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!
As this
evening's Open Mic guest, Wilton resident Pat St. Pierre is a freelance writer
and amateur photographer whose love for the written word and poetry, in
particular, was kindled initially while attending New Canaan High School.
An
admirer of the simplistic style of Emily Dickinson, Pat uses words and
photography in capturing small vignettes, ranging from life's ordinary events
to its darker journeys--as depicted with startling inevitability in the following from The Ephrastic Review:
The Family in the Red
House
While walking
through woods
Near a rambling river
I came upon a paint
peeled red house
barn like in
appearance,
broken window panes,
tall grasses covering
old cement steps
unattended for years.
Who inhabited this red
house
and where are they
now?
I entered cautiously
through the front door,
looked around the open
space.
Dishes with cobwebs
adorned
the wooden kitchen
table.
Shriveled food
occupied the old refrigerator.
The scene appeared as
though
a family simply
disappeared.
Bedroom quilts covered
most beds,
one bed remained unmade.
As I walked around
floorboards creaked like soft
screams.
I slipped on a small
throw rug;
moving the rug with my
feet,
I discovered a trap
door located in the floor.
Slowly, I lifted the
rusty hinge.
There in the hollow
space
were skeleton bodies.
The family stayed
behind in the paint peeled red house.
Pat's award-winning
adult and children's poetry, as well as assorted fiction/non-fiction, has run in The Camel Saloon,
Fiction 365, Friday Flash Fiction, The Kids Ark, Silver Boomer Books, among many other
venues, while her photography has graced the covers and pages of Gravel,
Sediments, Our Day’s Encounter and Peacock Journal. Her first chapbook, Reality of Life, was published by Foothills Publishing,
followed by Theater of Life (Finishing Line Press)--nominated in 2010
for the New England/Pen/LL Winship Award; fellow Finishing Line poet Debbie
Richard considered Pat's third release, the photo-accompanied Full Circle
(Kelsay Books, 2014) a “mosaic... of memories... reflect(ing) the seasons in
nature, in human frailties, and in coming home again.”
An avid
participant in many writing workshops over the years, Pat is a past member of
the Saugatuck Poetry Group and the Rose and Thorn Literary Ezine. Go to her blog, pstpierre.wordpress.com, to view her
latest photography and writing.
Hosted by Frank Chambers, Barnes & Noble’s Open Mic Poetry
program meets the second Monday of each month on the
main floor of the bookstore (located in the Stamford Town Center), beginning at
7:15 p.m.
Welcoming Curley’s Diner co-owner/poet
Eleni Begetis Anastos back from her family wedding in Greece tonight at
PoemAlley is fellow Tuesday Night Livecontributor
Susan Cosette—herself returning to Stamford since moving out of state last year--and
John Stanton, scuba diver/instructor, poet and novelist.
A former student of Marilyn Nelson at the University of Connecticut, Susan is a two-time winner of the Wallace Stevens Poetry Prize and presently serves as Annual Fund and Communications Manager for the Minneapolis non-profit Way To Grow, devoted to closing the educational gap in the Twin Cities area, where she currently resides.
Addressing a broad range of subjects, Susan wrote the piece below last February in response to Trump's prescription for school shootings, exhibiting a consistent combination of immediacy and emotional detail.
#Enough
I hid in a closet while my best friend was
killed.
I texted my sister.
I love you.
Tell Mom and Dad to get here,
fast.
I don’t want to die.
Thirty of us in a closet,
Paper plates for fans.
This is not supposed to happen here.
The police came.
If you had a
bag, you had to drop it in a pile.
Then, three
questions—
Are
you hurt?
Did
you capture anything on phone or video?
Do
know anything about the gunman?
After that they
let us leave.
The guns have changed,
Our laws have not.
Your rights to own a gun—
All I hear is mine, mine, mine.
You can buy as many guns as you want at one time.
A kid in a candy store of AK-15 blood.
I refuse to be the kid you read about in
textbooks,
The statistic.
