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Archive for January, 2008

Val Morehouse: TWO POEMS

Monday, January 28th, 2008

CARBON FUTURES

In tar beach tent towns roughnecks cast up,
climbing through muck like blackened grease monkeys
between sumps gummy with acrid crude.
Whole families broke down on the nuts and bolts of production,
earning poverty for their trouble and even
sleeping on ground the Company owned.

In heat that only a rattlesnake could love, and
breeze rank with petroleum funk, they stuck
tents and shanties on ditch backs
like burr scabs on a starving dog,
stalking that next whiskey dollar the way
a lover drinks in an embrace.

Oil owned my family.
Its flare-offs and blowouts they plowed
into a history of mud and fists and cable
song roaring through crops of derricks,
fields they planted for The Man, rigs
drilled like lightning bolts into the dirt.

Ruts and crushed rock fed acres of hulks
raised from dust devils like some hellish corn
grinding ground day and night for a promise
of moisture, the remembered curl of spring-sweet fiddleheads;
for the sound of ancient surf long fallen
into a slurry of shit-black dreams.

In sulphuric fury the tide turned,
gushing back in a rumble of carbon futures,
splits of gas, and diesel, and kerosene
oozing blood of machines,
banking the metallic stink of money into
the sweaty cents of escape.

8/2007

BLOWOUT

Centuries wax and wane above these damp will-o-the-wisps,
spirits, diatoms squeezed of soul by time’s closing fist.
Anticlines rise and rock their trillion skeletons to sleep.
Even Gaia’s hands close in one last amen over the salty dead.

Dark domes of decayed and deserted corpses drop
into secret amphora corked with stone.
Gathering a ghostly jewelry, a richness of
glassy stars, beads, circles, boats, and wings,

their silica bones crush and condense in
aromatic perfume impressed
and cradled inside the hoops of limestone.
Against all odds, one random

tremor expresses old genealogy the way
a fault line slips into the memory of movement.
The way feathers of carbon and oxygen unchained
at last hiss through dry seams of shale,

the dead erupt from that smoky crevasse between earth and sky.
Like angels the old ones soar into life
through tons of mud and midnight detritus on wings
flaring with the hellfire of a new star.

9/2007

Val Morehouse
Copyright © 2008

ValMorehouse.Com

WATER OVER STONE | Connie Post: Poet Laureate of Livermore

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

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Connie Post: Poet Laureate of Livermore

Water Over Stone

Livermore, California,

On January 18, 2008, a plaque inscribed “Water Over Stone”a poem by the City of Livermore‘s Poet Laureate, Connie Post — was installed at the Livermore Valley Center Park Plaza and Amphitheater. The poem was composed for the June 14, 2007 dedication and ribbon cutting at the opening of the Plaza. Connie Post read the poem to a crowd at the June celebration. This plaque is adjacent to the Faulkner Quote in the same area. Connie is pleased that the City of Livermore supports poetry and that she could bring poetry to the forefront of the structure of her community.


BIBLIOCRACY | Andrew Tonkovich | KPFK Pacifica, L.A.

Friday, January 25th, 2008

Bibliocracy

Mondays, 12:00 noon – 12:30 PM KPFK.org

A new, exciting books discussion and interview program featuring writers and readers of (mostly) literary fiction and nonfiction. In addition to talking with authors, host Andrew Tonkovich (editor, Santa Monica Review) makes a weekly “staff picks” survey of area independent bookseller recommendations and highlights So Cal readings, book signings and literary culture events.

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Andrew Tonkovich
Editor: Santa Monica Review

Bibliocracy Debut Guest: Al Young

BURMESE POET ARRESTED AND JAILED FOR LOVE POEM

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Burmese poet accused of hiding anti-junta message in love poem

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The Love Journal isn’t the first place we’d look for hidden messages railing against the Burmese government, but that’s where poet Saw Wai is accused of secreting a sentence that criticizes the junta’s top general.

BBC News reports that the government was none too pleased to discover that the first words of each line in his latest love poem said: “General Than Shwe is crazy with power.” (The hidden message is being reported as “Power Crazy Than Shwe” in one publication, and “Megalomaniac Than Shwe” in another.)

Saw Wai has been taken into custody, and BBC News says no one knows what will happen to the dissident writer. Editor Myat Khaing tells Mizzima News that he thought it was a romantic poem.

See article in its original context at USA Today

Burma poet held for secret insult BBC

Poet arrested after coded protest Irrawaddy: Covering Burma and Southeast Asia

NPR’s All Things Considered coverage of banned writers

Cities of Refuge

Katherine Hastings Announces the Season Premier of The WordTemple Poetry Series

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Copperfield’s Books, 2316 Montgomery Drive, Santa Rosa, CA 95405
Friday, February 1, 2008 7:00 pm

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California State Poet Laureate AL YOUNG celebrates his new book, complete with audio CD, Something About the Blues: An Unlikely Collection of Poetry. Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes was the first to popularize the blues as a poetic form. Young carries on his legacy in this wonderful new book of poems that evoke the blues in stories about life and music.

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WORDWIND CHORUS, an ensemble of performing writers (Reginald Lockett, Brian Auerbach, Q.R. Hand, Jr. and Lewis Jordan) will give a riveting performance. Don’t miss this rare opportunity to hear the Chorus right here in Santa Rosa.

WHOSE REALLY BLUES: Poems by Q.R. Hand, Jr. (Taurean Horn Press)

The opening poet of the evening is Petaluma poet BEATRIZ LAGOS, who qualifies as a “local” by way of her childhood and adolescence spent under Argentina’s military dictatorship.

For more information go to www.wordtemple.com or call 707.537.8594

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