Reading "Andromeda at Midlife" |
I loved reading last month with friends from A Slant of Light: Contemporary Women Poets of the Hudson
Valley (Codhill Press, 2013). This Hudson Valley Writers Center (HVWC) event featured really fine Westchester poets, and an
insightful talk by editors Larry Carr and Jan Schmidt, who announced that the anthology had received a Beverly Hills
Book Award.
Proud poets and anthology editors |
I caught up with Dos Madres
Press author Ruth Handel; NEA
recipient Pamela Hart; Against Butterflies (Little Red Tree Publishing,
2013) author Ann Lauinger, and HVWC founder and poet Margo Stever, among many other
friends. When Mervyn Taylor read his
tribute to Brenda Connor-Bey, I knew she must have been there. It was too magical an evening! Thanks to Meredith Trede for organizing a great event and Sarah Bracey
White for taking wonderful photos.
My favorite place to read in New York is Cornelia Street
Café, whose underground venue could
encourage people to break out black berets and snap their fingers. Last month, I had the honor of reading
alongside the lovely Mary Ann B.
Miller, editor of St. Peter’s B-List (Ave Maria Press, 2014), and contributor poets Dean Kostos, Susan L. Miller, Angela Alaimo O’Donnell, Christine Redman-Waldeyer and Susanna Rich. St. Peter’s B-List makes a great gift
for any spiritually attuned friends.
Sarah Lawrence Poetry Festival
What a pleasure to read at my alma mater with MFA alum and Red Glass Press Publisher Janet Kaplan, current undergraduates and MFA graduate poets! Festival organizer and Dancing Girl Press poet Katie Longofono kept us to one or two poems, which created fun, speed-dating exposure to nearly 20 poets. Our reading was followed by Kim Addonizio and Eileen Myles.
Scarsdale Inquirer interview
Thanks to Debra Banerjee, arts editor at The Scarsdale Inquirer, for recently interviewing me. Debra and I had a great conversation about
poetry, and she managed to capture all the important points in a fabulous Arts
Section cover story. Enjoy the interview
here.Scarsdale Inquirer interview
Congratulations to editor Tanya Chernov (right) on the release of The Burden of Light: Poems on Illness and Loss (Smashwords, 2014). This
multimedia project, which includes three of my poems, weaves together a
tapestry of inspiration, support, and hope.
You set the price for the book, which will directly benefit the National
Colorectal Cancer Research Alliance.
More good
news
My
translation of Chapter 8 of Le Héros by Hélène
Sanguinetti is in Exchanges, the University
of Iowa’s translation journal. My poems,
“Wildlife” and “Vermont: Midnight,” go live May 15 at Sugar Mule. Lummox Press has accepted one of my poems for its 2014 anthology, and my
Small
Print Magazine interview with
Scottish novelist Regi Claire is now online.
Regi Claire |
Seshadri wins Pulitzer
Congratulations
to Vijay Seshadri on winning the Pulitzer for his poetry collection3
Sections (Graywolf,
2013). Vijay
began his education in the sciences, and, as a result, brings startling clarity
to all things literary as both poet and critic.
In engaging talks, he has the gift for making a complex poet like Wallace
Stevens simple, and a seemingly simple Robert Frost complex. Annogram
rejoices in this much-deserved Pulitzer Prize!
Joan
Iaconetti’s first solo exhibit imagines post-graffiti subways in dark,
deliciously sinister angles, platforms, and riders. Called “evocative neo-noir” by the Curbed NY, her
work is on view Monday through Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm, at the Bridge Gallery
through June 2. The gallery is on the fourth floor of The
New School, 66 West 12th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues.
Translate
in the City
Come hear novelist Terry Dugan, one of 15 Manhattanville
MFA graduates reading on May 13, at 7 pm, in the
East Library at Reid Castle at Manhattanville
College.
Also on May 13, at 6:30 pm,
the Go Cat Go
Poetry Series welcomes Evie Ivey and Cynthia Toronto at Gracie’s Corner Diner, 352 E 86th St (between 1st and 2nd Avenues), New
York.
