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Welcome to the schedule of poetry events happening in Massachusetts! This schedule contains events happening all over the state, as entered by our Poetry Partners and others. It is not limited to Mass Poetry events. To submit an event, click here. For more questions regarding our calendar, you can email marketing@masspoetry.org
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Monday, December 14
 

TBA

Poetry in Spanish and Translations INTO ENGLISH AND INTO MUSIC
Pedro Granados, Lima, Perú, Ph.D (Hispanic Language and Literatures), Boston University. Poetry collections: Sin motivo aparente (1978), Juego de manos (1984), Vía expresa (1986), El muro de las memorias (1989), El fuego que no es el sol (1993), El corazón y la escritura (1996), Lo penúltimo (1998), Desde el más allá (2002), Poesía para teatro (2010), Poemas en hucha (2012), Activado (2014), Amerindios/Amerindians (2020), La mirada (2020) y Al filo del reglamento (2020). Currently he is president of “Vallejo sin Fronteras Instituto” (VASINFIN).

Leslie Bary teaches Latin American literature and culture at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, centering on avant-garde poetics and representations of race, and is a prisoners’ rights activist outside class. Her translation of Oswald de Andrade’s “Manifesto antropófago” has become a classic; English versions of César Moro’s La Tortuga ecuestre and Pedro Granados’ Enredadera are forthcoming. Current writing includes “Border Trouble: Anzaldúa’s Margins” and “Field Notes on the Carceral State: From Death Row to ICE Detention in Louisiana.” Amerindios can be bought from Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Amerindios-Amerindians-Spanish-Pedro Granados/dp/1940075882/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=Amerindios&qid=1607355659&s=books&sr=1-2. La mirada (translated in Amerindios), can be bought from the bookstore Virrey: https://www.elvirrey.com/libro/la-mirada_70125027

Daisy Novoa Vásquez is a Chilean-Ecuadorian writer passionate about education, the arts, and intercultural understanding. She lives in Jamaica Plain and teaches at the Margarita Muñiz Academy. Daisy contributes to the Hispanic newspaper El Planeta and is the author of the poetry collection Fluir en Ausencia. Many of her writings have been published in print and online anthologies and literary magazines. Daisy was a writer in residence for the University of Massachusetts Boston and has participated in various literary festivals in the U.S., Latin America, and Europe. To purchase her book, go to https://www.artepoetica.com/book/fluir-en-ausencia/.

Alan Smith Soto, a resident of Jamaica Plain and a member of the Jamaica Pond Poets, was born in San José, Costa Rica. He is the author of three books of poems, Fragmentos de alcancía (Treasure Jar Fragments) (Cambridge: Asaltoalcielo editores, 1998), Libro del lago (Pond poems), (Madrid, Árdora Ediciones, 2014) and Hasta que no haya luna (forthcoming Feb. 2021, Huerga y Fierro Editores, Madrid).His translation of Robert Creeley’s Life and Death (Vida y muerte) was published in 2000 (Madrid: Árdora Ediciones). Libro del lago can be bought here: https://www.amazon.com/Libro-lago-Alan-Smith-Soto/dp/848802052X

Largely unknown today, Juana Borrero (May 17, 1877-March 9, 1896), one of Cuba’s early Modernist poets, delves deep into raw states of imagination, affliction, love, decay, and death, centering the subjective experience of the individual. She died of tuberculosis while in exile in Key West during Cuba’s war for independence at the age of 18.

Stephany Svorinić is a composer and vocalist. Her work has been premiered by the Radius Ensemble and International Contemporary Ensemble, and played on radio stations across the country. She obtained her undergraduate degree from NYU and a Master of Music in vocal performance at New Jersey City University. She graduated from the Longy School of Music in 2019 with a diploma in composition and is currently pursuing a master's in composition at Tufts University. Her Borrero project sets her translations of the poetry of 19th Century Cuban poet, Juana Borrero, to music. Stephany enjoys horror, animals, and all things numinous. If you’d like to tip the artist, please Venmo @stephanysvorinic.

To receive a Zoom invitation with a link to the reading, email your name and email address to SandeeStorey@fastmail.fm before 2 pm on Jan. 7. You will be emailed a Zoom invitation with the link by noon Jan. 8. For security reasons, please do not publicize, post, or broadcast the Zoom link itself. If people you know want to attend, you may send them the link, but please ask them also not to publicize, post, or broadcast the link itself.

For more information, check our website at http://jamaicapondpoets.com or email dorothy.derifield@gmail.com or call 617-325-8388. The next Chapter and Verse Literary Reading on Zoom in the 2020/2021 series will be at 7:30 pm on Friday, February 12, 2021.


Monday December 14, 2020 TBA
 
Friday, June 11
 

4:00pm EDT

All Morning the Crows: A Virtual Poetry Reading with Meg Kearney
Bird lovers everywhere will be drawn to Meg Kearney's latest poetry collection, inspired by (but not always necessarily about) our feathered friends. All Morning the Crows, winner of the Washington Prize, arrived hot off the presses on June 1. Meg is also author of The Ice Storm, a heroic crown of sonnets published as a chapbook in 2020 (now in its third printing!); Home By Now, winner of the 2010 PEN New England LL Winship Award and finalist for the Paterson Poetry Prize and Foreword Magazine's Book of the Year, and An Unkindness of Ravens. Meg also writes for young people, including three novels in verse for teens and a picture book, Trouper, winner of the 2015 Kentucky Bluegrass Award. Meg's poetry has been featured on Poetry Daily, Ted Kooser's "American Life in Poetry" column, and Garrison Keillor's "A Writer's Almanac," and has been published in myriad anthologies. A four-time nominee for the Pushcart Prize, Meg is founding director of the Solstice MFA in Creative Writing Program in Massachusetts.

Readers/Speakers

Friday June 11, 2021 4:00pm - 5:00pm EDT
Online
 
Saturday, June 19
 

11:00am EDT

Fire Goes Out Without Wood: A Virtual Poetry Reading with Catherine Reed
In Fire Goes Out Without Wood, Catherine Reed’s latest poetry collection invites us to journey with her to where ministry and poetry meet. We will encounter a couple in their senior years holding hands, laughing and skipping down the street like two teenagers. A mother grieving her son in jail sits in a rest home waiting. The Intruder who does not discriminate. A child who stares and no longer recognizes grandmother who now wears a mask. We will hear the words of a six-year old perched on her daddy’s shoulders “my daddy’s going to change the world” and moments later her dying daddy pleading for his life with a knee on his neck. After 63 years of marriage one who sits with tears streaming down weather- beaten cheeks waiting to proceed. What God whispers to us when the flames of love dwindle and ending with her dedication For The God Who Knows My Name. Catherine Reed is an ordained minister and poet. She is the author of Crossing BoundariesBetween Midnight and Dawn, and Sankofa. She is a winner of the Barbara Pilon Poetry Contest and a winner of Dark Horse Third World Contest. She’s a mother, grandmother and great grandmother. “Ministry keeps me grounded, poetry helps me dream, and my family keeps me real.”

Readers/Speakers
CR

Catherine Reed

Catherine Reed resides in Worcester, MA. She is a graduate of Clark University, Worcester, Kaleo School of Ministry, Woburn, MA, Hartford Seminary BMCP, Hartford, CT and attended Boston University School of Theology.


Saturday June 19, 2021 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Online
 
Thursday, September 16
 

7:00pm EDT

Rozzie Reads Poetry and Open Mic
Susan Donnelly's newest poetry collection is The Maureen Papers and Other Poems, from Every Other Thursday Press. She is also the author of Capture the Flag, Transit, Eve Names the Animals, and six chapbooks. Her poems have been published in the New Yorker, Poetry, Prairie Schooner, Agni, and many other journals, anthologies, textbooks, and online. Susan teaches poetry in classes and consultations from her home in Arlington, Massachusetts.

James R. Whitley's poetry has been widely published and nominated for the Pushcart Prize. His most recent collection, Songs for Solo Voice, won the 2021 Red Mountain Press Poetry Prize. His prior collections include Immersion (winner of the 2001 Naomi Long Madgett Poetry Award), This Is the Red Door (winner of the Ironweed Poetry Prize and the Massachusetts Book Award) and The Goddess of Goodbye. Currently, Whitley is a Dean at Post University in Waterbury, Connecticut.

Readers/Speakers

Thursday September 16, 2021 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Online
 
Monday, September 20
 

5:30pm EDT

Writing a Black Trans Past
This hybrid talk/reading will consider time and timing as animating problems for black trans life writing. Drawing together poetry, personal narration, and something approaching a theoretical register, Cameron Awkward-Rich's remarks will be something of an experiment in answering the question: what does it mean to write a black trans past?

Cameron Awkward-Rich is a poet and scholar of transgender theory/cultural production. He is the author of two collections of poetry--Sympathetic Little Monster (2016) and Dispatch (2019)--and his critical writing has been published in Signs, Transgender Studies Quarterly, American Quarterly, and elsewhere. Presently, Awkward-Rich is an assistant professor of women, gender, sexuality studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Readers/Speakers

Monday September 20, 2021 5:30pm - 6:30pm EDT
Online
 
Thursday, September 23
 

6:30pm EDT

Amesbury Monthly Poetry Reading
Therese Broderick is a community poet with an MFA in writing degree (2006) from Spalding University, retired from full-time employment. She has been active in the local writing community as an open mic reader, teacher, contest judge, critique group member, classroom guest, blogger, Board member, volunteer for Hudson Valley Writers Guild, Poet Laureate of a local tavern, and administrator for a MeetUp.com local poetry group. Some of her poems have won prizes both locally and beyond and her full-length collection of poetry, Breath Debt, was released in 2018. In addition, she has self-published several chapbooks, including Green-Weak, published online by Red Wolf Editions of Red Wolf Journal. Her current project is Terzanelle Tuesdays. https://theresebroderick.wordpress.com/writing-aterzanelle/

Please email Ellie O'Leary for Zoom link: ellieoleary@gmail.com


Thursday September 23, 2021 6:30pm - 8:30pm EDT
Online
 
Sunday, October 3
 

1:00pm EDT

Writing the Land Poets' Book Launch
Celebrate the independent books published by Writing the Land poets in 2021! Join us for an afternoon of poetry reading and celebration with the authors: Mike Bove, Robert Carr, Ann Day, Alice Fogel, Jason Grundstrom-Whitney, Katherine Hagopian Berry, Jesse Lovasco, and Suzanne Rancourt.


Sunday October 3, 2021 1:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Online
 
Monday, October 4
 

7:00pm EDT

Solidarity Salon/ Virtual Version
Slate Roof poet Anna M. Warrock reads with Allison Adair, Jennifer Barber, Eileen Cleary, Karen Friedland, Jenna Le, Julia Lisella, Jennifer Martelli, Kevin McLellan, Deborah Schwartz, Enzo Silon Surin, and Cindy Veach.

The Solidarity Salon hosted by Lisa DiSero and Gloria Mindock gathers together local artists of various genres to share their creations in community spaces. The series aims to especially amplify the voices of women, people of color, immigrants, and LGBTQ persons.

Anna M. Warrock’s latest book, From the Other Room, won the Slate Roof Press Chapbook Award. Besides appearing in The Sun, The Madison Review, Harvard Review, and elsewhere, her work is anthologized in Kiss Me Goodnight, women writing on childhood mother-loss, a Minnesota Book Award Finalist. Her poems have been choreographed, set to music, and inscribed in a Boston area subway station. www.AnnaMWarrock.com

Live streamed via Facebook and YouTube. For more details see:
https://www.facebook.com/events/336928854412232


Monday October 4, 2021 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Online
 
Friday, October 8
 

7:00pm EDT

Rozzie Reads Poetry and Open Mic
Sponsored by Friends of the Roslindale Library

Yves Mary Jean is a poet, novelist, political activist and former Boston City Council candidate. His work has been published in French and in Haitian-Creole. His first novel, Tout Chen Pa Chen Nan Pòtoprens(Edisyon Lank Zetwal), has just been published. Yves headlined “The Politics of Translation,” at Bridgewater State University for their first annual Latin American Caribbean Studies Carnival Week.

Eileen Cleary, author of Child Ward of the Commonweath, is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of Lily Poetry Review and Lily Poetry Review Books. She holds two MFA's in poetry. Recent work is published in The Sugar House Review, JAMA, West Texas Literary Review and Solstice: A Magazine for Diverse Voices, among others. 
To sign up for this Zoom reading, contact hguran@aol.com


Readers/Speakers

Friday October 8, 2021 7:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Online
 
Saturday, October 9
 

4:00pm EDT

Peculiar Heritage: A Virtual Poetry Reading with DeMisty D. Bellinger
DeMisty D. Bellinger's debut full-length poetry collection, Peculiar Heritage, follows the inception of racism in the United States to our present political and social condition. Massachusetts poet Marge Piercy says that Bellinger "writes powerful, intelligent, and lyrical poems." Besides writing, DeMisty D. Bellinger is a poetry editor at Malarkey Books, an alumni reader at Prairie Schooner, and a professor at Fitchburg State University in Massachusetts. She has a BA in English from University of Wisconsin-Platteville, an MFA from Southampton College, and a PhD from the University of Nebraska. She is an alum of Bread Loaf and she attended the Vermont Studio Center on a fellowship.

Readers/Speakers
avatar for DeMisty Bellinger

DeMisty Bellinger

Assistant Professor, Fitchburg State University
DeMisty D. Bellinger teaches creative writing, women’s studies, and African-American studies at Fitchburg State University. Her writing has appeared in many places, including Necessary Fiction, Blue Fifth Review, and The Rumpus. Her chapbook, Rubbing Elbows, is available from Finishing... Read More →


Saturday October 9, 2021 4:00pm - 5:00pm EDT
Online

7:00pm EDT

Virtual Special Event: Bobby LeFebre Shares His Social Justice Poetry
Please join us for this very special event with Colorado Poet Laureate, Bobby LeFebre! His poetry spans all of the social justice issues of our time - from George Floyd, Black Lives Matter, gun violence, politics, gentrification, and so much more. His words will make you think, his poetry will give you chills, and his persona will make the learning accessible.

Bobby LeFebre is an award-winning writer, performer, and cultural worker fusing a non-traditional multi-hyphenated professional identity to imagine new realities, empower communities, advance arts and culture, and serve as an agent of provocation, transformation, equity and social change. His work has appeared in The New York Times, Huffington Post, The Guardian, American Theater Magazine, NPR, and Poets.Org.

In 2019, LeFebre was named Colorado's 8 th Poet Laureate, making him the youngest and first person of color to be appointed to the position in its 100 year history. LeFebre holds a bachelor's degree in Psychology from the Metropolitan University of Denver and a master's degree in Arts and Culture from the University of Denver. Learn more about Bobby on his website.

