Al Purdy A-Frame Writer’s Residency

Jack Kerouac had his ’49 Hudson; Leonard Cohen had his tower of song; Al Purdy had his humble A-frame cabin in Ameliasburgh, Ontario on the edge of Roblin Lake.

The poet George Bowering writes that Prince Edward County, in which Ameliasburgh is situated, reminded him of “certain half-abandoned farm valleys of eastern British Columbia.” Purdy’s A-frame, Bowering adds, is composed of “lots of inexpert finishings made up for by the sense of talent and energy, and honest usefulness.” Its charm, apparently, was also appreciated by Bowering’s wife Jean Baird, who described it over the phone as “a true cottage in the sense of old-time Canadian cottages, with the extra cups and saucers from your real house.” It was a project that entailed years of work, and Al called it “the house that was never finished.”

More here.

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North Cascades Institute Beat Weekend

The Beat Goes On:Lookout Poets and Backcountry Tales on Ross Lake

Gerry Cook; Saul Weisberg; Hannah Sullivan
August 26 – 29, 2010 (Thur eve – Sun) 1C / 21 clock hours
Learning Center/Ross Lake $255
Cost includes one night shared lodging and four meals at Learning Center, trailhead shuttle, backcountry campsite and boat transportation on Ross Lake

Venture up Ross Lake and immerse yourself in the literary history of the North Cascades while taking in the beauty of the region during its peak summer glory. Traveling by boat with three great storyteller-naturalists with decades of backcountry experience between them, we’ll read poetry and lookout journals, go swimming and hiking, practice yoga and meditation and tour the lake’s hidden canyons. The highlight of our adventure will be hiking to the top of Desolation Peak where Jack Kerouac, the reluctant “King of the Beats,” lived the life of a mercurial fire lookout–an experience he famously documented in his novels The Dharma Bums and Desolation Angels.

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Interview with Jerome Rothenberg

Nice work by Mark Weiss here, interviewing the remarkable Jerome Rothenberg:

Jerome Rothenberg is an internationally known poet and the author of over eighty books of poetry and ten breakthrough anthologies of experimental and traditional poetries including Technicians of the Sacred, Shaking the Pumpkin, A Big Jewish Book, and Poems for the Millennium in three volumes. He was a founding figure of ethnopoetics as a combination of poetic practice and theory, and he has been a longtime practitioner and theorist of poetry performance. Rothenberg was also the editor/publisher of Hawk’s Well Press in the early 1960s and of four poetry magazines since then, including some/thing (with David Antin) and Alcheringa: Ethnopoetics (“a first magazine of the world’s tribal poetries,” with Dennis Tedlock). In 1968 he received a Wenner-Gren Foundation award for the experimental translation of American Indian poetry, and he has also done extensive translations from a wide range of European poets (Lorca, Gomringer, Schwitters, Picasso, and Nezval, among others). His thirteenth book of poems from New Directions, Triptych, appeared in 2007, and a selection of his essays and interviews, Poetics & Polemics, appeared early last year in the University of Alabama Press’s Modern & Contemporary Poetics series. Three new books of poems are scheduled for 2010 and 2011.

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Old Red Sky Poets read at Jack Straw

Date:
Friday, April 2, 2010
Time:
7:00pm – 10:00pm
Location:
Jack Straw Foundation’s Studio, Seattle

Description

Myths, legends &
Urban folklore

Readings and Performances by
Marion Kimes
Michael Hureaux Perez
Judith Roche
David Lloyd Whited

April 2, 2010, Friday, 7:00 p.m.
Sliding scale: $1-$5.00

Jack Straw Studios, in Seattle’s U. District, at
4261 Roosevelt Way N.E.
(corner of 43rd & Roosevelt)

This event is co-sponsored by the JACK STRAW FOUNDATION.
Thanks to the Seattle Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs
for partial funding of Raven Chronicle 2010 programs.

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