We don’t want your thoughts and prayers—
We want policy and change.
You, President,
I dare you.
Tell me to my face—
It was a terrible
tragedy,
It should never
have happened.
How much money did you get from the
National Rifle Association?
You want to know something?
It doesn't matter, because I
already know.
Thirty million dollars.
Divided by the number of gunshot
victims in the United States
In the one and one-half months in
2018 alone,
That’s $5,800.
Is that how much we are worth?
Shame on you.
There is no hashtag for our grief.
Click here for information on her recent collection, Peggy Sue Messed Up. Susan’s latest work can be found at www.musepalace.wordpress.com.
John Stanton’s 20 years working in the scuba industry has encompassed travel,
teaching, diving under ice and into shipwrecks, as well as his first published
article for a 1986 issue of Skin Diver.
Besides subsequent work for technical manuals and other non-fiction, John also updated in 2008 A Jesuit In Belize, a family memoir by William Kane, first released in the 1920s, of Father William ‘Buck’
Stanton and his remarkable humanitarian experiences as teacher, scientist and explorer
as a missionary in turn-of the-century Central America.
John’s own wont for relaxed, irreverent observations on random topics finds
expression in poetry and rhyme in the collection Pooplets Of Truth (Stanton Lonestar Books, 2014) which, he assures, is “never
vulgar or laced with
subliminal messages from another dimension.” His 2010 performance of “3rd
Grade” at the Southern Playhouse, Minneapolis brings to mind both Jean
Shepard and Lenny Bruce:
His fiction manuscripts have made the quarter finals of the Amazon
Breakthrough Novel Of the Year and the semifinals in the Clive Cussler Society
Adventure Writer Contest (named after the acclaimed author of Raise theTitanic!, Cyclops and many
other titles featuring marine engineer/adventurer Dirk Pitt).
John’s own rollicking entry into the nautical/techno-thriller genre, The Lone Star Used Submarine Company
(Gabriel's Horn Publishing, 2012) finds struggling commercial diver Buck
Davies leading a makeshift crew in flight throughout the Caribbean in an old Soviet submarine, after he thwarted the corrupt Cuban official who attempted to swindle him
in its sale. Bumbling from island to island, Buck and his friends encounter
pirates, eccentric characters and romance while eluding the navies of the
world.
In his other novel, a toilet paper salesman, a
dominatrix and a general share center stage with Cassandra Vega, the
traumatized heroine of The Truth About UFOs, Aliens and All That, (Gabriel's Horn, 2009) when humanity’s collective expectations
about the existence and character of flying saucer aliens somehow wills the
little guys into existence—and no one knows what their plans are.
Learn more about all of John’s projects, including the forthcoming, Imagine Somewhere Else (not to
mention what is his favorite book, preferred liquor and most memorable shark
encounter) at www.johnstantonbooks.com.
A novelist/poet, potter and co-founder of the Always Art artist’s
collaborative, Rhoda Kaplan Pierce has placed pieces in numerous literary
journals and will be sharing selections tomorrow night at Curley’s from Nobody Really Leaves, The Apple That Wanted To Be Famous (New
Rivers Press), as well as 2004’s Leah’s Blessing (Kehillat Press, 2002), a novel relating the title character’s struggle with the dual
deaths of her alienated daughter’s husband, victim of a Jerusalem bombing and
that of her mother in Borough Park, Brooklyn, where she first turned her back
on an Orthodox Jewish upbringing.
As with much of Rhoda’s work celebrating one’s inner child, Leah
Applebaum’s unexpected reconciliative, healing journey shared with Maya, an
Arab-Israeli woman, affirms the conviction that, despite the trials and tragedy
of a violent, chaotic world, we are all one.
The former Poet in Residence of the New York City School System also collaborated
with Sandie Bernstein, who has published poetry and other writing in The Journal of Reform Judaism, The Boston Globe, The Jewish Advocate, The Longfellow Society Journal, among other
publications and is an 18-year veteran of Jewish communal services in the
greater Boston area.
