Archive for February, 2010

February 25, 2010

Bill Moyers + Weekend Edition tributes to Lucille Clifton

Lucille signing her BOA books. Photo by Robb Cohen.

Lucille signing her BOA books. Photo by Robb Cohen.

This weekend, Lucille Clifton’s poetic legacy will be honored nationally on television and radio:

Bill Moyers Journal will air a tribute to Lucille tomorrow night. The show airs on PBS and starts at 9PM EST. A complete schedule list is available at the show’s website: http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/index-flash.html

On radio, NPR’s “Weekend Edition” will air a 4-5 minute tribute to Lucille including clips of her reading from her BOA books. A complete schedule list is available at the show’s website: http://www.npr.org/templates/rundowns/rundown.php?prgId=7

Both of these tributes will undoubtedly be moving and memorable.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

February 25, 2010

Washington Post tribute to Lucille Clifton

Lucille Clifton accepting the 2000 National Book Award (AP Photo)

Lucille Clifton accepting the 2000 National Book Award (AP Photo)

Matt Schudel wrote a moving tribute to Lucille that appeared in The Washington Post. The piece starts with a striking image from Lucille’s girlhood:

“When she was a girl, Lucille Clifton sat on her mother’s lap and listened to her recite poetry. Her mother never made it through elementary school, but she knew the power of language, and her poems stayed in her daughter’s head forever.

But another memory seared itself in young Lucille’s memory, too: when her father said no wife of his would be a poet. She watched as her thwarted mother threw her pages of verse into a burning furnace.”

Read the whole story here: [Washington Post tribute to Lucille Clifton]

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

February 24, 2010

“Let Us Consider” Poetry Animation, Russell Edson

The Rooster's Wife, poems (and cover art) by Russell Edson

The Rooster's Wife, poems (and cover art) by Russell Edson

In 2005, we were thrilled to publish The Rooster’s Wife by prose poet master Russell Edson. Russell was at the forefront of the emergence of prose poetry in America in the early 60s and he continues to produce his trademark hilarious, surreal, and poignant poems. What many people don’t know is that Russell’s father was a cartoonist and that cartooning had a strong influence on his style. Russell is also a visual artist himself – in fact, his artwork graces the cover of The Rooster’s Wife.

Given his influences and style, it was a stroke of brilliance on the part of the Poetry Foundation to create an animated adaptation of a poem by Russell Edson. The poem they used is “Let Us Consider” from The Rooster’s Wife. The piece was animated and designed by Chris Lightbody.

You can watch the animation here ["Let Us Consider" animated poem]

Here is the text of the poem:

“Let Us Consider”

Let us consider the farmer who makes his straw hat his

sweetheart; or the old woman who makes a floor lamp her son;

or the young woman who has set herself the task of scraping

her shadow off a wall….

Let us consider the old woman who wore smoked cows’

tongues for shoes and walked a meadow gathering cow chips

in her apron; or a mirror grown dark with age that was given

to a blind man who spent his nights looking into it, which

saddened his mother, that her son should be so lost in vanity.

Let us consider the man who fried roses for his dinner,

whose kitchen smelled like a burning rose garden; or the man

who disguised himself as a moth and ate his overcoat, and for

dessert served himself a chilled fedora.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: Audio/Video

February 23, 2010

Oh Happy Day!

Syracuse U. MFA intern Anthony Antoniadis also loves the new copier

Syracuse U. MFA intern Anthony Antoniadis also loves the new copier

Okay, so maybe it’s only big news to us here in the office, but… we got a new copier yesterday! If you’ve ever seen that movie Office Space where they take their crappy office copier out into a field and beat it with bats – that’s how we felt about our old copier. So this is huge for us. It’s shiny, brand new, and does things we didn’t know a copier could even do (faxing, stapling – whodathunkit?)

