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Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Sit down and ponder for a moment about every person who impacted you or helped you get where you are today. These could be significant others, professors, your parents, that guy you once met at the Loaf & Jug on the way home from work...think about these people and how they have impacted your life, and then write a haiku for every person that is significant enough to deserve one.
Submission time is here! Every March from the 1st through the 20th, Write Bloody Publishing (founded by the miraculous beat poet Derrick C. Brown) accepts poetry and manuscript submissions to be judged. After some deliberations, the publishing company whittles down the contestants until three lucky writers stand at the top, with a book deal and guaranteed tour. It can't hurt to try! This is a company that publishes some of the best contemporary poetry I've ever read, so give it a try. All they can do is say no :)

Here's a link!
BECOME A PUBLISHED AUTHOR!
I just got back from the Unity Celebration in the DAC and I have to tell you all that it was simply incredible.

We had brilliant poets and poetry reading that would leave you breathless.  We honored both staff and students who are doing wonderful work in bringing this college together as a cohesive, meaningful community.  We had original music of incredible depth, emotion and maturity.  We were treated to a lovely group performance by the Poetry Club.  Overall, we had lots of people joining together in an event that was just, well, The Bomb.  


Bravo to everyone involved.  What a fabulous experience.  I wish I could bottle the feelings I'm taking away from this.
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In other words,
 a big thank you to everyone who was involved in our Black History Month Unity Celebration! Overall I think we did a fantastic job and the audience was quite moved by our words. It really just goes to show that language really can foster the emotion and passionate drive it takes to change the world.  
Monday, February 4, 2013

Gwendolyn Brooks

By Haki Madhubuti
 
she doesn’t wear
costume jewelry
& she knew that walt disney
was/is making a fortune off
false-eyelashes and that time magazine is the
authority on the knee/grow.
her makeup is total-real.

a negro english instructor called her:
       “a fine negro poet.”
a whi-te critic said:
       “she’s a credit to the negro race.”
somebody else called her;
       “a pure negro writer.”
johnnie mae, who’s a senior in high school said:
       “she and Langston are the only negro poets we’ve
       read in school and i understand her.”
pee wee used to carry one of her poems around in his
    back pocket;
       the one about being cool. that was befo pee wee
       was cooled by a cop’s warning shot.

into the sixties
a word was born . . . . . . . . BLACK
& with black came poets
& from the poet’s ball points came:
black doubleblack purpleblack blueblack beenblack was
black daybeforeyesterday blackerthan ultrablack super
black blackblack yellowblack niggerblack blackwhi-te-
       man
blackthanyoueverbes ¼ black unblack coldblack clear
black my momma’s blackerthanyourmomma pimpleblack
       fall
black so black we can’t even see you black on black in
black by black technically black mantanblack winter
black coolblack 360degreesblack coalblack midnight
black black when it’s convenient rustyblack moonblack
black starblack summerblack electronblack spaceman
black shoeshineblack jimshoeblack underwearblack ugly
black auntjimammablack, uncleben’srice black
       williebest
black blackisbeautifulblack i justdiscoveredblack negro
black unsubstanceblack.

and everywhere the
lady “negro poet”
appeared the poets were there.
they listened & questioned
& went home feeling uncomfortable/unsound & so-
       untogether
they read/re-read/wrote & rewrote
& came back the next time to tell the
lady “negro poet”
how beautiful she was/is & how she helped them
& she came back with:
       how necessary they were and how they’ve helped her.
the poets walked & as space filled the vacuum between
       them & the
lady “negro poet”
u could hear one of the blackpoets say:
       “bro, they been calling that sister by the wrong name.”

In Your Eyes
I shine on your stomach
   where I removed your entrails
I swell your tongue in my grip
   spread frozen across your skin
I sold your heart for feathers
   liquefied your joints with pain
I set your whiskers a-quiver
    and grew bulbs in your viscera
If you hide me in shame
   I grow forever more
Yet if you name me
   you prove I am not yours
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Hello one and all! Thanks to one of our lovely poets, Jeff, we now have a compiled list of poetry readings that will take place this year, all the way through May. I'm sure they're bound to be thrilling, so take a look!



Readings, Spring 2013

February
Friday, Feb. 1, 7:30 p.m.
Literary Northwest Series reading: Karen Holmberg (poetry)
The Valley Library Rotunda

Saturday, Feb. 2, 2:00 p.m.
Author reading and signing: Tom Titus, from his new collection Blackberries in July: A Forager’s Field Guide to Inner Peace (essays)
Grass Roots Books and Music, 227 SW 2nd, Corvallis

Saturday, Feb. 9, 2:00 p.m.
Poetry Reading: What the River Brings: Oregon River Poems
Charles Goodrich, Donna Henderson, Claudia Lapp, Kathryn Ridall, and Tim Whitsel
Grass Roots Books and Music, 227 SW 2nd, Corvallis

Friday, Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m.
Oregon State University Visiting Writers Series: Paisley Rekdal (poetry and essays)
The Valley Library Rotunda

Saturday, Feb. 16, 2:00 p.m.
Poetry Reading: Constance Eggers, from her chapbook Reliquary
Grass Roots Books and Music, 227 SW 2nd, Corvallis

March
Saturday, March 2, 7:00 p.m.
Author Event: A Natural History of Now (essays) and These Mountains that Separate Us (poetry)
Readers include Rick Borsten, David Oates, Adrienne Ross, Bette Husted, Pamela Steel, M.E. Hope, Charles Goodrich, and Erik Muller
Corvallis-Benton County Public Library, 645 NW Monroe Ave.

April
Thursday, April 4, 7:30 p.m.
Oregon State University Visiting Writers Series: Mike Rich (screenwriting)
LaSells Stewart Center Construction & Engineering Hall

Friday, April 19, 7:30 p.m.
Oregon State University Visiting Writers Series: Dawn Raffel (fiction and memoir)
The Valley Library Rotunda

May
Friday, May 10, 7:30 p.m.
Oregon State University Visiting Writers Series: Antonya Nelson & Robert Boswell (fiction)
The Valley Library Rotunda
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Hello Poets,

This is just a quick hello and reminder about the upcoming poetry exhibition in April.

By now, we each have a jpg of our chosen photo.  Please keep the deadline of February 15th firmly planted.  In the next few weeks, I'll be sending the format for submissions (e.g. info about you we need for press release etc).

Please also keep the length considerations in mind.  We've tossed around the guideline of a maximum of 12 lines by 12 words per line.  That might be a little short for what you're in the process of composing and I think a little bit beyond that is fine.  But once you hit the 20 line territory, you run the risk of creating havoc for Rich as well as diminishing the readers' joy -- hard to read a long poem on the wall.

At our poetry club meetings on Tuesday (Albany campus Tuesdays @ 3 in the Hot Shot) we've been sharing our poems-in-progress.  Last week, Jeff F. brought a few of the many he has written for his image.  It inspired us all to attempt many tries and share our drafts at our meetings.  If you can, please join us on Tuesdays or Wednesdays when our Benton Center poetry club meets in the conference room (BC conference room Wednesdays @ 5:00).

Rich has asked us to suggest a name for this exhibition.  Our last (Spring 2011) book and exhibition was titled "Words and Pictures."  It's a popular (generic) name.  Please be thinking about suggestions for our exhibition name and send them out for all.

If you have any questions or comments, please write or call.

Happy weekend,
Robin