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WCPA Office Book and Furniture give-away

November 9, 2022 by Robert Gill

After five years at the Sprinkler Factory, the WCPA has moved our offices.  We’ll share more about our new office space in the next newsletter; however, today, we are looking for help from our members and lovers of poetry in exiting our old office.

We’re not asking you to help us move; everything we could take with us is already at its new home.  No, we’ve been blessed with an abundance of books and furniture we don’t have room for as we downsize.  We’d love for it to become part of your poetry library or collection.

Come to the old WCPA office at the Sprinkler Factory (38 Harlow Street, Worcester) on Saturday, 11/12/2022, and Saturday, 11/19/2022, for a “yard sale.” The doors will be open from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm on both days.  Take some of our furniture to a new home, pick up a book or five for your winter reading, or just come to say “hello.”

We have a PDF inventory of what was available as of this past Sunday at this link.  Have a question?  Drop an email to wcpaboard@yahoo.com, and we’ll do our best to answer you.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Announcing the Winners of the 2022 WCPA Poetry Contest: The Frank O’Hara Prize

July 5, 2022 by Robert Gill


Jennifer Freed of Holden, Massachusetts, has won the 2022 Frank O’Hara Prize. The O’Hara Prize, awarded annually by the Worcester County Poetry Association (WCPA), was established in 1973. Freed’s poem “Kangaroos in Kharkiv” was selected by contest judge Usman Hameedi from the 89 submissions by 34 entrants.

Jennifer L. Freed is the author of When Light Shifts (Kelsay, 2022), a memoir-in-poems about the aftermath of her mother’s cerebral hemorrhage, and of a chapbook, These Hands Still Holding, a finalist in the 2013 New Women’s Voices Competition (Finishing Line Press, 2014).  She was awarded the 2020 Samuel Washington Allen Prize for a long poem or poem-sequence (New England Poetry Club), has been a finalist for the Frank O’Hara prize multiple times and has received nominations for the Pushcart Prize and Orison Anthology.  She leads adult education programs online and in-person, and lives in Holden, Massachusetts.

Four additional winners were selected by Usman Hameedi.

Second Place – Lis Beasley of Uxbridge, Massachusetts, for “The Father as a Magician”

Third Place – Cheryl Bonin of Sutton, Massachusetts, for “Burnt”
Honorable Mention – Glenn D’Alessio of West Brookfield, Massachusetts, for “A Lobotomy”

Honorable Mention – Dennis Rhodes of Naples, Florida, for “Question”

The winning poems will be published in the next edition of The Worcester Review, the nationally recognized journal of the WCPA. The winners also receive a cash award. The WCPA will invite all the winners to read their work at the Winners’ Ceremony and Reading on Sunday, September 25, 2022, at 3:00 p.m.

The Winners’ Reading will be held at the First Unitarian Church, 90 Main Street, Worcester. Contest judge Usman Hameedi will be our featured reader that afternoon.

Usman Hameedi is a Pakistani-American scientist, poet, and educator. He also serves on Mass Poetry’s Board of Directors.   He earned his MS in Biomedical Sciences from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.  During his graduate studies, he did additional work in medical humanities and volunteered in geriatric care at Mount Sinai Hospital.  Neuroscience and oncology are his primary areas of scientific interest and expertise.  Since 2008, he has competed in and coached for collegiate, national, and international level poetry slams.  He was featured on The Huffington Post, Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine, and The Story Collider: Storytelling for Scientists podcast.  His first full-length collection is forthcoming in 2023 and will be published by Button Poetry.

The poetry contest was renamed the Frank O’Hara Prize in 2009 and continues to be generously supported as a tribute to the late poet Frank O’Hara by the O’Hara family.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage, Yearly Archive item

Spam calls from the WCPA phone number

June 2, 2022 by Robert Gill

We’ve learned that the WCPA phone number is being used to call people for spam/scam purposes.  No one from the WCPA will ever call and ask for personal information.

We are working with our phone provider to try to resolve this issue.  Please accept our sincere apologies if you have been impacted by a spam call from our number.

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Tony Brown Chosen for Kunitz Medal

April 20, 2022 by Robert Gill

Proclaimed a “Slam Poet Legend” by Poetry Slam International, Worcester poet Tony Brown has been selected as the 2022 Stanley Kunitz Medal recipient.

Brown is widely known throughout Worcester’s poetry community and beyond. During nearly five decades of shepherding poetry from “the page to the stage,” he has established himself as a poet, essayist, teacher, pacesetter among slam team poets, editor, and venue host. Brown is cofounder of The Duende Project, a spoken word and music quartet that performs locally and along the East Coast, in addition to releasing six collections of their work. Brown’s daily blog, “Dark Matters,” attracts over 3000 readers, and his poems have garnered seven Pushcart Prize nominations.

The Stanley Kunitz Medal originated with a bequest to the Worcester County Poetry Association from former Poet Laureate of the United States and Worcester native Stanley Kunitz (1905-2006). Brown’s award will be the eighth annual medal bestowed on a poet with a strong Worcester County connection who best exemplifies Kunitz’s lifelong commitment to poetry. The award recognizes a poet’s commitment to poetry as Kunitz lived it: teaching poetry, mentoring poets, speaking poetry, publishing poetry, and supporting organizations which nurture poetry.

Also nominated this year were poets Curt Curtin, David Macpherson, and Laura Jehn Menides.

Tony Brown will receive his medal at a ceremony presented by the Worcester County Poetry Association at the Worcester Historical Museum on Thursday, July 28th from 6:30-8:30 p.m. There is limited parking at the museum, with additional parking on street and in the Pearl/Elm Street Garage. Visit the 2022 Kunitz Medal Ceremony event page for details.

 

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage Tagged With: #poetryofworcestercounty, #2022, #stanleykunitz

Haiku workshop this Thursday, April 7, 2022

April 5, 2022 by Robert Gill

Join West Boylston writer Loree Griffin Burns to reconsider and reconnect with the natural world through this seemingly simple poetic form. This group is for teenagers and adults, beginner to master, interested in exploring haiku in English. Join us monthly to wander indoors and out, to read, to write, and to share our poems.

Please email beaman @ cwmars . org at least 24 hours prior to this program to register.

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WCPA Annual Meeting this Sunday (4/3/2022)

March 30, 2022 by Robert Gill

Dzvinia OrlowskyJoin the Worcester County Poetry Association for our Annual Meeting on April 3, 2022! The afternoon consists of a short Business Meeting, a chance to mingle with friends, and a poetry feature by Dzvinia Orlowsky. We’ll start at 2:00 pm in-person at the First Unitarian Church, 90 Main Street, Worcester.

