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Holocaust Remembrance Week

Holocaust Remembrance Week is hosted by The Introverted Reader.  The only connection I have to WWII was my grandfather who passed last year.  He was not stationed near combat in Europe, but he was stationed overseas on the Azores.  He was proud of his service and was a member of the Greatest Generation.  I have no Jewish ties, but as any human on this planet should react, I react with utter disbelief and disgust when I read or hear about the atrocities of the Holocaust.

In honor of those who survived and those who lost their lives, I want to point out that beyond memoir, fiction, and nonfiction, poetry also demonstrates the innate horror of the Holocaust and can emotionally rip through readers’ hearts with its use of imagery.

Holocaust Poetry compiled by Hilda Schiff is one such collection that will bring the horrors and the simple joys many of the victims and their families experienced to life.  Here’s an excerpt from my review of this collection:

“Beyond the poems in the collection depicting the horrors and the losses of persecuted people in Germany, the poems of bystanders, perpetrators, and others are surprising.  They talk of how they stood by and did nothing, how they want to help even if they are too late.  Despite the time for help being long passed, these narrators express not guilt so much as regret — a deep regret at having been so paralyzed by fear that they did nothing or acted contrary to who they believed themselves to be.”

If reading an entire book of poetry is not for you, Words That Burn Within Me by Hilda Stern Cohen combines poetry with prose and nonfiction observations. This book is a compilation of her writings that her loving husband and friends put together after her death.  Please check out a part of my review:

“While the collection does illustrate one Jewish woman’s journey during WWII and the Holocaust, it stands as a testament — a record — of how inexcusably these humans were treated and how their debasement impacted their lives, their relationships, their faith, and their souls.”

Whether you take a moment to reflect on the Holocaust or pick up a book to learn more about that time in history, you are sure to feel a deep emotional attachment to those who lived through and endured some of the most horrifying events in history.  We all could learn a lesson from the past — to treat one another with more dignity and respect in our every day lives.

Earth Day 2011

Happy Earth Day, everyone.  I’ve done a number of posts over the years about recycling, ebooks, and other environmental topics, but today, I wanted to provide you with more of a hodgepodge of information.

First, Eco-Libris, which hosts the Green Books Campaign annually, is hosting a contest as part of its 41 reasons to plant a tree for your book. Today is the last day to enter the giveaway.  Check out the giveaway information from Eco-Libris:

Last November you took part in our Green Books Campaign and we thought you might be interested to learn on the campaign we’re launching for the upcoming Earth Day. This year we are celebrating the 41th Earth Day with a special campaign – 41 Reasons to Plant a Tree for Your Book.

With more than 180,000 trees planted so far on behalf of readers, authors and publishers working with Eco-Libris, it’s no surprise we think planting trees to green up books is a great idea..

But we also want to hear what readers think about it and why they believe planting trees for their books is a good idea, and so for 41 days, beginning on March 13 and continuing through April 22 (Earth Day) we’ll publish on our blog 41 of the best replies we’ll get, one reply every day!

We have great prizes to all the readers whose replies we’ll publish, including a $25 gift card for Strand Bookstore, audiobooks from Simon & Schuster Audio (such as The Half Life by Jennifer Weiner, American Assassin by Vince Flynn and Essence of Happiness by the Dalai Lama) and great green books, like Planet Home by Jeffrey Hollender, Little Green Books,  Spit That Out! by Paige Wolf, The Story of Stuff by Annie Leonard and many more! You can see the full list of the prizes on the campaign’s page.

If you would like to share the information on the this campaign with your readers and invite them to take part and send us their replies that would be great! Our email is [email protected] and the campaign’s page address is http://www.ecolibris.net/41reasons.asp

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Today, I’m striving to reduce energy use in my new home by installing eco-friendly light bulbs, ensuring that I recycle as much plastic and paper as I can, and reducing water consumption through my dishwashers “water miser” setting.  I’ve also heard some great things about rain barrels, and hope to comparison shop for one which we can use in our backyard.  Since giving birth to my daughter, I’ve reduce my energy consumption by working from home, but naturally, that’s a perk that will end sooner than I’d like.  What plans do you have to reduce your carbon footprint (take the quiz to see what your footprint is) or to conserve?

