July, 2005
Aug. 2005
Sept. 2005
Oct. 2005
Nov. 2005
Dec. 2005
Jan. 2006
Feb. 2006
Mar. 2006
Apr. 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
November 2007
December 2007
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
August 2008
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
December 2008
February 2009
March 2009
April 2009
May 2009
July 2009
August 2009
September 2009
November 2009
December 2009
January 2010
February 2010
March 2010
April 2010
May 2010
June 2010
July 2010
September 2010
October 2010
November 2010
December 2010
January 2011
February 2011
March 2011
April 2011
May 2011
June 2011
July 2011
September 2011
October 2011
December 2011
February 2012
April 2012
June 2012
July 2012
August 2012
October 2012
November 2012
February 2013
May 2013
ČERVENÁ BARVA PRESS NEWSLETTER
Gloria Mindock, Editor Issue No. 81 July, 2013
INDEX
July Newsletter, 2013
There was no newsletter in June. Bill and I were busy working on getting books done.
In Memoriam
From a Cervena Barva Press Reading, September 12, 2007 with Lucille Lang Day and Diana Der-Hovanessian.
|
F. D. Reeve passed away at the end of June.
Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife Laura, their
family and friends. Bill and I were very sad and shocked to hear this news.
I first met Franklin through Diana Der-Hovansessian when I had the reading series at the
Pierre Menard Gallery. Franklin read for the Cervena Barva Press Reading Series and the minute
I met him, I just loved him. He was such a nice person, a gem! I wrote on Facebook recently that once
in a while in life, you meet someone who touches your heart, Franklin was one of those.
We recently were working on his chapbook and getting it ready to
publish from his "Blue Cat" series.
Rest in peace and know your poetry will live on... You had such an impact on so many of us. |
At the end of May, the press released the following:
Refuge in the Shadows by Krikor Der Hohannesian (chapbook)
Imaginary Planet poems by Alan Elyshevitz (chapbook)
Krikor Der Hohannesian lives in Medford, MA and has been writing poetry for some 40 years though only
submitting work over the past several years. Since then, he has had poems published in many literary
journals including The Evansville Review, The South Carolina Review, Atlanta Review, Peregrine, The New
Renaissance, Hawaii Pacific Review and Connecticut Review. He also received honorable mention for the
New England Poetry Club's Gretchen Warren Award for best published poem of 2010. His first chapbook,
"Ghosts and Whispers," has been published by Finishing Line Press (2010). He also serves as Assistant
Treasurer of the New England Poetry Club.
Cover Art: Garabed Der Hohannesian
"In Krikor Der Hohannesian's poetry, we hear things we might not be able to hear otherwise. "A man is down"
signals the wind and rain coming in from the east, and the poet listens. In another poem a wife is keening,
a child is crying, and the poet listens, listens with all his imagination and his heart. We hear colonial whispers
emanating from the Granary Burial Ground. We hear the particular beauty of the names of the winds in many languages,
and in another poem we hear the equally specific sadness of parents grieving a lost child. We hear final words, and
words that should have been said, and we hear in several of these poems the long, agonized memory traces of the Armenian
genocide. In all there is a deeply empathic imagination at work, and these poems give the poet and the reader alike a
place of refuge, a place in the shadows in which to hold onto what is so profoundly dear and filled with meaning."
–Fred Marchant, Author of The Looking House
$7.00 | 44 Pages | Order Refuge in the Shadows here...
Winner of the 2011 Cervená Barva Press Poetry Contest
Alan Elyshevitz is a poet and short story writer who was born in New York City and now lives
in East Norriton, PA. He is the author of a short story collection, The Widows and Orphans
Fund (Stephen F. Austin State University Press), and two poetry chapbooks, The Splinter in
Passion’s Paw (New Spirit) and Theory of Everything (Pudding House). He is a two-time
recipient of a fellowship in fiction writing from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.
Currently, he is an Assistant Professor of English at the Community College of Philadelphia.
"To put it in baseball terms, Alan Elyshevitz is a five-tool poet: his poems smooth as silk,
whether he's imagining Akhmatova, trying to make sense, as we all are, of this often
confusing world, or acknowledging that while pizza may be bad for you, it’s heavenly and he’s
going to enjoy some slices. How can you not love a poet who writes, "The soul cranes its
neck to observe/the maximum number of yellow bikinis"? Imaginary Planet is full of such
nuggets, a book with intelligence and compassion to burn. Elyshevitz is a poet to savor and
be thankful for."