You can view the agenda at this link – 2022 Annual Meeting Agenda [link]

Dzvinia Orlowsky is a Pushcart Prize poet, translator, and a founding editor of Four Way Books.  She is also the author of six poetry collections published by Carnegie Mellon University Press including her most recent, Bad Harvest, named a 2019 Massachusetts Book Awards “Must Read” in poetry; Silvertone (2013) for which she was named Ohio Poetry Day Association’s 2014 Co-Poet of the Year; and Convertible Night, Flurry of Stones (2009) for which she received a Sheila Motton Book Award.  Her first collection, A Handful of Bees, was reprinted in 2009 as a Carnegie Mellon University Classic Contemporary. Her translation from the Ukrainian of Alexander Dovzhenko’s novella, The Enchanted Desna, was published by House Between Water in 2006, and her poem sequence “The (Dis)enchanted Desna” was selected by Robert Pinsky as the 2019 co-winner of the New England Poetry Club Samuel Washington Allen Prize.  In 2014, Dialogos published Jeff Friedman’s and her co-translation of Memorials: A Selection by Polish poet Mieczysław Jastrun for which she and Friedman were awarded a 2016 National Endowment for the Arts Literature Translation Fellowship.  Her co-translation with Ali Kinsella from the Ukrainian,  Eccentric Days of Hope and Sorrow:  Selected Poems by Natalka Biolotserkivets was published by Lost Horse Press in 2021.  Dzvinia is Writer-in-Residence at the Solstice Low-Residency MFA Program in Creative Writing and a contributing poetry editor to Solstice Literary Magazine and Agni.

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Our College Poetry Contest Endowment

March 24, 2022 by Robert Gill

The Greater Worcester Community Foundation manages six endowment funds on behalf of the WCPA that provides annual support for WCPA programs such as the Gregory Stockmal Reading, the Stanley Kunitz Medal, and our print journal, The Worcester Review. We also receive operating support through our Founders’ Fund.
We continue to raise money for the recently created College Poetry Contest Fund to support the annual Elizabeth Bishop Manuscript prize and the Etheridge Knight Performance prize for college students. We need to raise an additional $1,500 by June this year to establish the endowment fully.
Please consider a donation of any size to support the College Contest Fund if you are able. Mail checks to the WCPA office (PO Box 804, Worcester, MA 01613) or directly to the Greater Worcester Community Foundation (370 Main Street, Suite 650, Worcester, MA 01608-1738). Please note the College Contest Fund on the memo line of your check.
Thank you in advance for your consideration.

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Annual Contest Submissions accepted through April 30, 2022

March 21, 2022 by Robert Gill

Reminder – Submissions are open for the WCPA’s 2022 Poetry Contest: The Frank O’Hara Prize through Saturday, April 30, 2022. The 2022 contest is being judged by Pakistani-American scientist, poet, and educator Usman Hameedi.

The contest is open to WCPA members in good standing, residents of Worcester County, or students/employees of institutions within Worcester County.

There is no fee for WCPA members to enter. Non-members pay $8 to enter the contest.

Contest guidelines and a link to the online submission portal are available at
worcestercountypoetry.org/2022contest/

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Reminder – Nominations for the 2022 Stanley Kunitz Medal close on Thursday, March 31, 2022

March 18, 2022 by Robert Gill

Reminder – Nominations for the 2022 Stanley Kunitz Medal close on Thursday, March 31, 2022. The medal is presented annually to a person with a strong Worcester County (Massachusetts) connection who best exemplifies Stanley Kunitz’s life-long commitment to poetry and poets.
Nominations should be mailed to The Stanley Kunitz Medal, c/o Worcester County Poetry Association, P.O. Box 804, Worcester, MA 01613 before March 31, 2022, to be considered.
Additional information, including nomination guidelines, can be found at worcestercountypoetry.org/kunitz-medal/

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Job Opening – position filled.

March 14, 2022 by Robert Gill

Update 04/03/2022 – we have filled the Administrative Assistant position.  Thank you to all who applied.

The WCPA is seeking someone to fill a contract position.  The Administrative Assistant works as an assistant to the board of directors by handling its technical, web, and direct mail requirements as needed.  The candidate will be responsible and self-motivated with good people skills, a commitment to WCPA’s mission, and the ability to work independently while getting the job requirements completed satisfactorily and on time.  The candidate will have good technical skills.

You can find further details, along with information on how to apply, at https://worcestercountypoetry.org/admin-position/.

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Upcoming events

March 12, 2022 by Robert Gill

Hi all – 4 WCPA (sponsored) events are coming up in the next month. 3 are virtual and 1 is in-person. Maybe we’ll see each other at one of them.

3/22 – Thirsty Lab w/JC Todd – virtual – more info at https://worcestercountypoetry.org/event/4352/

3/23 – Women’s Poetry Reading – virtual – more info at https://worcestercountypoetry.org/event/princeton-womens-poetry-reading-placeholder/

3/29 – Thirsty Lab w/Jenith Charpentier – virtual – more info at https://worcestercountypoetry.org/event/a-virtual-thirsty-lab-with-jenith-charpentier/

4/3 – WCPA Annual Meeting w/Dzvinia Orlowsky – in-person – more info at https://worcestercountypoetry.org/event/2022-wcpa-annual-meeting/

 

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Stevens Memorial Library Reading on March 16, 2022

March 10, 2022 by Robert Gill

Sharing on behalf of the Stevens Memorial Library in Ashburnham, MA. Join them for a Zoom poetry reading on March 16 at 6:30 pm. Two of the most gifted poets in contemporary poetry, Anselm Berrigan and Maureen Owen, will read their work. Please contact the library to get on the list for the Zoom link.

Phone – 978-827-4115
Email – library@ashburnham-ma.gov
or Facebook DM the library

Join us via Zoom for an evening of poetry and hear two of the most gifted poets in contemporary poetry share their work.

Anselm Berrigan’s most recent book of poetry is Pregrets, published by Black Square Editions in 2021. Other books include Something for Everybody, Come in Alone, and the book-length poems Primitive State and Notes from Irrelevance. He’s the poetry editor for The Brooklyn Rail, and co-editor of Get The Money!: Collected Prose of Ted Berrigan, forthcoming from City Lights this fall.

Maureen Owen, former editor and chief of Telephone Magazine and Telephone Books, is the author of Erosion’s Pull, a finalist for the Colorado Book Award and the Balcones Poetry Prize. Her title American Rush: Selected Poems was a finalist for the L.A. Times Book Prize and her work AE (Amelia Earhart) was a recipient of the prestigious Before Columbus American Book Award. She has taught at Naropa University and co-edited Naropa’s online zine not enough night through 19 issues. Her newest title Edges of Water is available from Chax Press.