If you are interested in signing a petition to foster a “greener” economy here in the United States, please sign it here.

You also can go to the Earth Day Network and find events happening in your local area.  Please check out those events for the Washington, D.C., region.

But even if you don’t have the time or there are no Earth Day events near you, take the time to spend a moment or two outside cleaning up your own yard or  your local neighborhood, which can be as easy as picking up stray litter or dog poop.  You can even take time to visit a local park and clean up there or simply sit and enjoy the pleasures of nature.

Enjoy Earth Day and spread the word!

***Please also stop by the next National Poetry Month Blog Tour stop at Diary of an Eccentric and Read Handed.

Gatekeepers Post Interviews Me . . .

I’m glad I had the opportunity to answer the interview questions I received from The Gatekeepers Post even though I was in the midst of moving and just learning how best to care for my new daughter.  The online publication offers a number of videos, interviews, and more.  I’m glad I was given an opportunity to discuss National Poetry Month and the blog tour.

Check out my interview.

More Poetry Events . . .

As promised, I’ve been posting about poetry-related events on the Savvy Verse & Wit Facebook page, but I’m also posting information here on the blog about similar or the same events.  I hope that if you get out to see any of these events that you’ll stop by the blog and tell me about them or share them with your own readers if you have a blog.

John Amen, a poet who has appeared on this blog before and whose poetry I’ve reviewed before (At the Threshold of Alchemy and More of Me Disappears — click for my reviews), will be touring parts of the eastern United States and reading his poetry in honor of National Poetry Month.  Check out the schedule below:

04/07/2011: Reading and Workshop at Coker College: Hartsville, SC
Workshop at 3:30PM (in-school/closed event); Reading at 7:30PM (open to public)
Reading to be held in the C.W. Coker Auditorium in Davidson Hall; 300 East College Ave; Hartsville, SC 29550

04/12/2011: Reading in Wallingford, PA
7PM
Stage One; 101 Plush Mills Road (Route 252 & Plush Mills Road); Wallingford, PA.

04/14/2011: Reading in Lake Katrine, NY
7PM
Bohemian Book Bin; 85 Carle Terrace; Lake Katrine, NY 12449.

04/17/2011: Reading in New York, NY
4PM
Bowery Poetry Club; 308 Bowery; New York, NY.

04/19/2011: Reading in Fanwood, NJ
8PM
The Carriage House/Kuran Arts Center Series; 75 N Martine Ave; Fanwood, NJ 07023.

04/22/2011: Reading at Towson University in Towson, Maryland
More information available soon. For more info, email [email protected].

Also, he’s got a special going for his books:

I’m still running the special, until April 15. My first two collections (Christening the Dancer and More of Me Disappears) and my two CDs (All I’ll Never Need and Ridiculous Empire) are on sale for $5 each. My latest collection, At the Threshold of Alchemy, is marked down to $10. All purchases can be made easily and securely through Paypal via my website (www.johnamen.com). It is also possible to make purchases via check.

The Bethesda, Md., based Writer’s Center also is holding a series of great poetry events this month.

Open Door Reading with Erika Meitner and Candace Katz
Sunday, April 10, 2:00 P.M.

Erika Meitner reads poems from her latest collection, Ideal Cities. She is joined by novelist Candace Katz, author of Schaeffer Brown’s Detective Observations. Register here.

Poet Lore Vol. 106, No. 1/2 Launch Party
Sunday, April 17, 2:00 P.M.

Celebrate the launch of Poet Lore’s spring/summer issue! The nation’s oldest continuously published poetry journal, at 122 years old, hosts readings by local poets Janice Lynch Schuster, Melanie Figg, and R. Dwayne Betts. Register here.

Here are some other local Maryland and Washington, D.C., events:

Annapolis Book Festival
Saturday, April 9, 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M.

