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Produced and published by the members of Writers' Village University since 1998    ISSN 1521-2639       
17 May 2012
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Announcement:

SPECIAL POETRY EXHIBIT AT WRITERS’ VILLAGE UNIVERSITY

April is National Poetry Month and a time to celebrate poetry. One of the objectives of National Poetry Month is to "to bring poets and poetry to the public in immediate and innovative ways."

Writers Village University will be holding a special online exhibit of poetry. This will be the first time that WVU has hosted a special exhibit of poetry in honour of National Poetry Month.

The Exhibit will feature the work of the poets of the Senior Poets’ Workshop (P123). which is an open workshop for experienced poets where members follow WVU’s philosophy of writers helping writers. In this workshop, members hone their skills as advanced poets, expand their knowledge of poetic forms, participate in the development of group exercises and course facilitation, have a place to pursue literary critiques of poems and poets and work with some of the master poets at WVU.

The Exhibit will run all during April and is open not just to WVU members and the readers of T-Zero but to everyone in cyberspace.

The actual site is currently under development . The exact URL will be announced in the April issue of T-Zero and in the WVU newsletters.


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Catherine's Kitchen The Writers' Ezine - T-Zero Xpandizine

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Catherine's Kitchen

Catherine Manning

Peanuts

LATE AS USUAL, though I am normally very punctual for everything except the column.

I went this morning to the vegetable market which has opened near here and for the first time ever, the cashier, a 'nice' young man, asked me if I had a B.A.R.P card (Barbados Assoc. for Retired Persons, we get it at 50). I was mortified and as I handed it to him, asking if I looked as if I should have one! He just smiled. It was nice to get my 10% off, but I came home and looked in the mirror! Oh well, and I'm not retired!

Nostalgia is setting in as the house where I was born is up for sale and I wish...

Lamberts is a small plantation in the north of the island which belonged to my great grandfather's company and when several companies merged, it became part of Barbados Shipping & Trading, so we now own shares.

However, when my father proved to be a square peg in a round hole in the merchant world and only wanted to be on the land, he was sent to manage Lamberts at the age of 19. I think my grandfather thought that as it was so far from town and any social life, he would be kept out of mischief. That must have been wishful thinking.

Lamberts was turned into very productive farm, but was only 400 acres, and Dad (in his infinite wisdom) decided that it was too small to support the massive old plantation house that existed at that time. No different than any other plantation house, but as far as he was concerned it was a drag to keep up. So he knocked it down, brick by brick and left it where it fell. He then built another house with less wood and solid as a rock, which is where the first three of us were born. I can only assume he had permission. My mother says she only went there once before she was married and it was a rambling old place full of wood, so he was probably right to knock it down. I never discovered this till after he'd died and even my eldest brother, who thinks he knows everything, didn't know about it! He still thinks he knows everything!

It was due to a tragic accident that we moved to Westmoreland. While cleaning a 200 foot well, one man was killed and my father barely made it to the top. It was not his fault but naturally he felt responsible and blamed himself. He was such a mess that my grandfather decided that we couldn't stay there any longer, so he bought Westmoreland and we moved there when I was three. I remember everything about the house and even remember where certain pieces of furniture were. I would love to live there again, but I guess that's wishful thinking!

It strange how in a small island like Barbados, not only the rainfall is different but so is the soil. What grows in the north won't grow in the south and vice versa. One of the crops that grow well in the north is peanuts. I love them freshly dug and not roasted, but naturally they are more versatile roasted and one of the most popular is peanut butter which can be used in so many ways, but also popular in some of the islands is:

Peanut Punch

  • 1 tbs. cornstarch
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 3 tbs. peanut butter
  • 1 cup milk
  • sugar to taste

Mix cornstarch in water, add peanut butter, milk and sugar. Heat until dissolved and well mixed. Cool, refrigerate and serve over crushed ice.

Peanut Soup

  • 2 oz. butter
  • 2 oz. flour
  • 3 pints chicken stock (US 7 1/2 cups)
  • 12 oz. peanut butter
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Garnish
  • 4 tbs. finely chopped cooked chicken
  • 1 tbs. chopped parsley

Melt butter, add flour and stir for 2 minutes. Reserve 2-1/2 cups of stock, add remainder slowly to flour mixture and bring to the boil. Blend remaining stock with peanut butter and when smooth add to soup. Season and simmer for 10 minute. Serve hot, topped with chopped chicken and parsley.

