4/23/10

The angelic confidences of Joan Siegel, by Djelloul Marbrook


Many of Joan Siegel’s poems sound like the whispered confidences of angels, sound being the operative word. Most poems “read” one way or another, but only the rare poem engages eye and ear simultaneously.

There is from poem to poem a sense of angels coming and going, ghosting through memories, like zephyrs in curtains. Reflections dehisce from the memories.

In Buchenwald
his sister turned into a bird
and flew out the chimney stack.
In America/he found a wife,
then lost her.
An old man with sooty eyes
and sooty pants, he steers
a baby carriage brimming
with rags.


—"Rag Man of Middletown"

For silence some poets rely on caesurae—a device Siegel uses frugally—or placement on the page—but such is Siegel’s authorial hush that silences become moving parts of the poems’ creatureliness.

In your family
everyone left
without saying
a word.

Your father
took a bus
to the VA hospital
& died quietly
on the front steps.


— "To My Husband"

Thoughts of being the first to walk on new-fallen snow arrested me as I read a number of these poems—there is that pristine sense of beginnings being imparted. The work doesn’t clamor for attention, but when you look back you see how you have come here and you reflect that a footfall doesn’t have to be cast in cement to be memorable. Surely the music of Satie and Debussy, if not the poets, has taught us that.

Later, in the street, you lifted
your face to the snow and
loved the lamp post, the sky,
your life.


—"Piano Lesson"

Where is the music
when the dark piano lid is shut?


— "Burial"

That an informed reader might on occasion argue with a poet’s choice of word or meter doesn’t necessarily call into question the poet’s achievement, but nonetheless it’s remarkable that Siegel almost never invites such an issue. I was watching the Winter Olympics when I read Hyacinth for the Soul the first time, and I thought that if these poems were figure skaters and I a judge I would forget to score them for the sheer pleasure of their presence.

Toward the end
I carried him like a baby
through my dreams. I worried
I’d lose him in the crowds.
Now he visits my sleep.
Dying was the easy thing,
he says, then drives off
in his 1940 Studebaker.


—"How we look after each other"

I admire the sure-footedness of this poem and Siegel’s many poems like it, as if there were no other possible way to say this, as if this is the perfect line length, the perfect break: an inarguability of poetics, rare and deft.

Siegel’s poems are often like herons that know just where to stand by a pond so that the fish won’t see their shadow. Every step, every movement is choreographed in perfect attunement to the sensibility of the sentiment, to the recognition at hand.

These are youthful poems that could not have been made by a youth, because they have that becoming, tempered interiority that eludes all but the rarest youth (Keats comes to mind). There is a youthfulness that comes to some in old age because the luggage of pretense has been shed or lost in the terminals of experience. Sometimes a lightness, redolent of Voltaire’s smile, characterizes the work of older artists. In Siegel’s case it’s manifested by the exquisite footfalls of each poem upon the page, a reassuring inevitability about the path taken. We’re never tempted to ask, Are you sure this is the way? It is the only way. That is not characteristic of youth, however exciting the path.

Joan Siegel is professor emeritus at SUNY Orange and lives in Blooming Grove, New York.

The cover of her book, whose production values are superb, is a story by itself. It's a photograph of a quilt made by her sister as record of their father's struggle with Alzheimer's Disease. This story suggests how much we lose in a marketer's society obsessed with youth and its potential buying power. We lose not only our respect for the elderly but the hard-won wisdom they have eked out of their experiences. This advertising mentality leads us to think new experiences are more unique than they are and we have little to learn from the past. Hyacinth for the Soul is powerful contrary testament.

Hyacinth for the Soul is collected into four unnamed sections and dedicated to the poet’s family. The title poem, which appears in the middle of the second section, is explained in the first quatrain:

Bake two loaves of bread, my mother used to say.
Give one away and plant a hyacinth for the soul.
I never understood and she did not explain.
It was one of those sayings from the old country.


The hyacinth is ubiquitous in Victorian homes and Persian poetry as a symbol of love whose fragrance is redolent of the soul’s eternal nature. It provides the very scent of eternity. Here the 13th Century Persian poet Musharish Ud Din Sadi writes:

If of thy mortal goods thou art bereft,
And from thy slender store
Two loaves alone to thee are left,
Sell one, and with the dole,
Buy hyacinths to feed thy soul.


