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Send your bios and pictures to PoetsLane@everestkc.net

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“Ethel Mays is a peripatetic poet from the Sierra Nevada foothills of
Eastern Tulare County.  She writes sense-of-place pieces based on her
rural background and on her love of horses and travel.  Her writing is in
Canadian and American publications. No stranger to the road, she reads her
prose and poetry at public venues in several Bay Area counties, and makes
frequent trips to Mendocino County to read and collaborate on literary
projects.  She coordinates an annual statewide Youth and Elders Art &
Poetry Contest and is an operative for the Guerrilla Poetics Project.  She
lives in San Francisco, CA.”
Ethel Mays
760 Market Street, Suite 315
San Francisco, CA 94102
415-273-4631
ethel_mays@yahoo.com

 


Latif Harris arrived for first time North Beach in 1959 where I met Ginsberg and many of the poets of the Beat generation. Founding editor and publisher of ANTE a letterpress magazine of writing and art 1963. Attended the Berkeley Poetry Conference in Berkeley 1965 where he met Robert Creeley and moved to New Mexico to study with him for 2 years. Left U.S. (for good!)? to attended graduate school at University of Essex, lived and traveled in Europe and Near East until 1972, returned to live in Marin County. Moved back to S.F.1979. Worked with artist Gordon Wagner in performance pieces at the Vorpal Gallery. Founded BANNAM PLACE readings in '83 where all the poets who were part of the North Beach Community, including Jack Hirschman and Bob Kaufman (his last reading). This was the core group that came together to do the SILVER ANNIVERSARY edition of BEATITUDE.

For the next 20 years or so I spent most of my time doing work in Vajrayana Buddhism with long retreats and pilgrimages to Nepal and Bhutan. Worked on the English translation of two major Buddhist texts given by Lama Gyaltrul Rinpoche and translated by Alan Wallace. Continued writing poems and journals and did occasional readings.

Volunteered to do the Golden Anniversary of BEATITUDE which is turning out to be an anthology of the 50 years of work plus a lot of new work poets who have some connection to the original group who appeared in John Kelly's editions. Just had a large reading of many of the poets at the SF Public Library. Publication date is set for January 2008.

I have published 11 books of poetry, many reviews, critical works, and articles in various journals. Most recent book published by BROWSER BOOKS, S.F. "A Boddhisattva's Busted Truth"-2008, 120p, $14

Been living in Lower Haight area of SF with my wife of 26 years. One son who teaches young, immigrant children in Santa Barbara.

 latifpoet@mac.com


 

Terry McCarty was born on July 31, 1959 in Electra, Texas.  He moved to Southern California in 1988.  From 1988 to 1997, he worked as a background actor and occasional stand-in for actors including Joe Pesci (THE PUBLIC EYE, LETHAL WEAPON 3,and JIMMY HOLLYWOOD) and Wallace Shawn (HOUSE ARREST).

 

Terry began writing poetry in the summer of 1997.  From 1998

to 1999, he was a member of the Midnight Special Bookstore poetry workshop in

Santa Monica.  He has been a featured poet in several Southern California venues.

Terry has also featured at readings in Las Vegas, NV, San Francisco, CA, Santa Cruz, CA, Berkeley, CA and Seattle, WA.

 

Terry has also appeared in Lynda and Lisa LaRose’s THE POETRY SPIRAL

at Luna Sol Café (Los Angeles), Roni Walter’s BAKSTREEET COMETRI

at the Comedy Store (West Hollywood) and

the Austin International Poetry Festival (Austin, TX).

 

Terry McCarty is the author of several chapbooks containing poems

which blend humor with occasional

social and/or political commentary: HOLLYWOOD POETRY, USE YOUR DELUSION, WICHITA FALLS, LOVE POEMS, THE GREEN ALBUM,

ADJUSTMENT DISORDER and two volumes of GREATEST HITS.

Recent chapbooks include UNFABULOUS and BORN TO WALK (published by San Gabriel Valley poet Don Campbell).

 

He has also released two spoken-word CDs: THE BEST OF TERRY McCARTY

Vol. 1 (produced by Jimmy Smith) and VOLUME 2 (produced by Tish Eastman).

 

In addition, Terry’s poem “Icarus’ Itinerary can be found in Tebot Bach’s 2003 anthology

of California poetry SO LUMINOUS THE WILDFLOWERS (for sale through

www.Amazon.com ).

 

Currently, Terry has an e-book available titled NOTHING HELD BACK, consisting

of personal and political poetry mostly concerning events from the summer of 2007. 

The e-book is available as a FREE download in PDF format; please e-mail TerryMcCa@aol.com

for your copy.

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Radomir Vojtech Luza is a poet/actor/writer/comedian/journalist/former political candidate/lead singer mixing structured spontaneity, informed wisdom and an enlightened soul to present work and performance balancing commerce and art.  Born in Vienna, Austria, Luza, has performed Poetry and Comedy in New York City, New Jersey, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Atlanta, New Orleans, St. Louis, Biloxi, Pensacola, Ft. Walton Beach and Destin, Florida among other cities.

 Radomir has acted in over 20 plays (Four that he wrote) and at least 20 films and television commercials (Levis 501, Tastee Donuts).  The New Orleans native has written over 5,000 poems, of which well over 100 have found homes in over 30 literary magazines and some websites.

 Luza’s improvisational experience began as a Sophomore Theatre Major at Tulane University in New Orleans in 1982, where he won a major theatre prize for his theatre criticism at “The Hullabaloo,” the school newspaper.  He has since performed with Comedy Sportz in Philadelphia, The Brooklyn Lyceum in New York City and The People’s Improv Theater in Manhattan (NYC).  He is currently a company member at The LA Connection Improvisational Theatre, Voted One of the Top Three Comedy Clubs in Los Angeles, on Ventura Blvd. in Sherman Oaks, CA.

 At Tulane, Radomir’s creative spark was lit as a disc jockey and founder and sole Host of the Weekly Ramblin’ Rad Show and Nude Radio Review on school Radio Station, The Progressive WTUL.  Luza also found time to report the News, Sports and Weather three or four times-a-week on The Tool and write for the school yearbook, the Jambalaya.    

Luza has written eight poetry collections (The Harahan Journal, A Prayer For Monica, This N’ That: Handwriting From A Wounded Heart, Broken Headlights, Shoes In A Magazine, Scoliosis of Rain, Blue Sky School, 48 On The Floor), six books (Wood, 99, Diary of a Young President, Therapy, Airports and Railroads, Diva Dandruff ) a screenplay (Neanderthal Love) and a Sitcom Pilot (LA Jack) (which have all been published by small presses or self-published by Dancing Sprite Publications, the publishing arm of Radomir’s production company, RADMAN PRODUCTIONS) which also encompasses a theatre company (Turquoise Dream), Improvisational troupe (Improv Park) and recording label (Red Doubloon Recordings).      

Dancing Sprite is also the home of “Voices In The Library,” the literary journal Luza published and edited in 2002.  The magazine includes some of the biggest names in poetry such as AD Winans, Lyn Lifshin, Christine Strevinsky, Jay Chollick, Andrea Saunders Gereighty, Bryan Zanisnik, and Radomir and Monica Luza, off course. VitL has reached many of Poetry’s best-known addresses and editors setting the mark for content, character and lay-out.