Please register for this meeting and you will receive the program link in the confirmation and reminder notices - please check your spam folder for the emails and scroll to the bottom for the link. This program will be recorded with permission and we will upload it to our YouTube channel.

Contact us at caryprograms@minlib.net with any questions.

Sponsored by the Cary Library Foundation.

Readers/Speakers

Saturday October 9, 2021 7:00pm - 8:15pm EDT
Online
 
Saturday, October 16
 

11:00am EDT

Complex Nests: A Virtual Discussion & Tutorial with Blackout Poet Jessica McHugh
Join poet Jessica McHugh in a discussion about her Bram Stoker & Elgin Award-nominated gothic blackout poetry collection, A Complex Accident of Life, created from the pages of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. She will also read pieces from her new collection Strange Nests and discuss the tragedy that inspired her to seek out the horror hidden in the classic novel, The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Participants are encouraged to bring a pencil and page of prose from a book or magazine, as Jessica will share tips for exploring the craft of blackout poetry and lead attendees in the creation of their own piece. In addition to poetry, Jessica is an internationally-produced playwright and novelist, having written several horror and sci-fi/fantasy books, as well as the 5-book YA series, the Darla Decker Diaries.

Readers/Speakers

Saturday October 16, 2021 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Online

7:30pm EDT

Robert Lowell Memorial Lecture Series featuring Poets Natasha Trethewey and Meg Fernandes
Poets Natasha Trethewey and Meg Fernandes are “coming” to BU! This Zoom Webinar is free and open to the public.

The reading followed by a Q&A will be Thursday, October 15th from 7:30pm - 9:00pm. More information can be found here: http://www.bu.edu/creativewriting/calendar/robert-lowell-memorial-lectures/. The Zoom link is: https://bostonu.zoom.us/j/93316819395?pwd=bVBIT0xzSi9VSXRQdmRlRTZYbWlpQT09. Attendees do not need to pre-register, but they will need to input their name and email address to join.



Saturday October 16, 2021 7:30pm - 9:00pm EDT
Online
 
Thursday, October 21
 

7:00pm EDT

Rozzie Reads Poetry & Open Mic
Krysten Hill is the author of How Her Spirit Got Out (Aforementioned Productions, 2016), which received the 2017 Jean Pedrick Chapbook Prize. Her work has been featured in The Academy of American Poets' Poem-a-Day Series, apt, B O D Y, Boiler Magazine, Up the Staircase Quarterly, Muzzle, PANK, Tinderbox Poetry Journal, Winter Tangerine Review and elsewhere. The recipient of the 2016 St. Botolph Club Foundation Emerging Artist Award and 2020 Mass Cultural Council Poetry Fellowship, she received her MFA in poetry from University of Massachusetts Boston, where she currently teaches. You can find out more about her work at www.krystenhill.com

Christine Tierney’s debut collection of poetry, chicken+lowercase=fleur was recently published by Lily Poetry Review Books. Her poems and flash fiction have appeared in Fourteen Hills, Poet Lore, The Yalobusha Review, The Tusculum Review, Monkey Bicycle, Permafrost, Sugar House Review and elsewhere. She holds an MFA from The University of Southern Maine’s Stonecoast Writing Program, and a BA in film from Emerson College. She is a funk and disco lover, a photoartist and a wannabe comedian.

Contact hguran@aol.com for Zoom link.

Readers/Speakers
avatar for Krysten Hill

Krysten Hill

Krysten Hill is an educator, writer, and performer who has showcased her poetry on stage at The Massachusetts Poetry Festival, Blacksmith House, Cantab Lounge, Merrimack College, U35 Reading Series, Mr. Hip Presents, and many others. She received her MFA in poetry from UMass Boston... Read More →


Thursday October 21, 2021 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Online
 
Friday, October 22
 

1:00pm EDT

Online Poetry: Medicine for the Soul
Jessica Fisher is the author of Frail-Craft, which won the 2006 Yale Younger Poets Prize, and Inmost, which was awarded the 2011 Nightboat Poetry Prize. Her poems appear in such journals as The American Poetry Review, The Believer, The Bennington Review, The Colorado Review, McSweeney’s, The New Yorker, The Threepenny Review, Tin House, and TriQuarterly, and her translations have been published in The New York Review of Books and The Paris Review. She is co-editor, with Robert Hass, of The Addison Street Anthology. Her honors include the 2012 Rome Prize, a Holloway Postdoctoral Fellowship in Poetry, and a research grant from the Hellman Foundation. She holds a Ph.D. from University of California at Berkeley and is currently an associate professor at Williams College.

Contact Name: Wendy Pearson
Email Address: wpearson@cwmars.org

Readers/Speakers

Friday October 22, 2021 1:00pm - 2:00pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, November 3
 

7:15pm EDT

Blacksmith House Poetry Series: Jeffrey Harrison and Nathalie Handal
Jeffrey Harrison reads from a new collection, Between Lakes, with Nathalie Handal, author of Life in a Country Album.

The Zoom link, meeting ID, and password for this reading will be included in your confirmation email after you register. If you do not receive the confirmation email, please contact our registration office at 617-547-6789 ext. 1.

Wednesday November 3, 2021 7:15pm - 8:15pm EDT
Online
 
Monday, November 8
 

5:00pm EST

Language is Not an Animal We Can Train: A Reading and Talk with Eduardo Corral
What happens if we follow language instead of forcing it to perform in certain ways? What happens if we center play instead of intentionality? In this reading/craft talk, I'll discuss strategies that have helped me complicate the poetic line, imagery, subject matter, and the lyric "I." After the reading, there will be a question and answer period.

Eduardo C. Corral is the son of Mexican immigrants. He's the author of Guillotine and Slow Lightning. He teaches in the MFA program in Creative Writing at North Carolina State University.

Readers/Speakers

Monday November 8, 2021 5:00pm - 6:30pm EST
Online
 
Tuesday, November 9
 

3:00pm EST

Virtual Poetry At the Concord Free Library: Jeffrey Harrison and Matthew Lippman
Concord Poetry at the Library presents Jeffrey Harrison & Matthew Lippman: 

Please register here for the Zoom link!

Jeffrey Harrison reads from his sixth full-length book of poetry, Between Lakes (Four Way Books, September, 2020), where the death of the speaker’s father places him in the ever-shifting zone between the living and the dead while also sending him back into his journey to manhood. Old arguments are reimagined: What does it mean to be a man? What does it mean to be a participant in one’s life as well as a witness and recorder of the lives of others? The exploration of these questions leads to new discoveries, including the way time reshapes the vision of one’s life and alters relationships, remaking a shared history. Harrison’s other collections include The Singing Underneath (1988), selected by James Merrill for the National Poetry Series, Signs of Arrival (1996), Feeding the Fire (2001), winner of the Sheila Motton Prize from the New England Poetry Club, Incomplete Knowledge (2006), runner-up for the Poets’ Prize, and Into Daylight, published in 2014 by Tupelo Press as the winner of the Dorset Prize and selected by the Massachusetts Center for the Book as a Must-Read Book. View Harrison’s website for interviews in which he talks about the poet’s craft and samples
of his widely-published poetry. He lives in Massachusetts.

Matthew Lippman reads from Mesmerizingly Sadly Beautiful (Four Way Books, 2020), which won the 2018 Levis Prize in Poetry – a collection that “takes on issues of sex, politics, race, religion, and poetry, all subjects our mothers warned us not to bring up at a dinner party. At times dreamily or nightmarishly surreal, at others so realistic we laugh or cringe in recognition. It's outrageously American, crass, funny, fast talking, unbound, and yes, sadly beautiful.” – notes Levis poetry judge Dorianne Laux. Lippman is the author of five additional collections: A LITTLE GUT MAGIC (2018), SALAMI JEW (2014), AMERICAN CHEW (2013), winner of the Burnside Review Book Prize, MONKEY BARS (2010), and THE NEW YEAR OF YELLOW (2007) winner of The Kathryn A. Morton Poetry Prize and finalist for the 2008 Patterson Poetry Prize. Lippman is the Editor and Founder of the web-based project Love’s Executive Order (www.lovesexecutiveorder.com) and calls its weekly poems by different poets a chronicle of poetic protest during the current political time. Lippman holds an MFA with a concentration in poetry from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. He lives in Massachusetts.

Tuesday November 9, 2021 3:00pm - 4:15pm EST
Online
 
Sunday, November 14
 

7:30pm EST

Chapter & Verse Literary Reading Series
Allison Adair’s debut collection, The Clearing, was selected by Henri Cole for Milkweed’s Max Ritvo Poetry Prize and named a New York Times “New and Noteworthy” book. Allison’s poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, Arts & Letters, Best American Poetry, Kenyon Review, Waxwing, and ZYZZYVA. They have been honored with the Pushcart Prize, the Florida Review Editors’ Award, and the Orlando Prize. Originally from central Pennsylvania, Allison now lives with her family in the Boston area, where she teaches at Boston College and Grub Street. The Clearing is available at local bookstores or through bookshop.org.

Robbie Gamble’s poems and essays have appeared in Cutthroat, RHINO, Rust + Moth, Scoundrel Time, and Tahoma Literary Review. He was the winner of the 2017 Carve Poetry prize, and was a 2019 Peter Taylor Fellow at the Kenyon Summer Writers Workshop. He serves as associate poetry editor for Solstice: a Magazine of Diverse Voices. After working for many years as a nurse practitioner with the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, he now divides his time between Boston and Vermont.

Susanna Kittredge’s poems have appeared in publications such as Barrow Street, 14 Hills, The Columbia Review and Salamander as well as the anthologies Bay Poetics (Faux Press, 2006) and Shadowed: Unheard Voices (The Press at California State University, Fresno 2014). She has an MFA in Creative Writing from San Francisco State University. Her first full-length collection, The Future Has a Reputation, was published by CW Books in January, 2020. She lives in the Boston area and is a member of The Jamaica Pond Poets workshop and the Brighton Word Factory, a bi-weekly open writing group. By day she teaches middle schoolers. The Future Has a Reputation can be purchased directly from the author by contacting her at https://susannakittredge.wixsite.com/mysite/contact. It is also available on Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

To receive a Zoom invitation with a link to the reading, email your name and email address to SandeeStorey@fastmail.fm before 10 am on Nov. 12.

You will be emailed a Zoom invitation with the link by noon Nov. 13. For security reasons, please do not publicize, post or broadcast the Zoom link itself. If people you know want to attend, you may send them the link, but please ask them also not to publicize, post, or broadcast the link itself.

For more information, check our website at http://jamaicapondpoets.com or email dorothy.derifield@gmail.com or call 617-325-8388. The next Chapter and Verse Literary Reading on Zoom in the 2020/2021 Series will be at 7:30 pm on Friday, December 11, 2020.

Readers/Speakers

Sunday November 14, 2021 7:30pm - 9:30pm EST
Online
 
Thursday, November 18
 

12:00pm EST

Online Poetry Series: The Refuge of Witnessing featuring Holly Iglesias
Our second season, “Online Poetry: The Refuge of Witnessing” will provide a weekly poetry sanctuary to hear moving words, deepen our exploration of their meaning, and connect with each other. Join us each Thursday from 12:00 to 1:00 pm. It will be your port in a worldly storm.

This week’s poet will feature Holly Inglesias, author of three collections of poetry— Sleeping Things; Angles of Approach; and Souvenirs of a Shrunken World—as well as a critical work, Boxing Inside the Box: Women’s Prose Poetry. Her most recent publication is a collaborative chapbook, Myth America (Anhinga Press), co-written with Maureen Seaton, Carolina Hospital, and Nicole Hospital-Medina. Holly has been awarded fellowships by the National Endowment for the Arts, the North Carolina Arts Council, the Edward Albee Foundation, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and teaches in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at the University of Miami, with a focus on archival and documentary poetry. Her current project is an intergenerational memoir in prose fragments with the working title Theories of Flight.

Readers/Speakers

Thursday November 18, 2021 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST
Online

7:00pm EST

Cervena Barva Press Zoom Reading Series
Cervena Barva Press Zoom Reading Series featuring Dayna Leslie Hodges, Frannie Lindsay, & John L. Stanizzi. 

To RSVP and receive the Zoom link contact editor@cervenabarvapress.com


Thursday November 18, 2021 7:00pm - 8:00pm EST
Online
 
Saturday, November 20
 

7:00pm EST

Rozzie Reads Poetry and Open Microphone
Sandra Lim is the author of the poetry collections Loveliest Grotesque and The Wilderness. Her work has appeared in The New Republic, Poetry, The New York Times, The Yale Review, and elsewhere. Her honors include a Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Levis Reading Prize, and grants from MacDowell and The Vermont Studio Center. She is an Associate Professor at UMass Lowell.

Connie Nelson has published work in Bright Ideas, Field Notes, Portals, and Persimmon Tree. She holds Ed.M and Ed.D degrees in Community Education and Lifelong Learning from Harvard University and has written poetry all her life. She is a member of the Never Too Late to Be a Poet group, started by poet laureate Danielle Legros Georges and led by Sandee Storey, enabling her to share her work and explore a variety of poets, forms and themes.

To obtain a link, contact hguran@aol.com

Readers/Speakers

Saturday November 20, 2021 7:00pm - 8:30pm EST
Online
 
Thursday, November 25
 

7:00pm EST

A Virtual Thirsty Lab Poetry Reading with David Surette
Hosted by Worcester County Poetry Association

The WCPA is happy to help the Thirsty Lab poetry reading go virtual for their 4th (and occasional 5th) Tuesday reading. The next reading will be on Tuesday, November 24, 2020 when David Surette will be the feature.
Visit this link to register for the reading and Zoom will send you an e-mail with the meeting details and link.

David R. Surette’s new book of poetry is Malden, selected and new poems that feature his hometown Malden, Massachusetts. He is the author of five other collections: Wicked Hard, The Immaculate Conception Mothers’ Club, Young Gentlemen’s School, Easy to Keep, Hard to Keep In and Stable which was named an Honor Book at the 2005 Massachusetts Book Awards. He lives on Cape Cod

Thursday November 25, 2021 7:00pm - 8:00pm EST
 
Thursday, December 2
 

12:00pm EST

Online Poetry Series: The Refuge of Witnessing featuring Malachi Black
Our second season, “Online Poetry: The Refuge of Witnessing” will provide a weekly poetry sanctuary to hear moving words, deepen our exploration of their meaning, and connect with each other. Join us each Thursday from 12:00 to 1:00 pm. It will be your port in a worldly storm.

