The nice thing about going west from east is the ease with which I wake up early, since 6:30 LA is 9:30 GA. I shower, shave, dress up (for me), and zip to the UCLA campus to hit the green room before Elena and I start working the Poetry Corner Stage, which features a new poet every half hour. You'd think we'd get tired of hearing two full days of poetry, but it doesn't happen. We have too much to do but still we stop and listen. Elena's already in the green room buzzing with authors and entourages, and she's sitting down for coffee with David St. John, and I rush to join them. It's always a joy to see David because he's so welcoming and much more stimulating than the coffee I set down at the table. Robert Pinsky (who taught me much at Berkeley) comes in and Frank Bidart, who won the LA Times Book Award for poetry, and Marie Howe and Linda Gregerson and Dana Goodyear and Victoria Chang and we're introducing and sitting and chatting for twenty minutes before we have to get to work. It's a whirlwind of conversation, threads across time and place and new threads randomly. Robert mentions that we should get innoculated for shingles based on his own recent experience with this common illnes (and I think my friend John Guzlowski would agree). I talk with Frank about having heard that Lee McCarthy, a mutual friend and fellow central valley poet, had recently passed away, and we connected and appreciated her unique energy. Then Elena and I had to go work the stage.
It's always wonderful to see Bill and the staff of Small World Books (their presence is the best part of Southland Tales), who stocks the tables with a fine selection of poetry from people who'll read at the stage and other excellent poetry books that you should own. Saturday's lineup (and their most recent publications)? Funny you should ask:
Poetry Stage
10 a.m.
Dana Goodyear & Victoria Chang , Honey & Junk and Salvinia Molesta respectively
10:30 a.m.
Robert Pinsky, Gulf Music
11 a.m.
Matthea Harvey, Modern Life
11:30 a.m.
Linda Gregerson, Magnetic North
12 p.m.
Carol Muske-Dukes, Sparrow
12:30 p.m.
Frank Bidart, Watching the Spring Festival
1 p.m.
Marie Howe, The Kingdom of Ordinary Time
1:30 p.m.
Jill Bialosky, The Intruder
2:00 p.m.
This was supposed to be Jorie Graham's slot, but she cancelled.
To avoid dead air, Elena Byrne, Tony Barnstone, Sarah Maclay and I took turns reading from our works (and one of Jorie's poems).
2:30 p.m.
John Felstiner, Can Poetry Save the Earth? A Field Guide to Nature Poems
3 p.m.
David St.John, The Face: A Novella in Verse
3:30 p.m.
Cole Swensen, Ours
4 p.m.
Connie Voisine, A Rare High Meadow of Which I Might Dream
4:30 p.m.
Mindy Netifees & Richard Silberg, Sleepyhead Assassins and Deconstruction of the Blues
5 p.m.
Get Lit Players: Classical Teen Poetry Troupe
Saturday featured a strong lineup with good variety. Robert and David and Connie were my personal highlights, and it was good finally to hear Frank Bidart read in his driving style. I went to Utah with Connie and she was a prize nominee this year! Her book is terrific and I'll teach it in the fall (note: order books, dumbass). Richard Silberg, an avant garde icon, and the Get Lit Players, a troop of young spoken word champions, were very pleasant surprises. John Feltsiner gave the first lecture at one of these events, which he peppered with other people's poetry. Good message, but I think some in the crowd were puzzled. It was one of the smoothest days we'd ever had. Only one reader forgot how to tell time, but we handled that quickly. And Jackson Wheeler, David Oliveira's Solo co-editor, showed up, and we caught up best we could.
Elena hosted a party that night at the Ruskin Center. I enjoyed the drive up, listening to Henry Rollins post-punk program on KCRW, Television, Joy Division, and especially (because I hadn't heard it in ages) The Normal's "Warm Leatherette," which bled into one of my own poems (albeit with a very different ethos), among his many fine selections. I showed up early, set up chairs and tables, while Elena and Carol Ann Davis cooked pasta and made lovely sauces and salads and there was wine. Lots of LA poetry royalty arrived at this casual gathering and to name a few would slight the many, but we ate and drank and enjoyed a fine first day of poetry and conversation and pasta and a perfect LA evening in the Miracle Mile.
