The vulgar tongue of the masses!

Events, poetry mishaps, literary fragments, poems-for-all, prose-for-some; semi-official home of the Betrand Hebert fan[C]lub and the DHtG Society of Sacramento; in no way affiliated with the Custard Pie Appreciation Consortium (CPAC), but with ties to The Blue Chalk Liberation Front (BCLF).

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Buy a book ... one approach



My bookstore's recent ad in the Midtown Monthly. The direct approach using a concept we borrowed from another used bookseller, Doug Webber, who had a little sign behind the counter of his now gone N street store with same said directive, "buy a book you bastards!" As the economy swan dives into a vat of crap the message we're trying to deliver -- playful desperation -- seems to resonate.

Only two complaints, so far. One from an actual bastard, who didn't take kindly to us mocking his being born to an unmarried mother. The other... well, let's just say that little used bookstores get their fair share of slightly crazy people as part of their customer base. (Hey, not knockin' the 5150s; some buy books!)

Buy a book ... another approach



Books are great gifts. Sure are. And this website has assembled some famous people into the little video above to tell you why they make swell presents. Spoiler alert: Bill O'Reilly doesn't get angry; Dean Koontz looks scary. Lotsa smarm here, but its worth a view just to hear Jon Stewart say “Books make great gifts because they are an amazing way to kill time while your web site is buffering.” But the best line comes from Frank McCourt who succinctly connects books and sex ... but hey! I'm giving it all away. Watch. Just watch. It'll make you bastards want to buy books...

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Inside Grove Press: The Barney Rosset Documentary comes to Sacramento



The good folks at Movies on a Big Screen (MOBS) will show Obscene: How Barney Rosset Published Dirty Books for Fun & Profit on Friday, December 5th. Through Rosset's Grove Press some of the most avant garde, outsider, and counterculture literature found an imprint. It is a tale of sound and fury, including the censorship trials that evolved from efforts to publish Lady Chatterly's Lover and Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer.

Barney Rosset is the greatest American publisher of the twentieth century and the most influential cultural figure that you haven't heard of. Under Rosset, Grove Press and Evergreen Review fought decisive battles, including many before the state and federal supreme courts, defeated legal censorship, and opened American life to new and dangerous currents of freedom. But Rosset's public fight against hypocrisy and injustice is inextricable from his tumultuous personal life: the same unyeilding, quixotic, restless energy that upended centuries of law brought Rosset perilously close to destruction.

With: Barney Rosset, Amiri Baraka, Jim Carroll, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Al Goldstein, Erica Jong, Ray Manzarek, Michael McClure, John Rechy, Ed Sanders, John Sayles, Gore Vidal, and John Waters. And archival footage featuring Lenny Bruce, William S. Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Henry Miller, and Malcolm X.

There will be guest speakers in attendance.

Saturday, October 25, 2008


Bill Hughes --poet, historian, biographer, cultural cartographer, writer, playright -- has been turning the brickside of his apartment building in Midtown into an ad hoc art gallery on Second Saturdays. Last month (Sept.) he exhibited art and words related to his interest in the Abraham Lincoln Brigade (Americans who went to fight --and die-- supporting the Republican side during the Spanish Civil War.)

This month he lined the brick with his poems, each enlarged and presented on a letter-sized piece of paper. Weeks after Second Saturday, many still hang there, left there for ongoing poetic inspiration.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

SEP 28 | Poetry | Donald Sidney-Fryer | The Atlantis Fragments

poems-for-all presents


Sunday, September 28, 4:30pm
- - -
DONALD SIDNEY-FRYER : The Atlantis Fragments
- - -
The Book Collector
1008 24th Street
Between J and K Streets
in midtown Sacramento
916.442.9295
- - -
We're pleased to welcome Donald Sidney-Fryer back to Sacramento for a Sunday afternoon poetry reading where Donald will present his omnibus edition of the trilogy SONGS AND SONNETS ATLANTEAN.
- - -

"Mr. Fryer is a profound student of Clark Ashton Smith, and the influence shows, but he is very much his own poet, and he structures and plays with a surety and deftness which is remarkable."
-- Gahan Wilson

"Sidney-Fryer has created, in his fictional Atlantis, an entire civilization and a body of absorbing literature. The book should appeal to lovers of poetry, to devotees of science fiction, and to those who admire writers who can fashion a realistic world from the materials of mythology and speculation."
-- Earl J. Dias

"These poems are of an unearthly beauty. They celebrate love, beauty, and humanity; and yet throughout many of them is a consciousness of impending apocalypse. The imagery, lush, exotic, full of colors and magic names, is a welcome relief from the sterile, prosaic poetry of today. If you enjoy tripping on language, this book is for you. Whether the poems really are from the Atlantean or whether they are the creations of poet Sidney-Fryer, they deserve to be read and experienced."
-- Charles K. Wolfe

"Sidney-Fryer is, in a very strong sense, a traditionalist; his creations, superlatively original as they are, yet give us a powerful feeling of continuity with our own past and culture; they make us see ... the ideals that moved us when we were less “secure” and more human: adventure, love of life, and above all, the intricate beauty of a world long vanished – yet not vanished, if only we had eyes to see."
-- Richard L. Tierney


"A delightful book of verse – purportedly fragments of poetry from the lost Empire of Atlantis – that is very much in the tradition of Spenser’s Faerie Queene. A work that reflects a glittering imagination and no mean talent."
-- James Gorski