—Tim Suermondt, author of Just Beautiful
$7.00 | 35 Pages | Order Imaginary Planet here...
At the end of June, we released the following:
This is Not a Situation in Which You Should Remain Calm by Michelle Reale (chapbook)
My Life With Blondie by Jirí Klobouk is at the printers (Fiction book)
Michelle Reale is an academic librarian on faculty at Arcadia University in the suburbs of Philadelphia. Her work has appeared
in a wide variety of publications both in print and online, including Nano Fiction, Smokelong Quarterly, Pank, Gargoyle,
The Pedestal, elimae, JMWW and others. Her work was included in Dzanc’s 2011 Best of the Web Anthology.
She is the author of four collections of short fiction and prose poems. She has been twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize.
She blogs on immigration and Migration and Social Justice in the Sicilian context at
www.sempresicilia.wordpress.com
Cover Photo: Isabella Reale
"Michelle Messina Reale's poems evoke a deep confessional visitation between the connecting North
African landscape and Southern Italian Etruscan bloodlines. She has taken the sparse stones found
among the terrain’s ruins and placed them one by one, each carefully aligned in unique prosaic
consciousnesses that offer new and alluring formations of the old. Her rhythms are rough in prose,
often at the edge as a stone cut at various angles, yet continuous and steadfast. The sensation of the
hard and quick gallop of a horse through this horizon of remains and longing is heard. The fortitude
of trudging onward, of seeing ruinous sights combined with delicious heated passions, leave the reader
sweltering and swollen, understanding the validity of bruises."
—Sonia Di Placido, author of, Exultation in Cadmium Red
"In the title poem Michelle Reale, This is Not a Situation in Which You Should Remain Calm writes:
Breathed it in to my pulsating lungs. You will want to breathe in to your pulsating lungs each
beautifully crafted poem in this chapbook. You connect with the speaker of these poems on many levels
and are drawn into each poem, I found myself holding my breath many times while reading this collection
of achingly beautiful poems that encompass the human condition and all that it entails."
—Helen Vitoria, Poetry Editor, Thrush Poetry Journal
"Michelle Reale's poems are imbued in the "now" as much as they are journeys to the long-gone world of
our ancestors. The stories she paints are harrowing and touching: alive as lizards and intoxicating as
wild flowers. There is an exquisite touch to them: the robust flavor of wine, the taste of the nibbled
food and the omnipresent homage to Sicilian religiosity. The beauty of this collection’s landscapes
and soulscapes left me yearning for more."
—Alessandra Bava, Author of Guerilla Blues
$7.00 | 32 Pages |
Order This is Not a Situation in Which You Should Remain Calm here...
Interviewed this month: Robert Vaughan.
Raves will return next month.
Cervena Barva Press Studio Events
Editors Speak Series
Guest: Jennifer Barber, editor of Salamander
Tuesday, July 9th, 2013
7:00PM
Admission at the Door: $5.00
Literary Journal Publishing: Salamander, a magazine for poetry, fiction, and memoirs
Because the past several years have seen many changes in the literary publishing world,
including the advent of on-line content, on-line submissions, and the use of social media
for publicity, we will look at the effect of these changes on writers and editors.
We will also discuss the continuities. We will use Salamander-now in its
twentieth year-as a case history. Practical matters, as well as questions of
editorial selection and vision, will be covered, and discussion is encouraged.
Directions & parking:
The Center for the Arts is located between Davis Square and Union Square. Parking is located behind the
armory at the rear of the building. Arts at the Armory is approximately a 15 minute walk from Davis Square
which is on the MTBA Red Line. You can also find us by using either the MBTA RT 88 and RT 90 bus that can be
caught either at Lechmere (Green Line) or Davis Square (Red Line). Get off at the Highland Avenue and Lowell
Street stop. You can also get to us from Sullivan Square (Orange Line) by using the MBTA RT 90 bus. Get off
at the Highland Avenue and Benton Road stop.
