Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

The Sequoia Reading - Thanksgiving with John Brantingham and Friends, November 26, 2017


We are so looking forward to this reading, celebrating nature and trees. We have lots to be thankful for in California, in terms of nature and trees....The Village Poets Monthly Reading for November, the last this year, will be held on Sunday, November 26, 2017, at 4:30 p.m., at Bolton Hall Museum, 10110 Commerce Avenue, Tujunga, CA 91042. 



The reading will include JOHN BRANTINGHAM and his students , CYNTHIA ANDERSON, CINDY RINNE , and SHAYMAA as featured poets (45 min. for the group) and two open mike segments. Refreshments are served and $3 donations collected for the cost of the venue, the second historical landmark in the City of Los Angeles, that celebrated its centennial in 2013.  The Museum is managed by the Little Landers Historical Society.


JOHN BRANTINGHAM

John Brantingham
John Brantingham teaches creative writing at Mt. San Antonio College, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park, and the Center for the Arts. He is the author of Dual Impressions: Poetic Conversations about Art, an ekphrastic collection. He also published the following books and chapbooks: East of Los Angeles,  Putting in a Window,  The Mediterranean Garden,  Heroes for Today,  Mann of War,  Let Us All Pray Now to Our Own Strange Gods,  The Gift of Form,  The Green of Sunset,  In the Land of Bears, and  Study Abroad. 

Brantingham also co-authored How to Write, a textbook, and wrote The Gift of Form: A Pocket Guide to Formal Poetry. His blog "30 Days until Done" contains different instructions every month: "This month we are writing poems about joy," or "This month, we write poetic letters..." Visit: http://johnbrantingham.blogspot.com/Two of his poems were featured by Garrison Keillor on the Writer's Almanac and you can find his books on Amazon.com.

CYNTHIA ANDERSON

Cynthia Anderson lives in the Mojave Desert near Joshua Tree National Park. Her poems have appeared in numerous journals, and she is the author of seven poetry collections, the most recent being Waking Life (Cholla Needles Press, 2017). She co-edited the anthology A Bird Black As the Sun: California Poets on Crows & Ravens. www.cynthiaandersonpoet.com
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CINDY RINNE

Cindy Rinne creates art and writes in San Bernardino, CA. She brings myth to life in contemporary context. Cindy is the author of Moon of Many Petals (forthcoming, Cholla Needles Press), Listen to the Codex (Yak Press), Breathe In Daisy, Breathe Out Stones (FutureCycle Press), Quiet Lantern (Turning Point), spider with wings (Jamii Publishing), and she co-authored Speaking Through Sediment with Michael Cooper (ELJ Publications). Cindy is a founding member of PoetrIE, an Inland Empire based literary community and a finalist for the 2016 Hillary Gravendyk Prize poetry book competition. Her poems appeared or are forthcoming in: Birds Piled Loosely, CircleShow, Home Planet News, Outlook Springs, The Wild Word (Berlin), Storyscape Journal, Cholla Needles, and others. www.fiberverse.com


SHAYMAA

Shaymaa is a writer currently living on the lam. She graduated from UC Berkeley with double bachelor's degrees in English and Gender & Minority studies. Her education inspired her to turn her sights onto social justice through policy and non-profit work, and she is pursuing her Master's in public administration and peace studies. She has been published in the Chiron Review, the Cal Literary Arts Magazine, Field Guide, and the East Jasmine Review, among others. She has also won numerous writing contests and scholarships, including multiple prizes in the Writer's Day Contest. She attends various poetry events, including open mics, the Southern California Literary Festival, and Drawing Inspiration from the Parks and finds them to be nourishing to her as a writer, an artist and a human being. She is proud of the fun fact that Poet Laureate and Pulitzer Prize winner Robert Hass read her poetry on a few occasions and said it, along with her life story, was fascinating and worthy of publication. She spends her free time traveling the world, in ill-lit forests and engaging in occult things like tarot, astrology, and cooking from memory.


Two poems by SHAYMAA

Discovery

A shock of blue, the scrub jay
takes us down the trail to a
tree with pockmarked bark.
Each hole is an acorn home.
They glint like a child's hoard.

The hillside is a dark enigma,
the torrential river below
hushing its tell. Tree green
and shadow black cavort,
drawing passerby inquiry.