Donald Sidney-Fryer’s massive, 550-page poetry omnibus is the most elaborate book ever published by Hippocampus Press. Its color frontispiece, printed end papers, profusion of interior illustrations, Smythe sewn signatures and illustrated dust wrapper destine it to be a collector’s item. This hardcover omnibus presents the collected edition of the trilogy SONGS AND SONNETS ATLANTEAN in a limited edition of 300 copies.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

JUN 21 | Pablo Neruda Reading



Saturday, June 21, 7:30 p.m.
Poems-For-All presents
WILLIAM O'DALY READING PABLO NERUDA
The Hands of Day: at long last translated into English in its entirety
The Book Collector
1008 24th Street
Between J & K Streets
Sacramento
916.442.9295

William O’Daly is the best-selling translator of six of Pablo
Neruda’s books, including “The Book of Questions” and “The Sea and
the Bells
.” This reading will be the first celebrating the release
of “The Hands of Day,” (Copper Canyon, 2008) and will feature
readings from that book as well as excerpts from the forthcoming
translation of “World’s End” (Copper Canyon, 2009). O’Daly may toss
in a few poems of his own, but this will be primarily a reading of
translations from “Hands.” Copies of the book will be available for
sale at the reading.

Pablo Neruda is one of the world’s great poets, and Copper Canyon
Press has long been dedicated to publishing translations of his work
in bilingual editions.

"The Hands of Day" -- at long last translated into English in its
entirety -- pronounces Neruda’s desire to take part in the great
human making of the day. Moved by the guilt of never having worked
with his hands, Neruda opens with the despairing confession, "Why did
I not make a broom? / Why was I given hands at all?" The themes of
hands and work grow in significance as Neruda celebrates the
carpenters, longshoremen, blacksmiths, and bakers-those laborers he
admires most-and shares his exuberant adoration for the earth and the
people upon it.

- - -
Price: Free.
Ages: All ages
- - -
For more information about this activity, contact
Richard Hansen at
Phone: (916) 442-9295
E-mail: richard@poems-for-all.com
Web site: http://www.poems-for-all.com

Monday, April 14, 2008

APR 18 | Poetry | Charles Curtis Blackwell

Friday, April 18th, 7:30pm
Poems-For-All presents
CHARLES CURTIS BLACKWELL
- - -
The Book Collector. 1008 24th Street, between J & K Streets, midtown Sacramento. 916.442.9295. www.poems-for-all.com
- - -
Poems-For-All is pleased to welcome Charles Curtis Blackwell back to Sacramento. Presently a poet and performer in the Bay Area, Charles once graced the Sacramento scene with his exceptional readings. He comes with a new book of poems, or rather, two vignettes of poetry in one book: "Is, The Color of Mississippi Mud and Lou Next Door." The book's publisher/editor Vincent Kobelt has also been invited to read.
- - -
BIO
- - -
Playwright, poet, performing artist et al Charles Curtis Blackwell has written such plays as "Is, The Color of Mississippi Mud," which was produced in both Washington D.C. and Sacramento, and "Im a Boxer, a love story" , has been published both nationally and internationally. His first book, "The Fiery Response To Love's Callings", was published in 1999. He's been published in Eugene Redmond's "Drum Voices Revue" and has produced three spoken word CDs--featuring Jazz drummer Billy Toliver. He was also affiliated with The William James Assocciation's Arts in Prison Program. Currently he resides in the San Francisco Bay Area where he has organized Writer's workshops and community Cultural Arts events ath the Faithful Fools Agency in the San Francisco Tenderloin.
- - -
ABOUT THE BOOK
- - -
"Otis Redding says, 'Try a little tenderness.' Charles Curtis Blackwell's "Is, the Color of Mississippi Mud" is tenderness laid across the page. It gives us a glimpse of the segregated South tucked next to the banks of the Mississippi ... It is as if he ran his fingers across the welts of American history." -- Vincent Kobelt.
- - -
POEM
- - -

The big-get-tree confronted
by Charles Curtis Blackwell

The moon is stiff, enough to journey up river
In light; the way into the river's
Meeting place
Golden leaves of Harper's Ferry fall smooth
To the touch of fear
So, so well it sits with the April song
Sung in memory of pain
Ropes twine, so; so well, it sits with thee
Prejudice overlapping the days
Venture out west Exodus
Starving the freedom of a new narrative
Sung in submission, to the grave
A wind-wing bird flies under ground
Over the call of gush and ghostly cries
Years in passing comes this haunting
Echo of a tune

"John Brown's ah body
lay ah buried in the grave
John Brown's ah body lay ah buried in dee grave"

The arched over ropes twine,
Gun powder spilled upon railroad tracks
For the asking, it's history to remind
The flutter of whirlwind war; so civil
Tears in crossing so cruel
"Bye-bye, I don't know you," speaks the
colored girl, handed down futuristic thought
We were once referred to as cheap labor/free labor/
even slaves
Drag the river bottom for your SELF;
Seeking historical fact so matter.
For in the eye you behold an illusion
It's so different now
The way the rope untwines
Love lace groans, as the slave of the daughter
Calls out, "Abolishment."
Ignored. Resurrection now in crusade of...
Lover come hither and ease this burden
Running through lily grass in the future.
"Speak to me," whispers the stiff moon,
In the Dark blue, echo/Blue ridge mountain
Escapes...all these words voice,
RUN
RETALIATE
FIGHT
FLEE
BATTLE
REALIZE
Words that rip across trusted barbed wire
Bloody and jaded too.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Poetry Month | Snapshot of events

Friends & poets,

Below is a quick snapshot of poetry & lit events this month in the area. By no means comprehensive, but an outline of possibilities.


