Wishing you wings |
When the Pilotless
Plane Arrives
Thanks to Lou Spirito, author of Gimme Shelter, who generously wrote and posted this
review of my Trainwreck Press chapbook on Facebook earlier this summer:
Just finished Ann
Cefola's brilliant chapbook, When The
Pilotless Plane Arrives. Each of the 20 poems makes a sly, if oblique
connection between the poet's craft and B movies (okay, some are C or D cult
movies) from the 1930s-70s. Yes, you have to work a bit to suss out the
connections, but that's the fun of it. Thank God for writers with whimsy and
the nerve to trust their readers.
Svengoolie
Raging
My secret source for those films: Svengoolie, leading Saturday night ratings, as reported in the Wall Street Journal and kindly shared by sci-fi aficionado Bill Newell. What hooked me was the quality of acting, solid storylines, and delightfully cheesy effects; many films etched into our cultural psyche, such as The Day the Earth Stood Still. Host Rich Koz as Svengoolie adds wicked hilarity. If you love these films, you will enjoy both Svengoolie and When The Pilotless Plane Arrives.
To Be or Knott to Be
Bill Knott (1940-2014) |
Naughty annogrammers
Kerrin McCadden |
ModPo Anniversary
Creative
Opportunities
Lascaux
Review Prize in Creative Nonfiction, by September 30
Lines+Stars Midatlantic Poetry Chapbook Series, for poets from Delaware, District of
Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia, by October 1
September 15
Pedestal Magazine call for poetry, September 5-9
Presence: A
Journal of Catholic Poetry, by October 30
Pure Slush call for stories, essays, and poems on “snatches from an aria,” by September
30
Rhino Poetry Founders Contest, by September 30
Women in Their 80s,
octogenarian poetry and prose anthology; detaylor@cabrillo.edu, by September 30
New and Recent
Releases
Family (The
Poet Magazine)
Gary Glauber, Inside
Outrage (Sheila-Na-Gig Editions) (pre-order)
John C. Goodman, Miniscule
Repairs (Trainwreck Press)
Heller Levinson, Jus’ Sayn’ (Black Widow
Press) and Lure (Black Widow
Press)
John McMullen, Absent
Friends (Local Gems
Poetry Press)
Pedestal, Issue 90
Kevin Pilkington, Taking On
Secrets (Blue Jade
Press)
Jean-Luc Pouliquen and Ivan Frias, Autour de la poésie 30 questions d'un philosophe à un poète (Independently published)
Creative
Workshops
John McMullen |
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 Peekskill Writing Table, serious critique for writers, second and third Tuesdays via Zoom; email tpwritingtable@gmail.com
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
September
Readings and Events – ET
Kimiko Hahn |
September 7, 6:30pm, Tufts Downtown, fundraiser for Holding
Up the Sky, film preview followed by panel
discussion hosted by the Criminal Justice Policy Coalition
September 10, 11:30am, NYC
Po Fest, Algonquin Stage, Rebecca Doverspike, Michael
Quattrone, and Cindy Beer-Fouhy; 12:30pm, Margo Taft Stever, Susana H. Case,
and Myra Malkin,
Beth Gersh-Nesic, PhD |
September 17,
10am-4pm, Good Contrivance Farm, Kimiko Hahn workshop,
The Zuihitsu: What is This Genre and How to Write One; 6pm craft talk, Closure
is Not the End; $200; register for this in-person event here
September 19, 6:30pm, Free Library of Philadelphia,
Margo Taft Stever and Susana H. Case via Zoom; register here
Paula Curci |
September 21,
6pm, ModPo webcast and The Difference is Spreading launch with Herman Beavers on Amiri Baraka, Julia
Bloch on William Carlos Williams, Mónica de la Torre on Erica Baum, Tracie
Morris on Jayne Cortez, Ron Silliman on Gertrude Stein, and Elizabeth Willis on
Rae Armantrout
September 25, 4pm, Samudra Yoga Studio (Garden City), yoga and meditation with Christina Rau, donations to Alzheimer's Association
September 28, 10pm, PoetryBridgeLIVE, Aaron
Cayvedo-Kimura and Liz Marlow via Zoom; contact Susana H. Case for
details
September 29, 6pm, Jefferson Market Library, Amy Barone, Susana H. Case, Lily Greenberg, Ann Lauinger, Margo Taft Stever, and Estha Weiner
September
30-October 2, Long
Beach Short Play Festival featuring Nassau County
Poet Laureate Paula Curci
Monthly Readings
– ET
First Sunday, 4pm, Poetic License (Austin)
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
Frequent Saturdays (check Facebook),
5pm, LitBalm
Double-Chocolate
Zucchini Bread
This delicious annogram-tested recipe comes to us via King
Arthur Flour. I substituted maple syrup for honey, and used Nestlé’s Dark
Chocolate Chips which have no soy. Rave reviews on the KAF site merited!
