Kerrytown BookFest

Title: Kerrytown BookFest

Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan, US
Description: The Kerrytown BookFest is an event celebrating those who create books and those who read them. The primary goal is to highlight the area’s rich heritage in the book and printing arts while showcasing local and regional individuals, businesses, and organizations. The event features authors, storytellers, publishers bookbinders, book artists, book illustrators, poets, letterpress printers, wood engravers, calligraphers, papermakers, librarians, teachers, publishers, new, used, and antiquarian booksellers and many others associated with books and their diverse forms, structure, and content. The festival also offers a popular children’s area, with storytelling and creative activities.

Learn more here.

Date: September 9, 2012

Ponds, In Love

C.D. Wright

copyright ©C.D. Wright, 2002



One was always going when the other was coming back
One was biting a green apple
The deeper the evening the louder the singing
Throwing the core out the window
An oar stirred the dark then quit
A face drenches itself in carlight
A wrist wearing a man’s watch dipped a net
Even as one turned toward an unfinished building
The other wondered what one would have on
Upon returning will the hair be fallen or cropped
If one reaches what is grasped for
Gnats go for the eyes
Will utter disappointment set in
Will it be water or milk or wine tonight
Mostly one listened in the low-intensity glow
Of events one sustains incomprehensible feelings

Notes on the Poem

The images in CD Wright's "Ponds, In Love" are bright ... "A face drenches itself in carlight" and clear ... "One was biting a green apple" and evocative ... "An oar stirred the dark then quit" How does such clarity and simplicity seem to collectively delineate a complicated, puzzling relationship? If someone or something is "in love" here, as the title suggests, why is there no evidence of sympathy or connection? Everyone and everything in the poem is generic, devoid of gender or identifying features (apart from "a man's watch"). The people or living agents are signified as "one" or "the other" and we only see disembodied parts of them - face, wrist, hair. Inanimate objects and conditions seem to operate and exist autonomously: who or what is singing and throwing the apple out the window are not identified, the oar seems to stir the dark without assistance, who has left a building unfinished is not known, whatever state the hair will be in, it will seemingly fall or be cropped on its own. "One was always going when the other was coming back" If "one" and "the other" are "in love", they seem very distant, cool and alienated. Or are they estranged or reserved, trying to somehow reach each other across some divide that, say, would make it difficult for two separate bodies of water to reach each other and merge into one (not "one" and "the other")? That reaching is also apparently not a good idea because "gnats will go for the eyes" or "utter disappointment" is likely. Has Wright taken discrete images with the potential for intimacy and simply thwarted their connection and embodiment into complete people? That "one sustains incomprehensible feelings" rather than simply feeling something is probably the answer.

2013 Griffin Poetry Prize readings

Title: 2013 Griffin Poetry Prize readings

Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Description: Annually, the readings by the Griffin Poetry Prize shortlisted poets are highly anticipated. Again in 2013, the readings will be held at beautiful Koerner Hall, Telus Centre for Performance and Learning, part of The Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto. The evening will also include the announcement of the Griffin Lifetime Recognition award recipient.

Date: June 12, 2013

2013 Griffin Poetry Prize shortlist announced

Title: 2013 Griffin Poetry Prize shortlist announced

Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Description: Scott Griffin, founder of The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry and David Young, trustee, will announced the International and Canadian shortlist for the 2013 Griffin Poetry Prize.

Date: April 9, 2013

Havana Book Fair

Title: Havana Book Fair
Location: Havana, Cuba
Description: Each February, Havana’s International Book Fair transforms the old Spanish fortification San Carlos de La Cabana that overlooks the Havana harbour into one of the biggest book parties in the world. It takes place in Havana for 10 days before continuing on to the other cities for two more weeks. The book fair ends in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba.

The festival consists of book vendors, poetry readings, children’s activities, art exhibitions, and concerts in the evenings. It is considered Cuba’s premier cultural event, as well as the event with the highest attendance in Cuba: the XX International Book Fair drew over 2.3 million people to the Capital City!

Learn more here.

Start Date: February 14, 2013
End Date: February 24, 2013