APRIL 2008
POETRY MONTH EVENTS
- - -

TUE 1 6pm The Bonefolders: Poems-For-All Building Party Book Collector
- - -
WED 2 5pm Laureates Reading CA Poets Laureate Gathering State Library
- - -
THU 3 9am Al Young CA Poets Laureate Gathering State Library
- - -
THU 3 1pm Public Reading CA Poets Laureate Gathering Capitol
- - -
FRI 4 7:30p Lisa Dominguez Abraham, Denise Lichtig, Catherine French UU Church, Davis
- - -
FRI 4 6pm Jane Hirshfield, Camille Norton, Joshua McKinney SPC Conference
- - -
SAT 5 4:30p Al Young, Quinton Duval, Ellen Bass SPC Conference
- - -
SAT 5 7:30p Cornered: Five Years of SN&R's Poet's Corner Book Collector
- - -
WED 9 7pm Ann Menebroker, Ted Finn RATTLESNAKE Book Collector
- - -
SAT 12 2-4 Shanine Abercrombie, Yoke Breaker, vocalist Sidney Nicholas Culture Collection
- - -
SAT 12 6pm The Bonefolders: Poems-For-All Building Party Book Collector
- - -
MON 14 7:30p High School Poetry Contest Winners Sac. Poetry Center
- - -
WED 16 9pm John Boe, Storyteller Bistro 33, Davis
- - -
THU 17 10-6 POEM IN YOUR POCKET DAY Book Collector/citywide
- - -
THU 17 7:30p R.D. Armstong Center for the Arts
- - -
FRI 18 7:30p Charles Curtis Blackwell Book Collector
- - -
FRI 18 7:30p Art Mantecón, James DenBoer Galleria Posada
- - -
SAT 19 11am Cache Creek Nature Preserve's Day for the Arts
- - -
SAT 19 7pm Brigit Truex, Lori Jean Robinson, Sidney Singleton, Sean King Underground Books
- - -
SAT 19 7:30p John Amen, Brad Anderson Sac. Poetry Center
- - -
MON 21 7:30p Sac City Ethnic Theater! Sac.Poetry Center
- - -
SAT 26 2pm Arthur Winfield Knight Book Collector
- - -
SAT 26 7pm Brigit Truex, Sean King , 3rd place Sac Idol vocalist Jessica Teddington The Show
MON 28 7:30p William O'Daly Sacramento Poetry Center


VENUES
- - -
In Sacramento, unless indicated otherwise
- - -
Bistro 33 -- 226 F Street, Davis -- 530.756.4556
- - -
The Book Collector -- 1008 24th St -- 916.442.9295
- - -
Center for the Arts -- 314 W. Main St., Grass Valley -- 530.432.8196
- - -
Culture Collection -- 6391 Riverside Blvd in Greenhaven -- 916.208.POET
- - -
Sacramento Poetry Center -- 1719 25th St. -- www.sacramentopoetrycenter.org
- - -
The Show -- 2863 35 St. (off 35th & Broadway) -- 916.208.POET
- - -
Underground Books -- 2814 35th St. (off 35th & Broadway) -- 916.208.POET

Friday, March 28, 2008

APRIL | Poetry Month events at the Book Collector | Updated

Some changes to the line-up. The SN&R event has moved to the 5th; the first bonefolder building party has moved to April 1st. -- Richard


APRIL 2008
POETRY MONTH EVENTS AT THE BOOK COLLECTOR
- - -
1008 24th Street
Sacramento, CA
Between J & K Streets
- - -
916.442.9295
richard@poems-for-all.com
- - -

Tuesday, April 1st, 6 - 8pm
THE BONEFOLDERS: POEMS-FOR-ALL BUILDING PARTY
- - -
Help us build the hundreds of poem booklets we want to put on the street for Poetry Month.
- - -
Each little booklet made as part of the Poems-For-All (PFA) Series goes through the same ritual: Cut. Fold. Staple. Bonefolders are the small tools used to make a neat fold in paper. The Bonefolders are those kind souls willing to come out and help PFA build little booklets to be given away for free. Care to be a bonefolder? Join us anytime between 6 and 9 pm in the relaxed atmosphere of the bookstore. Come to fold poems or just hang out and enjoy the light refreshments. There are jobs for any skill level. Building little poem books is theraputic and you're welcome to take some with you!


Saturday, April 5th, 7:30pm
CORNERED: FIVE YEARS OF SN&R'S POET'S CORNER
- - -
A celebration of five years of poetry in the Sacramento News & Review. Poetry Editor Kel Munger is putting together a line-up of poets from among those who've been published in the papers' weekly Poet's Corner.


Wednesday, April 9th, 7pm
RATTLESNAKE PRESS: FOURTH ANNUAL BIRTHDAY BASH
featuring ANN MENEBROKER, TED FINN
- - -
From Rattlesnake publisher Kathy Kieth: "We will mark the Snake's fourth birthday by throwing the Fourth Annual Birthday Bash at The Book Collector on Wednesday, April 9, including a buffet at 7 PM, followed by a reading at 7:30 PM. That night, there will be three history-making releases: Ann Menebroker's new chapbook (Small Crimes); Ted Finn re-emerges with a new SnakeRings SpiralChap of his poetry and art (Damn the Eternal War); and Katy Brown inaugurates her blank (well, not really) journal series for our HandyStuff department with her MUSINGS: Photos and Prompts For Capturing Creative Thought. Please join us to celebrate four years of [your] poetry with fangs!"