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International Women’s Day

March 8, 2022 by Robert Gill

In honor of International Women’s Day we’ve uploaded the recording from last year’s Princeton Women’s Poetry Reading.  Each March, Susan Roney-O’Brien organizes the Princeton Women’s Reading with twenty women poets who read together to celebrate joy, creativity, and poetry.

You can view the video on our YouTube channel by visiting https://youtu.be/0QbHZzr7FRE.

The following poets are read – Pam Bernard, Polly Brown, Therese Carr, Devon Evans, Kathleen Fagley, Jennifer Freed, Joyce Heon, Emily Judkins, Maura MacNeil, Cheryl Perreault, Catherine Reed, Eve Rifkah, Rush Frazier, Francis Sterle, Nancy Strong, Beth Sweeney, Rhett Watts, Kate Zebrowski, and Susan Roney-O’Brien.

Join us for the 2022 reading via Zoom. Details can be found on the Women’s Poetry Reading event page.

Iternational Women’s Day is a global day celebrating the social, economic, cultural, and political achievements of women.

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Women’s Poetry Reading – March 23, 2022

March 2, 2022 by Robert Gill

Join a gathering of 20+ women on Wednesday, March 23, 2022, for the annual Princeton Women’s Poetry Reading organized by Susan Roney-O’Brien.  The event will start at 7:00 pm and will be held using a Zoom online meeting.  The Princeton Public Library has agreed to co-sponsor the event along with the Worcester County Poetry Association.

Visit the Zoom registration link to receive information on how to join the reading. Zoom will send you an e-mail with the meeting details and a link to join.

Expected to read are the following women (a * indicates a first-time reader at the event).

Kathleen Aguero *
Polly Brown
Devon Evans *
Kathleen Fagley *
Claire Golding
Sharon Ann Harmon *
Joyce Heon
Meg Kearney *
Andrea MacRichie *
Muriel Nelson *
Dolores Paljus *
Kyle Potvin *
Catherine Reed
Eve Rifkah
Susan Roney-O’Brien
Karen Sharpe
Nancy Strong
Francine Sterle *
Beth Sweeney
bg Thurston
Loretta Watts

 
You can download the bios for all the readers here >>> Women’s Reading Bios 2022.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage Tagged With: #poetryofworcestercounty, #2022

Black History Month recap

February 28, 2022 by Robert Gill

Over the month of February, we’ve shared poems, forms, and history of local and not-so-local poets as part of Black History Month. We’ve saved a list of the articles we published for future reference on a Black History Month page.

Who are the local Black poets whose words excite you?

There are so many more wonderful African American poets whose words have inspired and pushed us. Keep reading and learning by visiting some of these sites.

Poets.org “12 Poems to Read for Black History Month”
Poetry Foundation “Celebrating Black History Month”
TeamBonding.com “11 Inspiring Poems To Celebrate Black History Month”

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“Gingkoes” by Yusef Komunyakaa

February 27, 2022 by Robert Gill

Susan Conley writing in Ploughshares shares “Yusef Komunyakaa speaks in a gravelly Southern baritone, tinged with a Cajun flavor that reflects his childhood years in Louisiana. He is a man who chooses his words carefully, splicing his speech with long silences, until his conversation resembles something close to a jazz riff — very fitting for this acclaimed poet who says “oral language is our first music, and the body is an amplifier.”

We were honored to include Yusef’s poem “Gingkoes” in the 2012 issue of The Worcester Review which honored Chris Gilbert.  You can read Gingkoes at theworcesterreview.org.

Photo by David Shankbone. Komunyakaa at the 2011 National Book Critics Circle Awards in March 2012; his book The Chameleon Couch was nominated for the poetry award.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Douglas Kearney

February 24, 2022 by Robert Gill

Douglas Kearney is a poet, performer, and professor of poetry at the University of Minnesota. Kearney favors a nontraditional layout in his poetry, what he calls “performative typography”. Here’s an example found on poetryfoundation.org.

You can also take Kearney’s free course, “Sharpened Visions: Poetry Workshop” on Coursera for an introduction to the elements of poetry, popular poems, and a chance to workshop your own poems with poets around the world.

Learn about Douglas Kearney at his website, https://www.douglaskearney.com/.
Visit Kearney’s Coursera free course at https://www.coursera.org/learn/poetry-workshop.
Check out the Poetry Foundation for other inspiration at https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poems/152478/-a-ship-crashes-down-.

Click the image on the right to see the full-size image.

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Phillis Wheatley (1753 – 1784)

February 22, 2022 by Robert Gill

Despite spending much of her life enslaved, Phillis Wheatley is recorded as the first African American to publish a book of poems. Wheatley, (1753-1784) a Senegalese child kidnapped and sold into slavery when she was seven or eight years old, published “Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral” in London in 1773. Her work brims with gratitude, faith, and hope. She wrote a great many funeral pieces, requested by friends and patrons. Many poems allude to Greek and Roman myths, are based on religious teachings of the period, and refer to nature and the wonders it personifies.

Hymn to the Evening (excerpt)

Soon as the sun forsook the eastern main,
The pealing thunder shook the heavenly plain;
Majestic grandeur! From the zephyr’s wing,
Exhales the incense of the blooming spring.
Soft purl the streams, the birds renew their notes,
And through the air their mingled music floats. (Wheatley 38)

In 2020 the American Antiquarian Society hosted a program with poet, writer, and essayist Honorée Fanonne Jeffers about her newest book of poetry, The Age of Phillis. It delves into the pre-slavery life of the African child renamed Phillis. A recording can be found at https://www.americanantiquarian.org/public-program-honor%C3%A9e-fanonne-jeffers-0.

Image – Statue of Phillis Wheatley, The Boston Women’s Memorial (from https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=53991)

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Catherine Reed

February 20, 2022 by Robert Gill

Catherine Reed is a fixture in the poetry community. She has been the featured poet at area poetry readings for many years. Reed also served on the WCPA’s board of directors.

In her latest collection of poems, In Fire Goes Out Without Wood, Reed invites us to journey with her to where ministry and poetry meet. In their senior years, we will encounter a couple holding hands, laughing, and skipping down the street like two teenagers. A mother grieving her son in jail sits in a rest home waiting. The Intruder who does not discriminate. A child who stares and no longer recognizes grandmother who now wears a mask. We will hear the words of a six-year-old perched on her daddy’s shoulders, “my daddy’s going to change the world,” and moments later, her dying daddy pleading for his life with a knee on his neck.

