“Mother, May I?” coming soon!!!
Trying to upload a link to goodreads.com
However, I was unsuccessful.
New news: Look for my next book “Mother, May I?” soon!!!
Trying to upload a link to goodreads.com
However, I was unsuccessful.
New news: Look for my next book “Mother, May I?” soon!!!
4.19.14 NaPoWriMo PROMPT: today’s (optional) prmpt. This is a bit silly, but it’s Saturday. I recently got a large illustrated guide to sea shells. There are some pretty wild names for sea shells. Today I challenge you to take a look at the list of actual sea shell names below, and to use one or more of them to write a poem. You poem doesn’t have to be about sea shells at all — just inspired by one or more of the names.
Peruvian Hat
Snout Otter Clam
Strawberry Top
Incised Moon
Sparse Dove
False Cup-and-Saucer
Leather Donax
Shuttlecock Volva
Striped Engina
Tricolor Niso
Triangular Nutmeg
Shoulderblade Sea Cat
Woody Canoebubble
Ghastly Miter
Heavy Bonnet
Tuberculate Emarginula
Lazarus Jewel Box
Unequal Bittersweet
Atlantic Turkey Wing
One never knows where a word will guide you. Join me.
Unequal Bittersweet Quest
You clam up when I yearn
for dialogue. What do we do
with this forbidden subject?
Is it just an American thing?
We are culturally unprepared?
We will all do it so why not
scamper along the options road.
Death. It is our end gift.
Do we want to go with earth
or fire? Our bone sacks
already sag. Where do they
want to be? Liberated
by fire so friends can take
chunks of bone and ashes to toss
over mountain tops and rivers?
Or settled sweetly beneath earth
where roots can bind
and earthworms rid us of the unnecessary?
Perhaps near a towering cedar
where ravens will sing my name in sunbreaks
and owls will remember me into the night.
It is part of the aging conundrum,
this resting place, the cave that tends
the final inert body.
Where shall we be, my Love?
Together always in spirit
even if one is earth and the other fire.
C.J. Prince
©2014
When I read a poem or a novel, I wonder about the creative process. What was the inspiration? How many re-writes. Who edits? When is it complete?
Just as Summer blew hot breath on Bellingham, poets Luther Allen and Judy Kleinberg presented SpeakEasy 11: Poet’s Mind: Concept & Process.
Who could ask for more? A cool breeze off the bay, perhaps but not a better line up or enthusiastic audience. This is what we wanted, the poem and the process. Each poem was projected on a large screen so the audience could see/read the words as the poet read.
I was so engaged in listening that I forgot to take photos of the actual performance. The evening began with Matthew Brouwer, just back in town from a poetry tour. His poem “Ode to a Small Town” made me think he’d just been to Fondis, Colorado. He hadn’t but the words captured the feeling of the fading past of our industrial and rural heritage.
Susan J. Erickson read “Casa Azul”, one of her Frida Kahlo poems in a series about women. When this is available as a chapbook, be sure to grab a copy. You won’t want to miss Sue’s well woven words and perceptions of famous women. She spoke of the writing, the editing and re-editing with her writing group and then with professional poets until the piece gleams, a gem well faceted. Sue said “It takes a village to write a poem.” (I have the good fortune to be in a critique group with Sue.)
I’d never heard Ryler Dustin before but I’m a fan now. His poem “Poorly Possessed” took me into the image not only of place but of the heart. He showed the re-write from the original to the final version.
I’ve known Jeanne Yeasting socially for years. She knocked my socks off with her prose poem. Her stage presence is strong, her poetry inviting us to consider another possibility.
Luther Allen, the man behind the SpeakEasy Poetry series, read a sparse, tanka-esque poem “Spring.” He shared his process of reduction to capture feeling and image.
The artist and poet who helps produce the SpeakEasy series is J.I. Kleinberg. I woke up thinking about how Judy works this morning. She writes “found” poems, words tucked within paragraphs or newspaper articles or magazine stories, words in a vertical connection rather than horizontal. She explained the process and showed pictures of tiny word groupings that eventually tumble together into poetry.
Caitlin Elizabeth Thomson is another poet I was not familiar with and I was fascinated by her dedication to a poetry project of writing a poem every day for a month in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. (Makes me think I might do that with the Lightcatcher.) Her poem “Other Lovers’ Letters” was engaging. I heard it one way and then when she talked about the process, I saw at least two more interpretations.
Caleb Barber, another poet new to me, is a writer I’ll look for in the future. His poem “A Morning at Adrift” caught me. His reading style is strong, and I just wanted to hear more.