The ninth annual Annapolis Book Festival will feature nationally renowned authors from a variety of fiction and non-fiction categories. This Festival is free and open to the public, and will be held on the campus of The Key School at 534 Hillsmere Drive in Annapolis, Maryland. Check the schedule for TWC-sponsored events on writing and publishing. For more details, visit their Web site.

Bethesda Literary Festival
April 15th-17th

Celebrate literature at Bethesda’s weekend-long festival. Highlights include the Poet Lore Launch Party on Sunday (see above).

Just for Kids
Saturday, 1:00 P.M.
Bethesda Library

See award-winning children’s book author, poet, playwright and songwriter, Mary Amato (TWC workshop leader), as she reads from her most recent book, Edgar Allen’s Official Crime Investigation Notebook. Children ages 6-12.

Poetry Readings and Awards
Saturday, 8:00 P.M.
Hilton Garden Inn

Hear from award-winning poets David Keplinger and Michele Wolf (TWC workshop leaders), and the winners of the Bethesda Poetry Contest.

See the festival Web site for more details.

Also, please check out the latest Shelf Awareness article on poetry, which I really enjoyed because it is about the casual reader of poetry.

Richard Hugo House’s National Poetry Month Celebration

Seattle, Wash., based Richard Hugo House is celebrating National Poetry Month.  For every day this month, local poets are being filmed in odd places throughout the area reading their favorite poems.  Those videos will be published on the publisher’s blog, so check them out.

Here’s an example from the project; Peter Pereira reads Frank O’Hara’s “Lana Turner Has Collapsed!”

For those in the Seattle area, please check out the other events and activities the publisher is hosting:

A Good Line: Artists on Poems

April 1-30; reception on April 12, 6-9 p.m.

Local artists Gala Bent, Sharon Arnold, Troy Gua, Counsel Langley, Ryan Molenkamp, Amanda Manitach, Erin Shafkind, Nola Avienne, David Lasky, Liz Tran, Shaun Kardinal and Jed Dunkerley create new work based on poems they love. These paintings are on display throughout the month of April at the House. Gallery opening and happy hour on Tuesday, April 12, 6-9 p.m.

Recto Verso: A Small Press Expo

April 9, 2-6 p.m.

Meet local and visiting publishers and gain exposure to the independent publishing industry, featuring Copper Canyon Press, Wave Books, Future Tense Books, Chin Music Press and many other local and visiting presses and publishers. There will be readings by Aaron Kunin (Fence), Kevin Sampsell (Future Tense), Ed Skoog (Copper Canyon Press), Michael Riley Parker (Wonderlust) and others; informal talks; and drinks throughout the afternoon. Admission is $5-15 sliding scale (Includes gifts and a nifty book bag with price of entry). Presented in partnership with Pilot Books.

A Reading with Melissa Kwasny and Christopher Howell

April 18, 7 p.m.

Melissa Kwasny, former Seattleite and student of Richard Hugo’s at the University of Montana, visits Hugo House for a reading from her new collection of prose poems, “Nine Senses.” Kwasny is joined by Spokane poet Christopher Howell. A former journalist for the US Navy in the Vietnam War, Howell is the author of eight collections of poetry, including “The Crime of Luck” and “Light’s Ladder,” winner of the Washington State Book Award in 2005. The reading is free.

What’s So Funny About Peace, Love and Understanding?

April 20, 7 p.m.

Peter Pereira, Kathleen Flenniken, Judith Roche and Bob Redmond talk and read poems about the destruction and healing of our natural world. The reading is free.

Poetry Rocks!

April 21, 7:30 p.m.

Jose Bold, Sara Edwards, Goldfinch and Jason Dodson of the Maldives are taking their favorite poems to the natural next step: turning them into songs. Expect to hear poems from Wallace Stevens, Dean Young, Walt Whitman, Yeats, Keats, Dorothy Parker, Theodore Roethke and more translated into musical beauty. (There are rumors that Jose Bold may riff on Jewel’s “A Night Without Armor” to keep irony alive.) Each musician, great lyricists in their own right, performs original work, too. Come for the music and stay for the poetry. Tickets are $10 and available by calling (206) 322-7030.

