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Wednesday, October 31, 2007

CLAUDIA CARLSON READING RESCHEDULED

Claudia Carlson's reading from THE ELEPHANT HOUSE at Labyrinth (now Book Culture Bookstore) has been rescheduled to December 11 at 7 p.m.

Claudia will be reading with Matthew Thorburn.

Book Culture
536 West 112th Street (East of Broadway)
New York, NY 10025
p 212.865.1588
f 212.865.2749

Monday, October 29, 2007

STEPHEN PAUL MILLER AT TALISMAN READING!

Boog City presents

d.a. levy lives: celebrating the renegade press

Talisman House Press
(Jersey City, N.J.)

Tues. Oct. 30, 6:00 p.m. sharp, free

ACA Galleries
529 W.20th St., 5th Flr.
NYC

Featuring readings from

Figen Bingul
John High
Joel Lewis
Stephen Paul Miller
Paul Doru Mugur
Janet Rodney

and music from

So L'il

Wine, cheese, and crackers.

Curated and with an introduction by Boog City editor David Kirschenbaum

Saturday, October 27, 2007

CORDITE REVIEWS EILEEN TABIOS' LATEST MARSH HAWK PRESS BOOK!

Nicholas Manning offers a stunningly lovely review of Eileen Tabios' THE LIGHT SANG AS IT LEFT YOUR EYES . Click on excerpt below for entire review available in CORDITE:

Death, and silence, is the distillation of complexity and diversity, of all these vibrant languages, forms and histories, into something which unites them. It is perfection, yet such is Eileen Tabios’ vitalizing disposition, that even this perfection cannot seem an end. It too becomes poetic affirmation:

           “Don’t ever stop.” Be mad with me. Be ecstasy. Be me. . .

Monday, October 22, 2007

MARIE PONSOT JOINS ADVISORY BOARD

Marsh Hawk Press is delighted to announce that Marie Ponsot has joined our Artistic Advisory Board.

Native New Yorker Marie Ponsot was born in 1921. She has published numerous works, including Springing (Alfred A. Knopf, 2002); The Bird Catcher (1998), which won the National Book Critics Circle Award and was a finalist for the 1999 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize; The Green Dark (1988); Admit Impediment (1981); and True Minds (1957).

Marsh Hawk Press' Advisory Board will now be comprised of:

Toi Derricotte
Denise Duhamel
Marilyn Hacker
Allan Kornblum
Maria Mazziotti Gillan
Alicia Ostriker
Marie Ponsot
David Shapiro
Nathaniel Tarn
Anne Waldman
John Yau

In Memoriam Robert Creeley

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

EILEEN TABIOS READINGS

You are invited to two readings next week:

Oct. 21, "One Way or Another"

Featured poets: Eileen Tabios, Tsering Wangmo Dhompa, Cathy Park Hong, Paolo Javier, David Lau, Barbara Jane Reyes, and Truong Tran
2626 Bancroft Way
2621 Durant Avenue
Between College and Telegraph
October 21, 2007; 3:00 p.m.
Gallery C @ Berkeley Art Museum, Berkeley


Oct. 23, 2007, 7 p.m.
"Reading: Garrett Caples, Andrew Joron & Eileen Tabios"
Celebrating Philip Lamantia's 80th Birthday
City Lights Bookstore, San Francisco

Sunday, October 14, 2007

BASIL KING REVIEWED IN THE BROOKLYN RAIL; MARTHA AND BASIL KING IN BLACK MOUNTAIN COLLEGE FILM

Congratulations to Basil King whose 77 Beasts receives a nice review in Jeffrey Cyphers Wright's "Poetry Roundup" column in the October issue of The Brooklyn Rail. Click on excerpt below for whole review:
One of our most prominent poet/painters, Basil King studied painting and writing at Black Mountain College with such lions as Charles Olson, Robert Duncan and Estaban Vincente. His new book is an inventive romp through the prism of painters. / A little like Spoon River Anthology, King starts with a name. All 77 poems are titled by names of painters. Within that framework King alternately speaks in their persona or digresses on their technique or milieu. Occasionally he breaks out into sequences as in an open field, five-part section based on “The Maids of Honor” by Diego Valesquez. / In “Thomas Eakins” King states, “there is no truth/but the truth that contains fantasies.” This decree could equally apply to King’s drawing of three benign-looking beasts opposite the text and is an altogether fitting description of his own incisive invention.