This week’s poet will feature Malachi Black, author of Storm Toward Morning (Copper Canyon Press, 2014), a Lannan Literary Selection, a finalist for the Poetry Society of America’s Norma Farber First Book Award, and a selection for the Poetry Society of America’s New American Poets Series (chosen by Ilya Kamnisky). Black is also the author of two limited-edition chapbooks: Quarantine (Argos Books, 2012) and Echolocation (Float Press, 2010). His poems appear or are forthcoming in the Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day series, AGNI, The American Poetry Review, The Believer, Boston Review, Harvard Review, The Iowa Review, The Los Angeles Review of Books, Narrative, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and Poetry, among other journals, and in a number of anthologies, including Before the Door of God (Yale UP, 2013); Discoveries: New Writing from The Iowa Review (Iowa Review, 2012); and The Poet’s Quest for God (Eyewear Publishing [U.K.], 2016).

Black was born in Boston, Massachusetts and raised in Morris County, New Jersey. He holds a B.A. from New York University, an M.F.A. from the University of Texas at Austin‘s Michener Center for Writers, and a Ph.D. in English with a Creative Writing emphasis from the University of Utah. A 2019 National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellow, Black has also received fellowships and awards from the Amy Clampitt House, the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, Emory University, the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, the MacDowell Colony, the Poetry Foundation (a 2009 Ruth Lilly Fellowship), the Sewanee Writers’ Conference, and Yaddo. Black was the subject of an Emerging Poet profile by Mark Jarman in American Poets: The Journal of the Academy of American Poets, and his work has several times been set to music and has been featured in exhibitions both in the U.S. and abroad, including recent and forthcoming translations into French, Dutch, Croatian, and Lithuanian. Black is an associate professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of San Diego and lives in California.

Readers/Speakers

Thursday December 2, 2021 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST
Online
 
Thursday, December 9
 

12:00pm EST

Online Poetry Series: The Refuge of Witnessing featuring Dane Cervine
The Stockbridge Library's second season, “Online Poetry: The Refuge of Witnessing” will provide a weekly poetry sanctuary to hear moving words, deepen our exploration of their meaning, and connect with each other. Join us each Thursday from 12:00 to 1:00 pm. It will be your port in a worldly storm.

Join us in welcoming Dane Cervine to our online poetry series: The Refuge of Witnessing. Cervine’s recent books include Earth Is a Fickle Dancer (Main Street Rag), and The Gateless Gate – Polishing the Moon Sword, from Saddle Road Press in Hawaii, a cross-genre work of Zen koan & prose poems.Previous poetry books include Kung Fu of the Dark Father, How Therapists Dance, The Jeweled Net of Indra, and What a Father Dreams. Dane’s poems have won awards from Adrienne Rich, Tony Hoagland, the Atlanta Review, Caesura, and been nominated for a Pushcart. His work appears in The SUN, the Hudson Review, TriQuarterly, Poetry Flash, Catamaran, Miramar, Rattle, Sycamore Review, Pedestal Magazine, among others. Visit his website at: https://danecervine.typepad.com/

Dane Cervine lives in Santa Cruz, California, a small university town along the Monterey Bay coast just south of San Francisco. In addition to being a poet, Dane is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in private practice, and Emeritus Chief of Children’s Mental Health for the Santa Cruz County Mental Health & Substance Abuse Department. Dane is the father of two grown children–daughter Kelsey, who teaches AP History, and son Gabriel who is a spoken-word poet & activist. Dane’s wife Linda, directs an internal consulting firm at the University of California, San Francisco.

Dane received his BA from the University of California at Santa Cruz in 1980, majoring in Religious Studies. This is where Dane first met Jack Engler, a visiting professor of Buddhism and Psychology, who inspired Dane’s subsequent study of Vipassana meditation and mindfulness practice. Dane went on to graduate school at the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS) in San Francisco, receiving his MA in Integral Counseling Psychology in 1984, and his license as a Marriage & Family Therapist in 1985. CIIS offered a unique environment blending western psychology with eastern philosophy, which has shaped Dane’s career and interests ever since.

Dane is a Zen practitioner with the PACIFIC ZEN INSTITUTE community, which emphasizes lay practice integrated with the Arts in a contemporary cultural form. He also practices with INSIGHT SANTA CRUZ and is a long-time mindfulness meditator in the Theravadin tradition.

Readers/Speakers

Thursday December 9, 2021 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST
Online
 
Friday, December 10
 

4:00pm EST

& Company: A Virtual Poetry Reading with Moira Linehan
Moira Linehan will read from & Company, her fourth collection of poetry. In this collection she uses paintings from French and American Impressionists to imagine the work and world of her maternal grandmother, a seamstress and dressmaker in Paris in the late 1800/early 1900’s and then in Boston. She will discuss strategies for using paintings as triggers for poems, and give examples of the relationship between a poem’s subject matter and its form.

Moira Linehan is the author of four collections of poetry. Her first two, If No Moon (2007) and Incarnate Grace (2015), were published by Southern Illinois University Press. Dorianne Laux chose If No Moon as the 2006 winner of the Crab Orchard Series open poetry competition. Both books were named Honor Books in Poetry in the Massachusetts Book Awards. In 2020 she had two books come out. In June Slant Books published her collection Toward and in December Dos Madres Press brought out & Company. Linehan lives north of Boston.

Readers/Speakers

Friday December 10, 2021 4:00pm - 5:00pm EST
Online
 
Saturday, December 11
 

7:00pm EST

Cervena Barva Press Book Launch
Cervena Barva Press Book Launch featuring Karen Friedland and Corey Mesler


TimeDec 10, 2020 07:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)


Meeting ID848 0912 3757


Passcode 320003


Invite Link https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84809123757?pwd=eXdIZCtRYzY5VlNYTzRnVndpNlE1Zz09





Readers/Speakers

Saturday December 11, 2021 7:00pm - 8:30pm EST
Online
 
Sunday, December 12
 

7:30pm EST

Chapter & Verse Literary Reading Series
Joshua Coben’s second collection, Night Chaser (David Robert Books, 2020), was a finalist for the Vassar Miller Prize, the New American Poetry Prize, and the Donald Justice Poetry Prize. His first book, Maker of Shadows (Texas Review Press, 2010), won the X. J. Kennedy Poetry Prize. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Atlanta Review, The Cincinnati Review, College English, Pleiades, Poet Lore, Poetry Daily, Salamander, and elsewhere. A St. Louis native, he is an elementary school teacher and librarian. He and his family live in Dedham. Visit him online at joshuacoben.com. His books can be purchased from Bookshop.org at the following links: Night Chaser, Maker of Shadows.

Steven Cramer’s sixth poetry collection is Listen (MadHat Press, 2020). His previous collections are The Eye That Desires to Look Upward,  The World Book, Dialogue for the Left and Right Hand, Goodbye to the Orchard, and Clangings. Goodbye to the Orchard won the Sheila Motton Prize from the New England Poetry Club and was named an Honor Book in Poetry by the Massachusetts Center for the Book. Recipient of two grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, he founded and now teaches in the Low-Residency Program in Creative Writing at Lesley University. Porter Square Books (https://www.portersquarebooks.com/product/listen-steven-cramer) has been selling Listen.

Petition is Joyce Peseroff’s sixth book of poems. She is the editor of Robert Bly: When Sleepers Awake, The Ploughshares Poetry Reader, and Simply Lasting: Writers on Jane Kenyon. Her fifth collection, Know Thyself, was designated a “must read” by the 2016 Massachusetts Book Award. Recent poems and reviews appear in Consequence, On the Seawall, Massachusetts Review, and Plume. She directed and taught in UMass Boston's MFA Program in its first four years. Currently she blogs for her website So I Gave You Quartz at joycepeseroff.com and writes the poetry column for Arrowsmith Press. To order Petition, go to: https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/P/bo68082264.html

To receive a Zoom invitation with a link to the reading, email your name and email address to SandeeStorey@fastmail.fm before 2 pm on Dec. 10.

You will be emailed a Zoom invitation with the link by noon Dec. 11. For security reasons, please do not publicize, post or broadcast the Zoom link itself. If people you know want to attend, you may send them the link, but please ask them also not to publicize, post, or broadcast the link itself.

For more information, check our website at http://jamaicapondpoets.com or email dorothy.derifield@gmail.com or call 617-325-8388. The next Chapter and Verse Literary Reading on Zoom in the 2020/2021 series will be at 7:30 pm on Friday, January 8, 2021.

Readers/Speakers

Sunday December 12, 2021 7:30pm - 8:30pm EST
Online
 
Tuesday, December 14
 

3:00pm EST

Concord Poetry at the Library Series: Steven Cramer and Joyce Peseroff
Join Steven Cramer and Joyce Peseroff who will read from their newest collections and talk about their practice and the influences of their small writing group of almost two decades on the elements of their craft.

Steven Cramer's sixth book Listen (MadHat Press, 2020), is a collection of lucid, smart portrayals of the “darker corners” of despair through scores of illuminating juxtapositions. Experimenting with many verse forms to give shape to the mind’s restless shifts and associations — absurdly funny, bracingly honest, and always sharp in thought and craft—the lyric testimony of Listen reaffirms the indispensable, if fragile, consolations of art. Cramer’s previous books of poetry are The Eye that Desires to Look Upward (1987), The World Book (1992), Dialogue for the Left and Right Hand (1997), Goodbye to the Orchard ( 2004)—winner of the 2005 Sheila Motton Prize from the New England Poetry Club and named a 2005 Honor Book in Poetry by the Massachusetts Center for the Book—and Clangings (2012). His poems and criticism have appeared in numerous literary journals, including The Atlantic Monthly, Field, Kenyon Review, The Nation, The New Republic, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and Poetry, as well as in several poetry anthologies. He has taught at Bennington College, Boston University, M.I.T., and Tufts University; and he founded and now teaches in the Low-Residency MFA Program in Creative Writing at Lesley University.

Joyce Peseroff reads from her sixth collection, Petition (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2020). From privilege at a gas station to fraud in a memorial grove, Peseroff follows the faults of indifference and division that crack our impulses toward mercy and love. She nests fragmented tales of the overheard and overlooked—lonely widowers, a lost hiker, predatory trees, an angry jury—in poems that bring a formal restlessness to common speech. With wit and compassion, Petition renders the tense joys and vivid griefs of mortal and moral experience in the luminous moment when the ordinary becomes singular. Peseroff edited Robert Bly: When Sleepers Awake, The Ploughshares Poetry Reader, and Simply Lasting: Writers on Jane Kenyon. Her fifth book of poems, Know Thyself, was designated a “must read” by the 2016 Massachusetts Book Award. Recent poems and reviews appear in American Journal of Poetry, Consequence, On the Seawall, Massachusetts Review, Plume, Salamander, and on the website The Woven Tale Press. She directed and taught in UMass Boston’s MFA Program in its first four years. Currently she blogs on writing and literature at her website and writes a poetry column for Arrowsmith Press.

Tuesday December 14, 2021 3:00pm - 4:00pm EST
Online
 
Thursday, December 16
 

12:00pm EST

Online Poetry Series: The Refuge of Witnessing featuring Owen Lewis
The Stockbridge Library's second season, “Online Poetry: The Refuge of Witnessing” will provide a weekly poetry sanctuary to hear moving words, deepen our exploration of their meaning, and connect with each other. Join us each Thursday from 12:00 to 1:00 pm. It will be your port in a worldly storm.

Owen Lewis, author of three collections of poetry, most recently Field Light (Distinguished Favorite, 2020 NYCBigBookAward), and two chapbooks including best man (recipient of the 2016 Jean Pedrick Chapbook Prize, New England Poetry Club.) Prizes include Finalist, 2017 Pablo Neruda Award, and first prize, the 2016 International Hippocrates Prize for Poetry. His poetry has appeared in Nimrod, Poetry Wales, The Mississippi Review, Southward, Stay Thirsty Poets, and Presence. A professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, he teaches Narrative Medicine in the Department of Medical Humanities and Ethics. Field Light, set in Glendale, Mass., weaves a poetic tapestry of Berkshire history.

Readers/Speakers

Thursday December 16, 2021 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST
Online
 
Thursday, January 13
 

12:00pm EST

Online Poetry Series: The Refuge of Witnessing featuring Angela Dribben
The Stockbridge Library's second season, “Online Poetry: The Refuge of Witnessing” will provide a weekly poetry sanctuary to hear moving words, deepen our exploration of their meaning, and connect with each other. Join us each Thursday from 12:00 to 1:00 pm. It will be your port in a worldly storm.

Angie Dribben’s debut collection, Everygirl, a finalist for the 2020 Dogfish Head Prize, is out with Main Street Rag in May 2021. She is Contributing Review Editor at Cider Press Review and Director of Internal Affairs at Southern Collective Experience. Her poetry, essays, mixed media, and reviews can be found or are forthcoming in Cave Wall, EcoTheo, Deep South, San Pedro River Review, Crab Creek Review, Crack the Spine, fatal flaw, up the staircase quarterly, patchwork lit, and others. Her poetry is widely-anthologized: Aunt Flo, I Wanna Be Loved By You (Marilyn Monroe Poems), Texas Review Press’ Virginia anthology, among others.

Readers/Speakers

Thursday January 13, 2022 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST
Online
 
Friday, January 14
 

4:00pm EST

Birthright: A Virtual Poetry Reading with George Abraham
George Abraham’s highly anticipated debut Birthright (Button Poetry, 2020) constructs a dialogue in which “every pronoun is a Free Palestine.” Through poems of immense emotion, and the use of alluring form, Abraham crafts work that examines what we come to own by existing. As trauma seeps through generations, can the body deconstruct its own inheritance? In a world that only takes, what is owed?

George Abraham is a Palestinian American poet and writer from Jacksonville, FL. Their debut Birthright won the Big Other Book Award and the Arab American Book Award in Poetry, and was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in Bisexual Poetry. He is a board member for the Radius of Arab American Writers (RAWI), a recipient of fellowships from Kundiman and The Boston Foundation, and winner of the 2017 College Union Poetry Slam Invitational's Best Poet title. Their work has appeared in The NationAmerican Poetry ReviewThe BafflerThe Paris ReviewMizna, and elsewhere. A graduate of Swarthmore College and Harvard University, Abraham currently teaches at Emerson College and is a Litowitz MFA+MA Candidate at Northwestern University.

Readers/Speakers

Friday January 14, 2022 4:00pm - 5:00pm EST
Online
 
Saturday, January 15
 

11:00am EST

Virtual Poetry Writing Workshop with Susan Roney-O’Brien
This virtual poetry workshop is a vehicle for critique, a time of close reading and thoughtful responses that help craft the written word so that it says exactly what the author intends. The focus is the work itself. Poets are respectful of each other, value the craft, understand the courage it takes to have work critiqued, and make the final decisions about their own writing. Please join us. Writing prompts will be shared with registrants one week before the workshop, and we request you submit your work at least three days before the workshop to give attendees time to read your poem.

