Ryder Rejects at Last Sunday Poetry’s Open Mic

Another lovely, warm evening greeted the Bloomington Writers Guild’s “Last Sunday Poetry Reading & Open Mic” (see February 25, et al. — a March “Last Sunday” having been pre-empted by Easter), including this time sun!, at Morgenstern Books. The opening featured reader was Writers Guild founder Patsy Rahn, with nonfiction and poetry publications both in the US and England as well as being 2021’s recipient of the People’s Choice Award from the 5th Open Eurasian Literary Festival of Festivals (LIFT), with — with an eye toward Gaza-related protests on the local IU campus, including incidents spurred by IU and state police — a series of poems from both her 2018 collection, THE GRAINY WET SOUL, and a new collection currently in press, based loosely on the idea of “humanity.”

She was followed by Zionsville resident Rosaleen Crowley, a graduate from University College Cork, Ireland; past president/interest group leader of the Writing Group, International Women Indiana; and a current Creative Writing-Poetry MFA student at Butler University with, first, a group of poems written in and about Ireland coupled with many reminiscences, and finally some poems from the most recent of her six poetry books, BE PREPARED TO BE LUMINOUS, written in and about Indiana.

This was followed by an open-mic session with a record eleven people signed up of which, due to strict time constraints given the session’s 7 to 8:30 p.m. time slot (that is, running up to the bookstore’s closing), only nine were able to be heard. Of these I came sixth with, noting May’s upcoming Second Thursday Spoken Word where poems originally selected to be published in THE RYDER’s spring poetry edition (up in the air at this moment due to the untimely death of its de facto Editor-in-Chief/general firebrand Peter LoPilato) are to be presented, and as a sort of preview of mine, three brief poems that THE RYDER had rejected: two shadormas, “The Health-Conscious Vampiress Reflects Upon Her Most Recent Meal” and “Error in Judgement,” and a more conventional “Pas de Dead.”

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Published on April 28, 2024 19:20
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