Tag Archives: Avid Reader

Double your Bakowsi!

That’s right!

You can get your first dose tomorrow at SpeedPoets when Peter reads from his new book, Beneath Our Armour alongside fellow Melbournian, Koraly Dimitriades at Brew (Lower Burnett Lane, Brisbane City) from 2:30pm – 5:30pm and if that’s not enough to sate you, why not get along to the Salon event at Avid Reader (193 Boundary Road, West End) the following night (Monday October 8) to hear Peter speak about the poems in Beneath Our Armour. On the night, Peter will also be joined by local poets Andrew Phillips, Trudie Murrell and John Koenig. Can’t think of anything better to do on a Monday night!

And here’s a tip… to gain free entry to the Monday night gig, all you have to do is email events@avidreader.com.au  or call 38463422 and let them know that you are my guest. They will sort the rest…

As I prepare to head back to work, this is the poetry injection I need to kick start the term.

Look forward to seeing many of you there,

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Love Your Independents

The fate of the book store has been a constant talking point for some time now; even more so since the demise of the REDGroup and their flagship stores, Borders and Angus & Robertson. But somehow, in the midst of the chaos there are independent book stores that continue to thrive. The Weekend Australian recently ran a feature story that focussed on two of QLD’s wonderful independent book stores – Riverbend Books and Avid Reader (you can read the full story here).

I have had a long relationship with Riverbend Books, hosting poetry events on their large, open deck for the past 6-years in conjunction with QLD Poetry Festival and QLD Writers Centre. It is one of those stores that welcomes you from the street. Visiting authors have likened it to a community church or an old fashioned English pub, referring to the store’s power as a social space. And this is one of the key factors that makes the independent such an important part of the community; people crave social interaction when buying a book. They want that face to face engagement, the conversation, the sense of discovery and human connection. It is what makes book buying one of life’s true pleasures.

The other defining point of most independents is their event program. Both Riverbend and Avid have a constant stream of events happening from month to month and you don’t have to look too hard to find something that appeals.

The next event in the Riverbend Poetry Series is coming up soon and features a stellar line up of local and inter-state poets including, Vanessa Page (Memory Bone), David Stavanger (And the Ringmaster Said), Julie Beveridge (Home is Where the Heartache is) & Max Ryan (Before the Sky). Tickets are on sale now, so make sure you book early as these nights often sell out. To book your spot call (07) 3899 8555.

So next time you are looking for some reading material to fire up the synapses, or want to get up close and persoanl with an author, check out your local independent book store and make an outing of it. Buying books should not be rushed…

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Emily XYZ – new poems & her final Australian reading

Avid Reader’s (193 Boundary St West End) Poetry Month celebrations continue tomorrow night (Thursday September 16) with readings from Tessa Leon, Jeremy Thompson, Bruce Dorlova and 2010 Arts QLD Poet-in-Residence Emily XYZ. This will be Emily’s final reading in Australia in 2010, so make sure you are their to get your last hit.

Details are:

Date: Thursday September 16
Time: 6:00pm – 8:00pm
Venue: Avid Reader, 193 Boundary Rd, West End
Cost: Free
Bookings: Call 3846 3422 or book online at:
http://www.avidreader.com.au/index.php?option=com_registrationpro&view=event&Itemid=0&did=86

Here are two brand new poems from Emily XYZ written during her 2010 residency to give you a taste of what tomorrow night will bring…

See you there,

 

 

motionless

 
those clouds are motionless overhead
it doesn’t seem possible
they sit in their white gold ness
unmoved by winds aloft
how is that turning force
suspended / has god told this
airspace position and hold
for a moment / is it an error?
for heaven’s sakes drift
in some direction / your
breath-held pause is most
unvaporlike / you’re not really
mountains, and you’re making
me nervous

 