Inside the Armory:
Go inside main doors and walk straight ahead about 30 feet, look for the door on the right to the
stairs down to the basement. (There is an elevator just after the stairs.) Once in the basement walk
through the basement lobby straight ahead about 20 feet, first door on the right is
the Červená Barva Press Studio.
Poetry Workshop Series
Instructor: Jennifer Barber
Saturday, July 13th, 2013
1:00-3:00PM
|
Registration: $45.00
|
Sense of a Beginning, Sense of an Ending
This workshop will focus on two key aspects of the poem: the first line, which defines the speaker, tone,
and realm that the poem is about to enter; and the last line, which ideally closes the poem in a way that
simultaneously completes the arc while also providing an opening into the silence that follows.
Participants should bring one poem of their own, as well as a list of five new opening lines and five new
closing lines for poems yet to be written. We will complete an exercise during the workshop and, as time
permits, examine some beginnings and endings to well-known poems.
Cervena Barva Press Studio
Basement Room B8
Center for the Arts at the Armory
191 Highland Avenue
Somerville, MA
(Directions below)
Gloria Mindock: editor@cervenabarvapress.com
|
To register and pay for this Workshop securely using your Paypal account
or a Credit Card, please click the button below...
Registration: $45.00
Or visit our Workshop page at: http://www.cervenabarvapress.com/workshop.htm
|
Or send check or money order payable to:
Cervena Barva Press
PO Box 440357
W. Somerville, MA 02144-3222
The Center for the Arts is located between Davis Square and Union Square. Parking is located behind the
armory at the rear of the building. Arts at the Armory is approximately a 15 minute walk from Davis Square
which is on the MTBA Red Line. You can also find us by using either the MBTA RT 88 and RT 90 bus that can be
caught either at Lechmere (Green Line) or Davis Square (Red Line). Get off at the Highland Avenue and Lowell
Street stop. You can also get to us from Sullivan Square (Orange Line) by using the MBTA RT 90 bus. Get off
at the Highland Avenue and Benton Road stop.
A MEMOIR TALK and WORKSHOP
Instructor: Mary Bonina
Register for A MEMOIR TALK and WORKSHOP with MARY BONINA
author of the memoir My Father's Eyes forthcoming September, 2013.
A MEMOIR TALK and WORKSHOP
Session #1 only:
$20.00
Saturday 17 August 2013, 12:00 - 1:00 PM
|
A MEMOIR TALK and WORKSHOP
Session #1, #2, #3:
$80.00
Saturday 17 August 2013, 12:00 - 1:00 PM
Saturday 24 August 2013, 12:00- 1:00 PM
Saturday 24 August 2013, 1:30-2:30 PM
|
Session #1, Saturday 17 August 2013, 12:00 - 1:00 PM:
An entertaining and informative talk about memoir and other forms of personal writing. Those attending-whether
interested in the genre for their own reading pleasure, or others considering a personal writing project-will
receive a bibliography of some inspiring examples; a Q & A will follow the talk. Registration for this session
alone is open to all readers/writers ($20).
To register and pay for Session #1 of the Memoir Workshop securely using your Paypal account
or a Credit Card, please click the link below...
(Please Note: If you plan to purchase and attend all 3 sessions, scroll down and use the link below instead of this one.)
Note: Plan to attend the two one- hour sessions the following week?
Make sure to register & attend Session #1 as well (required); fee for the three-sessions is $80.
Use button below to register and pay for all 3 sessions!
Welcome to anyone interested in exploring the possibilities, those who have already decided to begin
their own personal essay or memoir writing project, as well as those who have one in progress.
Session#2, Saturday 24 August 2013, 12:00- 1:00 PM:
In the first of back-to-back sessions, we'll take
a closer look at examples of memoir and other personal writing. Issues considered include: readership,
techniques for the telling, and strategies for beginning. Participants will be supplied with handouts
as well as pencils and markers and newsprint sheets to create maps, lists, timelines, drawings, etc.,
which might be used as blueprints for a future personal
writing project.
1:00 - 1:30 PM - Lunch Break
Session #3: Saturday 24 August 2013 1:30-2:30 PM:
A moderated discussion using a selection of
blueprints created, brainstorming notes, and writing samples collected in session #2. Focus will
be on writing for general interest vs. recording family history and the importance of the elements
of good research and writing in both.