E. J. Antonio |
The Hot Poets Collective, Cheryl Boyce-Taylor, E.J. Antonio, Sabrina Hayeem-Ladani, Elizabeth Lara, Anton Nimblett, Jayne Pierce, and Ed Toney will read on May 16 at a private Woodside, Queens
home. To attend, RSVP by May 12 to jgex@Hotmail.com.
The Saturn Series Open Mike will feature Juanita
Torrence-Thompson,
Ellaraine Lockie and E.J.
Antonio on May
19, at 8-10 pm at Revival, 129 E. 15th Street, New York.
If you’re a poet in Westchester County, you can bring poetry
to people who might not be able to hear it otherwise. Contact Ruth Handel (RuthHandel@verizon.net) to learn
more about the Poetry Caravan.
Calling all poems on “desire” or “road kill” for the Lummox Poetry
Anthology to be published in November. Donate $15 and your submission will also be
considered for the 2014 Lummox Poetry Prize, $100 and chapbook publication. Send 2-3 poems to poetraindog@gmail.com.
Poets for Living Waters is
a poetry project which responded to the 2010 Gulf Oil Disaster. In light of the highly contested Keystone
Pipeline, please send 1-3 poems, brief statement of ecopoetics, and short bio
to poetsforlivingwaters@yahoo.com before
July 20, 2014.
Asparagus
Soufflé
How I love fresh spring vegetables, like artichokes and
asparagus! Here’s a favorite recipe from
The Ayurvedic Cookbook (Lotus Press, 2004) by Amadea
Morningstar with Urmilla Desai.
1 cup milk
3 tablespoons barley or whole wheat flour
1 egg yolk
½ teaspoon sea salt
¼ teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
4 egg whites
1/8 teaspoon cream of tartar
Paprika as garnish
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Wash asparagus and chop into 1-inch pieces. Steam until tender, about 8 minutes. Melt ghee in medium saucepan; slowly stir in
flour. Add milk gradually, stirring constantly over medium heat. The sauce will thicken as it cooks. Bring mixture to a boil and stir in cooked
asparagus. Reduce heat to low and stir
in egg yolk. The mixture will thicken a
bit more as you continue to cook it for another 1-2 minutes. Stir in salt and pepper; remove from heat and
let mixture cool.
Beat egg whites with cream of tartar in a clean glass,
enamel or stainless steel blow (plastic will slow down the process). When egg whites are stiff enough to peak,
fold them gently into the cooled asparagus sauce. Place whole mixture in an ungreased soufflé
or baking dish (one about half as deep as it is wide). Sprinkle top with paprika. Bake for 30-40
minutes, or until soufflé is firm. The
soufflé will keep for a few minutes after taking it out of the oven before it
falls, but it is best eaten immediately.
Goes well with salad and bread or rice.
Serves 2-4.
Round the
Net
Congratulations to Jeanette
Briggs on winning the President’s Award from Purchase College, selected by the faculty for outstanding and dedicated studies.
Congratulations to Ruth
Handel on four poems published in Eclectica; on reading from her Tugboat Warrior (Dos Madres Press, 2013) at Dobbs Ferry Public Library, and for Poetry Caravan readings at Armonk,
Greenburgh and Scarsdale Libraries.
Congratulations
to NEA recipient Pamela Hart, who
will be teaching a summer course on ekphrasis at the Sarah Lawrence Writing Institute—register
by May 29.
Congratulations
to Jacqueline Lapidus and Lise Menn, editors of The Widows Handbook (Kent
State University Press, 2014), which has gone into its second printing!
Congrats
again to Pulitzer -winner Vijay Seshardi,
here talking about his poetry on NPR.
“Oh no,
me gotta go! Ai yie yie yie,” writes music
archivist Jay Shulman who let us
know that April 11 was International
Louie Louie Day.
Congratulations
to Linda Simone, whose poetry
collection, Archeology, will be
published by Flutter
Press.
Congratulations
to Widows Handbook (Kent State University
Press, 2014) contributor Chris Thiele
on her essay, “Trusting the Process,” which appears in The Best American
Poetry Blog.
Wishing
you a Happy Mother's Day and successful soufflés,
No comments:
Post a Comment