The following recipes are from the "old cousins" cookbook which I have not tried, but they look workable! I will try them though, when I have someone to eat them other then me! I'm still battling with my diet, so far 10 lbs. lost and now I'm stuck: my fault not the diet!

Peanut Cakes

  • 1 lb. of peanuts shelled, roasted and ground before being weighed
  • 1/4 lb. butter
  • 1/4 lb. sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • rose water
  • flour

Beat butter and sugar together, add eggs, rose water, nuts and enough flour to make stiff enough to drop on buttered and floured baking sheet. Bake in moderate oven till golden.

Peanut Cookies

  • 2 tbs. butter
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup flour
  • 1 tsp. baking powder
  • 2 tbs. milk
  • 1/2 cup roasted nuts chopped
  • 1/2 tsp. lemon juice
  • 1/4 tsp. salt
  • 1 egg well beaten

Cream butter and sugar and add beaten egg. Sift the flour, baking powder and salt together and mix well with the butter mixture and then add the milk, nuts and lemon juice. Drop in into patty pans and bake on a high heat for 12 to 15 minutes.

As I said, I haven't tried these yet, but since fresh peanuts are now on the market I should find the time. I hesitate because my sweet tooth has surfaced since I've been on this diet and it's fatal to make anything sweet.

Today I had some friends to lunch and even though lunch was quite simple, I couldn't make up my mind about dessert. I did Buljol to start and then flying fish with yam pie, a variety of vegetables and salad and then decided I would stick with ice cream and fresh cherries for dessert. Who reminded me I had profiteroles in the freezer, so I ended up making a coulis of ice cream and cherries, stuffing the puffs with ice cream and melting down strawberry jam to dribble over them with nuts sprinkled on top. A few were left over and I say no more! Tomorrow is another day.

Bon Appetit
Cath


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Fiction Corner

Alison Hawke

Make them laugh

I recall very little of my university course on Thermal Physics, but I will never forget that it was a postgraduate student who proved the Einstein Podolsky Rosen (EPR) paradox, thanks to Dr Jim Al-Khalili. It stuck in my mind because I learnt this in a Quantum Mechanics lecture. Dr Al-Khalili was walking back and forth across the room describing the paradox when he mentioned it had been proved by J.S. Bell in 1964, a postgraduate student working on his thesis. Dr Al-Khalili, a Quantum Physics researcher himself, paused a moment, exclaimed a derogative on the Bell's parentage, smiled at the class, and continued the lecture like nothing had happened. I remember trying not to laugh out loud that a mere student had beaten our lecturer to it. After that, the whole class listened attentively for at least a week, in case he did it again

By contrast, I can almost guarantee that I never laughed at anything my Thermal Physics lecturer said in class.

Humour sticks in people's minds. We swap jokes over coffee, watch comedians and clowns, and repeat funny things kids said. It gets your attention. Weave some into your fiction and the results can be wonderful. I can still quote verbatim large sections of Douglas Adam's Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, even though the last time I read it was years ago. It stuck in my mind, taking up space that should have gone to Bessel functions and other mathematical equations.

This quote is one that I have been wanting to track down for ages. It is from Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, another Douglas Adams book. I haven't read the book since at least 1993, and don't own a copy of it any more, but I remembered the quote.

"Luckily," he went on, "you have come to exactly the right place with your interesting problem, for there is no such word as 'impossible' in my dictionary. In fact," he added, brandishing the abused book, "everything between 'herring' and 'marmalade' seems to be missing."

When I took a comedy writing course a while back I learned the grim truth that writing humour can be a cold blooded business. It doesn't just happen, you have to sit and think up something that might be funny, play with it until it works, and then write another one. Write ten more, discard nine of them, and write another ten. And keep going. John Vorhaus's book The Comic Toolbox: How To Be Funny Even If You're Not was a great manual on writing humour. I've found it creeping into other writing sometimes, a turn of phrase, an exaggeration, a fish out of water situation, a contrast, things with the potential to be funny.

