Friday, April 5, 2019

Village Poets' Featured Poet for 28 April 2019 - Mary Fitzpatrick and Paintings for Ekphrastic Projects for May



MARY FITZPATRICK

Mary Fitzpatrick is a fourth-generation Angeleno who holds a BA from UC Santa Cruz and an MFA from UMass Amherst. Her poetry career is divided in two parts, separated by 17 years. In Part II, her poems have been featured in Atlanta Review and North American Review as contest finalists, have been finalists in the 2010 Beyond Baroque and Inkwell Poetry Contests, as well as for the Joy Harjo Poetry Prize and the Slapering Hol Chapbook Award. Her work has been featured in Mississippi Review, Atlanta Review and North American Review where she was a contest finalist. Her poetry has been published in journals, including Agenda (UK), The Dos Passos Review, ASKEW, The Georgetown Review, on-line by Writers at Work (L.A.), as well as in Hunger Mountain, Miramar, The Paterson Review, and in anthologies such as Wide Awake: Poets of Los Angeles & Beyond and Cancer Poetry Project 2. Her corporate career included translating electric-energy innovations into human prose; she works as a communications manager in a large corporation. In her non-profit career, she boosted the fortunes of a small Catholic elementary school.


Basho's Death

not turning, standing still
the snow turning his black hair white
suspended in a bronze gong’s
chime not turning
phrases in his mind but letting the notes alight
and write their own lines; seasons turn; standing
in his summer hut
all night grasshoppers churn their tune
Basho writes by the harvest moon’s
light; then
not standing still but turning
on highest mountain top he sees
the red carp sun straddle
east and west   turning to catch
its either light standing
in Fuji’s red snow while tiny boats
drift below; when the snows melt turning
his muddy feet to riverbanks / plum blossoms
turning in the warm breezes light
with spring, Basho not answering
the call to another cup of plum
wine Basho stands unsteady in a tiny boat,
turns it to moon’s broad reflection on the pond
leaning over to kiss it and he’s gone




published in Poet & Critic
Vol. XIII, No. 3   1982




Almost Fruit by Maja Trochimczyk

Sweet are the Uses of Adversity
            
             Sweet are the uses of adversity
            Which, like the toad, ugly and venomous,
            Wears yet a precious jewel in its head.
                                                -- William Shakespeare



Sweet are the uses of adversity — the office
culture I have grown around, the
strategic plan, draft document, political
message meant to motivate — a skill,
a skein of words I have grown
as an appendage, developed skin around.
Sweet are the uses of adversity — provide
Jesuit, Franciscan, community, university:
the education I had to my children.
Sweet are the uses of adversity — the mate
for twenty years, a skein
of months, laughter, jokes, sorrow, bitterness between us and I
have pits and fissures and blooms and growth
I’ve grown skin around to stay.
Sweet are the uses of adversity: the modern
whizz, car chase, crammed calendar, lack of peace, the pace
a price to pay for all we have — far from want, we will not starve.
Sweet are the uses of adversity as used
by the hopeful who alit
at Jamestown, Plymouth, any yard
where they planted food and buried
their young, their many dead. A certain determination
swelled; they stayed. And I
— another pair of hands, another hauler
of the great barge forward —
see the head of land, hear sloshing waves,
know my part of the coarse, warty flesh, intent
on that jewel glint.


published in Agenda
Vol. 41. Nos. 3-4 (double issue)
Winter 2005


Speed of Light, by Maja Trochimczyk

 

One Face May Hide Another
                                            
after Kenneth Koch
 
I wait at least a moment
and see what is already there
as at a crossing
when one brindle bulldog
may hide another
while evening cools the air
and though one can scarcely believe
in a creature so preposterous,
yet when the light changes
there is another that appears
when their leashes split
from a single hand, and if I wait
I’ll surely see the other holding
a cell phone, for no walker
is disengaged, as at a stoplight
when one looks left to see
what one expects, the next
driver with a cell phone, but sees
instead a brindle bulldog
on the driver’s lap, a second
bulldog in the back, the driver
searching for her cell phone. Now looking up
one scouts around to see
if the streets aren’t full of brindle bulldogs
but finds instead they’re full
of people dressed in slim black pants
who haunt the sidewalks, step
in and out of cars. Some
have cell phones, some
red hair. One recedes
in her red sandals, the undersides
wink at me with each step: red,
white sole, red – then one’s
a red dot on a parrot’s cheek
and another parrot shrieks
as they hurtle, gadflies, tree to tree
and I look at least a moment, see
red flowers in the flame trees
which then take flight as parrots’ cheeks
receding with each flap, dodging
people on the streets
dressed in slim black pants. And one
is your friend, one is mine, and one
holds a cell phone or two
leashes in one hand. And though
I thought I saw you once before
it was instead
someone who resembled you and paused
and stroked her chin just to consider
if I was her cousin or her cousin’s friend
or simply looked like her –-
then drove away
with brindle bulldogs.  





