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This Thurs: Art Taylor, Lauren Bender, Jennifer Depalma, & LunaSol @ Cheryl’s Gone

Art is going to mystery your ass off.

FB invite here.

Cherylsgone.com – Future events, archive of past readings.

May 12, 2011 – 8pm
Cheryl’s Gone presents…

Art Taylor (fiction)
Lauren Bender (poetry)
…Jennifer DePalma (poetry)
& music from LunaSol (folk duo)

Lauren Bender lives and works in Baltimore, where she is 1/3 of Narrow House and the whole director of the Show&Tell Series at Minás.

Art Taylor’s short fiction has appeared in several national magazines, including Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine and North American Review; online at Fiction Weekly, Prick of the Spindle, and SmokeLong Quarterly; and in various regional publications. His story “A Voice from the Past” was an honorable mention for the 2010 Best American Mystery Stories anthology. His story “Rearview Mirror” won the 2011 Derringer Award for Best Novelette. He regularly reviews mysteries and thrillers for the Washington Post and contributes frequently to Mystery Scene, among other publications. For more information: www.arttaylorwriter.com.

Jenn DePalma lives and works in Washington DC. She is an active member of the now defunct D’Steele Society of Advanced Poetics. She is half of the art collaborative the YAY team.

LunaSol is a female folk-rock band born in the beautiful Bay Area of Northern California in 2006. After meeting in law school, Lara and Heidi began performing together at local coffee shops and events in Berkeley, CA. After finishing law school in 2007, the band briefly separated until Heidi and Lara joyfully reunited in Washington, D.C. in 2008. LunaSol has since given several performances at Dahlak and Busboys & Poets in Washington, D.C., singing a mixture of folk-rock favorites and original songs by Lara Eilhardt. Listen online at http://www.myspace.com/lunasoldc.

@ Big Bear Cafe
1st and R NW
Washington, DC

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Jason Labbe on First Books

Jason Labbe wrote a very generous review of Pigafetta that appears in the current Colorado Review.

The introduction gives a particularly lucid view of the first book landscape:

The past several years have brought us an abundance of style-conscious first poetry books consisting (primarily or completely) of poems connected either by subject or formal treatment–and a good number of these series, sequences, and serial poems are highly crafted and quite enjoyable. The surplus of poets competing for first book prizes perhaps precludes, to some degree, a collection of discrete poems where we witness a younger poet trying her hand at various approaches, even failing sometimes. As I recently heard a well established poet say, “we’re in the age of the project.”

Jason infers that this is a ” monotonous” situation. I could read a whole essay on this alone.  So how ’bout it? To what degree are gatekeeping first book contests (and what we perceive they want) inflecting how we write?

Dorothea Lasky’s Poetry Is Not a Project at the very least affirms the idea that there is pressure for younger poets to have a project and that this emphasis on project is fundamentally wrongheaded–in that we are coming to value the project, the intellectual scaffolding, as much as the poem itself.

Or does the idea that a first book should be 60 MS pages turn all grand project ideas into little stones? Can we neatly wrap up in 60 pages writing about

the untimely death of our X

the photographs of y who mediates on z

?

It does seem like a project (as generated for a first book contest) can be a kind of self-imposed life-saver for poets. In that it keeps them above the water and gives them something concrete to hold onto while also drawing a tight circle around them and what they believe is fair game for their poetry to do. So what is the alternative? Forget first book contests run by academic presses? Start to value those presses whose vision is a bit more expansive–that take risks? I think so.

Either way, thanks to Jason. Check out his other review on Kate Greenstreet’s case sensitive and the others linked to on his blog. They’re worth your time.

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NEW NODE IN THE POETRY INTERNETOSPHERE

How a Poem Happens: Pretty much has dibs on every strictly lyric narrative poet who has a book awards on a college press. Poetry Daily: Sort of the same. Maybe a little more latitude. Action, Yes: Meat for the animals. notnostrums : FenceOctopus. EOAGH: Taking care of it on the fragmented side (w/notable exceptions).

This is my terribly reductive mini internet poetry landscape.

Here is another for your consideration: iO

Kyle & Wendy are hitting a sweet spot somewhere between the above while avoiding  content overload.  Issue One will have Susan Tichy, Franz Wright, Zach S, Kara Candito, and <sigh, yes, this post does have ulterior motives> me.

See the issue preview here.