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Cross, Vida 2017

Thursday, Aug 31, 2017
Poetry in the Parks with Aaron Coleman

 

 

Read this interview with Vida Cross from Awst Press:

Interview with Vida Cross – Awst Press

After last week’s debut of poet Vida Cross’s book, BRONZEVILLE AT NIGHT: 1949, Liz Blood chatted with Cross about the influences on her work including painter Archibald J. Motley, writer Langston Hughes, and living in Chicago. They discussed bringing writing, music, and painting together, d

Watch Vida Cross read here:

https://vimeo.com/152918611

More info on Vida Cross⇒

Coleman, Aaron 2017

Thursday, Aug 31, 2017
Poetry in the Parks with Vida Cross

 

 

 I am made of what I am afraid to remember. Come tell me more
about what I was—about the brothers, mind-ancient now, fleeing
Mississippi with spilled moon ready in their eyes. 

              – Aaron Coleman, “Very Many Hands”

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Read this interview with Aaron Coleman from Cave Canem:

DOGBYTES interview: Aaron Coleman

A Cave Canem Fellow and Fulbright Scholar from Metro-Detroit, Aaron Coleman is the winner of the Tupelo Quarterly Poetry Contest, The Cincinnati Review Schiff Award, and the American Literary Translator Association’s Jansen Memorial Fellowship. His chapbook, St. Trigger, won the 2015 Button Poetry Prize, and his work can be found in Apogee, Boston Review, Fence, New York Times Magazine, and elsewhere.

Faith, let me be rootless, fluent
as pain and change-slick water. I am you and falling through
darkness in my mind, soft spill of dying fireflies, impatient
in this body, this brink, scheme, see: in here I can’t look back. 

– Aaron Coleman, “To Whom— To What— Do I Belong”

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Watch Aaron Coleman read here:

Aaron Coleman – On Acquiescence

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More info on Aaron Coleman⇒

Hunter, Lauren 2017

Thursday, Sept 14, 2017
with Melissa Castro
Julius Meinl

 

 

this happens when i am between asleep
and you                    when my hair is wet
call me hurricane i answer to anything 

              – Lauren Hunter, “i am warm and powerful”

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Read this interview with Lauren Hunter from Entropy:

https://entropymag.org/lauren-hunter-in-conversation-with-vi-khi-nao

why i like to see my breath like smoke. why i like to
be the last body in a room. i’m gonna touch everything, someday. 

– Lauren Hunter, from “the gospel according to tough love”

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Watch Lauren Hunter read here:

Lauren Hunter HUMAN ACHIEVEMENTS NC LAUNCH – selina kyle’s apartment

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Tardi, Mark 2017

Wednesday, Oct 4, 2017
with Nina Corwin
57th Street Books

bw+elbow

some spindle of the sun
empirically facted
deafening skin
open and afterwards

              – Mark Tardi, “series 2”

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Read this interview with Mark Tardi:

12 or 20 (second series) questions with Mark Tardi

Mark Tardi is from Chicago. He is the author of the books Euclid Shudders and the newly released Airport music . He also has an essay in …

As ridiculous as writing a postcard to her cat
these were bodies like mismatched socks
a kind of furniture
no more holdable than the wind 

– Mark Tardi, from “Attribution Error”

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Watch Mark Tardi read here:

More info on Mark Tardi⇒

Dubrow, Jehanne 2017

Wednesday, Nov 8, 2017
with Emily Jungmin Yoon
City Lit Books

 

 

We dreamed of glowing children,
their throats alive and cancerous,
their eyes like lightning in the dark.

              – Jehanne Dubrow, “Chernobyl Year”

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Read this interview with Jehanne Dubrow from the American Literary Review:

Obsession and Resistance in Poetry: An Interview with Jehanne Dubrow

Obsession and Resistance in Poetry: An Interview with Jehanne DuBrow Interview conducted by Sebastian Paramo Jehanne Dubrow is a prolific poet whose work is visceral and rich with the language of the senses. Her sixth book of poems, Dots & Dashes, won the 2016 Crab Orchard Review Series in Poetry Open Competition Award and will be published…

And flickering beyond the fence,
we’ll see the slatted lives
of strangers. The light
above a neighbor’s porch
will be a test of how we tolerate
the half-illumination
of uncertainty

– Jehanne Dubrow, “Syllabus for the Dark Ahead”

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Watch this visual depiction of one of her poems:

The Long Deployment by Jehanne Dubrow

On 11 November, 2015 by Dave Bonta with 0 Comments – Videopoems In honor of Armistice Day, Remembrance Day, and in the U.S., Veteran’s Day, here’s a poem by Jehanne Dubrow adapted by Nicole McDonald for Motionpoems, whose monthly email newsletter describes it as “a love letter to all who’ve had a loved one overseas.”