FEATURED ARTIST - SANDY FISHER ON MAY 26, 2019

We are asking poets to write poems to eight paintings by Sandy Fisher, more information about her will be posted later, here are just the paintings to view and write about. 

Awaiting Monet

Autumn Ablaze


Break of Day at Big Rock Creek


Golden Hour in Owens Valley

Where the Road Bends

Springdale Sunset on Johnson Mountain

 Quiet Harbor

Sweet Whisper

PHOTOS FROM THE READING BY PEGGY DOBREER 
AND MANDY KAHN ON MARCH 24, 2029

Mandy Kahn and Peggy Dobreer

Maja Trochimczyk, Mandy Kahn, Peggy Dobreer








Kathabela and Rick Wilson

Kathabela and Rick Wilson

Peggy Dobreer



Seated L to R: Marlene Hitt, Mira Mataric, Mandy Kahn, Peggy Dobreer, Kathabela Wilson
Standing L to R: Dorothy Skiles, NN, PAm Shea, Peter Larsen, Maja Trochimczyk, Lois P. Jones, NN, Seven Dhar, Rick Wilson






Monday, March 4, 2019

Peggy Dobreer and Mandy Kahn at Village Poets on Sunday March 24, 2019

Big Tujunga Wash, February 2019, Photo by Maja Trochimczyk

Village Poets of Sunland Tujunga present Peggy Dobreer and Mandy Kahn as Featured Poets on Sunday, September 25, 2016 at 4:30 p.m. at Bolton Hall Museum (10110 Commerce Avenue, Tujunga, CA 91042). The reading will feature two Open Mike segments and refreshments. We will pass around the  hat of George Harris, the builder of Bolton  Hall Museum, Los Angeles Historic Monument no. 2 (from 1913), for voluntary donations of $3 per person. 

PEGGY DOBREER 


Peggy Dobreer won Downey Symphony Orchestra’s, Poetry Matters 2016 Contest.  She has one pushcart nomination from Cadence Collective, and two books with Moon Tide Press: Drop & Dazzle and In the Lake of Your Bones. Peggy is featured in the first Aeolian Harp Folio Series by Glass Lyre Press and has been published in Cultural Weekly, The Rise Up Review, Pirene’s Fountain, For the Love of Words, Mas Tequilla Press, Malpais Review, and LA Yoga Magazine among others. 

Peggy is a longtime educator and former dancer, who taught with Red Hen Press for Writing in the Schools, and was a Program Director for AROHO2015, A Rom of Her Own Foundation. She has curated and promoted other poets at venues in LA for 15 years. Visit her at www.peggydobreer.com.

Calla lily leaf, by Maja Trochimczyk

Exquisite Harmonics


What is exquisite
            is the breaking of china
                        splash against tile
            bright tones of glass

What is exquisite
            is the tango of Kali
                        The savory statement
            of unsung stanzas
The brain quenching
                        fire of mouths

Migration of the herd
            to the gate of the mind
                        Throne of the flesh
                                    that lights up the eye
                                                Arc of the rib to
                                                            the bone in the soup

What is exquisite
            is a memoir of the body
                        A vibratory tonic of
            connective harmonics
guiding chants that
                                                cannot be extinguished

What is exquisite
            is this limitless unleadening
                        alchemy of Ganesh on our sleeves

In the breath
            of the opening cage
                        the rush to rhapsody’s rest
                                    in the eyes of the hawk
                                                on the wings of a loon
                                                            who light this way and
                                                                        fill these forests with sound                    

  (C) by Peggy Dobreer


MANDY KAHN


Mandy Kahn

Mandy Kahn is the author of two poetry collections, Glenn Gould’s Chair and Math, Heaven, Time. Her poetry is included in The Best American Poetry 2018 from Scribner/Simon & Schuster and was featured in former Poet Laureate Ted Kooser’s newspaper column American Life in Poetry. She’s given readings at Cambridge University, London Review Bookshop and Shoreditch House in England, at Motto in Berlin, at Colette in Paris, at Printed Matter in New York, at Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco, and at many venues in Southern California, and has been interviewed by BBC Radio, Flaunt and The Los Angeles Review of Books. She frequently collaborates with composers to create new works that combine verse and classical music and was a librettist for Yuval Sharon’s immersive opera Hopscotch. 


THE EVERYDAY

Old friends, old loves, I celebrate
the day-to-day you’ve found: the favored cup,
the dog, the child, the husband, wife—
the hat rack by the door, the bowl of keys,
the chair in sun,
weekends with your omelets made
just right. You graduated into
the encyclopedic pleasures of the everyday,
that brighter vision—
the sharp phantasmagoria you enter
when you watch your child through sprinkler water:
that moving prism.