The Younger Radomir’s freelance journalism work stretches from coast-to-coast.  Luza, who earned a BA in English from Tulane University in New Orleans in 1985, has written for The Pulitzer Prize-winning Times-Picayune/States-Item in New Orleans, The Jersey Journal in Jersey City, NJ, The Bucks County Courier Times outside Philadelphia, The Encino Sun (Sun Community Newspaper chain in the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles), Creative Loafing in Atlanta, New Orleans Magazine, Where Magazine in N.O., Wavelength Music Magazine (N.O.) (Bam Network), Clarion Herald Catholic Weekly (N.O.), Where Magazine (TP/SI), Exit Magazine (West Patterson, NJ) (North Jersey Entertainment Weekly), VOX (North Jersey Online Arts and Entertainment Magazine)(Film Critic) (Staff Writer), Stage Press Weekly (New York City) (Staff Writer/Theatre Critic) and was The Theatre Critic for The Aquarian Arts Weekly in Little Falls, NJ.  

Radomir’s Stand-Up Comedy Routines have ricocheted throughout comedy clubs and live venues around the country such as Gotham (NYC), Stand-Up NY, Caroline’s (NYC), Comic Strip Live (NYC), Comedy Garden at MSG (NYC), Black And White (NYC),                                                                        

Don’t Tell Mama (NYC), Where Eagles Dare (NYC), West End Gate (NYC), Pure Lounge (NYC), B3 Lounge (NYC), Shutters (NYC), Village Lantern (NYC), Tribeca Comedy Basement (NYC), The Vault (NYC), Chicago City Limits (NYC), Comedy Cellar (NYC), HA! (NYC), Bowery Poetry Club (NYC), New York CC,  Siberia (NYC), People’s Improv Theatre, (NYC), Underground Lounge (NYC), Sal’s Comedy Hole (NYC),  Dillon’s (NYC), The Duplex (NYC),  Fat Cats (NYC), Hathaway’s Comedy Room (NJ), Rascals’s (NJ), Stress Factory (NJ), Comedy Cabaret (NJ/Philly), Poor Billy’s (NJ), Whiskey Café (NJ), Alliteration Alley (NJ), Rodeo-Ristra (NJ) and Sportsmen’s Lodge (LA).  Outside The Big Apple and So Cali, The Radman has performed at The Funny Bone (St. Louis and Baton Rouge, LA), Improv (Orlando), Punch Line (Atlanta), Comedy Zone (Biloxi) and Coconuts (Pensacola).  Radomir has also graced comedy stages at Jarrett’s (Philly), Constantine’s Caterers (Philly), Catch A Rising Star (Philly), Laugh House (Philly), Club Deluxe (Philly) and New Market Cabaret (Philly), The Punch Line in New Orleans, The Univ. of N.O., Muddy Waters Lounge (N.O.), Metry Café (N.O.), Augustine’s Lounge (N.O.), Rhythms Lounge (N.O.) and the Radisson Hotel (N.O.).    

Since relocating to Los Angeles (North Hollywood) in October of 2006, the artist with the Czech name and parents of the same heritage is a Regular at The Comedy Store (Pot Luck Open Mike) and had his Fifth and Sixth Showcases at The Laugh Factory with Number Seven coming-up on November 13 and Five at his local Comedy Watering Hole, The Comedy Club HA HA. Radomir has performed at local clubs and venues such as The Improv, Ice House, Ice House Annex, IO West, Un Urban Coffee House, Rainbow Room, Liquid Lounge, Ground Work Coffee Company and Rumba Room, among others.

Radomir was a success at his First Ever Featured Musical Show at The Rainbow Bar and Grill on The Sunset Strip on a day he will never forget--November 2.  The willowy Sports and Features writer also performed his music at Highland Grounds and El Cid

Restaurant in LA.  The 6”2’ former Tennis scribe is the lead singer for Purgatory, a new rock n’ roll band just coming into its own.   

Luza, the award-winning school boy track star, who received The Award of Outstanding Merit from The Democratic Party of Middletown Township, PA (Outside Philadelphia) in 1996, a year before he ran for Auditor, receiving an unprecedented 43% of the vote in a predominantly Republican Township, has signed-on to do a ONE-MAN SHOW at The White Fire Theatre on Ventura Blvd., in Sherman Oaks, CA in September as part of its Solo Show Series in 2007.  He is also The Featured Poet at Café Amsterdam (North Hollywood) at SPOKEN AMSTERDAM every other Tuesday night.  Radomir has Featured at The Pasadena Library’s Monday Night Series as well as at The Rapp Saloon in Santa Monica. He has read at Tia Chucha’s Cultural Center, The Cobalt Café, Da Poetry Lounge at The Greenway Court Theatre, The Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Center and Un Urban Coffee House in Santa Monica.

In November, Luza, who finished Third as Young Man of the Year (Catholic Youth Organization) in 1983, signed a SAG Short Film Agreement for his One-Act Play Curious Tumor that was produced at the American Theatre of Actors in New York City in 2004 and The One-Act Play Contest at The NY Int’l Film and Video Festival in 2000. Radomir had previously staged Three of his Plays, Beneath The Blood Red Bridge, The Bishop Has Landed and Braille on a Budget at The Strawberry One-Act Play Festival (Riant Theatre) (Winter, 2003), The Brooklyn Lyceum (2001) and Temple University Annex (Philly) 1994, respectively. A shorter play,  the as-of-yet un-produced “White Man, Black Man,” perhaps Luza’s best effort to date, was written on an Not-For-Profit Arts-Sponsored Retreat from NYC to Pennsylvania in the Summer of 2005.

Radomir V. Luza, CEO/Radman Productions,

(818)762-5866/ radluza@sbcglobal.net

www.ollav.com/radluza

www.myspace.com/radomirluza


CAROL DEE MEEKS

I am the 2007 NEW MEXICO SENIOR POET LAUREATE at " Amy Kitchener's Angels Without Wings Foundation" contest. I won that title from this same contest in 2004 and 2005, and was the 2006 runner up. I placed two poems in the 73rd Writer's Digest top 100. I hold memberships in BARDS OF A FEATHER, HIGH PRAIRIE POETS of Roswell NM, NMSPS, and NFSPS. In 2004, I won six poetry contests. In 2005 I won five, and increased my wins in 2006. I have a Special Honorable Mention at Bylines for poetry and two for short stories. I've seen poetry published in Potpourri, Poe Magazine, Heart Songs, Inspirational Verses, Poet Speak, Creative Juices, Herlands Flaming Tongues, 2006 Forrest Fest Anthology, R. B.'S Viewpoint, Hodgepodge, Opened Eyes, The Rag, Our Piped Dreams, The Diplomat, Under the Yucca, New Mexico State Poetry Society Newsletter, Poets' Forum Magazine, Wt-In Spirit, The Southwest Region of Haiku Society of America, The Poet Sanctuary, Bells Letters, Golden Words, Poet's Lane, and Litchfield Review. I chair the committee for the bi-monthly contests held by the High Prairie Poets New Mexico chapter of New Mexico State Poetry Society. This has helped my poetry path grow and I've met some incredible people doing this. Thanks again. Carol Dee Meeks 2007 Senior Poet Laureate of New Mexico

http://home.comcast.net/~pkmeeks/


    Leah Brown has been on stage from the age of 15 to the present. Having started out as a background singer, she has progressed to doing stand-up comedy for many years, and now has turned her creativity to writing and performing her poetry. She has been published in the San Gabriel Valley Poetry Quarterly, and on BET’S Def Poetry Jam website.
    Leah is an Urban Poet, drawing inspiration from the world around her, and the way she views this life. She writes from the depth of her spirit. She brings a fresh new outlook and strength to the spoken word arena.
    Her first volume of work, entitled "LeahsLand" will be out June 12, 2006.



