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Showing posts with label Bart Edelman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bart Edelman. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Bart Edelman's poem "Where Are You, Osbaldo?" published by Hawaii Pacific Review

 Meadowlark poet Bart Edelman (Whistling to Trick the Wind, 2021) recently had his poem "Where Are You, Osbaldo?" published in Hawaii Pacific Review! Congratulations, Bart!


Where Are You, Osbaldo?

by Bart Edelman


The night twists tighter—
A tourniquet of desire.
And we can’t help but whisper,
Where are you, Osbaldo?
What promises have you made
Nameless hungry women,
Seated at banquet dinners
You do not expect to attend.
How long can you pinwheel
Between each flickering star,
Displaying smile after smile,
Although solitude’s luxury
Confines you to impure thoughts.
One day the clever moon
Will be done with you, forever.
You’ll spin out of control,
In an orbit dawn delivers
To the last available address,
Lurking beside your name.
Mismatched clothes still remain—
Waiting for you to claim—
Yet you’ll never wear them again.

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Sunday, September 18, 2022

Meadowlark Poet Bart Edelman reads at A Day of Poetry in Los Angeles

Bart Edelman, author of Whistling to Trick the Wind, was among the Los Angeles-area poets to participate in A Day of Poetry in Los Angeles! Watch him read his poem "In Heaven" in the video below (also linked HERE), timestamp 3:08:16. 



"In Heaven" was published in the Spring 2022 San Pedro River Review. The poem reads:



The A Day of Poetry in Los Angeles event received wide media coverage. Check out more pictures, videos, and news stories about the event at these links:


Thursday, September 8, 2022

Birdy Poetry Prize + Bart Edelman Judge's Feature + Cupping Our Palms Sneak Peek

 

Click on image above for submission details!
THE BIRDY POETRY PRIZE IS OPEN FOR SUBMISSIONS!

In honor of this time of year, we will be celebrating myriad aspects of the Birdy Poetry Prize. We begin the celebration with a feature on the 2022 Birdy Poetry Prize judge, Bart Edelman, and the winning manuscript (soon-to-be-book) he selected, Cupping Our Palms by Jonathan Greenhause!



About Bart Edelman:

Bart Edelman was born in Paterson, New Jersey, and spent his childhood in Teaneck. He earned both his undergraduate and graduate degrees from Hofstra University. He has taught at Kingsborough Community College of the City University of New York, Santa Monica College, West Los Angeles College, Long Beach City College, UCLA, and Glendale College, where he edited Eclipse, a literary journal. Most recently, he was appointed to the Affiliate Faculty in the MFA Program at Antioch University, Los Angeles. Edelman served as Poet-in-Residence at Monroe College of the State University of New York. His work has been widely anthologized in textbooks published by City Lights Books, Etruscan Press, Fountainhead Press, Harcourt Brace, Longman, McGraw-Hill, Pearson, Prentice Hall, Simon & Schuster, Thomson, the University of Iowa Press, Wadsworth, and others. He has been awarded grants and fellowships from the United States Department of Education, the University of Southern California, and the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin to conduct literary research in India, Egypt, Nigeria and Poland. In addition, he received National Endowment for the Humanities grants for a series of lectures at public libraries on “The Common Good: Individualism and Commitment in American Life,” and “Trails: Toward a New Western History.” Collections of his work include Crossing the Hackensack, Under Damaris’ Dress, The Alphabet of Love, The Gentle Man, The Last Mojito, The Geographer’s Wife, and Whistling to Trick the Wind. He lives in Pasadena, California.


Bart Edelman's Judge's Statement on Selecting Cupping Our Palms by Jonathan Greenhause as the 2022 Birdy Poetry Prize Winner:

These provocative, trustworthy poems owe their strength to narrators who are not afraid to confront their own sense of awe, misgivings, and incredulity, as it pertains to their various stations in life. The prevailing subject of parenthood, and what it means to shepherd children through the stages of growth, keeps circling in this superb collection–none more so than in “The Perfect Dad.” Long before this final section, however, we witness personal journeys towards reconciliation and how to parent not only a child, but also humankind, on a practical, universal level. Cupping Our Palms has a stirring habit of casting its readers far out into a sea of curiosity and wonder, and, then, rather methodically, reeling or easing its audience back to shore, turn by gradual turn, through its eloquent language and structural change of pace. Compelling as “Beacons of Light,” “Not for Sale,” “Parabolic,” and “Relics” appear, they’re gateways to more profound questions the poet addresses and destiny poses, to all readers. Yes, here are rich, haunting poems, replete with honest voices whose declarations linger, long after the collection is complete–lessons well learned–but never quite at rest.