More info on Jehanne Dubrow⇒

Faizullah, Tarfia 2018

Friday, Jan 26, 2018
with Kaveh Akbar
Produce Model Gallery

 

 

because I look like them—
because I am ashamed
of their bodies that reek so
unabashedly of body—
because I can—because I am
an American, a star
of blood on the surface of muscle. 

              – Tarfia Faizullah, “En Route to Bangladesh, Another Crisis of Faith”

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Read this interview with Tarfia Faizullah from Lantern Review:

A Conversation with Tarfia Faizullah

Tarfia Faizullah is the author of (Southern Illinois University Press, 2014), winner of the 2012 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry First Book Award. Her poems appear in Ploughshares, The Missouri Review, The Southern Review, Massachusetts Review, Ninth Letter , and are anthologized in Poems of Devotion: An Anthology of Recent Poets (Wipf & Stock, 2012).

I play
and replay the voices of these
hurt women flowering
like marigolds or thistles.

– Tarfia Faizullah, “The Interviewer Acknowledges Grief”

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Watch Tarfia Faizullah read here:

Voluble: “Feast or Famine” and “Love Poem Ending with the Eye of a Needle” by Tarfia Faizullah

This video features two poems by Tarfia Faizullah, a featured poet at the LA Review of Books exclusive channel: Voluble.

It bewilders me to have looked
at this piece of fruit without
seeing it grow its own blue
shroud. Now you, too, are
gone.  

– Tarfia Faizullah, “What I Want is Simple”

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More info on Tarfia Faizullah⇒

Akbar, Kaveh 2018

Friday, Jan 26, 2018
with Tarfia Faizullah
Produce Model Gallery

Teenagers are texting each other pictures
of orchids on their phones, which are also orchids.
Old men in orchid pennyloafers
furiously trade orchids.

              – Kaveh Akbar, “Orchids are Sprouting from the Floorboards”

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Read this interview with Kaveh Akbar from Slice Magazine:

https://slicemagazine.org/literal-magic-an-interview-with-poet-kaveh-akbar/

angels don’t care about humility
you shaved your head        spent eleven days half-starved in solitary
and not a single divine trumpet wept into song      now it’s lonely all over

– Kaveh Akbar, “Heritage”

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Watch Kaveh Akbar read here:

I WAS ALREADY AN AMERICAN LAST WEEK WHEN A LEAF FELL – Kaveh Akbar

Watch Kaveh Akbar read his piece, which is also live at PANK in our new Spring / Summer 2016 issue. www.pankmagazine.com

your mouth a moonless system
of caves filling with dust
the dust thickened to tar
your mouth opened and tar spilled out 

– Kaveh Akbar, “Palmyra”

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More info on Kaveh Akbar⇒

Kaveh Akbar is an Iranian-American poet who has received honors including a Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation, a Pushcart Prize, the Levis Reading Prize, and a Lucille Medwick Memorial Award from the Poetry Society of America. In February 2019, he was named an editor for Poetry Daily. His poems appear in The New Yorker, Poetry, and The New York Times, among others. His debut full-length collection, Calling a Wolf a Wolf, is out with Alice James in the US and Penguin in the UK, and his chapbook, Portrait of the Alcoholic, was published by Sibling Rivalry Press. Akbar founded  Divedapper, and, along with Sarah Kay and Claire Schwartz, he writes a weekly column for the Paris Review called “Poetry RX.” Previously, he ran The Quirk, a for-charity print literary journal. He has also served as Poetry Editor for BOOTH and Book Reviews Editor for the Southeast Review

Xu, Lynn 2018

Thursday, Feb 22, 2018
with Jennifer Roche
Sector 2337

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Doors open and shut.
We’ve come to the place where nothing shines.
I hear eternity
Is self-forgetting.  Interiors warm with the nightmare of guests and poetry
And you.

              – Lynn Xu, “Earth Light: I”

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Read this interview with Lynn Xu from the Huffington Post:

National Poetry Month Emerging Poet Spotlight: Interview with Lynn Xu, Author of Debts and Lessons

Lynn Xu’s debut book of poetry, Debts & Lessons , has just appeared (April 1) from the always terrific Omnidawn Publishing.

Now rising
Now setting
A windbreak of gum trees
Etcetera
The edge of time
Etcetera

– Lynn Xu, “Nocturne”

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Watch Lynn Xu read here:

More info on Lynn Xu⇒