immersive art project.

***

Fairy Tale Erotica Reading @ She Bop
909 N. Beech Street
Saturday, October 16th – 8:30 p – FREE

Join erotica writers Shanna Germain, Kristina Wright, and Andrea Dale for a night of fantasy and fairy tales. Reading from ‘Fairy Tale Lust’ and ‘Alison’s Wonderland’, these authors will show you how sexy and steamy fairy tales can be! Dress in fairy tale attire and be eligible to win a She Bop gift certificate (costume optional).

5.

From Steve Williams and Constance Hall

We have events galore to talk about.

In October, there is of course Wordstock where you will find both Constance and myself wandering the aisles most of both days. Last year, Constance was in the midst of gall bladder surgery so we missed the festivities -- so we're going to be making up for it this time. A week later is the OSPA conference in The Dalles. It looks to be a good one and we will be there all day Saturday. Also, don't miss the readings on both Friday and Saturday night. I'm attaching the flyer for more info.

Our monthly critique group is going great at Looking Glass books. In October, our normal Sunday night is also the last day of Wordstock, so we're moving the critique group back a week to October 17th at 5 p.m. Bring yourself and 10 copies of a poem you'd like feedback on from the group.

On October 20th, Figures of Speech is proud to present Judith Arcana and Matthew Dickman as our featured readers at the 100th Monkey studio from 7 to 9 p.m.

Join us for another exciting evening at the Monkey. These two poets are so different and yet have much in common. And as always, open mic (1 poem, 2 page max.), prompts, cookies and other fun. See you on October 20th at 7 p.m.

Matthew Dickman is the author of All-American Poem (American Poetry Review/Copper Canyon Press, 2008), as well as the recipient of The Honickman First Book Prize, The May Sarton Award from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Kate Tufts Award from Claremont College, the 2009 Oregon Book Award and two Fellowships from Literary Arts of Oregon. He has received residencies and fellowships from The Michener Center for Writers in Austin, Texas, The Vermont Studio Center, The Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, and The Lannan Foundation. He has been profiled in The Oregonian, Poets & Writers Magazine, The Seattle Post Intelligencer, and The New Yorker. Born and raised in the Lents District of Portland, he has been a guest lecturer and teacher at Reed College, Writers in The Schools, Portland State University, Vermont College of Fine Arts, Hamline University, and Smith College. W.W. Norton & Co. will publish his second book in 2012. He lives and works in Portland, Oregon.

Judith Arcana writes poems, stories and essays, publishing online and on paper; her books include Grace Paley’s Life Stories, A Literary Biography, the poetry collection What if your mother, and4th Period English, a chapbook of poems about immigration. In 2010, she created the ZAP Writing Workshop for Portland’s Red & Black Café and the Locally Grown Poetry series for the Hollywood Farmers Market; she spent the summer living/working as Artist-in-Residence at Milepost5. (picture by Linda Koolish)

Lastly but certainly not leastly :). If there is only one poetry event you can attend this fall, make it this one. On December 15th at 7 p.m. we are hosting a special reading by Paulann Petersen and Vern Rutsala. We expect a huge crowd for this event and have reserved space on the campus of PSU. The reading will be at the Multicultural Center in Smith Student Union (Rm. 228).

We recently discovered the Poet Laureate position in the state of Washington has been suspended by the Governor. We should count ourselves lucky for organizations like "Oregon Cultural Trust" who fund the Poet Laureate position in Oregon. For this reason, we have decided to make our December reading also a benefit for Oregon Cultural Trust. Both Paulann and Vern have agreed to let us publish a broadside with their poems side by side. Each will be signed by the author and will printed in a limited number. Each person who donates to the Oregon Cultural Trust ($10 dollar suggested) will receive a broadside commemorating the evening. And of course, there will be a book table and our normal array of poetry prompts and refreshments.

Due to the audience size, we will not be doing our usual open mic. but ask that members of the community who wish to read something inspired by our featured readers or have a personal connection they'd like to talk about, please write us at slw1057@hotmail.com and we will reserve a spot for you to speak that evening.This is a first come, first serve kind of thing so don't wait as we expect the time to fill up quickly.

