Spring 2007
ISSN 1542-3123
The robin's eye
is a hole opening
into a universe
which is contemplating a river.
— Matthew Rohrer, "Poem Against Wordsworth"
Big City Lit Poets
The Cornelia Street Café
29 Cornelia Street
b/t Bleecker & West 4th)
Cover $6 (includes one house drink)
A reading to celebrate the Big City Lit Spring Poetry Feature with contributors
Jeanne Marie Beaumont, Marion Brown, Claudia Carlson, Jay Chollick, Allen C. Fischer,
Janet Hamill, Pamela Hart, Kate Irving, Dean Kostos,Richard Levine, Philip Miller,
M. A. Schaffner, Anna Soo-Hoo, Matthew J. Spireng, Margo Stever, Melinda Thompson,
Angelo Verga and Barry Wallenstein.
(Note: List is not restrictive nor preclusive of other themes.)
Epigrams; Moving/Motion; Dust; Corridors; Insects; Cemeteries; Smoking; Infanticide; Surrealism; Timepieces; Kites; Suicide; 'Lovesick'; Hands and Gloves; Wells; Windmills; and Small Town Wherewithal. (Bolding indicates features which are scheduled to appear very soon.)
Consult Submissions for guidelines, Masthead for editorial policy.
Please query first on articles over 750 words.
Email: editors@nycBigCityLit.com.
"By the Wayside: Change Is What Keeps Us" is this Spring's feature including contributors Jeanne Marie Beaumont, Pamela Hart, Philip Miller, D. Nurkse, Margo Stever, George Wallace, and Barry Wallenstein.
In Twelve-12, new work from Janet Hamill.
Margo Berdeshevsky, "Blue Dahlia": a tale about a young lady who never had a prince.
"Glory, Ananias," by Eileen St. Lauren, an excerpt from her unpublished novel, My Neighbors: Blue Roses. Myra Boone and Margie Anne visit Ananias in the city of Goodlife.
Veteran Marc Levy's "A Beginner's Guide to Combat," required reading for everyone in harm's way.
Planning a visit to 'The Windy City'? Take with you a copy of Robert Klein Engler's "A Short Tour of Ugly Art" in the public spaces of Chicago to ensure you miss nothing artistically offensive. See, with your own eyes, what the City Fathers have been thinking. They've probably been thinking the same thing in your city.
Soluble Fish and the Emu of Wonder: The Poetry of Matthew Rohrer
by Diana Manister
The poems of Rise Up come close to achieving the super-realism Breton described. Regarding Surrealism, Diana Manister explains how "no single movement of recent times has had such a transformative effect on all the arts…. [It] is the driving force of modernism… and helped to put America on the international cultural map for the first time in history."
Elizabeth Harrington's Earth's Milk: One Morning after the Next: The Poetry of Grief and Ascension
by Brant Lyon
Her poems "chronicle a psychological journey and personal history that richly evoke landscapes as well as mindscapes…"
"Venus" in Blue Jeans
by Martin Mitchell
As a movie, "Venus" is simultaneously hilarious and depressing….
Books of interest by authors R. Nemo Hill, Marilyn Johnson, Brant Lyon, Philip Miller, Stephen Stepanchev, Mervyn Taylor, and Vando & Miller's Chance of a Ghost anthology.
Music and spoken word by David Francis, Tracie Smart, Jeff Ciampa, Chris Mills, Richard Buckner, and Larissa Schmailo.
Thursday, June 28th
Cornelia Street Café
6:00 to 8:00 pm
Big City Lit Poets
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Big City Lit welcomes letters from its readers. Address correspondence to Editors@nycBigCityLit.com
All Print Series Suspended
For the present, all Contests suspended.
As we say good-bye to those no longer with us, we are pleased to announce new contributing editors Martin Mitchell, George Wallace and Barry Wallenstein; regular contributor Allen C. Fischer; and Associate Editor Elena Kondracki.
Martin Mitchell, Barry Wallenstein, James Ragan, Patrick Henry (UK), Diana Manister, Philip Miller, Margo Berdeshevsky, George Wallace