It is worth learning something about humour, even if it's not your main focus, because it can bring fiction alive, breathe life into nonfiction and make your words stick long after you have moved on.


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Healthy Horizons

Laurie Lupold

Well I'm back and hopefully life will begin to function at a normal pace. I really missed WVU and my readers especially. It's good to be back. I've really missed you Margaret and your encouragement. You don't know how much you appreciate it until it is gone. Well I hope my first column back isn't a disappointment. I was real emotional at the time I wrote it.

Life, a bit complicated, more so to those who go through it with the concept of a fog filtering its illusions continuously. It's not that these people are any less of the capacity of any human being, it is merely that these people have extreme circumstances to overcome to which they find some sense of normality in life.

Many dwell in this kingdom of the fog. It knows nothing of discrimination. Everyone is welcome. But those who haven't crossed over into this path often can't comprehend those who survive it. They don't categorize a mental disorder as one would a heart condition or such. In their eyes it is two separate things but the truth be known a mental condition is very much a medical condition.

In many cases it affects how you feel physically. Maybe you are tired, withdrawn. As in my case, I find myself this way often. Have you ever experienced panic? Your heart races, your breathing quickens, your body tenses. Some experience this at night during sleep as a feeling of suffocation. I know this to be true because I have experienced such. I have found myself at times amused by everything and nothing then turn around and be sad and angry all in the same short hour. Can I explain this?

Only from what I'm told. These problems exist because of an imbalance in the brain. Technical terms don't enlighten me and they sure don't make me feel any better. I don't know of a cure either but then I haven't been very good about treatment either. I've been good about taking my medicine but not so good at therapy. Perhaps this should be a commitment I make to myself and to my therapist who has been very patient with me. I wouldn't expect her to trust me as I have let her down before but I will try and maybe my readers can help me. A little encouragement goes a long way. Perhaps I'm appearing at the mercy of my illness but it has me beaten at this point and I could use all the support I can get.


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Poetics The Writers' Ezine - T-Zero Xpandizine

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Poetics

Kathleen Helen Strom,
Glennis Hobbs, and
Christine Henderson

National Poetry Month,
Seventh Anniversary - April 2002

In April 1996, The Academy of American Poets launched an annual celebration dedicated to promoting poets and poetry. According to the American National Poetry Society, this unique event has grown into the "largest and most democratic celebration of any of the arts in America with an estimated audience that now reaches into the tens of millions."

There are seven goals for National Poetry Month:

  • To highlight the extraordinary legacy and ongoing achievement of American poets
  • To introduce more Americans to the pleasures of reading poetry
  • To bring poets and poetry to the public in immediate and innovative ways
  • To make poetry a more important part of the school curriculum
  • To increase the attention paid to poetry by national and local media
  • To encourage increased publication, distribution, and sales of poetry books
  • To increase public and private philanthropic support for poets and poetry

Writers Village University is dedicated to furthering these goals through education online. We are currently offering approximately sixty classes and workshops in poetry, as well as a large curriculum of writing courses in other genre. One of the poets we studied recently was Langston Hughes. (P125/Arlene Lawson) It is gratifying to note that this beloved American poet was chosen to be honoured this year on the 100th anniversary of his birth. On his actual birthdate of February 1, the United States Postal Service issued a Langston Hughes stamp as part of its Black Heritage series. A column about Langston Hughes and his poetry will be featured in the April issue of T-Zero.

Langston Hughes Remembered

In his honour there will be a National Poster and advertising campaign in which some 180,000 posters will be distributed to schools, libraries and book stores across America. There will be a Langston Hughes Poetry Day on April 2. A tribute to Hughes at New York City's famous Town Hall on April 30. And a Centenary Exhibit on the web at The Academy of American Poets.

Other poets singled out for honours this year include: Gertrude Stein, W. H. Auden, Marie Ponsot & Shel Silverstein and E. E. Cummings.

