Hurricane Sandy Devastates New York
I have to start this
newsletter with an appeal to help New Yorkers devastated by Hurricane
Sandy. The sad truth is that the government has done little to nothing to help people without water, food,
electricity or heat. Elderly sit trapped
in darkened hi-rise buildings and families with young children shiver in
damaged homes. We have a Katrina on our
hands. Here’s how you can help:
The American Red Cross
has been noticeably absent in some of the most affected areas. Thank you for whatever you can donate. If you live in the tristate area, I hope you
and yours are safe!
Update
on anthologies
Joel
Allegretti, editor of
the upcoming anthology of TV poems, reports the title—suggested by Billy
Collins—will be Rabbit Ears. I am thrilled to be in this Poets
Wear Prada anthology
alongside poets such as Collins, Tony Hoagland, Dorianne Laux, Ron Padgett, and
Diane Wakoski. In addition, Kent
State University Press
will publish The Widow’s Handbook,
which will also include my work.
Malcolm
MacDougall III at 287 Spring
What a pleasure to
attend the opening of Malcolm D. MacDougall III’s
exhibit, Parallel Worlds, last week
at the new 287 Spring Gallery! This gem of an
exhibit, curated by Beth Gersh-Nesic, is worth a trip to Soho. The 22-year-old MacDougall, who already has a
sculpture on display in Union Square,
shares eight gravity-defying pieces that resonate with early Cubist energy. Another surprise was meeting fellow Santa
Fe Art Institute
resident, painter Robert Dandarov, at the opening. An artist/curator conversation will take
place Saturday, November 17, at 2 p.m.
Max
Jacob: Mysticism and Radical Poetry
Rosanna Warren will speak on the important and eccentric French modernist poet, painter
and critic Max Jacob on November
14, at 6:30 p.m. in Room 9100 at the CUNY Center for the Humanities, 365 Fifth Avenue. Warren, who has
translated Max Jacob's poems and is currently at work on his biography, will
discuss the connection between Jacob's mystical experiences and new poetic
forms he invented.
John Amen and The New Arcana
Congratulations to poets John Amen and
Daniel Y. Harris on the debut of their collaborative work, The New Arcana (NYQ Books,
2012). The New
Arcana is a multi-genre extravaganza featuring verse, fiction, mock
journalism, academic writing, drama, and art.
Hear John perform a selection or read the book’s first
review.
Join
Toadlily Press at Poets
House
for the launch of its seventh book, Embark. A reading, book-signing and reception will take
place Saturday, November 17, at 5 p.m.
Toadlily has expanded opportunities for poets by creating a yearly
quartet of four chapbooks—bringing more poets’ voices to public awareness. Congratulations to cofounders
Myrna Goodman and Meredith Trede!
EstroGenius 2012
Just
a reminder to catch Rachel Cohen and RacocoRx in "I
Would"—A Story of Self, Determination, and Self-Determination As Told
through Dance and Woodworking, at TBG Theatre, 312 West 36 Street, 3rd
Floor, Saturday, November 17,
at 6:00 p.m. Click here for tickets ($18).
Hear poets E.J. Antonio (right), Golda Solomon, Phylisha
Villanueva and musicians Sarah
Bernstein, Rosie Hertlein, Larry Roland, Michael T.A. Thompson , and guest JD
Parran at The Stone,
West Corner of Avenue C and 2nd Street, Saturday, November 17, at 10
p.m. ($10 at the door).
River Trio at North Castle Public Library
River Trio at North Castle Public Library
The River Trio has become one of this
library’s most popular annual Sunday afternoon music sessions.
Performing classical, baroque and modern chamber music will be violinist Linda
Finegan Lott, cellist Jay Shulman
and flutist Pamela Sklar.
Hear them at the library, 19 Whippoorwill Road East in Armonk, Sunday, November 18, at 3:00 p.m.
Pamela
Laskin at Cornelia Street Café
Poet Pamela Laskin will be reading at Cornelia
Street Café on
November 24 with Laurel Kallen and Salita Bryant.
Congratulations also to Pam, director of the CUNY Poetry Outreach Center, on the publication of Daring Daughters/Defiant Dreams (A
Gathering of the Tribes, 2012), based loosely on Judy Chicago’s “The Dinner Party.” You may order the book from Pam at 414
5th St., Brooklyn, New York 11215, for $17.00.
'Round the Net
Thanks to the following
for sending, or allowing me to discover, these great links:
·
Translator
Steven Bradbury for this review by Lydia Davis of John Ashbery’s translation of
Rimbaud’s Illuminations
(Norton, 2012).
·
Translator
and poet Mark Weiss for recommending the novel My
Two Worlds (Open Letter, 2012) by Sergio Chejfec, translated by Margaret
Carson.
·
Poet Linda Simone for news of an app that enables poets to
hear their poems read by William Shatner; news
of poetry museums in the UK; Jane Hirshfield discussing the art of the metaphor; blog “The Poetweet as Form” and Atlantic article on the power of poetry.
Until next time,
Ann
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