I’m glad to have my workshop on pantoums hosted by Jules’ Poetry Playhouse in Albuquerque on Saturday, November 5th from 11-2. I see it as an opportunity to share some wonderful pantoums and look at how they are made to do their magic. After the workshop, we’ll do an pantoum open-mic.
All posts by Donald Levering
“I Will Arise and Go to Innisfree”
Innisfree Poetry Bookstore & Café in Boulder, Colorado will host my reading on October 27th at 7 PM. I love that “poetry” is in the name of the business, and the use of “Innisfree,” which recalls the famous W. B. Yeats poem that begins:
I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made;
Nine bean rows will I have there, a hive for the honey bee,
And live alone in the bee loud glade.
Ginosko Literary Review Posts Five Poems
I-70 Review Publishes Dos Poemas
I received my contributor’s copy of the Summer/Fall 2016 issue of I-70 Review. Edited by the esteemed Maryfrances Wagner and others, contributed to by the likes of Michelle Boisseau, H. L. Hix, Al Ortolani, Kevin Rabas, William Sheldon, Alarie Tennille, and Diane Wakoski, I am honored to have two poems included inspired by traveling with a working plein air painter, Jane Shoenfeld.
New Letters Announces Literary Awards Winners & Finalists
Congratulations to Deborah Bogen who won this year’s New Letters Award in Poetry. My friend Leslie Ullman was in the running as a finalist, as was yours truly, but no cigar this time. Here’s the link to the announcement.
IthacaLit Accepts Poem
Michele Lesko, editor of IthacaLit, accepted the poem “Sorry” for an upcoming online issue. The poem concerns a chance encounter on a bus, and how we imagine scenarios with the strangers we meet.
Reading & Workshop Scheduled in Taos
The Society for the Muse of the Southwest (SOMOS) in Taos has kindly invited me to present a reading on Friday, September 23, 2016 at 7:00 PM to be followed the next day by a workshop at 10:00 AM. Both events will be in a new venue (to me anyway) on Civic Plaza Drive in Taos. The workshop will be on questions in poems, their various functions, and how they work or don’t work to engage the reader. More information about the reading and the workshop are in the attached links.
Fungi Magazine Reprints Monster Mushroom Poem
I have had the good luck in the past to have poems published in journals that do not specialize in literary art, where the subject of the poems aligns with the interest of other fields. So I’ve a poem on leatherback turtles in Chelonian Conservation and Biology, one on surfing in The Surfer’s Journal, and now I’ve received a copy of Fungi magazine, with my poem, “The Kingdom of Ignorance,” which features a mushroom “larger than a blue whale” (armillaria bulbosa), reprinted from my Finishing Line Press chapbook bearing the same title. I salute the open-mindedness of the editors of these journals, in Fungi’s case, Editor-in-Chief Britt Bunyard and a whole colony of contributing editors.
Long-Last Acceptance of Poems by Ginosko Review
Persistence pays…Ginosko Review had turned down six batches of my poems (that’s 30 poems) before accepting the entire 7th batch of five poems for the Fall 2016 issue.
Spring /Summer 2016 Comstock Review Is Out
This is the 30th anniversary issue, with beautifully bold cover art by Gregory Amenoff. The poem of mine included, “In a Bar Near the School for the Deaf,” had been workshopped in Tony Hoagland’s community poetry writing class in Santa Fe.