Didn’t I always tell you, lover, roommate,
there were portals by the dishtowels?
          
                                    You think you left your dreams.

You’ve entered
the Basilica of the Present
by its common causeway.

This, your striving earned.

Pier in Hermosa Beach, by Maja Trochimczyk

The Tour Guide


I followed the German tour guide
through the hulking old basilica.

He told the group (or so I guessed),
indicating high and low:

This is where the wind begins.

This is where the childhoods of a thousand
martyrs live, untouched.

Wood grain in these pews still curls
to likenesses of patron saints.

Window-holes are cut the breadth
of human souls, when loosed.

Dark paint in the frescoes is crushed ants.
White paint is light.

Leaves and fauna long extinct are rendered
in the porticoes. See that goat
with antlers? Gone from life,
but captured here.
(Hold your breath and it bows its head.)
(Reach towards the ceiling and sigh, and it sighs.)

Worth two times the value of the Bulgar Sea
is that old bell.

(When younger priests
would ring it,
the nuns were warned to shield their hearts.)

He said far more
I can’t recall

and when I tried to pay him,
he spurned my coins, saying, in German,

What good is money,

my child, to the wind?


Pacific Ocean with LA seen from Hermosa Beach, Maja Trochimczyk

VILLAGE POETS NEWS

VILLAGE POETS ANTHOLOGY


In 2020, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Village Poets Readings, Moonrise Press will issue a Village Poets Anthology, with poems by featured poets - and regular attendees of the readings over the past ten years. Please submit your poems and bios on moonrisepress website - or via email in one attachment with three poems (one will be selected) and a 150 to 200 word biographical notes.  
Email to maja@moonrisepress.com.  Submission deadline - August 31, 2019.

Due to large number of contributors, the anthology will be available for sale to contributors of one poem each at heavily discounted price of $10. An eBook will also be made. 


TOTI O'BRIEN FEATURE IN FEBRUARY 2019

L to R, standing: Maja Trochimczyk, Joe DeCenzo, Dan Krosser, Marlene Hitt, Pauli Dutton, Pete Larsen, Rick Wilson, Rick Dutton, Mari Werner, Sharon Hawley with issue of Colorado Boulevard with an article by Toti. Seated L to R: Pam Shea, Kathabela Wilson, Toti O'Brien, Joyce Futa, Mary Torregrosa.

L to R, standing: Maja Trochimczyk, Joe DeCenzo, Dan Krosser, Marlene Hitt, Pauli Dutton, Pete Larsen, Rick Wilson, Rick Dutton, Mari Werner, Sharon Hawley with issue of Colorado Boulevard with an article by Toti. Seated L to R: Pam Shea, Kathabela Wilson, Toti O'Brien, Joyce Futa, Mary Torregrosa.



During the reading, Maja Trochimczyk presented the California Quarterly vol. 44 no. 4 edited by Margaret Saine including her poem, "Oh, the Art of Looking."  Trochimczyk then encouraged poets to submit their work to the CQ via the website of the California State Poetry Society. Dr. Trochimczyk has just been elected the new Acting President of the CSPS.  The Society organizes monthly poetry contests, annual poetry contests, and publishes the California Quarterly, edited by eight California poets, each with a different voice, priorities and interests.  This makes the journal vibrant and relevant.



The same group with Dorothy Skiles on the left, and Alice Pero next to Marlene. 




Sunday, January 27, 2019

Toti O'Brien Shares her Creativity and Poetry on February 24, 2019



 Orange Blosoms by Maja Trochimczyk


Toti O'Brien will be featured poets at the Village Poets Monthly Reading are held on Sunday, February 24, 2019 at 4:30 p.m., at Bolton Hall Museum, 10110 Commerce Avenue, Tujunga, CA 91042. The reading will include two open mike segments; refreshments will be 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.


TOTI O'BRIEN
 
Toti O'Brien is the Italian Accordionist with the Irish Last Name. She was born in Rome, Italy, raised in Sicily and France. After touring Europe and Brazil with her itinerant theater, in the early nineties, she established herself in Los Angeles where she makes a living as a self-employed artist, performing musician and professional dancer.


O’Brien’s first book of stories, Africa, was published in 1990. It was followed by another short story collection, Reversed Memories, two illustrated children books and an essay collection, Lanterna Magica, gathering selected work out of her long-term collaboration with Italian journals and magazines.


O’Brien started writing in English language in 2004. Since, her poetry, fiction and non fiction were published in hundreds of journals and anthologies in the US, UK, Ireland, Canada, India, Australia, and all over the world. Her most recent appearances include CultureCult, Metafore, Gyroscope and the Mizmor Anthology. Her work was nominated for Best of the Net, Best Small Fiction, Best American Essay, the Pushcart, and various other prizes. Her memoir ‘Nicotine’ won a nonfiction prose award in 2018. Her essay ‘Blur In The Front Line’ won the Anthony Award for inspiring and revolutionary work in nonfiction prose in 2016. Besides her creative writing, she contributes articles and reviews about art, music, film, literature and civilization to several magazines. She also translates poetry and prose from the Italian, the Spanish, and the French.