SAHARA, Dark Horse, Ballard Street Poetry Journal, The Purple, and Windfall have published her poetry. She won the Barbara Pilon Poetry Contest and Dark Horse Third World contest. She is the author of four books of poetry: Crossing Boundaries, Between Midnight and Dawn, Sankofa, and Fire Goes Out Without Wood. She is the host of WCCATV’s A Journey of Words.

She is a graduate of Clark University, Worcester, MA, Kaleo School of Ministry, Woburn, MA, Hartford Seminary BMCP, Hartford, CT, Brigham and Women’s Chaplaincy Program, and attended Boston University School of Theology. She is an Associate Pastor of John Street Baptist Church of Worcester and retired Protestant Chaplain of The College of the Holy Cross.

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Black History Month at Clemente Worcester

February 17, 2022 by Robert Gill

Worcester’s Clemente Course in the Humanities Literature class will acknowledge Black History Month in two ways this month: 1) they will do an ekphrastic writing exercise using Otto Bettmann‘s photo I am a Man (March 1968).

The picture is from the 1968 Memphis Sanitation workers’ strike, which was supported by Dr. King and other civil rights advocates. King would be killed in Memphis that April.

In addition, we will do a ‘translation’ exercise. In other words, we will read Langston Hughes ‘Harlem’, and each student will ‘translate that into their personal language.

Thanks to Clemente Worcester faculty member Mark Wagner for the photo and context.

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Chris Gilbert (1949 – 2007)

February 15, 2022 by Robert Gill

Mary Bonina wrote, “The 1970s and 80s were an exciting time for anyone interested in poetry living in Worcester.” She wrote this in an article about Chris Gilbert, who earned an MA in psychology from Clark University in 1975. Catherine Reed recalls that Gilbert chaired Worcester’s “Free People’s Poetry Workshop” for a time.

Of his poetry, Mark Doty writes: “No one else sounds quite like Christopher Gilbert… His voice feels timeless in its immediacy, and the poems startle in their almost uncanny ability to grant readers access to a mind at work.”

The Worcester Review dedicated the 2012 special section to the strong impression that Gilbert left on Worcester. You can read the introduction by the section editor Gene McCarthy at https://worcestercountypoetry.org/chris-gilbert-into-the-emerging-landscape/.

You can also learn more about Chris Gilbert at https://poets.org/poet/christopher-gilbert.

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Mike True Memorial Reading – this Thursday, February 17, 2022

February 14, 2022 by Robert Gill

Mike True was a co-founder of the WCPA.  Since his passing Assumption College has hosted a poetry reading in his honor.  This year the event will be held on Thursday, February 17, 2022, at 7:30 pm.  Jonathan Blake will be the featured reader.

Details can be found in the event listing or on the Assumption College Facebook listing.

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Lucille Clifton (1936 – 2010)

February 13, 2022 by Robert Gill

Lucille Clifton (1936 – 2010) was a prolific poet and children’s book author. Clifton’s work was easily identified by its purposeful lack of punctuation and capitalization. She served as Maryland’s poet laureate from 1974 until 1985 and won the National Book Award for her collection “Blessing the Boats.”

Her poetry ranged from social upheavals and the African-American urban experience to her role as a woman and poet.

On the anniversary of her death, we share her poem,

“sleeping beauty

when she woke up
she was terrible.
under his mouth her mouth
turned red and warm
then almost crimson as the coals
smothered and forgotten
in the grate.
she had been gone so long.
there was much to unlearn.
she opened her eyes.
he was the first thing she saw
and she blamed him.”
— lucille clifton, “sleeping beauty”

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Amina Mohammad

February 10, 2022 by Robert Gill

In December 2019, the City of Worcester selected the first youth poet laureate in Massachusetts, Amina Mohammad.  Over her two years in office, Mohammad, who grew up in Worcester’s Main South neighborhood, would move from live readings to a virtual world that included not just poetry but finishing her high school years and starting college.  

As her term was coming to an end, she shared, “… poetry comes in all shapes and forms, and this would be the best way to express how you feel about this certain situation that’s going on.”

You can read more in her discussion with Devy Forcina at https://worcesterculture.org/writing-expressing-and-healing-an-interview-with-amina-mohammed-worcester-youth-poet-laureate/.

You can also read her poem “Change” at https://www.uml.edu/Magazine/Summer-2021/amina-poem.aspx.  You will also find a selection of Mohammad’s poems on the City of Worcester’s poet laureate’s webpage (http://www.worcesterma.gov/cultural-development/poet – scroll to the bottom). 

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The Golden Shovel poetic form

February 8, 2022 by Robert Gill

Pushcart Prize-winning poet Terrance Hayes has published seven books of poetry, poems that examine culture, race, music, and masculinity. Hayes plays with formal constraints in his poetry and created the Golden Shovel poetic form to pay homage to admired poets. To write a Golden Shovel, take one word from each line of a pre-existing poem – these words will serve as the final word of each line of your own poem.

Check out Hayes’ Golden Shovel after Gwendolyn Brooks’ “We Real Cool” here and try writing a Golden Shovel of your own.

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David Mills & Tim Seibles recording

February 6, 2022 by Robert Gill

In September 2020 Worcester’s Bedlam Book Cafe hosted a virtual poetry reading and discussion with (NYC poet and American Antiquarian Society Fellow) and Tim Seibles (former Poet Laureate of Virginia).  You can find a recording of the event on our YouTube channel – visit https://youtu.be/tvC57_yn8BI.

David Mills is the author of After Mistic (Massachusetts slavery poems), The Sudden Country, and The Dream Detective. He has received fellowships from the American Antiquarian Society, Breadloaf, The New York Foundation for the Arts, and the Lannan Foundation. His poems have appeared in Ploughshares, Colorado Review, Crab Orchard Review, Jubilat and Fence. The Juilliard School commissioned and produced a play by Mr. Mills. He has also recorded his poetry on RCA records and ESPN and lived in Langston Hughes` landmark Harlem home.

Tim Seibles is the author of several poetry collections including Hurdy-Gurdy, Hammerlock, Buffalo Head Solos, and Fast Animal, which was a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award and winner of the Theodore Roethke Memorial Poetry Prize. Tim is a former NEA fellow and recipient of a fellowship from the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center. His latest collection, One Turn Around the Sun was released in 2017. He recently completed a two-year appointment as Poet laureate of Virginia.