Susan Roney-O’Brien earned her MFA at Warren Wilson College and is the author of five poetry collections. She hosts monthly poetry readings, teaches workshops and coordinates the Stanley Kunitz summer writing series.

Readers/Speakers

Saturday January 15, 2022 11:00am - 12:00pm EST
Online
  Online, Poetry Reading
 
Sunday, January 23
 

2:00pm EST

Book Launch: Aporia by Eric E. Hyett
Join Lily Poetry Review Books as we celebrate Eric Hyett's Aporia with special guest interviewer, Heather Nelson. In Aporia, the debut poetry collection by Eric E. Hyett, the poet struggles with a psychic predicament: how to guide his mother (poet Barbara Helfgott Hyett) through the ravages of early-phase Alzheimer’s Disease, while preserving both her dignity and her literary legacy. Organized chronologically to span exactly one year, the poems in Aporia recount a balletic narrative between the speaker and his mother, both of them trying to understand what has happened. Over the course of the year, what started out as shock gives way to grief, as both Hyett and his mother begin to move toward acceptance.

Readers/Speakers

Sunday January 23, 2022 2:00pm - 3:00pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, January 26
 

7:00pm EST

Martín Espada with Luke Salisbury, Floaters
Join Porter Square Books for a virtual reading from award-winning poet Martín Espada's latest collection Floaters!  The reading will be followed by a discussion with Luke Salisbury. This event is free and open to all, hosted on Crowdcast.

From the winner of the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize come masterfully crafted narratives of protest, grief and love.
Martín Espada is a poet who "stirs in us an undeniable social consciousness," says Richard Blanco. Floaters offers exuberant odes and defiant elegies, songs of protest and songs of love from one of the essential voices in American poetry.

Floaters takes its title from a term used by certain Border Patrol agents to describe migrants who drown trying to cross over. The title poem responds to the viral photograph of Óscar and Valeria, a Salvadoran father and daughter who drowned in the Río Grande, and allegations posted in the "I’m 10-15" Border Patrol Facebook group that the photo was faked. Espada bears eloquent witness to confrontations with anti-immigrant bigotry as a tenant lawyer years ago, and now sings the praises of Central American adolescents kicking soccer balls over a barbed wire fence in an internment camp founded on that same bigotry. He also knows that times of hate call for poems of love—even in the voice of a cantankerous Galápagos tortoise.

The collection ranges from historical epic to achingly personal lyrics about growing up, the baseball that drops from the sky and smacks Espada in the eye as he contemplates a girl’s gently racist question.

Whether celebrating the visionaries—the fallen dreamers, rebels and poets—or condemning the outrageous governmental neglect of his father’s Puerto Rico in the wake of Hurricane María, Espada invokes ferocious, incandescent spirits.

Martín Espada has published more than twenty books as a poet, editor, essayist and translator, including Vivas to Those Who Have Failed and Pulitzer finalist The Republic of Poetry. His many honors include the Ruth Lilly Prize, the Shelley Memorial Award, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Born in Brooklyn, he now lives in western Massachusetts.

Luke Salisbury is an award winning author and Professor of English at Bunker Hill Community College in Boston. His interests range from Shakespeare to baseball, with the latter including a book The Answer is Baseball, and time spent as both vice president and national secretary for the Society of Baseball Research (SABR). No Common War, published in 2019, is his latest work. Mr. Salisbury attended The Hun School, New College, and received an MA in Creative Writing from Boston University. He once taught third grade in the Bronx, and now lives with his wife Barbara in Chelsea, Massachusetts.
Register here to join the event on Crowdcast: www.crowdcast.io/e/floaters

Wednesday January 26, 2022 7:00pm - 8:00pm EST
 
Friday, January 28
 

7:00pm EST

Poetry Readings: Cheryl Savageau, David Surette, Ellen LaFlèche and Steven Riel
You are invited to a Zoom meeting.
When: Jan 27, 2021 07:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Register in advance for this meeting:
https://maine.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIlf-2upzkoE9H4Dv3L7KaQdI3N0JDHF5C9

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.



Friday January 28, 2022 7:00pm - 8:00pm EST
 
Tuesday, February 1
 

5:00pm EST

reflection | regeneration | renewal Poetry Reading
As we enter this turbulent new year, let’s take an hour to reflect.

Students of our playful poetry course will be joined by members of the 3weeks community to read some original works, connect, and enjoy our mutual company.

Register to read at the link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfMxBEuvKXqALbRVW6L3m8lXDw4L7CCojS94zoMFp1SfUbN1Q/viewform
View the stream here: twitch.tv/2mbstudios

Tuesday February 1, 2022 5:00pm - 6:00pm EST
Online
 
Sunday, February 6
 

3:00pm EST

Poetry As Portraiture and Remembrance: Reading and Q&A with Moira Linehan and Angela Narciso Torres
The Concord Poetry at the Library Series invites you to join prize-winning poets Moira Linehan and Angela Narciso Torres who will read from their latest collections and engage in a Q&A about their practice. For more information, visit the Concord Poetry at the Library Series' website.



Sunday February 6, 2022 3:00pm - 4:00pm EST
Online

7:00pm EST

Poetry at the Y Reading Series (Virtually via Zoom) - POETRY READING & Open Mic
Join us for a poetry reading with Wendy Drexler and Richard Waring, friends of the PoemWorks community, followed by an Open Mic (sign up by emailing host Richard Waring at rwaring@nejm.org).
Wendy Drexler’s third poetry collection, Before There Was Before, was published by Iris Press in 2017. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Barrow Street, J Journal, Lily Poetry Review, Nimrod, Pangyrus, Prairie Schooner, Salamander, Sugar House, The Atlanta Review, The Mid-American Review, The Hudson Review, The Threepenny Review, and the Valparaiso Poetry Review, among others. Her work has been featured on Verse Daily and WBUR’s Cognoscenti, and in numerous anthologies. She’s been the poet-in-residence at New Mission High School in Hyde Park, MA, since 2018, and is programming co-chair for the New England Poetry Club. Her website is www.wendydrexlerpoetry.com
 
Richard Waring is the author of the poetry collection, What Love Tells Me (Word Poetry, 2016)and a chapbook, Listening to Stones (Pudding House Publications, 1999). His work has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, including Sanctuary, Ars Medica, Comstock Review, JAMA, and the American Journal of Nursing. “Monarchs Passing Through New England” and “Night” have been set to music by composer Leander Frank. He hosts this monthly reading series and is senior layout artist for the New England Journal of Medicine.

*Contact host Richard Waring at rwaring@nejm.org for Zoom invitation.

Sunday February 6, 2022 7:00pm - 8:00pm EST
Online
 
Tuesday, February 8
 

2:00pm EST

Temple Sinai’s Twelfth Annual Poetry Festival Featuring Marge Piercy
This year’s featured poet, Marge Piercy, is an American poet, novelist and social activist. She has published 20 books of poems and 17 novels including Women on the Edge of TimeHe, She, and It, which won the 1993 Arthur C Clarke Award, and Gone to Soldiers, a New York Times Best Seller, a sweeping historical novel set during World War II. Her book, The Art of Blessing the Day, focuses on poems with a Jewish theme. Born in Detroit, she is the recipient of four honorary doctorates. Marge Piercy is an active force in antiwar, feminist and environmental causes.

Tuesday February 8, 2022 2:00pm - 3:30pm EST
 
Friday, February 11
 

4:00pm EST

Pondering the Pandemic During the Rust Years: A Virtual Poetry Reading with Joe Fusco
Joe Fusco Jr. is a well-seasoned poet and humorist from Worcester, Massachusetts. He is the author of four books of semi-amusing poems and essays: Pondering the Pandemic During the Rust Years (2021); Hmm…That’s Different (2020); Three Score (2014); and The Lost and Found Essays (2012), all available on Amazon. Joe’s musings have appeared in Damfino PressBallard Street PoetryWorcester ReviewAsinine Poetry, and the naughty ezine Clean Sheets. He was a co-winner of the Jacob Knight Poetry Award in 2002 and was named Best Poet by Worcester Magazine readers in 1999 and 2002. Joe is still a frequent contributor to Worcester Magazine and the last Worcester Mega-Slam winner in 2017. Joe has lived in lovely Worcester with his better half Cyndi and their large family for thirty-five years. He is a registered Independent and sleeps with one eye always open. More info on Joe can be found at joesyellowpad.com.

Readers/Speakers

Friday February 11, 2022 4:00pm - 5:00pm EST
Online
 
Saturday, February 12
 

7:00pm EST

Shelter: The Art of Caring -- Virtual Poetry & Prose Reading
Free event featuring Lowell writers & poets: Stephan Anstey, Diamond Asaneh, Suzanne Beebe, Douglas Bishop, MJ Bujold, Charles Gargiulo, Nancy Jasper, S.C. Thibodeau, and PJ Wamala. Their writings on the subject of “Shelter” were selected for inclusion in the community exhibit at the Arts League of Lowell, which this month (Feb 3rd-28th) is featuring an art show and sale with all proceeds to benefit the Lowell Transitional Living Center (LTLC). Hosted by Lowell poet Emily Ferrara, with special guest Alexis Ivy, homeless advocate and author of “Taking the Homeless Census.” Ivy will read poems from her book, followed by a Q&A on discussion topics on homeless advocacy, and what community members can do to better understand and make a positive impact for our fellow residents.


Saturday February 12, 2022 7:00pm - 8:15pm EST
 
Sunday, February 13
 

7:30pm EST

CHAPTER AND VERSE LITERARY READING SERIES
Now on Zoom! RSVP as below to attend.

Susan Buttenwieser is the author of the short story collection We Were Lucky with the Rain (Four Way Books). Her writing has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and appeared in numerous literary publications and received fellowships from the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. She contributes news features regularly to Women’s Media Center and teaches creative writing in New York City public schools in high-poverty neighborhoods, with incarcerated women and older adults. To purchase We Were Lucky with the Rain go to https://fourwaybooks.com/site/we-were-lucky-with-the-rain-by-susan-buttenwieser/.

Jennifer Martelli is the author of My Tarantella (Bordighera Press), selected as a 2019 “Must Read” by the Massachusetts Center for the Book and named as a finalist for the Housatonic Book Award. Her chapbook, After Bird, was the winner of the Grey Book Press open reading, 2016. In the Year of Ferraro was recently published by Nixes Mate. Her work has appeared in Verse Daily, Iron Horse Review (winner, Photo Finish contest), On the Seawall, The Sycamore Review, and Poetry. Jennifer Martelli has twice received grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council for her poetry. She is co-poetry editor for Mom Egg Review. You can order My Tarantella by going to www.bordigherapress.org. In the Year of Ferraro can be ordered from Nixes Mate Publishing https://nixesmate.pub/product/in-the-year-of-ferraro-·-jennifer-martelli/.

Scott Withiam’s latest book of poems, Doors Out of the Underworld, was published by MadHat Press in October 2019. Withiam has been a recipient of the Ploughshares Cohen Award, and the Two Rivers Review Chapbook and Drunken Boat Pan-Literary prizes. His first book, Arson & Prophets, came out with Ashland Poetry Press. Poems have been published by AGNI, Beloit Poetry Journal, Boston Review, Diagram, Indiana Review, Ploughshares, Plume, The Sun and elsewhere. He formerly taught college English Literature and writing and now works for a non-profit in the Boston area. Doors Out of the Underworld can be purchased online by going to https://madhat-press.com. Either or both books can be purchased by emailing the author at scwithiam@gmail.com.

To receive a Zoom invitation with a link to the reading, email your name and email address to SandeeStorey@fastmail.fm before 2 pm on Feb. 11. You will be emailed a Zoom invitation with the link by noon Feb. 12. For security reasons, please do not publicize, post or broadcast the Zoom link itself. If people you know want to attend, you may send them the link, but please ask them also not to publicize, post, or broadcast the link itself.

For more information, check our website at http://jamaicapondpoets.com or email dorothy.derifield@gmail.com or call 617-325-8388. The next Chapter and Verse Literary Reading on Zoom in the 2020/2021 series will be at 7:30 pm on Friday, March 12, 2021.


Sunday February 13, 2022 7:30pm - 7:45pm EST
Online
 
Thursday, February 17
 

12:00pm EST

Online Poetry Series: The Refuge of Witnessing featuring Owen Lewis
Our second season of "Online Poetry: The Refuge of Witnessing” will provide a weekly poetry sanctuary to hear moving words, deepen our exploration of their meaning, and connect with each other. Thursdays from 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. It will be your port in a worldly storm.

Owen Lewis, author of three collections of poetry, most recently Field Light (Distinguished Favorite, 2020 NYCBigBookAward), and two chapbooks including best man (recipient of the 2016 Jean Pedrick Chapbook Prize, New England Poetry Club.) Prizes include Finalist, 2017 Pablo Neruda Award, and first prize, the 2016 International Hippocrates Prize for Poetry. His poetry has appeared in Nimrod, Poetry Wales, The Mississippi Review, Southward, Stay Thirsty Poets, and Presence. A professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, he teaches Narrative Medicine in the Department of Medical Humanities and Ethics. Field Light, set in Glendale, Mass., weaves a poetic tapestry of Berkshire history.

Readers/Speakers

Thursday February 17, 2022 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST
Online
 
Monday, February 21
 

11:00am EST

Virtual Panel Discussion Featuring New England Poets
The Worcester Public Library is pleased to present a panel of poets who are in New England. Panelists Meg Kearney of New Hampshire, Tim Mayo of Vermont, and J.D. Scrimgeour of Massachusetts will read aloud some of their work, discuss what drew them to writing poetry, the struggles they’ve faced, and advice for aspiring poets.
In June 2021, The Word Works Press will publish Meg Kearney’s All Morning the Crows, winner of the 2020 Washington Prize for poetry. Meg is also author of An Unkindness of Ravens and Home By Now, winner of the PEN New England L.L. Winship Award; a heroic crown, The Ice Storm, published as chapbook in 2020; and three verse novels for teens. Her award-winning picture book, Trouper, is illustrated by E.B. Lewis. Meg’s poetry has been featured on Garrison Keillor’s “A Writer’s Almanac” and Ted Kooser’s “American Life in Poetry” series, and included in the 2017 Best American Poetry anthology (Natasah Tretheway, guest editor). She lives in New Hampshire and directs the Solstice MFA in Creative Writing Program in Massachusetts. Visit www.megkearney.com.