As with all things non-profit, getting new stuff usually depends on the kindness of friends and supporters. In this case, we give thanks to Toshiba Business Solutions, and, specifically, Steven B. Sauer, President, and John McBride, Senior Account Executive. Thanks to BOA Board member Glenn William for putting this all together for us too.

BOA's new Toshiba copier

BOA's new Toshiba copier

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

February 22, 2010

Elizabeth Alexander, New Yorker Tribute to Lucille Clifton

This beautiful piece appears “The Book Bench” section of The New Yorker. Read the entire article here: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2010/02/remembering-lucille-clifton.html#ixzz0gHokN9EB

Lucille Clifton. BOA Poet. Photo by Robb Cohen.

Lucille Clifton. BOA Poet. Photo by Robb Cohen.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

February 18, 2010

Dark Things Shortlisted for BTBA Award

Dark Things by Novica Tadic, translated from the Serbian by Charles Simic, has been shortlisted for the Best Translated Book Award in Poetry from the translation website Three Percent. Three Percent was “launched in the summer of 2007 with the lofty goal of becoming a destination for readers, editors, and translators interested in finding out about modern and contemporary international literature.” The site has quickly become a clearinghouse of information on translations by U.S. publishers, and we are thrilled to be one of the ten finalists for the BTBA in Poetry. The winner will be announced on March 10, 2010.

Here is the complete shortlist and information on the selection process:

[BTBA in Poetry Shortlist]

Dark Things. Shorlisted for BTBA in Poetry.

Dark Things. Shorlisted for BTBA in Poetry.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

February 17, 2010

New York Times Obituary for Lucille Clifton

Lucille Clifton accepting the 2000 National Book Award (AP Photo)

Lucille Clifton accepting the 2000 National Book Award (AP Photo)

Lucille Clifton, Poet Who Explored Intricacies of Black Lives, Dies at 73

Lucille Clifton, a distinguished American poet whose work trained lenses wide and narrow on the experience of being black and female in the 20th century, exploring vast subjects like the indignities of history and intimate ones like the indignities of the body, died on Saturday in Baltimore. She was 73 and lived in Columbia, Md.

The precise cause of death had not been determined, her sister, Elaine Philip, told The Associated Press on Sunday. Ms. Clifton, who had cancer, had been hospitalized recently with an infection.

Ms. Clifton received a National Book Award in 2000 for “Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems, 1988-2000,” published by BOA Editions. In 2007, she became the first African-American woman to win the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, a $100,000 award that is one of American poetry’s signal honors.

[Read the rest of the article here]

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

February 16, 2010

BOA Press Release On the Death of Lucille Clifton

National Book Award-winning Poet Lucille Clifton Dies

Rochester, NY — BOA Editions is sad to mark the passing of poet Lucille Clifton on February 13, 2010. Lucille Clifton (born Thelma Lucille Sayles) was raised in Depew, New York. She attended Howard University from 1953 to 1955 and graduated from the State University of New York at Fredonia in 1955. In 1958 she married Fred James Clifton. She worked as a claims clerk in the New York State Division of Employment, Buffalo (1958–1960), and as literature assistant in the Office of Education in Washington, D.C. (1960–1971). Her first poetry collection Good Times was published in 1969, and listed by The New York Times as one of the year’s ten best books.

Lucille Clifton published seven poetry collections with BOA Editions. Her first two BOA collections, Next: New Poems, and, Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969-1980, were both published in 1987. In one of her many unprecedented accomplishments, both of those books were named finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in 1988. She was awarded the National Book Award for Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems 1988-2000 (BOA, 2000). In 2007, Lucille Clifton became the first African American woman to receive the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize from the Poetry Foundation, one of the largest literary honors for work in the English language. Her other awards include the Lannan Literary Award and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts; an Emmy Award from the American Academy of Television Arts and Sciences; the Shelley Memorial Prize; and the Charity Randall Citation. The Poetry Society of America awarded Clifton their Centennial Frost Medal for 2010.

