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Dear Friends,
 
We've just posted our
spring newsletter to our website but you can read the cover story below. It's a testament to how your support helps literature thrive in our community. Please read and enjoy.

As our fiscal year comes to a close on May 31 we hope you'll consider making a spring donation to Literary Arts! Thank you for all your support.

Best,
Literary Arts


FROGS





Teaching Poetry in Biology Class

By Jessica Lamb, Writer in the Schools

By the time I was 14, I had made my decision: I wanted to be a writer; I did not want to be a scientist. These two statements involved a single thought: It was obvious that becoming a writer meant not becoming a scientist.
 
Writers were dreamers, scientists were strict fact checkers. Scientists could dissect piglets without wincing. Poets cared more about words than things. I stopped listening in science class; I didn't mind when I got a C in chemistry - I was going to be an artiste.

Many decades later, as I climbed the steps of Cleveland High School to begin a poetry residency in Ms. Talcott's freshman biology class, I remembered my own sadly narrow self-definition at the age of 14. Gripping a sack of notebooks, I prepared myself to confront a sea of bewildered freshmen faces. Poetry in biology class? We're doing what?... read the rest of the article.


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Literary Arts is a statewide, nonprofit organization that enriches the lives of Oregonians through language and literature. For more information about Literary Arts please contact us at 503.227.2583.

PANELISTS: For our February 2009 Poetry Forum

DAVID BIESPIEL’s books of poetry include Shattering Air, Pilgrims & Beggars, & Wild Civility. A new book of poems, The Book of Men and Women, is due out in 2009. Among his honors are a Wallace Stegner Fellowship in poetry at Stanford University, a Lannan Fellowship in poetry, & a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in literature. He has taught at Stanford, George Washington University, University of Maryland, & Portland State University, & he has been the Richard H. Thornton Writer-in-Residence at Lynchburg College in Virginia. He currently divides his teaching among three universities: in the fall as the Visiting Poet at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in the spring as an Adjunct Professor at Oregon State University, & in the summer on the faculty of the low-residency M.F.A. Program at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. He’s a contributor to American Poetry Review, Parnassus, Poetry, Slate, The New York Times Book Review, & The New Republic. Since 2002 he has been the columnist on poetry for The Oregonian. In 2005 he was named editor of Poetry Northwest. In 2008, in line with his belief that poets be fully engaged with political and civic life, he became a contributor to Politico’s Arena, a cross-party, cross-discipline daily conversation about politics and policy among more than a hundred current and former members of Congress, governors, mayors, political strategists and scholars.

KIRSTEN RIAN’s poetry has appeared in national literary journals and anthologies, and was recently nominated for inclusion in the 2008 Best New Poets anthology. She leads workshops internationally, including locations like Sierra Leone and Finland, using poetry as a tool for literacy, healing, and storytelling within the refugee/immigrant and homeless communities. She resides in Portland, OR where she is a Poet-in-Residence through the Literary Arts Writers-in-the-Schools program. She co-authored with Sharon Wood Wortman the anthology, Walking Bridges Using Poetry as a Compass. Her anthology of Sierra Leonean poetry is forthcoming from Pika Press in 2009. She is poetry editor of the online literary journal, Writersdojo.org. Also an independent curator and writer, she has coordinated more than 375 exhibitions, and 65 books and catalogues.

STEPHANIE LENOX received an MFA in poetry from the University of Idaho and a BA in English from Whitworth University. Her work can be found in Crab Orchard Review, Gulf Coast, Seattle Review, and Washington Square, among others, and online in DIAGRAM and AGNI. The Heart That Lies Outside the Body, a chapbook of poems inspired by record holders, human superlatives, and ludicrous acts, won the 2007 Slapering Hol Chapbook Contest. Her work has been anthologized in Best New Poets 2006, nominated five times for a Pushcart Prize, and published as a limited-edition broadside by the Center for Book Arts. She is a recipient of a grant from the Oregon Arts Commission. She works as the promotions director at a children’s museum in Salem, Oregon, and edits the online literary journal Blood Orange Review.

JEREMY HALINEN is a poet and a coeditor and cofounder of Knockout Literary Magazine. Some of his recent poems appear in Arroyo Literary Review; Best Gay Poetry 2008;Dos Passos Review; Pontoon: an anthology of Washington State Poets, Number Ten; Quarter After Eight; and Rio Grande Review. Halinen holds an MFA in creative writing from Eastern Washington University, and he resides in Seattle.

DAVID D. HOROWITZ founded and manages Rose Alley Press, which primarily publishes books featuring Pacific Northwest rhymed metrical poetry. His new poetry collection, from Rose Alley Press, is Stars Beyond the Battlesmoke. Other collections, from Rose Alley, include Wildfire, Candleflame; Resin from the Rain; and Streetlamp, Treetop, Star. Many of his poems have been published in fine literary journals, such as The Lyric, Candelabrum, and The New Formalist. Some of his recent essays have appeared in Exterminating Angel and the IBPA Independent, a journal specializing in helping small press publishers. In 2005, David won the PoetsWest Achievement Award. In 2007, he edited, as well as published, the Rose Alley Press anthology: Limbs of the Pine, Peaks of the Range. David gives frequent readings in and around Seattle, where he lives.