Saturday, April 12th, 6 - 9pm
THE BONEFOLDERS: POEMS-FOR-ALL BUILDING PARTY
- - -
Come out for Midtown's Second Saturday Art Walk and drop by the bookstore!
- - -
Each little booklet made as part of the Poems-For-All (PFA) Series goes through the same ritual: Cut. Fold. Staple. Bonefolders are the small tools used to make a neat fold in paper. The Bonefolders are those kind souls willing to come out and help PFA build little booklets to be given away for free. Care to be a bonefolder? Join us anytime between 6 and 9 pm in the relaxed atmosphere of the bookstore. Come to fold poems or just hang out and enjoy the light refreshments. There are jobs for any skill level. Building little poem books is theraputic and you're welcome to take some with you!


Thursday, April 17th, All Day
POEM IN YOUR POCKET DAY
- - -
The Academy of American Poets launches the first annual national "Poem in your Pocket Day" The idea is simple: select a poem and carry it with you (poem in your pocket) and unfold it with family friends and co-workers throughout the day. More details are available at their website: poets.org/pocket
- - -
Throughout the day the largest selection of Poems-For-All booklets ever made available for distribution will at the bookstore for people to take and use as part of "Poem in your Pocket Day" Other activities during the day at the bookstore are in the works to help celebrate and promote this new national tradition.


Friday, April 18th, 7:30pm
CHARLES CURTIS BLACKWELL
VINCENT KOBELT (Invited)
- - -
Poems-For-All is pleased to welcome Charles Curtis Blackwell back to Sacramento. Presently a poet and performer in the Bay Area, Charles once graced the Sacramento scene with his exceptional readings. He comes with a new book of poems, or rather, two vignettes of poetry in one book: "Is, The Color of Mississippi Mud and Lou Next Door." The book's publisher/editor Vincent Kobelt has also been invited to read.


Saturday, April 26th, 6pm
ARTHUR WINFIELD KNIGHT
- - -
Poet, writer and editor of UNSPEAKABLE VISIONS, a literary journal of Beat Generation writing, Arthur celebrates the release of his latest Novel MISFITS COUNTRY.

AND INTO MAY...

Friday, May 2nd, 7:30pm
WILLIAM WANTLING IS DEAD
featuring
KEVIN JONES
GENE BLOOM
RICHARD HANSEN
Others
- - -
May 2nd marks the anniversary of the death of mimeo era poet William
Wantling. Poet and Wantling Scholar Kevin Jones and others will read
their favorite Wantling poems and discuss his importance and impact as
a poet.

MAR 31 | Poetry | Zen Marxist Launderettes

Monday, March 31 at 7:30pm
Sacramento Poetry Center presents
ZEN MARXIST LAUNDERETTES
Laura Ann Walton, Emily Wright, Mira Kores, Sandra Senne, Margaret Burns, Erin Doyle, Ellen Johnson, Carolyn Schneider. Host: Frank Dixon Graham
- - -
1719 25th Street at HQ for the Arts, at 25th & R Streets. www.sacramentopoetrycenter.org
- - -
LAURA ANN WALTON is a poet, dramatist and social activist. In the past decade and a half, she founded Maryhouse, a center for homeless women and The Women's Wisdom Project, an arts program for disadvantaged women. EMILY WRIGHT may or may not be a professional model. MIRA KORES is a poet from Sacramento. SANDRA SENNE is a poet from Sacramento and is currently the treasurer of the Sacramento Poetry Center. ERIN DOYLE is someone whose first name means “peace” in Celtic, whose last name originates as a form of Dowall = Dougal/Dougall, whose personal power animal is the blue tit, and whose numerology number is “8.” ELLEN JOHNSON may or may not be the president of American Atheists. CAROLYN SCHNEIDER may or may not be the author of The Ultimate Consignments and Thrift Store Guide.
- - -

SACRAMENTO POETRY CENTER: UPCOMING EVENTS
April 07: Nickole Brown, Gene Bloom
April 14: SPC High School Poetry Contest
April 19: (Special Saturday Session) John Amen, Brad Henderson
April 21: Sacramento City Ethnic Theater!
April 28: William O' Daly
May 12: Rebecca Foust, Elizabeth Krause
May 26: Chad Sweeney and Josh McKinney
June 09: F.D. Reeve, Al Garcia

MAR 28 | Film | The Six String Samurai (7pm) | Rocky Horror Picture Show (10pm)

Friday, March 28th
Movies on a Big Screen (MOBS) presents:
THE SIX STRING SAMURAI (7pm) -- $5
ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (10pm) -- $6
- - -
600 4th St, West Sacramento. That's the corner of 4th & F in West Sacramento (just over the river from downtown near the Pyramid Building). Digital projection on to a large screen. Seating is mostly on folding chairs. Feel free to bring a pillow or cushion. www.shiny-object.com/screenings
- - -
The Six-String Samurai is Buddy, a mysterious and powerful hero of the post-apocalyptic future, who must fight his way to Lost Vegas and ditch a bothersome orphan kid if he's ever to become the next King of Rock 'n' Roll. Along the way, they encounter bounty-hunting bowlers, a cannibalistic "Cleaver" family, a Windmill God and even the Russian army. Winding up at the gates of Vegas, Buddy finds himself in an epic battle with Death over the child's soul and comes to realize just what it means to be King.

