Poetry

June 30, 2008

Summer 2008 Issue of Beltway Poetry Quarterly

Beltway Poetry Quarterly announces it's summer volume. The Forebears Issue includes essays that celebrate individuals and locations important to their writing:


  • a photo essay on DC AUTHOR'S HOUSES by Kim Roberts and Dan Vera

  • Taquiena Boston and Vera J. Katz on OWEN DODSON

  • M.A. Schaffner on AMBROSE BIERCE

  • Grace Cavalieri on ANN DARR

  • Olivia Barbee on GWENDOLYN BENNETT

  • Kathi Morrison-Taylor on JOAQUIN MILLER

  • Myra Sklarew on LEON-GONTRAN DAMAS

  • Merrill Leffler on GABRIELLE EDGCOMB

  • Elisavietta Ritchie on JOHN PAUKER

  • Mark Opsasnick on JIM MORRISON and BEAT COFFEEHOUSES


This is the third issue in a series documenting the rich literary history of Washington, DC. Beltway Poetry Quarterly is also pleased to welcome a new summer intern, Alyssa Schimmel. Alyssa is serving as an editorial assistant, and has already updated one of the most popular sections of the Beltway Resource Bank, The Poet Links, which provides links to other web sites featuring individual area poets, past and current.

Finally, Beltway Poetry Quarterly annouces Maureen Thorson as co-editor of a new themed issue on the subject of museums. Poems on the theme are welcome from any poets currently living in DC, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia or Delaware. Entries will be read throughout the month of August. Full guidelines can be found on the journal's website.

Gaea Honeycutt
blog@weirdingword.com


Weirding Word®, a division of G.L. Honeycutt Consulting, LLC, is a virtual publication department that provides editing, freelance writing, and publication and web design services.

Copyright 2008 Gaea L. Honeycutt. All rights reserved.

June 15, 2008

June Beltway Poetry Quarterly and Metro Area Events

The June Poetry News is now online at Beltway Poetry Quarterly, with listings of calls for entries, new publications, and special events.

Upcoming events include:


"GLBT Poets of Washington," a guided walking tour of the Dupont Circle neighborhood, June 21, 10:30 am to noon. Led by Dan Vera, the tour costs $5 and advance reservations are required. Celebrate Gay Pride Month and learn how gay literary culture has flourished from the 1970s to the present in the Dupont Circle neighborhood, with the influence of such writers as Essex Hemphill, Ed Cox, Tim Dlugos, Michael Lally, Lee Lally, Richard McCann, Andrew Holleran, and many others. Stops include Dupont Park, Lambda Rising Bookstore, the site of the Community Bookshop, and writer's homes. This is an expanded version of the tour first developed for the Split This Rock Poetry Festival in March 2008. The tour takes approximately 1.5 hours and will run rain or shine. Limited to 25 participants. Please wear comfortable walking shoes and carry water. The tour starts outside the Starbucks Coffee where Connecticut Avenue and New Hampshire Avenue intersect with the northern part of Dupont Circle. RSVP to Kim Roberts at beltway@mac.com.

Gaea Honeycutt
blog@weirdingword.com



Weirding Word®, a division of G.L. Honeycutt Consulting, LLC, is a virtual publication department that provides editing, freelance writing, and publication and web design services.

Copyright 2008 Gaea L. Honeycutt. All rights reserved.

April 11, 2008

Welcome Spring With Beltway Poetry Quarterly

Beltway Poetry Quarterly announces the Spring 2008 issue, featuring six talented poets whose work will surprise, delight, and inspire:


ABDUL ALI, a recent graduate of Howard University, where he edited the campus literary journal and won the Mt. Vernon Poetry Festival;

CARLEASA COATES, a Cave Canem alumna and a trial lawyer who has practiced in Boston and, for the past ten years, in Washington;

DAVID KEPLINGER, an Associate Professor in creative writing at American University;

JUDITH McCOMBS, a Margaret Atwood scholar and author of five books of poems:

JOSE PADUA, a performance poet who made his name in the clubs of New York City before moving to northern Virginia;

and MAUREEN THORSON, winner of the Poetry Society of America's National Chapbook Fellowship and publisher of Big Game Books, an experimental small press.


In addition to the new issue, don't forget to check the April Poetry News. Filled with a wide range of readings and performances for National Poetry Month, the News also lists new publications, calls for entry, and a special feature on summer writing workshops that are enrolling participants now.

Gaea Honeycutt
blog@honeycuttconsulting.us


Weirding Word®, a division of G.L. Honeycutt Consulting, LLC, is a virtual publication department that provides editing, freelance writing, and publication and web design services.

Interested in guest blogging? Please see the Weirding Word (SM) Blog Guide.

March 07, 2008

Delaware Poetry Review Features 22 Poets

The second issue of the Delaware Poetry Review is out, featuring 22 poets with ties to the Delmarva Region. The Winter 2008 issue includes an exciting range of voices, including:

  • Sandra Beasley, winner of the 2007 New Issues Poetry Prize;

  • Gary Blankenburg, founding editor of Maryland Poetry Review;

  • Sunil Freeman, Assistant Director of the Writers Center in Bethesda;

  • Michael S. Glaser, former Poet Laureate of Maryland;

  • Shelley Grabel, faculty member at Delaware Technical and Community College;

  • Gerry La Femina, director of the Frostburg Center for Creative Writing at Frostburg State University;

  • Ann Menebroker, author of over 20 books;

  • John Ramspeck, winner of the 2007 John Ciardi Prize for Poetry;

  • Sue Ellen Thompson, editor of The Autumn House Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry;

  • Billie Travalini, founding director of the New Castle Writers' Conference; and

  • Jeanne Murray Walker, professor of English at the University of Delaware.

