Wednesday, June 26, 2013
POETRY PENTATHLON-CONTESTANTS WANTED
Are you tired of Poetry Labels? Are you the kind of poet that can win slams and get published in literary journals? Are you comfortable wherever you perform, be it bar, cafe, library, or gallery?
I ask again...ARE YOU TIRED OF LABELS?
Don't you wish that there were some way of testing ALL your skills. Something that challenges you, as a Writer, and as a Performer. Something that challenges you in classic forms and spontaneous inspiration?
The kids at Waiting 4 The Bus have developed a system for finding the exceptionally talented and creative. The Poetry Pentathlon stand alone as a proper means for testing the skill of a Poet and Performer.
As Labor day approaches a Young poet's fancy turns to the thrill of poetic competition.
It's not a Poetry Slam!
It's the glorious throwdown known as the Poetry Pentathlon
Saturday, August 31
7-9PM
CONTESTANTS SHOULD BE 15 MINUTES EARLY
Powell's books in University village,
1218 S Halsted St, Chicago, IL 60607
TO REGISTER:
E-MAIL poetrypentathlon@gmail.com
ALL CONTESTANTS MUST BE FREE TO COMPETE IN THE LIVE EVENT
YOU CAN WIN PRIDE, BRAGGING RIGHTS AND THE ENVY OF YOUR PEERS!!!!
GOOD LUCK TO YOU ALL.
THE EVENTS
2013
Villanelle-
The highly structured villanelle is a nineteen-line poem with two repeating rhymes and two refrains. The form is made up of five tercets followed by a quatrain. The first and third lines of the opening tercet are repeated alternately in the last lines of the succeeding stanzas; then in the final stanza, the refrain serves as the poem's two concluding lines. Using capitals for the refrains and lowercase letters for the rhymes, the form could be expressed as: A1 b A2 / a b A1 / a b A2 / a b A1 / a b A2 / a b A1 A2.
Rant-
Rant poetry comes in all shapes and sizes, but it is most commonly defined as a free-verse prose poem written about an exasperating subject. Follow the steps below to wax poetic about any subject that aggravates, pesters, or otherwise drives you batty.
1
Settle on a single subject that provokes, annoys, exasperates or infuriates you. This subject will be the topic of your rant poem.
2
Brainstorm a list of reasons why your subject maddens you. Jot down a list of 10-20 specific details about your subject that drive you bonkers.
3
Decide what tone you want your poem to convey. How do you want your poem to make the reader feel? You might want to make them laugh at your misery, or cringe at your excruciating details.
4
Choose the details from your brainstorm list that you think will stimulate your audience, and craft them into sentences that reflect your tone. For example, as stated in a handwritten rant called "Airline Complaint," the writer states, "I constructed a stink shield by shoving one end of a blanket into the overhead compartment," which is a funny way to rant poetically about an airline lavatory.
5
Write your rant poem by stringing sentences from your brainstorm together in chronological order. Rant poems, like prose, contain sentences and sentence fragments. Make sure each complaint flows to the next logically, like sentences do in paragraphs.
6
Break the lines of your poem where it feels appropriate. Prose poems like the rant don't need dramatic line breaks, as they read almost like a short story.
7
End your rant poem with the single most annoying complaint from your brainstorm list. Rant poems usually run from one to two pages in length.
list poem-
A list poem is just that. A list of things. List poems first appeared thousands of years ago. The bible has list poems. Think of the family genealogy lists. Homer’s Iliad also has list poems in its lists of Trojan War heroes.
Lists are part of life. It has been used throughout the centuries to make an inventory of things.
A list poem can be a list of either people, places, things you do, items, even ideas you may have. It can rhyme, but doesn’t have to. Repetition is often a tool used in a list poem.
One thing a list poem is not is a random list. Most list poems are thought out and not just casual items.
The last item in a list poem usually has meaning – by that I mean it is often an important item.
With a list poem you are trying to get the reader to look and think about what is in your list.
Like a story there is a beginning and there is an end.
Keep consistency with the style and remember to create a parallel structure with your words.