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Etheridge Knight and the Free People’s Poetry Workshop

February 3, 2022 by Robert Gill

Etheridge Knight (1931 – 1991) lived in Worcester and hosted his Free People’s Poetry Workshops for part of his life.  These workshops were free and were open to anyone who wished to attend. Those who wanted to learn bought Knight drinks throughout the night, and in return, he would look over their poetry and offer advice. Apocryphally, Knight explained that if someone ís reading poetry and can stop a drunk man with a bladder full of beer on his way to the bathroom, you know it ís a good poem.  A version of the Free People’s Workshop continues today with artists, poets, musicians, dramatists, and others meeting to discuss and share their work.

In September 2018, the WCPA honored Knight by renaming the performance portion of the WCPA’s Annual College Poetry Contest.  The “Etheridge Knight Performance Prize” is awarded to a single individual each year and includes a cash prize.  College and universities in central Massachusetts chose a participant to represent the school at the event.  Craig Blais of Anna Maria College is chairing the contest again this year.

You can find additional information about Etheridge Knight in the Literary Tour section of our website.

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Celebrating Black History Month with Poetry

February 1, 2022 by Robert Gill

One of the celebrations that take place during February is Black History Month. It’s a time to celebrate the accomplishments of African Americans. While we should celebrate Black history every month, this dedicated time allows everyone to share, remember, and embrace the influence of Black heritage and culture.

To celebrate Black History Month, we’ll be sharing poems, forms, and history of local and not-so-local poets who occupy a special place on our bookshelves. Join us in celebrating these poets and their words.

Let’s start with poet Amanda Gorman. Ms. Gorman is an award-winning writer and cum laude graduate of Harvard University, where she studied Sociology. In 2017, she was appointed the first-ever National Youth Poet Laureate by Urban Word – a program that supports Youth Poets Laureate in more than 60 cities, regions, and states.

You can watch a recording of Amanda Gorman sharing a poem to kick off 2022 at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_aCJhuDIirg.

Visit Amanda’s website at https://www.theamandagorman.com/.

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“A Walk in the Woo” Worcester’s Rain Poets Read

January 30, 2022 by Robert Gill

We are looking forward to our first in-person event in over six months with “A Walk in the Woo” Worcester’s Rain Poets Read on February 13, 2022 (snow date: February 27, 2022).  The reading will start at 3:00 pm.

We have invited the poets who created the Rain Poems to share their work in a reading for friends and family at the Park View Room at Cornerstone Bank (just off Elm Park @ 230 Park Ave, Worcester).

Learn more about the Park View Room at https://www.preservationworcester.org/park-view-room/.
Read the Rain Poems and learn about the project by visiting the WCPA website at https://worcestercountypoetry.org/a-walk-in-the-woo/.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage Tagged With: #2022

Save the Date – 2022 Mike True Memorial Reading

January 27, 2022 by Robert Gill

On Thursday, February 17 at 7:30 PM in the Curtis Performance Hall, the Assumption University HumanArts Series presents the 2022 Michael True Memorial Reading, featuring poet Jonathan Blake. Jonathan has been a fixture of the Worcester County poetry scene for more than three decades. His voice, contemplative and liturgical, provides a needed antidote to the pell-mell world in which we are so often embroiled. Michael True was a professor in Assumption’s English Department for nearly four decades and was a co-founder of the Worcester County Poetry Association, which has been active for 50 years now, bringing poets and poetry to schools and venues across Worcester County, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the United States, and Internationally.

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Happy birthday to Scottish poet, Robert Burns!

January 25, 2022 by Robert Gill

Each year on Robert Burns’ birthday (January 25), Scots around the world pay tribute to the bard and his words that continue to inspire and challenge us all today.

Today at 2pm EST (7pm in Scotland), tune in to a “Big Burns Supper”, a free, virtual Burns Night celebration full of music, comedy, poetry, performance, and prose. This year’s event is described as a “cabaret-esque rollercoaster around the world. From KT Tunstall in LA to Dervish performing from lockdown in Dublin, this year’s Big Burns Supper takes Burns Night global once again.”

Eddi Reader’s Big Burns Supper is taking place live on Facebook. Visit https://www.facebook.com/events/3177152909275106 starting at 2:00 pm Eastern.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Elizabeth Bishop Graveside Reading on February 8, 2022

January 11, 2022 by Robert Gill

Renowned poet, painter, memoirist, and short story writer, Worcester’s own Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979) rests within Hope Cemetery. On what would be her 111th birthday, we gather by her grave to read her poetry and summon the scenes so skillfully painted in her verse. Come celebrate with the WCPA and Beth Sweeney, director of the new Mapping Worcester in Poetry Project, on Tuesday, February 8, 2022, at 12:00pm.

Please wear appropriate attire, footwear, and a mask.

To find Bishop’s grave in Hope Cemetery at 119 Webster Street:
– Enter the cemetery’s main gate and drive along Curtis Avenue
– Take your fourth left onto Beech Street
– Proceed for one block until you see two trees next to each other on the left side of the road
– Bishop’s grave lies behind the first tree
– If you like you can use these coordinates: 42°14’08.7″N 71°49’43.2″W

If you have a bit of time that day you might wish to use this new downloadable, 20-minute do-it-yourself driving tour which will lead you past five Bishop sites on Main Street in Worcester to end at her grave in Hope Cemetery. Download the PDF at https://worcestercountypoetry.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Bishop-DIY-Driving-Tour.pdf.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

New Worcester Youth Poet Laureate announced

January 3, 2022 by Robert Gill

Congratulations Adael Mejia, the newly named City of Worcester Youth Poet Laureate!

Along with the Worcester Poet Laureate, the Youth Poet Laureate serves as an official ambassador to the City’s historic and vibrant cultures of poetry and literature, both using their positions to promote local writers and the transformative qualities of poetry and the written word.

Mejia, a Burncoat High graduate, will begin his term as Youth Poet Laureate in 2022. Mejia assumes the role after the two-year term of the City and Commonwealth’s first Youth Poet Laureate, Amina Mohammed, came to an end on Dec. 31, 2021. Worcester Poet Laureate Juan Matos, whose own term continues through 2022, will serve as a mentor and guide to Meija.

Read more about Adael in the official City of Worcester press release or in this profile in Worcester Magazine. You can also follow the new youth poet laureate on Facebook.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

2022 Annual Poetry Contest Submission are open!

January 1, 2022 by Robert Gill

Submissions for the WCPA’s Annual Poetry Contest: The Frank O’Hara Prize are now open. For 2022 our contest judge is Usman Hameedi, a Pakistani-American scientist, poet, and educator who serves on Mass Poetry’s Board of Directors.

