Fortified Poetry (Living Room, 7P – Dec 20, 2011)

Cocktails Anyone?

Just when the earth reaches maximum axial tilt and dark winter looms, people do a strange thing: they act as if times are flush. Winter solstice celebrations everywhere feature rich food and drink. There were practical reasons for this in herding and agrarian cultures. Grazing livestock were slaughtered so they wouldn’t have to be fed over the winter; at the same time, the alcohol content of wine and beer from the fall harvest was peaking. So on the first day of winter, there was plenty of fresh meat and strong booze.

  • Tonight is the last meeting before our Midwinter break, so please bring a dish or a bottle of something to share.

In modernist poetry, language is at its most spare. Many of us are trained in this wintry style: less is more, focus on the bones—nouns and verbs. That’s too depressing in the dead of winter. Tonight we’ll transform the elitist wine that is the modernist poem into something beefier, trade in that Cab Franc for Mad Dog.

So bring in a favorite modernist poem for the slaughter. We’ll stuff it full of adjectives and adverbs, add characters where there were only images, and indulge pathetic fallacies. Living Room is an open critique circle. We ask for a contribution of $5 to keep the place open. We meet at SPLAB, 3651 S Edmunds in the former Columbia School. We’re close to the Columbia City Light Rail Station and there is parking on site. We will not meet on Dec 27 in honor of Charles Olson’s 101st birthday.

Scot Brannon is your facilitator.

William Carlos Williams slaughtered and fortified
The claims adjustor
couldn’t understand
how a barn
glazed with rain water
could burn down.
Well, yes, he could,
but he urged the little red-
head to talk it through.
So much depended on…
Mom’s not right.
Even these few words taxed
the inert girl
and like a rusted wheel barrow
she seized up.
It had been a bad year—
first a hailstorm snapped
every stalk of corn
like so many wishbones—
with her getting the short
branch every time.
Her father sort of dried up
then he snapped too.
Her older brother said
This life isn’t worth spit
and left for the city.
Pressed, she explained
I thought at seventeen
I’d get to go to prom. Nope.
I’m Queen of these White
Chickens.

Scot Brannon Bio and Picture: Scot Brannon grew up in Thailand, Indonesia and America. Initially home-schooled, he continued his education at Tates Creek High School in Lexington, Kentucky, where he studied science. He left the shelter of his father’s roof at 17 to seek his fortune and has since attended Toastmaster meetings in several states. He is a licensed notary public.

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Cascadia Poetry Festival Schedule

Sam Hamill

Tentative Schedule: Saturday, March 24, 2012
Night
Keynote Talk/Reading, selected faculty on Cascadian Culture, 15-30 minutes
each and discussion. 7:30-10P, SPLAB. Sam Hamill, Judith Roche, Trevor Carolan, Tim McNulty, others TBA.

Saturday and Sunday:
Morning faculty-led discussion, 9-11A, SPLAB.

Simultaneous afternoon workshops and panels, SPLAB and venues TBA.
12-4P Saturday panel, nature walk and writing prompt: Igniting the Green Fuse: Women on Eco-poetry moderated by Kim Goldberg (Nanaimo, BC) featuring: Catherine Owen (Vancouver, BC), Heidi Greco (White Rock, BC) & Carolyne Wright (Seattle, WA) at Seward Park Environmental and Audubon Center.

1-3 Saturday workshop: Tim McNulty  (Sequim, WA) Images as Windows, SPLAB.

4:30-6:30 Saturday workshop: Reading in the Rain (a performance workshop facilitated by Dan Raphael (Portland, OR) at SPLAB.)

7:30P Saturday Keynote reading: Sam Hamill, Judith Roche, Trevor Carolan, Tim McNulty, others TBA.

1 -3 Sunday workshop: Judith Roche (Seattle, WA) The Power of Place, SPLAB.

4P Sunday Reading: Introducing A Sense of Place: The Washington State Geospatial Poetry Anthology edited by Katharine Whitcomb, Robert Hickey, and Marco Thompson, The Center for Geospatial Poetry at Central Washington University! Kathryn Hunt, Terry Martin, Kevin Miller, Paul Fisher, Alice Derry and Anne Teplick are among the confirmed readers.

Sunday night and Monday brunch, goodbyes 11A-1P.

Sponsors: Seward Park Environmental and Audubon Center, State Commission on Humanities.

 

 

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Living Room, Tuesday Dec 13 7P w/ Anthony Warnke

Anthony Warnke

If, as Marvin Bell’s quote for last week’s Living Room suggests, poetry differs from prose for what it leaves out, why do some writers cast a poem in prose form? When does prose become poetry? When does poetry become prose? When do either prose or poetry become the prose poem? And how is the prose poem different from short-short/flash fiction? To get a general sense of the form, we will read prose poems from Charles Baudelaire, Russell Edson, Harryette Mullen, and several others. Then, we will do a prose-poem writing exercise and explore what the genre-challenging form can offer to our writing. Please bring any of your own work to share — prose-y, poem-y, or somewhere in between! Anthony Warnke is your guide.

Writers of all ages and skill levels gather @ SPLAB Tuesdays at 7P to read new work, the work of someone else or to just be in the engaging company of other writers. Your donation of $5 helps SPLAB continue our programming. Please bring 8 copies of the work you plan to read. If you do not bring copies, they are available for 10c.

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2012 Skagit River Poetry Festival

From Molly McNulty:

Hello All
We are excited to announce our 2012 lineup for the May 17-20 Skagit River Poetry Festival.  We have brought back some of our favorite poets and are excited to have many poets who have not yet been to Skagit share their poetry with us.

I hope to see all of you this spring.
Cheers,
Molly McNulty
Director
Skagit River Poetry Project and Festival

alurista
Elizabeth Austen
Ellen Bass
Linda Bierds
Jericho Brown
Lorna Crozier
Tony Curtis
Chris Dombrowski
Lorraine Ferra
Karen Finneyfrock
Carolyn Forché
Matt Gano
Samuel Green
Lorraine Healy
Bob Hicok
Tony Hoagland
Christopher Howell
Will Hornyak
Mary Howe
Kurtis Lamkin
Patrick Lane
Tim McNulty
Simon Ortiz
Red Pine
Rachel Rose
Mark Schafer
M.L. Smoker
Dick Warwick
Jeremy Voigt

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