Hyacinth for the Soul’s internal organization is worth noting because of publishers' pervasive bias against books lacking overt themes. Deerbrook Editions, to its considerable credit, correctly discerned that thematic threads may be so subtle and unobtrusive that they elude all but the most sensitive editor. This book is a record of a recollective, integrative life: Not a box of verbal snapshots, but a navigational rutter, denoting landmarks, landfalls, troubled straits, hard passages, warnings, premonitions and precognitions.

The marketer’s bias for strong thematic books of poetry precludes much good poetry and often compels poets to impose themes. Much good poetry is squeezed out of the market by this predeterminant.

Siegel’s work addresses a situation in poetics that I notice from time to time the way you might notice a soup stain on someone’s tie or blouse. There is a vogue for plain speech which, while welcome in its own right, often lapses into a kind of soap opera plastered like icing into line breaks characteristic of prosody but in effect having none. Her work is intrinsically lyrical and cadenced, so much so that one is tempted to think her ordinary thought process—the way she thinks things through—must resemble her finished poems.

The deeply moving collection reminds us that without the gracious wisdom of the elderly, without respect for their experiences, we are half a society. —Djelloul Marbrook



Djelloul Marbrook is the author of Far from Algiers, a superb book of poems that won the 2007 Stan and Tom Wick Poetry Prize published by The Kent State University Press.

4/20/10

Busy Weekend in Portland, Maine

Events often land on the same day. These readings are timed for the possibility to attend both. The workshop requires registration and a fee.
























"Prayers & Run-on Sentences" by Stuart Kestenbaum, cover art by Susan Webster, will be available at the USM Book Store, around the corner from the Glickman Family Library in the Student Center.

Kate Cheney Chappell '83 Center for Book Arts at USM

Paper and Poetry: Collaborative Works of Art from Maine Artists and Poets
An exhibtion of limited edition books, artists' books, prints, and broadsides
MARCH 1 - APRIL 30, 2010 UNUM Great Reading Room, 7th floor, Glickman Family Library
This exhibition was made possible in part by the generous curatorial assistance of Nancy Leavitt, Jan Owen, Steve Luttrell, Catherine Fisher, and Gary Lawless.

Featuring

Lecture and Poetry Reading
by Susan Webster and Stuart Kestenbaum
Friday, April 23, 4pm

then

Saturday, April 24, 9am -4:30pm
Words and Images: a dialogue in poetry and prints
Workshop at the Wishcamper Center
Team taught by Stuart Kestenbaum and Susan Webster
$135, call 780-5900 to register


also on Friday


In celebration of National Poetry Month
Mayo Street Arts
starts getting

Lit

first up:

Beatify
Channeling a generation’s best minds.

An evening of
Beat verse • eros • live jazz • participatory exaltations

featuring the work of
Burroughs~Corso~Creeley~di Prima~Ferlinghetti~Ginsberg~Kandel~Kerouac

with classics performed by
Nate Amadon • Dennis Camire • Paul Haley
Nancy Henry • Steve Luttrell
Michael Macklin • April Singley • Kevin Sweeney

and open readings by
local writers and (if you so choose) you.

Friday, April 23 at 8 pm

Hosted by Megan Grumbling
The first in a monthly series of literary happenings at
10 Mayo Street

Joan Siegel at Woodstock, NY in June

Woodstock Poetry Society & Festival (www.woodstockpoetry.com) as part of the Woodstock Arts Consortium is sponsoring the following poetry event as part of the Woodstock "Second Saturdays" Art Events. For a full listing of "Second Saturday" events, see: www.woodstockartsconsortium.org

Poets Joan I. Siegel and Mary Makofske will be the featured readers when the Woodstock Poetry Society & Festival meets at the Woodstock Town Hall, 76 Tinker Street, on Saturday, June 12th at 2pm. Note: WPS&F meetings are held the 2nd Saturday of every month at the Woodstock Town Hall.

The readings will be hosted by Woodstock area poet Phillip Levine. All meetings are free, open to the public, and include an open mike.

Bios:

Joan I. Siegel - Joan I. Siegel is the author of two poetry collections. The first, published jointly with her husband, J. R. Solonche, is titled PEACH GIRL: POEMS FOR A CHINESE DAUGHTER (Grayson Books, 2001). Her first solo collection, HYACINTH FOR THE SOUL, was issued by Deerbrook Editions in Spring 2009.

Regarding HYACINTH…, former US Poet Laureate Maxine Kumin commented:

“These passionate, caring poems range seamlessly from personal lyric to public outcry, from a pair of well-turned pantoums of childhood memories to a poem that rewrites the liturgy of a responsive reading from the Passover service. Siegel knows how to go for the small specific details that illuminate even the darkest subjects.”

