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2sDay Poems: Hot Out of Chicago with Highlights from Dancing Girl

29 Tuesday Jul 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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2sDay Poems, Call for work, Chicago poetry, Christine Rau, Dancing Girl Press, feminist poets, For the Girls I, In the Yellowed House, Kristy Bowen, Naming the WIfe of Sisyphus, poetry chapbooks, Release, small presses, submissions, The Poetry Storehouse, wicked alice, women poets, women-centric press

indexOk peeps, today you get a double shot from one my all-time favorite small poetry presses, the women-centric Dancing Girl Press & studio.

This artsy shop is run out of downtown Chciago by poet/artist Kristy Bowen, a talented gal with impeccable taste.

In addition to overseeing the publication of its annual chapbook series, Bowen also has on offer a quirky collection of paper goods/vintage ephemera and produces the feminist online mag wicked alice.

Two of Dancing Girl’s newest chaps are featured below with selections.  Click italicized title to order.

 

from In the Yellowed House

Janeen Rastall

by Janeen Pergrin Rastall

RELEASE

The surf lays out featherless wings537fb7a0c643a_80495n
and sanded birch limbs,
pieces once bound by ice.
Does a wave batter debris into something better?
A woman goes to the lake.
shorts and t-shirt taunt early May,
faded welts dapple wintered flesh.
She carves the sand with a stick,
draws two names inside a heart.
In an hour the beach will be blank.
She has predicted this end,
tasted it on his menthol tongue,
felt it in each whorl and callus,
every knuckles’ edge.
When waves encroach, she snaps
a photo with her phone.
She will not stay
to see her name sucked back with the sand.

The audio for this poem is at The Poetry Storehouse.

 

 

from For the Girls, I

Christina M. Rau

by Christina M. Rau

NAMING THE WIFE OF SISYPHUS

Cathy—it’s a sweet name,
one who loves her husband
but since she’s got a bit
of resistance in her, maybe53ac975abbe74_80495n
it’s Kathy, with a K,
or Kat since she’s got some
sass, too, or Katerina,
a strong, sexy name,
but that would make her too skinny.
No one has ever seen a fat Katerina;
Fat Katerinas simply do not exist.
She needs to have some weight
so she can throw it around
when she stands her ground.
Georgina—slender with a slight belly,
a woman who can bellow at the Gods,
but that’s not old enough;
it needs to be antiquated,
like Antigone, but not as depressed,
like Aphrodite, but not as beautiful,
like Angelika, but less cinematic.
Frannie, Francine, that must
be her name—no, Francesca,
a woman with looks, older but not
too old a soul, one strong enough
to love a man whose heart attacks him
and then kills him
though he refuses to die.
Perhaps that’s too pretty still;
even a slightly average woman
would move on.
Laura, Maria, Betsy, Daphne,
Portia, Sally, Vesta, Wanda,
Yolanda, Zelda, Helen—
nothing quite fits.
They are all slightly off.
Nothing safely and soundly
encompasses all that is the woman
who stands by her man
in the face of his false immortality
and the consequences of his
undeadly denial.

 

DGP: Chapbook manuscripts currently being accepted from women poets through August 31. Guidelines.

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Aussie Hop: Hot Drama & Summer Lit Piks

06 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in C.A. Explains It All, Thoughts on Poetry

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#ANZLitMonth, Aussie drama, Australian poetry, Cloudstreet, Kathryn Lomer, Kim Forrester, literary magazines, Maria Takolander, McLeod's Daughters, Reading Matters AZN LIt Project, Sandra Thibodeaux, small presses, Stuart Cooke, Tracy Ryan

indexHome to 23million, Australia is a land of diverse peoples and landscapes.  As the continent dips into winter, start your summer off right with a slew of steamy Aussie drama and a stack of good reads.

 

Streaming free on Hulu.com, McLimages2eod’s Daughters tells the story of feisty half-sisters Claire and Tess who are reunited by their father’s death and now must, after 20 years apart, work together to keep the family cattle property up and running.  Strong women and hot “blokes,” what can go wrong!