PAUL HUNTER has lent a hand where it was needed—whether as teacher, performer, grassroots arts activist, worker on the land, or shade-tree mechanic. For the past 14 years he has published fine letterpress poetry under the imprint of Wood Works, currently including 24 books and 60 broadsides. His poems have appeared in Alaska Fisherman’s Journal, Beloit Poetry Journal, Bloomsbury Review, Iowa Review, North American Review, Poetry, Poetry Northwest, Prairie Schooner, Raven Chronicles, The Small Farmer’s Journal, The Southern Review and Spoon River Poetry Review, as well as in five full-length books and three chapbooks. His first collection of farming poems, Breaking Ground, 2004, from Silverfish Review Press, was reviewed in the New York Times, and received the 2004 Washington State Book Award. A second volume of farming poems, Ripening, was published in 2007, and a third companion volume, Come the Harvest, just appeared in 2008. He was recently a featured poet on The News Hour with Jim Lehrer.

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The Psychedelic '60s: Literary Tradition and Social Change View item detail Comment to LII email this

Information about the social movements of the 1960s in the United States, with emphasis on the literature of the period. Features articles and images on the Beats, Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters, Timothy Leary, the Black Mountain Poets, hippies, Woodstock, illicit drugs, protests, and much more. Includes images of handbills, posters, and other memorabilia from the 1960s. From the University of Virginia Library.
URL: http://www.lib.virginia.edu/small/exhibits/sixties/
LII Item: http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/4505

Upcoming Events

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If you are unable to attend a lecture, please consider giving your tickets to a friend or donating them back to Literary Arts as a tax-deductible donation. Many of our lectures this season are sold out. Your donation is appreciated.
 

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Coming Soon!
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Delve: Readers' Seminars
 
COMING UP NEXT
Ann Patchett & Elizabeth Gilbert

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From Paper Fort - Our Blog about Oregon's writers and readers.
 
 
OLFDickman

Accidents of Trees
by Daneen Bergland
2008 Oregon Literary Fellowship Recipient

In columns and rows
they grew sideways for spite
or confusion, elbowed
for light.

In these tidy rows the whippoorwills
disorient and cannot rest.

The dust boiled as they fell
into square bright pools of field.

The wild trees, not far away,
stood on tiptoe. The new ones
in delicate tangles of root
where the nurses once fed them,
and old survivors licked black
where they'd opened their skirts.

Towards the straight forest
long throats leaned forward
shushing the birds.

Read more...


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The Mysterious Human Heart
by Matthew Dickman
2008 Oregon Literary Fellowship Recipient

The produce in New York is really just produce, oranges
and cabbage, celery and beets, pomegranates
with their hundred seeds, carrots and honey,
walnuts and thirteen varieties of apples.
On Monday morning I will walk down
to the market with my heart inside me, mysterious,
something I will never get to hold
in my hands, something I will never understand.
Not like the apricots and potatoes, the albino
asparagus wrapped in damp paper towels, their tips
like the spark of a match, the bunches of daisies, almost more
a weed than a flower, the clementine,
the sausage links and chicken hung
in the window, facing the street where my heart is president
of the Association for Random Desire, a series
of complex yeas and nays,
where I pick up the plantain, the ginger root, the sprig
of cilantro that makes me human, makes me
a citizen with the right to vote, to bear arms, the right
to assemble and fall in love.

Read more...

 
Literary Arts is a statewide, nonprofit organization that enriches the lives of Oregonians through language and literature. For more information about Literary Arts please contact us at 503.227.2583.
 
 

Calvin Trillin

February 17, 2009

Special Events

Join us in celebrating our milestone anniversary with Trillin, a long-time friend and supporter of Literary Arts.

 

Dante: The Divine Comedy

March 4, 2009 - April 8, 2009

Delve: Readers' Seminars

Examine the detail and the grandeur that mark Dante’s masterpiece.

 

Scott Simon

March 17, 2009

Portland Arts & Lectures

Scott Simon is a reporter, novelist and host of Weekend Edition Saturday on National Public Radio.

 

Terry Tempest Williams

March 25, 2009

Special Events

How do we find beauty in a broken world? Who better to explore this question than Terry Tempest ..

 

Flannery O’Connor: Wise Blood and The Complete Stories
Complete Information on Flannery

April 14, 2009 - May 19, 2009

Delve: Readers' Seminars

Explore two masterpieces from the Southern Gothic tradition.

 

Mira Nair

April 29, 2009

Portland Arts & Lectures

Director Mira Nair’s most recent film, The Namesake (2007), is an adaptation of Jhumpa Lahiri’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name.

 

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