Poets Corner Reading Series

EVENTS

UPCOMING READINGS, FEATURED POETS, and THEMED READINGS.

Poetry Reading this Wednesday 21st September @730pm (HYRBID)

Please join us this Wednesday 21st September at 730pm for our first reading of the Fall semester! We are going HYBRID, We’d love to see you in person at Fairleigh Dickinson University auditorium. Otherwise, you can pre-register for the Zoom info: https://tinyurl.com/3uw73fpu. Our featured poets this month are Gillian Jerome and Dallas Hunt. Bios below!

Gillian Jerome is a mother, writer, teacher who lives on the unceded land of the xʷməθkʷəy̓ əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish) and Sel̓íl̓witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nation. She is the author of two books of poems. Her first book, Red Nest (Nightwood Editions, 2009), was nominated for the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize and won the 2010 ReLit Award for Poetry. Nevertheless: Walking Poems was published by Nightwood Editions in Spring 2022. She co-edited an oral history project,Hope in Shadows: Stories and Photographs from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2008), which won the 2008 City of Vancouver Book Award.  Her work has been supported by the BC Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts. She has taught Creative Writing and Literatures the University of Arizona, Douglas College, and the University of British Columbia.  She now teaches English Language Arts, Creative Writing and Social Studies to Vancouver teenagers. Born in Ottawa, and raised in Orléans, Ontario, she lives in East Vancouver with her partner, Tom Green, and her daughters, Rory and Micah Sophia, and their sweet cat, Pippa.

 

Dallas Hunt is Cree and a member of Wapsewsipi (Swan River First Nation) in Treaty Eight territory in northern Alberta. He has had creative works published in Contemporary Verse 2, Prairie Fire, PRISM international and Arc Poetry. His first children’s book, Awâsis and the World-famous Bannock, was published through Highwater Press in 2018. His new book, CREELAND, is out through Nightwood Editions. Hunt is an assistant professor of Indigenous literatures at the University of British Columbia.

 

May Reading Round Up

Posted on behalf of Evelyn Schofield.

Our May reading was touched with sadness as we remembered Kieran Egan, long-time supporter and much loved contributor to Poets Corner, who passed away earlier this month.  We plan to do something special in June to recognize this fine poet. Till then, listen to him reading this One Minute Poem which he recorded for us a year ago.

Our first featured poet for the evening was Natalie Lim, who read selections from her debut chapbook  arrhythmia. These poems cover a wide range of subjects mused upon during the time of the pandemic, but as she says herself “mostly, it’s a book about and for the people I love.” Her delivery was engaging and expressive and showed how she has been inspired by spoken word poets like Sarah Kay. In One Poem Wonder, an accident with her parent’ car prompts her to speak of poetry as something beautiful rescued from a car wreck and brings into focus her nagging fear that she might be “a superhero whose only power is burning out early”.  The Science of Holding On contrasts scientists’ effort to conquer time and see into the future with her own simple desire to slow the hands of the clock and linger in the present, where “everyone I love is now”.  In Six Months and Counting she asks her dog Luna to “teach me to be good“ and yearns to have the dog’s simple faith and ability to love people “in every small way they allow,/trying to make this world, yes, a little gentler,/ however I can.”

The evening continued with Jude Neale reading a diverse selection of poems from several of her published works. Her poetry speaks of family and relationships and calls up deep memories with images that strike to the heart, inviting us to see new meaning in things we previously might have overlooked. Her poems are not afraid to tackle difficult subjects, but always sorrow is lightened with small telltale signs of love or even a spark of humour. In poems like Why is it always an insult to be ‘just like your Mom’?  she proudly talks of the traits she shares with her mother. Teddy Bear’s Picnic touches obliquely on the subject of child abuse and a cherished stuffed Panda called Max, who “when I wasn’t sure what childhood was, [my bear] held the mirror”. In Blazer of the Universe she considers Mozart’s famous melody now familiar to the world as the children’s song “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star” and wonders out loud if the great composer could have known that his music would be “for all the sleepless children to come”. She is a trained singer and her delivery is evocative and moving. Her body of work exemplifies her philosophy that poems should always show love and poets should be positive torch bearers in the world.

All in all, it was an inspiring evening of community through the medium of poetry. We hope that you will join us on June 15 for the next reading, our last one until the fall.

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