From Sea to Sea

Given the political climate of the United States these days, it is refreshing to find that the phrase, "from sea to shining sea", can describe a simple celebration. From New York to Georgia, Arkansas to Illinois, Texas and Arizona to Oregon and Washington, National Poetry Month is being heralded in libraries, recital halls, coffee shops and even book stores.

It doesn't matter if your brand of verse runs to the epic poems of Homer, or the wit and humor of Ogden Nash, or to the more modern poets. What does matter is that you allow the words to touch you and that you share your enthusiasm with others. If you are a closet poetry reader, join others at your local library and quietly compare your favorites and sample the tastes of others in a small group. If you speak of poetry someone will listen. Stand up at a reading and show others what you like and tell why you like it. Someone will understand.

Poetry in New York City

Starting off a little earlier, the week of March 17 is Dialogue Through Poetry Week, an effort to unite not only our country, but the world through a shared passion for poetry.

The National Arts Club in NYC held a Launch Party and Poetry Reading on Friday, March 1.

The New School in NYC will host readings March 20, featuring Breyten Breytenbach, Bob Holman, Sharon Olds and others.

The American Poetry Society, NSPS affiliates, and various local writing and poetry clubs are sponsoring contests, readings, workshops, and publication of poetry in April.

The Poetry of Plays (Barnard College): A two-day conference on April 5 and 6 will feature women poets and playwrights. Plays by Gertrude Stein, Leslie Scalapino, Brighde Mullins, Lee Ann Brown, Christine Hume, Jena Osman, Renee Gladman, Anna Rabinowitz, Susan Wheeler and others will be presented.

In Texas the Austin International Poetry Festival is being held April 18-21.

Seattle, Washington is having a Poetry Festival in April.

The Oregon State Poetry Association is hosting readings around the state on April 13, and their Spring Conference is being held on April 27.

Throughout other states, local poetry societies and literature groups are hosting a variety of readings and workshops. Most will be in the form of small gatherings where favorites will be discussed and shared. Check your library, bookstore, college or university. Something related to poetry is going on near you. Detailed information on National Poetry Month throughout America can be found at The Academy of American Poets' site on National Poetry Month.

So there we have it. By national proclamation April is the month for poetry and poets to reign supreme. What more will they have to offer across this great land, we wondered? We discovered that bards and booksellers, libraries and legislatures, schools and speakers, musicians and mountain climbers, are poised and ready.

During National Poetry Month there will be...

Poetry in the Desert
In the Valley of the Sun, on Saturday, April 6 all roads lead to The Arizona Book Festival at Hance Deck Park on Central Avenue in Phoenix. This fifth annual jam-packed event is sponsored by The Arizona Humanities and other organizations celebrating literature in Arizona. Last year's event drew a crowd in excess of 12,000.

Premiere activities for this year's Festival are:
The Main Stage Presentation by authors Barbara Kingsolver, Ana Castillo, Lois Lowry, Jewell Parker Rhodes, Diana Gabaldon and Sherman Alexie.

The Children's Stage with authors Lynne Cravath, Rick Walton, Max Grover, B.G. Hennessy, David Christiana, Conrad Storad. And illustrators Jean Ekman Adams, Lynne Cravath, Katalin Ehling, Michael Lacapa.

Other events include: Educational Programs coordinated by Arizona Highways, Arizona State University, Yavapai College, Maricopa County Library, Glendale Public Library, and the Sharlot Hall Historical Society, featuring Cowboy Poets. And there will be Book Award Winners, Romance writers, panel discussions, exhibitions, entertainment, children's crafts and activities, hundreds of books to browse and buy. And of course what would a book festival be without autograph sessions? Admission is free. Complete details online at the Arizona Humanities Council.

Cowboy Poets are a unique feature of Arizona cultural life. To learn more about their poetry and performance schedules throughout the year, several web sites offer information and poetry. One that I particularly liked was
here. They offer a youth program and student poetry contests.

The Arizona State Poetry Society invite the public to a free Spring Festival on April 13 at the Scottsdale Mustang Library. A morning workshop on writing poetry will be presented by Beckian Fritz-Goldberg, a published poet, professor, and director of creative writing at Arizona State University. The afternoon presentation will be given by Jeannine Savard, a published poet and professor at ASU. During the day, awards will be presented to the winners of ASPS pre-festival poetry contest which closes March 11. And there will also be opportunity for members of the public to participate by reading their own poetry.