To register and pay for all 3 sessions of the Memoir Workshop securely using your Paypal account
or a Credit Card, please click the link below...
Cervena Barva Press Studio
Basement Room B8
Center for the Arts at the Armory
191 Highland Avenue
Somerville, MA
(Directions below)
Gloria Mindock: editor@cervenabarvapress.com
Or visit our Workshop page at: http://www.cervenabarvapress.com/workshop.htm
|
Registration:
Session #1: $20.00
Session #1, #2, #3: $80.00
To register and pay for this Workshop securely using your Paypal account
or a Credit Card, please click one of the links below...
A MEMOIR TALK and WORKSHOP Session #1: $20.00
A MEMOIR TALK and WORKSHOP All 3 Sessions: $80.00
|
Or send check or money order payable to:
Cervena Barva Press
PO Box 440357
W. Somerville, MA 02144-3222
The Center for the Arts is located between Davis Square and Union Square. Parking is located behind the
armory at the rear of the building. Arts at the Armory is approximately a 15 minute walk from Davis Square
which is on the MTBA Red Line. You can also find us by using either the MBTA RT 88 and RT 90 bus that can be
caught either at Lechmere (Green Line) or Davis Square (Red Line). Get off at the Highland Avenue and Lowell
Street stop. You can also get to us from Sullivan Square (Orange Line) by using the MBTA RT 90 bus. Get off
at the Highland Avenue and Benton Road stop.
|
Robert Vaughan leads writing roundtables at Redbird- Redoak Writing. His writing has appeared in hundreds
of journals. His short prose, “10,000 Dollar Pyramid” was a finalist in the Micro-Fiction Awards 2012. Also,
“Ten Notes to the Guy Studying Jujitsu” was a finalist for the Gertrude Stein Award 2013. He is senior flash
fiction editor at JMWW, and Lost in Thought magazines. His book, Flash Fiction Fridays, is at Amazon.
His website is at: http://www.robert-vaughan.com/
Order Microtones from The Lost Bookshelf...
You currently host the Flash Fiction Friday segment of the Lake Effect radio show on WUWM,
and have written a wealth of flash fiction pieces yourself. What drove you to pursue this medium?
I was turned on by some of the earliest current writers of the flash fiction genre- Kathy Fish,
Etgar Keret, Kim Chinquee, Barry Hannah, Elizabeth Ellen, Claudia Smith. There are so many
superb short fiction writers! And I was turned on by elements of heat, a charge I felt when
I'd read a tremendous flash piece. So I tried my hand at them, and began submitting pieces to
online and print journals in 2008. The Flash Fiction Friday radio show came about in 2010, after
I'd been a guest on the WUWM Lake Effect program and read several flash pieces of my writing.
What do you feel can be accomplished through the writing of flash fiction as opposed to longer
forms of fictional writing?
I can tell a heightened story in a more condensed, compressed format, and flash fiction challenges me to do so
succinctly by selecting every single word that best suits the form. In revisions, I craft each sentence in a manner
that is technical, and lyrical, similarly to poetry in this sense. The flash form also lends itself to more play,
abstraction, surrealism. I also like to be fresh with the context of the form itself- diptychs, triptychs, the
whole piece in one entire sentence, or tweet-sized (140 characters). These are all "constructs" in which it
becomes almost a game, or a puzzle in which to fit a piece. So, in this way, the writing is akin to geometry
and equations, also.
What are you currently reading? Are there any authors you find yourself returning to again and again?
I tend to read more than one book and genre most of the time. So, currently I am reading
Every Love Story is a Ghost Story: A Life of David Foster Wallace by D.T. Max, What The Right Hand Knows by Tom Healy,
Racing Hummingbirds by Jeannee Verlee and The Many Woods of Grief by Lucas Farrell. This highly
informs how I write: I never know what form I might write on any given day. As far as repeating authors,
a partial list might be David Wojnarowitz, Patti Smith, Marie Howe, David Foster Wallace,
Simon Perchik, Lydia Davis, Mark Doty, Meg Tuite, Len Kuntz. There are many, many more.
Plays you have written have been performed in New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Milwaukee.