Poetry Pot Luck-
each contestant will present a poem of their own creation to the judges. This poem will be in a sealed envelope. This poem will be given to an opposing contestant to perform.
the scoring for this round is different
1-5 points will be awarded to the performer
1-5 points will be awarded to the author
On the spot prompt-
all contestants will be presented with a poetry prompt upon arriving at the Pentathlon Arena (Powell's). A poem will be written based upon the prompt during the course of the evening and will be presented to the judges as the final event of the evening
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Pamela Miller & Bill Yarrow, RHINO Reads! Friday, June 28
Open Mike 6:00 pm – 6:30 pm
Featured Poets 6:45 pm – 7:30 pm
Brothers K
500 Main St.
Evanston
Pamela Miller’s newest collection of poems, Miss Unthinkable, has just been published by Mayapple Press. Her previous books include Recipe for Disaster, Fast Little Shoes and Mysterious Coleslaw. Her work has appeared in After Hours, OVS, blossombones, Wicked Alice and many other journals and anthologies. She lives on Chicago’s Far North Side—so far north she’s practically in Evanston.
Bill Yarrow is the author of Pointed Sentences, published by BlazeVOX in 2012. He has been published in many print and online journals including PANK, Thrush, DIAGRAM, Contrary, and the current RHINO. Two chapbooks (Twenty from MadHat Press andIncompetent Translations and Inept Haiku from Červená Barva Press) are forthcoming in 2013.
Monday, June 24, 2013
July 1st-La PIXie is Waiting 4 the Bus + Open Mic
One of our faves
we're full of raves
you are gonna be amazed
this could be the coolest show of the year
and at least there are 40 different beers
come join us as
La PiXie
rocks Jaks Tap
901 W. Jackson
Chicago Il
sign up is at 7:30
showtime is from 80-10 pm
donations are accepted for the feature
we're full of raves
you are gonna be amazed
this could be the coolest show of the year
and at least there are 40 different beers
come join us as
La PiXie
rocks Jaks Tap
901 W. Jackson
Chicago Il
sign up is at 7:30
showtime is from 80-10 pm
donations are accepted for the feature
Friday, June 21, 2013
Red Rover Series / Experiment #64
Red Rover Series
{readings that play with reading}
Experiment #64:
Coda Chroma
SATURDAY, JUNE 22nd
7pm / doors lock 7:30pm
Featuring:
James Belflower
Michael Sikkema
Jen Tynes
Nikki Wallschlaeger
at Outer Space Studio
1474 N. Milwaukee Ave
suggested donation $4
logistics --
near CTA Damen blue line
third floor walk up
not wheelchair accessible
JAMES BELFLOWER is the author of The Posture of Contour / A Public Primer (Spring Gun Press), Commuter (Instance Press), Bird Leaves the Cornice, winner of the 2011 Spring Gun Press Chapbook Prize; and a collaborative echap, And Also a Fountain (NeOpepper Press). His poems, essays and reviews appear, or are forthcoming in: Aufgabe, Fence, New American Writing, 1913, Drunken Boat, Coldfront, EOAGH, Denver Quarterly, and Apostrophe Cast among others. He is pursuing a PhD in Contemporary Poetics at Suny Albany and cocurates the Yes! Reading Series in Albany NY.
MICHAEL SIKKEMA is a native of Northern MI who has lived in California, New York state and the Netherlands. He is the author of the full length collection Futuring and seven or eight chapbooks and collaborative chapbooks. He helps make Horse Less Press happen and co-hosts the reading series Poetry and Pints in Grand Rapids, MI.
JEN TYNES is the founding editor of Horse Less Press. She is the author of several books and chapbooks, most recently You Are Causing a Disturbance (Dancing Girl Press), The Fabulous Bilocation of B. Lee (Projective Industries), The Black Mariah (DoubleCross Press), and Hunter Monies (Horse Less Press). Her third full- length book, Trick Rider, will be published by Trembling Pillow Press in 2014.
NIKKI WALLSCHLAEGER lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She is the author of one chapbook, Head Theatre ( 2007) which etched itself out of her palms unexpectedly. Her hands continue to talk, which is why she writes. Recent publications include Esque, Word Riot, Pirene’s Fountain, DecomP, Spork, Burdock, and Great Lakes Review.She is currently working on a chapbook as well as collaborative poetry projects with other awesome writers in the Midwest.