Many thanks to Paulann and Vern for gracing our series with their work. Also, huge shout outs to Michele Glaser who is co-sponsoring this event through the English Dept. at PSU and made the space for this reading possible.

6.
VoiceCatcher 5 will be released on October 9, featuring 25 writers and 16 artists from the Portland/Vancouver area! You can get your copy at Portland area booksellers and online at www.voicecatcher.org .

Upcoming Readings and Events

Please join us at the Wordstock Festival on October 9 and 10, where we will be celebrating the anthology's release with a reading and a workshop with board president, Carolyn Martin, "Words Alive!"

Sunday October 10, 2010 -- Wordstock Festival
Wordstock Stage - 1 p.m.
http://www.wordstockfestival.com/

Readers include:
Carmel Bentley
Christi Krug
Kristin Roedell
Naomi Fast
Lisa Maier
Sonya Zalubowski

Monday October 18, 2010 - Powell's on Hawthorne - 7:30 p.m.
3723 SE Hawthorne Blvd, Portland OR 97214
http://www.powells.com/

Readers include:
Paulann Petersen
Penelope Scambly Schott
Mary Zelinka
Kaitlyn Burch
Sage Cohen
Nikki Schulak

Tuesday November 2, 2010 - In Other Words -- 7pm
8 NE Killingsworth St., Portland, OR

Readers to be announced

http://www.inotherwords.org/

Thursday December 8, 2010 -- Cover to Cover Books - 7 p.m.
1817 Main St., Vancouver, WA 98660

Readers to be announced
http://www.covertocoverbooks.net/

7.
Literary Arts proudly presents an evening with
Leslie Marmon Silko and Molly Gloss
EVENT DATE: MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2010
TIME: 7:30 P.M.
LOCATION: LINCOLN PERFORMANCE HALL - PSU

Leslie Marmon Silko is the author of numerous books including Almanac of the Dead, Garden in the Dunes, Ceremony, and most recently, The Turquoise Ledge.

Silko is a Native American novelist, poet, essayist, screenwriter and short-story writer whose work is primarily concerned with the relations between different cultures and between humans and the natural world. Silko was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and grew up at Laguna Pueblo. The Pueblo has been home to members of her family for generations and is where she learned traditional stories and legends from her grandmother Lilly and her aunt Susie.

Called the most accomplished Native American writer of her generation and an "American Indian Literary Master," Silko has been awarded a MacArthur Foundation "genius grant," the National Endowment for the Arts Discovery Grant, the Boston Globe prize for nonfiction, the Pushcart Prize for Poetry, and the New Mexico Endowment for the Humanities "Living Cultural Treasure" Award. Silko was also the youngest writer to be included in The Norton Anthology of Women's Literature, for her short story "Lullaby."

Molly Gloss is a native Oregonian and one of Portland's literary icons. She is the author of such books as The Jump-Off Creek, The Dazzle of Day, Wild Life and The Hearts of Horses. Her work has been nominated for numerous awards, including the PEN/Faulkner Award for American Fiction. In 1990, Gloss won the Oregon Book Awards in fiction for her novel The Jump-Off Creek.
TICKETS: $15 & $20 (ALL SEATS RESERVED)

You may also charge by phone at 503-725-3307 or at PSU box office - 1825 SW Broadway.

Thank you to our sponsors: Portland State University and Willamette Week.

Literary Arts is a statewide, nonprofit organization that enriches the lives of Oregonians through language and literature. For more information about Literary Arts, please contact us at 503.227.2583 or visit www.literary-arts.org.