What themes do you like to incorporate in your theater work, and do you use the same subjects in your
prose?
Some of the themes I've incorporated into my plays are broken homes or homelessness,
unfulfilled dreams (the "American Dream"), impact of death(s) or destructive, addicted behaviors,
competitive siblings, abstract beliefs that are unconventional, gullible choices, fatalism versus
free will. I do explore some of these same subjects in prose and poetry form(s). And I continue to
craft plays, also. My pattern has been to birth a new play about every five years.
Tell us a bit about your editorial positions at JMWW magazine and Lost in Thought magazine. What brought
you into contact with these publications? What is your process like for narrowing down submissions?
I've been at JMWW for two years. I started as an associate fiction editor, and last summer when a co-worker,
John, left to promote his latest novel, head editor Jen Michalski asked me to step into our Senior Flash
Fiction editor role. Around the same time I started with JMWW, I was also flash fiction editor
at Thunderclap! Magazine for eight print issues.
Around the time Thunderclap ended, I'd published a piece called "3C's" (also included in Microtones)
in Lost in Thought magazine, issue 2. I loved the concept of Lost in Thought- combines stunning art
with poetry and flash pieces. When I'd heard that Kyle Schruder, the editor at LIT was too busy to
continue the magazine, I wrote and asked how I might help. We negotiated and he asked if I might handle
the writers, read submissions, and Kyle would do the rest- find artists, match the pieces, layout and
publishing. We published Lost in Thought #3 last October, and published Lost in Thought #4 in February.
As far as submissions go, I like original, inventive and bold work. I'm more interested in a lack of
convention than I am getting something right, or trendy bon vivant writing.
Describe your process for writing poetry. Do you approach poems like you would a fiction piece, or do
you have distinct ways of thinking about these forms?
I try to write every day. Poems come in rare, unexpected moments. Sometimes from prompts, visuals and music
work really well, settings can also assist. My writing studio is on the second floor of my house and I look
out into hundred year old oaks, soaring hawks, deer and other woodland animals. It's an honor to live so close
to nature and I find that inspiring. I feel like my best work needs to simmer, either on the page, or in my
heart. As an example, I wrote a response to the tragedies that occurred in the Sikh Temple in Wisconsin last
summer. But not that day, or even that week. I sensed it was four parts, like a musical quartet, and connected
to other moments of personal violence that I have experienced. And so, it became "The Thief" which was
published in December at Red Fez. I also workshop my writing, in roundtables where I get instant written
and verbal feedback. And online, I workshop weekly with other writers in which we share original work.
What are some of the things that inspired you while composing your chapbook Microtones, which was released
by Cervena Barva Press in March, 2013?
The concept, Microtones, came from Harry Partch, an American outsider musician who developed an entirely
new microtonal scale and built various custom-made instruments, like the Chromelodeon, in which to play
his pieces. His life story inspired me, the idea of notes between the standard scales, as we've come to
know it, felt right to get "in there," within the construct of these pieces. I grew up playing piano,
spent endless hours practicing classical, and modern pieces. I also played various brass instruments
(trumpet, tuba, baritone horn). Music has always informed my work, probably always will. I feel links
directly, and indirectly from music to writing, lyrics to poetry, and multiple other crossovers,
various threads in which I cannot articulate. Microtones became an exploration, then, of the interior
lives of the characters, or of life itself. I also loved how it sounds, the aural aspect of the word
and realize that I have a desire to work from this perspective: how does each poem sound? I love to
read my work aloud, at readings and roundtables. So that is another thread, connection, a loop back
to music.
If you would like to be added to my monthly e-mail newsletter, which gives information on readings,
book signings, contests, workshops, and other related topics...
To subscribe to the newsletter send an email to:
newsletter@cervenabarvapress.com
with "newsletter" or "subscribe" in the subject line.
To unsubscribe from the newsletter send an email to:
unsubscribenewsletter@cervenabarvapress.com
with "unsubscribe" in the subject line.
Index |
Bookstore |
Image Gallery |
Submissions |
Newsletter |
Readings |
Interviews |
Book Reviews |
Workshops |
Fundraising |
Contact |
Links
Copyright © 2005-2013 ČERVENÁ BARVA PRESS - All
Rights Reserved
|