 

climber
 

he likes to go up
he likes to climb
it’s in his nature
 
he wants to do better in life
he wants to see things from above
he wants perspective
 
the vertical is transcendent
ascent is musical
the ceiling goes underfoot
 
clouds obscure you
but I know you are there
 
I know there is a path, a plan,
an imaginary line in the sky
in the night stars a compass
 
a way in the chasm and the chaos
that must be taking you higher
even as it takes you away
 
rocks are steps that propel you to the top
the top is a place to visit
ambition in the abstract
the summit is relative,
you cannot live there
it is only a place from which you can see
further

 

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Why Poetry? The discussion begins…

Avid Reader (193 Boundary St West End) have declared September, ‘Poetry Month’ and to celebrate they are putting on some mighty fine events. The first of these is a discussion / reading taking place this Thursday night. To pick at the seams of the question, ‘Why Poetry?’ they have assembled Bronwyn Lea, Nathan Shepherdson, Ross Clark, Arts QLD Poet-in-Residence Emily XYZ and this Lost Shark.

Full details of the event are:

Date: Thursday September 9
Time: 6:00pm – 8:00pm
Venue: Avid Reader, 193 Boundary Rd, West End
Cost: $5.00
Bookings: Call 3846 3422 or book online at:
http://www.avidreader.com.au/index.php?option=com_registrationpro&view=event&Itemid=0&did=80&shw_attendees=0

Avid’s monthly magazine is also brimming with poetic musings, reviews and other articles. You can download a copy of it from their website:
http://www.avidreader.com.au/
 but I thought I would post my article answering the question ‘Why Poetry?’ to get the discussion started…

Why Poetry?

Brisbane is definitely a bright star in the poetry sky, hosting major events such as QLD Poetry Festival: spoken in one strange word (August 27-29), The Australian Poetry Slam and the annual Arts QLD Poet-in-Residence Program alongside a number of regular events, including Brisbane’s longest running poetry/spoken word event, SpeedPoets. And now, Avid Reader are throwing a month long poetry party in September, featuring a panel of established poets (incl. Bronwyn Lea, Nathan Shepherdson, Ross Clark, Graham Nunn and 2010 Arts QLD Poet-in-Residence, Emily XYZ) talking about the importance of poetry in our lives and readings from some of the bright new things currently setting the Brisbane poetry scene on fire. So why all this interest in poetry? Well, to give you a short answer, I couldn’t go past this quote from ‘poet laureate of the down and out’, Charles Bukowski:

Poetry is what happens when nothing else can.

For me, what Bukowski is getting at here is poetry’s ability to embrace and elevate all that makes us human. When you hear it, you should be able to see, as if in a flash of lightning, the words crystallise, and if you are open to it, the poem will contain more than images. Poetry invites us to cast off habit and reconsider life with new eyes and at its best, as Emily Dickinson put it, can take the top off your head.

I strongly believe that enjoying poetry is as natural as drawing breath. As a boy I spent many summers sitting beside my father watching Australia’s great fast bowler, Dennis Lillee tear through various batting lineups. Each time the stumps would buckle or Lillee would throw himself into his trademark appeal, shouting ‘Howzat’, my father would look over at my brother and I and say, ‘that was poetry’. Of course my father did not mean that it was literally poetry, he was simply pointing out that Lillee’s bowling had the qualities one normally expects of poetry – grace, surprise, beauty, rhythm. My father was not much of a poetry reader, but he, like all of us, had an idea of what poetry is and should be.

We know this because poetry is not firstly in the words; it is there to be discovered in the current of the river, the rush of the street, the strange angles of a spider’s web, a home cooked meal. Our senses are bombarded with literally thousands of stimulants on a daily basis… poetry is about stripping this back and getting in touch with the things that really matter; finding the truth in the everyday.