8.
From Dan Nelson:

Octobers 3rd Thursday falls on the 21st and at 7pm we will begin another Poetry Night @ Paper Tiger (703 Grand blvd. in the 'Couve). Between open mic sessions I am delighted to announce we will be featuring Ric Vrana. Ric Vrana left an increasingly untenable legal and political situation in the industrial midwest and moved to Seattle 32 years ago where he worked on the watefront and fell in with a bad crowd that formed the nucleus of a poetry scene that produced the Red Sky Poetry theater and related zines and projects.Falling in with another bad crowd, he found himself in graduate school at the UW where he became a geographer, having been a maphead most of his life. Poetry and Cartography, therefore, are major lenses through which he understands the world and he likes to work at the border where they both come together. He's been in Portland since 1990 where he now works a day job as a planner for TriMet and also teaches as an adjunct in PSU's Master of Urban and Regional planning program. Re-emerging into performance poetry, he's been active in the Portland area open mic scene and invited readings for the last five years. His work has appeared in "The Duwamish Review","Open Sky", "The Alberta Street Anthology", "Blown Out: Portland's Indie Poets", "Venetian Blind Drunk" and has been heard on KBOO radio's "Talking Earth" and can be found in scattered podcasts here and there on the world wide web. His first chapbook "Brain Screams" appeared in Feb. 2010 and can still be found in a few local bookstores which means not many people are buying it but he's working on another one already anyway.

Hope to see and hear all of you at this months Poetry Night at Paper Tiger. For those who haven't been there yet Paper Tiger is located between Mill Plain and Evergreen on the east side of Grand, about a mile east of I-5 in Vancouver. Great people, great poetry, great potables! what more could you ask. I'll leave you with a sample of Ric's elegant and inspired verse.

Dan Nelson
360-334-1129 or nelsondaniel59@yahoo.com

Landing in Portland
by Ric Vrana

Near ear deafening engine’s roar
metal cigar spear sky dart
taking me home though I would stay.
Still, it could be worse, I think
and thank some providence
it is here, not somewhere else, I return.

Northwest North America
continental edge, marine overtaking,
not mine by birth but
by these many indentured years,
earned through noble effort
a place I own a piece of
a place I raised my kids
a place scattered with incoherent
talking slivers of my story.

Airline window soliloquy uncomfortable
contortion body strains to favor eyes
sighting landmarks named and
unknown closer and closer to
the buried bones of home.

Blue world seen through water vapor atmosphere
white glaciers melt metallic, conic
volcanoes so close I might touch
but for machine envelope flying me inside.
When I descend all wet earth
is a hundred greens.
Amid noise of resumed life
my thoughts like city streets
retreat to geometric patterns.

Here's another one:

Tiny Signs of the Partial Breakdown of Civilization
(a Pantoum) by Ric Vrana

Eggshells scattered in small white flecks
fragile and jagged as broken shellfish
evidence of consumption discarded
on a transit bench inches from a trash can.

Fragile and scattered as broken shellfish
out of work former factory millwright
on a transit bench inches from a trash can
searches want ads for call center jobs.

Out of work former factory millwright
his cough will go untreated this year
searches want ads for call center jobs
hoping to keep his daughter in school another semester.

His cough will go untreated this year.
No money to pay the health care ransom.
hoping to keep his daughter in school another semester,
one by one, asks waiting commuters for spare change.

No money to pay the health care ransom.
Airport travelers stand in security line
one by one, empty pockets of their spare change
Who is comforted by this futile show?

Airport travelers stand in insecurity line.
Every new event is interpreted as war.
Who is comforted by this futile show
when we have all become the numerous enemy?

Every new event is interpreted as war.
Evidence of consumption discarded.
We have all become the numerous enemy, like
eggshells scattered in small white flecks

9.
October 22
7pm
St. Johns Booksellers
8622 N. LOMBARD ST., PORTLAND
Contact:
Christopher Luna 360-910-1066
Nena Rawdah 503-283-0032

A special reading
with Claus Ankersen, Judith Arcana, Nancy Carol Moody, Charles F. Thielman
to celebrate the release of
hell strung and crooked: Poetry taken to the edge and back round again
a new anthology from Uphook Press

JUDITH ARCANA writes poems, stories, and essays, and is a longtime scholar, teacher, and activist. Her latest poetry publication is the chapbook 4th Period English (Ash Creek Press, 2009), which explores immigration. Other books include the poetry collection What if your mother (Chicory Blue Press, 2005) and Grace Paley’s Life Stories: A Literary Biography (University of Illinois, 1993).

