Welcome to PoemAlley, Stamford, Connecticut's eclectic venue for poets, poetry reading and discussion! Open to anyone living in Fairfield County and the surrounding area, we meet Tuesday nights at 7:30 pm at Curley's Diner on 62 Park Place (behind Target) . Come contribute, get something to eat, or simply listen!
Sharon Charde, retired psycho-therapist and highly-accoladed
poet, reads this Tuesday at Curley’s Diner from numerous chapbooks and
publications reflective of the economical and sensitive style for which she is known.
Sharon most recently earned first prizes both in the
Arcadia Press 2014 Ruby Irene Chapbook Contest (deadline for the next round is November 15) and the Broad River Review’s
Rash Awards competition. Her work has appeared more than sixty-five
times in Calyx, The Paterson Literary Review, Ping-Pong (literary organ of the Henry
Miller Memorial Library), Poet Lore and many other
journals and anthologies. In addition, she has seven Pushcart
nominations to her name.
Sharon has edited and published I Am Not A Juvenile Delinquent, containing the work of the adjudicated teens she has
volunteered with since 1999 through the creative writing program at Touchstone,
a residential treatment center in Litchfield, Connecticut for girls ages 12
through 18. A devoted writing teacher for twenty-three years, Sharon has been
awarded fellowships from the Vermont Studio Center, the Virginia Center For The Creative Arts and The MacDowell Colony.
Yaddo Gardens entrance
She has released several prize-winning chapbooks, such as BadGirl At The Altar Rail (Flume, 2005), Four Trees Down From Ponte Sisto, (Dallas Poets Community Press, 2006) as well as 2008’s Branch In His Hand, a full-length collection from Backwaters Press, later adapted for radio by the
BBC in 2012. Described as a requeim in poetry, Branch recalls with sparse but unflinching eloquence the death of Sharon's son in 1987 during
a trip to Italy and the transformative effect the freak event had on herself and her
family. After Blue, for which she
won honorable mention in Finishing Line Press’s 2013 chapbook contest, was
published in September 2014. She’ll be at Yaddo, the famous artists’
retreat in Sarasota Springs, New York, this spring.
“Black
Lives Matter, Too”, next Monday’s timely installment of Stamford Barnes & Noble’s Open Mic program, features Barbara Bethea, the “Afrikana Madonna”, a poetess and motivational
healer with a wonderfully exuberant presentation style (to which those who
attended her July appearance at Curley’s last year can attest).
A creative
therapist certified through the National Association for Poetry Therapy (NAPT),
Bethea works with Mt. Sinai Hospital’s Sexual Assault & Violence
Intervention program as a rape counselor advocate and is an active member of
the renown Afrikan Poetry Theatre in Jamaica, NY (now in its 39th year),
founded by the late John Watusi Branch and Yusef Waliyaya, poets and cultural
workers in the early 1970s.
Besides helping adults achieve recovery and empowerment from chemical
dependencies and intimate partner violence, Barbara’s activities
supporting at-risk teens both in health care and church settings demonstrates
an inspired dedication to dignity, mutual interest and empathy in pursuit of
acceptance of one another and our individual struggles, transcending an
oft-bandied call for mere “tolerance” or cynical recommendations on how to accommodate intolerable behavior on the part of officialdom.
While the
brief video below, “Supreme Teens”, which Barbara produced in association with the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, highlights how
critical an open and engaged response is to
these concerns, their acute import readily applies to the future of all in an open,
civil society, given the portentous escalation of police brutality and killings
targeting the non-white population of the country in recent years.
Her
inspirational outreach also extends to recorded material, such as Like Manna for the Soul, a nine-track CD released in 2007, and televised presentations, like this 2013 example from Manhattan Neighborhood Network's Can We Talk Television:
Barbara is an adjunct professor at the College of New
Rochelle/School of New Resources, Brooklyn Campus. You can contact her directly
at afrikanamadonna1@aol.com.
Hosted
by Frank Chambers, Barnes & Noble’s Open Mic Poetry takes place the
second Monday of each month in the cookbook section on the main floor of the
bookstore (located in the Stamford Town Center), beginning at 7:15 p.m.