Join us for an afternoon of poetry reading and discussion with six poets at varying stages of their craft.
Members of a poetry workshop run by the poet Elaine Sexton, this group meets weekly on Zoom to share and hone their writing. Over time they have grown to know each other very well via the poems they bring to class, as well as all the commentaries and critiques. They cheer each other on as poets and otherwise. They make a great effort to see one another in person, too, whenever possible; this is happily one of those times.
The poets you’ll hear from are:
Bonnie Jill Emanuel, reading from Glitter City
Thea Goodman, reading from The Invented Mother
Linda Hillman Chayes, reading from Not My First Walk On The Moon
Vanessa Smith, reading from Room Tone
Michele Karas, reading from current work
Sherry Stuart Berman, reading from current work
Whether you are an aspiring poet yourself or poetry is simply a cherished part of your life, we hope you’ll spend your Friday afternoon with us. Please let us know if you’ll be coming by (for planning purposes). Books will be available for purchase and signing. This event is free to attend.
The poems in The Invented Mother question the social construction and the reality of mothering, the gender binary, and the mystery of family relationships on a changing planet.
Not My First Walk On The Moon takes the reader on a journey through time and geographies. It moves through seasons and generations, through cityscapes, seashore, barrier islands, and backyards. The poems reflect on loss and how it reverberates throughout a lifetime including the tiny but continual losses of aging. Many of the poems use a framework of visual art and imagery—including a mother’s love of Turner’s “Paintings of the Sea at Margate,” a crime scene photo in which the facts fail to tell the story, and a portrait of a family leaving Rockaway beach in late afternoon.
Room Tone invites the reader to explore perception, love, and impermanence as it delves into the landscape of the human experience. A meditative and imaginative voice underscores these poems that are startling portraits from a woman’s life - including scenes from childhood, marriage, motherhood, travel, illness, divorce, and the deaths of those around her.