New Poetry & Open Mic, April 11, 2021, 3 pm, with Kelly DuMar, Ruth Smullin, Ann Taylor

Join the New England Poetry Club on April 11, 2021, 3 pm.for New Poetry & Open Mic with Kelly DuMar, Ruth Smullin, and Ann Taylor who will read from their new books of poetry. (Bios and book purchasing information below.)

This event is free and open to the public. Members will receive the zoom link information in a newsletter; please email info@nepoetryclub.org if you are not a member. Sign-up for the open mic in the chat box before the reading begins. 

Kelly DuMar is a poet, playwright and workshop facilitator who is the author of three poetry collections, girl in tree bark, All These Cures, and Tree of the Apple. Her plays are published by dramatic publishers, and her poems, prose and photos are published in many literary journals including Bellevue Literary Review, Tupelo Quarterly, Crab Fat, Storm Cellar, Corium & Tiferet. Kelly serves on the Board of the International Women’s Writing Guild (IWWG), and produces the Bi-Monthly Open Mic Writer Series attended by women worldwide. Kelly founded and leads the Farm Pond Writer’s Collective, now in its fifth year, and facilitates a variety of creative writing workshops in person and online. She blogs her daily nature photos & creative writing at kellydumar.com/blog

Purchasing information: girl in tree bark

Ruth Smullin grew up in inner city and suburban Boston where she currently lives.  Her work has been published in Atlanta Review, Common Ground Review, Constellations, Crucible (winner of the Sam Ragan Prize), Ibbetson StreetNaugatuck River Review, Plainsongs, Sow’s Ear Poetry Review, The Aurorean, and is forthcoming from Main St. Rag. Her chapbook, The Open Door, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2020.

Purchasing information: If you wish to purchase The Open Door, please email Ruth Smullin at rasmullin@verizon.net.The cost is $10, which includes shipping to any address in the USA.

Ann Taylor is a Professor of English at Salem State University in Salem, Mass. where she teaches both literature and writing courses. She has written two books on college composition, academic and free-lance essays, and a collection of personal essays, Watching Birds: Reflections on the Wing (Ragged Mountain/McGraw Hill). Her first poetry book, The River Within, won first prize in the 2011 Cathlamet Poetry competition at Ravenna Press. A chapbook, Bound Each to Each was published in 2013. Her most recent collection, published in 2018, Héloïse and Abélard: the Exquisite Truth, is based on the twelfth-century story of their lives.

Purchasing information: www.dosmadres.com

New Poetry & Open Mic, March 14, 3 pm, with Linda Haviland Conte, Timothy Gager, Eleanor Kedney

Join us for a reading of poetry by NEPC members with new books! 

Until further notice, all events will be online; this series is free and open to the public.

Members will receive the zoom link information in a newsletter; please email info@nepoetryclub.org if you are not a member.

Bios for New Poetry Reading, March 14, 2021

Linda Haviland Conte is the author of Seldom Purely (Ibbetson Street Press, 2020) and Slow As A Poem (Ibbetson Street Press, 2002). Her work also appears in several anthologies and magazines.  She was a panelist at the Massachusetts and New Hampshire Poetry Festivals (2017).  Linda is Treasurer and Membership Coordinator for The New England Poetry Club. Seldom Purely is available at Lulu, Barnes & Noble, and Amazon. 

People can message her through my website (lindaconte.net) to order my chapbook Slow As A Poem.

Timothy Gager is the author of sixteen books of fiction and poetry. His latest, an Amazon #1 Best Seller, Poems of 2020,is his ninth of poetry. Timothy hosted the successful Dire Literary Series in Cambridge, Massachusetts from 2001 to 2018, and as a virtual series starting in 2020. Timothy was the co-founder of The Somerville News Writers Festival. He has had over 600 works of fiction and poetry published, of which seventeen have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. His work also has been nominated for a Massachusetts Book Award, The Best of the Web, The Best Small Fictions Anthology, and has been read on National Public Radio.

Purchase link:

2020 Poems by Timothy Gager | BigTablePublishing

Eleanor Kedney is the author of the full-length collection Between the Earth and Sky (C&R Press, 2020) and the chapbook The Offering (Liquid Light Press, 2016). Between the Earth and Sky is a 2020 Best Book Award Finalist in Poetry (American Book Fest). Her work has appeared in Miramar Poetry Journal, New Ohio ReviewUnder a Warm Green LindenSliver of Stone, and other journals, and anthologies. Her poem “Bubbles Blown through a Wand” won the 2019 riverSedge Poetry Prize (University of Texas Rio Grande Valley). “A Park Bench in Prague” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize by Fjords Review. Kedney is the founder of the Tucson branch of the New York-based Writers Studio, and served as the director for ten years. She lives in Stonington, Connecticut and Tucson, Arizona. Learn more at eleanorkedney.com.