Also streaming free is the TV dramatization of Tim Wintonindex4‘s bestselling novel of the same name. Cloudstreet spans the 20 year period 1943-63 and tells the story of two working class families in Perth.  I’m told that there are several discrepancies between the show and the book, but I have yet to dig into the text.  Perhaps I will post on that after my library loan arrives.

 

If you run across some new terms (like “rack off,” “stuffed up,” and “ute”) during the viewing, head on over to the Australian Word Map for some fun with regional slang.

ANZ-LitMonth-200pix

Then get your pen out and put together a reading list from the #ANZLitMonth tweets and Kim Forrester’s very good, very detailed posts on the Reading Matters blog. But be sure to check out the interlibrary loan program at your local before you blow your book budget on purchases.

Poetry is going to be a bit harder to find, unfortunately, so commit to purchasing a few titles. Here’s a handful that I recommend:

Sandra Thibodeaux‘sindex2

Dirty H2O from Mulla Mulla Press

interview

 

Kathryn Lomer‘sindex5

Night Writing from Univ. of Queensland Press

Gilded
My palomino reached fourteen and a half hands
when I turned fourteen and a half.
Then came the breaking-in,
ribs too narrow for comfort, stride skittish,
coltish.
Boys came to ride with me,
half-known boys,
their names like ripe berries,
and long hair tied in ponytails.
We tracked over spitting summer paddocks,
crackly, combustible,
horses sweating under us,
swatting flies with sharp tail-thwacks.
We galloped;
fear of the tilting earth thrilled us.
Always an element of danger:
the bolt, the buck, the roll.
We rode boundaries,
occasionally crossing,
leaving fencelines behind for bush,
pretending to adventure.
Sometimes we rode to the pine forest,
where needles lay like a mattress on forest floor
and hushed everything.
Sometimes, resting, we fished for yabbies.
4
When the boys had gone
my mother and I washed my horse
with the carwash brush and a hose,
my mother in slacks,
my face half-hidden behind loose long hair.
I would learn this act had the intimacy
of knowing a man’s body,
skin rippling under touch.
My hands were all over him:
I picked up his hooves gently,
hooking out the sour scent
from a tender frog,
amazed at the soft secrets within horny feet.
Curry comb, brush, hay and oats:
this is how I learned to care for another,
the looking-after love requires.
Nicknamed Shandy for his colour,
he had a smart breed name –Tshinta,
something exotic, an otherness I desired.
I would whisper the foreign syllables
into his twitching ear,
nuzzle the velvet lips,
cry into his unkempt mane for want of friends.
I pictured him wild on a faraway plain
galloping with his mob
like the stallion in Wildfire.
In winter he paled and grew shaggy.
Summer gilded him; he glowed,
a muscled sun.
5
The vet came and cut out his testicles.
I remember the hard bite
on the moon of my backside
next time I picked up his hoof.
The bruise flowered on my young skin
for seven weeks.

 

Maria TakolanderTakolander-frontcover-214x300

The End of the World from Giramondo Pub.

Review at The Compulsive Reader

interview

 

Tracy Ryanindex6

Unearthed from Fremantle Press

Review at The Australian

 

Stuart Cooke

Edge Music from Interactive Publications

To be a Cat Curled
Loss is days
passing,
the traction of years deflating
the vertical

so that a man, once a pearl in a dark mouth,
becomes sound’s flat plane.images.duckduckgo.com

The beating heart is corrosion,
scattering leaves,
butterflies, leaves.

Each mumbling moment.
Each frozen, irretrievable One.

Headlines could be the only things that matter;
the rest is just flesh, flow,
proliferation.
This sense that everything’s
the same and what I see – in the way
a tree emerges or an emu speeds – are the tips
of the freezing.
How to keep pace with the sun?

Never to falter. To be a cat curled
in the corner of a doorway, smiling dreamily.
Can the dream of shade
moving further out across the grass
ever be reconciled
with this tightening stiff of the gut?