Learn more about Bart Edelman HERE


Poems from Cupping Our Palms


About Jonathan Greenhause:

Jonathan Greenhause has won the Ledbury Poetry Competition, Aesthetica Magazine’s Creative Writing Award in Poetry, the Telluride Institute’s Fischer Poetry Prize, and the Prism Review Poetry Prize, and his poems have appeared in America, december, New York Quarterly, Notre Dame Review, Poetry Ireland Review, The Poetry Society, The Rialto, RHINO, Subtropics, and the Times Literary Supplement. Jonathan lives in Jersey City with his wife and their two sons, all within a stone’s throw of the local freight line.

Sunday, August 7, 2022

Bart Edelman Reading with Rivertown Poets

Meadowlark poet Bart Edelman recently shared an evening on Zoom with Rivertown Poets and friends. Listen to Bart read from Whistling to Trick the Wind and his past poetry books! 

Watch on YouTube at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBfSCZTVpkk&t=152s




Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Bart Edelman's Movie-Themed Poems Published by Hobo Camp Review

Meadowlark poet Bart Edelman (Whistling to Trick the Wind, 2021) recently had the following poems published by Hobo Camp Review in the Summer 2022: Midnight at the Movies issue! Congratulations, Bart!

James So Dean 

Head so heavy,
Heart so bold,
Ford so Chevy,
Soul so cold.

Eyes so blue,
Feet so wide,
Giant so true,
Tongue so tied.

Smile so nice,
Voice so shy,
Once so twice,
Low so high.

Porsche so clean,
Road so slick,
James so Dean,
Death so quick. 


The Clamor of the Lambs
 
Clarice may, or may not, be hearing
The silence of the lambs, these days,
Yet I can assure you,
I still listen for any bleat
They make throughout the night.
And like her, I would save them—
If only I were able.
However, I require my sleep,
And other dreams, even more terrifying,
Compel me to take medication,
Placing me in the deep zone—
Halfway between a heaven and hell
I am forced to imagine.

Ah, yes, but, dear, sweet Clarice…
What has fate prepared for her?
Is she condemned to chase criminals
Across crooked lines the FBI has drawn,
Merely to capture Public Enemy #1?
Perhaps, it would be better
If she simply returned to Montana
And made penance with the flock;
It might do wonders for her soul.
As for me, I also need a break—
Miles away from all the clamor
My mind finds to spook me.
Now, the lambs are sheep—
Far too plentiful to count.


Monday, July 25, 2022

Author Interview: New poetry, new perspectives with Bart Edelman

Meadowlark poet Bart Edelman (Whistling to Trick the Wind, 2021) was recently interviewed by Pasadena Weekly! Read the article in full below or click HERE to read the original. 

Bart Edelman: New poetry, new perspectives

By Abigail LaCombe, Pasadena Weekly Staff Writer

Writing is a pathway to grasping the human condition in this chaotic world for Pasadena author Bart Edelman.

If it’s politics, life and death, or his personal life wearing on him, Edelman turns to writing to seek closure. His latest effort is his seventh published poetry collection, “Whistling to Trick the Wind.”

His 54 poems have a variety of narrators and characters, and they are divided into four sections — yellow, red, black and white.

“The colors are a nod to Native American literature and the way certain tribes experience the wind,” he said. “Together, they represent life and spirit. But, also, the transition from bright colors to dark, symbolizes completion.”

Writing new material is exciting to Edelman.

“You can always find something to write about,” said the former Glendale Community College professor.

“It’s how to take an idea and honestly create something out of that, that is open enough to allow readers different interpretations. It’s a fascinating process. But if you use too much of one element, it may be expected for every line to have that element. It’s, basically, threading a needle.”

Fiction or nonfiction, Edelman believes no writer sits down to create in a vacuum. Stories are told, they are related to, and they’re what encourage him to keep writing his reflective poetical stories. They create connections and help make life a chewable size.