Their novel of Judaic magical realism, The Spirit of Kehillat Shalom (AuthorHouse, 2014), draws the
reader into the mission of Serach, dispatched from the Garden of Eden by the
prophet Elijah to come to the aid of the beleaguered rabbi Hillel Kramer, but, in
the process, becomes beset, herself--in her guise as a volunteer office
assistant--by the various personal problems of Kehillat Shalom’s congregation,
both humorous and grave and is eventually torn between returning to Eden and
remaining with the community of which she has become so fond.
In association with the
Unitarian Universalist Congregation, PoemAlley celebrates the release of Tuesday Night Live (Turn of River Press,
2018) this Saturday afternoon in downtown Stamford.
Ralph Nazareth and Eleni Anastos Begetis
Hoby Rosen and Alex McDonald
The fourth in a series
of PA member anthologies edited by group facilitator Ralph Nazareth, Tuesday Night will be dramatized with a
series of live readings by numerous contributors both local and from the
tri-state area, such as Rona Schenkerman, Cora Santaguida and Eleni Begetis
Anastos, who, as co-owner of Curley’s Diner, has generously provided a regular
weekly home for this uniquely dynamic gathering of poets, essayists, musicians
and other artists since PoemAlley’s founding by Ann Yarmal and Catherine Ednie
in the late 1990s. Over this span, the group has grown, not just in attendance, but in warmth, interchange and community, notably embodied by
many departed members over the years, including Herb Davison, Alex McDonald,
Hoby Rosen, Eddie Smith, Diva, and, most recently, Eva-Maria Palevich.
From 9/11, perpetual
global wars, erosion of civil liberties, to the current nadir of what seems to
be a comprehensively regressive time, Tuesday nights at Curley’s Diner endures as an
irrepressible haven for open thought, singing and joy.
While you can scroll to
the bottom of this post for further details, this is also a good time to catch
up on other books produced by individual PA members over the last few
years:
Former Fairfield County
resident Susan Cossette Eng’s Peggy Sue Messed Up (CreateSpace, 2017) applies the home-base theme of growing up
female in a bastion of suburban conformity as a launch pad for weighing the
ethics of the Atomic Age, confronting the consequences of poverty and
inequality and highlighting Elizabeth Warren’s refusal to cringe
before Beltway patriarchy in defense of reproductive rights, among other
affecting, timely topics. Below is a video collage version of “Struldbrug
at the Wine Bar” (her musings on European musical culture),one of several engaging adaptations of her
pieces posted on her Youtube channel:
Now
residing out-of-state, Susan collaborated frequently with fellow PA member Neddy Smith, a Norwalk-based musician, who has played both solo and with bands live
and in the recording studio in Jazz, Funk, Brazilian, Caribbean and other
genres. His positive zeal for music both as performer and as enthusiastic educator
has been extended to fiction with the publication last year of Valerie Palmary: A Small-Town Girl
(NedGJean Publishing, 2017). A novel of creative and entrepreneurial self-discovery in the aftermath of family tragedy, Neddy regards it as a prose vehicle to further his own and his company, NedGJean International's, commitment to "help guide young writers to follow their dreams with a passion for producing projects and (making their) dreams become a reality." He maintains a blog called "Words and Music".
One
of the earliest contributors to this blog, Enzo Malaglisi published Castelforte, his first collection, in 2017 (Xlibris), showcasing a powerful body of work dealing with desperation, love,
fear, the irresistible comfort of needing things, as well as more large-scale
subjects like freedom and justice—all unified by the theme of redemption. Click
here to read his remarkable “At the Mercy Of a Higher Hand” from 2011.
Saturday’s Tuesday Night Live launch party is free and open to the
public; refreshments will be served (and bring your lungs, too, as there will be singing).
When: 3-6 pm Saturday October 20, 2018
Where: Unitarian Universalist Congregation 20 Forest Street Stamford, CT 06901