**Upcoming**
JULY 27
Experiment #65:
Amanda Ackerman, Toby Altman, Emily Barton & Suzanne Scanlon
AUGUST 10
Experiment #66:
Elizabeth Marino, Timothy David Rey & NewTown Writers
Red Rover Series is curated by Laura Goldstein and Jennifer Karmin. Each event is designed as a reading experiment with participation by local, national, and international writers, artists, and performers. Founded in 2005 by Amina Cain and Jennifer Karmin, the over sixty events have featured a diversity of renowned creative minds.
Email ideas for reading experiments
to us at redroverseries@yahoogroups.com
The schedule for events is listed at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/redroverseries
WOW WOW WOW
Red Rover Series
on facebook? why not?
{readings that play with reading}
Experiment #64:
Coda Chroma
SATURDAY, JUNE 22nd
7pm / doors lock 7:30pm
Featuring:
James Belflower
Michael Sikkema
Jen Tynes
Nikki Wallschlaeger
at Outer Space Studio
1474 N. Milwaukee Ave
suggested donation $4
logistics --
near CTA Damen blue line
third floor walk up
not wheelchair accessible
JAMES BELFLOWER is the author of The Posture of Contour / A Public Primer (Spring Gun Press), Commuter (Instance Press), Bird Leaves the Cornice, winner of the 2011 Spring Gun Press Chapbook Prize; and a collaborative echap, And Also a Fountain (NeOpepper Press). His poems, essays and reviews appear, or are forthcoming in: Aufgabe, Fence, New American Writing, 1913, Drunken Boat, Coldfront, EOAGH, Denver Quarterly, and Apostrophe Cast among others. He is pursuing a PhD in Contemporary Poetics at Suny Albany and cocurates the Yes! Reading Series in Albany NY.
MICHAEL SIKKEMA is a native of Northern MI who has lived in California, New York state and the Netherlands. He is the author of the full length collection Futuring and seven or eight chapbooks and collaborative chapbooks. He helps make Horse Less Press happen and co-hosts the reading series Poetry and Pints in Grand Rapids, MI.
JEN TYNES is the founding editor of Horse Less Press. She is the author of several books and chapbooks, most recently You Are Causing a Disturbance (Dancing Girl Press), The Fabulous Bilocation of B. Lee (Projective Industries), The Black Mariah (DoubleCross Press), and Hunter Monies (Horse Less Press). Her third full- length book, Trick Rider, will be published by Trembling Pillow Press in 2014.
NIKKI WALLSCHLAEGER lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She is the author of one chapbook, Head Theatre ( 2007) which etched itself out of her palms unexpectedly. Her hands continue to talk, which is why she writes. Recent publications include Esque, Word Riot, Pirene’s Fountain, DecomP, Spork, Burdock, and Great Lakes Review.She is currently working on a chapbook as well as collaborative poetry projects with other awesome writers in the Midwest.
**Upcoming**
JULY 27
Experiment #65:
Amanda Ackerman, Toby Altman, Emily Barton & Suzanne Scanlon
AUGUST 10
Experiment #66:
Elizabeth Marino, Timothy David Rey & NewTown Writers
Red Rover Series is curated by Laura Goldstein and Jennifer Karmin. Each event is designed as a reading experiment with participation by local, national, and international writers, artists, and performers. Founded in 2005 by Amina Cain and Jennifer Karmin, the over sixty events have featured a diversity of renowned creative minds.
Email ideas for reading experiments
to us at redroverseries@yahoogroups.com
The schedule for events is listed at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/redroverseries
WOW WOW WOW
Red Rover Series
on facebook? why not?
Monday, June 10, 2013
Andre Linoche is Waiting 4 the Bus + Open Mic
The Omniphonic Challenge:a celebration of Music meets Poetry
Top Shelf Poets is back to rock your world
put some Jazz in your step and
maybe even Funk you up.
On June 21st at 7pm
in the rendezvous room at
Powell's books
1218 S Halsted St Chicago, IL 60607
see some great music/poetry combos
featuring
The Sutton Sisters (with Stephanie Lane Sutton)
Billy Tuggle
the Goods (with Este Stevie Cologne & Rory Carolan)
and of course Omniphonic
hosted by the Weirdos of W4tB
This show will start in real time at 7pm
performers should be early
spectators should be on time.
put some Jazz in your step and
maybe even Funk you up.