2 large eggs
1/3 cup honey
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1/2 cup light brown sugar or dark brown sugar,
packed
1 teaspoon vanilla
extract
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon espresso
powder, optional
1/3 cup unsweetened
cocoa, Dutch-process or natural
1 2/3 cups King Arthur
Unbleached All-Purpose Flour
2 cups shredded, unpeeled zucchini, gently pressed
1 cup chocolate
chips
Preheat
350°F oven; lightly grease an 8 1/2" x 4 1/2" loaf pan. In large
bowl, beat eggs, honey, oil, sugar, and vanilla until smooth. Mix in salt,
baking soda, baking powder, espresso powder, cocoa, and flour, until well
combined. Stir in zucchini and chocolate chips. Pour batter into pan. Bake
65-75 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in center comes out clean, except
light smear of chocolate from melted chips. Remove from oven, and let cool 10-15
minutes before turning out of pan onto rack. Cool completely before slicing;
store well-wrapped, at room temperature.
ʼRound the Net
Sylvia Beach (1887-1962) and James Joyce (1882-1941) |
Wish maven and author Barbara Dickinson on the launch of her new blog, The Pipeline
Translators Chen Du and Xisheng Chen
for poems by Yan An in DoubleSpeak, Family (The
Poet Magazine), Mantis, and Sand; and a short story by Feng Jiqui
in Delos
Poet Cindy Hochman on having her poem, “What the Sun Said Today,”
in The Long Islander
Dr. James H. Cone (1938-2018) |
Poet Hiram Larew on having a poem translated into American Sign Language (ASL), and
translator Eric Epstein discussing the process
Ada Limón |
Poet and
painter Meg Lindsay on having work in a juried show at Gallery A3 last month, and for sharing The Journal of Universal Rejection
Yorktown Poet Laureate John McMullen on having a poem in the Brownstone Poets Anthology
2022; Joseph Carrabis’s interview
with John; this article, “What
is Poetry?” and this interesting electronic
notebook you can write on
Lynn Nottage |
Poet and novelist Kevin Pilkington on having 12
poems translated into Russian, and for his online reading this summer via the American Center in Moscow
Music archivist, producer, and cellist Jay Shulman for the “best Beatle performance
ever”
Nadine Valenti Beauchamp (1927-2022) |
Filmmaker and author Bob Zaslow for his American Film Institute award-winning
documentary, Nadine Valenti: Portrait of a Painter (1976), collected at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art and NYC Z Public Library
Only This One Thing
Paraphrased from Godly Play in Middle and Late Childhood (Church Publishing):
In Crow and Weasel, a picture
book by Barry Lopez, the two animals journey together and stop at an old
badger’s home. They enjoy good food and share stories of their journey. A
wonderful listener, the badger coaches them as they tell the story, asking for
more feeling or details. The next morning, as he wishes them farewell, he says
I would ask you to remember only this one thing: The stories people tell have a way of taking care of them. If stories come to you, care for them. And learn to give them away where they are needed. Sometimes a person needs a story more than food to stay alive. That is why we put these stories in each other’s memory. This is how people care for themselves.
Until next time,