The Tempe Public Library is celebrating National Poetry Month with readings and moderated discussion by featured poets on four Tuesdays in April.

April 9: Lora Tohe, an Associate Professor in the English department at ASU. Lora Tohe, Dine, was born and raised on the Navajo reservation. An Associate Professor in the English department at ASU, her book of poetry and stories, No Parole Today, received Poetry of the Year Award by the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers. Recognized for her contributions to American Indian literature through "Those Who Speak the World into Place: An Honoring of Native Writers," made possible through Joy Harjo and the Lila-Wallace Reader's Digest Fund. Her current work is called Talking Woman.

April 16: Sean Nevin, who teaches at ASU, and for the Arizona Commission on the Arts as an Artist-in-Education. He served as the poetry editor for Hayden's Ferry Review. His poetry has appeared in Poet Lore, The East Valley Tribune, Long Island Quarterly, Medicinal Purposes, and Barbaric Yawp. He received the 1999 Dorothy M. Hood Prize for Poetry, was a finalist in Arizona's 18th Annual Statewide Poetry Contest (2001), and was awarded ASU's first Faculty Emeriti Association Fellowship in 2001. Nevin, originally from New Jersey, currently resides in Tempe.

April 23: Lois Roma Deeley, whose poems have been published in a number of literary magazines and anthologies nationwide, including Looking for Home, Faultline, Iris, and Confluence. She was the Honorable Mention choice for the IX Tucson Poetry Festival, as well as being a finalist in the 2000 Emily Dickinson Award poetry competition. She serves as one of two poetry editors for National Forum. Roma-Deeley teaches creative writing at Paradise Valley Community College, where she is a full-time professor.

April 30: Thea S. Kutick associate editor at Bilingual Review/Press, who received her MFA from the University of Virginia. She received a Henry Hoyns Fellowship and the 2001 Arizona Commission on the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship in Poetry, was selected for First Place at the 2000 Tucson Poetry Festival by Arthur Sze, and for the 2001 Black Rock Press Broadside Competition. Her poetry has appeared in Alaska Quarterly Review, Arts & Letters, Clackamas Literary Review, Poems & Plays, and the online journal Valparaiso Poetry Review.

The City of Mesa Library will present finalists from the January Poetry Contest. Winners of 'The Battle of the Bards' will read their entries on April 4, in the Main Library. This contest is comprised of two age groups: Teen - 12-17, and Adult - 18 and up.

In Tucson, Student Poetry Contest is held annually by the University of Arizona, UofA Poetry Center, and the Academy of American Poets. The contest, open to full-time graduate or undergraduate students at the University of Arizona, offers cash prizes and publication in the Poetry Center Spring Newsletter. Winners will be asked to read their entries at the Spring Reading Series, April 10.

In Flagstaff the Northern Arizona Book Festival will bring together a diverse group of about 20 acclaimed writers for a 3-day weekend of readings, panel discussions, workshops, and other literary events. The Festival takes place in downtown Flagstaff and at Northern Arizona University, April 12-14.

Poetry in Canada

National Poetry Month in Canada
National Poetry Month was established in Canada in April, 1999 by the League of Canadian Poets. It brings together schools, publishers, booksellers, literary organizations, libraries, and poets across the country to celebrate poetry and its vital place in Canada's culture. Communities and businesses participate through readings, festivals, book displays, and other events. The League has been in existence for thirty-six years and has a membership of 550 professionally published poets.

Provincial Legislatures Across Canada
Edita Petrauskaite, Executive Director of the League said celebrations will begin early on March 21, 2002. On that date poetry readings will be held in eleven provincial legislatures from British Columbia to the Northwest Territories, across the country to Newfoundland and Labrador to celebrate both World Poetry Day and the International Day for the Elimination of Racism. Some of the poets who will be participating in these cross-Canada readings include P. K. Page, Dennis Lee, Sue MacLeod, Dennis Lee, Fred Wah, George Morrissette, and Glen Sorestad.