NANCY CAROL MOODY’S poetry has been anthologized in The Quizzical Chair (Uttered Chaos Press, 2010), and published in the journals Bellevue Literary Review, Natural Bridge, Poetry Northwest, and The New York Quarterly Review. Her first full-length collection, Photograph With Girls, was published in 2009 by Traprock Books.

CHARLES F. THIELMAN is a poet, artiste, reading host, and active member of Tsunami Books—an independent lefty bookstore collective in Eugene. He is a committee member of both the Lane Literary Guild and the Oregon State Poetry Association.

CLAUS ANKERSEN works with poetry, fiction, spoken word, and cross-disciplinary artistic expressions. He has published two collections of poetry, a poetry CD, and has directed and produced a documentary on spoken word in his native Denmark, where he is considered a leading figure in the genre. He writes and performs in both English and Danish, and has presented his work in Norway, Sweden, Finland, Germany, Turkey, India, and the U.S.

Readers will be joined by Uphook Press editors Ice and Jane Ormerod

Uphook Press is a New York City-based publisher specializing in work by poets and spoken words artists who love both the ink and the mike. hell strung and crooked ($15) is their second anthology, taken from open submission, with the aim to promote a nationwide community of performing poets. Featuring forty-one poets—from San Francisco, Atlanta, Nashville, Boston, Seattle, elsewhere, and New York—hell strung and crooked also includes interviews with Mark Doty and Claus Ankersen. Contributors include Lenore Balliro, Samantha Barrow, Paul M.L. Belanger, Alex O.Bleecker, Meredith Devney, Malaika Favorite, Joseph Fritsch, Christian Georgescu, Robert Gibbons, Thomas Gibney, Deborah Hauser, Suzanne Heagy, Aimee Herman, R. Nemo Hill, Vicki Iorio, Kit Kennedy, Stephen Kopel, David Lawton, Richard Loranger, E. K. Mortenson, Nancy Carol Moody, Puma Perl, John Marcus Powell, Bob Quatrone, Seraphime Rhyianir, Lynn Samsel, Jackie Sheeler, Mary McLaughlin Slechta, Elliot D. Smith, Laura L. Snyder, Francesca Sphynx, Gregory Vincent St. Thomasino, Charles F. Thielman, Andrew Topel, John J. Trause, Geoffrey Kagan Trenchard, Stephanie Valente, Jacob Victorine, Ocean Vuong, Bruce Weber, and Laura Madeline Wiseman.

http://www.uphookpress.com/
editors@uphookpress.com

10.
OCTOBER MOONSTRUCK LITERARY EVENT:
A WORLD UNITED THROUGH WORDS AND MUSIC

Arrive early to order chocolate or beverages and enjoy listening to poetry and melody. Featured are regional authors Christopher Wicks, Nathan Warner, David Cook and Dan Raphael, with music by guitarist Debra Giannini.

Hosted by Joan Maiers.

Free and open to the public.

Five dollars suggested donation to assist orphans in Haiti.

Sunday, October 24, 2010
6:30 PM
Moonstruck Chocolate Cafe
45 S. State Street in downtown Lake Oswego, OR 97034
503-697-7097

Accessible with abundant parking.

SUBMISSION CALLS

1.
CALYX, A Journal of Art and Literature by Women will open for submissions of poetry, short fiction, and creative non-fiction on October 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010.

Please send up to six poems or 2,500 words of prose, SASE, and a short bio to:

CALYX Journal
PO Box B
Corvallis, OR 97339

For 34 years CALYX Journal has been a creative forum for women’s diverse voices showcasing work from new and emerging writers and artists. Visit our website www.calyxpress.org/submission for full guidelines.

2.
http://www.ashevillepoetryreview.com/

Beginning September 1, 2010 through January 15, 2011,Asheville Poetry Review will be accepting entries for the first annual William Matthews Poetry Prize.