I’ve met Sheila Sondik several times and heard her read. Last night I was captivated by her dedication to a poetry chapbook of “found” poems written from the novel “The Yearling.” The copying, cutting, pasting, and rearranging of words into the poem “A Thin Green April” made me hold my breath.
Nancy Pagh closed the evening with “Oars”. I heard some people say they were attending this event just to hear her. Now I know why. But when she said she didn’t keep previous copies of poems, that she crumples paper and tosses it in a wastebasket, I was shocked. No. Some great word combos may be going to the dump. Wait. Don’t do that I wanted to shout. However, I did speak to her after the performance and she advised me to do it. I shook my head. The refusal prompted her to give me another chance. “Here. Try it. Throw it away.” She crumpled the poem she’d just read and it handed me. You think I threw it away? Nope. It’s sitting by my laptop right now, all waded up and ready for trash. My cat actually tried to nab it this morning. It has a few teeth marks. No, I won’t let the cat chew it (he is inclined). I’m going to “borrow” a line from Nancy’s poem and race away into my own world of creation where I will carefully keep every copy of the re-writes, dated and where I read it at what venue.
The diversity of style, concept, process and presentation inspires me and settles my inner critic a bit. Just keep on writing, in my own style, with my own obsessions and limitations. It’s what makes for good entertainment.
NASA NIght photo of Earth
Little Blue Ball
Earth Day 1970. San Bernardino.
1971 First recycling meeting,
Valley of Enchantment.
Earth Day, hippie heaven
folding into mass culture.
Decades of parades and celebrations,
articles and consciousness evolving.
Small Azure Planet, third orb from the sun.
Earth Day 2013. Bellingham.
We sit at the dining table and write
love poems to Our Mother.
She gives us obsidian.
To Boston, I send Aconite 50 M
and standing stones of black tourmaline
a circle around the city to cleanse,
support, guide, and to release.
Mother Earth keeps on spinning,
her moon skirts unfurling.
Color returns to the garden.
Earth women wear fushia and chartreuse.
The celebration of the Spinning Turquoise Sphere,
in my eyes each day, in my heart,
each action, in my soul,
a blessing.
Copyright 2013
C.J. Prince
“Poetry is all that is worth remembering in life.”
~William Hazlitt
Bellingham poet Paul Fisher will read at the Sudden Valley Community Center, 8 Barn View, on Thursday, November 15, at 1:00 PM, hosted by the Bard Stormers, a Sudden Valley poetry study group. The event is free and open to the public.
Fisher, a Seattle native, is author of “Rumors of Shore”, which received the Blue Light Book Award. His poetry appears in literary journals, periodicals and several anthologies. He received and Individual Artist’s Fellowship in Poetry from the Oregon Arts Commission.
During 2012, Fisher has traveled around Washington state to read his poetry, including the Cascadia Poetry Festival, The Washington State Convention Center and the Floating Bridge Poets.
With precise language, breath taking metaphor and unexpected imagery Fisher invites the reader to an expanded perception of the world.
Copies of “Rumors of Shore” will be available for purchase.
Today I will be a panelist on The Care & Feeding of Writing Groups at Village Books in Fairhaven. An honor to be asked. A surprise to be referred. A scattering of thoughts. I ponder my own history in writing groups and with writers.
I see Mom in a slice of sunshine on soft golden tiles staring out at the bay of Naples, then returning pen to journal.
I see Aldous Huxley peering though thick glasses at huge notes as he speaks at a college. When I talk to him, I must drop my head back.
I remember an award for writing. Today is an improv. A panel of people with a variety of experiences. I remember the Womyn’s Centre Writing Group where sessions could push on into darkness and five hour sessions. Intense wild groups with deep character analysis.
Today is another moment of memory making.
Today I will be a panelist on The Care & Feeding of Writing Groups at Village Books in Fairhaven. An honor to be asked. A surprise to be referred. A scattering of thoughts. I ponder my own history in writing groups and with writers.
I see Mom in a slice of sunshine on soft golden tiles staring out at the bay of Naples, writing in her journal.
I see Aldous Huxley peering though thick glasses at huge notes as he speaks at a college. When I talk to him, I must drop my head back.
I remember an award for writing. Today is an improv. A panel of people with a variety of experiences. I remember the Womyn’s Centre Writing Group where sessions could push on into darkness and five hour sessions. Intense wild groups with deep character analysis.
Today is another moment of memory making.