Tim Mayo has published two full length collections of poetry, The Kingdom of Possibilities (Mayapple Press, 2008), a finalist for the May Swenson Award and Thesaurus of Separation (Phoenicia Publishing, 2016) which among other awards was a finalist for both the 2017 Montaigne Medal and the 2017 Eric Hoffer Book Award. His two chapbooks are The Loneliness of Dogs (Pudding House Publications, 2007) and Notes to the Mental Hospital Timekeeper (Kelsay Books, 2019), which won Honorable Mention in the chapbook category of the 2020 Eric Hoffer Book Awards. Nominated for seven Pushcart Prizes, his poems and reviews have appeared in numerous literary magazines, among them, The American Journal of Poetry, Barrow Street, Narrative Magazine, ONE (Jacar Press), Poetry International, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Verse Daily, and The Writer’s Almanac. He lives in Brattleboro Vermont where he was a founding member of the Brattleboro Literary Festival, and where he continues to teach and work in a mental hospital. Visit www.tim-mayo.net.

J.D. Scrimgeour is the author of four poetry collections The Last Miles, Territories, Lifting the Turtle, and, most recently, Festival. He won the AWP Award for Nonfiction for his second book of nonfiction, Themes for English B: A Professor’s Education In & Out of Class. With musician Philip Swanson he released Ogunquit & Other Works, a CD blending music and poetry. A longtime resident of Salem, he’s written in many genres about the city. Mary Towne Eastey, an ancestor in his direct line, was put to death during the Salem Witch Trials. Another ancestor, Thomas Perkins, sat on the jury that found her guilty.

Readers/Speakers

Monday February 21, 2022 11:00am - 12:00pm EST
Online
 
Tuesday, February 22
 

7:00pm EST

A virtual Thirsty Lab with Moira Linehan
The Thirsty Lab poetry reading, normally based out of Princeton, Mass., continues to meet virtually. On Tuesday, February 22, 2022, Moira Linehan will be the featured reader.

Visit the Zoom registration link to receive information on how to join the reading. Zoom will send you an e-mail with the meeting details and a link to join.

Moira Linehan is the author of four collections of poetry. Her first two books, If No Moon (2007) and Incarnate Grace (2015), were published by Southern Illinois University Press. If No Moon had been selected by Dorianne Laux as the winner of the 2006 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry open competition. Both books were named Honor Books in Poetry in the Massachusetts Book Awards. In June 2020 Slant Books published her third book, Toward and at the end of that year, Dos Madres Press brought out her latest, & Company. She lives in the greater Boston area.

For her February 22, 2022, Worcester County Poetry Association reading, Linehan will read from Toward. Many of its poems are set in landscapes where she had been awarded a writer’s residency. In particular, she will highlight those begun at the Tyrone Guthrie Centre in County Monaghan and the Cill Rialaig Project in Ballinskelligs, County Kerry.


Co-Founder / Co-Host
Readers/Speakers


Tuesday February 22, 2022 7:00pm - 8:00pm EST
Zoom
 
Friday, February 25
 

7:00pm EST

Martín Espada — Author of Floaters at the Odyssey Bookshop
Join us on Wednesday, February 24th, 7 pm on Crowdcast for a poetry reading by Martín Espada from his new book, Floaters. Espada will also be in conversation with Paul Mariani, former University Professor of Poetry at Boston College.

Questions about joining an online event? Email events@odysseybks.com for more info.

About the Book
From the winner of the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize come masterfully crafted narratives of protest, grief and love.
Martín Espada is a poet who "stirs in us an undeniable social consciousness," says Richard Blanco. Floaters offers exuberant odes and defiant elegies, songs of protest and songs of love from one of the essential voices in American poetry.

Floaters takes its title from a term used by certain Border Patrol agents to describe migrants who drown trying to cross over. The title poem responds to the viral photograph of Óscar and Valeria, a Salvadoran father and daughter who drowned in the Río Grande, and allegations posted in the "I’m 10-15" Border Patrol Facebook group that the photo was faked. Espada bears eloquent witness to confrontations with anti-immigrant bigotry as a tenant lawyer years ago, and now sings the praises of Central American adolescents kicking soccer balls over a barbed wire fence in an internment camp founded on that same bigotry. He also knows that times of hate call for poems of love—even in the voice of a cantankerous Galápagos tortoise.
The collection ranges from historical epic to achingly personal lyrics about growing up, the baseball that drops from the sky and smacks Espada in the eye as he contemplates a girl’s gently racist question.
Whether celebrating the visionaries—the fallen dreamers, rebels and poets—or condemning the outrageous governmental neglect of his father’s Puerto Rico in the wake of Hurricane María, Espada invokes ferocious, incandescent spirits.

About the Panelists
Martín Espada has published more than twenty books as a poet, editor, essayist and translator. His new book of poems from Norton is called Floaters. Other books of poems include Vivas to Those Who Have Failed(2016), The Trouble Ball (2011), The Republic of Poetry (2006) and Alabanza(2003). He is the editor of What Saves Us: Poems of Empathy and Outrage in the Age of Trump (2019). He has received the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, the Shelley Memorial Award, an Academy of American Poets Fellowship, the PEN/Revson Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship. The Republic of Poetry was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. His book of essays and poems, Zapata’s Disciple (1998), was banned in Tucson as part of the Mexican-American Studies Program outlawed by the state of Arizona, and reissued by Northwestern. A former tenant lawyer, Espada is a professor of English at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. http://www.martinespada.net/

From 1968 until 2000, PAUL MARIANI taught poetry at the University of Massachusetts/ Amherst and was the University Professor of Poetry at Boston College from 2000 until his retirement in 2016. He has published over 250 essays as well as 20 books, among them six biographies, including William Carlos Williams, Hart Crane, Robert Lowell, John Berryman, Gerard Manley Hopkins and Wallace Stevens, and eight volumes of poetry, most recentlyOrdinary Time: Poems (2020). He earned fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the NEA and the NEH, and was awarded the John Ciardi Lifetime Achievement Award and the Flannery O’Connor Lifetime Achievement Award. For over two decades he taught poetry workshops at the Bread Loaf Writers Conference and the Glen Workshops in Colorado and Santa Fe. His most recent book of essays is The Mystery of It All: The Vocation of Poetry in the Twilight of Modernity (2020).

Get Your Copy
Get your copy of Floaters here. To get a signed copy, visit our signed book order page.

Readers/Speakers


Friday February 25, 2022 7:00pm - 8:30pm EST
Online
 
Sunday, February 27
 

9:00am EST

Authors and Artists: Writing the Land
The third annual Authors and Artists Festival: Writing the Land is a celebration of the intersection of poetry with social- and ecological-justice, online February 26-27, 2022. All-BIPOC headline speakers include Saturday: Jillian Hishaw, Dina Gilio-Whitaker, John Francis; Sunday: Ross Gay, Rahawa Haile, and Latria Graham. Poets from the Writing the Land project www.writingtheland.org will read including Cheryl Savageau, JuPong Lin, David Crews, Angie Vasquez, Alice B. Fogel, Paul Richmond and many others. Please also see our online poet retreat Healing Ourselves, Healing the Planet Feb 25-27, 2022; and our free reading group meeting monthly. Entrance to the festival is free.

Details at: https://www.nature-culture.net/authors-artists-festival


Readers/Speakers
CS

Cheryl Savageau

Of Abenaki and French Canadian heritage, Cheryl Savageau was born in central Massachusetts. She graduated from Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, and studied writing at the People’s Poets and Writers Workshop in Worcester. She is the author of the poetry collections Home... Read More →

Hosts
avatar for Paul Richmond

Paul Richmond

Owner/ Operater, Humen Error Publishing
I run two monthly reading and an annual festival - Greenfield Annual Word Festival - www.gawfest.org and Word stage at the Garlic & Arts Festival and other events yearly. Always looking for feature writers. I also publish books. I have three books myself with my fourth coming out... Read More →


Sunday February 27, 2022 9:00am - 5:00pm EST
Online
 
Monday, February 28
 

2:00pm EST

Poetry Reading with Charles Coe
Known for his powerful readings and unusually warm and compassionate voice, Charles Coe's poems speak to the heart and mind as well as the ear. He combines subjects as diverse as Afro-American history, myth, jazz, and family as well as surprising observations of those unexpected moments of joy to be found in a work-a-day city. Hear from one of our region's finest poets as he shares his sometimes humorous, sometimes poignant, but always insightful work. Coe will weave stories from his own life and reflections on his writing process through readings of poems from his 3 published collections. The reading will be followed by a Q&A session with the audience. A recipient of a Mass. Cultural Council fellowship in poetry, Coe served as an Artist-iin-Residence for the City of Boston in 2017 and is an Artist Fellow for Boston's St Botolph Club. Teaching poetry and prose is a special interest and he has taught in a wide variety of settings; currently he is an adjunct professor of English at Salve Regina University in Newport, Rhode Island, teaching poetry and non fiction in the low-residency MFA program. Presented by Arlington Commission for Arts and Culture in collaboration with Robbins Library and Arlington's Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Division in conjunction with the launch of "Elevating Arlington's Voices of Color", a new collection welcoming poems, stories, essays, memoirs, photos, videos, diaries, artworks, and other digital artifacts from the Arlington Black, Indigenous and People of Color communities. Advance registration required at https://artisttalkcharlescoe.eventbrite.com

Monday February 28, 2022 2:00pm - 3:30pm EST
Online
 
Friday, March 4
 

12:30pm EST

MCC Visiting Writers Series presents Kevin Carey
Kevin Carey is a poet, fiction writer, playwright, & filmmaker. He has published three books of poetry, The One Fifteen to Penn Station (2012), Jesus Was a Homeboy (2016), & Set in Stone (2020), a new novel, Murder in the Marsh (2020), and a chapbook of short stories, The Beach People (2014). His play, The Stand or Sal is Dead, premiered at the Actor’s Studio in Newburyport (2018), & his one act plays have been staged at The New Works Festival in Newburyport & The New Hampshire Theater Project. His co-written screenplay Peter’s Song won Best Screenplay at the 2009 New Hampshire Film Festival. He has co-directed & co-produced two documentary films about poets, including Unburying Malcolm Miller which premiered at the Mass Poetry Festival in 2017. His fiction & poetry have appeared in The Red Mountain Review, Silk Road, Rip Tide: Crime Stories by New England Writers, & elsewhere. Kevin Carey is the Coordinator of Creative Writing at Salem State University.

Friday March 4, 2022 12:30pm - 1:45pm EST
Online
 
Sunday, March 6
 

3:00pm EST

Sean Hill and Michael Kleber-Diggs: Concord Virtual Poetry at the Library Series
Join Sean Hill and Michael Kleber-Diggs whose prize-winning poetry explores Black experiences in America, with home and family at its heart and visions for a nation in balance. A Q&A session will follow.

Born and raised in Milledgeville, Georgia, Sean Hill is the author of Dangerous Goods, awarded the Minnesota Book Award in Poetry, (Milkweed Editions, 2014) and Blood Ties & Brown Liquor, named one of the Ten Books All Georgians Should Read in 2015 by the Georgia Center for the Book, (UGA Press, 2008). From the poet whose stunning debut was praised as "transcendent" by Kevin Young, Dangerous Goods tracks its speaker throughout North America and abroad, illuminating the ways in which home and place may inhabit one another comfortably or uncomfortably, or both simultaneously. Hill has received numerous awards including fellowships from the Cave Canem Foundation, the Minnesota State Arts Board, The MacDowell Colony, the University of Wisconsin, Stanford University, and the National Endowment for the Arts. His poems and essays have appeared in Callaloo, Harvard Review, New England Review, Orion, Oxford American, Poetry, Terrain.org, Tin House, and numerous other journals, and in almost two dozen anthologies including Black Nature and Villanelles. His poems have also been featured as part of the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day series and on The Slowdown podcast hosted by Tracy K. Smith. Hill has taught at several universities, including the University of Alaska – Fairbanks and Georgia Southern University, and has also served as the director of the Minnesota Northwoods Writers Conference at Bemidji State University since 2012. He lives in Montana with his family and is currently a Visiting Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Montana. Visit his website at https://www.seanhillpoetry.com/.

Poet, essayist, and literary critic Michael Kleber-Diggs reads from his debut collection, Worldly Things, (Milkweed Editions, 2021), selected by Henri Cole as winner of the Max Ritvo Poetry Prize, finalist for the 2022 Minnesota Book Award in Poetry, and a New York Times Book Review "New & Noteworthy Poetry" Selection. “I am captivated, consoled, and bowled over by these poems, knifelike in their concision and oracular at their core,” observes Tracy K. Smith. In these poems, Kleber-Diggs names delight in the same breath as loss. With uncompromising candor, he documents the many ways America systemically fails those who call it home while also calling upon our collective potential for something better. “All of us want,” after all, “our share of light, and just enough rainfall.” Kleber-Diggs’ writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Poem-a-Day, Poetry Daily, Great River Review, Poetry Northwest, Potomac Review, Hunger Mountain, Memorious, and in several anthologies of essays. He has been a Fellow with the Givens Foundation for African American Literature, winner of the Loft Mentor Series in Poetry, and the former Poet Laureate of Anoka County libraries. His work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. Since 2016, Kleber-Diggs has been an instructor with the Minnesota Prison Writing Workshop. He also teaches Creative Writing in Augsburg University’s low-residence MFA program and at Saint Paul Conservatory for Performing Artists. Visit his website at https://michaelkleberdiggs.com/

The Poetry Series is sponsored by the Friends of the Concord Free Public Library.



Sunday March 6, 2022 3:00pm - 4:00pm EST
Online

3:00pm EST

Visions for a Nation in Balance: Sean Hill & Michael Kleber-Diggs
Join renowned poets Sean Hill and Michael Kleber-Diggs who will read from their luminous, moving poetry on Black experiences in America, with home and family at its heart and visions for a nation in balance. A Q&A period follows.

Born and raised in Milledgeville, Georgia, Sean Hill is the author of Dangerous Goods, awarded the Minnesota Book Award in Poetry, (Milkweed Editions, 2014) and Blood Ties & Brown Liquor, named one of the Ten Books All Georgians Should Read in 2015 by the Georgia Center for the Book, (UGA Press, 2008).

From the poet whose stunning debut was praised as “transcendent” by Kevin Young, Dangerous Goods tracks its speaker throughout North America and abroad, illuminating the ways in which home and place may inhabit one another comfortably or uncomfortably, or both simultaneously. From the Bahamas, London, and Cairo, to Bemidji, Minnesota, and Milledgeville, Georgia, Hill interweaves the contemporary with the historical, and explores with urgency the relationship between travel, migration, alienation, and home. Here, playful “postcard” poems addressed to Nostalgia and My Third Crush Today sit alongside powerful reflections on the immigration of African Americans to Liberia during and after the era of slavery.

