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“Gingkoes” by Yusef Komunyakaa

February 27, 2022 by Rob Baker

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: General News

Douglas Kearney

February 24, 2022 by Rob Baker

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.

Filed Under: General News

Phillis Wheatley (1753 – 1784)

February 22, 2022 by Rob Baker

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)

Filed Under: General News

Catherine Reed

February 20, 2022 by Rob Baker

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.

Filed Under: General News

Black History Month at Clemente Worcester

February 17, 2022 by Rob Baker

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.

Filed Under: General News

2022 Archive

February 16, 2022 by Rob Baker

Elizabeth Bishop Graveside Reading – February 8, 2022

It was chilly in Hope Cemetery as the Mapping Worcester in Poetry team gathered with members of the WCPA to honor Elizabeth Bishop on her 111th birthday.  The reading made the front page of the February 10, 2022 Telegram.

Those who gathered to honor Elizabeth Bishop on her 111th birthday.
The front page of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette on Feb. 10, 2022.

“A Walk in the Woo” Worcester’s Rain Poets Read – February 13, 2022

Our deepest gratitude to all who joined us to share their words, especially to all who braved the snow to join us in the Park View Room.

A panoramic image of the readers at the Rain Poets Reading. Photo by Robert Steele.
Photo by Robert Steele.
Paul Szlosek reads at the Rain Poets Reading. Photo by Robert Steele.
Photo by Robert Steele.
Photo by Robert Steele.

Over February, we 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.


WCPA Annual Meeting – April 4, 2022

The Worcester County Poetry Association hosted its Annual Meeting on April 3, 2022! The in-person gathering consisted of a short Business Meeting, a chance to mingle with friends, and a poetry feature by Dzvinia Orlowsky.

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

Dzvinia Orlowsky
Dzvinia Orlowsky with Susan Roney-O'Brien.
Susan Elizabeth Sweeney shared info about the Mapping Worcester in Poetry program.
Carolyn Oliver, editor of The Worcester Review, shows up the most recently volume.
Susan Roney-O'Brien talks about WCPA Programming.
WCPA President, Rodger Martin, was our MC for the event.

We thank the First Unitarian Church on Main Street in Worcester for making their space available for our meeting.


April 20, 2022

Thank you, Worcester Magazine, for sharing info about Mapping Worcester in Poetry

Read the article at worcestermag.com.


Filed Under: Uncategorized

Chris Gilbert (1949 – 2007)

February 15, 2022 by Rob Baker

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.

Filed Under: General News

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

February 14, 2022 by Rob Baker

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.

Filed Under: General News

Lucille Clifton (1936 – 2010)

February 13, 2022 by Rob Baker

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”

Filed Under: General News

Amina Mohammad

February 10, 2022 by Rob Baker

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). 

Filed Under: General News

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