Hello Everyone,
May this note find you well. The guild's website is now on line! Thanks to everyone who worked to make this so. Thank you Writers!Blessings of words,
Patricia
HART ROCK Poetry Series and Open Mic will present poetry readings and a community open-mic the fourth Friday of each month at 7:00pm September through June unless otherwise announced. The event is FREE and OPEN to the Public - Come Eat Drink, Listen, Read, Enjoy! The series is produced and hosted by Patricia C. Coleman and Peggy Squires from Rachael's Cafe, 300 E 3rd St, Bloomington, IN.
Community Poem #3
June 24, 2011
What circumscribes my efforts reach and range
in the leafing out of the solstice anything, everything is possible
When we choose to awake within this varied dream
We will once again venture into the unknown territory
Wishing to recapture the fleeting wonder
Hoping it would refuel – restart - a zest for life!
A gift free for asking
not what your country can do
can your country do?
A gavotte? A tango? A slow boat to Brooklyn?
A Muse, A Dance, a frolic in the woodlands.
No more thoughts of war, only love on my mind
For the trees, for the flowers, for the children, for you
The one can be the two can be the three can be the few
The few are favored by the many
and we give those stars names, forgetting they may already have one
more fitting than human sounds may tell. O’ glittering love
that has been sought here, there, and everywhere
| |
Click Here to Read Information on our website
|
|
Friday, June 24th, HART ROCK POETRY SERIES AND OPEN-MIC at RACHAEL'S CAFÉ hosts “FREE-RANGE POETS” Lee James Chapman, Jack King, Judy Lafferty Beerman, Jerry Smith, Suzanne Sturgeon, Bob Taylor, Ian Woollen followed by a Community Open-Mic.
The Free-Range Poets are the product of a 2001 idea of Bob’s. Jerry and Ian were friends with whom Bob knew he shared an interest in the craft of poetry. He met Jack through a writing workshop at the John Waldron Art Center in Bloomington. Wouldn’t it be grand, Bob thought, if we could get together and share what we’ve been writing. The invitations were issued, all accepted, and the group was born. It has been meeting ever since. has been meeting ever since. The format has remained the same. A member reads a recent work, the others mull it over, and then there is time for written and oral critiques. So the process goes—around the table until all have had their turn. From the beginning coffee, tea, and cookies have been a necessary part of the ritual. Meetings happen every two weeks or so. Until 2006 we took summers off but now meet year-round.
Since the group’s founding, three others have joined the circle. Judy, Lee, and Suzanne were met during poetry classes at the Waldron. There have been some leaves of absence from our circle—getting married, finishing and publishing a novel, spending winters in Florida, occasional unavoidable obligations of earning a living, assorted grand tours, etc.—but none have been permanent. We’re grateful for that.
Lee James Chapman wrote his first, terrible, poems at age 15 but spent most of his life energy helping physicists smash atoms at Fermilab. Between quarks he wrote songs and poems and set poems of Emily Dickinson to music. While a member of the Naperville Writer’s Group in Illinois he had several poems published. He set a collection of Bloomington poets’ poems, including some of his own, for voice and piano, and produced a performance of them in Bloomington. He has been a member of the Free-Range Poets since 2005.
Jack King is a New Yorker by birth—a Hoosier by choice. He moved to Bloomington with his wife Sylvia and their three children in 1974 to take a position with the now defunct Center for University Ministry at Indiana University. While in town he has practiced—and retired from—at least three distinct careers. Through all three he wrote—lectures, a thesis or two, sermons, rĂ©sumĂ©s, funding proposals, newsletters, etc. Now he writes poetry as a means of self expression, exploration, and spiritual discipline. The third retirement seems to be final.
Judy Lafferty Beerman, A native of Kansas, Judy moved to the Bloomington area in the late 1980’s. A retired Interior Designer for Residential Programs and Services, Indiana University, her experiences as a wife and mother and her appreciation of nature and the out-of-doors are strong influences on her poetry. Judy has been a member of the Free Range Poetry Group since 2002.
Jerry Smith and wife Betty, having lived in Bloomington for forty years, now call it home. Jerry “wakes to sleep and takes his waking slow.” He’s too old to try a new art form and too young to stop writing. He has 100 favorite poets and 1000 favorite poems. Don’t ask for the list. It’s not compiled and constantly changes. He tries to read 50 poems for each one written but seldom succeeds. Betty is his most helpful critic and daughter Linda and son Paul, his most prized accomplishments (with Betty). He has been writing poetry seriously, though not without humor, since 1996. His poems have been published in several magazines and anthologies.