First Prize: $1,000, publication in Asheville Poetry Review, and a featured reading at the nationally acclaimed Wordfest Literary Festival

Second Prize: $250, publication, and a featured reading at Wordfest

Third Prize: Publication and a featured reading at Wordfest

Final Judge: Sebastian Matthews (poet, memoirist, and son of William Matthews)

The final judging process will be “blind” (all identifying information will be removed from the poems).

All submissions will be considered for publication.

Postmark Deadline: January 15, 2011

Send 1-3 poems, any style, any theme, any length, with a $20 entry fee (payable to Asheville Poetry Review) to:

William Matthews Poetry Prize
c/o Asheville Poetry Review
PO Box 7086
Asheville, NC 28802

Friday, September 17, 2010

Brittany Baldwin, Barbara Drake, and Barbara LaMorticella at St. Johns Booksellers Saturday, September 18/Joann Ferias and Cindy Williams Guitterez on KBOO's Talking Earth Monday, September 20

From Barbara LaMorticella barbala@teleport.com


Barbara LaMorticella

September 18, Noon, St Johns Booksellers 8622 N Lombard, Portland
Barbara Drake, Brittany Baldwin, and Barbara LaMorticella
read on Market Day

Barbara Drake, Brittany Baldwin and Barbara LaMorticella team up for an end of summer reading. Enjoy an afternoon of organic produce at the St. John’s Farmer’s Market, and books and spoken word at the St. Johns Booksellers from Noon to 1 o’clock.

One of Oregon’s most beloved poets, Barbara Drake raises sheep, grapes and grandchildren on her small farm in Yamhill. Barbara is winner of many awards for both poetry and prose, and her memoir Peace at Heart was an Oregon Book Award finalist. Her college textbook, Writing Poetry, has been in print and continuously used in colleges across the country since 1983. Barbara's work is both grounded and ever-changing.

Brittany Baldwin
Brittany Baldwin combines fabulous cookery with extraordinary poetry and writing. She has cooked and catered professionally for almost 20 years. She currently owns and runs a personal chef catering company, and grows many of her own vegetables and herbs herself organically on her small homestead. Her first collection was Broken Knuckles Against Knives Cutting The Food to Feed Me Through This. She’s won awards for both cooking and poetry.

Barbara LaMorticella has co-hosted Talking Earth on KBOO since 1988. Her second collection of poems, Rain on Waterless Mountain, was a finalist for the Oregon Book Award. She’s won a Stewart H. Holbrook Award for Outstanding Contribution to Oregon Literary Arts, a Bumbershoot Big Book Award, and in 2010 the first Northwest Poets Concord Prize. Her newest collection is “The Great Dance,” poems 1969 to the present. She lives in the woods outside Portland.

THE SENSITIVE
by Barbara Drake

The truly sensitive are better than you and I, their ears flap shut at the slightest unpleasantness. To soften their passage, sleeping mice curl in the toes of their slippers. Their tongues are coated with microscopic light-emitting diodes and when they open their mouths an ethereal glow comes forth like that of a firefly caught in an old mayonnaise jar. When they move the world doesn’t jangle or slap like seawater in a rocky hollow the way it does with the rest of us, but slides past with a gentle shussing. We cannot imagine anyone having given birth to them, for their heads seem too fragile to have ever been squeezed into existence in this rough animal fashion.

EXCERPT FROM "AND THEY DO, AND IT DOES"
by Brittany Baldwin

Refusing to settle for the expectations of my form
I run my hands over butter
and smudge it across the bottom of a hot pan
with my fingers lightly.
I close my eyes instead of looking for you,
I close my eyes and think of all the men
I’ve tried to explain this to,
but before I have a chance
they’ve already decided I must be gay,
I must’ve been beaten,
I’m way too damaged to be here on the other side
of things
mixing fire and metal on food.
Scared of the work in your hands,
settling against doors of misunderstandings
trying to create love,
trying to form love into a shape in my hands,
when there is only work
I am only working food through my skin.
They cannot see the rhythm,
they cannot see the processes,
they only see me with my eyes closed
in a cloud of stress and time...