Write Out: A Happy Hour for Writers

April 26, 6-8 p.m.

Hugo House’s new, popular happy hour for writers is bards-only this month. Guests Carol Guess, John Burgess and David Nixon of “Awesome” offer writing prompts to get you started and then hunker down and write. If their prompts don’t do it for you, a grab-bag of writing prompts and exercises and a small library of books on writing are available to inspire you. And to further inspire you, happy hour specials are available at the bar.

4 Courses

April 27, 6:30 p.m.

Joyce Carol Oates once wrote, “If food is poetry, is not poetry also food?” At 4 Courses, featuring four pairings of writers—Langdon Cook, Kevin Craft, Kate Lebo and Martha Silano—with food from Tom Douglas Restaurants and pie from High 5 Pie , Oates’ question is answered with a resounding “Yes!” Tickets are $15/$10 for students and seniors and available by calling (206) 322-7030.

“Cheap Wine and Poetry”

April 28, 7-10 p.m.

Hugo House closes out the month with its popular reading series, featuring poets Roberto Ascalon, Elizabeth Austen, Paul Nelson and Katharine Ogle. Plus, cheap wine! The reading, as always, is free. Open mic follows the featured readers.

Details at www.hugohouse.org or call (206) 322-7030.

***Please stop by Reading Frenzy for today’s National Poetry Month Blog Tour stop on Dylan Thomas.

National Poetry Month at 32 Poems Magazine Blog

Have you wondered what other Websites are doing to celebrate National Poetry Month?  Well, you’ve learned that Poetic Asides is doing a poem-a-day prompt, and today we’re going to take a look at the events on the 32 Poems Magazine Blog.

Not only are there interviews with poets by yours truly, but also poetry book recommendations from poets themselves.  Those recommendations will surely come in handy for those taking part in the National Poetry Month Blog Tour and my 2011 Fearless Poetry Reading Challenge.  I hope you’ll check out the books being recommended and give some of them a try this month.

Deborah Ager, owner of the blog and publisher of 32 Poems magazine, also is participating in NaPoWriMo.  You can check out the prompts and her poems on the blog as well.

Finally, there’s a big poetry giveaway for those interested in reading more poetry this month or this year.  Please go on over and enter.

***Don’t forget to visit the tour stops and check out the poetry events near you that I’m posting on Facebook.***

Books I Love . . .

If you’re not a regular reader of Book Chick City, you may have missed my guest post about the books I love.  My guest post appeared on March 29, and I’ve finally got around to telling you. 🙂

I’ve included an eclectic list of books for her readers and you, though some of you will recognize some old favorites I’ve mentioned here before.

Please go check out my post.

Breaking News . . .

Good afternoon blogging buddies and readers,

If you’ve been on Flickr, Facebook, or Twitter, I’m sure you’ve heard the news that my daughter, Katerina, finally made her debut this week.  So she’s a March baby and a Pisces.

If you want to see some photos, please visit my Flickr page.  Please ignore the horrible photos of me.  I hate my pictures always, but these are particularly unflattering.

For those that just want to see the little one, here she is:

I hope everyone is still enjoying the Indie & Small Press celebration this month because there is more to come.

March 2011 Independent and Small Press Month

As many of you know, I will be pre-occupied with the new bundle of joy for the next month or so, but in my absence, I’ve got a great line-up of small and independent press owners and publishers, some guest reviews, and other goodies coming in March.

I dubbed this event a Celebration of Independent and Small Press Month.  Lucky for me, I was able to “twist” the arm of another blogger, Shellie from Layers of Thought, to make me some fantastic buttons and a banner for everyone to use in March who wants to jump on the bandwagon.  Check out these cool buttons and banner she created:

The banner:

buttercups with white banner 3

The two badges:

buttercups with white badge b3

buttercups with white badge 3

What do you think?

