your antikythera annogram
Antikythera mechanism

More good news

American Writers Museum

Kids Short Story Connection

Remembering Thomas Lux

Kathe Gregory at Bromfield Gallery

Between I and Thou Exhibit and Reading
On February 18, the Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art will also pay homage to Thomas Lux in the exhibition, Between I and Thou; at 1:15pm, curator Livia Straus will lead a walk through; 2pm, Cal Lane, Leslie Pelino, Asya Reznikov and Antonio Santin will discuss their work; 4-5pm, poets for Writing the Walls: Between I and Thou will read their poems and a reception will follow 5-6pm.
New releases

Jerry T. Johnson, Morning to Morning (Kindle, 2018)
CM Mayo, trans. Metaphysical Odyssey into the Mexican Revolution (Dancing Chiva, 2017)
Susan Miller, The Communion of Saints (Paraclete Press, 2017)
Jennifer Wallace, Almost Entirely (Paraclete Press, 2017)
Carrot Ginger Soup
An easy and flavorful soup to brighten a chilly winter day. It’s from Allison Fishman’s You Can Trust a Skinny Cook (Wiley, 2011), healthy yet indulgent recipes. Great with grilled cheese sandwiches….
2 Tbsp unsalted butter

Melt butter in medium skillet over medium heat. Add carrots, onion, ginger, thyme, salt, and cook, stirring, until vegetables begin to soften, about 6 minutes. Add broth to vegetables, raise heat to medium-high and bring to a simmer. Reduce heat and simmer until vegetables are tender, 12-15 minutes. Remove from heat and puree the soup with a stick blender.
Poetry / literary readings

Kelly Writers House, February 8, 5pm, Rob Sheffield, author of Dreaming the Beatles
Kelly Writers House, February 13, 6pm, Emily Wilson, translator of The Odyssey
CUNY Elebash Recital Hall, February 13, 7pm, Tribute to Thomas Lux; Billy Collins, Terrance Hayes, Edward Hirsch, Marie Howe, Mary Karr, Jeffrey McDaniel, Patrick Rosal, Amber Tamblyn, Vijay Seshadri

Harrison Public Library, February 17, 2pm, Sarah Bracey White on memoir
HVCCA, February 18, 4pm, Writing the Walls: Between I and Thou, poets read exhibit-inspired work
Freight House Cafe, February 21, 7pm, John McMullen and open mic
Creative opportunities
How to Write a Family History Book Workshop with Donna Zucker, February 10, 10-3,

Yoga and writing workshop with Christina Rau, February 11, 2-4pm, $25
Kids Short Story Connection starting March 10; email sarahbracey.white@gmail.com
Spring courses at the Hudson Valley Writers Center
Weekly Poetry Workshops in Upper Westchester County
’Round the Net

Short story writer Regi Claire for “We All Know About Desire” in For Books’ Sake Weekend Read
Art historian Beth Gersh-Nesic for her superb article on Modigliani in Bonjour Paris
Poet Gary Glauber for work in Verse Virtual and Verse Daily
Artist Melanie Janisse-Barlow for her portraits of poets
Art historian Laura Morelli for a few of her favorite things in her Amazon Store

Publisher Ann Starr for nominating Free Ferry for the 21st Century’s Best Books
This seems a good way to close out your annogram. Read this poem, memorize it, live it.
Until next time,Ann
An Horatian NotionThomas Lux
The thing gets made, gets built, and you’re the slave
who rolls the log beneath the block, then another,
then pushes the block, then pulls a log
from the rear back to the front
again and then again it goes beneath the block,
and so on. It’s how a thing gets made – not
because you’re sensitive, or you get genetic-lucky,
or God says: Here’s a nice family,
seven children, let’s see: this one in charge
of the village dunghill, these two die of buboes, this one
Kierkegaard, this one a droolingnincompoop, this one clerk, this one cooper.
You need to love the thing you do – birdhouse building,
painting tulips exclusively, whatever – and then
you do it
so consciously driven
by your unconscious
that the thing becomes a wedge
that splits a stone and between the halves
the wedge then grows, i.e., the thing
is solid but with a soul,
a life of its own. Inspiration, the donnée,the gift, the bolt of fire
down the arm that makes the art?
Grow up! Give me, please, a break!
You make the thing because you love the thing
and you love the thing because someone else loved it
enough to make you love it.
And with that your heart like a tent peg pounded
toward the earth’s core.
And with that your heart on a beam burns
through the ionosphere.
And with that you go to work.
Published on February 04, 2018 18:29
No comments have been added yet.