Hill has received numerous awards including fellowships from the Cave Canem Foundation, the Minnesota State Arts Board, The MacDowell Colony, the University of Wisconsin, Stanford University, and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Hill’s poems and essays have appeared in Callaloo, Harvard Review, New England Review, Orion, Oxford American, Poetry, Terrain.org, Tin House, and numerous other journals, and in almost two dozen anthologies including Black Nature and Villanelles. His poems have also been featured as part of the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day series and on The Slowdown podcast hosted by Tracy K. Smith.

Hill has taught at several universities, including the University of Alaska – Fairbanks and Georgia Southern University. Hill has also served as the director of the Minnesota Northwoods Writers Conference at Bemidji State University since 2012. He lives in Montana with his family and is currently a Visiting Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Montana.

Poet, essayist, and literary critic Michael Kleber-Diggs reads from his debut collection, Worldly Things, (Milkweed Editions, 2021), winner of the Max Ritvo Poetry Prize and finalist for the 2022 Minnesota Book Award in Poetry and A New York Times Book Review “New & Noteworthy Poetry” Selection.

In these poems, Kleber-Diggs names delight in the same breath as loss. With uncompromising candor, he documents the many ways America systemically fails those who call it home while also calling upon our collective potential for something better. “All of us want,” after all, “our share of light, and just enough rainfall.”

“I am captivated, consoled, and bowled over by these poems, knifelike in their concision and oracular at their core,” notes Tracy K. Smith.

Among other places, Kleber-Diggs’ writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Poem-a-Day, Poetry Daily, Great River Review, Poetry Northwest, Potomac Review, Hunger Mountain, Memorious, and in several anthologies of essays. He has been a Fellow with the Givens Foundation for African American Literature, winner of the Loft Mentor Series in Poetry, and the former Poet Laureate of Anoka County libraries. His work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net.

Since 2016, Kleber-Diggs has been an instructor with the Minnesota Prison Writing Workshop. He also teaches Creative Writing in Augsburg University’s low-residence MFA program and at Saint Paul Conservatory for Performing Artists. He is married to Karen Kleber-Diggs, a tropical horticulturist and orchid specialist. Together, they have a daughter who is pursuing a BFA in Dance Performance at SUNY Purchase.

This event is sponsored by The Friends of the Concord Free Public Library.


Sunday March 6, 2022 3:00pm - 4:00pm EST
Online
 
Sunday, March 13
 

7:30pm EDT

CHAPTER AND VERSE LITERARY READING SERIES
Sally Bliumis-Dunn teaches Modern Poetry at Manhattanville College and offers individual manuscript conferences at the Palm Beach Poetry Festival. Her poems have appeared in New Ohio Review, The Paris Review, Prairie Schooner, PLUME, Poetry London, the NYT, PBS NewsHour, upstreet, The Writer’s Almanac, Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-day, and Ted Kooser’s  column, among others. In 2002, she was a finalist for the Nimrod/Hardman Pablo Neruda Prize. Her books include Talking Underwater and Second Skin (Wind Publications, 2007 and 2010); Galapagos Poems (Kattywompus Press, 2016); Echolocation (Plume Editions Madhat Press, 2018). Echolocation was long-listed or runner-up for Best Book of the Year from the Julie Suk Award, the Eric Hoffer Prize and the Poetry by The Sea Prize, all in 2018. To buy it: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1941196551/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

Robert Carr is the author of Amaranth, published in 2016 by Indolent Books and The Unbuttoned Eye, a full-length 2019 collection from 3: A Taos Press. Among other publications, his poetry appears in The American Journal of Poetry, Massachusetts Review, On the Seawall, Rattle, Shenandoah and Tar River Poetry. Robert is a poetry editor with Indolent Books and recently retired from a career as Deputy Director for the Bureau of Infectious Disease and Laboratory Sciences at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. Additional information, including book purchase information, can be found at robertcarr.org

Jennifer De Leon is the author of Dont Ask Me Where I’m From (Atheneum/Simon & Schuster, 2020) and the editor of Wise Latinas (Univ. of Nebraska Press, 2014). An Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Framingham State University, and a faculty member in the MFA in Creative Nonfiction program at Bay Path University, she has published prose in over a dozen literary journals and is a GrubStreet instructor and board member. Her essay collection, White Space: Essays on Culture, Race, & Writing, is the recipient of the Juniper Prize and will be published by UMass Press in Spring 2021. Signed copies of her book may be ordered through Word on the Street Books: https://wordstreetbooks.indielite.org/ Ask for a signed copy in the checkout comment box. Bookshop.org is also an option (but not for signed copies): bookshop.org.

To receive a Zoom invitation with a link to the reading, email your name and email address to SandeeStorey@fastmail.fm before 2 pm on March 11. You will be emailed a Zoom invitation with the link by noon March 12. For security reasons, please do not publicize, post, or broadcast the Zoom link itself. If people you know want to attend, you may send them the link, but please ask them also not to publicize, post, or broadcast the link itself.

For more information, check our website at http://jamaicapondpoets.com or email dorothy.derifield@gmail.com or call 617-325-8388. The next Chapter and Verse Literary Reading on Zoom in the 2020/2021 series will be at 7:30 pm on Friday, April 9, 2021.

Readers/Speakers

Sunday March 13, 2022 7:30pm - 8:30pm EDT
Online
 
Monday, March 14
 

11:00am EDT

A Light Breeze from Kerry: A Virtual Poetry Reading with Curt Curtin
As part of a virtual book tour, the Worcester Public Library is hosting a live reading with Curt Curtin and his wife Dee O'Connor. Curt is a first-generation Irish-American poet who grew up in Boston and lives in Worcester. Both his parents emigrated from County Kerry at the beginning of the 20th century, and their experiences inspired Curt's latest collection, Kerry Dancers.

Readers/Speakers

Monday March 14, 2022 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Online
 
Friday, March 18
 

11:00am EDT

Kerry Dancers: A Family Portrait in Poetry
The Worcester Senior Center Celebrates St. Patrick's Day and the Worcester County Poetry Association's 50th anniversary with a reading from Kerry Dancers, Curt Curtin's newest poetry collection. Curt, his wife, and fellow poets/friends will read selected poems. You'll meet Da, Ma, Aunt Nora and the rest of the family, dance a reel in Boston's Hibernian Hall, and "shake the hand of the man who shook the hand" of notorious Boston Mayor James Michael Curley. With lively fiddle by members of the New England Enrichment Foundation, you'll be dancing in your seat.

This will air on Worcester Cable Station, Channel 192 subsequently be available on YouTube. Initial air time is estimated; program will run for several days after initial airing.

Friday March 18, 2022 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Online

6:30pm EDT

Pakachoag Music School Presents Chasing Dreams to American Shores
Musicians from Worcester's Pakachoag Music School provide fiddle music to accompany Curt Curtin's reading of selected poems from Kerry Dancers. Though the collection focuses on Curt's Irish-American heritage, it is a more generic immigrant's tale dedicated to "immigrants from around the world who chased their dreams to the American shores".

This pre-recorded event will stream on YouTube.

Friday March 18, 2022 6:30pm - 7:00pm EDT
Online
 
Tuesday, March 22
 

3:00pm EDT

Concord Poetry at the Library Series presents: An Afternoon with Allison Adair and Tiana Clark
Join acclaimed poets Allison Adair and Tiana Clark who will read from prize-winning debut collections and talk about their inspiration, influences, and some essential elements of craft in developing the poems in these books.

Allison Adair’s debut collection, The Clearing, selected by Henri Cole for Milkweed’s Max Ritvo Poetry Prize, was named a New York Times "New and Noteworthy" book. From the midst of the Civil War to our current era, Adair charts fairy tales that are painfully familiar, never forgetting that violence is often accompanied by tenderness. Described by Cole as “haunting and dirt caked,” her unromantic poems of girlhood, nature, and family linger with an uncommon, unsettling resonance. Adair’s poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, Arts & Letters, Best American Poetry, Kenyon Review, Waxwing, and ZYZZYVA; and have been honored with the Pushcart Prize, the Florida Review Editors’ Award, the Orlando Prize, and first place in the Mid-American Review Fineline Competition. Originally from central Pennsylvania, Adair lives in Boston, where she teaches at Boston College and Grub Street.

Tiana Clark’s (author photo credit: Crystal K Marteldebut) full-length poetry collection, I Can’t Talk About the Trees Without the Blood (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2018) is winner of the 2017 Agnes Lynch Starrett Prize and the 2020 Kate Tufts Discovery Award.  Clark is also the author of Equilibrium (Bull City Press), selected by Afaa Michael Weaver for the 2016 Frost Place Chapbook Competition. She is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellow, a Pushcart Prize, the 2017 Furious Flower’s Gwendolyn Brooks Centennial Poetry Prize, and the 2015 Rattle Poetry Prize. She was the 2017-2018 Jay C. and Ruth Halls Poetry Fellow at the Wisconsin Institute of Creative Writing. Clark has received fellowships to the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, Sewanee Writers' Conference, and Kenyon Review Writers Workshop. She is a graduate of Vanderbilt University’s M.F.A. program where she served as the poetry editor of the Nashville Review. Her writing has appeared in or is forthcoming from The New Yorker, Poetry Magazine, The Washington Post, VQR, Tin House Online, Kenyon Review, American Poetry Review, Oxford American, The Atlantic, and elsewhere. Clark teaches creative writing at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville.

Sponsored by The Friends of the Concord Free Public Library in Concord, Massachusetts  

Readers/Speakers


Tuesday March 22, 2022 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Online
 
Thursday, March 24
 

7:00pm EDT

Across the Tracks: A Virtual Poetry Reading with Curt Curtin
In this final book launch event, Curt Curtin and his wife Dee O'Connor will read some of the lesser-known poems from Curt's newest collection, Kerry Dancers. Selected poems include "Across the Tracks," "Ma," "Eldest Sister," and "Paying respects at Katie's Wake" along with many popular favorities from his Irish-American heritage. As fellow poet, Susan Roney O'Brien, says, "[We] want to be caught in the ballad, the hornpipe, the reel--want to be pulled into the dance."

Readers/Speakers

Thursday March 24, 2022 7:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Online
 
Sunday, April 3
 

2:00pm EDT

Four Jennifers
Four Jennifers joins Lily Poetry Salon as we celebrate National Poetry Month with Jennifer Jean, Jennifer Markell, Jennifer Martelli, and Jennifer Militello. Jennifer Militello is the author of the poetry collection The Pact (Tupelo Press/Shearsman Books, 2021) and the memoir Knock Wood, winner of the Dzanc Nonfiction Prize (Dzanc Books, 2019), as well as four additional collections of poetry. Her work has appeared in Best American Poetry, Best New Poets, American Poetry Review, The Nation, The New Republic, The Paris Review, and POETRY. She teaches in the MFA program at New England College. Jennifer Martelli is the author of The Queen of Queens and My Tarantella, selected as a “Must Read” by the Massachusetts Center for the Book, as well as the chapbooks "In the Year of Ferraro" and "After Bird", winner of Grey Book Press’s open reading. Her work has appeared in The Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day, The Tahoma Literary Review, and Poetry. Jennifer Martelli has twice received grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council for poetry. Jennifer Markell’s first poetry collection, Samsara, (Turning Point, 2014) was named a “Must Read” book by the Massachusetts Book Awards. Her second collection, Singing at High Altitude was published by The Main Street Rag (November, 2021). Jennifer’s work has appeared in The Bitter Oleander, The Cimarron Review, Consequence, and RHINO, among other publications. She works as a psychotherapist, serves on the board of the New England Poetry Club, tends two gardens and three well-versed cats. Jennifer Jean is the author of the poetry collection Object Lesson (Lily Books, 2021) and Object Lesson: a Guide to Writing Poetry (Lily Books, 2021). The recipient of a Peter Taylor Fellowship from the Kenyon Review Writers Workshop, a Disquiet FLAD Fellowship from Dzanc Books, and an Ambassador for Peace Award from the Women’s Federation for World Peace, she is the program manager of 24PearlStreet, the Fine Arts Work Center’s online writing program.

Readers/Speakers
avatar for Jennifer Jean

Jennifer Jean

Program Manager, 24PearlStreet Online Writing Program at FAWC
Jennifer Jean’s poetry collections include VOZ and The Fool, as well as Object Lesson which is about sex-trafficking and objectification in America. Her teaching resource is Object Lesson: a Guide to Writing Poetry and she's a co-editor and co-translator of an anthology in development... Read More →

Hosts
avatar for Jennifer Markell

Jennifer Markell

Jennifer Markell's first poetry collection, Samsara, (Turning Point, 2014) was named a “Must-Read Book” by the Massachusetts Book Awards in 2015 and was a Finalist in the Next Generation Indie Book Awards. Markell received the Barbara Bradley and Firman Houghton awards from the... Read More →


Sunday April 3, 2022 2:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, April 13
 

7:30pm EDT

SRP Broadside Reading & Craft Talk with Jendi Reiter & Armen Davoudian
Armen Davoudian and Jendi Reiter, winners of Slate Roof's Glass Broadside Contest, will read their winning poems and other work. A craft talk follows the reading, featuring our master letterpress printer, Ed Rayher, and artist J. Hyde Meissner, who will describe the process of creating the woodcuts and producing the broadsides printed on a Vandercook Universal. The evening closes with an audience Q&A. Hosted by Slate Roof Press www.slateroofpress.com. To register go to https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZElcOurqTkoEtGVKMvNLQUk6xnO6-bg3Vpa 

Armen Davoudian is the author of Swan Song, which won the 2020 Frost Place Chapbook Competition. His poems and translations from Persian appear in AGNI, The Sewanee Review, The Yale Review, and elsewhere. He grew up in Isfahan, Iran and is currently a PhD candidate in English at Stanford University.

Jendi Reiter is the author of the novel Two Natures (Saddle Road Press, 2016), the short story collection An Incomplete List of My Wishes (Sunshot Press, 2018), and four poetry books and chapbooks, most recently Bullies in Love (Little Red Tree, 2015). Awards include a Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship for Poetry, the New Letters Prize for Fiction, the Wag's Revue Poetry Prize, the Bayou Magazine Editor's Prize in Fiction, and two awards from the Poetry Society of America. Two Natures won the Rainbow Award for Best Gay Contemporary Fiction and was a finalist for the Book Excellence Awards and the Lascaux Prize for Fiction. Reiter is the editor of WinningWriters.com, an online resource site with contests and markets for creative writers. Visit JendiReiter.com.