Talking Earth Monday Night September 20
10-11 PM Pacific Time
KBOO, 90.7 FM Portland

Hispanic Heritage Month: Joann Ferias and Cindy Williams Guitterez bring poetry and music in honor of Hispanic Heritage Month to Talking Earth on Monday September 20. To open the Miracle Theater’s 2nd-annual festival of Hispanic Arts and Culture, Guitterez has teamed up with writer-storyteller Lynn Darroch and musician Gerardo Calderon to stage Dreaming the Americas: Encounters/Encuentros. Encuentros is a journey through the Americas from south of the border through the Northwest, narrated through the dreams of spoken word artists, and accompanied by the rhythms of Latin guitar and cello and the haunting sounds of pre-Hispanic instruments and Didgerido. Cindy and Gerardo preview and talk about the show, the theater, and the celebration.

Los Portenos is a lively group of Hispanic poets that has crystallized around the Teatro Milagro. Joann Ferias brings some of Los Portenos to share the air with Guitterez and Calderon.

THE BOY IN THE BALLOON
by Barbara LaMorticella

For Falcon Heene, who vomited at a press conference when asked
to vouch for his father’s lie that Falcon had accidentally cut loose his father’s
home-made balloon and then hid. The whole thing was actually his father’s
elaborate publicity stunt. Millions watched the untethered balloon fly

Watching as the balloon raced,
we grew so much bigger than ourselves.
our hearts came out of the basement.

We, too, were caught in an updraft,
spiralling unmoored, untethered from earth.

We floated with the six year old,
tossed and buffeted,
our world out of control,
not knowing where we would end
what field we would find ourselves in
when we came down.

Only when the balloon crashed
did we realize the ride we’d really taken
had never left the earth.
The wizard was only a con man.

The single grace note in the story was
the vomiting of a boy
who wouldn’t lie.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Poet Emmett Wheatfall's Cascade AIDS Project Fundraiser Friday, September 17

From Carolyn Lee and Emmett Wheatfall:

There Stood I: The Poetry of Emmett Wheatfall
Cheatham Hall
4033 SW Canyon Road
Portland, OR 97221

Performances by:
Mario DePriest
Lindy Fisker
Ronault “Polo” Catalani
T. Allen Bethel
Dorothy Elmore 
Jana Cole
David OrnetteCherry 
Lynn Darroch
Lawrence Howard
Richard Wingard
Sunshine Dixon
Paula Small
Lynne Duddy
Anderson Duboise

Capacity is Limited ‐Please RSVP by September 15, 2010:
cascadeaidsprojectfundraiser@yahoo.com

Thank You to Our Generous Sponsors: Elephants Delicatessen and Quick Stop Photo

Friday, September 17, 2010

6:30p –7:00p
Reception

7:00p –7:45p
Silent auction

8:00p –10:00p
Poetry readings

Hors d’ oeuvres will be provided
No‐host refreshments
will be available

A Charity Fundraiser For
Cascade AIDS Project

This is an amazing fundraiser for Cascade AIDS Project (CAP) involving poetry, photography and dignitaries (200+ guests). The event will be held on Friday, September 17, 2010 from 6:30p – 10:00p at the World Forestry Center’s Cheatham Hall in Portland.

We chose to partner with Cascade AIDS Project because of Emmett Wheatfall's personal connection with AIDS - his sister passed years ago of AIDS related complications and he wrote a poem about it. As a result, CAP was the perfect charity to benefit from this fundraiser and we named the event after his poem.

The event itself consists of an intimate reception then a performance piece. The reception will involve music, photography/poetry, a silent auction/raffle, hors d’ oeuvres, and beverages. Guests will have the opportunity to bid on the artwork consisting of Emmett Wheatfall’s poetry incorporating professional photography by local photographer Tony Sibley. All proceeds will go to charity.
The performance part involves dignitaries and community leaders reading Emmett’s poems that are specifically chosen for them.
 
Please RSVP by September 15th to cascadeaidsprojectfundraiser@yahoo.com.

Emmett Wheatfall: http://emmettwheatfall.com/

Cascade AIDS Project: http://www.cascadeaids.org/