Dear annogrammers, Welcome to almost-summer, the days of ease we await in the next few weeks. I have exciting news to share, the regular creative round-up, and a sweetpotato salad for lazy picnics with family or friends. Wishing you good books to read, naps on the sand or in the hammock, and picture-perfect times with loved ones.
The Hero Video
My YouTube Channel
Dead Poets Rise
How can poetry be more accessible? Enter Dead Poets Rise—a board game unlike any other, where poetry doesn’t feel like schoolwork, but something fun and challenging for anyone, from the poetry-averse to die-hards composing haikus and sonnets. DPR is about rescuing poets from obscurity–and everybody gets to take home their own poem at the end. Learn more here and help Kickstart this important game!
Vinyl Obsession
Looking for a place where your young writer (ages 9-15) can join peers to cultivate their literary talent in a non-competitive environment? Greenburgh's Arts and Culture Committee is sponsoring a series of writing workshops (in person and over Zoom) on Saturday mornings in July. Contact sarahbracey.white@ gmail.com for details.
Creative Opportunities
The Pedestal Magazine, call for poems
by June 4
Poetry Prizes: Frontier,
Lois
Cranston Memorial, Rattle,
deadlines soon
Pure
Slush and Truth Serum Press, poems on achievement, by June 30
New and Recent Releases
Jerry T. Johnson, A Coldness (Finishing Line Press)
Dana Levin and Adele Elise Williams, eds., Bert Meyers: On the Life and Work of an American Master (Pleiades Press)
Heller Levinson, Query Caboodle (Black Widow Press)
Heller Levinson, Shift Gristle (Black Widow Press)
Creative Workshops
Charles Alexander |
Kevin Pilkington |
All-Genre
Writers Group, 6:30pm, Thursdays
John
McMullen Poetry Workshop, 6pm, fourth Wednesdays
Mahopac Poetry Workshop, 6pm, second Wednesdays
The Peekskill Writing Table, serious critique for writers, second
and third Tuesdays via Zoom; email
tpwritingtable@gmail.com
June+ Events – ET
Walt Whitman (1819-1892) |
Bennington
Museum (VT), For
the Love of Vermont: The Lyman Orton Collection, July 15-November 5; Southern Vermont Art Center,
July 22-November 5
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
Sweetpotato Salad
This recipe called for up to six
potatoes but two will do for two+ servings. The North Carolina Sweetpotato
Commission, the recipe’s originator, has made the spud one word, so we will
respect that:
2 sweetpotatoes, peeled and diced
2 teaspoons, plus 1 tablespoon,
olive oil, divided
¾ teaspoon salt, divided
¼ teaspoon pepper
1 bunch curly kale, rinse and
chopped
½ large lemon, juice only
1 15-ounce can garbanzo beans, rinsed and drained
1 large avocado, pitted and
diced
½ cup dried cranberries
½ cup almonds, coarsely chopped
¼ cup red onion, chopped
½ cup goat cheese
Dressing:
2 tablespoons maple syrup
2 tablespoons olive oil
¼ cup balsamic vinegar
Preheat oven to 375°F. Place potatoes
in large bowl. In small bowl, whisk 2 teaspoons olive oil, ½ teaspoon salt and
pepper. Toss on potatoes and place them on sheet pan. Bake 35-40 minutes until
tender, flipping once during baking. Place chopped kale in large bowl. In small
bowl, whisk remaining olive oil, salt, and lemon juice. Pour over kale and
massage with hands until mixed. For dressing, whisk syrup, olive oil, and
vinegar in bowl. In kale bowl, add remaining ingredients. Toss with dressing
and serve. Sweetpotatoes can be baked and refrigerated 1 day in advance.
ʼRound the Net
Poets Susana Case and Margo Stever, editors of I Wanna Be Loved By You: Poems on Marilyn Monroe (Milk and Cake Press), which won Honorable Mention for the Eric Hoffer Grand Prize in Poetry
Sandra Lim |
Poet Trish
Hopkinson for this list
of feminist literary journals
Poet Sandra
Lim on winning the Jackson
Prize for Poetry
Poet Heller Levinson on his two new books, work in Word for Word, and this great review of Jus’ Sayin’ (Black Widow Press)
Ralph Nazareth and friends |
Hélène Sanguinetti at Victoria Hall (Geneva) |
Bassist Larry Schwartzman for this video of Skip James singing “Hard Time Killin’ Floor Blues”
Joan Miró (1893-1983) Painting, 1933 |
Grow Your Soul
Thanks to John McMullen for sharing Kurt Vonnegut’s (1922-2007) response to a high school English class that had written him in 2006. We close with a few words from his charming response:
Practice any art, music, singing, dancing, acting, drawing, painting, sculpting, poetry, fiction, essays, reportage, no matter how well or badly, not to get money and fame, but to experience
becoming, to find out what’s
inside you, to make your soul grow.
Seriously! I mean starting right now, do art and do it for the rest of your lives.
Until September,
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