Senator Grafstein and the League of Canadian Poets will also host a poetry breakfast in the national capital of Ottawa.

Bilingual Poetry Contest
This year the League held a bilingual poetry contest for Canadian youth. The winning poems of the Poetic Licence Contest for Canadians will be posted on the League's second website. The provincial winners of the contest will also be reading their poems at the legislatures on World Poetry Day.

National Poet Laureate
Petrauskaite also announced that in December, 2001, a bill was proclaimed to create the office of a National Poet Laureate for Canada. Proceedings are now underway to choose the poet and the name will be announced between April and June 2002. She also says that part of the Poet Laureate's mandate will be to "make people aware of their rich Canadian cultural heritage and that poetry makes it easy to communicate."

Toronto Poetry College
In Toronto, plans are underway for another main event, the Poetry College, some time in April. Last year's celebration featured fourteen events and was held on three blocks of College Street with thirty poets participating in readings and workshops.

(W)rites of Spring
Deidre Dwyer, the League of Canadian Poets' representative for Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador is organizing a reading (W)rites of Spring to be held in Halifax around April 18.

Poetry in Motion
Halfway across the continent in Winnipeg, the Manitoba Writers Guild is planning to launch Poetry in Motion in conjunction with Winnipeg Transit during Manitoba Book Week which takes place during the week of April 20-27. Poetry in Motion features the work of six Manitoba poets and their poetry is placed on bus cards where according to Carlene Rummery, the Guild's Director of Marketing and Communication "the weary working guy can read poetry on his way to work."

Manitoba Book Week
The Manitoba Association of Booksellers is also helping to celebrate Manitoba Book Week through the launchings of several new poetry books. On April 18, Jon Paul Fiorentino reads from his book "transcona fragments" at Ace Art Gallery. On April 23, Clive Holden will read from "Trains of Winnipeg" (Cyclops Press) at the Winnipeg Centennial Library; this is a new hybrid of performed poetry by Holden with musical accompaniment. April 24, Turnstone Press presents an evening of poetry with reading by David Arnason (author of "Skrag"), Catherine Hunter (author of "Lunar Wake"), and Audrey Poetker-Thiessen (author of "Making Strange to Yourself") at Chapters Polo Festival. In Manitoba's Interlake a celebration of French language Métis literature will be held on April 25 with reading by Roger Léveillé (author of "Le Soleil Du Lac Se Couche") and Métis poets published in the "Anthologie de la Poésie Franco-Manitobaine.

Manitoba North
North of the 54th parallel, the Flin Flon Writers Guild, Flin Flon Public Library and the Flin Flon Toastmasters Club are working together to host an evening celebrating Canadian poetry on April 25, 2002 at the Flin Flon Public Library in honour of National Poetry Month. Local poets will read their own works. Representatives of the community have also been invited to read the works of Canadian poets.

Beat Cinema
To round out National Poetry Month, Cinamatheque will present Beat Cinema: Late Night Rapping. Screenings include: "Pull My Daisy" by Robert Frank/Narration by Jack Kerouac, an avant garde classic about the lives of New York beats featuring Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso with music by David Amram; and "Joe" by David Middleton. Shot in the lamented El Strato Lounge on Gottingen Street "Joe" consists of three hardboiled poems by Beverly Elkins, transplanted to film through onscreen narration and still photography.

And there will be.....

Poetry on the Mountains
The United Nations General assembly has declared 2002 the "International Year of Mountains" to foster understanding of the worldwide importance of mountain ecosystems. To further this aim poetry will be read from twenty-four mountaintops around the world, including the seven highest peaks on the seven continents. This program with the poetic title of "Poetry on the Peaks" is sponsored by Dialogue Through Poetry.

These mountain top readings will coincide with the annual Dialogue Through Poetry Week and UNESCO's World Poetry Day during the week of March 17, 2002. Over 200 poetry readings in 150 cities are scheduled worldwide to discuss "Can poetry help create a culture of peace and non-violence in the world?"

Included in these mountaintop readings will be excerpts from Martin Luther King's "I Have A Dream" speech. A unique feature of this event will be the excitement of a race to the summit of Mt. Everest, by an all-Sherpa team, hoping to beat the world record of 18 hours. On the summit in April, their leader, Kazi Sherpa, will read a poem by the Dalai Lama.