Suzanne Sturgeon lives on a farm in Owen County with her husband, Michael Tracy, and three cats, Lancelot, Murphy, and Bear. Michael and the cats are instrumental in the poetry writing process—from inspiration to revisions. She began writing poetry by taking classes at the John Waldron Art Center, where she met members of the Free-Range Poets. An attorney in private practice in Bloomington, Indiana, her Monday-through-Friday writing consists of motions, wills, and trusts.
Bob Taylor, In the 70’s, I wanted to record memories from childhood on a small Iowa farm and thought that poetry could be a way to proceed. Upon taking them to a knowledgeable poet he noted that there was a child in there but probably they were not poems. Haiku and tanka style offered some improvement, along with graduate courses and workshops. As a student and professor of psychology, I find the power of story with dense structure, image, and metaphor useful and healthy for me. Honing skills with this writing group is most gratifying.
Ian Woollen, walks his dog in Bryan Park almost every day. Poems have surfaced in Zone 3, Porcupine, and Red Dancefloor. His short stories have appeared in The Massachusetts Review, Onthebus, and The Mid-American Review, from which he received a Sherwood Anderson Prize. His novel, Stakeout on Millennium Drive, won the 2006 'Best Books of Indiana' Fiction Award. Come to share poems, songs and stories of your favorite poets and to listen. Open-mic readers have up to three minutes to share their own or another’s works.
******************************************* Rachael's Café is located at 300 East 3rd Street, Bloomington, IN (812) 330-1882 Send questions to poetry@hartrock.net or bloomingtonpoetry@gmail.com.
This event is FREE and open to the public. Food and drinks are available for purchase.
|
HART ROCK, http://www.hartrock.net , a member of the Indiana Holistic Health Network, http://www.indianaholistichealth.net
Hosted and produced by Patricia C. Coleman and Peggy Squires.
Readings for the 2010-2011 season are every fourth Friday, September through June.
2011-2012 Poetry Season
Join us on September 23rd, 2011 for the Opening Program of our 2011-2012 season!
http://www.hartrock.net/poetryrachaels.htm
ALSO: to connect with the BLOOMINGTON WRITERS GUILD contact Patsy Rahn at prahn@worldnet.att.net
WRITERS, ARTIST AND STORYTELLERS RESOURCES – http://www.hartrock.net/writersartistresource.htm
**********************************
|
Community Poem #2
HART Rock Poetry and Open Mic – May 2011
Ruminate, marinate, percolate poems!
To do this, one must look from the inside out
…And from the future to your past.
Like a ray of setting sun sweeping east to west
A midwife live here
And in the reflection of her mirror
Suns tore back storm’s drapes
Snapping turtle hides under the cattails
Kinda dark down here – feels like a jail
At least we’re not constricted by dactylic hexameter
So we let words flow like sweet nectar from our fingers
And catch their meanings from the breezes
Gently whispering soft encouragement
Will that is if he could speak
He would never know what to say
So, read his mind. You’ll be right.
Right, that is, if you’re certain to be wrong
If you are certain, you must be wrong, right?
Perhaps that rule is right until I hold on to it with all my might
Holding on is sometimes all we can do
As the storms blow through
We listen to the magic of rebirth
And we wonder about all the things that are to come
But let it go to breathe, breathe this
Breath of peace, oxygen of hope
We are all that and more to one another
Freedom is irresistible, but I do not touch
I refrain from his glorious splendor.
What a wonderful evening of poetry last night! Our Women's Words program featured writers from "Women Writing for (a) Change" - http://www.womenwritingbloomington.com/ - followed by the many who presented in the open-mic made for a great time. The room was filled with people from Bloomington to Brown County. There were younger poets and the elder poets, and the response was gratifying! So many people told me how much they appreciated the work Peggy and I do in organizing the program. I am grateful to share this with Peggy. Together HART Rock Poetry Series and Open-mic gets better and better!
On June 24th we will host the Free Range Poets for our final program for the 2010-2011 poetry season. Peggy and I will return September 23rd to begin the 2011-2012 poetry year!
Because we are taking July and August off does not mean no poetry at Rachael's on the fourth Friday in July and August. Virginia Thomas, one of our younger regular poets, will host poetry. So you can expect to receive announcements and view postings on our blog at http://www.hartrockpoetry.blogspot.com
If you have any poetry announcements, send them our way and if we are not on vacation, the information will be posted to the blog calendar.
I will return later with a posting of Community Poem #2.
Blessings of good words!