www.LeahzLand.com  tiggyclay@yahoo.com
 


                                                                                                                               sandra kay  aka:  sandra, ttgp

blogger/poet/speaker/cnf writing coach/artist 
shesayswithasmile.blogspot.com
www.hercouragetattoo.blogspot.com 
in progress: memoir/cnf
contact info:  kay.s@comcast.net
 

                                                                                


 

Aline Soules' work has appeared in journals, e-zines, and anthologies such as The MacGuffin, 100 Words, Literature of the Expanding Frontier, Variations on the Ordinary, and The Size of the World, a "flip" book of poetry and short fiction, co-published with Nancy Ryan's The Shape of the Heart. Prose poems from her manuscript Meditation on Woman have appeared in Kaleidowhirl, Tattoo Highway, Edifice Wrecked, Poetry Midwest, Binnacle, Long Story Short, and the Kenyon Review. She has an M.A. in English, an MFA in Creative Writing, and a M.S.L.S. in Library Science.

She makes her living as a library faculty member at California State University, East Bay and also teaches workshops, reads her work at events, and engages in voice work (reading and singing).

soulesa@yahoo.com



 
Dane Cervine's poetry was chosen by The Hudson Review for its New Writers Edition, and over 100 of his poems have appeared in a wide variety of magazines. Adrienne Rich chose Dane's poem The Jeweled Net of Indra as the winning entry in the National Writers Union 2005 competition, appearing in Poetry Flash as well as the SUN Magazine. Dane's poem Accordions & Shotguns was chosen by Tony Hoagland as a finalist for the Wabash Prize for Poetry, and appears in Purdue University's Sycamore Review (Winter/Spring 2005). Dane was chosen as Poet of the Year in 2006 for Cabrillo College's Porter Gulch Review in Santa Cruz.
 
Dane's book What A Father Dreams  can be purchased at www.xlibris.com  or from the author at danecervine@cruzio.com   , and his new website can be viewed at http://danecervine.typepad.com/.
 
Plain View Press has just published Dane's new book The Jeweled Net of Indra in 2007, which can be purchased at: http://www.plainviewpress.net/gallery2/pages/Jewelednet.html
 
Dane is a member of the Emerald Street Writers in Santa Cruz, California, where he serves as Chief of Children's Mental Health for the county.
 

 

Juanita J. Martin has been writing on and off since the age of 18. It was at that age she 
garnered 1st place, a $ 50. series EE bond, in the NJ. Audubon Society Essay Contest. It was 
about the impact of the1976 casino referendum on the environment. She was known as Juanita 
Jenkins then. She went on to write for the Atlantic Review and the South Jersey Advisor.
 Juanita J. Martin is now a poet/freelance writer in Northern California. Her genres include 
non-fiction and poetry. She does academic, business and personal writing. She is a member of 
the Valley Writers Group, Chaparral Poets, Inc., National Writers Association, Bay Area Poets 
Coalition, California State Poets Society and Ina Coolbrith Circle. 
 Juanita is best known as a spoken word artist and host of several open mike poetry events, 
around the Bay Area. She was creator and host of Barnes & Noble Booksellers open mike poetry 
group from 2001-2003. She has featured at Listen and Be Heard Poetry Café and Solano College 
Soul Food Jam. In 2005, Juanita won 1st place in the Sonoma County Library Poetry Slam 
Contests. In 2006, she won the grand prize and became the host of that venue for the 2006-2007 
season.
 Although she loves poetry, Juanita is blessed to be able to write articles as well. In addition 
to her extensive publishing credits, she has published articles in Solano College Tempest, Solano 
County Memory Walk Walker Times, Sonoma County Women's Voices and Vallejo Times 
Herald. There are many articles that have been written about her and her work. 
Ms Martins’ poetry has been a part of several programs. Her poem Art Embraces the Past, was 
part of an exhibit at the Vallejo Naval and History Museums’ Art & Artifact: New Perspectives. 
She entered a pencil sketch as well.
 She has published 2 poems in Street Spirit Magazine. Juanita has written 3 scholarships. 
One, a $ 500. LVN Scholarship named for her, is offered at Napa Valley College. It is called The 
Juanita J. Martin LVN Scholarship. Ms Martins’ poem Environmental Terrorists, became the 
title of a chapbook to support a Vallejo environmental rally. Juanita is an avid volunteer and 
supporter in the arts community. She has contributed goods, money and service to various 
community events. Juanita is the organizer and host of the Poetry in the Park Festival 2007, on 
May 5th.
 Martin has 3 chapbooks and an original quotes book currently. You can hear her read at 
various poetry venues around the Bay Area and Sonoma County. You can contact her at
 (707) 435-1807. You may also send an email inquiry to freelance@jmartinpoetwriter.com . 
Check out Juanita’s website at www.jmartinpoetwriter.com for samples, testimonials and 
original products. 

 Gary Lehmann     Twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Gary Lehmann’s poetry and prose is published in literary and popular journals in all parts of the world, over 100 publications per year. He is co-author and editor of a book of poetry entitled The Span I Will Cross [Process Press, 2004].  His poem “Reporting from Fallujah” was nominated for the 2006 Pushcart Prize, and “First in Flight” has been nominated for 2007. His most recent book, Public Lives and Private Secrets [Foothills Publishing, 2005], features poems about secret moments in the lives of well-known public figures. Look for his forthcoming book entitled American Sponsored Torture [FootHills Publishing] in May 2007. It explores the moral implications of the American decision to accept torture as a means of gathering information. Visit his website at www.garylehmann.blogspot.com


Kathleen Lynch’s collection Hinge (2006) won the Black Zinnias Press National Poetry Book Competition (California Institute of Arts and Letters). Her chapbooks include How to Build an Owl (Select Poet Series Award, Small Poetry Press, 1995), No Spring Chicken (White Eagle Coffee Store Press Award, 2001), Alterations of Rising (Small Poetry Press Select Poet Series, 2001) and Kathleen Lynch - Greatest Hits (Pudding House Publications Gold Invitational Series, 2002).