O’Brien’s multimedia artwork was exhibited in group and solo shows in Europe and the US, since the early nineties. Her paintings, sculptures, collages and textiles were featured in many publications, and she has produced book covers and illustrations.  She majored in Music, specializing in Vocal Performance. She currently performs classical and popular music as a vocalist and an instrumentalist, both solo and as a member of several groups.  She was trained in contemporary dance and acrobatics, and she is currently a member of two dance companies.





Aprile by Toti O'Brien.

 
ALIEN ALIEN


If belong is something
to be built
and believed
before
clouds of insularity
conceal chronic solitudes
deep bites of separation
bleed themselves to the bone
nailing upon flipped chessboards
dried up postures
unmovable
oppositions
                                                finallyripped away
                                                en route towards liberty
old flags float
unanchored                            
squinting at promised lands
seeking for ground
improbable



Alter, Alter by Toti O'Brien
 
MIGRATION


As you vanish, unchecked
grasping frantically
at denial
(your trusted safety belt)
trying to resist sinking

noticing
on a glimpse of consciousness
you cannot tell your age
or mine, or today’s date

‘then’ you say
‘we should say farewell.
I might not recognize you
the next time around.’

‘Chances are you won’t, Mom.’
‘But you’ll love me nevertheless’
I would like to add.
Tears choke me.

‘You’ll love me’
my mind whispers
‘because of the cormorants
we watched from the riverbank.’

Your arm weighing over mine
as I pointed at dark silhouettes
long necks
wide wingspans.

You were all there, were you?
Enjoying the breeze
and my words.

When you’ll recognize me
no more, your body
—your nameless soul—
will recall the cormorants
and the afternoon sun.

Your arm will seek mine.
You’ll know I am a good thing
you can lean on.


Cassandra by Toti O'Brien


MOTHER TONGUE



How it crumbles
like pebbles slipping between your fingers.
Oh, the number of rings you possess.
Aren’t jewels stones?

Only
when your brain has scattered
like beads on a carpet
you start marveling at the uselessness
of redundant adornment.

Gold is dust
swallowed by lazy waters.
After a long season of draught
riverbanks are sunken
and a reek of mud fills our nostrils
as we walk.

Your step has become unsteady
one of your feet, askew
skids on its own course.

Mother tongue
as you lose it
the universe falls apart.
All of my past implodes
as its vessel gives in.

Cracks, leakage
infiltration were bearable.
Now this rupturing ends the empire.
Such sadness.
Like a flight of swallows
headed to Neverland.

With your silence
long-lasting spells will subside
something whispers into my ear.
Not a comforting sound
but the metallic utterance of a toy frog
whose mechanics are breaking
as your lips harden.

If the spell will dissolve
what will remain?
A dryness of bones
a flayed snake
as defenseless as a severed length
of garden hose.

I’ll become an alphabet
unknown to myself
a satchel of un-deciphered symbols
yet another story untold.

 Toti O'Brien with her artwork, 2016.




VILLAGE POETS NEWS


The January 2019 reading included a wealth of verse by local and faraway poets, including a presentation of a new anthology edited by Kathabela Wilson, based on meetings in Japanese Stearns Garden in Pasadena; as well as Lloyd Hitt's collection of poems, work in Japanese and English by Mariko Kitakubo, commemoration of the International Holocaust Memorial Day by Maja Trochimczyk, poetry about foster youth by Cile Borman, and many other fascinating works of verse.
 




Poets L to R: Seated. Cile Borman, Mr. Borman, Gabriel Meyer, Mariko Kitakubo, Kathabela Wilson, Rick Wilson. Standing L to R: Maja Trochimczyk, Mr. Foster, Jan King, Jonathan Vos Pos, Marlene Hitt, Jackie Chang, Kathleen Travers, Joe DeCenzo, Elsa Frausto, Bo Kim, Dorothy Skiles, Charles Harmon.

Gabriel Meyer with Maja Trochimczyk with rosemary and camellia from Maja's garden.  






Poets L to R: Seated. Cile Borman, Mr. Borman, Gabriel Meyer, Mariko Kitakubo, Kathabela Wilson, Rick Wilson. Standing L to R: Maja Trochimczyk, Mr. Foster, Jan King, Jonathan Vos Pos, Marlene Hitt, Jackie Chang, Kathleen Travers, Joe DeCenzo, Elsa Frausto, Bo Kim, Dorothy Skiles, Charles Harmon.