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#NationalPoetryMonth’16 Round-up (Day 2)

02 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in National Poetry Month '16

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Tags

#NaPoWriMo, #NationalPoetryMonth, 30dpc, Adele Kenny, Alain Ginsberg, Apparatus Magazine, Audre Lorde, Carolyn Moore, Edward Rathke, Entropy Magazine, Family Friend Poems, Found Poetry Review, Grant Snider, Imaginary Garden with Real Toads, Influential Poems, Kenneth Koch, Mariah Wilson, Mary Biddinger, Mary Carroll Hackett, Mary Oliver, Natalie Diaz, NotaLiteraryJournal, NPM16, Paula Meehan, Poem a Day, Poetic Asides, Poetry comic, poetry prompts, Poetry School, Rasheed Copeland, Stanley Kunitz, The Onion, Winter Tangerine Review, women poets

Day_two

BoneSpark here with DAY TWO of the best prompts, poems and news from your  #NaPoWriMo/#NPM16/#NaPoMo /#NationalPoetryMonth/#poemaday hashtags.

Best of the Prompts

NaPoWriMo’s “Family Portrait prompt”
NotaLiteraryJournal’s “Lies That You Used to Believe prompt”
Imaginary Garden’s “Horses prompt”
Mary Carroll-Hackett’s “Body of the planet prompt”
Poetic Asides P-A-D “He said/She said prompt”
Adele Kenny’s “Color RED prompt”
Found Poetry’s “Junk Mail/Gov’t forms Erasure prompt”
30dpc’s “New Beginnings prompt”
Apparatus Mag’s “Ode to TV show prompt”
Poetry School’s “Instagram prompt”
Mariah Wilson’s “Harbingers of Doom Haiku series prompt”
Winter Tangerine’s “Ode to a Stranger prompt”

Poems I Have Loved (Tweeters’ Shares)

Mary Oliver’s “Peonies” (video)
Stanley Kunitz “Route Six” (w/audio)
Audre Lorde “Recreation”
Kenneth Koch “To Breath”
Rasheed Copeland “Shrimp and Grits”
Carolyn Moore “How to Housebreak a Shadow”
Alain Ginsberg “Body Becomes Black Hole or Magic Trick in Three Acts”
Paula Meehan “Seed”
Natalie Diaz “Post-Colonial Love Poem”
Mary Biddinger “Hard Labor”

Miscellaneous
Grant Snider’s “Poetic Justice” comic in the NY Times
30 Days to Find the Poet in You (at Family Friend Poems)
National Poetry Month Raises Awareness Of Poetry Prevention (at The Onion)
Edward Rathke shares on Influential Poems at Entropy Mag

**Poets, if you would like to be featured in 2sDay Poems, have your collection reviewed, guest post in the Poetry Lab or blog on any of the Thoughts on Poetry topics, including Foremother Friday or Small Press Interviews, drop me a line at  bonesparkblog@yahoo.com.

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#NationalPoetryMonth Round-up (Day 15)

15 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in National Poetry Month '15

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#NaPoWriMo, #NationalPoetryMonth, #NPM15, 32 Poems, Ada Limon, AGNI, Anna Akhmatova, Apparatus Magazine, Barbara Crooker, Best American Poets, Blogalicious, Bluets, craft talks, found poems, Ha Kiet Chau, Harriet poetry blog, Iain Haley Pollock, James Author, Jorie Graham, journals accepting summer submissions, latino poets, Lee Hynes, Maggie Smith, Miss Rumphius Effect, Modigliani, Naomi Shihab Nye, Negative Capability Press, O Magazine, Paula Meehan, pink ink press, Poem a Day, Poetic Asides, Poetry and Grief, Poetry Foundation, poetry prompts, punctuation and poetry, Susan Rich, the language inside, Timothy Green, visual poems, Wild Violet, women poets

VintageNumber15

DAY FIFTEEN, Poets. We are half-way through! Today’s round-up of the best in prompts, poems and news from #NaPoWriMo/#NPM15 /#NationalPoetryMonth coming at ya.

