A Local Reading & Interview Sneak Peaks

Next weekend, I’m reading with nine fellow poets and writers in Nebraska, some of them featured in LFF in 201, some just featured, and some soon to be featured. I will read the poem in Les Femmes Folles: The Women, 2011, the two poems in Womanhouse: The House That Feminism Built, and some from my forthcoming chapbooks.

Here’s the info for the reading and a link to the flyer (LFFreadingflyer):

Reading (poetry) in the Les Femmes Folles: The Women, 2011 with Sally Deskins, Lucy Adkins, Jaime Bruton, Megan Gannon, Natasha Kessler, Marianne Kunkel, and Marjorie Saiser
4 p.m., Saturday March 25, 2012
Parallax Space, 1746 N Street, Lincoln, NE

I hope to see you there! Sally Deskins will be selling copies of her beautiful book and lots of other books and chapbooks from the other writers will be for sale. Actually, I just got word my book-length collection of poetry SPRUNG may be out very, very soon. Yay! If it is out by the reading, I’ll definitely read from it.

And in a chapbook blog series update, coming up soon are interviews with Grace Bauer…

…Lucy Adkin…

…and Kristy Bowen.

I’m so excited!

Valentine’s Day reading

On February 14 at 7 p.m. I will be reading at Crescent Moon with Mary K. Stillwell. Given the date, I will be reading love and anti-love poems from my new chapbook Ghost Girl (Pudding House, 2010), poems from my dissertation on Matilda Fletcher, and maybe some other new work or poems from my forthcoming chapbook Branding Girls (Finishing Line Press, 2011).

Here’s a sneak peek: In my chapbook Ghost Girl the poem “Ghost Girl Wonders if she’s Always had Bad Eyes” is a new love poem and a break-up poem that meditates on vision, how traveling becomes an inspiration to re-see the world around us. In the poem Ghost Girl flies to Florida to walk the white sands, tours a city garden of roses, and visits an art museum with an exhibit on artistic responds to Hurricane Katrina.

no name

I want to thank those of you who attended the no name reading series last Friday. It was a good turn out and super fun! I was able to read from my new chapbook My Imaginary and from a series I’ve been working on which examines the life of Matilda Fletcher.

In other news The Whistling Fire has some of my poems from the My Imaginary series. I also have poems in the recent issues of Big Muddy and Nebraska Life. And, this just in, San Pedro River Review has accepted a poem and Specs has accepted a poem for their forthcoming issue on toys. Yeah!

naomi shihab nye

Today is the last day of a two week poetry and creative nonfiction workshop by Naomi Shihab Nye I’ve had the honor of taking. She’s funny, down to earth, warm, and endlessly generous. Last week she gave a wonderful reading at the Great Plains, reading pieces from Honeybee and Your & Yours, including two of my favorites: “Gate 4-A” and a piece on the McNay Museum. Several of my students attended the readings and almost all of my women’s poetry class. They were as excited and enthralled as I was. One student said she was still giddy, a week later. The few who didn’t go, seemed visibly upset to have missed it.

to teach honeybee

A friend asked me what I thought about Naomi Shihab Nye’s work 19 Varieties of the Gazelle which I was teaching. I’d heard Nye read in D.C.

“I think she’s a sweet poet,” I said. My friend looked at me, waiting, which made me think: a) sweet is not an intelligent word, b) that perhaps I knew nothing about the poet; c) that one day I would be able to converse with utter intelligence, sophistication, and verve, but today was not the day. I continued, “She read this poem in D.C. about cookie dust.” I then began to try and recount the poem which sounded a little like “this happened, and then this happened, and then this happened,” which likely increased my perception to said friend of my brilliance.

Alas.

Well, that was a semester ago and I’ve just finished reading Honeybee which I’m teaching in my comp class in the spring. And, it’s a sweet book, with sweet poems. (Dear future student, please stop reading now, as I’d hate if you knew all my thoughts on the book before we began our class discussion). Granted, Nye writes poems of witness and certainly here in Honeybee one will find her critique of war and the current-soon-to-be-gone administration, but for me my favorite poems are her sweet ones. Honeybee asks the reader to remember the little pollinators and to try and slow down. In “We Are the People” she writes,

I know people who, the minute they get into their
homes, tell you where they are going next.

I am one of them.

This is nothing to be proud of.

Of course, Nye reveals her bug knowledge , like “Bees take naps, too.”

My favorite two poems in Honeybee are “Before I read The Kite Runner” and “Gate A-4,” the latter being the cookie poem I once tried to describe. Read them. You’ll understand the sweetness. Here’s the first.

UPDATE: I just finished Nye’s You & Yours, which I’m also teaching in another class. In this text, I like her political, powerful, disruptive poems. Go figure.