Her work (fiction and poetry) appears in several anthologies, including The Next River Over–A Collection of Irish American Writing (New Rivers Press), Times Ten: An Anthology of Northern California Poets (Small Poetry Press), Who are the Rich and Where Do They Live? (DePaul University Press), In a Fine Frenzy – Poets Respond to Shakespeare (University of Iowa Press), Birds in the Hand – Fiction and Poetry about Birds (Farrar Straus & Giroux) and The Book of Irish American Poetry from the Eighteenth Century to the Present (University Press of Notre Dame). Her poems appear in many literary journals, including Poetry, Nimrod, Spoon River Poetry Review, Chariton Review, Runes, The Laurel Review, Poetry Northwest, The Midwest Quarterly, Two Rivers Review, Slipstream, Quarterly West, and The Midwest Review. She received the Spoon River Poetry Review Editor’s Choice Award, the Salt Hill Poetry Award, Two Rivers Review Prize, Peregrine and  Sow’s Ear prizes, and ten Pushcart nominations.

She worked as Coordinator of Writers In Performance, and Writers' Workshops for San Jose Center for Poetry and Fiction, served as board member for San Jose Center for Literature and Arts, taught through Poets in the Schools (all grade levels), mentors individual poets, and conducts Teachers’ In-Service training programs. Lynch also publishes fiction, essays and reviews, and does free-lance editing. She lives in Carmichael CA.

Web site: www.kathleenlynch.com


 

Storyteller

The Granny Apple-seed of Joy

 

On her retirement from counseling, Dr. Joan Garcia – usually known as Granny, or The Frog Lady – embarked on a new endeavor: producing songs and stories from the heart, music for children 2 to 102. She draws upon the richness of her experience to create a bubbling fountain of little “silly songs,” stories that wrap valued life lessons in humor and rhyme.  They allow the child in all of us to take joy in the simple things in life, to laugh at the unexpected twists and turns life brings.  She tells her tales from memory, pulling the audience into her private world of frogs, aardvarks, lizards, and other assorted creatures of the earth as she weaves journeys of the imagination.

  Her stories are designed for use in the classroom, library, or the senior community. Dr. Garcia has shared many of her tales – in schools, at Barnes and Noble and Bounty Books, at day-care centers, in Senior communities, in a variety of poetry venues, and with the disabled -- with consistently positive response.  She has been featured at poetry venues in San Francisco and Walnut Creek, done performances in Davis, Concord, Rio Vista, and other local communities.  She anticipates continuing her “granny apple-seed” journey, spreading her tales beyond the local community, through her performances, through CDs (now numbering eighteen!) available on her website, and through videos for public access television (Vacaville and Sacramento).  For information on performances or to purchase CDs, contact:

Joan Garcia

707-678-8549

jgarcia@onramp113.org

www.grannyspearls.com


                   

MK Chavez is a Berkeley-based writer. She writes poetry about the beauty that can be found in ugliness, the mystery of feeling bad about feeling good, little birds, big consequences, situs inversus, wanton sex, and other conundrums.
 


To find out more about her, visit her website at www.mkchavez.com
 




Edward Coletti is a graduate of Georgetown University and the Creative Writing Masters Program at San Francisco State University.  He is also a Vietnam veteran, fiction writer, vocational rehab counselor and business consultant.

Publication credits include two separate editions of Light Year (Bits Press Anthology), Tucumcari Literary Review, The New Verse News, Orphic Lute, Kickass Review, InterGalactic Poetry Messenger, Riverrun, Parting Gifts, Green's Magazine, Mediphors, Gryphon, The Pedestal,  Cafe Pushkin etc.  Mr. Coletti is also indexed in Granger's American Poets (Columbia Univ.) and was Sonoma County, California’s Featured Writer in 2005.

Information about his book,  thawts: selected poems of Edward Coletti,  is contained at www.Amazon.com .  Between Trellis & Glass was published by dPress April 2006.  Bringing Home the Bones, an epic exploration of war, death, remains, superstition, belief, and closure was published by dPress in June of 2006.  He released Peace Planters through his own Round Barn Press in September 2006.  Ed lives with his wife Joyce in Santa Rosa, California and can be reached by email at edcoletti@sbcglobal.ne

1. I  think you'll enjoy Ed Coletti's P3 It's not just a typical self-absorbed blog.  Each time I post I offer one each Political, Philosophical, and Poetical piece - not typically about me.  I haven't done as many posts lately (and the current one is a bit dated) as in the past, so, when you hit the link below, you also might want to browse through past ones.  However,  I'd recommend that you make any comments (encouraged) through the top one where comments are more likely to be read.

http://edcolettip3.blogspot.com/

2. I'm also sending along this notification of a separate blog which I reserve exclusively for poetry matters.  It's Edward Coletti's Poetry Blog
Today I announce several new titles from by Round Barn Press.  Please take a look and feel free to comment.

Ed

http://edwardcolettispoetryblog.blogspot.com/


ANDRENA ZAWINSKI is the daughter and granddaughter of coal miners and mill workers. She was born and grew up in and around
Pittsburgh, PA, where she raised her son, Jamie. Zawinski now lives
at Lake Merritt in Oakland, CA and teaches writing there at Laney
College in Chinatown. Her experience as an educator is extensive
and spans the gamut from early childhood through post-secondary,
from remedial through advanced students in reading and writing. She
has been a poet-in-residence through the PA Council on the Arts,
International Poetry Forum, and W. PA Writing Project at her alma
mater University of Pittsburgh. Zawinski’s background as an
activist is as a feminist: she was a founder and organizer with
Gertrude Stein Memorial Bookshop Collective, Women Against Violence
in Pornography and Media, Radical Feminist Organizing Committee,
and worked with many pro-woman and anti-war groups. Post 9-11, she
was an organizer for a series of Bay Area Poets for Peace readings.

Andrena Zawinski’s poems appear widely in print and online at many
fine publications. Some of her favorite places to have had her work
showcased in print include Gulf Coast, Haight Ashbury Literary
Journal, Nimrod, Quarterly West, Rattle, Slipstream, San Francisco
Reader, Viet Nam Generation; online favorites include
AdirondackReview, ForPoetry, OnThePage, RainTiger, Tatoo Highway,
Triplopia, and others. Her individual poems have gathered many
honors and awards from Akron Art Museum, Alameda Arts Council, Bay
Area Poets Coalition, Black Bear Review Poetry of Social Concern,
Euphoria, Friends of Sacramento Library, Nob Hill Pen Women, San
Francisco Dancing Poetry, Sarasota Poetry Theater, Triton Salute to
the Arts, Paterson Literary Review’s Allen Ginsberg Awards, and
others along with several Pushcart Prize nominations.

Zawinski’s full collection, TRAVELING IN REFLECTED LIGHT, was
released in 1995 by Pig Iron Press as a Kenneth Patchen competition
winner; her chapbook, ZAWINSKI'S GREATEST HITS 1991-2001, is part
of Pudding House's invitational and archival series. Her first
chapbook from Harris Publications, POEMS FROM A TEACHER’S DESK, is
out of print as is an online ELEGIES FOR MY MOTHER collection from
Autumn House and ThePittsburghQuarterly. Zawinski has been Features
Editor at www.PoetryMagazine.com  since 2000.


 

 


Deema K. Shehabi is a writer, editor, and poet. She grew up in the Arab world and attended college in the US, where she received an MA in journalism. Her poems have appeared in several anthologies and literary journals including the Atlanta Review, DMQ Review, The Poetry of Arab Women, Crab Orchard, Valparaiso Review, Flyway, and The Mississippi Review, to name a few. She was a finalist in the Drunken Boat's 2006 panliterary competition. She currently resides in Northern California with her husband and two sons.