Contest rules and submission details can be found on the 2022 Annual Contest Submission Guidelines page. The submission deadline is Saturday, April 30, 2022.

Online submissions are powered by Submittable.

submit

Filed Under: Annual Poetry Contest, News Feed for Homepage Tagged With: #poetryofworcestercounty, #2022

Thank you GWCF!

December 28, 2021 by Robert Gill

The WCPA is thankful to receive a $10,000 Community Grant from the Greater Worcester Community Foundation! GWCF operating support will help us focus on our mission to celebrate the rich literary history and creative energy of Central Massachusetts through poetry.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Nominations are open for the 2022 Stanley Kunitz Medal

December 6, 2021 by Robert Gill

On behalf of the Stanley Kunitz bequest to the Worcester County Poetry Association, the Medal committee is pleased to announce the opening of nominations for the 2022 Stanley Kunitz Medal, the eighth to be awarded since 2015.

                The medal is presented annually to a person with a strong Worcester County (Massachusetts) connection who best exemplifies Stanley Kunitz’s life-long commitment to poetry and poets. The award recognizes an individual’s total commitment to poetry as Kunitz lived it: teaching poetry, mentoring poets, speaking poetry, publishing poetry, and supporting organizations which nurture poetry.

                Letters of nomination should provide support explaining how the nominee nurtured poetry as defined above. Because the yearly award is singular and cannot honor all worthy applicants, past nominations may be reactivated for 2022 once the nominators notify the committee chair to keep the nomination active.

                Nominations should be mailed to The Stanley Kunitz Medal, c/o Worcester County Poetry Association, P.O. Box 804, Worcester, MA  01613 between December 1, 2021 and March 31, 2022.  The award announcement will be made in the late spring of 2022, with a ceremony at The Worcester Historical Museum coinciding with Kunitz’s birthday the last week of July.   Please visit the Kunitz Medal page for more details. 

                The 2022 Stanley Kunitz Medal committee wishes to recognize and thank the following volunteers who have served to bestow this honor in the past: Rodger Martin, chair (2013-2021), Kent Ljungquist (2017-2021), Karen Sharpe (2019-2021), Robert Steele (2015-2016), E. Robert Cronin (2015-2018).

Respectfully,

Judith Ferrara, Committee Chair – Judy@PaletteAndPen.com -508-757-0524

Joe Fusco, Jr.

John Hodgen

Heather J. Macpherson

Susan Elizabeth Sweeney

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage Tagged With: #poetryofworcestercounty, #stanleykunitz

An Evening of Poetry

November 16, 2021 by Robert Gill

An Evening of Poetry will be held on Saturday, November 20th at the GB & Lexi Singh Performance Center at Alternatives’ Whitin Mill, 60 Douglas Road, Whitinsville, MA. A celebration of poetic excellence, this event features readings from four regional poets and an open mic segment following intermission.  Scheduled from 7:00 – 9:00 pm, the event is free and open to the public with donations welcome.

The poetry showcase will spotlight Candace Curran, Paul Richmond, Karen Warinsky, and Gerald Yelle, who will all read during the first hour. Curran has twice been named Western Massachusetts Poet’s Seat laureate, while Richmond was honored as Massachusetts Beat Poet Laureate (2017-2019) and National Beat Poet Laureate (2017-2019). Warinsky has been a finalist in the Montreal International Poetry Contest. Her debut collection, Gold in Autumn, was released last summer. Yelle’s publications include The Holyoke Diaries and No Place I Would Rather Be. He is a member of the Florence, Massachusetts Poets Society.

Following intermission, community poets from the audience will be able to participate in an open mic segment, with five minutes allotted to each poet. Participants will be able to sign up to read at the start of the event.

This event is being hosted by ValleyCAST, the arts and culture arm of Open Sky Community Services. Following Open Sky’s COVID safety protocol, all attendees are required to wear a mask regardless of vaccination status.

For further information about this program or to learn more about participating, email Karen Warinsky: karen.warinsky@gmail.com. To learn more about ValleyCAST and/or Open Sky Community Services, visit openskycs.org.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Spring Retreat for Writers and Painters

November 14, 2021 by Robert Gill

Plein air painter and Plein air writer Sam Lalos invites you to a retreat at the Marie Joseph Spiritual Center (10 Evans Road, Biddeford Pool, Maine  04005),

MAY 11-15. WEDNESDAY-SUNDAY 2022 FOUR NIGHTS arriving Wednesday 1ish leaving Sunday 15 after lunch

Contact Anne or Sister Kate at the Marie Joseph Spiritual Center directly 207 284 5671 and ask for Sam Lalos’ Worcester painters and poets group
or contact Sam. 508 753 4319 slalos@worcester.edu and mention dates.
100 per night with a private room and three meals included for 100 total per night.  Book other dates, an option you have.

COVID concerns? refunds up to a week or two before stay; that is Sam’s understanding. There is the possibility of eliminating the weekend days; check out the possibilities of booking your own or other dates. Separate sections for women. Religious services are optional and not required.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

The Worcester Review is accepting poetry submissions

November 11, 2021 by Robert Gill

Cover of The Worcester Review 2020

The Worcester Review publishes literary fiction and poetry by new and established writers, as well as critical commentary on aspects of Central Massachusetts literary culture and history. The Worcester Review is a print journal published by the WCPA.

We welcome and encourage contributions from under-represented writers. For Fall 2021/ Winter 2022 submissions, TWR will have a waived-fee option for BIPOC writers.

TWR does not want to miss out on submissions from any writer; if our submission fee is a barrier for you, please email the editor for options.

Submissions Periods:
We will open for submissions of poetry and fiction on October 1, 2021.

POETRY:
October 1, 2021 – January 31, 2022

FICTION:
October 2021 and January 2022

For more guidelines, please visit TWR’s Submittable page: https://theworcesterreview.submittable.com/submit

 

Image information – The cover of the 2020 volume of The Worcester Review features artwork by Abu Mwenye.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Root and Press Poetry Extravaganza (featuring Tony Brown)

October 26, 2021 by Robert Gill

Join host Joe Fusco Jr. for a poetry-packed evening this Thursday, October 28, 2021, at Root and Press (623 Chandler St., Worcester).  The reading starts at 6:00 pm.

Join them for an open mike then their Feature performer, the extraordinary poet, Tony Brown.

Tony has been writing, publishing, and performing poetry for more than fifty years.

A seven-time Pushcart Prize nominee, he is also the front person for local poetry and music band The Duende Project.

Sign up for the open mike in advance at jfjr6969@gmail.com.