Her poems published in The Atlantic Monthly, The Gettysburg Review, Prairie Schooner, Commonweal, Raritan, among numerous journals and anthologies, Ms. Siegel is also recipient of the New Letters Poetry Prize and the Anna Davidson Rosenberg Award.

Professor Emerita of English at SUNY/Orange in Middletown, New York, she previously co-edited Wordsmith: a Journal of Poetry and Art, which featured the work of SUNY and CUNY faculty poets and artists.
 
Joan lives in the Hudson Valley with her husband and daughter and assorted cats.

*

Mary Makofske - Mary Makofske lives with her husband in a solar house in Warwick, NY, where they enjoy a view of a mountain and a large vegetable, fruit, and flower garden. She’s taught at Ramapo College of New Jersey and SUNY Orange, from which she retired in 2006.

Her poems have appeared in Poetry, Zone 3, Poetry East,  Mississippi Review, Modern Haiku, Amoskeag, Calyx: A Journal of Art and Literature by Women, and other literary magazines and in the anthologies In a Fine Frenzy: Poets Respond to Shakespeare (Iowa); Hunger and Thirst (City Works); Tangled Vines (HBJ); and Proposing on the Brooklyn Bridge and Essential Love (Grayson).

She is the author of The Disappearance of Gargoyles (Thorntree) and Eating Nasturtiums, winner of a Flume Press chapbook competition. Individual poems have received the Robert Penn Warren Poetry Prize (Cumberland Poetry Review), the Lullwater Review Prize, the Spoon River Poetry Review Prize, and the Iowa Woman Prize.

*

Here's our 2010 schedule of featured readers:

January 9th, 2010 – Bruce Weber; Laurie Byro (at Woodstock Community Center)
February 13th, 2010 – Richard Boes Memorial (at Woodstock Community Center)
March 13th, 2010 – Philip Memmer; Roger Mitchell (at Woodstock Community Center)
April 10th, 2010 – Jacqueline Ahl; Joann Deiudicibus
May 8th, 2010 – Alison Koffler; Barry Wallenstein
June 12th, 2010 – Joan I. Siegel; Mary Makofske
July 10th, 2010 – Carl Rosenstock; Richard Levine
August 14th, 2010 – Bert Shaw; Lee Gould
September 11th, 2010 – Dennis Doherty; James Sherwood (at Woodstock Community Center)
October 9th, 2010 – Amy Ouzoonian; Tyler Wilhelm
November 13th, 2010 – Lea Graham; Reagan Upshaw
December 11th, 2010 – Open Mike & Annual Business & Planning Meeting

Also, why not become a 2010 Member of the Woodstock Poetry Society & Festival?

Membership is a nominal $15 a year. (To join, send your check to the Woodstock Poetry Society, P.O. Box 531, Woodstock, NY 12498. Include your email address as well as your mailing address and phone number.)  Your membership helps pay for hall rental, post-office-box rental, the WPS website, and costs associated with publicizing the monthly events. One benefit of membership is the opportunity to have a brief biography and several of your poems appear on this website.

Carl Little joins others in Bangor

April at Poets House

Friday, April 16, 7:00pm

Texts to Argue Through: 
A Conversation with John D'Agata, 
Thalia Field & Jena Osman
Essayist John D'Agata, cross-genre writer Thalia Field and experimental poet Jena Osman trace how research-based projects can evolve into book-length lyric essays and serial poems.
$10, $7 for students and seniors, free to Poets House Members

Poetry for Children
Saturday, April 17, 11:00am–3:00pm

Grand Opening of the Constance Laibe Hays Children's Room at Poets House
(Part of Ecopoetic Futures, a series of events that examine poetry and the environment)
Join us for a celebration of our new children's room! Festivities begin at 11:00am with U.S. Children's Poet Laureate Mary Ann Hoberman and teacher Linda Winston sharing poems from their anthology, The Tree That Time Built: A Celebration of Nature, Science, and Imagination. The revelry continues with giveaways, creative writing exercises and other surprises.
Admission free

Also in April
Wednesday, April 21, 12:30pm

Nordic Voices: A Reading & Conversation 
with Jörgen Gassilewski, Anna Hallberg 
& Jonas J. Magnusson
Young Swedish poets Jörgen Gassilewski and Anna Hallberg read their work and talk with conceptual artist and translator Jonas J. Magnusson.
Admission free

