Sunday, March 28, 2010
The Pit Live on the Internet - from Kansas City
Subject: The Pit live on the Internet
We are now broadcasting live. Check out Kansas City's poets here:
Journal Bits March 22 – March 28
March 22 - read Barefoot by Anne Sexton… this poem is on the erotic side, pretty interesting given the period in which it was written.
March 24 - “the front never advances / no land changes hands / no prisoners are captured / death keeps percolating / hot black death.”
March 25 – “Corduroy slacks don’t hold / creases well, in fact they turn / cheap quickly— warn down / like a smooth bald head.”
March 28 - “A Sunday afternoon cocoon / the time held tightly / a pattern of jealous squeaks in the hallway floor / my hunger to be refreshed / warm within the pit / I hear the ticking of the clock not / in the present latitude / not in the passage from light into dark / or even back again.”
“Molten sweet sonnet / sings my eyes into shadows / of the present.”
Quote by Elizabeth Jennings….”For me, poetry is always a search for order.” I so agree!
j
Unconscious Mutterings Week 374
- Bow out :: withdraw
- Relationships :: personal
- Facebook :: slow
- Items :: sundry
- Ours :: communal
- Sting :: bee
- Hangover :: wasted
- Contacts :: eyes
- Lonely :: forlorn
- Seven days :: week
Get you own list here
Saturday, March 27, 2010
~ Book of Kells: NaPoWriMo: 30 New Poetry Prompts for National Poetry Month
Getting ready for NaPoWriMo????
Or if you are just looking for a poetry prompt or two to get you started on a new poem here is a great list.
Kelli constantly has helpful insights to writing and publishing poetry so her blog is an excellent read anyway. Check it out.
You Go Chester Stranczek!
Friday, March 26, 2010
Under Construction
Will your grandchildren be asking what a library is?
How many of us take libraries for granted? Honestly, I think a good deal of the time they are not occupying a significant front and center portion of my mind. I don’t think I’ve ever really stopped to consider what would happen if they were not there.
Students of course are highly dependent upon them. And I saw a figure that suggests that one third of Americans go online at libraries. Is that their only internet access? I suppose for many it is. Again, I probably take for granted that most have easy access in their own homes.
Could we see the day of privatized libraries with memberships? Or a time when the library we used had no walls, no visible librarians in the dark framed glasses? We entered our membership numbers online and uploaded reading and research material. That kind of change is probably not lurking just around the corner yet, but like many of the services that we’ve come to take for granted, the access we have to libraries is at risk of some change due to the monetary constraints of municipalities. A nation that at times seams loath to read if it isn’t required of them, stands much to lose from loss of public library access. How queer it seems that with all the modern marvels taking place around the world, keeping a library door open for the public may just too challenging for cities.