Wednesday April 13, 2022 7:30pm - 8:30pm EDT
Zoom
 
Saturday, April 16
 

7:00pm EDT

Poetry Month Celebration with Mass. Book Award Poetry Winners
Enjoy a Poetry Month Celebration with local award-winning authors Karen Skolfield, Oliver de la Paz, and Andrea Cohen. The program will feature a reading from each of the poets, followed by a discussion and Q & A. Karen Skolfield will share an excerpt from Battle Dress: Poems, which recently won the Massachusetts Book Award for poetry. Honorees Oliver de la Paz (The Boy in the Labyrinth) and Andrea Cohen (Nightshade) will read from their books.

About the Books:
Battle Dress: Poems by Karen Skolfield: In a poetic voice at once accessible and otherworldly, gutsy and insightful, U.S. Army veteran Karen Skolfield offers a rare glimpse of a female soldier's training and mental conditioning. Through the narratives of a young soldier, her older counterpart, and her fellow soldiers, Skolfield searches for meaning in combat preparation, long-term trauma, and the way war is embedded in our language and psyche.

The Boy in the Labyrinth by Oliver de la Paz: In a long sequence of prose poems, questionnaires, and standardized tests, The Boy in the Labyrinth interrogates the language of autism and the language barriers between parents, their children, and the fractured medium of science and school.

Nightshade by Andrea Cohen: The poems in Andrea Cohen's Nightshade, her sixth full-length collection, are constructed from the wisdom of loss--of lovers and loved ones and a world gone awry. Cohen builds a short poem the way a master carpenter does a tiny house, in lines that are both economic and precise, with room enough for sorrow and wit to exist comfortably in their spaces.

About the Poets:
Karen Skolfield’s book Battle Dress (W. W. Norton) won the 2020 Massachusetts Book Award in poetry and the Barnard Women Poets Prize. Her book Frost in the Low Areas (Zone 3 Press) won the 2014 PEN New England Award in poetry, and she is the winner of the 2016 Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize in poetry from The Missouri Review. Skolfield is a U.S. Army veteran and teaches writing to engineers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst; she’s the poet laureate for Northampton, MA for 2019-2022. Learn more: https://karenskolfield.com/

Oliver de la Paz is the author of five collections of poetry: Names Above Houses, Furious Lullaby, Requiem for the Orchard, Post Subject: A Fable, and The Boy in the Labyrinth which was a finalist for the Massachusetts Book Award in Poetry. He also co-edited A Face to Meet the Faces: An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry. A founding member, Oliver serves as the cochair of the Kundiman advisory board. He has received grants from the NEA, NYFA, the Artist’s Trust, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and has been awarded two Pushcart Prizes. His work has been published in journals such as Poetry, American Poetry Review, Tin House, The Southern Review, and Poetry Northwest. He teaches at the College of the Holy Cross and in the LowResidency MFA Program at PLU. Learn more: https://www.oliverdelapaz.com/

Andrea Cohen's poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, The Threepenny Review, and elsewhere. Her seventh poetry collection, Everything, was recently published by Four Way Books. Other recent books include Nightshade and Unfathoming. Cohen directs the Blacksmith House Poetry Series in Cambridge, MA. Learn more: https://www.andreacohen.org/

This event is sponsored by the Billerica Public Library Foundation.
Presented in collaboration with libraries in Tewksbury, North Reading, and Chelmsford.

Saturday April 16, 2022 7:00pm - 8:30pm EDT
Online
 
Tuesday, April 19
 

3:00pm EDT

Concord Poetry at the Library Series presents: Andrea Cohen / Fady Joudah
Join acclaimed poets Andrea Cohen and Fady Joudah reading from recent work and talking about their practice.

Andrea Cohen reads from Everything (Four Way Books, 2021) – poems that traffic in wonder and woe, in dialogue and interior speculation. Humor and gravity go hand in hand here. “A work of great and sustained attention, true intelligence, and soul,” praises Christian Wiman.  Cohen’s poems and stories have appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry, The Threepenny Review, The Atlantic Monthly, The New Republic, and elsewhere. Her other collections include Nightshade (Four Way, 2019), winner of the 2020 American Fiction Book Award for Contemporary Poetry, Unfathoming (Four Way, 2017), Furs Not Mine (Four Way, 2015), Kentucky Derby (Salmon Poetry, 2011), Long Division (Salmon Poetry, 2009), and The Cartographer's Vacation (Owl Creek Press, 1999). Cohen has received a PEN Discovery Award, Glimmer Train's Short Fiction Award, and several fellowships at The MacDowell Colony. She directs the Blacksmith House Poetry Series in Cambridge, MA.

Fady Joudah reads from Tethered to Stars (Milkweek Editions, 2021.) With an analytical eye and a lyrical heart, Joudah shifts deftly between the microscope, the telescope, and sometimes even the horoscope. His gaze lingers on the interior space of a lung, on a butterfly poised on a filament, on the moon temple atop Huayna Picchu, on a dismembered live oak. In each lingering, Joudah shares with readers the palimpsest of what makes us human. Joudah’s other collections include Footnotes in the Order of Disappearance (Milkweed Editions, 2018), Textu (Copper Canyon Press, 2013), Alight (Copper Canyon, 2013), and The Earth in the Attic (Yale University Press, 2008.) He has translated several collections of poetry from the Arabic and is the co-editor and co-founder of the Etel Adnan Poetry Prize. He was a winner of the Yale Series of Younger Poets competition in 2007 and has received a PEN award, a Banipal/Times Literary Supplement prize from the UK, the Griffin Poetry Prize, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He lives in Houston, with his wife and kids, where he practices internal medicine.

Readers/Speakers


Tuesday April 19, 2022 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Online
 
Tuesday, April 26
 

3:00pm EDT

Tuning in to a higher power: poems of prayer
Poetry, like all of the arts, helps raise heavy hearts, and who doesn’t need more of that right now? Join us to listen and/or share poetry about the uplifting power of Love. For more information, go to christianscience.com/tmcrrnow

Attendees are encouraged to share favorite poems and original works about God’s goodness and care for us.

Tuesday April 26, 2022 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Online
 
Monday, May 2
 

7:00pm EDT

The Book of Delights with Ross Gay
In The Book of Delights, one of today’s most original literary voices offers up a genre-defying volume of lyric essays written over one tumultuous year. The first nonfiction book from award-winning poet Ross Gay is a record of the small joys we often overlook in our busy lives. Among Gay’s funny, poetic, philosophical delights: a friend’s unabashed use of air quotes, cradling a tomato seedling aboard an airplane, the silent nod of acknowledgment between the only two black people in a room. But Gay never dismisses the complexities, even the terrors, of living in America as a black man or the ecological and psychic violence of our consumer culture or the loss of those he loves. More than anything else, though, Gay celebrates the beauty of the natural world–his garden, the flowers peeking out of the sidewalk, the hypnotic movements of a praying mantis.

Ross Gay is the author of four books of poetry: Against WhichBringing the Shovel DownBe Holding; and Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude, winner of the 2015 National Book Critics Circle Award and the 2016 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award. His new poem, Be Holding, was released from the University of Pittsburgh Press in September of 2020. His collection of essays, The Book of Delights, was released by Algonquin Books in 2019. Ross is also the co-author, with Aimee Nezhukumatathil, of the chapbook “Lace and Pyrite: Letters from Two Gardens,” in addition to being co-author, with Rosechard Wehrenberg, of the chapbook, “River.”  Ross is a founding board member of the Bloomington Community Orchard, a non-profit, free-fruit-for-all food justice and joy project. He also works on The Tenderness Project with Shayla Lawson and Essence London. He has received fellowships from Cave Canem, the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, and the Guggenheim Foundation. Ross teaches at Indiana University.

Readers/Speakers

Monday May 2, 2022 7:00pm - 8:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, May 4
 

12:00pm EDT

“There is a hornet in the room”: A Craft Talk and Poetry Reading About Insects with Robyn Schiff
“There is a hornet in the room,” a line drawn from a poem by James Schuyler, will be a talk about a few poems that involve insects, followed by a reading from Robyn Schiff's insect-infested manuscript-in-progress, Information Desk: An Epic. Robyn Schiff is the author of three books of poems, Worth, Revolver, and A Woman of Property. A winner of the Rome Prize, she is a Professor at Emory University, and co-editor of Canarium Books. Schiff’s next collection, Information Desk: An Epic, is forthcoming from Penguin. Harvard University welcomes individuals with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities.

This event is free and open to the public, but registration is required. If you would like to request accommodations or have questions about the digital access provided, please contact Ariella Ruth Goldberg, at agoldberg@hds.harvard.edu or 617-495-4476 in advance of your participation.

Readers/Speakers

Wednesday May 4, 2022 12:00pm - 1:00pm EDT
Online
 
Tuesday, May 17
 

3:00pm EDT

Concord Poetry at the Library Series presents: Krysten Hill and Cynthia Manick, A reading and conversation with Joyce Peseroff
The Concord Poetry at the Library Series is proud to present award-winning poets Krysten Hill and Cynthia Manick who will read from their poetry collections and in conversation with poet and editor Joyce Peseroff talk about their inspirations, influences, and the act of writing.

Krysten Hill (Photo Credit: Jonathan Beckley) is the author of How Her Spirit Got Out (Aforementioned Productions, 2016), which received the 2017 Jean Pedrick Chapbook Prize from the New England Poetry Club. Her work has been featured in The Academy of American Poets, apt, B O D Y, Boiler Magazine, Up the Staircase Quarterly, Muzzle, PANK,Tinderbox Poetry Journal, Winter Tangerine Review and elsewhere. The recipient of the 2016 St. Botolph Club Foundation Emerging Artist Award and 2020 Mass Cultural Council Poetry Fellowship, she received her MFA in poetry from University of Massachusetts Boston, where she currently teaches.  

Cynthia Manick (Photo Credit: Sue Rissberger) is the author of Blue Hallelujahs (Black Lawrence Press, 2016) and editor of Soul Sister Revue: A Poetry Compilation (Jamii Publishing, 2019) and The Future of Black: Afrofuturism and Black Comics Poetry (Blair Publishing, forthcoming 2021). She has received fellowships from Cave Canem, Hedgebrook, MacDowell Colony, and Château de la Napoule among others. Winner of the Lascaux Prize in Collected Poetry, Manick was also awarded Honorable Mention for the 2019 Furious Flower Poetry Prize. She is Founder of the reading series Soul Sister Revue; and her poem "Things I Carry Into the World" was made into a film by Motionpoems, an organization dedicated to video poetry, and has debuted on Tidal for National Poetry Month. A performer at literary festivals, libraries, universities, and most recently the Brooklyn Museum, Manick’s work has appeared in the Academy of American Poets Poem-A-Day Series, Callaloo, Los Angeles Review of Books (LARB), The Wall Street Journal, and elsewhereShe currently serves on the board of the International Women’s Writing Guild and the editorial board of Alice James Books.

Joyce Peseroff’s most recent, sixth poetry collection is Petition (Carnegie Mellon University Press, Fall, 2020.) She edited Robert Bly: When Sleepers Awake, The Ploughshares Poetry Reader, and Simply Lasting: Writers on Jane Kenyon. Her fifth book of poems, Know Thyself, was designated a “must read” by the 2016 Massachusetts Book Award. Recent poems and reviews appear in American Journal of Poetry, Consequence, On the Seawall, Massachusetts Review, Plume, Salamander, and on the website The Woven Tale Press. Her honors include grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Massachusetts Artists Foundation as well as a Pushcart Prize. She directed and taught in UMass Boston’s MFA Program in its first four years. Currently she blogs for her website and writes a poetry column for Arrowsmith Press.

Sponsored by The Friends of the Concord Free Public Library in Concord, Massachusetts

Readers/Speakers


Tuesday May 17, 2022 3:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Online
 
Sunday, June 19
 

6:30pm EDT

Lesley University MFA in Creative Writing Summer Reading Series
Lesley University’s Graduate Creative Writing summer evening reading series will bring acclaimed authors to campus from June 17-25. All readings will take place on the South Campus in Washburn Auditorium. Attendance at the in-person readings is restricted to members of the Lesley Community (students, faculty, staff) due to Covid-19 restrictions. All readings will be open to the public on Zoom, all times are ET. Award-winning author Angie Cruz will headline the series as a visiting author.

Readers/Speakers

Sunday June 19, 2022 6:30pm - 7:30pm EDT
Online
 
Monday, June 20
 

6:30pm EDT

Lesley University MFA in Creative Writing Summer Reading Series
Lesley University’s Graduate Creative Writing summer evening reading series will bring acclaimed authors to campus from June 17-25. All readings will take place on the South Campus in Washburn Auditorium. Attendance at the in-person readings is restricted to members of the Lesley Community (students, faculty, staff) due to Covid-19 restrictions. All readings will be open to the public on Zoom, all times are ET. Award-winning author Angie Cruz will headline the series as a visiting author.

Readers/Speakers

Monday June 20, 2022 6:30pm - 7:30pm EDT
Online
 
Thursday, August 17
 

6:00pm EDT

Phosphorescence Poetry Reading
To Emily Dickinson, phosphorescence, was a divine spark and the illuminating light behind learning — it was volatile, but transformative in nature. Produced by the Emily Dickinson Museum, the Phosphorescence Poetry Reading Series celebrates contemporary creativity that echoes Dickinson’s own revolutionary poetic voice. The Series features established and emerging poets whose work and backgrounds represent the diversity of the flourishing contemporary poetry scene. Join us for the virtual event 8/17 to hear from poets around the world as they read their work and discuss what poetry and Dickinson mean to them.

This month's poets are:
  • Yamini Pathak
  • Ilan Stavans
  • Devanshi Khetarpal
The virtual event is free and registration is required.

Register here.

Thursday August 17, 2023 6:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
The Emily Dickinson Museum
 
Tuesday, September 19
 

7:00pm EDT

Readings From the Room

Join us for an evening of poetry at the Writers' Room of Boston, Readings from the Room on September 19, 2023. This online event hosted by Livia Meneghin will bring together poets Daniel Brock Johnson and Richard Hoffman sharing and discussing their work.