For those of you still interested in writing up guest reviews of small and indie press published books, please contact me or send in your reviews by Feb. 25 with all the graphics, links, and personal information you would like included.

Kill Shakespeare by Anthony Del Col and Conor McCreery Event

Happy Valentine’s Day, everyone.  Today’s normally reserved for lovers, poets, and married couples to share the joy of their relationships, and some even accomplish that with poetry from The Bard himself, Shakespeare.

In that way, today’s announcement is about Shakespeare because authors Anthony Del Col and Conor McCreery will be at the Washington, D.C., Folger Shakespeare Theater on February 15, 2011, at 7:30 p.m.  Tickets are $15 each.

Both authors will discuss their suspense and adventure graphic novel, Kill Shakespeare, in which all of Shakespeare’s heroes team up to save a wizard named Shakespeare from the villains of his plays.

Here’s a synopsis of the novel:

Kill Shakespeare is an adventure that pits Shakespeare’s greatest heroes (including Hamlet, Juliet, Othello, Falstaff, Puck) against his most menacing villains (including Richard III, Lady Macbeth, Iago) in a quest to track down and kill – or save – a reclusive wizard by the name of William Shakespeare.  A combination of Lord of the Rings, Shakespeare in Love and the comic book series Fables, and told in modern-day English (with some Shakespeare expressions thrown in measure for measure), it is an adventure ull of action, drama, bloody violence, love, lust, comedy, double-crossing and cross-dressing – an adventure of Shakespearean proportions. . .

For those of you interested in learning more about the graphic novel, please check out this YouTube video:

Here are a couple of inside pages to view as well. Also, check out the blog.

If, you are in the D.C. area, you should stop by the Folger Shakespeare Theater to check out these authors tomorrow evening.

Stephen King’s IT Read-a-Long 2011

Created by Monniblog

Anna and I have talked about reading Stephen King’s IT together for a long while, so we decided this would be the year.  I haven’t read this novel since I was about 10 years old, which is probably why I had nightmares at the time.  I think its time to read it again.

We’ve come up with a schedule, and we’re announcing it early so that other people can join us.

The read-a-long will run from August through December, and we’ll be reading one part per month, plus the immediate interlude following each part.

For example, in August, we’ll be reading Part 1:  The Shadow Before and Derry:  The First Interlude.

We’ve also set up a posting schedule for our discussions:

August 24: Discussion of part 1 on Savvy Verse & Wit

Sept. 28:  Discussion of part 2 on Diary of an Eccentric

Oct. 31:  Discussion of part 3 on Savvy Verse & Wit

Nov. 30:  Discussion of part 4 on Diary of an Eccentric

Dec. 21:  Discussion of part 5 on Savvy Verse & Wit

We welcome anyone who wishes to join us.

You can visit the our blogs on the appointed dates for the discussions or if you prefer right up your thoughts on your own blog and post a link to your post on the day of the discussions.

Call for Guest Posts…

Good afternoon everyone!

As many of you already know, March will be a challenging month for me in terms of reading and blogging since the little one will soon be with us, so I wanted to get prepared.

As a result of brainstorming, I came up with an idea to feature independent publishers on Savvy Verse & Wit in March.  March is going to be Independent and Small Press Month here at the blog.

What I’m looking for:

1.  Guest posts either from the publishers and/or their publicists about their small presses and why the continue to struggle against the mass market producers (i.e. is it a passion for a particular book, local authors, or something more).

2.  Guest reviews from book bloggers about a great book from an independent publisher or small press, including information about the press and whether they’ve read other books by that publisher.

While it would be great to feature some poetry book reviews and publishers, I will be more open minded!  If you want to review some poetry or know a small press that publishes poetry and wants to contribute, please have them contact me.

OK, that’s it.  What do you think?  Are you game?  I want to fill up every day in March, so please send in your date requests early.

***Also, if anyone has ideas about linkable buttons/banners for the month-long event, please email me. ***