The fire licks at the darkness,
and rain whispers into the air. No
one sees the grey cinders burn
white hot as a raindrop here and
there soothe the fire to a smolder.

A shimmer of blue-grey and
the day is gone. Settling to sleep,
the breathing nearby is delicious
temptation. No one has a name,
a history. When in a dark room,
the known and the secret look the same.


Wild Life

The clouds are a stained glass ceiling,
a skylight. The trees everywhere are
fingers, dirty hair, broccoli for kings.

Pay attention. Inhale the surroundings
from the mountain top. How do people
enjoy nature when hiking?

Being slow, I notice a salamander
with steps like babies, like vulnerability.
I notice the tick who hungers for my blood,
the wind in a quiet circumnambulation
of the Great Spirit.

The hills are a Gothic landscape, painted
by an auteur with only emerald, black,
and blue. The fog is a slowly reaching hand,
creeping toward trails that are moody footsteps.
I lead everyone, then fall behind, first finding the
trail, then letting it find me.

Getting lost here, starting a fire,
the darkness of everyone's faces,
subtle bundling, a sort of sudden
comfort from being in the same place
with strangers who smile and tell stories and
eat banana bread cookies without
seeing them in the dark.





Happy Thanksgiving, Everyone!


Note: Photos of sequoias from John Brantingham, photos of sycamore, oak and maple leaves, and pomegranates by Maja Trochimczyk

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Come on November 22, 2015 to Thank Jack Cooper and Jeanette Clough for their Poetic Gifts


So close to Thanksgiving, Village Poets' last Monthly Reading at Bolton Hall Museum in Tujunga, will feature poetry we have a reason to be really thankful for.  Jeannette Clough and Jack Cooper are both well known in Southern California poetry community, and beyond. Their presence with us will give us something to be thankful for...

The Monthly Village Poets Reading at Bolton Hall will take place on Sunday, November 22, 2015 at 4:30 p.m. There will be two segments of Open Mike Readings for our poets and refreshments will be served.  The Bolton Hall Museum is Historical Landmark No. 2 in the City of Los Angeles and is located at 10110 Commerce Ave, Tujunga, CA 91042.



Jeannette Clough


Jeanette Clough’s 2014 collection, Flourish, was a finalist in the Otis College of Art and Design and Eastern Washington University annual book competitions. She has edited and reviewed for journals, and served as Artist in Residence for the National Parks. Recent poetry appears in the Laurel Review and Colorado Review.


A Sample Poem, from Flourish:

Salt

I choose salt, a common mineral unfit for jewelry. 
Its ladder is fragile and vital, which other jewels are not. 

Salt lives in the blood.
It does not care how it is seen

but cares a great deal how it is savored on the tongue.

I cannot live without you, jewel of choice. 

I work myself into your skin so we will last together a long time,
older and tougher. 

I adorn my body with salt.  You comply,
an animal drawn to the lick. 

Predators skirt the underbrush but we ignore them
because our hunger is more huge. 

I wish to be nowhere but encasing the saltiness of you.

(C) 2014 by Jeanette Clough





Jack Cooper

Jack Cooper's first poetry collection, Across My Silence, was published by World Audience, Inc., 2007. His work has been nominated three times for a Pushcart Prize, and chosen as a finalist in North American Review's 2012 James Hearst Poetry Prize and in the 2014 Eco Arts Award in Creative Excellence, and winner, Annual Flash Contest, Flash Fiction Chronicles, April 2015.  His poetry and/or flash and mini-plays have also appeared in Slant, Bryant Literary Review, Santa Fe Literary Review, and many other publications. He is a contributing editor at www.KYSOflash.com.



We are very happy that Los Angeles Poet Laureate Luis J. Rodriguez found time to visit our reading in Sunland-Tujunga. Here's a group photo of Mr. Rodriguez with Village Poets at Bolton Hall Museum on October 25, 2015.

L to R: Mira Mataric, Maja Trochimczyk, Dorothy Skiles, Elsa Frausto,
Janet Nippell, Luis J. Rodriguez, Peter Larsen, Joe DeCenzo, Mari Werner,
Tom Hall, Marlene Hill - at Bolton Hall Museum.