Saturday, August 18, 2018
Spare Change News Poems: An Anthology of Homeless People and those Touched by Homelessness--Edited by Marc Goldfinger and Lee Varon
Spare Change News Poems: An Anthology of Homeless People and those Touched by Homelessness
Editors: Lee Varon and Mark Goldfinger
Ibbetson Street Press ( 2018)
http://ibbetsonpress.com
Review by Doug Holder
In the introduction to the new anthology Spare Change News Poems... editors Lee Varon and Marc Golfinger write:
" The Spare Change News newspaper was founded in 1992 by a group of homeless individuals and a housed advocate. Since its inception, Spare Change News has worked to elevate the voices of the homeless and economically disadvantaged people in the Boston Area.
In these pages you will find the poetry of many people who are who are homeless, or who have been touched by homelessness in some way. You will find the poetry of veterans, of those with mental health issues, or those struggling with substance abuse disorder. You will find poems written by incarcerated or formerly incarcerated people."
Personally-- I have a real connection to the paper not only for its laudable mission of giving the homeless a voice (and in some cases a chance to make a living by selling the paper), but years ago I was an arts reporter under the managing editor at the time Linda Larson--and assisted the poetry editor Don DiVecchio. I worked closely with late assistant editor Cynthia Baron, and former editor Marc Goldinger, as well. I learned a lot during my tenure with all these people. That being said, the poetry you will find in this anthology is not New Yorker-style work. It can be raw as the streets, visceral, heartbreaking and even heartwarming.
There are many fine poets, with fine poems in this collection like: Martin Espada, Marge Piercy, Alexis Ivy, the late Sarah Hannah and many more. In a poem by the editor Lee Varon titled "Colleen," the poet uses colors to vividly portray a young woman doomed by her torrid love affair with heroin:
Heroin is white
but your lips are blue
and blue is seeping into the room
where you passed out last week,
the room
where your head hit the floor,
blue dust is wafting from the ceiling,
oozing froom the floorboards...
In Martin Espada's poem " How We Could Haved Lived and Died This Way," Espada quotes Whitman,
Not songs of loyalty alone are these,
but songs of insurrection also,
For I am the sworn poet of every dauntless rebel the world
over.
Here in hardscrabble detail Espada, like Whitman, takes it all in-and sings a song for the marginal rebels who survive or don't survive the vagaries of the street:
I see the dark -skinned bodies falling in the street as their ancestors fell
before the whip and steel, the last blood pooling, the last breath spitting.
I see the immigrant street vendor flashing his wallet to the cops,
shot so many times there are bullet holes in the side of his feet....
I see the man hawking
a fistful of cigarettes, the cop's chokehold that makes his wheezing
lungs stop wheezing forever. I am in the crowd, at the window,
kneeling beside the body left on the asphalt for hours, covered in a sheet.
From reading this poetry it is evident that there is tragedy, and beauty on these mean streets and perhaps. ..salvation.
There will be a reading at Porter Square Books in Cambridge 7PM Aug 22
To order the book go to: http://lulu.com/ibbetsonpress
Friday, August 17, 2018
The Sunday Poet: Meg Smith
Poet Meg Smith |
Meg
Smith is a poet, journalist, dancer and events producer living in
Lowell, Mass.
Her poems have appeared in The Cafe Review, Poetry Bay, Astropoetica,
Illumen, Dreams & Nightmares, the Dwarf Stars anthology of the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry Association and many more.
As
a journalist, her coverage has been in honored by the New England
Newspaper And Press Association, including first place awards for
coverage of racial and ethnic issues, and coverage of religion.
She
is a past board member of Lowell Celebrates Kerouac! and produces the
Edgar Allan Poe Show, honoring Poe's presence in Lowell, Mass. She
recently published a second book of poetry, Dear Deepest Ghost,
available on Amazon.
The Amulet
For
keeping,
on a Cairo
balcony
overlooking
gardens of
satellite dishes
rooftop flowers
and rose-colored
dusk
calling,
chanting.
I know
every life here.
I hold this,
close,
wearing, to
signify,
everything
copper,
everything in a
diminishing sun.
Thursday, August 16, 2018
The Hastings Room Reading Series Presents: Seamus Heaney Memorial Reading: August 29th 7PM Tobin, Buchinger, Vincenz
Polished
linoleum shone there. Brass taps shone.
The
china cups were very white and big—
An
unchipped set with sugar bowl and jug…
“Clearances”
from
The Haw Lantern
Daniel
Tobin
is the author of
eight books of poems, most recently of The
Stone in the Air, his
suite
of
versions from the German of Paul Celan (Salmon Poetry, 2018). The
translation is called “lucid and lyrical” by Stephan Schneider.
Tobin’s many honors include the Julia Ward Howe Award, The Robert
Penn Warren Award, the Massachusetts Book Award in Poetry, "The
Discovery/The
Nation Award,"the
Robert Frost Fellowship, and creative writing fellowships in poetry
from the National Endowmentfor
the Arts and the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation.
Mary
Buchinger is
the author of three books of poetry, most recently e i n f ΓΌ h l u n
g/in
feeling (Main
Street Rag, 2018) and Aerialist (2015,
Gold Wake). Her poetry was chosen for the Raining Poetry Project
on Boston sidewalks and will be permanently installed in the city of
Cambridge, where she has served as a Cambridge Poetry Ambassador.
She’s been a featured reader at the Library of Congress
and is President of the New England Poetry Club
(founded by Robert Frost, Amy Lowell, Conrad Aiken).
Marc
Vincenz
has published
twelve books of poetry, including, most recently, Becoming
the Sound of Bees
(Ampersand Press, 2016), Leaning
into the Infinite (Dos
Madres Press, 2018) and The
Syndicate of Water & Light
(Station Hill, 2018). He is also a prolific translator and has
translated from the German, Romanian and French. His work has
received fellowships and grants from the Swiss Arts Council and the
National Endowment for the Arts, among others.
7pm at Christ Church ,O Garden Street--just outside of Harvard Square..
7pm at Christ Church ,O Garden Street--just outside of Harvard Square..
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