"It's The Road Warrior with a rock 'n' roll beat, Buddy Holly doing his best Toshiro Mifune, a Sergio Leone gang picture set in a fantasy future, directed with the flash and panache of a Hong Kong action flick and the sleek style of a samurai film. Lance Mungia's high energy genre soup is a hoot, a low budget indie action film that embraces its limitations with a spare grunge-chic look spiced with flashy visuals, jazzy editing, and plenty of punk attitude." - Nitrate Online

And then at 10 PM (admission: $6.00): Rocky Horror!!

- - -
Coming next Friday April 4 - the Sacramento premiere of "Honeydripper," John Sayles' newest film starring Danny Glover!! Admission for "Honeydripper" will be $7.00.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

MAR 20 | Speaker | Delores Huerta

Thursday, March 20, 7:30pm
DELORES HUERTA
- - -
Sacramento State. University Union Ballroom. www.csus.edu/union/unique. (916) 278-6997.
- - -
Dolores Huerta, a civil rights activist for more than half a century, and co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America, will speak as part of the University’s Women’s History Month events. Her talk will focus on U.S. immigration policy and its impact on women. Huerta’s talk is presented by the University Union UNIQUE Programs, the Women’s Resource Center, Multicultural Center, California Faculty Association, Serna Center and ASI at Sacramento State.

Huerta, who first came to national attention when she organized a widespread grape boycott in the 1960s, remains active in causes supporting civil rights, women’s rights and farmworkers’ rights. She also chairs the nonprofit Dolores Huerta foundation, which trains community organizers to assist immigrants and the poor. In recent public appearances, she has stressed the importance of intense hands-on involvement in the political process.

April | Poetry Month events at The Book Collector

Here's a rough sketch of what we're doing at the bookstore for and during Poetry Month. I'll follow up with more details.

APRIL 2008
POETRY MONTH EVENTS
AT THE BOOK COLLECTOR

- - -
1008 24th Street
Sacramento, CA
Between J & K Streets
- - -
916.442.9295
richard@poems-for-all.com

- - -

Saturday, April 5th, 6 - 9pm
THE BONEFOLDERS: POEMS-FOR-ALL BUILDING PARTY
- - -
Help us build the hundreds of poem booklets we want to put on the street for Poetry Month.
- - -
Each little booklet made as part of the Poems-For-All (PFA) Series goes through the same ritual: Cut. Fold. Staple. Bonefolders are the small tools used to make a neat fold in paper. The Bonefolders are those kind souls willing to come out and help PFA build little booklets to be given away for free. Care to be a bonefolder? Join us anytime between 6 and 9 pm in the relaxed atmosphere of the bookstore. Come to fold poems or just hang out and enjoy the light refreshments. There are jobs for any skill level. Building little poem books is theraputic and you're welcome to take some with you!


Wednesday, April 9th, 7pm
RATTLESNAKE PRESS: FOURTH ANNUAL BIRTHDAY BASH
featuring ANN MENEBROKER, TED FINN

- - -
From Rattlesnake publisher Kathy Kieth: "We will mark the Snake’s fourth birthday by throwing the Fourth Annual Birthday Bash at The Book Collector on Wednesday, April 9, including a buffet at 7 PM, followed by a reading at 7:30 PM. That night, there will be three history-making releases: Ann Menebroker’s new chapbook (Small Crimes); Ted Finn re-emerges with a new SnakeRings SpiralChap of his poetry and art (Damn the Eternal War); and Katy Brown inaugurates her blank (well, not really) journal series for our HandyStuff department with her MUSINGS: Photos and Prompts For Capturing Creative Thought. Please join us to celebrate four years of [your] poetry with fangs!"

Friday, April 11th, 7:30pm
CORNERED: FIVE YEARS OF SN&R'S POET'S CORNER
- - -
A celebration of five years of poetry in the Sacramento News & Review. Poetry Editor Kel Munger is putting together a line-up of poets from among those who've been published in the papers' weekly Poet's Corner.

Saturday, April 12th, 6 - 9pm
THE BONEFOLDERS: POEMS-FOR-ALL BUILDING PARTY
- - -
Come out for Midtown's Second Saturday Art Walk and drop by the bookstore!
- - -
Each little booklet made as part of the Poems-For-All (PFA) Series goes through the same ritual: Cut. Fold. Staple. Bonefolders are the small tools used to make a neat fold in paper. The Bonefolders are those kind souls willing to come out and help PFA build little booklets to be given away for free. Care to be a bonefolder? Join us anytime between 6 and 9 pm in the relaxed atmosphere of the bookstore. Come to fold poems or just hang out and enjoy the light refreshments. There are jobs for any skill level. Building little poem books is theraputic and you're welcome to take some with you!


Thursday, April 17th, All Day
POEM IN YOUR POCKET DAY
- - -
The Academy of American Poets launches the first annual national "Poem in your Pocket Day" The idea is simple: select a poem and carry it with you (poem in your pocket) and unfold it with family friends and co-workers throughout the day. More details are available at their website: poets.org/pocket
- - -
Throughout the day the largest selection of Poems-For-All booklets ever made available for distribution will at the bookstore for people to take and use as part of "Poem in your Pocket Day." Other activities during the day at the bookstore are in the works to help celebrate and promote this new national tradition.


Friday, April 18th, 7:30pm
CHARLES CURTIS BLACKWELL
VINCENT KOBELT
(Invited)
- - -
Poems-For-All is pleased to welcome Charles Curtis Blackwell back to Sacramento. Presently a poet and performer in the Bay Area, Charles once graced the Sacramento scene with his exceptional readings. He comes with a new book of poems, or rather, two vignettes of poetry in one book: "Is, The Color of Mississippi Mud and Lou Next Door." The book's publisher/editor Vincent Kobelt has also been invited to read.