On other mountaintops there will be poems by Pablo Neruda, Gary Snyder, Rumi, Wislawa Szymborska, William Blake, Han Shan Walt Whitman and many others.

And yet, in all of this, we have but a sample of the broad spectrum of poetry, as it manifests itself throughout society, in North America and beyond, in this National Poetry Month, 2002. Obviously poetry is alive and well, confidently expressing the essence of humanity in an ever-changing kaleidoscope of gilded words. Walt Whitman said it best in these excerpts from...

I Hear America Singing
I hear America singing, the varied carols I hear,
Each singing what belongs to him or her and to no one else,
Singing with open mouths their strong melodious songs.


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Poetics Presents

Julie Ferguson

Originally from England, Julie has lived in New Zealand since she was nine. She lives on Auckland's North Shore with her husband, two young sons and dog. She joined WVU almost a year ago with great intentions of writing a novel. The novel has yet to materialize as poetry seems to have taken top spot on her priority list for now.

Julie’s work has previously appeared in T-Zero and Writers' Village members look forward to reading more of her work

Strawberry Kisses

she skips to school
each weekday
my baby grown
pudgy fingers entwined in
a lock of strawberry hair
riotous curls remain untamed
despite the hat

she pauses at the funeral parlour
hands plunged deep
into overall pockets
on tiptoe she stretches to see
squints into the dim-lit window
shrouded with lace
the place where Poppa slept
amongst flickering candles

she stands
small and quiet for a moment

the present returns rippling
across her brow
she blows her sweetest strawberry kiss
and skips lightly on
fading from view
beyond the school gate

Copyright © 2002 by Julie Ferguson


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Poetics Presents

Len Fouty

Len Fouty is a student with WVU. He has been writing poetry and fiction for about two years. A year ago, he published a book of poetry entitled Mountaintops and Valleys. He has a wife and three kids and owns a bag making business in Michigan.

Writers' Village members look forward to reading more of Len’s work.

The Outlaw

Fog, like a panther's shadow,
crept in low on the mossy earth.
Rider straightened in his saddle.
Twilight dimmed, eve unfurled.
Leather creaked and groaned
and broke the eerie hush
that gripped the path he followed
through the tangled brush.
A storm was brewing in the west;
a mountain in a thunderhead;
an ocean in a massive shroud.
Gone was his desire to run;
lost amid the smoke and guns
that tore his flesh with wounds that yawned.
Slowly, he rode on.

Copyright © 2002 by Len Fouty


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Signs of Life

Nancy Horner

Christmas Valentine's Easter Letters ­
A Story of Procrastination

I've blown it, again. Christmas is long gone, Valentine's Day has passed by with a whoosh of chocolate and flowers, St. Patrick's Day is on the way; and, I haven't gotten around to the annual Christmas letter. I haven't even managed to send out cards with our names scrawled at the bottom.

Just before Valentine's Day, I thought I’d get this belated letter-writing job done in time to slap heart-shaped stamps on the front of each envelope. In preparation, I gathered the envelopes and chopped the flap of each envelope with a heart-shaped hole punch. Rounding up the photographs of the kids, I placed them in a stack, unfortunately not in a very convenient location, then plastered return address labels on the front of each envelope. All that remained was to write a new letter, since the one I began to write in December was already outdated, buy some heart stamps and jot down the proper mailing addresses. Simple, right?

Wrong.

On Friday of that week, I went to the post office to fetch some stamps. There were still more than ten days remaining until Valentine's Day, so I thought I had plenty of time. I stood in line with a box that I needed to mail, and then asked the postal worker for something that would work for a Valentine’s theme.

"Flowers would do," I told the clerk, thinking that opening up options would mean I could find some kind of Valentiney alternative.

"We don't have any flower stamps," she said.

"No flowers?"

"Nope, nothing but fruit."

"Fruit?" I shouldn't have been so stunned. Our post office has never been known for its broad variety of colorful postage options.

"Yep, just fruit. We sold out of heart stuff last week. We don't get a whole lot, you know."