 

 


 

Kim Addonizio's numerous books include four poetry collections, most recently What is This Thing Called Love (W.W. Norton); the novels Little Beauties and (forthcoming) My Dreams Out in the Street, both from Simon & Schuster; a collection of stories from FC2, In the Box Called Pleasure; and The Poet's Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing Poetry, co-authored with Dorianne Laux (W.W. Norton). She also co-edited, with Cheryl Dumesnil, Dorothy Parker's Elbow, an anthology of writing on tattoos (Warner Books). Her essays, poetry, and fiction have appeared widely in journals, anthologies and textbooks. Addonizio's work has been recognized with two NEA Fellowships, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a National Book Award nomination, a Pushcart Prize, and other awards. She lives in Oakland, CA, and online at www.kimaddonizio.com

 

 


Susan Browne's poetry has appeared in Ploughshares, River City, The Mississippi Review, Gargoyle, Margie and other literary journals and anthologies, such as 180 More, Extraordinary Poems for Everyday.  She has received awards from the Chester H. Jones Foundation, the National Writer's Union, the Los Angeles Poetry Festival, and the River Styx International Poetry Contest.  She was selected as the winner of The Four Way Books Prize by Edward Hirsch; her first book, Buddha’s Dogs, was published in 2004.  She teaches at Diablo Valley College in Pleasant Hill, California, and offers private workshops. 

 

Email: browne1dvc@aol.com

 



Carol  Alena Aronoff, Ph.D., is a psychologist and writer. Dr. Aronoff taught Eastern spirituality and healing practices, imagery, meditation, and women's health at San Francisco State University. Currently, Dr. Aronoff resides in a rural area of Hawaii working her land, meditating and writing.
 

JOHN FOX

John Fox is a poet and certified poetry therapist.  He is an associate professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, California.  He also teaches in the Graduate School of Holistic Studies at John F. Kennedy University in Orinda, California and the Institute for Transpersonal Psychology in Palo Alto, California. John offers workshops at Esalen and Omega Institutes and throughout the United States in hospitals, churches and schools.

He is the author of Finding What You Didn't Lose: Expressing Your Truth and Creativity Through Poem-Making and Poetic Medicine: The Healing Art of Poem-Making (Jeremy P. Tarcher/G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1995, 1997).  His work is featured in The Soul of Creativity edited by Tona Pearce-Myers and published by New World Library and In The Spirit of Writing: 60 Classic and Contemporary Essays Celebrating the Writer's Life.  He was recently included in the four-part anthology series Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious: Reflecting American Culture Through Literature and Art.

John is the president of the National Association for Poetry Therapy 2003 - 2005. He lives in Mountain View, California.  If you are interested in contacting John about programs for your organization, coordinating a workshop for him in your area, or being on his mailing list - please write him at  P. O. Box 60189 Palo Alto, CA  94306 or email JFoxCPT@AOL.com

PRAISE FOR THE WORK OF JOHN FOX

"Having over ten years-experience of leading groups in the difficult task of lifestyle behavior change, I left Fox's workshop on the healing art of poem-making with profound patient-empowering skills: poetry a la Fox creates an intimacy within the self capable of healing sorrows, shaping dreams, rendering joys and aspirations.  With Fox's skillful guidance, poem-making takes our impediments to growth and turns them into catalysts.

-  Peg Baim, RN, NP,  Clinical Director, Center for Training,
Mind/Body Medical Institute, Harvard University Medical School


“It's Fox's ability to express with breathtaking clarity, his inner voice that draws workshop participants to him.”

                    - Washington Post

Drawing from a splendidly various range of sources, John Fox guides you gently into the wide realms where the shape of words connects the feeling heart and the world.

                    - Jane Hirshfield
 


 

A native Calgarian, Zaid Shlah now resides in Walnut Creek, CA with his wife Randa. He obtained his MA in English from San Francisco State University. His poetry has appeared in literary magazines and journals in both Canada and the U.S. In May of 2005, he was awarded the American Academy of Poets Award. His first book of poetry, Taqsim, has been published in the U.S. and most recently in Canada (Frontenac House, 2006). Currently, he teaches English at Solano Community College and creative writing at New College of California, San Francisco.

www.frontenachouse.com/books/32/Taqsim/

 

 

 


Commander Charles O. McCauley III, USN (RET), was born in North East, Maryland, a small, shanty Irish fishing village along the Northeast River, at the head of the Chesapeake Bay.

He graduated from the University of Maryland, where he edited the underground newspaper, “TTTT,” without getting caught by distraught deans. After graduation, he worked as an associate editor for the Cecil Whig, a weekly newspaper in Elkton, Maryland, the county seat.

As the Vietnam War escalated, McCauley joined the Navy and flew various types of aircraft for twenty years, until his retirement. He had two tours of duty in ‘Nam, where he flew, under the umbrella of the CIA, clandestine missions in support of that “other war,” in Laos and Cambodia.

Starting his second career, McCauley became a First Vice President for a national commercial bank, and an officer in a successful “startup” community bank, until retiring from the banking industry after almost twenty years.

Having won several awards for poetry, McCauley has published six books: Sirens in the Sun, Northeast of Yesterday, Word Warrior, War Lords on the Wind, West of Eden, and Apache Tango. His work also found a way into in such publications as “Explorations (University of Alaska Southeast),” “Poetry Letter and Literary Review,” “Barbaric Yawp,” “Carquinez Poetry Review,” “Bay Area Poet’s Coalition,” “Poetalk,” “The Gathering,” “Voices in Wartime,” and “Blue Unicorn (pending)."

 
 
c o mccauley
925.228.1161
mcpoet@comcast.net   http://comccauley.com/

 

The door to the world of poetry opened for Gayle Eleanor when she happened upon The Second Coming by William Butler Yeats about twenty years ago.  She subsequently read voraciously and began writing herself about ten years ago. She strives to give voice to what lies outside the box of civilization and what, for her, affirms both life and death.  Her work has appeared in Atlanta Review, Calyx, Hawaii Pacific Review, Manzanita Quarterly, Sow’s Ear Poetry Review, Snowy Egret, and several other publications.  She has published two collections of poems: Grace Happens (2001) and Nahanni (2002).

 far right Gayle Eleanor, Bob McNally,

Cher Wollard and Cynthia Bryant

2006 Pleasanton Poetry, Prose & Arts Festival


 

Jan Steckel is an Oakland, California writer, a bisexual activist, and a former pediatrician. Seventy of her short stories, poems and nonfiction pieces have appeared in print and online publications such as Margin, Lodestar Quarterly, Yale Medicine, and Scholastic Magazine. Her poetry chapbook, The Underwater Hospital, comes out from Zeitgeist Press in 2006. She has performed her work as a featured reader at over twenty West Coast venues. You can find more of her work at www.jansteckel.com

Contact Jan at jan.steckel@post.harvard.edu      
 

 


Tshaka Campbell is originally from London England and of Jamaican decent. He attests to the importance of oral traditions, the need to pass on stories, history, thoughts and passion, through the art of written and spoken word. He is an intense performer with a who blends real world life with teachings/histories of the past. A member of the NY Nuyorican national Poetry team and the 2005 San Francisco Grand Slam Champion. He has performed across the United States and has a published chapbook entitled "TarMan - A Chapstik book for those with dry mouths". He is completing his book of Poetry entitled "Natural Kink", as well as an CD of the same name, which is expected to be released in 2005/6. Tshaka has degrees in architecture and Integrated Marketing, and currently resides in Los Angeles.
http://www.naturalkink.com


 

 

Jim Lyle was a professional designer in Industrial, Interior, Graphic, and Building Design for over thirty years.  He was a founding partner in Pacific Design Group, an Architectural, Industrial, Product, and Interior Design firm located in Campbell, CA..  He also taught Project Management in the Design department of San Jose State University for 5 years.  Jim closed his business in 1991 to allow time for writing and painting. 