Best of the Prompts

Negative Capability Press’ “Poems w/ Colors in the Style of Nelson’s Bluets“
The Language Inside’s “Narrative poems after Naomi Shihab Nye”
Pink Ink Press’ “Tabloid Fever prompt”
O magazine’s “Insomniac prompt after Susan Rich”
Poetic Asides P-A-D “Adjectives as Titles prompt “
NaPoWriMo’s “Poems That Address Themselves”
Apparatus Magazine’s “Through The Opposition’s Eyes prompt”
Miss Rumphius Effect’s Jumping Into Form: Found Poems”
REWIND Being Poetry’s “Fairytale prompt”
Wild Violet’s “M is for Memory prompt”
REWIND Lee Hynes’ “(Visual) Paper Poems prompt”

Poems I Have Loved (Tweeters’ Shares)

Maggie Smith| “Wren Songs”
Ada Limón| “Sharks in the Rivers”
Barbara Crooker| “Peeps”
Ha Kiet Chau| “A Bird’s Eye’s View”
Iain Haley Pollock| “Violets For Your Furs” (w/ commentary)
Jorie Graham| “Coaltrains Crossing the Wyoming Prairie”

Miscellaneous

9 L.A. Poets Giving Latinos a Voice
Punctuation and Poetry at Poets Online
Journals Accepting Summer Submissions at Blogalicious
Paula Meehan: The Poet at 60
Timothy Green’s Take on Submission Fees at Best American Poetry blog
Modigliani and the Russian poet Anna Akhmatova at the Telegraph
Poetry and Grief at Harriet Blog
Poetry as a Way of Thinking: Interview w/ James Author at 32 Poems

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Galoshes Optional: Rain-Soaked POETRY LAB

09 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Poetry Lab

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

art prompts, Betsy Johnson-Miller, Games that Ogres Play, It's Raining in Honolulu, Jim Sallis, Joy Harjo, Kenji Miyazawa, Lawrence Raab, Millane's Creativity Club, Museum of Modern Art, My Work, Ocean Power, Ofelia Zepeda, Painting Rain, Paula Meehan, poetry drafts, poetry exercises, poetry lab, poetry prompts, Pulling Down the Clouds, Rain Room, rain sounds, rain themed art, rain themed poetry, Rain When I Want Rain, Rain's Eagerness, Strong in the Rain, Visible Signs, Why It Often Rains in the Movies, writing prompts

IMG_2742

The Rain Room at the Museum of Modern Art. New York, NY. Friday, June 14, 2013.

Anyone lucky enough to have visited the Museum of Modern Art last summer, could have enjoyed its fun Rain Room installation without ever getting wet.  While most of us here in South Louisiana did not have that luxury, we are all very much acquainted with Nature’s slippery friend.  After a few mind-numbing days of downpours, one simply must retreat to the clean, dry page.

Alas, even there rain-themed verse is to be had aplenty. But with the sheer beauty of such lines as “Rain opens us, like flowers, or earth that has been thirsty for more/than a season” from Harjo’s “It’s Raining in Honolulu” (full-text below), who would not want to have a good soak.  Enjoy this poem and the four other selections before we move on to penning our own.

 

It’s Raining in Honolulu
by Joy Harjo


There is a small mist at the brow of the mountain,
each leaf of flower, of taro, tree and bush shivers with ecstasy.

And the rain songs of all the flowering ones who have called for the rain

can be found there, flourishing
beneath the currents of singing.rainh

Rain opens us, like flowers, or earth that has been thirsty for more
than a season.
We stop all of our talking, quit writing or blowing sax to drink the
mystery invoked
by the night rain.

We listen to the breathing beneath our breathing.

This is how we became rain.

Translated, this means a white flower behind your ear is saturated with
faith after the second overthrow.

We will plant taro where there were curses.

 

 

That’s such a gorgeous one. Hard to beat a women in tune with the earth! Next have a listen to Rodney Jones reading “Rain on Tin” (text accompanies). Then peruse:

Lawrence Raab‘s “Why It Often Rains in the Movies” from Visible Signs.

Ofelia Zepeda’s “Pulling Down the Clouds”  from Ocean Power

Kenji Miyazawa’s “Strong in the Rain” from same-titled collection

 

And if that doesn’t get you in the mood to write something slick, trying mixing your own rain tract up over at NatureSoundsForMe. Or for those artists out there, try digging into the Singing and Dancing in Rain art prompt over at Milliane’s Creativity Club. You might like to use some of the images below for something similar to that one, or pull from the Rain art board on Pinterest.

 

open flowers
9d63ccdba53dda5b58483781d72f0257
898a7922d8e61165007728e210d2e496
shakeoff
1816382_3156758_b
rain
boats
japanese
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b1f252adfbaecb937b5735d819dd3826
T151LUXlthXXcuLGIU_013605
images

But wait, I’m not done yet.  How about a few rain-soaked poetry titles like…

 

Painting Rain from Paula Meehan

Rain When You Want Rain from Betsy Johnson-Miller  OR

Rain’s Eagerness from Jim Sallis


 

 

I even have a draft that I’ve been playing with called “Games that Ogres Play”

 

GamesThatOgresPlay

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Feel free to share your drafts as well. Comments are open, skippy-dee-do-dahs!!

