Author Archives: beth

Poetry Workshops with Staten Island OutLOUD

Saturday afternoons, April 11, 18 & 25 at 2:30pm – At the Stapleton Branch Library, 132 Canal Street, Staten Island NY 10304

Staten Island OutLOUD presents a 3-week series of free poetry workshops for adults.  Stretch your wings, try something new.  We welcome writers at all skill levels.  If you’ve never done much creative writing, here’s a great way to get started in a friendly, supportive atmosphere.  If you are more experienced, this workshop will help you strengthen your work.Jon Fox - Kris headshot

Our workshop series will be lead by Island writer and teacher Jonathan Fox (pictured at left), who was a Macaulay Scholar at Hunter College, where he studied poetry and philosophy as an undergraduate. He is currently pursuing his Master’s Degree in Elementary Education at the College of Staten Island. Jon has facilitated poetry workshops on Staten Island as part of “The Curiosity Project,” a month-long arts and event installment curated by Melissa West and funded by Staten Island Arts.

Jon has also been a featured poet and performer at various Staten Island arts events, performing at venues such as Deep Tanks Studio and Everything Goes Cafe and Bookstore.

Staten Island OutLOUD’s three-part workshop series will provide a safe and friendly space for exploring the power of our creative writing, and tools to enhance our poetic work. Each session will focus on a different  component of the writer’s craft.  We’ll look at the work of  some renowned poets, and apply their methods and insights to our own writing.  OutLOUD will also offer an opportunity (optional) for poetry workshop participants to present readings of their original work on Sat, April 25 at noon, at Staten Island OutLOUD’s St George Day event (Bay St Noodle Shop, 228 Bay St, SINY 10301 – Between Victory Blvd & Hannah St, across from Tompkinsville Park)

This Staten Island OutLOUD poetry workshop series is made possible in part by a grant from Poets & Writers, Inc., with public funding by the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the New York City Council.

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Staten Island OutLOUD’s Great Poetry Giveaway

April is National Poetry Month, and Staten Island OutlOUD offers full poetry service for our community!

Throughout the month of April, OutLOUD distributes free poems throughout the Island (North Shore, mid-Island & South Shore).  Pick up a poem (or 2!  or 3!  They’re free!), keep it in your pocket & share with people throughout the month of April.  Share your poem with family – Share your poem with friends – Share your poem with the person sitting next to you on the Ferry, bus or subway!

National Poem-In-Your-Pocket Day is Thursday, April 30th.  So get your poem from Staten Island OutLOUD, and get ready to share!  You can pick up a free poem from OutLOUD at all Staten Island branches of the NY Public Library, as well as at many community & cultural centers.  Participating community organizations include:ETG Book Cafe, 288 Bay St, SINY 10301, AHistoric Richmond Town (441 Clarke Ave, SINY 10306),and the Greenbelt Nature Center, (700 Rockland Ave, SINY 10314). Natl Poetry Month

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The Selma-Montgomery Marches – 50th Anniversary

Sunday, March 15, 2pm at Rossville AME Zion Church, 584 Bloomingdale Road, SINY 10309

Staten Island OutLOUD’s series for The Big Read on Selma marchHarper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird continues with this special event.  Featured guest: our neighbor Rev George McClain, who will have just returned from the 50th anniversary commemoration of the historic Selma-Montgomery marches.

Staten Island OutLOUD is honored to present this event in collaboration with Pastor Janet Jones and the congregation of Rossville AME Zion Church, one of Staten Island’s leading faith communities.  The Rossville church stands on the site  of historic Staten Island’s Sandy Ground community, where freed Black oyster fishermen settled with their families in the early 1800s.