Saturday, April 26th, 6pm
ARTHUR WINFIELD KNIGHT
- - -
Poet, writer and editor of UNSPEAKABLE VISIONS, a literary journal of Beat Generation writing, Arthur celebrates the release of his latest Novel MISFITS COUNTRY.


AND INTO MAY...

Friday, May 2nd, 7:30pm
WILLIAM WANTLING IS DEAD
featuring
KEVIN JONES
GENE BLOOM
(Invited)
RICHARD HANSEN
Others
- - -
May 2nd marks the anniversary of the death of mimeo era poet William Wantling. Poet and Wantling Scholar Kevin Jones and others will read their favorite Wantling poems and discuss his importance and impact as a poet. Poet GENE BLOOM who edited the little magazine ENTRAILS and published Wantling has been invited to attend. (I wish I had the cash to bring A.D. WINANS over from the Bay Area. His Second Coming Press put out a wonderful collection of Wantling poems...Fortunately, A.D. Winans will be reading at the bookstore in January 2009 in support of a forthcoming book to be published by Robert Grossklaus at Polymer Press.)

MAR 19 | Protests | Anti-War Demonstrations and Events in Sacramento (and beyond)

On the fifth year anniversary on the war in Iraq a list of anti-war demonstrations and events compiled by musician, journalist and friend Dan Bacher with the hope that the poets, musicians, writers and other creative souls who read this blog will add their voice and energy to ending the war in Iraq.

IN SACRAMENTO:
7:30-8:30am
Demo at 3rd & J Sts. offramp, Sacramento. From here we will plan random demonstrations throughout the city, stopping at the 11:30 rally at the Capitol. Info: 916-448-7157

11:30am, 5th Anniversary Rally Against the War Iraq; North side State Capitol, L & 11th Sts, Sac, 916-448-7157; sacpeace@dcn.org

4 - 6pm, Anti-War vigil 15th & L, Sac, 916-446-5261.

4:30 - 6pm, 5 Years is Too Many: Demonstration to demand an End the U.S. occupation of Iraq. Bring signs. Howe & Fair Oaks Blvd. Sacramento, 916-481-6122.

7:15pm, CAAC Goes To The Movies: Retrospective on the 5th Anniversary of the Invasion of Iraq with Short Films. 1640 9th Avenue, FMI: 446-3304

7pm, Candlelight Peace Vigil & gathering on the 5th anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Unitarian Universalist Society, 2425 Sierra Blvd., Sac, ernestsweet@aol.com; 916-481-6122

Please join with other opponents of this war, which is driving our country into the ground, and causing so much misery for so many.

IN SAN FRANCISCO:
5 - 8pm
, No business as Usual March & Rally on 5th anniversary of the US invasion of Iraq. Civic Center, San Francisco. Carpools from Sacramento: 916-448-7157; sacpeace@dcn.org

Thursday, February 14, 2008

FEB 25 | History of the Zapatista Movement


Raúl Salinas has died



The news circulates, and I am sad to send it, that poet Raúl Salinas has died. He was here, in Sacramento, in 2004; a part of Jose Montoya's Flor y Canto. There he conducted a sunday programme for Children. I remember fondly how he delivered a love of poetry to the kids; my little daughter among them. I'll remember Mr. Salinas this way, in how he made her smile.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

FEB 21 & 22 | Poetry | Readings in Davis | Yosefa Raz | Susan Kelly-DeWitt Options

Thursday, February 21, 7pm
YESEFA RAZ
- - -
Yolo County Library in the Blanchard Room, 317 W. 14th Street, Davis.
- - -
Yosefa Raz is an Israeli-American poet, whose first book, In Exchange for a Homeland, was published in 2004 by Swan Scythe Press. She is a graduate of the U.C. Davis creative writing program, and now lives in Berkeley, where she is working on her doctorate. The reading is sponsored by Israel Peace Alternatives.

- - -

Friday, February 22, 7:30pm
SUSAN KELLY-DeWITT
- - -
The Avid Reader, 617 Second Street, Davis.
- - -
Susan Kelly-DeWitt will celebrate the publication of her first full- length collection, The Fortunate Islands, at a readingThe author of six chapbooks and a letterpress collection, The Book of Insects, she has been the recipient of a Wallace Stegner Fellowship from Stanford University, and has won many national awards for her writing. Her poems have appeared in Poetry, Prairie Schooner, New Letters, North American Review, Rosebud, Cutbank, and Nimrod, among many other journals.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

FEB 6 & 7 | Poetry | Readings in Davis | Mary Mackey | Joe Wenderoth Options

Wednesday, February 6, 9pm
MARY MACKEY
- - -
Bistro 33, 226 F Street, Davis.
- - -
Poetry Night hosts Andy Jones and Brad Henderson are pleased to announce that the esteemed poet, novelist and Sac State Professor Mary Mackey will be the featured performer at Poetry Night at Bistro 33 on February 6 at 9pm. Mackey has published five volumes of poetry, a novella, and eleven novels. Her works have sold over a million copies and have been translated into eleven foreign languages, including Japanese, Hebrew, Greek, and Finnish.
- - -
Mackey's nonfiction and memoirs have appeared in various anthologies. She has reviewed books for The San Francisco Chronicle, the San Jose Mercury News, the American Book Review, and a variety of other publications; has lectured at Harvard and the Smithsonian; and has contributed to such diverse print and on-line publications as The Chiron Review, Redbook, and Salon.
- - -
Poetry Night takes place on the first and third Wednesday of every month. After the featured performer, an open mic will give new and experienced poets and performers an opportunity to share their work. Admission is free, and all are welcome to join the evening of literary performance at 226 F Street in the old City Hall building. For more information, contact Bistro 33 at (530) 756-4556.