Support a local business and an awesome performer!

Doors open at 5:30 pm. The kitchen will be open.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Who will be Worcester’s next Youth Poet Laureate?

October 21, 2021 by Robert Gill

Applications will be accepted until November 15, 2021, and all interested in applying, nominating, or learning more are encouraged to attend a virtual Application Workshop Tuesday, October 26 at 4:30 pm.

The City of Worcester is accepting applications for its next Youth Poet Laureate!

The Youth Poet Laureate program is an exciting opportunity for a young individual to serve as an official ambassador to Worcester’s historic and vibrant cultures of poetry and literary arts. This role is open to Worcester residents who will be between 13 and 19 years of age on January 1, 2022. Those interested may be nominated or apply on their own. Candidates will be reviewed on the literary merit of their work, impact on the community, contributions to the literature of Worcester, and more. Applications must be submitted by November 15, 2021. Click here to learn more about guidelines and submit an application.

The chosen individual will serve a two-year term from January 2022 through December 2023. During this time, the appointee will represent the City of Worcester as they develop their own work, act as an ambassador to literacy, the arts, and expression, perform public readings, work with the public, and capture life in Worcester for future generations. In Youth Poet Laureate will receive a $2,500 scholarship, as well as a $500 annual stipend honorarium.

Prospective applicants and anyone thinking of nominating a candidate is encouraged to attend the virtual Youth Poet Laureate Application Workshop on Tuesday, October 26 at 4:30 PM. This comprehensive workshop will provide an application walk-through and the opportunity to hear from current Youth Poet Laureate, Amina Mohammed. Click here to register for this workshop on Zoom.

Learn more about the role through the eyes of current Youth Poet Laureate Amina Mohammed in a recent interview on WorcesterCulture.org: Writing, Expressing, and Healing: An Interview with Amina Mohammed, Worcester Youth Poet Laureate.

For questions, please email Culture@WorcesterMA.gov.

 

The information in this post was provided by the Worcester Cultural Coalition (WCC).

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Reminder – take the WCPA Survey by 10/22.

October 19, 2021 by Robert Gill

Our community survey closes this Friday, October 22, 2021.  Visit https://bit.ly/WCPA-survey to get started.

As part of our 50-year celebration, we’re reaching out to our members and the community to collect information about what we’re doing well, where we could use some improvement, and how you’d like us to expand and change so we thrive for another 50 years!

This survey will take between 5-10 minutes to complete. We encourage you to be open and honest with us, so we can learn and grow. All of your answers will be held in complete confidence. The only person who will see the answers is our consultant, who will share the answers – without names — with the WCPA board in a summary format.

Visit https://bit.ly/WCPA-survey to get started.

The WCPA is partnering with Sarah B. Lange on this process.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

The Art of Business – GWCF and Mass MoCA collaboration

October 7, 2021 by Robert Gill

Individual artists are essential to a vibrant, thriving arts ecosystem! That’s why the Greater Worcester Community Foundation (GWCF) is partnering with MASS MoCA’s Assets for Artists to offer The Business of Art, a 6-month, entrepreneurial program for Worcester artists of color and artists or those who identify as low to moderate-income.

The program is part of the Creative Worcester Initiative, and the deadline to apply is October 18, 2021. For details and eligibility: https://www.greaterworcester.org/Grants/Grant-Opportunities/The-Business-of-Art.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

“A Walk in the Woo” Update

October 2, 2021 by Robert Gill

Earlier this year we solicited short poems for a special public poetry project across Worcester which we called “A Walk in the Woo”. Over the past two weeks, a few volunteers painted stencils of the thirteen selected poems near bus stops (see the locations). What makes this public art project extra special is that the installed poems will only be visible when they get wet.

You don’t need to wait for the next rainy day to read the great work though. Visit the A Walk in the Woo page on our website.

Special thanks to our judges – Juan Matos, Poet Laureate, City of Worcester; Walter Molina, Clemente Alumnus; Elizabeth Bacon, Coordinator of Clemente Course in the Humanities; and Katherine Gregiore, WCPA Board Member.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Take the WCPA Community Survey

October 1, 2021 by Robert Gill

The Worcester County Poetry Association is turning 50! As part of our 50-year celebration, we’re reaching out to our members and the community to collect information about what we’re doing well, where we could use some improvement, and how you’d like us to expand and change so we thrive for another 50 years!

This survey will take between 5-10 minutes to complete. We encourage you to be open and honest with us, so we can learn and grow. All of your answers will be held in complete confidence. The only person who will see the answers is our consultant, who will share the answers – without names — with the WCPA board in a summary format.  The survey closes on Friday, October 22, 2021.

Visit https://bit.ly/WCPA-survey to get started.

The WCPA is partnering with Sarah B. Lange on this process.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Clemente Worcester Viewing Party and Fundraiser

September 28, 2021 by Robert Gill

The Clemente Course in the Humanities is an award-winning college-level seminar for highly motivated low-income adults seeking to build better lives for themselves, their families, and their communities.

Clemente Worcester is 10% short of the money it needs to support its class of 2022.  To raise awareness and funds to support our program, we will be holding a virtual watch party of the award-winning documentary, A Reckoning in Boston, on Sunday, October 3 any time between 4 and 8 pm.

Please consider supporting this empowering program by joining their Viewing Party, and, if you are able, make a financial contribution.  Additional details can be found at https://www.clementeworcester.com/support/.

The WCPA proudly serves as the fiscal agent for Clemente Worcester.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Join us on Sunday, September 26, 2021, for the Winners’ Reading for the 2021 Frank O’Hara Prize

September 25, 2021 by Robert Gill

Join the winners of the WCPA’s 2021 Annual Poetry Contest: The Frank O’Hara Prize for a reading of their work and the work of contest judge, Pam Bernard. There will be an opportunity to mingle over refreshments as well.  The reading will start at 3:00 pm US/Eastern.

Our 2021 Winners’ Reading will be held virtually via Zoom. Visit the Zoom registration link to receive information on how to join the reading. Zoom will send you an e-mail with the meeting details and a link to join.

This year’s winners include First Prize – Dean Gessie, Second Prize – Rhett Watts, Third Prize – Tom Driscoll, and Honorable Mentions – Therese Gleason Carr, Jennifer Freed, and Joyce Schmid. Contest Chairperson, Bob Gill, will moderate the ceremony.

Contest judge Pam Bernard is a poet, painter, editor, and adjunct professor who received her MFA in Creative Writing from the Graduate Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College and BA from Harvard University. Her awards include a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Poetry, two Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowships, and the Grolier and the Pablo Neruda Prizes in Poetry. She has published four books: three full-length collections of poetry, and most recently a verse novel entitled Esther, published by CavanKerry Press. Ms. Bernard lives in Walpole, New Hampshire.

