Dear annogrammers, Happy New Year! January is a great time to ponder creative projects and listen to what your heart is telling you. Instead of weighty and broken resolutions, how about wishes? More on that below. Use each day wisely and gratefully, and watch your fondest dreams unfold.
Yorktown Poet
Laureate Workshop
Join me on January 26 at 6pm as I guest-host John McMullen’s monthly Zoom poetry workshop sponsored by the John C Hart Memorial Library. Simply click https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83176155376. John facilitated a delightful conversation between NEA recipient Kerrin McCadden and me a while back. While she is reading at the HVWC the same evening, stop by our workshop first!
Five Joys and
Three Wants
Margie Herrick (c) |
Creative
Opportunities
The Stephen A. DiBiase Poetry Prize, by January
15
The Big Moose Prize for an unpublished novel,
by January 31
Ethos Literacy 3rd
Annual Short Short Story Contest, by January 31
New and Recent Releases
Susana Case, The Damage Done (Broadstone Books) (pre-order)
David Giannini, The Dawn of
Nothing Important (Dos
Madres Press)
Keriann Gilson, places I never
want to see again (Gnashing Teeth
Press) (pre-order)
Michael Gottlieb, Selected Poems
of Michael Gottlieb (Chax Press)
Ceridwen Hall, Excursions (Trainwreck Press)
Christina Rau, What We Do to
Make Us Whole (Alien Buddha Press)
Pat Whitney et al, Lost and Found (Independently published)
Creative
Workshops
John McMullen Poetry Workshop, 6pm, fourth Wednesdays
Mahopac Poetry Workshop, 6pm, second Wednesdays
ModPo, University of Pennsylvania’s free
poetry course and global community
Norwalk Poetry Workshop, first and third Mondays, 6:30pm; email poet_laureate@norwalkpl.org to register
The Poets Salon, led by Ed Ahern and Alison McBain of Fairfield Scribes Press, 10am, every second Saturday
Writers and Artists Lunch Conversation, second
Fridays, noon
January Readings
and Events – ET
Jan Victors (1619-1676) "The Banquet of Estherand Ahasuerus," c. 1640 |
January 12, 5:30pm, Betheny Arts Community, “This Far and No Further,” exhibit and tour with
photographer William Abranowicz (LIVE); register by emailing thecapaspace@gmail.com, $300
Christina Rau |
January 19, 7pm, HVWC, A
Reading & Discussion with Sandra M. Gilbert & Susan Gubar—Still Mad:
American Women Writers and the Feminist Imagination; register here
January 22, 4pm, The Damage Done by Susana Case book launch via Zoom; to register, email broadstonemediakentucky@gmail.com
January 26, 6pm, John C. Hart Memorial Library, Ann guest-hosts Yorktown Poet Laureate Workshop; join here
Kerrin McCadden |
January 26, 7pm, HVWC, Kerrin McCadden, Angela Narciso Torres, & Jennifer Sperry Steinorth; register here
Monthly Readings
– ET
Every Tuesday, 2pm, Spoken Word World (Paris)
Every Tuesday, 7pm, Curley’s Diner
Third Fridays, 7pm, Hudson Valley Writers Center Open Mic – click third Friday for details
Every Saturday, 5pm, Lit Balm
Turkish Red Lentil Soup
Our annogram resident
chef Linda Simone went wild for this recipe, perfect to warm up a damp winter
day—go for it and let me know!
3 tablespoons salted butter
1 medium yellow onion, diced ½ inch (1
cup)
1 medium garlic clove, grated
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1 tablespoon sweet paprika
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1 cup red lentils
2 tablespoons long-grain clear rice
5 cups water
Kosher salt
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
2 teaspoons Aleppo pepper
fresh mint leaves, chopped
lemon wedges
In large saucepan over medium heat, melt butter. Add
onion, sauté 5 minutes until translucent. Add garlic and cook 30 seconds. Add
tomato paste, paprika, and cumin; sauté 1 minute. Add lentils, rice, water, and
2 teaspoons salt; bring to boil. Simmer, cover, and cook until lentils and rice
break down, about 30 minutes. Adjust salt. In small skillet, heat olive oil and coat
pan. Add Aleppo pepper and cook until bubbles appear and oil is bright red.
Remove from heat. Drizzle each soup serving with Aleppo pepper oil, and serve with
mint and lemon wedges.
ʼRound the Net
Regi Claire |
Poet, essayist, and translator Chen Du on her essay,
"Walk in the Right Shoes," being longlisted by the CNF Flash Contest
of Invisible
City
Poet, essayist, and filmmaker Terry
Dugan for introducing us to Ossining’s Betheny Arts Community
Poet Jerry T. Johnson on being nominated for a Pushcart Prize
Jerry T. Johnson |
Author Leslie McCollom on the renewed popularity of the New Year lemon pig
Yorktown Poet Laureate John McMullen for this insightful review of a Johnny Cash bio
The New York
Public Library for its Most
Checked-Out Books of 2021
Joan Didion (1934-2021) |
Poet and performer Patty Smith on receiving the key to New York City
What makes great art?
Artist Helen Honig and I were happily
emailing about good vs. bad painting, when she sent me this astonishing
observation:
And it’s not the subject of the painting, it’s what you have to say about the subject. It’s like a piece of music. The notes are there, the timing, the playing instructions, slow down here, speed up there, soft here, loud there. How can you bring your own self, and your own sense of beauty and uniqueness to that piece of work? That is more important than getting every note right. Those who judge the big piano competitions, like the Van Cliburn, know that, and judge accordingly. It’s tough to judge those competitions, because everyone is so skilled and so flawless. You need to look for that certain something.
Until next time,
Great issue, Ann. So much good news. And wishes instead of goals sounds very appealing!
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