Come on out on Friday, April 3 to a poetry reading and open mic at The Book of Knowledge in the Winchester downtown walking mall. Wine and hors d'oeuvres will be served. Six local poets will be featured.
Details are below:
POETRY READING AND OPEN MIC NIGHT IN WINCHESTER
Date: Friday, April 3, 2009
Time: 6:30 pm-9:30 pm (acoustic duo and refreshments at 5:30)
Location: The Book of Knowledge, 7 North Loudoun Street, Winchester, VA
Featured Poets:
Carolyn Wolfe-Carolyn Wolfe’s book, When The Moon Speaks, is a compilation of poems written over a thirty year period. They range from her college days in the 70’s to the New Millennium. Her poetry emphasizes topics ranging from her strong belief in animal rights to lighter fair including love, life and laughing at ourselves. She lives in Winchester, VA with her husband Scott and her animal companions.
Joshua Legg– Joshua Legg frequently develops his poetry into material for performance in dance and theatre works. In 2006-2007, Joshua participated in the poetry workshop in Harvard University’s Creative Writing Program, and is currently crafting a novel in verse.
Maggie Stetler-Maggie Stetler, a post 9/11 refugee from New York City, has read her work at The Donnell Library, Tompkins Square Library, Provincetown Playhouse, and Queens College in NYC. She has two Chapbooks, The Naming of The Soul and The Chain. Her poems have appeared in The Small Pond Magazine of Literature, Telephone, Woman child, Kosmos, West Wind Review, among others. For her first poetry collection, In The Belly of the Whale, she was named a finalist in the Pearl Poetry Contest. Also a Reiki practitioner, Maggie now lives in Old Town Winchester with her artist husband and five cats.
Heather Davis-Heather Davis earned a B.A. in English from Hollins University and a M.A. in creative writing from Syracuse University. She is the author of The Lost Tribe of Us, winner of the 2007 Main Street Rag Poetry Award. Her poems have appeared in Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Cream City Review, Poet Lore, Puerto del Sol, and Sonora Review, among others. She lives in Front Royal, VA with her husband, the poet Jose Padua, and their daughter. She also serves on the coordinating committee of the Split This Rock Poetry Festival and is an active member of D.C. Poets Against War.
Jose Padua-Jose Padua’s poetry and fiction have appeared in Bomb, Salon.com, Exquisite Corpse, Another Chicago Magazine, Unbearables, Crimes of the Beats, and many other journals and anthologies. He has read his work at the Lollapalooza Festival, CBGB’s, the Knitting Factory, the Black Cat Club, the Public Theater, the Washington Project for the Arts, and many other venues. His chapbook, The Complete Failure of Everything , was published by Apathy Press.
Laura Levesque Madagan– Laura grew up in Baltimore, MD. She earned her Bachelor’s in Creative Writing and English Literature from the University of New Mexico at Albuquerque in 1996. She is an active member of several online poetry boards and has been published in The Montage, Ensemble, and others. She currently lives with her three children in Winchester and works for the Loudoun County government in Leesburg, VA.
Everyone is encouraged to share their poetry. Open to everyone.
Free event sponsored by The Book Of Knowledge.
Call 540-545-8878 for more info or email to thebookofknowledge@verizon.net
Friday, March 20, 2009
Front Royal Reading and Open Mic a Huge Success
In the beautiful and cozy setting of Changes Antique Gallery, 3 featured poets and 16 open mic readers performed in celebration of Women's History Month last Saturday, March 14. The creative vibe was palpable as local poets from teens to seniors got up an shared their work. The house was packed!
Thanks go out to Catherine Wolnievicz for her hard work to coordinate the event, JoEllen McNeal for her enthusiasm and support, Tory, Pat, Christian, and Melissa for hosting the event and providing refreshments, and guest featured readers Mattie Quesenberry Smith and Julia Campbell Johnson.
Here is the article in the Warren Sentinel: http://www.shenandoah.com/stories/?headlineID=17427&sourceID=68
Stop by Changes Antiques Gallery sometime to see the current art show on their walls and shop for something unique then head next door for excellent wine and cheese at Vino y Formaggio then to the neighboring D & B Chocolates for handmade chocolates, fudge, and gelato!
Thanks go out to Catherine Wolnievicz for her hard work to coordinate the event, JoEllen McNeal for her enthusiasm and support, Tory, Pat, Christian, and Melissa for hosting the event and providing refreshments, and guest featured readers Mattie Quesenberry Smith and Julia Campbell Johnson.
Here is the article in the Warren Sentinel: http://www.shenandoah.com/stories/?headlineID=17427&sourceID=68
Stop by Changes Antiques Gallery sometime to see the current art show on their walls and shop for something unique then head next door for excellent wine and cheese at Vino y Formaggio then to the neighboring D & B Chocolates for handmade chocolates, fudge, and gelato!
Monday, February 2, 2009
Review of Hagerstown Reading
Wow, someone was really listening! Check out this write-up by reporter Lauren LaRocca. You'll have to scroll down a bit to find the story.
"...the reading was a bright spot — sometimes piercing lemon yellow — on an otherwise cold and dreary Saturday afternoon in Hagerstown...I was most inspired by Heather Davis and Jose Padua, who are poets and happen to be married — or maybe it’s the other way around."
And visit the Washington County Museum of Fine Art--it is a gorgeous place.
https://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/blogs/blog.htm?bid=7&headerTitle=the%20art%20chakra
"...the reading was a bright spot — sometimes piercing lemon yellow — on an otherwise cold and dreary Saturday afternoon in Hagerstown...I was most inspired by Heather Davis and Jose Padua, who are poets and happen to be married — or maybe it’s the other way around."