The issue includes poets who have national reputations alongside poets who are just beginning to publish (and one poet who makes his very first appearance in print with this issue).

The Delaware Poetry Review was inaugurated in 2007. The free, online magazine is published in Lewes, DE, and dedicated to showcasing talented poets from the Chesapeake Bay watershed and beyond. The Delaware Poetry Review publishes two issues per year, in the Summer and Winter, and is compiled by a collective of five area editors (all of whom run other literary presses or journals as well).

"The poets in this issue have a remarkably wide range--in subject matter, writing styles, and influences," says co-editor Richard Peabody. "We think that's a sign of just how vibrant the literary community is in the Mid-Atlantic."

Free subscriptions are available upon request at the website. To read the latest issue, see http://www.depoetry.com.



Weirding Word (SM), a division of G.L. Honeycutt Consulting, LLC, is a virtural publication department that provides editing, freelance writing, and publication and web design services.

February 14, 2008

Weirding Word (SM) on Writers: Hiram Larew (Part 2)

Today, Hiram Larew continues a discussion about writing, poetry and his latest book, More Than Anything, which was published by Vrzhu Press last year. Read Part 1 of the interview here on the Weirding Word Blog.

WW: Tell me about More Than Anything.
HL: First off, I got word from Vrzhu out of the blue. It was a gift to have gotten that request for a manuscript. I’d been wanting to shop a manuscript around because I felt that I had a few poems that could be fit into a book. So, we worked together. There’s not a theme. It’s a hodgepodge of poems that have been written over the years. It contains pieces that reflect my awe in how life plays itself out. There are several poems about relationships, there are poems about anger, and Bk_larewthere are poems about heritage. I enjoy reading poems by others—by that I mean reading silently as well as aloud—and I enjoy reading some of these poems to others.

Kim and I have been doing so many readings that we say we’ll be able to recite each other’s poetry when it’s all done. I think the time she spent in India compliments the kind of wandering in my poems as we do readings.

WW: Now, this is not your first book.
HL: My first chapbook was published by the City of Baltimore by Artscape, which focused on the literary arts. In 1999 I submitted a manuscript and was lucky enough to have it accepted. It’s called Part Of and it was also a series of poems, not a storyline collection.

WW: What is different about your writing now that you didn’t expect when you first started?
HL: I think the poetry now is influenced by a much broader life experience. It’s influenced by a very supportive writing community, which influences me in terms of the kinds of things I include. And, I think my writing is influenced by events and remarkable joys that I’ve faced. Now, saying that I think it’s matured, is it wiser? I don’t know about that. It may be a little bit more patterned, not quite as freewheeling as it was when I was younger. I sometimes look at pieces I’ve written and it feels like I’m a different person. I can’t help but wonder, if I’m still writing in 20 years if I’ll have a very different voice. But I don’t want to predict what I’ll be writing. My writing is about the unexpected, so if there were a plot line, it would take out the enjoyment I have in writing.

One of the reviewers of More Than Anything said how it seems to be focused on discovery. First off, I rarely have my writing reviewed, so it was interesting to me to see what others had to say about my writing. My writing is about discovery and trying to understand. I had not thought of the word discovery , but the reviewer helped me by using that word.

WW: How did writing and becoming published transform your life?
HL: For me writing is the only place I can go where I can do, be and say what I want to do, be and say without a great deal of constraints. If there are rules, they’re my rules. It’s a retreat. It’s a place I can go and work with only the notion that what I’m doing is only going to be judged by me and probably by time. It’s not therapeutic, but it is a place of a kind of unremitting freedom. So that’s why it’s so incredibly important to me to be given the opportunity, the luxury of the opportunity.

With publishing, it’s the opportunity to see whether or not anything I’m doing is appreciated, is understood, is enjoyed. To have your work shared is a remarkable process. As so many other writers have said, it’s no Larew_f1_thlonger your work. People can chew on it, spit on it, recite it. It’s no longer your own. When you put it in the public domain, it’s no longer your diary. It’s something other people can see and react to. It’s open to all the winds of acclamation and criticism. It’s interesting feedback.

WW: At Weirding Word (SM), we believe that “language creates reality”. How does language create reality in your life? In your writing?
HL: Um, I think I’d have to question the assumption. For me, language often questions reality. Maybe in doing that it creates reality of its own. For me language is a way, writing is a way and speaking is a way of trying to convey meaning and sense. Often, what I find most interesting are things that have meaning but don’t make sense. I think life doesn’t have a game plan and try to take a look at it and appreciate and fathom. When I think of language creating reality, it makes me think of trying to make things crystal clear and I’m not sure that’s possible.

WW: What’s next for you?
HL: One thing I’ve noticed here recently is that the activity surrounding the publication of a collection is somewhat intentioned with the need/urge to move forward. The collection and the celebration of it is, in fact, looking back and you’re celebrating something that’s been done. And I’m interested in that. I’m trying to get my eyes ahead and keep working, but it’s difficult to stay with my feet where I am. I’m not sure if there will be a chronicle. I think one piece I just finished has everything from Romeo to waking up with the love of your life. It’s a strange mosaic of different pieces. It gives me hope that there are things beyond More Than Anything that I can continue to work on.


The next Weirding Word (SM) interview will be with Ann Timmons, Communications Artist.

Gaea Honeycutt
blog@weirdingword.com


Weirding Word (SM), a division of G.L. Honeycutt Consulting, LLC, is a virtural publication department that provides editing, freelance writing, and publication and web design services.