*****

As Wright's column reminds, King studied painting and writing at Black Mountain College, and the film "Fully Awake: Black Mountain College" (with nice interview with Martha King as well as Basil King) is beginning to make the rounds. For more information, go to www.fullyawake.org. Here also is upcoming known schedule:

WASHINGTON, D.C.
December 23 at 2:00pm
December 27 at 1:00pm
December 28 at 1:00pm
National Gallery of Art, Free
National Mall between 3rd and 7th Streets at Constitution Avenue NW
http://www.nga.gov/programs/filmart.shtm#dec23

Friday, October 12, 2007

NORMAN FINKELSTEIN READING IN CHICAGO!

You are invited to a reading featuring

Michael Heller & Norman Finkelstein

Powells North Reading Series

Powells North Bookstore
2850 N. Lincoln Avenue, Chicago IL

Thursday, October 18th, 7:00 PM

For more information, go to http://powellsnorth.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

CLAUDIA CARLSON IN POETRY FOUNDATION BLOG

Rigoberto Gonzalez puts the "Wednesday Shout Out" spotlight on Claudia Carlson's The Elephant House. Click on excerpt below, which presents Gonzalez's take on the poem "Case Studies" for the whole blog post:

The curiosities and explorations of this poem from Claudia Carlon’s debut collection are central to the book—a poetic Bildungsroman, if you will, in which a young speaker’s nascent sexuality (and other important rites of passage) must navigate into the mixed messages and mysterious metaphors of the adult world. The poem is less about sex education as it is about the creativity and resilience of the young, and how during puberty we shape a context even for the most surprising of encounters. In this case, with the literature of fetishism, steamy romance novels, and pornography. Ah, memories.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

EILEEN TABIOS REVIEWED IN THE PHILIPPINE STAR

Eileen Tabios' The Light Sang As It Left Your Eyes was reviewed in the Oct. 8, 2007 issue of The Philippine Star, a Manila newspaper. Here's an excerpt from Juaniyo Arcellana's review:

Another writer ... is the Fil-Am Eileen Tabios, who comes out with books as if they were going out of style, then again maybe they are.

Her latest, and according to her the last in a long while, is The Light Sang as It Left Your Eyes (Marsh Hawk Press), subtitled “Our Autobiography.” And though the selections here are classified as poetry one isn’t really sure as Tabios has been known to subvert the genres almost as if it were a fetish, perhaps even deriving some satisfaction out of our inability to place her under one label or category.

The Light Sang is a heart wrenching chronicle of the death of her father, a day-by-day, blow-by-blow account of how the Tabios patriarch wastes away on a hospital bed, as well as the diffuse aftermath of regret, catharsis, self-examination, whatnot, whatever it is a poet or writer needs to come to terms with oneself and one’s past.

Indeed there are several sections that seem too personal, and make the reader feel like a voyeur or intruder, or for us to suspect that the writer is something of an exhibitionist. Maybe it is a little bit of both sides of the existential coin.

The writer makes good use of autobiography as in itself a conceit for her poetry, a construct that when left alone may soon enough crumple by the wayside like the shattered feeling of one who has just been orphaned.

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

CLAUDIA CARLSON READING

Claudia Carlson and Matthew Thorburn will read their poetry at Labyrinth Books (Broadway, on W. 112th Street) in New York City, starting at 8 p.m. on November 8, 2007.

Monday, October 01, 2007

EILEEN TABIOS' REVIEW AND GIGS

A preview of a Midwest Book Review article on Eileen Tabios' The Light Sang As It Left Your Eyes is now available at the reviewer's blog. Click on excerpt below to see the whole review by Laurel Johnson:

Her father‘s dying does not soften Eileen Tabios‘ reflections on injustice. “April in Los Angeles” is a 120 verse contemplation on love, grief, horror, exhaustion and regret that zeroes in on the cost cutting cruelty practiced by modern hospitals. Tabios fans will discover that sorrow has neither blurred her outlook on world politics or injustice, nor smothered her passionate love of friends, family, and literary excellence. This autobiography in poetry and prose is typical Tabios -- intensely personal yet international in flavor -- with translations by and collaborations with her peers from other lands. Highly recommended.


Eileen Tabios also will be reading from The Light ... at her October events:

Oct. 13, Litquake with SPD
Featured Poets: Eileen Tabios, Joseph Lease, Elaine Kahn, Dennis Somera, Tanea Lansford and "Pickleman"
Marsh Cafe at 1070 Valencia near 22nd, San Francisco
Begins at 8 p.m.
Featuring SPD's "Poetry Trading Post": Trade a poem or story for a Free Book!

Oct. 21, "One Way or Another"
Featured poets: Eileen Tabios, Tsering Wangmo Dhompa, Cathy Park Hong, Paolo Javier, David Lau, Barbara Jane Reyes, and Truong Tran
Gallery C @ Berkeley Art Museum, Berkeley
2626 Bancroft Way
2621 Durant Avenue
Between College and Telegraph
October 21, 2007; 3:00 p.m.

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