"No hearts, flowers, love stamps? None of that?"

"Just fruit."

I didn't even bother to ask whether or not American flags were available, since the alternatives were obviously narrowed down to edibles only.

"Okay," I said, "I'll take two books, then."

The postal clerk slapped two books of self-stick apple and orange stamps on the counter and took my money.

Back at home, armed with my fresh fruit stamps, I decided that I would pay the bills using the orange stamps and save the apples for the Christmas Valentine letters, apples being red and therefore closer to the concept of a Valentine theme. The book of stamps began to take on the look of a checkerboard as I peeled the oranges away, leaving apple stamps behind.

Unfortunately, Valentine's Day came and went. I began to fret because even the Valentine theme I'd begun with the heart punch was now pointless. I looked back into my little mailing drawer, where I keep the mailing labels and stamps. Santa Claus peered back at me, apples sat in their little checkerboard, and I knew I didn't have any kind of rubber stamp, stickers or punch that resembled a St. Patrick's theme. Now what? I sent out a note to friends, informing them that I still hadn't managed to write the Christmas letter and wondering whether I should simply give up until next Christmas.

"How about sending out Easter letters?" One friend replied. Easter. There's a thought. No bunnies or eggs were to be found in the house, so I headed for the craft store, where I found a rubber stamp with a bunny on it. "Fur's Class," it says in one corner. In the middle is a bunny with a heart-shaped tail, the best of both worlds for my multi-holiday theme. I would use Christmas stamps on envelopes with a heart-shaped punch and then stamp the back side of the envelope with Easter bunnies.

I set the bunny stamp beside the pile of envelopes next to my computer. Within hours, my husband walked by.

"Hey," I said. "I got a bunny stamp for the Christmas Valentine's Easter letters."

"Great." He peered over my shoulder. "That's not a bunny. That's a bunny's butt."

Well, okay, the bunny is hopping in the other direction. "I thought that was good. See, his tail is heart-shaped."

"It's a bunny butt." He said. "You're going to stamp our letters with a bunny butt?"

I sighed. "It's an Easter thing. See, it says 'Fur's Class'’" He shook his head and left the room, muttering about bunny butts and humiliation.

The annual letter still hasn't been written, but I'm prepared. In case the envelopes don't make it out the door by Easter, I have a whole sheet of leftover American Flag stickers all ready to slap onto a stack of envelopes.


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Writer to Writer

Rie Sheridan

Suffering the Slings and Arrows

I got my first really bad review the other day. Now, I have had some that weren't totally favorable, but all were valid, and I appreciated the time that had been spent in reading my book and giving a thoughtful opinion on it. This one was just bad. For example, it started like this:

Review: This book is grievously amateur. The writing is filled with weak, overused comparisons...

And ended like this:

Cons: Unprofessional; hard to read; poor dialogue, description, plot, characterization.

There were no "Pros."

It hurt. It always hurts when someone doesn't like your work. But what to do about it? As a writer, there will be times that you must face such criticism. It is practically inevitable (Stephen King and Anne Rice may be immune, but we normal writers aren't...) My immediate reaction was "Ouch! Who does this reviewer think they are?" But that isn't valid either. There were actually some points of her review that I agreed with. The inner monologues are rather stilted. They used to be descriptive text, and I hadn't learned to refine them into thoughts yet. I made a point to give the inner monologues on my next book extra attention to avoid a repetition of the problem.

On the other hand, there were comments that I didn't agree with. I gave them some thought before dismissing them out of hand, but if I didn't feel that they would forward my writing in a positive direction, I didn't dwell on them. No matter what the content of a review, it is still only one person's opinion. There are things in the best review I've gotten that I also take with a grain of salt.

The point is, take what there is of value from a review, and ignore what isn't. Don't let it destroy you or stop you from writing. I don't plan on letting this one bother me. After all, the book has gotten at least six reviews so far, and this is the only truly negative one.

Besides... it is a good excuse for chocolate.


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T-Zero: The Writer's Ezine
http://TheWritersEzine.com

Copyright 1998 - 2007, Writopia Inc. All Rights Reserved

 

© Copyright 1998 - 2007, Writopia Inc. All rights reserved