In “Whistling to Trick the Wind” and in his earlier poetry collections, Edelman uses fictional characters to better communicate his ideas.

The book asks the question, what makes this life worth living? The last poem in the collection inspired the title. A man whose life ended on a very individualistic level, loses his family and what he once had, now, seemingly, alone.

“It’s easy to say, ‘Oh this poor guy’s life has ended with nothing.’ But he seems to have this relationship with God, at the end of his life, and that makes him think his life was worthwhile.”

This poem is a mirror image, somewhat off-putting to the audience, yet makes sense for the character. Edelman explained how it opens a new perspective that encourages the reader not to relate the poems to themselves, but to, instead, gain perspective from someone else.

“Whistling to Trick the Wind” portrays an overarching theme of what Edelman describes as individuals accepting where their lives have led.

“While it’s rarely perfect, it’s certainly worth the living.”

As with every writer, Edelman wants to influence the world in some way. “I’m just hoping that I’m providing a forum for people to think about the perspectives they have and why they do the things they do, and believe in the things they believe.”

In a world divided, Edelman lives in a gray shadow. “Living in black and white is such a curse.” He explained how getting stuck in a narrow mind doesn’t allow one empathy.

Now retired, Edelman said he believes “poetry can be employed in  many ways. It’s like all literature. The more people read about other people’s lives, plights and struggles, the more empathetic we become for each other.

“I’ve had students get up and leave the classroom because of a poem, and I always want to know what about the poem hit that nerve in them. It often has to do with politics, prejudice, religion or sexuality.”

Wanting his students to stray from existing in that oh-so-common black-and-white world, he encourages them to lead rather than leave.

“I’m trying to teach students to speak up, be skeptical and question authority,” he said.

“It starts with professors. If students feel their teachers are dogmatic, they should challenge them. I’ve been incredibly fortunate because I’ve been able to teach at a level that’s allowed me to have a close relationship with my students. In these classes, every day, the students have always taught me.”

Taking a moment to thank his publisher, Edelman said, “I think Meadowlark Press does great work. They’ve gone above and beyond for me, and they’ve given me so many different opportunities. I really appreciate how they treat their authors and the mark they’re making across the poetry landscape.”

Before picking up “Whistling to Trick the Wind,” he offered a few tips.

“I want readers to have an open mind because they will face self-examination,” Edelman said.

“There are narrators they will like and dislike, similar to the people we interact with daily. I want the audience to read the poems with eyes open and see the humor in life. To perceive the normal, universal questions being offered — and enjoy the work.”

Bart Edelman, presented by Rivertown Poets and Aqus Café

WHEN: 6:15 p.m. Monday, Aug. 1

WHERE: Zoom, open mic follows the feature

Sign up in advance for open mic: aqus.com/rivertownpoets

Log to Zoom: https://zoom.us/j/6508887879


Whistling to Trick the Wind

Ran out of words—
One letter at a time—
Found no use for them.
Spoke in speechless sounds
Only the deaf can hear.

Lost his job,
Refused to repeat destinations
The train passed as it wound its way
From the mouth of Manhattan
Through the belly of Brooklyn.

Gave his friends the heave-ho
When they requested an intervention,
Paid the neighbors for their services,
Climbed up the roof in the dark
And communed with the moon.

Came to believe in a God
Whose perfection was never in question,
Promised to wire his mouth shut
If the Almighty would agree
To keep his miracles to himself.

Lived a rather fruitful life
In the company of boulders—
Too old and tired to converse—
Took his final act of contrition,
Whistling to trick the wind.


Monday, April 4, 2022

Congratulations Jonathan Greenhause - WINNER of the '22 Birdy Poetry Prize!

It is with great excitement that we share the announcements for the 2022 Birdy Poetry Prize! 

Check out the video below to hear Guest Judge and 2021 Birdy Finalist Bart Edelman (Whistling to Trick the Wind) announce the 2022 winner, Jonathan Greenhause! Additionally, hear Publisher Tracy Million Simmons announce the finalists and semifinalists for this year. Last, but certainly not least, hear Birdy poets Ruth Maus (Valentine), Brian Daldorph (Kansas Poems), Alison Hicks (Knowing Is a Branching Trail), and, now, Jonathan Greenhause read from their collections. 

Tuesday, November 30, 2021