On June 21st at 7pm
in the rendezvous room at
Powell's books
1218 S Halsted St Chicago, IL 60607
see some great music/poetry combos
featuring
The Sutton Sisters (with Stephanie Lane Sutton)
Billy Tuggle
the Goods (with Este Stevie Cologne & Rory Carolan)
and of course Omniphonic
hosted by the Weirdos of W4tB
This show will start in real time at 7pm
performers should be early
spectators should be on time.
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
June 6: UChicago Chapbook Festival
7pm Thursday, June 6th
at 935 East 60th Street
Mi dway Studios 108
Featuring readings by:
Eric Elshtain
Jennifer Karmin
Kenyatta Rogers
Join the students of "Poetry Chapbooks: Text and Texture," for a release party and readings from the new chapbooks. Light refreshments will be provided.
Emceed by Shaan Heng-Devan, with student readers:
Kunal Basu-Dutta
Shiyah Trotman
Alida Miranda-Wolff
Eric Shoemaker
Lorenzo Conte
Ashley Tran
Fia Bigelow
Rachel Hyman
Ryan Walach
Rebecca Ramirez
Shaan Heng-Devan
ERIC ELSHTAIN was the poetry editor of the Chicago Review for five years until stepping down in 2005. He is now the poetry editor of Beard of Bees Press, an online poetry chapbook press and home of Gnoetry0.2, a poetry generating software he co-created. Through the Snow City Arts Foundation, he is a poet-in-residence at Children's Memorial Hospital; through the Poetry Center of Chicago he is a poet-in-residence at Galileo Scholastic Academy (a public school in Chicago). Elshtain's poetry, reviews, and interviews can be found in McSweeney's, Skanky Possum, Notre Dame Review, Ploughshares, Interim, Salt Hill, GutCult, Denver Quarterly, Chicago Review, Kennesaw Review, and others. A chapbook, The Cheaper the Crook, the Gaudier the Patter, appeared in 2004 from Transparent Tiger Press. In 2006, RubbaDucky press published a chapbook entitled Here In Premonition.
JENNIFER KARMIN's multidisciplinary projects have been presented at festivals, artist-run spaces, and on city streets across the United States, Japan, Kenya, and Europe. A founding curator of the Red Rover Series, she is the author of the text-sound epic Aaaaaaaaaaalice (Flim Forum Press, 2010) and her poetry was recently published in I’ll Drown My Book: Conceptual Writing by Women (Les Figues Press, 2012). Jennifer teaches in the Creative Writing program at Columbia College and at Truman College, where she works with immigrants as a community educator. She will be a guest faculty member at Naropa University in the summer of 2013.
KENYATTA ROGERS was the 2012-2013 Visiting Poet at Columbia College. He's a Cave Canem fellow and his work has been previously published in or forthcoming from Jubilat, Court Green, Reverie, Vinyl, Cave Canem Anthology XIII, among others.
Sunday, June 2, 2013
June 4: Norman Fischer
Expressing the Inexpressible: Poetry and Religious
Practice
Norman
Fischer, poetry reading and talk
Tuesday, June 4th 7-8:30pm
at the DePaul
University Art Museum
935 W. Fullerton
Avenue
2nd floor multipurpose room
Norman Fischer is an eminent Zen Teacher and noted poet and author. Norman is former Abbot and Senior Dharma Teacher of the San Francisco Zen Center, and now leads the Everyday Zen Foundation. Norman is known for his eclecticism, warmth, and common sense, and has been active in interfaith dialog and teaching in the business world. His new book of poetry is The Strugglers. His other books of poems include Opening to You: Zen-inspired Translations of the Psalms; Precisely the Point Being Made; Like a Walk Through a Park; On Whether or Not To Believe in Your Mind; Turn Left in Order to Go Right; and Success. His many other books include the recent Training in Compassion: Zen Teachings on the Practice of Lojong; Benedict's Dharma: Buddhists Comment on the Rule of Benedict; Sailing Home: using Homer’s Odyssey to navigate life's perils and pitfalls; and Jerusalem Moonlight.
Co-sponsored by: DePaul
University Religious Studies Department
Center
for Interreligious Engagement, DePaul University
Ancient
Dragon Zen Gate, Chicago
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