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Poetry News For August 20, 2008

Poetry News:

  1. New site: Postal poetry
  2. City Lights: 50 years on the cutting edge of publishing
  3. Half of his sonnets and songs were written during his travels which he regarded as a form of exile, an alternative to prison in Lisbon, imposed on him by cruel fate
  4. Revisiting Coney Island of the Mind
  5. How Seamus Heaney defines Ireland’s 1972 troubles with a portrait of a drunken seaman blown up in a pub [mp3] —
  6. faculty readings from the last two West Chester conferences are online: 2007 and 2008
  7. Joe Milford’s internet radio show feat. Ron Silliman [mp3] —
  8. Seeking poems that explore the twisted world of David Lynch’s Blue Velvet for The Private Press’s next chapbook anthology. Deadline 31 December 2008
  9. Is music just “auditory cheesecake” or can it provide deep insights into the workings of the brain and the evolution of language
  10. Trying to explain this to younger/newer poets and those outside of the poetry community is frustrating [True -- 7.03% of regular readers of this blog bought my book, using my feed subscriber stats & # of Lulu orders to calculate... it's probably even less than 7%, because the calculation assumes that all the orders came from RSS feed subscribers, which is probably doubtful.] —
  11. Eileen Tabios & the Poetry Economics: A Moronic Oxymoron

A bit of confession Wednesday — lately I’ve been posting here as a way to demonstrate to myself that I am doing better, healthwise, than I am — I think. Self-psyche-out. But I need to quit it until I get this cardiovascular / autonomic nervous system weirdness figured out. I am totally exhausted! From what?! All I’m doing is sleeping and eating really, and my PT routines. I’m getting fat too. I have an exam Friday. I’ll be back when I get some energy.

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Poetry News For March 18, 2008

Poetry News:

  1. A Poem for the NCAA Basketball Tournament
  2. Death, destruction and fear on the streets of cafes, poets and booksellers
  3. What he would have us hearken to most closely is not the song the verse-maker spins inside his own head, but the common world’s melody, “the music of what happens”
  4. It seems that the challenges of living elicit the most eloquent and powerful verse, and sometimes that power is delivered in a quiet voice
  5. Wordclay Recognized as Site of the Week by PC Magazine
  6. He told his readers difficult truths about their lives … but he did so in a way which was oddly consoling in its honesty
  7. Hughes is a vigorous poet and the muscle of his language lifts the ordinary or overlooked experience, turns it about, holds it up to the light
  8. Jean Valentine, Poetry Faculty Member Since 1974, Named New York State Poet for 2008-2010
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Poetry News for August 6, 2007

Poetry News:

  1. Shakespeare in Dogpatch - Of sonnets and comic strips [link courtesy afitf thank you] —
  2. Apartment Complex Where Charles Bukowski Wrote “Post Office” For Sale, Could Be Leveled [link found here thank you] —
  3. Southern book festival announces authors for this year’s event [we have room for 1 guest if you plan to attend and are not an axe-murderer] —
  4. Emotional poem fills screen
  5. The Gotham Book Mart (it was originally Gotham Book and Art) became known for embracing avant-garde and, occasionally, controversial writers and challenging censorship
  6. Is Southern literature exhausted?
  7. SUNY Brockport seeks to restore paintings of E.E. Cummings
  8. Simic Interview at NPR
  9. X-Ray of a Van Gogh Reveals 2nd Painting
  10. To make the top reaches of this list, I was told by Brent Cunningham, S.P.D.‘ operations director, you need to sell roughly 100 copies a month

I enjoyed “Masters of Science Fiction” & am looking forward to the next episodes. Stephen Hawking narrates it. Speaking of alternate universes: China tells living Buddhas to obtain permission before they reincarnate

Awww. More niece. She kinda looks like she got all of our modicum of Native American genes.

And some deep-linking to the NY Times:

:)

  1. Featured Author: Ishmael Reed With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  2. Featured Author: Allen Ginsberg With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  3. Featured Author: Jack Kerouac With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  4. Featured Author: Langston Hughes With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  5. Featured Author: Randall Jarrell With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  6. Featured Author: Seamus Heaney With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  7. Featured Author: James Merrill With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  8. Featured Author: Joseph Brodsky With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  9. Featured Author: Robert Frost With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  10. Featured Author: James Dickey With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  11. Featured Author: James Joyce With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  12. Featured Author: Margaret Atwood With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  13. Featured Author: Sylvia Plath With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  14. [More] Featured Author: Sylvia Plath With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  15. Featured Author: Ted Hughes With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  16. More on Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath From the Archives of The NYT
  17. Featured Author: Hart Crane With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  18. Featured Author: Maxine Kumin With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  19. Featured Author: Federico García Lorca With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  20. Featured Author: William S. Burroughs With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  21. Featured Subject: Cole Porter With News and Reviews From the Archives of The New York Times
  22. Featured Author: Charles Bukowski With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  23. Featured Author: W. S. Merwin With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  24. [More] Featured Author: W. S. Merwin With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
  25. Featured Author: Kenneth Koch With News and Reviews From the Archives of The NYT
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Poetry News for 7-7-7

Poetry News:

  1. Seamus Heaney’s new book “¦ is sold out before most people have even heard about it
  2. Poet Christopher Buckley Wins Guggenheim after 20 years of Trying
  3. In Berry tribute, authors explore influence of writer who loves the land
  4. Harborview lets poetry do some of the healing
  5. When a new hotel in Edinburgh commissioned local poets to write poems to place on guests’ pillows instead of the usual chocolates, there was a gleefully cynical response
  6. Chickasaw Nation Announces 2007 Hall of Fame Inductees
  7. even with the occasional endorsement of the MLA, online projects are not generally esteemed by universities as evidence of scholarly productivity
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Poetry News For January 28, 2007

Poetry News:

  1. Google mashes up books and maps
  2. “I hate publishing!” Alfred Tennyson complained
  3. Edward Thomas on the Lagans Road by Seamus Heaney
  4. The Man With Two Brains
  5. A New Book Promises an Intriguing Twist to the Epic Tale of ‘Doctor Zhivago’
  6. Remembering Brainard

Edwin Arlington Robinson article at the Wall Street Journal, if someone has access. I’d like to know what it says if anyone out there can view it. I’m a fan.

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Poetry News For January 16, 2007

Poetry News:

  1. Chilean poet Gabriela Mistral, the first Latin American to win a Nobel Prize, died 50 years ago this week
  2. Heaney wins TS Eliot poetry prize
  3. Asahi Haikuist Network
  4. I should be inclined to rank her second, then, in importance among our women poets [Monday, Aug. 13, 1923] —
  5. Mongoose Civique, Thunder Crester, Dearborn Diamante…. [Monday, Apr. 22, 1957] hahaha —
  6. What does it mean to be a poet in our time: Interview with Charles Bernstein

Womb Poetry Vol.1 is up.

Maybe because I’ll be 40 this year (?) I can’t read light text on darker backgrounds online anymore. Ow. ow ow. I hate to pick on specific sites but my freakin’ eyes! I WANT TO READ YOUR CONTENT. I’m using the bookmarklet that I found here to turn light-text-on-dark to dark-text-on-light. Though in 1996 the first non-Lynx website I made had light text on a black background, hee. :P Don’t even get me started on Macromedia Flash-turbation.

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