Poetry news via Google, MSN, and Yahoo!
- It's all good news in Brid - Bridlington Today
It's all good news in BridBridlington Today, UK - 1 hour ago"There was a fabulous buzz about the place and various activities added to the atmosphere, such as a fencing display, poetry reading and dance lessons. ...
- Roy Nathanson: Auditory Circus (All About Jazz)
Saxophonist Roy Nathanson was in one of the earliest versions of The Lounge Lizards, which he left to found The Jazz Passengers, a group that slowly morphed into his new ensemble, Sotto Voce. In between he also co-led a duo with keyboardist and composer, Anthony Coleman and released, among others, the ground-breaking album I Could've Been a Drum (Tzadik, 1997).
- World Leaders Who Liked to Paint (Newsweek)
What happens when world leaders get creative. Hint: it isn't always pretty.
- Every little thing (they do is magic) - Belfast Telegraph
Belfast TelegraphEvery little thing (they do is magic)Belfast Telegraph, United Kingdom - 1 hour agoWhatever Pete Doherty might have to say about Kate Moss, heroin, or otherwise, chances are his much-lauded 'poetry' will fall rather flat by comparison. ...
- David Biespiel's poetry column addresses variations in Philip Whalen's 'Zenshinji' (The Oregonian)
L ast month I was visiting a cousin who showed off his framed broadside of the poem "Zenshinji" by his late friend, poet Philip Whalen. Whalen was born in 1923 in Oregon and grew up in The Dalles (he and my cousin attended Reed College during the Gary Snyder and Lew Welch era of the late 1940s).
- A sad tryst with destiny (The Telegraph)
On a searing, arid Friday afternoon of April, the traffic stands still as the burnt air in Bowbazar Street, officially known as BB Ganguly Street, a name not too popular.
- Summer Choir concert spotlights American poets (University of Wisconsin - Madison)
For its depth and meaning to be truly experienced, poetry should also be heard, and not just read. As evidence, the blossoming of spoken word, open mics and poetry slams are bringing the joy and power of poetry to a new generation.
- Survivor recalls bridge collapse 50 years later - Vancouver Sun
Vancouver SunSurvivor recalls bridge collapse 50 years laterVancouver Sun, Canada - 12 hours ago"It was a fascinating image I had of him dangling from his umbilical cord of oxygen," said Geddes, who will read from Falsework, his book of poetry about ...
- Chicago Opera Theater makes growing its base a priority - Chicago Tribune
Chicago Opera Theater makes growing its base a priorityChicago Tribune, United States - 2 hours agoEvents are scheduled through May 25 at the University of Chicago Gleacher Center, Columbia College, Indo-American Center, Chicago Cultural Center and other ...
- Area still one of London’s safest - News Shopper
BEXLEY has kept its reputation as one of the safest boroughs in London, with another fall in recorded crime. Borough commander Chief Superintendent Tony Dawson said around half of the reductions in crimes such as assault and criminal damage are down ...
- Butch Camping Tips (RainbowNetwork.com)
I’d like to be able to say that I'm good at camping - but I certainly can't say any such thing. It's quite difficult to admit that I, a card-carrying Butch, am completely without camping skills.
- TUNE IN TONIGHT: Britain’s great, white danger hunter returns - Reading Eagle
Bear Grylls returns with six new episodes of “Man vs. Wild†(9 p.m., Discovery). This is the show in which a former British Special Forces officer is dropped into harrowing locales and forc ed to survive on the local bugs, plants and other nasty ...
- Ultrafit: Conquering the 'Marsh Mountain' - Minneapolis Star Tribune
Paul Getzke has his feet on the grass and his hands on Precambrian stone. A wall of rock -- swirled gneiss with lichen, striped pink and gray with granitic veins -- towers 12 feet above his head. "Let's give it a go," he says. Getzke reaches for an ...
- Iraqi translators have the deadliest job (San Francisco Chronicle)
Neither his parents nor his siblings know he works for the U.S. Army. It's bad enough that he wakes up each night around 2 a.m., the hour his armored convoy was hit by a roadside bomb several months ago. He doesn't want his family to have the same...
- The Witlings - BackStage.com
Meddling old women, gossipy bubbleheads, and pompous pretenders will always be with us. So long as the follies of humankind cross cultures and continents, good satire will be eternal. But Magis Theatre Company's production of The Witlings by 18th ...
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