Showing posts with label Robert Pinsky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Pinsky. Show all posts
Friday, June 12, 2009
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Road Trip Day 4: Books to Beans
Day four was OUR day. Elena's and mine. We've toiled away happily at the Poetry Corner for ten years, and, finally, they let us read. Happily, we both had fresh projects to read from: Elena's Masque (Tupelo) and my own chapbook, Other Medicines (Redbone). We chose to alternate rather than chunk it up, and that seemed to work well, create a different rhythm. Friends were in the audience, including Chryss, Margaret, and new friend Tristan with his lovely fiancée (and, oh, Jackson was there Saturday). And Robert, who read after and who taught me at Berkeley, showed up early to listen, but this is all I'll say about us basking in our tiny glory. We still had to work the rest of the day, and it was also a fine one, with Robert reading from his strong new book, and on through many regulars to Stanley Plumly in his best basso radio voice, to another old Fresno compadre Sam Pereira, and Wanda Coleman, who briefly turned it into a revival tent with heavy with eros. The complete lineup follows.
Elena Byrne and Marty Williams
Masque and Other Medicines
Robert Pinsky
Gulf Music: Poems
Maurya Simon
Cartographies
Al Young
Something About the Blues
Elaine Equi
Ripple Effect: New and Selected Poems
Jill Bialosky and Dana Goodyear
The End of Desire and Honey and Junk
1:00 PM
James Ragan
In the Talking Hours
Adam Kirsch
Invasions: New Poems
Stanley Plumly
Old Heart: Poems
Carol Muske-Dukes and Sam Pereira
Sparrow and A Café in Boca
Chris Abani
Hands Washing Water
Wanda Coleman and Diane Ward
Mercurochrome and When You Awake
Luis J. Rodriguez
My Nature is Hunger
It was especially lovely to see Margaret, whom I bean seein' here every year and who beacons her smile wherever she goes. I left her in the green room with Robert and Pico Iyer. After the reading, Elena and I tried to meet up with Noah, who usually comes out but was visiting family in San Diego. That was perhaps the only disaster of the entire trip, since Noah was coming on bike and I had to leave for a gathering in Santa Barbara the moment he arrived. I needed more Noah time. But the three of us parted and hugged and I headed north, where I stayed with George and Amy, and where Chryss and Cattie and Dave and Patrick and Barry remained despite my latish arrival. We drank great wine (including a lovely '98 Dehlinger pinot) and laughed until late. It was nice to be home.
Elena Byrne and Marty Williams
Masque and Other Medicines
Robert Pinsky
Gulf Music: Poems
Maurya Simon
Cartographies
Al Young
Something About the Blues
Elaine Equi
Ripple Effect: New and Selected Poems
Jill Bialosky and Dana Goodyear
The End of Desire and Honey and Junk
1:00 PM
James Ragan
In the Talking Hours
Adam Kirsch
Invasions: New Poems
Stanley Plumly
Old Heart: Poems
Carol Muske-Dukes and Sam Pereira
Sparrow and A Café in Boca
Chris Abani
Hands Washing Water
Wanda Coleman and Diane Ward
Mercurochrome and When You Awake
Luis J. Rodriguez
My Nature is Hunger
It was especially lovely to see Margaret, whom I bean seein' here every year and who beacons her smile wherever she goes. I left her in the green room with Robert and Pico Iyer. After the reading, Elena and I tried to meet up with Noah, who usually comes out but was visiting family in San Diego. That was perhaps the only disaster of the entire trip, since Noah was coming on bike and I had to leave for a gathering in Santa Barbara the moment he arrived. I needed more Noah time. But the three of us parted and hugged and I headed north, where I stayed with George and Amy, and where Chryss and Cattie and Dave and Patrick and Barry remained despite my latish arrival. We drank great wine (including a lovely '98 Dehlinger pinot) and laughed until late. It was nice to be home.
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