We recently received an email asking if we'd like to host a reading by three visiting Irish poets, and fortunately we were able to schedule the event. They'll be reading here at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, April 8. There's no admission charge, and all are welcome. The reading will be followed by a wine reception courtesy of the Embassy of Ireland, Washington DC.
The Writer's Center welcomes visiting Irish poets Siobhan Campbell, Anne-Marie Fyfe, and Iggy McGovern. Monday, 8 Apr, 2013 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM at The Writer’s Center, 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, Maryland. Email us at post.master@writer.org or call 301-654-8664 for directions.
Siobhan Campbell is known for her quirky take on contemporary Ireland and on the limping Celtic Tiger. As well as writing poetry, she works with veterans of the forces in the US and the UK and edited Courage and Strength, Stories and Poems by Combat Stress Veterans (2012). Her most recent poetry collections are Cross-Talk, That Water Speaks in Tongues and The Cold that Burns. She has published in Poetry, The Southern Review, Crab Orchard Review, Magma, Poetry Ireland, The Irish Times, Identity Parade: New British and Irish Poets and other journals and anthologies. Awards include prizes in the National poetry competition, Troubadour and Wigtown International poetry prize and Templar Chapbook prize. Siobhan writes accessible, wry and sometimes satirical verse,
Iggy McGovern lives in Dublin where he is Associate Professor of Physics at Trinity College. His poetry has been widely published in anthologies and journals in Ireland and abroad, as well as in the popular ‘Poetry in Motion’ series on trains in the Dublin suburban rail system (DART). He is author of two collections of poetry, The King of Suburbia, and Safe House. He also edited the anthology 2012: Twenty Irish Poets Respond to Science in Twelve Lines, published by Dedalus Press in association with Quaternia Press, and co-edited (with Jean-Patrick Connerade) Science Meets Poetry 3, published by Euroscience. Well-known for his witty, playful, but emotionally engaged poems, McGovern is the recipient of the McCrae Literary Award and the Hennessy Literary Award for poetry.
Anne-Marie Fyfe: poet, creative-writing teacher, and former Chair of the Poetry Society, (2006-2009), lives in West London. She has published four volumes of poetry, including Understudies: New and Selected Poems (Seren Books, 2010) and has won several awards including the Academi Cardiff International Poetry Competition with her poem CuraƧao Dusk. Anne-Marie has been organiser of Coffee-House Poetry in London for 14 years and is co-founder and organizer of the John Hewitt Spring Festival on the Antrim Coast. She has edited anthologies, has guest-edited and written for poetry magazines, and has worked with writers’ groups, schools, hospitals, libraries and prisons. Anne-Marie is a mesmerizing reader of her wonderfully musical lyric poetry.
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Delphi Quarterly: We Want to Hear Your Voice
(Former workshop leader Ramola D, who moved to Boston a few years ago, recently emailed to let us know about Delphi Quarterly, a newly-launched online site she co-founded that publishes interviews with writers. She was glad to write about the site for First Person Plural.)
Delphi rose out of a feminist vision of connection—writers connecting with other writers, writers speaking with, inspiring, and supporting each other—and when I first began to mull over the idea of starting a journal of craft interviews and literary conversations online, I was drawn especially to the notion of creating an across-all-levels platform for a diversity of writers’ voices.
We seem to live in a world dominated by the promotion, publicity, and hype generated by mainstream publishing—an old-school model that reeks of commerce and patriarchy. Too often we do not hear the voices of the visionary poet, the experimental prose writer, the serious fiction writer or essayist, the playful linguist, the revolutionary satirist, the documentary ecologist, the thoughtful memoirist or dramatist. If you are young, a beginning writer, an “emerging” writer (emerging into publication, I assume that means), a writer struggling for years to publish your manuscripts, a writer writing outside the norms of acceptability for mainstream publishers to recognize, your voice is not heard except in your own immediate environs—for years and years—while entrenched others, deserving or not, are lionized to perdition.
A Platform for Your Voice
We at Delphi think there is value in your voice, in hearing your voice and in including your voice, while you are writing, reading, publishing pieces in local or larger forums, living your writing life, and living your creating, rather than only when you land the agent, the book deal, the million-dollar movie deal. We know and live the understanding that writing is a process, and can accompany a life. We want to create a space where you and I and all the writers we know can talk shop, talk craft, and exchange insights while we are living this one-and-only writing life.
The Writer as Publisher & From the Workshops
Early in Delphi’s inception, Joe Ponepinto, Book Review Editor for The Los Angeles Review, who co-edits the journal with me, offered for inclusion a series of his interviews with writers as publishers. This now forms a regular feature—our launch issue highlighted Sarah Gorham, of the wide-reaching Sarabande Books—and we hope to keep it going. With the launch, we also introduced a workshop feature, where we highlight a writing workshop: participants can interview the workshop leader, or the other way around, or each other, mainly to give a glimpse of what the workshop is about, its high points and excitements. Our launch featured the Bangalore Writers Workshop, a fearless venture embarked on by a recent MFA graduate, Rheea Mukherjee, with her writer friend Bhumika Anand—participants from their workshops interviewed them. We are moving currently to also include documentary filmmakers in our rubric.
Writers Interviewing Writers
We invite you to join the conversation. Literally, this means, if you are a writer, beginning or established, if you admire the work of any writer you know or work with, please interview her or him! Send us a note first to introduce the writer to us. We are looking for interviews that highlight craft and focus surrounding a single published work, whether a book, a poem, a story, an essay, or a play—recent, or from another time. We want to encourage writers to interview each other—interview the writers you know and the ones you admire; do round-robin interviews of writers in your writing workshop, short or long. If you are in a workshop, as participant or leader or peer, whether a paid-for or private workshop, offer us insights into how your workshop works, what it does best, to be featured in From the Workshops.
Please drop in at Delphi Quarterly online for more information and to read our unique launch issue featuring Vermont poet Neil Shepard and Baltimore writer Justin Sirois. Delphi wants to feature your voice!