- - -


Thursday, February 7, 2008, 8pm (sharp)
JOE WENDEROTH
- - -
The John Natsoulas Center for the Arts, 521 1st Street, Davis.
- - -
The heralded author of the poetry collections No Real Light, Disfortune, and It Is If I Speak; the epistolary novel Letters to Wendy's, and the collection of essays The Holy Spirit of Life: Essays for John Ashcroft's Secret Self, will perform his work -poems, songs, and short silent film clips--in the darkened third floor of Davis's most majestic gallery. The critic Ben Marcus has commented that "Joe Wenderoth is a brilliant writer, original and subversive, sensitive and strange. I read his work with awe and admiration." Come early to this unforgettable event. Viewer Discretion is Advised. No Host Bar.

Friday, February 1, 2008

Buy a book...


REMEMBER THE BLUE CHALK LIBERATION FRONT!

FEB 1 | Film | The Crazies (7pm) | Rocky Horror (10pm)

FRIDAY, FEB 1, 7:00PM
Shiny Object "Movies on a Big Screen" presents:
THE CRAZIES
- - -
600 4th St, West Sacramento. That's the corner of 4th & F in WEST Sacramento (not downtown Sacto). Admission: $5.00. Digital projection on to a large screen. Seating is on folding chairs - feel free to bring a pillow or cushion - or even your own folding chair! web: www.shiny-object.com/screenings
- - -
A government plane carrying a secret military bio-weapon crashes near a small town in Pennsylvania, leaking into the water supply. Violent insanity infects and transforms most of the town's citizens, and the army moves in to quarantine the town and restore order -- but have to avoid infection themselves. Filled with government paranoia and social statements, this oft-overlooked Romero classic from 1973 is about to be remade (shudder) and was a blatant influence on "28 Days Later."
- - -
Do NOT forget, The Rocky Horror Picture Show plays every Friday at 10 PM. Admission for this is $6.00. Turnout has been picking up -- but we still need people coming out to continue screening this! Oh - you can also see the RHPS FAQ at our website.
- - -
COMING ATTRACTIONS: Next week (2/8) a personal fave of ours -- the rarely seen film from Kids in the Hall director John Paizs, "Crimewave." And don't forget our Valentine's Day movie -heh- on 2/15: "Porn King: The Trials of Al Goldstein."


- - -
ELSEWHERE & OTHERWISE
- - -

CALIFORNIA LECTURE SERIES
Subscriptions are on sale now for their next six-lecture series ($150). Subscribe and get more info at: (916) 737-1300 or visit www.californialectures.org
SIX-LECTURE SERIES: Crest Theatre, Sacramento 7:30pm
GERALDINE BROOKS Wednesday, February 6, 2008
RICHARD POWERS Monday, March 3, 2008
TOBIAS WOLFF Thursday, May 8, 2008

FEB 2 | Music | Instagon at the Java Lounge

SATURDAY, FEB 2, 8PM
[Music]
INSTAGON LORDS OF OUTLAND
- - -
Java Lounge, 2416 16th Street, Sacramento. www.thejavaloungeisrad.com
- - -
You may know Lob as a poet. He's also the genius behind the annual Noise Fest as well as the unique noise-music-performance experience know as INSTAGON whose performers change every time it takes the stage. About the show, which celebrates Instagon's 15th birthday, Lob says: "Your support would be most appreciated.. It will be a fun show will lots of surprizes... BE THERE." Also playing, LORDS OF OUTLAND from the Bay Area who will be celebrating a CD release. More info: Lob ov Instagon


- - -
ELSEWHERE & OTHERWISE
- - -

FRIDAY, FEB 8, 5PM
ALEX ESCALANTE: POET-TRAITS
- - -
Luna's Cafe, 1414 16th Street. (916) 441-3931.
- - -
Poet Portraits of JOSE MONTOYA, PHIL GOLVARG, FELICIA McGEE and others. Readings by selected poets at 7pm. Complimentary wine and Hors d’oeuvres will be served.