When I tell people that I write poetry, a common response is, ‘I don’t really get it’, but the truth is, that is just a reflection of society’s needless mystification of the art. A poem is not an obscure code or linguistic puzzle, if it works, it will speak to you. But remember, it’s a matter of chemistry. Not every song you hear or film you watch will speak to you, likewise, every poem you encounter will not hit the mark, but don’t let that deter you, there is an infinite number of voices and styles waiting to be discovered and when a poem hits, it will cast its spell and make the mind sing; it will engage your imagination and draw you into its universe.

As there are a myriad voices writing poetry today, I thought I would ask a handful of the poets participating in the Avid Reader Poetry Month festivities to get their thoughts.

One of Brisbane’s new voices, Jonathan Hadwen offered this:

“…it’s the way thoughts line up in our minds, a way in which we finally make sense of experiences and situations that have been difficult to understand.  The real power of poetry is in the sharing, as by doing so, we pass on this understanding. Poetry has been around in one form or another since we have had the ability to think and communicate those thoughts, and will be around until we lose those abilities.”

2010 Arts QLD Poet-in-Residence, Emily XYZ responded with zeal:

“Poetry, like all art, is part of the human condition.  The reason people say they ‘don’t get poetry’ is because we are not usually called on to use our minds that way.  Quite the opposite:  ‘daily life’ generally requires us to dumb down and stay in the lower registers of what is possible for the human mind. ‘Why poetry?’ is a question that must be answered anew every few years, and yet the answer never really changes:  because it is resistance to misery.  Because it is a swing against dehumanization and an affirmation of freedom and possibility.  Because it makes jailer-minded people uncomfortable—and that really is something that can (ultimately) (maybe) change the world.”

And, John Koenig answered with a poem of his own:

“trembling under a love blue sky the thesaurus tree bears alphabetical fruit ripening and falling to be caught by slender feminine hands of faith held up in front of inquisitive gun smoke eyes with intriguing lashes curling over the words of sweet sorrow and joyful redemption making darkness and light fill the flowering iris with colour overflowing to flood the optic nerve becoming a raging river running along neural paths synaptic sparks jumping high and igniting the fire of imagination framing the question what does this mean poetry yes that’s right it’s magic”

The one thing each of these responses has in common is the passion and belief in which they are delivered. That is the power of poetry… when it hits, you are never again the same. So why not get along to one of the many poetry events happening in this fine city of ours or to your local independent book store and embark on your own quest to answer this question. The journey could just be life changing.

Look forward to reading other people’s responses to this question,

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Want to know the 10 Rules of Rock ‘n’ Roll?

10RulesofRockandRoll

 

Brisbane icon, Robert Forster, is about to dish out the facts in his first book, The 10 Rules of Rock ‘n’ Roll: Collected Music Writings 2005 – 2009 (Black Inc). As one of the founding members of The Go-Betweens (along with the late G.W. McLennan), Forster is responsible for penning some of this country’s best loved songs. And since 2005, Forster has been a mainstay for The Monthly, reviewing albums as diverse as Antony and the Johnsons’, I Am A Bird Now and Glenn Campbell’s, Meet Glenn Campbell and delving deep into the minds and lives of artists such as Delta Goodrem and The Monkees. All of this and a number of previously unpublished works will be presented in 10 Rules. Forster will also be doing the rounds, reading from the collection at a book store (hopefully) near you. At this stage only Melbourne and Sydney have been confirmed. Here’s where you can catch him:

Melbourne
Robert Forster in conversation with Michael Dwyer
Wednesday, 4th November 2009; 6.30pm-7.30pm
Readings, 309 Lygon St, Carlton
Tickets: Free, all welcome. Please book through Readings Carlton, (03) 9347 6633.

Brisbane
Robert Forster in conversation with Matt Connors
Thursday, 5th November 2009; 6pm-8pm
Avid Reader, 193 Boundary St, West End
Tickets: $5. To book contact Avid Reader, (07) 3846 3422.

And for those of you in Brisbane, you may also be interested in checking out Robert’s work as part of The True Story of Butterfish.

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