He is nationally published and his first book "Things Seen in the Desert” was released in 2001.  In 1997, he moved to Lake County, CA and a year later was the selected the first Poet Laureate of that County.   He was a member of the Editorial Board of Review for the Montserrat Review for five years.   He is a frequent featured speaker in Northern California, and has been a guest lecturer at Mission College, Menlo College, Phoenix University, Cogswell College and Lake Community College; all in the greater bay area. 

In 2003, Jim moved into the Veteran’s Home of California at Yountville.  He continues to be active in writing and speaking.

 jimlyle@earthlink.net  707-844-2648



Ronda Lawson

www.rlawsonwriter.com

 Ronda Lawson was writing poetry long before she learned to hold a crayon.  While still in high school she created, implemented and taught a poetry class at the local community center.  She has won gold, silver, and bronze awards at county fairs, and received an honorable mention at last year’s Pleasanton Poetry and Arts Festival in Pleasanton, California.  Her work has been published in a wide variety of magazines including The Saturday Evening Post, Mobius, Byline, Hidden Oak, The Advocate, Tucumcari Literary Review, and Pleiades.  In addition, she has published short fiction and numerous non-fiction articles, and has just completed her first novel.  “Kitchen Odysseys” is her first chapbook.

 

Ronda is the San Francisco office administrator for an international public accounting firm.  She currently lives on a cattle ranch in the California hills with her long-time companion Doug, an elderly golden retriever, an even more elderly cat, and a constantly changing array of wild creatures.  When not writing, which is seldom, Ronda enjoys reading just about anything, creating art, designing a fine meal for family and friends, discovering a new wine, and watching the hills with a pencil in her hand.


 

 

                                                                Patricia Wellingham-Jones Former psychology researcher, writer, editor, lecturer has recently been published in Edgz, Ibbetson Street Press, Underground Window, HazMat Review. She is a three-time Pushcart Prize nominee. Her newest books are Belt of Transit (PWJ Publishing) and Hormone Stew (Snark Publishing); also published is Don’t Turn Away: Poems about Breast Cancer. Her website is www.wellinghamjones.com  

 

 


ROBERT SWARD has taught at Cornell University, the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and UC Santa Cruz. A Fulbright scholar and Guggenheim Fellow, he was chosen by Lucille Clifton to receive a Villa Montalvo Literary Arts Award. His 25 books include: Four Incarnations (Coffee House Press), now in its second printing; Heavenly Sex; The Collected Poems (1957-2004); and The Toronto Islands, a bestseller.

Born and raised in Chicago, Sward served in the U.S. Navy in the combat zone during the Korean War and later worked for CBC Radio and as book reviewer and feature writer for The Toronto Star and The Globe & Mail.

An Internet pioneer, Sward was among the first to embrace the medium as a viable venue for poetry and the oral tradition. For more, see:

1. Garrison Keillor reads "God is in the Cracks" (audio file)

 
Garrison Keillor reads title poem.
NEW 1 minute movie
 
2. New Blog / poet journal -

 

 

http://www.robertsward.com

robert@robertsward.com
831.426.5247
 

  Connie Post

   Livermore Poet Laureate

  

Connie Post is the first and current Poet Laureate of Livermore. She has been a published poet for over twenty years, and has appeared in many anthologies and journals. Some of these include: California State Poetry Quarterly, Carquinez Poetry Review, Mid West Poetry Review, Mobius, and others. Her work has also appeared in a number of parenting magazines and associated publications She has five books of poetry and has presented at many Bay Area readings. Her most recent book is titled “Waking State”.  She is a two time winner of the Grand Prize Lydia Wood Award at the Las Positas Spring Arts contest. She also earned First Prize in the Montclair Poetry Meet in August 2003, and the B Jo Kinnick award 1996. In addition, she has earned several other awards in local, statewide and national contests. In May 2005 she presented her poetry on the nationally syndicated radio program “West Coast Live”.  She presents poetry and discussion on the subject of parenting, poetry and autism to local colleges and affiliated groups. www.poetrypost.com


 Peter Bray

I grew up in the San Francisco Bay area, graduating from U.C. Berkeley and have worked as a rocket design engineer, illustrator, graphics designer, corporate manager, caregiver, toilet and sewer repairing plumber and handyman. Why? They were things I found of interest along with writing poetry for the past 30 years, publishing chapbooks, and writing songs for the past 20. I semi-regularly attend Open Mikes in the Bay Area, am a member of The Ina Coolbrith Circle, Bay Area Poets Coalition, Chaparral Poets, and West Coast Songwriters Association. I continue to write and publish Taproot & Aniseweed, an eclectic, rambling newsletter, formerly monthly but now becoming a once in a while publication via my Macintosh G3 with Quark software. I have a weekly poetry column with Listen & Be Heard News in Vallejo, can be followed on three websites; Joel Fallon's www.poetrymatters.150.com (See Benicia Poets), www.peterbray.org and www.sonador.com/pedro . Benicia, California is home with my wife Janice and our two cats, White Henry and that former feral street cat, Dirty Harry Potter. My 4th chapbook, 'First Annual Report of Sorts' is in the works and is scheduled to be out in Spring 2006.
 


Jim Ott’s poetry and short stories have appeared in several small press literary journals, and he is both a columnist for the Tri-Valley Herald and the co-host of a television show in the Tri-Valley about books and reading—which he created in the late-1990s­—called "In A Word." 

 In 1999, Jim proposed the idea for the city-sponsored poet laureate position that was adopted by the Civic Arts Commission and City Council. He was invited to serve as Pleasanton's second poet laureate from 2001-2003.  He is also a co-founder of Pleasanton’s Annual Poetry, Prose, and Arts Festival, and is an adjunct English professor at Las Positas College, and the President/CEO of UNCLE Credit Union.