On that note, how to follow a poet’s letters
to the memories of childhood
while fixated

upon the streaked darkness, through which
I perpetually, always
without seeing, fall?

 

Find more great reading at these…

Aussie Lit Journals

Small Presses

Writer’s Festivals

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Scouting Small Press Poetry: A Tiny Guide

12 Wednesday Feb 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Thoughts on Poetry

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Airlie, AngelHouse Press, Arrowhead, Bear Star, Black Lawrence, Carolina Wren, Centennial, Cinnamon Press, Coffee House, Copper Canyon, Cypher Books, Dancing Girl, Doire Press, Gold Line, Graywolf, Hanging Loose, Happenstance, Lapwing Poetry, Lost Horse Press, Mayapple, MoonPath, Mouthfeel, Nine Arches, Parallel Press, Persea Books, Pindrop Press, Poetry Salzburg, Red Hen, Saturnalia, small press poetry publishers, small presses, Steel Toe Books, The Emma Press, ThePressPress, Tupelo Press, Unicorn Press, Vagabond, Wave Books, WordTech

gremlins2_2I’m one of those crazy poetry freaks who goes gremlin without an occasional fix.  I find a few of the more mainstream books locally, but for the really good stuff you have to scout out the small presses.  Here’s my go-to list:

Airlie Press US/OR http://airliepress.org/
Bear Star Press US/CA http://www.bearstarpress.com/
Black Lawrence US/NY http://www.blacklawrence.com/
Carolina Wren Press US/NC http://carolinawrenpress.org/
Centennial Press US/WI http://www.centennialpress.com/curiosityshop.html
Coffee House US/MN http://coffeehousepress.org/
Copper Canyon US/WA https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/index.asp
Cypher Books US/NY http://www.cypherbooks.org/index.html
Dancing Girl US/IL http://www.dancinggirlpress.com/
Gold Line Press US/SC http://dornsife.usc.edu/goldlinepress
Graywolf Press US/MN https://www.graywolfpress.org/
Hanging Loose US/NY http://hangingloosepress.com/
Lost Horse Press US/ID http://www.losthorsepress.org/
Mayapple Press US/NY http://mayapplepress.com/
MoonPath Press US/WA http://moonpathpress.com/
Mouthfeel Press US/TX http://www.mouthfeelpress.com/
Parallel Press US/WI http://parallelpress.library.wisc.edu/poetry/
Persea Books US/NY http://www.perseabooks.com
Red Hen US/CA http://redhen.org/
Saturnalia Books US/PA http://saturnaliabooks.com/
Steel Toe Books US/KY http://steeltoebooks.com/
Tupelo Press US/MA http://www.tupelopress.org/
Unicorn Press US/NC http://www.unicorn-press.org
Wave Books US/WA http://wavepoetry.com/
WordTech US/OH http://www.wordtechweb.com
Cinnamon Press UK/Wales http://www.cinnamonpress.com/about/
Happenstance UK/Scot http://www.happenstancepress.org/
Arrowhead Press UK/Eng http://www.arrowheadpress.co.uk/index.html
Doire Press Ireland http://www.doirepress.com/HOME.html
The Emma Press UK/Eng http://theemmapress.com/
Lapwing Poetry Ireland http://www.freewebs.com/lapwingpoetry/
Nine Arches Press UK/Eng http://www.ninearchespress.com/
Pindrop Press UK/Eng http://www.pindroppress.com/
AngelHouse Press CAN http://www.angelhousepress.com/index.php?Chapbooks
Poetry Slazburg Austria http://www.poetrysalzburg.com/
ThePressPress Australia http://www.presspress.com.au/Chapbooks.html
Vagabond Press Australia http://vagabondpress.net/collections/poetry

We’ll talk later about some of the goodies I’ve found from these guys. For now, I’d love it if you would share some of your favorite presses. I know you WOM-PO ladies probably have a few that I have missed. Burn up the comments!

***See SMALL POETRY PRESSES PART II for more great recommendations.

 

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