Thom Ward, Clifton’s editor at BOA Editions, said of her poetry, “Lucille Clifton’s poems have their own special ‘signature’ as, say, the work of Elizabeth Bishop and Emily Dickinson. Mixing spare, muscular, visual language, a deft balance of idea and image with powerful silences and taut line-breaks – you always know when you are in the presence of a Clifton poem.”

Longtime BOA poet Naomi Shihab Nye says, of the lasting power of Lucille Clifton’s work, “How many times have her humanizing words helped us in these devastating years of doublespeak, war and doubt? No matter what was going on or where we found ourselves, her words and tone were balance beams, lifting us back into energy and verve. Cleansing the air! All these years, she swept clutter away with a few well-filtered lines. Once, shortly after a grueling hospital stay, she showed up at the Folger Library with students, for a reading by Arab Americans—when we said, “’It’s incredible that you made the effort to come!’ she said, ‘Where else would I be?’ She showed up. Always in this life. It’s that grace she leaves us.”

Li-Young Lee, BOA poet and friend of Clifton, notes, “If the chief aim of civilization is to provide security for human beings, Lucille was one of its finest builders and architects. Her work sorts meaning from noise, sense from nonsense, good readings of our world from bad readings. She was a friend to me, a mentor, and a mirror of my better self. I loved her and learned to love the world because of her.”

Lucille Clifton served as a Distinguished Professor of Humanities at St. Mary’s College in Maryland. She was appointed a Fellow of The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and elected as Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets in 1999.

Memorably, Lucille Clifton dedicated her first BOA collection, Next: New Poems, to her recently deceased husband Fred. The dedication read simply:

to fred

see you later alligator

###

Lucille Clifton. BOA Poet.

Lucille Clifton. BOA Poet.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

February 15, 2010

Lucille Clifton dies at Age 73

08 Lucille Clifton

The Board of Directors, staff and poets of BOA Editions, Ltd.

are greatly saddened to report the death of longtime BOA poet

Lucille Clifton. Lucille passed away Saturday morning February

13 at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore at age 73. Lucille

had been ill for quite some time, but the exact cause of her death

is still uncertain.

Lucille was one of the great voices in world poetry, and a

wonderful human being. We will miss her tremendously.

The BOA Editions family sends our condolences to her sister,

three daughters, son, and three grandchildren. A list of Lucille’s

BOA poetry books follows, including Blessing the Boats:

New and Selected Poems, 1988 – 2000, for which she won

The National Book Award for Poetry.

Blessing the Boats

Good Woman

Mercy

Next

Quilting

The Terrible Stories

Voices

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

February 12, 2010

“into the past and the future, simultaneously”

Cupid and Psyche by Antonio Canova.

Cupid and Psyche by Antonio Canova.

Our final installment for Valentine’s Week is the title poem from Cecilia Woloch’s Carpathia. This is also the last day to receive our special Valentine’s Day offer: buy a copy of Carpathia for only $10 (shipping included)! To get this deal, just call 585-546-3410 (ext 13), and ask for Peter.

Here’s what Cecilia said about her poem Carpathia:

“For me, it speaks of how we move forward and backward in time, in love, into the past and the future, simultaneously, how we just keep going on, and also returning…”

Carpathia

Having rinsed off the soot and stink

of the Polish train,

having sung with the child.

Having eaten and laughed and wept,

had my vodka with apple juice,

my bread.

Having walked through the fields

at dusk, and into the forest

and back again–

meadows of buttercups,

thistles with bristling heads,

the first blue cornflowers of June.

Having opened my arms to the sky

falling back on itself

in my dizziness.

Having taken the small purple berries

that dropped from the wild bush

into my palm

–Siberian berries, like tiny plums–

put their sweet bitter inkiness

onto my tongue.

Having failed and failed at love.

Having gone anyway,

breath after breath.

Having trusted the world to be kind

and stood in the doorway

and listened for wolves

and heard my own dead in the high

grass whispering,

beloved,beloved, beloved.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News