 Because of his work in the area of promoting poetry, Jim has been featured in the San Francisco Chronicle and in the Wall Street Journal, and he has appeared on KQED FM radio.

 jott@unclecu.org



		
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ellen Bass's most recent book, Mules of Love, was published by BOA 
Editions in 2002 and won the Lambda Literary Award for poetry. Her work 
has been published in many journals and magazines including The 
Atlantic Monthly, Ms., Ploughshares, Field, and The Kenyon Review. 
Among her other awards for poetry are inclusion in The Pushcart Prize 
XXVIII, the Elliston Book Award from the University of Cincinnati, The 
Pablo Neruda Prize from Nimrod/Hardman, the Larry Levis Prize from 
Missouri Review, the New Letters Prize, the Greensboro Award, the 
Chautaqua Poetry Prize, and a Fellowship from the California Arts 
Council. She coedited, with Florence Howe, the groundbreaking 
anthology, No More Masks! An Anthology of Poems by Women (Doubleday, 
1973) and her nonfiction books include Free Your Mind: The Book for 
Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Youth—And Their Allies (HarperCollins, 1996), 
and The Courage to Heal: A Guide for Women Survivors of Child Sexual 
Abuse (HarperCollins, 1988) which has been translated into twelve 
languages. Her newest volume of poetry, The Human Line, is forthcoming 
from Copper Canyon Press in 2007.
Ellen lives and teaches poetry and creative writing in Santa Cruz, 
California, as well as at conferences and workshops at some of the most 
beautiful places on the planet, including Esalen Institute in Big Sur, 
California, La Serrania in Mallorca, Spain, Hollyhock on Cortes Island 
in British Columbia, and The Tuscany Institute in Italy. 
Ellen Bass Schedule
www.ellenbass.com


Molly Fisk was born in San Francisco. She earned her B.A. from Radcliffe College/Harvard University, her M.B.A. from Simmons College Graduate School of Management, and began writing at the age of 35. She's the author of Listening to Winter, Terrain (with Dan Bellm and Forrest Hamer), and the letterpress chapbook Salt Water Poems. (See Books/CDs)

Molly has received fellowships in poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts, the California Arts Council, and the Marin Arts Council. She has won the Robinson Jeffers Tor House Prize in Poetry, the Billee Murray Denny Prize, and the National Writer's Union, Santa Cruz/Local 7 Prize.

Linda McCarriston says about Molly's book Listening to Winter:

"...[an] intellectually self-aware, bold and brilliant re/consideration of the culturally paradigmatic problem of incest. In lacunae and ellipses as artful as the poems themselves, she shows to the mind the heart's wounds and forces it to make of them an answer. Complex, memorable, Listening to Winter makes vivid the real and dangerous work of what is called, contemptuously, 'confessionalism,' meditating, from its most intimate perspective, on the nature and costs of 'The Old Order.'"

To contact Molly, e-mail her at molly@mollyfisk.com, or write to her at 10068 Newtown Rd. Nevada City, CA 95959.  

www.mollyfisk.com


Aptly named; -GO got his start on the spoken word scene in 2000 writing and performing his children's poetry under the name Uncle -GO and hasn't stopped moving since.
Currently, -GO spends most his time producing commercial video projects for his co. 3rd Eye Collective, but his list of artistic ventures in the last 2 years include:
-Producing 5 live poetry/conscience hip-hop
events (2 including live painting and comedy)
-Producing/directing the TV show- 3rd Eye
Collective presents: Artistic Insomnia
(channel27- Vacaville, CA)
-Producing an album of spoken word poetry set
to music- 3rd Eye Collective presents-
Weapons of Mass Instruction: the Evolution
Will Be Televised
-SLAM/Spoken Word performance at several
small venues from San Jose to Sacramento
under the names -GO and Uncle -GO
-Camera/Asst. Producer- Love Jones
(Upperroom Productions: Poetry/Neo-soul)
-Consultant for "The Voice of Our Opinion"
(Solano County Adult Literacy Newspaper)
-Perform/Speak on KPFA Berkeley, Ca
-GO has worked tirelessly to promote Bay area arts in general, but his main love and focus has been on: Video Production, Spoken Word, SLAM, Freestyle and Conscience Hip-Hop. It is the goal of -GO to be a lead promoter in the Bay-Area Poetry evolution.
-GO mailto: artisticinsomnia@tmail.com
(707) 803 3393
artisticinsomnia@tmail.com
3rd Eye Collective http://www.artisticinsomnia.com
www.artisticinsomnia.com
-GO
(707) 803 3393
artisticinsomnia@tmail.com
3rd Eye Collective Productions/Agency
Myspace.com/artisticinsomnia


Marc Elihu Hofstadter was born in New York City in 1945. He graduated from Swarthmore College and earned a Ph.D. in Literature      from the University of California at Santa Cruz in 1975. He taught American Literature at Santa Cruz, at the Universite d'Orleans in France on a Fulbright in 1977-78, and at Tel Aviv University in 1978-79. He served as the Librarian of the San Francisco Municipal Railway from 1982 until his retirement in 2005.  Marc won the Whetstone Poetry Award for 2004.  He has published three volumes of poetry: House of Peace, Visions, and Shark's Tooth. Shark's Tooth, published in 2006, is currently available from Marc for $12.95. He has published poetry, translations and essays in many magazines, including Talisman, Exquisite Corpse, The Hawai'i Review, The South Carolina Review, The Malahat Review, Rattle, Home Planet News, Pearl, Confrontation, Whetstone and The Redwood Coast Review. He lives with his partner David Zurlin at 2301 Tice Creek Drive, #1, Walnut Creek, CA 94595-5274. His phone number is 925-934-8194 or you may e-mail him at mhofstad@ifn.net


Debralee Pagan (Deborah Fruchey) has spent much of her life in churches, 12-Step meetings,
and mental hospitals. Now she lives in Walnut Creek. Her sixth chapbook, Not Without My Latte, is being produced online by Languageandculture.net. She holds a monthly reading, Pagan's Place, which is meant to replace the beloved but folded Primo Poets. Her newest venture is a newsletter, Strictly East, for poets past the Tunnel. It is currently available by email, but she hopes to build a website with weekly updates.

 
Deborah published her first novel, the award-winning comedy The Unwilling Heiress,
at the age of 25. Her goals now are a Master's Degree, another book contract, and a flat stomach.

 
You can visit Deborah at www.lafruche.zoomshare.com, or email her at debralee@astound.net.
 

 

Albert J. Rothman albroth@comcast.net
I was born 1924 and raised in Brooklyn NY. I moved to SF Bay Area in 1948. BS Columbia; PhD (chemistry and chemical engineering) UC-Berkeley.
Since retiring in 1986 I have written personal essays, memoir, poetry, and short stories. A memoir of my childhood is ready for publication.
I am an avid hiker, the source for numerous nature writings, and a classical music lover and collector. I belong to several writers¹ groups, including Tri Valley Writers, Ina Coolbrith Poetry Group, and attend writing classes at Las Positas College.
I received prizes in Ina Coolbrith Circle poetry contests, 1997-2004, First Prize and publication in The Poets¹ Edge Magazine. Poems and prose were published in Northwoods Journal, Dan River Anthology, two Bristol Banner Books, and Drumvoices Revue 2005. I have won awards and publication in annual Las Positas College Anthologies, 1996 through 2005, and other poetry awards, including Sky Blue Waters, California Federation of Chaparral Poets, California State Poetry Society, Dancing Poetry contest, 2005, etc.
 