Rev. McClain worked in Alabama and Mississippi in the early 1960s as a seminarian and as a young minister.  OutLOUD has been featuring his oral history of that pivotal time in civil rights history, as part of our 2014-15 series on Harper Lee’s gripping novel.  The march on Selma, Alabama was a critical point in the nation’s growing civil rights movement, and many observers credit To Kill a Mockingbird as helping to catalyze public opinion.  For excellent guides on To Kill a Mockingbird, visit http://www.neabigread.org/books/mockingbird/readers-guide/.

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Celebrating Three Local Poets: Bright Hill Prize Winners

Sunday, March 8, 3pm.  At Historic Richmond Town’s Courthouse, 441 Clarke Ave, SINY 10306.  Plenty of free parking in the Courthouse lot.  Free & open to the public

Staten Island OutlOUD is proud to celebrate the work of two Staten Island poets, Victoria Hallerman and Lisa Rhoades.  By remarkable coincidence, each woman won the coveted Bright Hill Press Poetry Prize in two consecutive years.  OutLOUD’s event will honor their work, together with that of a recent Bright Hill Prize winner, Constance Norgren, a poet who makes her home in Brooklyn.

Ms. Hallerman has written and editted a variety of chapbooks,  journals and books of poetry.  Bright Hill Press published her luminous volume, The Aerialist.    Ms. Rhoades’ Bright Hil Press publication is Strange Gravity; other works include The Week I thought I Was, Ugly, Wretched, and New Jersey Girls Are Fixing Their Hair.  Bright Hill Press published Constance Norgren’s Tonight’s Quiet; her other works include Falling Again and poems included in the anthology Bigger Than They Appear: Anthology of Very Short Poems.

Molly Peacock, past president of the Poetry Society of America and the author of more than six books of poetry, said of Lisa Rhoades’Strange Gravity, ” Very few poets, only the truly gifted ones like Lisa Rhoades, dare to write poems of such vulnerability and depth that readers can enter them as if they were made from our own thoughts and emotions.”  Strange Gravity won The Bright Hill Prize, and was published in 2004.

Sapphire, American author and performance poet, said of Tonight’s Quiet, by Constance Norgren, “These are poems with glistening quiet surfaces that crack open suddenly, radiating heat and vitality.”  Tonight’s Quiet won The Bright Hill Prize, and was published in 2014.

Jean Valentne, New York State Poet Laureate from 2008-2010 and winner of the National Book Award, said of  The Aerialist, “With mature authority and true poetic intelligence, Hallerman presents us with our lives as aerialists:  ‘Her life is the wire–she can never come down…/if she were to cut the wire (she dreams of this)/ the sky would break like a mirror into the sea/ and nothing would be whole again…'”  The Aerialist won The Bright Hill Prize, and was published in 2005.

L to R: Constance Norgren, Victoria Hallerman and Lisa Rhoades.  Connie NorgrenHallerman photoLisa Rhoades

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African Writer Ayi Kwei Armah: “The Healers”

The Healers book coverSunday, March 1, 2pm at Clay Pit Ponds State Park, 2351 Veterans Road West (@Sharrotts Rd), SINY 10309

This is an unusual opportunity to become familiar with a leading voice in African literature, presented at the close of Black History Month.   Ayi Kwei Armah was born in Ghana, educated at Groton, Harvard and Columbia.  He has worked as a translator in Algeria, as a scriptwriter in Ghana, and as an editor in Paris.  He has taught in Ghana, Tanzania, the National University of Lesotho, the University of Wisconsin and Amherst.

Ayi Kweh Armah now makes his home in Dakar, Senegal, and has continued to work throughout the African continent as an educator and writer.  The Healers is a novel that traces the history of the Ashanti Empire, but in a very personal way.

As we gather inside the Interpretive Center at Clay Pit Ponds State Park and gaze at the woodland, we’ll read several chapters of The Healers.  The story describes traditional coming of age ceremonies.  It brings to life the concerns of traditional healers who seek a solution and a future for the people of Africa, their new nations and their coming generations.  This event will be co-hosted by Gregory Taylor, a beloved Staten Island community leader and member of Staten Island OutLOUD’s Board of Directors. This event is free and open to the public.

