In celebration of Joy Harjo's appearance at the Fond Du Lac Tribal and Community College, the editors of this fine collection asked writers to send work that was inspired by the writing of Joy Harjo. It is a wonderful collection of writings, and I'm proud to have some poems in it. First it was an e-book, and now, since it received a 2022 MN Author Project Award in the Communities Create category, it has become a physical book.
January 31, 2023
Bringing Joy
January 28, 2023
Surface Displacements, a Finalist in Poetry at the Minnesota Book Awards
I'm thrilled to be among the poetry finalists for the Minnesota Book Award! Here's a list of all the finalists in all categories: https://thefriends.org/minnesota-book-awards/minnesota-book-awards-winners/
Celebrate the state's best books at the annual Minnesota Book Awards Ceremony. Readers, writers, and book-lovers from all over the state gather together for one incredible evening to honor stories of Minnesotans that connect us all. Awards are presented to winners in nine book categories and to the recipient of the Kay Sexton award, with special guests.
Minnesota Book Awards 35th Annual Ceremony
Tuesday, May 2 | Ordway Center for Performing Arts
Tickets will go on sale January 30, 2023
College of St. Scholastica Rose Warner Reading Series
I'm pleased to join northern Minnesota writers Linda LeGarde Grover, Ellie Schoenfeld, and Nick Trelstad leading workshops for students. The keynote is poet Michael Bazzett.
2023 Rose Warner Reading Series
February 3, 2023 | 9:30 AM – 1:45 PM
Join us for a free, day-long celebration of English literature for Northland teachers and students, with our special guest speaker, the renowned Minnesota poet, Michael Bazzett.
https://css.edu/2023rosewarnerreadingseries/home?authuser=0
January 18, 2023
Jorie Graham: The Question
In the interview in the New Yorker magazine January 8, 2023,
Jorie Graham Takes the Long View, Katie Waldman the interviewer asks this question:
You write so sharply about the way the mind, and your mind, moves. I’m
curious about that poetic mind. Is it the same mind you bring to the breakfast
table or the garden?
JG: The mind is a current—let’s take a river as an example. It not only carries
whatever it picks up by what it traverses (breakfast table, garden), but it is also
changed in its course by what it traverses.Its weight changes, its speed, the
direction in which it was going. Being taken by surprise is one of the fundamental
experiences for any poet writing any poem. You know you are in the grip of a
poem when it—the subject, the terrain you are entering, traversing—reorients you
and puts you before a question that you did not know existed. You are irrevocably
changed. One writes to be so changed. The silence you break to enter the poem is
never the same silence closing over again when the voice reënters the silence.The
poem is an action you have taken and an experience you’ve undergone. You’re not
the same person you were when you undertook that poem.That sensation of
transformation is addictive—spiritually and emotionally.Why else would anyone
attempt this insanely difficult—practically impossible—practice day after day for a
lifetime? One is in it for the conversion experiences.What are the ideals of form
for except to get us into legitimate danger that we may be legitimately rescued,
Frost asks. The key term in this brilliant formulation is “legitimate.”
Graham's poetry with its philosophical questions examines life, human life in an increasingly alarming
world beset by violent storms, floods, wildfire, and rising seas. We know what is happening, and she
describes this as a runaway system, yet we cannot stop. Her consciousness is sharp and clear, and her
voice is powerful.
https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/books/to-the-last-be-human-by-jorie-graham/