Tuesday September 19, 2023 7:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, October 11
 

7:00pm EDT

Cervena Barva Press Reading Series
Readers: Kalpna Singh- Chitnis, Constantin Severin (Romania) and Anna Warrock

For zoom link email: editor@cervenabarvapress.com

Wednesday October 11, 2023 7:00pm - 8:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, October 18
 

7:00pm EDT

Cervena Barva Press Reading Series
An evening focusing on Romanian writers: Claudia Serea, Lucia Cherciu, and Clara Burghelea

email to request link: editor@cervenabarvapress.com

Wednesday October 18, 2023 7:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, October 25
 

7:00pm EDT

Cervena Barva Press Reading Series
Readers: Timothy Gager, Joan Gelfand and George Wallace

For zoom link, email to request: editor@cervenabarvapress.com

Wednesday October 25, 2023 7:00pm - 8:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, November 29
 

12:30pm EST

Online Poetry — Sparks in the Dark
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83562414054
Meeting ID: 835 6241 4054
Malachi Black is the author of Indirect Light, forthcoming from Four Way Books in
2024, and Storm Toward Morning (Copper Canyon Press, 2014), a finalist for the
Poetry Society of America’s Norma Farber First Book Award and a selection for
the PSA’s New American Poets Series (chosen by Ilya Kaminsky). Black’s poems
have appeared in The American Poetry Review, The Believer, The Los Angeles
Review of Books, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and Poetry, among other
journals, and in a number of anthologies, including Before the Door of God: An
Anthology of Devotional Poetry (Yale UP, 2013), The Poet’s Quest for God
(Eyewear Publishing [U.K.], 2016) and In the Tempered Dark: Contemporary Poets
Transcending Elegy (Black Lawrence, 2024). Black’s work has been supported by
fellowships and awards from the Amy Clampitt House, the Bread Loaf Writers’
Conference, Emory University, the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown,
Hawthornden Castle, the MacDowell Colony, the National Endowment for the
Arts, the Poetry Foundation (a 2009 Ruth Lilly Fellowship), the Sewanee Writers’
Conference, and Yaddo. Black’s poems have several times been set to music and
have been featured in exhibitions both in the U.S. and abroad, including recent
and forthcoming translations into French, Dutch, Croatian, Slovenian, and
Lithuanian. Black teaches at the University of San Diego and lives in California.

Wednesday November 29, 2023 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, December 6
 

12:30pm EST

Online Poetry — Sparks in the Dark
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81613198655
Meeting ID: 816 1319 8655
Ellen Steinbaum is the author of four poetry collections and a one-person play.
Her work has been nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize and is included in
several anthologies including The Widows’ Handbook and Garrison Keillor’s Good
Poems American Places. An award-winning journalist and former Boston Globe
columnist, she writes a blog, “Reading and Writing and the Occasional Recipe”
which can be found at her website, ellensteinbaum.com.

Wednesday December 6, 2023 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Online
 
Sunday, December 10
 

3:00pm EST

New England Poetry Club Zoom Reading
Please join the New England Poetry Club for a program of readings by Lindsey Schaffer, Rajiv Mohabir, and Cindy Veach. The reading will be held on Zoom. To attend, please register in advance to receive your personal link: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEsduqoqTIjH91ENL3VOYcKRXTkpy2BW1zX

Sunday December 10, 2023 3:00pm - 4:30pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, December 13
 

12:30pm EST

Online Poetry — Sparks in the Dark
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84539953779
Meeting ID: 845 3995 3779
James Davis is the author of Club Q, which Edward Hirsch selected for the
Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize and The Waywiser Press published in 2020. His work
has been featured on NBC News and CBC Radio and anthologized in two
installments of Best New Poets (2011, selected by D. A. Powell; and 2019, selected
by Cate Marvin). Recent poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Pleiades, The
Hopkins Review, The Gettysburg Review, Gulf Coast Online, and The Sewanee
Review. He is a PhD candidate in creative writing at the University of North Texas
and editor-in-chief of American Literary Review. His website is
jamesdavispoet.com.

Wednesday December 13, 2023 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, December 20
 

12:30pm EST

Online Poetry – Sparks in the Dark with Gunilla Theander Kester, Ph.D.
Swedish-born Gunilla Theander Kester, Ph.D. is the author and editor of six books in three genres including her full-length poetry book If I Were More Like Myself. In the last two years, she has written and published over 40 poems in various literary magazines including The American Journal of PoetryCitron ReviewPirene’s FountainPangyrus, and The Potomac Review. Her new book-length poetry collection—Hold Me Still—is looking for a publisher.

Click here to join us for this week’s online poetry event.

Wednesday December 20, 2023 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, January 10
 

12:30pm EST

Online Poetry — Sparks in the Dark
Click here to join the event on January 10 at 12:30 p.m.

Dane Cervine is a poet whose recent books include The World Is God’s Language (Sixteen Rivers Press), Earth Is a Fickle Dancer (Main Street Rag), and The Gateless Gate – Polishing the Moon Sword, from Saddle Road Press. Previous poetry books include Kung Fu of the Dark FatherHow Therapists DanceThe Jeweled Net of Indra, and What a Father Dreams. Dane’s poems have won awards from Adrienne Rich, Tony Hoagland, the Atlanta ReviewCaesura, and been nominated for a Pushcart. His work appears in The SUN, the Hudson Review, TriQuarterly, Poetry Flash, Catamaran, Miramar, Rattle, Sycamore Review, and Pedestal Magazine, among others. You can read more about Dane’s at his blog: https://danecervine.typepad.com/

Wednesday January 10, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, January 17
 

12:30pm EST

Online Poetry – Sparks in the Dark
Click here to join today’s poetry session.
Published globally with little to no reportable income. Full length collections include the upcoming haiku collection, Monet’s Bamboo, (CAPS Press, 2024) and Buckshot Reckoning (Luchador Press, 2023). mooncussers, (Luchador Press 2022); AmericanMental, (Luchador Press 2020); Blue Fan Whirring (Nirala Press, 2018). Anthologies: Calling All Poets 20th Anniversary Anthology, (CAPS Press); Reflecting Pool: Poets & the Creative Process (Codhill Press, 2018); Like Light: 25 Years of Poetry & Prose (Bright Hill Press, 2018); others. Now in its 25th year, Mike serves as President of Calling All Poets, New Paltz, Beacon NY. A 2016 Pushcart nominee, online CD reviews appear at All About Jazz and Lightwoodpress.com Co-Chair, Music Fan Film Series, Rosendale Theater. Host, New Jazz Excursions, WVKR 91.3. FM Vassar College. Regional music and art features Van Wyck Gazette, 2013-2020. The Rock n Roll Curmudgeon appeared in Rhythm and News Magazine, 1996-2003. He loves Emily most of all.
http://www.mikejurkovic.com

Wednesday January 17, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Online
 
Thursday, January 18
 

7:00pm EST

Rozzie Reads Poetry and Open Mic
Two featured readers plus an open mic.
Miriam O’Neal lives in Plymouth, MA. She has a special care for Rozzie, because her mother grew up there. Her poems have appeared in North Dakota Quarterly, The Galway Review, and elsewhere. Three books of poems bear her name; We Start With What We’re Given (Kelsay Press 2018), The Body Dialogues (Lily Poetry Review Books 2020), and The Half-Said Things (Nixes Mate 2022). In her world, birds are real.
Ewa Chrusciel is a poet, translator, and educator. She has four books of poems in English: Yours, Purple Gallinule (Omnidawn 2022), Of Annunciations (Omnidawn 2017), Contraband of Hoopoe (Omnidawn 2014), Strata (Emergency Press 2009, reprinted by Omnidawn, April 2018), plus three books in Polish: Tobołek (2016) Sopiłki (2009), and Furkot (2003). Contraband of Hoopoe was translated into Italian by Anna Aresi and came out in Italy with Edizioni Ensemble in May 2019. In her work, Ewa explores themes such as eco-poetics, exile, and migration.
For Zoom link contact: Vivshalom8@gmail.com


Thursday January 18, 2024 7:00pm - 9:00pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, January 24
 

12:00pm EST

Dear Mothership: Poems
A presentation from 2023–2024 Mary I. Bunting Institute Fellow Marcus Wicker

At Radcliffe, Wicker is completing “Dear Mothership,” a book of poetry that uses speculative narrative, empathy, and a hip hop aesthetic to explore reparations and examine the confounding ways humans treat one another when empowered by history and inheritance.

Free and open to the public.
To view this event online, individuals will need to register via Zoom.
For instructions on how to join online, see the How to Attend a Radcliffe Event on Zoom webpage.
After registering, you will receive a confirmation e-mail containing a link and password for this meeting.

Wednesday January 24, 2024 12:00pm - 2:00pm EST
Online

12:30pm EST

Online Poetry — Sparks in the Dark
Click here to join today’s poetry session.

Dennis James Sweeney is the author of You’re the Woods Too and In the Antarctic Circle, as well as four chapbooks of poetry and prose, including Ghost/Home: A Beginner’s Guide to Being Haunted. His first book, In the Antarctic Circle, won the Autumn House Rising Writer Prize and was a Debut Poetry Book of 2021 in Poets & Writers, as well as a finalist for the National Poetry Series and the Big Other Book Award. His second book, You’re the Woods Too, is a Small Press Distribution bestseller and a finalist for the Deborah Tall Lyric Essay Prize.
His fiction, nonfiction, and poetry have appeared in Ecotone, Ninth Letter, The New York Times, The Southern Review, and Witness, among others. Formerly a Small Press Editor at Entropy and Assistant Editor at Denver Quarterly, he has an MFA from Oregon State University and a PhD from the University of Denver. His writing has been supported by residencies from Brush Creek Foundation for the Arts, I-Park Foundation, and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. He is the recipient of a Fulbright grant to Malta.
Originally from Cincinnati, he lives in Amherst, Massachusetts, where he teaches at Amherst College.

Wednesday January 24, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, January 31
 

12:30pm EST

Online Poetry — Sparks in the Dark
Click here for the link to today’s poetry session.

Brian Culhane is the author of two collection of poems, The King’s Question (Graywolf Press) and Remembering Lethe (Able Muse Books). Recently, retired, he and his wife live in Seattle and spend summers in New York’s Catskills.

Wednesday January 31, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Online
 
Wednesday, April 3
 

12:30pm EDT

Online Poetry — Sparks in the Dark with Andrea Deeken
Andrea Deeken is the author of the chapbook, Mother Kingdom, winner of the
2021 Slapering Hol Press Chapbook Competition and finalist in the Poetry:
Chapbook Category of the 2022 International Book Awards. Her writing has
appeared in Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Beyond Queer Words, The Blue Mountain
Review, Hocus Tarot Chapbook Vol. 2, Ran Off With the Star Bassoon, Spoon River
Poetry Review, Valley Voices, and elsewhere. A former book editor, she has
worked for the Multnomah County Library for over fifteen years. She lives in
Portland, Oregon with her wife and child.

Wednesday April 3, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, April 10
 

12:30pm EDT

Online Poetry — Sparks in the Dark with Guy Reed
Guy Reed won the 2022 Littoral Press poetry prize and is author of Second Innocence (Luchador Press), The Effort To Hold Light (Finishing Line Press), and co-author, with Cheryl A. Rice, of Until The Words Came (Post Traumatic Press). His poems and essays have been published in journals both online and in print. He’s a graduate of The American Academy of Dramatic Arts. From Minnesota, Guy now resides in the Catskills Mountains. You can learn more about Guy here.

Wednesday April 10, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, April 24
 

12:30pm EDT

Online Poetry – Sparks in the Dark with Holly Iglesias & Landon Godfrey
Holly Iglesias is the author of three collections of poetry— Sleeping Things; Angles of Approach; and Souvenirs of a Shrunken World—as well as a critical work, Boxing Inside the Box: Women’s Prose Poetry. Her most recent publication is a collaborative chapbook, Myth America (Anhinga Press), co-written with Maureen Seaton, Carolina Hospital and Nicole Hospital-Medina. Holly has been awarded fellowships by the National Endowment for the Arts, the North Carolina Arts Council, the Edward Albee Foundation, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and teaches in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at the University of Miami, with a focus on archival and documentary poetry. Her current project is an intergenerational memoir in prose fragments with the working title Theories of Flight.

Landon Godfrey’s collection of poems, Inventory of Doubts, was selected by Dana Levin for the Tupelo Press Dorset Prize. She is also the author of Second-Skin Rhinestone-Spangled Nude Soufflé Chiffon Gown (Cider Press Review), chosen by David St. John for the Cider Press Review Book Award, and two limited-edition letterpress chapbooks, In the Stone (funded by a Regional Artist Project Grant) and Spaceship (Somnambulist Tango Press). Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in The American Poetry Review, New England Review, Copper Nickel, Slice, Studium in Polish translation, Best New Poets, Verse Daily, and other places. She has received fellowships from the NEA, North Carolina Arts Council, and Hambidge Center for the Creative Arts and Sciences. Also an artist, her current studio work includes drawing, painting, and printmaking. Born and raised in Washington, DC, she now lives in Northampton, MA.

Wednesday April 24, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, May 15
 

12:30pm EDT

Spark in the Dark — Joe Zaccardi
Joseph Zaccardi’s sixth book of poems, Songbird of the Nine Rivers, was
published by Sixteen Rivers Press in 2023.  His poems have appeared in Atlanta
Review, Cincinnati Review, Poetry East, Rattle, and elsewhere. Zaccardi served as
the poet laureate of Marin County, California, from 2013 to 2015, and edited
Changing Harm to Harmony: Bullies and Bystanders Project.
He says he has no working process that he can describe. Each day is a tree of
verbal apples to climb, and he is usually up there, unless he’s after the even more
delectable fruits of silence. He says, further, that to create a book of poems is a
selfless act and a minor miracle. But miracles, minor or otherwise, don’t happen by
happenstance; they are engendered in part by hard work and in part by the
generous help from other poets.

Wednesday May 15, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, May 22
 

12:30pm EDT

Sparks in the Dark with Lisken Van Pelt Dus
Lisken Van Pelt Dus is a poet, teacher, and martial artist, raised in England, the US, and Mexico, and now living in Massachusetts. Her work can be found in such journals as Conduit, The South Carolina Review, qarrtsiluni, and upstreet, and has earned awards and honors from The Comstock Review, The Atlanta Review, and Cider Press Review. Her chapbook, Everywhere at Once, was published by Pudding House Press in 2009, and her first full-length book, What We’re Made Of, is due out from Word Tech Publications’ Cherry Grove imprint in May 2016.

Wednesday May 22, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, May 29
 

12:30pm EDT

Sparks in the Dark with Lis Weiss
Elisabeth Weiss teaches writing and literature at Salem State University. She’s
taught poetry in preschools, prisons, and nursing homes and as well as to the
intellectually disabled. She’s worked at Harper and Row Publishers (HarperCollins)
and has an MFA from The University of Iowa Writers Workshop. She’s published
poems in London’s Poetry Review, Porch, Crazyhorse, Lily Poetry Review and
Birmingham Poetry Review. Lis won the Talking Writing Hybrid Poetry Prize for
2016 and was a runner up in the 2013 Boston Review poetry contest and the 2023
Small Harbor Hybrid Chapbook Prize. Her chapbook, The Caretaker’s Lament, was
published by Finishing Line Press in 2016. Lis runs a refugee resettlement
organization, North Shore Friends of Refugees, and works as a docent in a house
built by a shipping merchant in 1768.

Wednesday May 29, 2024 12:30pm - 1:30pm EDT
Online
 


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