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Luscious Poetry From Ireland’s Best

24 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Thoughts on Poetry

≈ 1 Comment

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Deirdre Hines, Eavan Boland, Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Enda Wyley, female poets, Irish poets, JP Rooney, Mary O'Donnell, Mary O'Malley, Medbh McGuckian, Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill, Paula Meehan, Sheila O'Hagan

Harvesting the Corn by (Irishman) JP Rooney

First, we had the VIDA count, which was both elating and depressing all in one breath. Then my good Celtic Music friend reminded me that St. Patrick’s Day is coming on fast.  We will not tell Gran that I forgot. Shhhhhh!

What is important to note is that these things got me thinking about all the fine Irish ladies who are writing today, and I wanted to share some of their gorgeous collections with you. A few faces may be familiar, but most won’t.  I hope you come to love their work as much as I do.

[ Oh, and some of these have Youtube readings attached because I finally figured out how to do that. ]

Sheila O'Hagan

Shelia O’ Hagan is Dublin born and based. Her writing began in the 80’s at Birkbeck College, London University, and she has won many awards since. Her most recent collection is both poems and short stories. It’s titled, Along The Liffey: Poems and Short Stories  from Salmon Poetry.

Sample Poem:

PAINTING SEAMUS HEANEYAlong the Liffey

Here is the task, old man
Note the distance
between man and mask

Mould well the dome of the head
Inscrutable rock that puts clout
on the words to be read

Score well the line between soul and eye
Let light stream in
like underwater images of sky

Hold out for definition.
Be exact with the pitch of intellect
and scrutinise the gift

But who is this sitter you call
as open as the dawn
solid as the rocks of Donegal?

The Irish poet. And yourself?
Rembrandt, of course.
None other.

celtic-borders-13849839

Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill

Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill is one of the few contemporary poets writing in Irish (Gaelic). Fortunately, her work has been translated by Heaney, McGuckian and others. The Fifty Minute Mermaid is her fourth collection with Gallery Press, translated by Paul Muldoon.

 

Sample Poem:

MERMAID IN THE HOSPITAL

She awoke
to find her fishtail
clean gone
but in the bed with her
were two long, cold thingammies.
You’d have thought they were tangles of kelp
or collops of ham.
“They’re no doubt
taking the piss,
it being New Year’s Eve.
Half the staff legless
with drink
and the other half50 minute mermaid
playing pranks.
Still, this is taking it
a bit far.”
And with that she hurled
the two thingammies out of the room.
But here’s the thing
she still doesn’t get—
why she tumbled out after them
arse-over-tip…
How she was connected
to those two thingammies
and how they were connected
to her.
It was the sister who gave her the wink
and let her know what was what.
“You have one leg attached to you there
and another one underneath that.
One leg, two legs…
A-one and a-two…
Now you have to learn
what they can do.”
In the long months
that followed,
I wonder if her heart fell
the way her arches fell,
her instep arches.

celtic-borders-13849839

Paula Meehan

Paula Meehan is also Dublin-born and based.  Mysteries of the Home combines two of her most praised collections, The Man Who Was Marked by Winter and Pillow Talk into one hard-hitting volume. Available from Dedalus Press.

 

Sample Poem:

WELL


I know this path by magic not by sight.Mysteries of the Home
Behind me on the hillside the cottage light
is like a star that’s gone astray. The moon
is waning fast, each blade of grass a rune
inscribed by hoarfrost. This path’s well worn.
I lug a bucket by bramble and blossoming blackthorn.
I know this path by magic not by sight.
Next morning when I come home quite unkempt
I cannot tell what happened at the well.
You spurn my explanation of a sex spell
cast by the spirit who guards the source
that boils deep in the belly of the earth,
even when I show you what lies strewn
in my bucket — a golden waning moon,
seven silver stars, our own porch light,
your face at the window staring into the dark.

celtic-borders-13849839

Mary O'Malley

Mary O’Malley hails from Connemara, Co. Galway. She has published many award-winning collections including her most recent with Carcanet Press. My favorite, The Knife in the Wave is from Salmon Poetry.

Sample Poem:

 

ABSENT

Say mackerel shoaled through the lullabiesThe Knife in the Bones
Wrens circled Christ’s head and drank Mary’s tears;
Say each love song was a festival of desire
And allow that the touch of some shapeless thing
Sickened his mind one night between bog and shore –
When he turned his back on his children
And cut their mother out of his life

He was harder than Connemara stone.
Old women pulled shawls over their faces
The silence of daughters descended
Our memories closed into a fist
And there was blood on the moon.

celtic-borders-13849839

Medbh McGuckian

Medbh McGuckian is a native of Belfast with degrees from The Queen’s University of Belfast where she studied under Seamus Heaney and was the first woman to be named writer-in-residence in that university. The High Caul Cap from Gallery Press is the latest of over a dozen volumes of poetry.