To purchase Between the Earth and Sky please visit C&R Press: C&R Press or email Eleanor Kedney at eleanorkedney@yahoo.com for a signed copy.

New Poetry & Open Mic, February 14, 2021, 3 pm

Join us for a reading of poetry by NEPC members with new books! 


This event is free and open to the public. It will take place on Zoom; the link will be sent out via the newsletter or you can email info@nepoetryclub.org.

READER BIOS:

Krikor Der Hohannesian’s poems have appeared in over 175 literary journals including South Carolina Review, Atlanta Review, Louisiana Literature, Connecticut Review, Comstock Review and Natural Bridge. He is a three-time Pushcart Prize nominee, author of two chapbooks, Ghosts and Whispers(Finishing Line Press, 2010) and Refuge in the Shadows (Cervena Barva Press, 2013), as well as a full-length book, First Generation (Dos Madres Press, 2020). Ghosts and Whispers was a finalist for the Mass Book awards poetry category in 2011. 

Anyone wishing to purchase a copy of his latest collection, First Generation, can do so by e-mailing him at krikorndh@verizon.net  or, alternatively by telephone: 781-488-3933. 

Alexis Ivy is a 2018 recipient of the Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship in Poetry.  She is the author of Romance with Small-Time Crooks (BlazeVOX [books], 2013), and Taking the Homeless Census (Saturnalia Books, 2020) which won the 2018 Saturnalia Editors Prize. A Boston native, her poems have been displayed in City Hall and featured by Mass Poetry aboard the red line subway.  Her poems have recently appeared in Saranac ReviewPoet Lore and Sugar House Review.  She works as an advocate for the homeless in Cambridge, and teaches in the PoemWorks community. Her website is alexisivypoet.com

To buy her book:

Taking the Homeless Census | IndieBound.org

Barbara Thomas grew up in the Last Green Valley. She earned a Masters Degree from Boston University in Education and taught English and Reading in the public schools for 35 years. 

Barbara is an active member of The New England Poetry Club, the Greek Institute, and Glenbrook, an environmental writing group in New Hampshire. She was a Joiner Center participant for ten years and received the Jeff Mayle AwardHer most recent book is The Last Green Valley, Cedar Grove Press, 2019. Other publications are a chapbook, Seduced Sighs of Trees, Cloudkeeper Press, 2007, and her poems have appeared in the Paterson Literary Review, Fiele-Festa, Lalitamba, and in several of the Bagel Bards Anthologies,among others.  Her recent book, The Last Green Valley, can be purchased on Amazon ( $19.00) from Cherry Grove Collections: The Art of the Lyric; cherry-grove.com/barbara_thomas.html.

Sign-up for the open mic in the chat box before the reading begins; each participant will read ONE poem (no longer than a page). Limit 12 readers.

Join us for New Poetry and Open Mic, Sunday, October 18, 3 pm on Zoom, with Robert Carr, Hannah Larrabee, and David P. Miller

Please email info@nepoetryclub.org for the Zoom information.

Sign-up for the open mic will be open ten minutes before the reading using the chat box function on Zoom; each participant will read ONE brief poem (no longer than a page). Limit 12 readers.

Robert Carr is the author of Amaranth, published by Indolent Books and The Unbuttoned Eye, a full-length collection from 3: A Taos Press. Among other journals, his work appears in the American Journal of Poetry, Ninth Letter, Shenandoah, and Tar River Poetry. Robert is poetry editor with Indolent Books based in Brooklyn, and recently retired from a career as Deputy Director for the Bureau of Infectious Disease and Laboratory Sciences at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. Links to purchase The Unbuttoned Eye can be found at robertcarr.org

Hannah Larrabee’s collection, Wonder Tissue, won the Airlie Press Poetry Prize and was shortlisted for a 2019 Massachusetts Book Award. She has a recent chapbook of epistolary poems exploring climate change and spirituality out from Nixes Mate Press, and new poems in Voices Amidst the Virus: Poets Respond to the Pandemic just released by Lily Poetry Review. Hannah has written poetry for the James Webb Space Telescope program at NASA, and she’ll be sailing around Svalbard in the Arctic Circle with artists and scientists in the fall of 2021. Here’s the link to buy Wonder Tissue directly from Airlie Press: http://www.airliepress.org/wonder-tissue

hannahlarrabee.com


David P. Miller’s collection, Sprawled Asleep, was published by Nixes Mate Books in 2019. Poems have recently appeared in Meat for Tea, Hawaii Pacific Review, Boston Literary Magazine, Seneca Review, Thimble Literary Magazine, Constellations, Denver Quarterly, The Lily Poetry Review, Unlost, and Northampton (UK) Review, among others. His poem “Add One Father to Earth” was awarded an Honorable Mention by Robert Pinsky for the New England Poetry Club’s 2019 Samuel Washington Allen Prize competition. To purchase Sprawled Asleep, contact David Miller at dpmiller1955@outlook.com