FEB 4 | Poetry | Francisco X. Alarcón & Eve West Bessier

MONDAY, FEB 4, 7:30PM
Sacramento Poetry Center presents:
FRANCISCO X. ALARCÓN & EVE WEST BESSIER
- - -
The Book Collector, 1008 24th Street, between J & K Streets. (916) 442-9295. www.sacramentopoetrycenter.org
- - -
PLEASE NOTE THE TEMPORARY LOCATION CHANGE. SPC events typically happen at their location at 25th & R Streets, inside HQ: Headquarters for the Arts.
- - -
Francisco X. Alarcón is an acclaimed poet and educator, author of ten volumes of poetry. Alarcón is the recipient of 1993 American Book Award, the 1993 PEN Oakland Josephine Miles Award, and the 1984 Chicano Literary Prize. In April 2002 he received the Fred Cody Lifetime Achievement Award from the Bay Area Book Reviewers Association (BABRA). He was one of the three finalists nominated for the state poet laureate of California. Alarcón was also awarded the 1997 Pura Belpré Honor Award by the American Library Association and the National Parenting Publications Gold Medal. He also received 2002 Pura Belpré Honor Award, Danforth and Fulbright fellowships, 1998 Carlos Pellicer-Robert Frost Poetry Honor Award by the Third Binational Border Poetry Contest, Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua.
- - -
Alarcón's most recent books are Sonnets to Madness and Other Misfortunes / Sonetos a la locura y otras penas (Berkeley: Creative Arts Book Company 2001) and From the Other Side of Night / Del otro lado de la noche: New and Selected Poems (University of Arizona Press 2002). He currently teaches at the University of California, Davis.
- - -
Eve West Bessier is a author of poetry, fiction and non-fiction. She was born in the Netherlands and has lived in Davis, California for the past two decades. She currently works as a Certified Life Coach and Vocal Coach, and teaches writing workshops and residencies. She worked for The University of California, Davis for eighteen years in educational research, program development and evaluation. She holds a Master of Education from UC Davis and has done graduate course work in English and creative writing at California State University, Sacramento. She also holds a Bachelor of Arts in English and Creative Writing from San Francisco State University.
- - -
She is a performing jazz vocalist, a visual artist and a promoter of community arts programs. She has received several literary awards including The Kathryn Hohlwein (2000), First Place for Poetry in The California Focus on Writers Contest (2000), and Second Place in the Sacramento News & Review's Short Story Contest (2001). Her poetry was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2003.. She has two chapbooks, Roots Music and Splash published by dPress, Sebastopol, 2002 and 2003.

- - -
ELSEWHERE & OTHERWISE
- - -

MONDAY, FEB 18, 7:30PM
Sacramento Poetry Center presents:
AFRICAN AMERICAN HERITAGE & HISTORY MONTH READING
- - -
Sacramento Poetry Center, 1719 25th Street, 25th & R Streets, www.sacramentopoetrycenter.org
- - -
Hosted by: Indigo Moor and Khiry Malik Moore. Headliners include: Emmanuel Sigauke, Dawn Dibartolo, Mario Ellis Hill, Terry Moore and Supanova.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

JAN 12 | stranded and disbanded, busted and disgusted

Many will remember Tim Holt as the editor of The Suttertown News, Sacramento's alternative newspaper long before the News & Review opened up shop. Living in Dunsmuir now, Tim returns for an evening celebrating Woodie Guthrie and the American folksong. His talk and performance will be followed by a folk jam. Folk musicians from beginners to pros are invited to bring their acoustic instruments and join in. It all takes place at 2pm at The McClatchy Library, 2112 22nd Street, Sacramento. It's free, folks.

"The history of the American folksong is a people's history of thiscountry," Holt says.

From the ramblin' songs of Woody Guthrie ("from Oklahoma to CaliforniaI've been stranded and disbanded, busted and disgusted") to the old-time religious songs of a much earlier era, Tim Holt will explore thehistory of the American folksong--its origins in the British Isles andWest Africa, and the social context from which it arose.Along the way he'll sing songs that represent various facets of theAmerican folksong, including the preoccupation with sinfulness and thesinner ("Hard Ain't It Hard"), the old-time gospel ("LonesomeValley"), Guthrie's Depression-era songs ("Ramblin' 'Round"), songs ofthe westward migration ("Cumberland Gap" and "Sweet Betsy From Pike"), and the contributions of Charles Neblett, a courageous champion ofcivil rights in the 1960s ("If You Miss Me On The Back Of The Bus").

Tim Holt is a frequent contributor to the Sunday San Francisco Chronicle and the author of several books, including On Higher Ground and Songs Of The Simple Life (both available at The Book Collector).

Saturday, January 5, 2008

JAN 7 | POETRY | Barbara Jane Reyes and Oscar Bermeo

MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 7:30PM
Sacramento Poetry Center presents:
BARBARA JANE REYES, OSCAR BERMEO
- - -
1719 25th Street. 25th & R Streets,Sacramento
(916) 451-5569.www.sacramentopoetrycenter.org
- - -
The Sacramento Poetry Center starts the new year with a reading featuring Barbara Jane Reyes and Oscar Bermeo. Hosted by Arturo Mantecon, count on it to be an exciting night of powerful poetry.
- - -
Barbara Jane Reyes was born in Manila, Philippines and raised in the SF Bay Area. She is the author of Gravities of Center (Arkipelago,2003) and Poeta en San Francisco (Tinfish, 2005) which received the James Laughlin Award of the Academy of American Poets. Her other honors include an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Fellowship and numerous Pushcart Prize nominations. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Asian Pacific American Journal, Chain, New American Writing, North American Review, Notre Dame Review, among others. She lives with her husband, poet Oscar Bermeo, in Oakland.
- - -
Born in Ecuador and raised in the Bronx, Oscar Bermeo is a BRIO (Bronx Recognizes Its Own) award winning poet, educator & literary events coordinator who now makes his home in Oakland, where he is the poetry editor for Tea Party magazine and lives with his wife, poeta Barbara Jane Reyes.
- - -

Upcoming Readings at the Sacramento Poetry Center
January 14 [T]: Emmanuel Sigauke and Shevonn Blackshire
January 21[R]: Michael Cluff and Michael Garbarini
January 28 [B]: Frank Graham
February 11 [B]: Pat Grizzell and Alice Armstrong
March 3 [T]: Julia Levine and Rick Campbell
March 10 [B]: Edythe Schwartz

Host code: [T] Tim Kahl; [R] Rebecca Morrison; [B] Bob Stanley;
[A] Arturo Mantecon



# # #