Please join us for what is always a fun, and inspiring, event.

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

Announcing the Winners of the 2021 WCPA Poetry Contest: The Frank O’Hara Prize

August 2, 2021 by Robert Gill

2021 contest winner Dean Gessie

The Worcester County Poetry Association (WCPA) is pleased to announce that Dean Gessie of Midland, Ontario, Canada, has won this year’s WCPA Poetry Contest: The Frank O’Hara Prize. His poem “Diary of a Dead Eel Boy” was selected by contest judge Pam Bernard from the 191 poems submitted by 69 entrants.

Dean Gessie is a widely acclaimed author and poet who has won or placed in more than 80 international competitions. Gessie won the Enizagam International Poetry Contest in California and he was selected for inclusion by Black Mountain Press in both The Sixty-Four Best Poets of 2018 and 2019. In England, Gessie was shortlisted for the Anthology Poetry Award and the Latin Program Poetry Prize, and in Ireland, for the Fish International Poetry Contest. He was a finalist for the Seán Ó Faoláin Short Story Prize. He also won Third Prize in the Hungry Hill Writing Poets Meet Politics Competition. His short stories and poetry have appeared in numerous anthologies around the world. He has also published three novellas with Anaphora Literary Press: Guantanamo Redux; A Brief History of Summer Employment; and TrumpeterVille.

Additional winners:
Second Place – Rhett Watts of Auburn, MA for “Blues for Betty”
Third Place – Tom Driscoll of Framingham, MA for “This isn’t the first time”
Honorable Mention – Therese Gleason Carr of Worcester, MA for “Pee Wee Valley Kentucky: 1965”
Honorable Mention – Jennifer Freed of Holden, MA for “The Others”
Honorable Mention – Joyce Schmid of Palo Alto, CA for “Returning to Where I Grew Up”

The winning poems will be published in the next edition of The Worcester Review, the nationally recognized journal of the WCPA. The winners also receive a cash award. The WCPA will invite all the winners to read their work at the Winners’ Ceremony and Reading on Sunday, September 26, 2021, at 3:00 p.m.  The Winners’ Reading will be held at the First Unitarian Church, 90 Main Street, Worcester.  We hope that contest judge Pam Bernard will also be able to join us.

Contest judge Pam Bernard is a poet, painter, editor, and adjunct professor who received her MFA in Creative Writing from the Graduate Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College and BA from Harvard University.  Her awards include a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Poetry, two Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowships, and the Grolier and the Pablo Neruda Prizes in Poetry.  She has published four books: three full-length collections of poetry, and most recently a verse novel entitled Esther, published by CavanKerry Press.  Ms. Bernard lives in Walpole, New Hampshire.

The contest, which was established in 1973, was renamed the Frank O’Hara Prize in 2009 and continues to be generously supported as a tribute to the late poet Frank O’Hara by the O’Hara family.

Filed Under: Annual Poetry Contest, News Feed for Homepage Tagged With: #poetryofworcestercounty, #2021

Call for Poems: “A Walk in the Woo”

July 1, 2021 by Robert Gill

light grey text on a wet sidewalk

As part of its 50th Anniversary Celebrations, the Worcester County Poetry Association is seeking short poems from Worcester residents that illustrate the poetry of the streets of Worcester.

Thirteen poems will be stenciled on sidewalks throughout Worcester using paint that is only visible when wet with rain.  A map and list of planned poem locations can be found on the program page.

To be considered for this project, submit up to 2 poems of max. 49 words, including the name of the poet.

Submission guidelines

The submitter must be a resident of the City of Worcester.

Each poem can contain no more than 49 words which will include the poet’s name and title if any.

Dual language poems are encouraged. (Please provide a translation into English for our judges.)

Submit via e-mail to this e-mail address: rainpoems@worcestercountypoetry.org

Include in submission e-mail your poem, your name, your address, e-mail, and contact information such as a phone number.  Poets of any age are encouraged to submit.

Poets selected will receive an honorarium of $20. Poems must be submitted by midnight of July 31st, 2021.

Filed Under: Yearly Archive item Tagged With: #2021, rainpoetry

Announcing the 2021 Recipient of the WCPA’s Stanley Kunitz Medal

June 28, 2021 by Robert Gill

Worcester, Mass., poet, editor and teacher Eve Rifkah has been chosen to receive the 2021 Stanley Kunitz Medal awarded through a bequest from two-time Poet Laureate of The United States and Pulitzer Prize winning poet and Worcester native Stanley Kunitz.The medal, awarded annually since 2015, is the seventh awarded to a person with a strong Worcester County (Mass.) connection who best exemplifies Stanley Kunitz’s (born in Worcester in 1905) life-long commitment to poetry and poets. The award recognizes the total commitment to poetry as Kunitz lived it: Teaching poetry, mentoring poets, speaking poetry, publishing poetry, and supporting organizations which nurture poetry.
Poet and publisher of Tupelo Press Jeffrey Levine said of Rifkah’s poetry in Dear Suzanne, “[She] achieves what may be one of the contemporary artist’s most difficult purposes—to deliver moments of affirmation amid a tide of loss. In the doing, her lines come to us both in time and out of time, as with a nod to Virginia Wolf….”

RIFKAH co-founded Poetry Oasis, Inc. (1998-2012), a non-profit poetry association dedicated to education and promoting local poets. She was the founder and editor of Diner, a literary magazine and earned her MFA from Vermont College. She also teaches poetry with the WISE program at Assumption University.

Rifkah is the author of Dear Suzanne (WordTech Communications, 2010) and Outcasts: The Penikese Island Leper Hospital 1905-1921 (Little Pear Press 2010). Her next book Lost in Sight, will be coming out in 2021 from Silver Bow Publishing. Rifkah has published two chapbooks: Scar Tissue (Finishing Line Press, 2017), and At the Leprosarium, 2003 winner of the Revelever Chapbook Contest. Her single poems, flash fiction stories and essays have appeared in many journals.

Eve Rifkah will receive her medal at an event presented by the Worcester County Poetry Association at the Worcester Historical Museum on Thursday, August 19, 2021 at 6:30 p.m.

Please note:  Because the event is indoors, and the Covid-Delta variant is still about, masks will be required. 

Broadside – 2021 Kunitz Medal honoring Eve RifkahDownload
Press Release – 2021 Kunitz MedalDownload

Filed Under: News Feed for Homepage

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