INFO ON HOW TO GET THERE:  Take 440 South to Exit 3A S (to merge onto Veterans Road West. Then turn Left onto Englewood Ave. Then turn Left onto East Service Road/Veterans Road East. Veterans Road East turns slightly left to become Woodrow Road. Continue on Woodrow Road; the road turns slightly left to become Veterans Road West. Continue a short distance on Veterans Road West, and on your right you will see the entry to Clay Pit Ponds Interpretive Center.

Here’s a link for the Clay Pit Ponds Interpretive Center: http://parks.ny.gov/environment/nature-centers/14/details.aspx

Here’s a link for directions from your home to Clay Pit Ponds Interpretive Center:   http://parks.ny.gov/environment/nature-centers/14/getting-there.aspx

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Why read “To Kill a Mockingbird”

As Staten Island OutLOUD prepares for our Autumn 2014 series on Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird for The Big Read – Our friend Ted Lochwyn recalls the first time he read Mockingbird as a young boy.

Here’s the link: http://youtu.be/ZPHvImTcLG4

Why read “To Kill a Mockingbird”

Staten Island OutLOUD’s friend Ted Lochwyn recalls the first time he read Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird.  Ted was a young boy, and Scout was the first female hero he encountered in literature.

Here’s the link:  http://youtu.be/ZPHvImTcLG4

King Gesar of Ling – for Tibetan New Year

Sunday, Feb 15, 2015, 2pm at the Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art, 388 Lighthouse Ave, SINY 10306

In anticipation of Tibetan New Year, Staten Island OutLOUD hosts a reading from a Tibetan national epic, King Gesar of Ling.  The Tibetan Museum will serve momos (Tibetan dumplings), and will also feature a free screening of a Tibetan film after our reading concludes.  Free & open to the public.  Details TBA.Gesar

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Bellow OutLOUD – with artist Sarah Yuster

Saturday, Jan 31, 2015, 7pm.  Art Lab, 1000 Richmond Terrace, Building H (Snug Harbor), SINY 10301

Years ago, Staten Island artist Sarah Yuster painted the portrait of the novelist Saul Bellow.

I wrote to him, sending samples of my work, and asking if we could meet so I might paint him. He liked my  letter and we began a correspondence.  A year later he invited me to Vermont, where I spent several days taking photos and talking with him and his wife.”  From those photographs, Ms. Yuster created a portrait of  the Nobel Prize-winning author of Henderson the Rain King, the Dean’s December, Ravelstein, and many other distinguished works.

The young painter was delighted to work with Bellow, and he was pleased with the final result.  The painting now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery.  Sarah wrote an essay on her experience working with one of the most eminent American writers of the 20th century.

The painting is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery.

Join us for a winter’s evening of readings & conversation with Sarah.  Free & open to the public.

Yuster BW photo headshot

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Paws & Read OutLOUD – For Kidz

Sunday, January 25, 2015, 2:30pm at Greenbelt Nature Center, 700 Rockland Ave (@Brielle), SINY 10314

Young readers can build confidence and strengthen their skills by reading aloud to a thoughtful, patient listener: a kindly licensed therapy dog named Sweetie Pie.  Sweetie Pie is a gentle, kid-friendly boxer.  She’s getting older, so she moves slower and loves to sit & listen as kids read to her.  Kids enjoy Sweetie Pie and she loves curling up on the floor as kids and their parents hang out with her.

Kids can bring their favorite books from home, or borrow one of ours.  This is a fun event for the whole family; parents and kids can read together, or big brothers & sisters can read with their younger siblings.  Join us to sit in front of the fireplace, and gaze out the windows at the winter woodland scene, as we read our favorites.

Paws & Read OutLOUD  for Kidz is fun for all ages.  Free & open to the public.Kids Pet Sweetie Pie 2

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