 


Deborah Grossman is a poet, food and wine journalist, and essayist. In 2006 she published Goldie and Me, a book about the many facets of freedom, family and friendship through the lens of poetry. Her poems and essays have won awards at the Las Positas College Literary Arts Contest, the Ina Coolbrith Circle’s Annual Poet’s Dinner, the Pleasanton Poetry and Arts Festival, and the Alameda County Fair. Deborah is a dining columnist for Diablo magazine and contributor to Napa Sonoma, Wine & Spirits, Chef, National Culinary Review, Santé, Wine Business Monthly, The Wine Report, and Bay Area newspapers such as the San Francisco Chronicle.. A resident of Pleasanton, Deborah hails from Wilmington, Delaware and received her postgraduate degree from the University of London, England. Deborah is a member of the American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA). She likes to travel wine country back roads with her husband Michael and read umpteen newspapers, books, and magazines.

Contact Deborah at dcgrossman@yahoo.com. Goldie and Me is available on at www.amazon.com  or www.deborahgrossman.com.

    


Rashna Owens







RASHNA Heart Poet
Resides in Castro Valley, Ca. the founder/owner of “POEMS FROM MY HEART TO TOUCH YOUR HEART” CD AND BOOK/RED I GRAVY AFFAIR a poetry troupe of various artists who comes together to entertain.
My goal is to reach a new level of poetry through song and speak out against violence and various social issues. To enjoy life and continue to enhance with ALLAH (GOD) spirituality and mentality.
I love to love all! I speak IN PEACE AND IN LOVE!
 

www.rashnaowens.com
     www.cdbaby.com/rashna
 

rashna.owens@worldnet.att.net 


Terry Ehret is a creative writing and composition teacher, and one of the founders of the innovative Sixteen Rivers Press, a hands-on publishing collective run by and for San Francisco Bay Area Poets.

 As the Sonoma County poet laureate from 2004-2006, she visited classrooms all across the county, helped organize and promote the poetry program at the annual Sonoma County Book Festival, and hosted bilingual workshops, writing programs, and readings, including the Poetry on the Bus project and the Poetry of Remembrance reading for Petaluma’s El Dia de los Muertos. She has also launched The Sonoma County Writers’ Guide, a web page hosted by the Literary Arts Guild which serves as an on-line community bulletin board for local writers.

 She has previously published three collections of poetry, most recently Translations from the Human Language.  Literary awards include the National Poetry Series, California Book Award, and Pablo Neruda Poetry Prize.

 Terry teaches private creative writing workshops through the Sitting Room in Cotati, and is available for manuscript consultation. Contact her through her e-mail at tehret99@comcast.net  .

 For more information about Sixteen Rivers Press, check out the website at www.sixteenrivers.org .

 To view the Sonoma County Writers’ Guide webpage, go to www.socobookfest.org  and click on the Writer’s Guide feature from the menu.


Kim Shuck is a mixed Tsalagi, Sauk/Fox and Polish educator, writer and weaver. Shuck has had myriad jobs, which include writing math curricula, frothing cappuccino, teaching at the university level and being the mom of three kids who are even now entering teen hood. She has attended way too much school, one product of which is an MFA. Her poetry has been published nationally and internationally. These publications include Shenandoah, Cream City Review and the En’owken Journal. In late summer of 2005 she made a trip with poets to Jordan in the interest of peace and communication. Her poetry manuscript Smuggling Cherokee, won the 2005 first book award from the Native Writer’s Circle of the Americas, it was published in December 2005 by Greenfield Review Press. She is a co-curator for the Native American Cultural Center in San Francisco.

kshuck@tsoft.net
 

 


Matt Miller was born and raised in Lowell, MA. He earned a BA from Yale University and an MFA in Creative Writing from Emerson College. A former Visiting Assistant Professor of Writing at New England College, Miller has taught also at Stanford University, Harvard University, Endicott College, Cambridge College, and the New Hampshire State Prison for Men. His work has been published in Third Coast, DMQ Review, Entelechy International, Renovation Journal, Boston Magazine, the Lowell Sun, LiteraryTraveler.com, and is forthcoming in the Poetry Nation Review. He has been nominated for three Pushcart Prizes and his first book, Cameo Diner: Poems, was published in 2005. He is currently a Wallace Stegner Fellow in Poetry at Stanford University. He lives in East Palo Alto, CA with his wife, Emily Meehan, and their daughter, Delaney Grace.

Matthew Miller matthew_miller@uml.edu


David Alpaugh’s poetry, fiction, drama, and criticism have appeared in over a hundred literary journals and anthologies, including Poetry, Exquisite Corpse, The Formalist, Modern Drama, Light, Wisconsin Review, Zyzzyva, and California Poetry from the Gold Rush to the Present. His collection Counterpoint won the Nicholas Roerich Poetry Prize from Story Line Press and his chapbooks have been published by Coracle Books and Pudding House Publications. His essay “The Professionalization of Poetry,” serialized by Poets & Writers Magazine in 2003, drew hundreds of emails and letters plus wide discussion on the internet where his poetry has also frequently appeared.

 

A graduate of Rutgers University and the University of California, Berkeley, where he was a Woodrow Wilson and Ford Foundation fellow, Alpaugh operates Small Poetry Press, a chapbook design and printing service and edits its Select Poets Series. He has taught at the University of California Extension; publishes The Carquinez Poetry Review; hosts the popular Second Sunday Poetry Readings in Crockett; and is a member of the board of trustees of The Ina Coolbrith Circle, a statewide association of  California poets & historians.

You may reach David at davidalpaugh@comcast.net

Check out a live interview with David Alpaugh on www.NewVoices.com  "Not Your Same Old Radio" LadyBugLive, then click on Poet's Lane program and the icon next to David Alpaugh's name.


Floriana Hall, author and poet, founded and coordinate a group of local poets (Akron, Ohio) who meet once a month at the Cuyahoga Falls Library in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, at two PM the second Wednesday.  We (about 20 of us) enjoy each other's creations and also have a mission.  This year we are helping ACCESS and Battered Women's Shelter at Christmas.  I founded this group seven years ago and have helped  the poets get published -- we have three books published which I put together and edited, THROUGH OUR EYES, Poems of Beautiful Northeast Ohio; POET'S NOOK POTPOURRI; and TOUCHING THE HEARTS OF GENERATIONS.  These three books may be bought from me at HAFLORIA@cs.com  for $10 each plus shipping of $1.50 to $2.00.  My website is www.expage.com/flossiesbooknook  This website also promotes my five nonfiction inspirational books.

     I also teach poetry at www.LssWritingSchool.com  under YOU, ME, AND POETRY. 


Doug Stout, Healdsburg Literary Laureate (1999 - 2000) 1st prize haiku contest (Don Sherwood radio show) 1960; lived in Japan off and on 1977, published 10 English texts for college students - from 1977; Fulbright teacher in Thailand, 1974-1975; English Department San Francisco State University, 1955-1976; USN, 1943-1945, co-founder Healdsburg Farmers Market, 1977- present, two books of poetry - Urgent News! and Sometimes I'm Surprised; co-editor of Present at the Creation, an anthology of poets writing about writing poetry' three unpublished novels, dramaturg - Sonoma County Repertory in the 90's, National Comedy Prize - Ukiah Players, 1992, miscellaneous publications including first prize Tiny Lights essay contest, 2005 (?)
mailing address: 8383 W. Dry Creek Rd., Healdsburg,  CA 95448; e-mail: dalstout@aol.com.