Wednesday, April 21, 7:00pm

A Civil Feast of Jazz & Poetry 
with Poet Afaa Michael Weaver & Jazz Musicians Harold Anderson, Bill Lowe & Stan Strickland
Poet Afaa Michael Weaver and acclaimed musicians perform jazz pieces and recitals of Weaver's poems, followed by conversation about music and verse.
$10, $7 for students and seniors, free to Poets House Members

Thursday, April 22, 7:00pm

The Opening of the Field: A Conversation 
with Nalini Nadkarni & Leonard Schwartz
(Part of Ecopoetic Futures, a series of events that examine poetry and the environment)
Rainforest ecologist Nalini Nadkarni and poet Leonard Schwartz examine how poetic and scientific understandings of nature might be combined to inspire ecological stewardship.
$10, $7 for students and seniors, free to Poets House Members
Tuesday, April 27, 7:00pm
The Whole Island: Six Decades of Cuban Poetry 
with Maria Isabel Alfonso, Lourdes Gil, 
James Irby, Mark Weiss & Christopher Winks
On the occasion of the publication of The Whole Island: Six Decades of Cuban Poetry, editor Mark Weiss, contributors and translators explore major trends in Cuban poetry, both on and off the island.
$10, $7 for students and seniors, free to Poets House Members

Thursday, April 29, 7:00pm

Nox: From Box to Book with Anne Carson & Currie
With artistic collaborator Currie, poet Anne Carson discusses and reads from Nox, her illustrated "book in a box" that elegizes the loss of her brother with photos, collages, sketches and poetry written through the lens of her translation of Catullus.
$10, $7 for students and seniors, free to Poets House Members

All programs take place at Poets House, 10 River Terrace (at Murray St) in Lower Manhattan, unless otherwise noted. For more information, call (212) 431-7920 or visit www.poetshouse.org.
Poets House Hours
Poets House Reading Room 
& The Reed Foundation Library
Tuesday–Friday, 11:00am–7:00pm
Saturday, 11:00am–6:00pm
The Constance Laibe Hays 
Children's Room at Poets House
Through Saturday, April 17: 
Saturday, 11:00am–5:00pm
Starting Thursday, April 22: 
Tiny Poets Time (for Toddlers): Thursday, 10:00am
Open hours: Thursday & Friday, 12:00–5:00pm, Saturday, 11:00am–5:00pm

All correspondence should be addressed to:
Poets House
10 River Terrace
New York, NY 10282
For more information, 
call (212) 431-7920.
Spring 2010 Classes 
at Poets House
Please visit our website for details on these classes and for other upcoming spring programs.
• Master Classes
• Marie Howe – May 22–23
• Robert Hass – May 30
• Quincy Troupe – June 5–6
• Ecopoetic Futures: Open-Enrollment Seminars & Workshops on Poetry & the Environment
• The Opening of the Field with Leonard Schwartz & Nalini Nadkarni – April 23–24
• Ecopoetics After Copenhagen with Jonathan Skinner – May 12, 14, 15
• An Ethics Occurs at the Edge of What We Know with Brenda Hillman – May 2

Directions
The new Poets House is located at
10 River Terrace at the corner of Murray Street in Lower Manhattan's Battery Park City.
Take the 1, 2, 3, A or C subway to Chambers Street. Walk west on Chambers Street (past West Street) all the way to River Terrace. Turn left and walk two blocks south to 10 River Terrace at Murray Street. The M22 bus runs along Chambers between North End Ave and the Lower East Side. The M20 bus travels from the Upper West Side and the southern tip of Battery Park City to North End Ave. The Downtown Connection, a free Lower Manhattan shuttle bus, travels to North End Ave from South Street Seaport and from Broadway along Murray Street; for more information, visit: www.downtownny.com
Find Out What's Happening At Poets House Now!

Poets House invites you to follow us on Twitter and Facebook. We'll be posting updates about upcoming events, photos of our new home in Battery Park City and more.
Become a Poets House Member
To become a Poets House Member or to give the gift of Membership to a family member or friend, visit www.poetshouse.org/join.htm. We look forward to welcoming you as a new member of our growing community of writers, readers, teachers, parents and poetry-lovers from around the nation and worldwide.
If you would like more information about the Capital Campaign for Poets House and how you can participate, please contact Krista Manrique at krista@poetshouse.org or (212) 431-7920, ext. 2830.

| 10 River Terrace, New York, NY 10282 | | (212) 431-7920
www.poetshouse.org


 

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