And visit the Washington County Museum of Fine Art--it is a gorgeous place.
https://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/blogs/blog.htm?bid=7&headerTitle=the%20art%20chakra
Friday, December 19, 2008
New Poem Published in Exhalezine.com
Thursday, December 11, 2008
2 Readings in January with Jose Padua
The old man and I will be reading together on two Sundays in January. Jose has been very productive since we moved to the boonies where people look at us (and especially him) real funny. You won't want to miss his new P-Funk inspired piece!
Sunday, January 11:
Iota Club & Cafe
Arlington, VA
6 PM
IOTA is located at 2832 Wilson Boulevard in the Clarendon neighborhood of Arington, VA. Wilson Boulevard starts in Rosslyn, which is just across the river from Washington D.C. IOTA is just a couple miles up on Wilson, between Edgewood and Fillmore Streets.
Sunday, January 18:
Washington County Museum of the Fine Arts
Hagerstown, MD
2:30 PM
"The Lost Tribe of Us" featuring poets Heather Davis, Sonja James and Jose Padua with music by the Frederick Baroque Ensemble.
Location: In the middle of the beautiful Hagerstown City Park, the Museum is easily accessible from Interstates 70 and 81. Click here for directions. Free admission. Plenty of free parking. Building is fully accessible to those with disabilities.
Sunday, January 11:
Iota Club & Cafe
Arlington, VA
6 PM
IOTA is located at 2832 Wilson Boulevard in the Clarendon neighborhood of Arington, VA. Wilson Boulevard starts in Rosslyn, which is just across the river from Washington D.C. IOTA is just a couple miles up on Wilson, between Edgewood and Fillmore Streets.
Sunday, January 18:
Washington County Museum of the Fine Arts
Hagerstown, MD
2:30 PM
"The Lost Tribe of Us" featuring poets Heather Davis, Sonja James and Jose Padua with music by the Frederick Baroque Ensemble.
Location: In the middle of the beautiful Hagerstown City Park, the Museum is easily accessible from Interstates 70 and 81. Click here for directions. Free admission. Plenty of free parking. Building is fully accessible to those with disabilities.
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Reading at The Daily Grind on July 17 and More
Jose Padua, Kristin Camitta Zimet, and I will be reading at The Daily Grind at 215 Main Street in Front Royal on Thursday July 17.
This event is part of the Third Thursday Art Walk in Front Royal--come on down and sip on a cool coffee frap and catch some metaphors then stroll on over to The Lucky Star Lounge for some Guinness or hard cider.
Future Readings:
This event is part of the Third Thursday Art Walk in Front Royal--come on down and sip on a cool coffee frap and catch some metaphors then stroll on over to The Lucky Star Lounge for some Guinness or hard cider.
Future Readings:
- Thursday, August 21 at the Gallery of the Blue Ridge Arts Council as part of "Virginia Monologues"
- Sunday, September 14 at Iota Bar and Cafe in Clarendon, VA
- Friday, October 3 at the Winchester Book Gallery in Winchester, VA
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Poetry Coming to Front Royal!
Well, I've finally hooked up with some artsy folks here in Front Royal and it looks like Jose (my ever faithful companion) and I will be reading on July 17 somewhere on Main Street. We're still working out the details. There is now a Third Thursday Art Walk in Front Royal and more shops are opening up. A new bar called the Lucky Star Bar is coming and a gourmet wine and cheese shop. Yeeha! We're just bursting with kultcha!
The reading in Lexington at Studio 11 was fantastic. Lexington is a beautiful town and Jeanne Larsen and Mattie Quesenberry Smith were so much fun to read with. But I really want to know how Mattie manages to write anything while home schooling her 10 kids--I mean, oh my gosh!
Here are 2 beautiful poems from Jeanne's latest book of translations from the Chinese --Willow, Wine, Mirror, Moon:
Poem is attributed (!) to Pei Yixian, dates unknown, Tang dynasty
(618-907 CE):
MISSING HIM: TWO POEMS
1.
Winds lift and curl the level
sands. Sun slips
into their dusk. Signal
smoke. A distant guess--
nomads' flocks on the move.
called up, captured, gone sick
in the camps: some
heroes never come home.
I'll wear out my gaze on
barbarous skies. I'll
cry over clouds
on the northern front.
2.
Once, love, you patrolled
the western tribes. Deployed,
you took war's force
to be no heavy thing.
Now you're gone.
You're one of the dead.
What point, this leaving
a woman like me, here
to hate the dull
half-light of another day's end?
The reading in Lexington at Studio 11 was fantastic. Lexington is a beautiful town and Jeanne Larsen and Mattie Quesenberry Smith were so much fun to read with. But I really want to know how Mattie manages to write anything while home schooling her 10 kids--I mean, oh my gosh!
Here are 2 beautiful poems from Jeanne's latest book of translations from the Chinese --Willow, Wine, Mirror, Moon:
Poem is attributed (!) to Pei Yixian, dates unknown, Tang dynasty
(618-907 CE):
MISSING HIM: TWO POEMS
1.
Winds lift and curl the level
sands. Sun slips
into their dusk. Signal
smoke. A distant guess--
nomads' flocks on the move.
called up, captured, gone sick
in the camps: some
heroes never come home.
I'll wear out my gaze on
barbarous skies. I'll
cry over clouds
on the northern front.
2.
Once, love, you patrolled
the western tribes. Deployed,
you took war's force
to be no heavy thing.
Now you're gone.
You're one of the dead.
What point, this leaving
a woman like me, here
to hate the dull
half-light of another day's end?
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