Sample Poem:

THESE LATINIZED SNOWS
 
This room should be read as a prefacehigh-caul-cap1
to an experience which occurred
many miles before: light-of-day
simplicity in the administered space,
accepting the pre-set view,
though belts of country miles in width
have been swept away.
The electric fluid has taken to carrying
the mail, like a blood-opening heart buried under
a sundial, or the undiluted Nile.
 
By quietly slipping in the word ‘eva’ (‘only’),
those who delicately thread the needles
lay a motionless finger on a forearm
to show through this so-called non-blue
otherwise sheltering the dance the woman
is about to break into, wearing her belatedness
like a far grander blanket.
 
Long after other fireplaces have subsided
two savage arcs are flaming like weeds
in snow from end to end of your lovely,
symbolic city where one day
marketgoers would again arrive by train …
 
As when a younger-sister-haunted older
daughter finds in the messy street debris
stretch marks on the trunk of an aspen,
etchings of beetles on the tree bark:
or when I photographed the births of my three
children, each in their turn, I saw
that with their first intake of breath
their whole bodies were suffused
with off-hour rainbowing, from head to toe.

celtic-borders-13849839

Mary O'Donnell

Mary O’ Donnell comes from Co. Monaghan but studied for some time in Germany.  She has taught at Trinity College Dublin and is currently a poetry mentor with Carlow University, Pittsburgh. Her fifth collection of poetry, The Ark Builders is published by Arc Publications.

 

 

Sample Poem:

FOLLOWING FRIDA

That mono-brow wouldn’t work today.The Ark Builders
Girls wax the in-betweens, the ups and
downs, smooth, smooth. Sometimes,
the greenery around the hacienda
itches so much we sneeze and tickle,
create unnecessary frowns, a slippage.
There’s always Dr. Death, of course,
his bright smile, that happy mouth
inviting us to pout and make kiss shapes,
Kiss, kiss! Kiss, kiss! he urges. His short needle
makes cushions of our worries. Little prick here,
another there, there, there,
it’s all right darlings, growing old
needn’t hurt so badly.
The hairs remind us, marching to link brow
to brow, shadowing our lips.
We want to be Frida, earnest with hair,
mocking Dr. Death’s short needle
before it punctures our flesh.
Old, old! we shout the words he hates,
loose and old, not tight and old!
Senses, raging, in need of colour
as we behold ourselves, mirror-wise,
the women we always were,
just older, looser, still there.

celtic-borders-13849839

Enda Wyley

Enda Wyley hails from Dublin and is also a popular children’s writer and primary school teacher. Her fourth volume, To Wake to This is from Dedalus Press.

Sample Poem:

celtic-borders-13849839

Eavan Boland
Eavan Boland also hails from Dublin and is the daughter of a diplomat and post-expressionist painter. She has won numerous awards for her poetry and is a regular reviewer for the Irish Times. She currently teaches and directs the creative writing program at Stanford.  New and Collected Poem includes selections from previous collections as well as new work.

Sample Poem:

THAT THE SCIENCE OF CARTOGRAPHY IS LIMITED

—and not simply by the fact that this shading ofCollected Eavan
forest cannot show the fragrance of balsam,
the gloom of cypresses,
is what I wish to prove.

When you and I were first in love we drove
to the borders of Connacht
and entered a wood there.

Look down you said: this was once a famine road.

I looked down at ivy and the scutch grass
rough-cast stone had
disappeared into as you told me
in the second winter of their ordeal, in

1847, when the crop had failed twice,
Relief Committees gave
the starving Irish such roads to build.

Where they died, there the road ended

and ends still and when I take down
the map of this island, it is never so
I can say here is
the masterful, the apt rendering of
the spherical as flat, nor
an ingenious design which persuades a curve
into a plane,
but to tell myself again that

the line which says woodland and cries hunger
and gives out among sweet pine and cypress,
and finds no horizon

will not be there.

celtic-borders-13849839

Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin

Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin is a native of Cork, but is currently residing in Dublin, working with Trinity College. She has won numerous rewards for her poetry and is also known for her translation work. Her collection The Sun-Fish is from Gallery Press.

Sample Poem:

 

celtic-borders-13849839

Deirdre HinesDeirdre Hines grew up in Belfast and Co. Donegal. Also a playwright with degrees in English and Theatre studies, her first poetry collection, The Language of Coats is now out from New Island Books.

 

 

Sample Poem:

 

That’s all for you, chickies! But head on over to my Amazon list to see two additional poets (both men).

images

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