Archive for April, 2010

April 30, 2010

BOA Author Visit

When you’re “in the trenches” (as they say), working on producing and selling books, it’s always great to have a real flesh-and-blood author visit the office. After all, without their oustanding poems and stories, there’s no reason for us to be here every day! It’s especially a pleasure when the author is a really cool person. Such was the case with today’s visit by Christopher Kennedy – a brilliant poet and all-around good guy. Chris’ last BOA book, Encouragement for a Man Falling to his Death, was awarded the 2007 Isabella Gardner Poetry Award. His next book, Ennui Prophet, is forthcoming in 2011.

Here’s Chris standing in front of the BOA bookshelves with his editor Peter Conners.

BOA poet Chris Kennedy and editor Peter Conners

BOA poet Chris Kennedy and editor Peter Conners

And one of Peter’s favorite Chris Kennedy poems which is included in Encouragement for a Man Falling to His Death:

Riddle of Self-Worth

By cannibal standards, I’m dinner for six.

My pet vulture has the disconcerting habit of staring

at the clock and then at me. In terms of sun,

I plan for a long Alaskan winter. Insurance salesmen

slink away from me at parties. A stiff breeze

blows away my weight in gold. In the world of before

and after, I remain steadfastly before. Last session,

my psychiatrist shook my hand and thanked me

for curing his insomnia. If I had a nickel for every time

my name was associated with greatness, I would owe

someone a quarter. My mother called recently and asked

for her umbilical cord. Yet I’m resilient, a human cockroach.

I’ll be here for awhile, blocking progress in a black leather jacket,

switchblade quick and ruthless as a jar of pennies.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

April 28, 2010

The BOA Board

Everyone who’s been involved with a not-for-profit knows that board members are a key part of keeping the organization vital, healthy, and moving forward. Here at BOA, we’re fortunate to have an outstanding board that supports our mission in numerous ways. At this morning’s board meeting we asked the group to pose for a photo that we could use on our new website (more about that soon!). But why wait? Here’s BOA’s board gathered together in front of the fireplace at Midtown Athletic Club where the meeting was held.

BOA Board (partial)

BOA Board (partial)

From left to right: Jack Langerak, Nan Westervelt, Bernadette Catalana, Elissa Orlando, Peter Durant, John Roche, Glenn William, Rob Tortorella. Not pictured: Jack Garner, Robert Hursh, Boo Poulin, and, Steve Russell.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

April 26, 2010

Spring Titles Released!

Our spring 2010 titles have officially been released and all of us at BOA are very excited! This season, we have collections from Peter Makuck, Keetje Kuipers, Wyn Cooper and Craig Morgan Teicher — three books of poetry and one of short stories, respectively — and wanted to share something of each with you.

Peter Makuck's "Long Lens"

Peter Makuck's "Long Lens"

Long Lens: New and Selected Poems is the newest in a long list (no pun intended) of books by Peter Makuck. It represents forty years of Makuck’s poetry, and also includes twenty-five new poems. In this collection, he touches on such subjects as the aftermath of the 1970 killings at Kent State University, scuba-diving on an offshore shipwreck, flying through a storm in a small plane and rescuing a boy caught in a riptide with precise language. He evokes spiritual longing, love, loss, violence and transcendence in this collection, inspiring Brendan Galvin to say, “Peter Makuck sees through the detritus of daily life to what matters … It’s that essence that lives deep down in things, looked for in people, sea- and-landscapes, and creatures, that lifts the quotidian toward the marvelous, and animates this selection of poems from four decades.”

Keetje Kuipers' "Beautiful in the Mouth"

Keetje Kuipers' "Beautiful in the Mouth"

The fact that Keetje Kuipers won the A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize for 2009 makes Beautiful in the Mouth quite a debut. The fact that critics like Thomas Lux are noting “the boldness of imagination, the strange cadences, and wild music of these poems” doesn’t hurt either. Kuipers’ poems work towards answering questions about contemporary female loss, questions like: What happens when the things we care for—children, lovers, parents, dreams, homes—are taken away? How do we perceive these objects? What populates our landscapes? To answer, she takes us on a journey from Paris to New York to Oregon, telling us how these landscapes unwillingly receive loss and alter to cope with it.

Wyn Cooper's "Chaos is the New Calm"

Wyn Cooper's "Chaos is the New Calm"

Wyn Cooper, in Chaos is the New Calm, takes something familiar to poetry readers –the sonnet– and turns it on its head. Some rhyme, some do not. Some rhymes come in unusual places. Sometimes even the stanza forms are altered. Even the subject matter is wildly varied. However, every poem displays what Major Jackson calls “subtle echoes, balance of cultural sophistication and bare, formal construction.” They range from travelogue to inner monologue, from surveys of the news, to social commentary, to solitary musing, all the while singing with sound, rhythm, and extremes of syntax, diction and style. None of these poems lacks sense, though, creating a challenging, though rewarding, poetic environment through which we may gain lyric insight into the world.

Craig Morgan Teicher's "Cradle Book"

Craig Morgan Teicher's "Cradle Book"

The stories in Craig Morgan Teicher’s Cradle Book encapsulate the timeless and the timely, and hope with a dark underbelly to revive a tradition as old as Aesop. The worlds Teicher creates are rich with a storyteller’s imagination and a poet’s mastery, populated by animals fated for disaster and the humans who act like them. These include a boy who wishes he was raised by wolves, some badly behaving Gods, a talking tree and a shape-shifting room. Of this collection, Aimee Bender writes, “Wrapped lightly in philosophy and whimsy and wisdom, here’s a book to be savored, and revisited, and read aloud. Teicher is brewing some elegant magic here.”

There’s nothing better than to curl up with a good book during the spring rain, so all of us at BOA invite you to share in our delight with our new spring titles!

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

April 22, 2010

Two BOA Authors Featured on Podcasts

Photograph by Betsy Dougherty Keetje Kuipers

Lucille Clifton

Lucille Clifton

Listen live on www.weaa.org, or download a podcast from
www.steinershow.org after the show. Here’s an excerpt from the website:

April 20, 2010

Keetje Kuipers Guest Blogger Extraordinaire

Here’s the next installment by our guest blogger Keetje Kuipers! Keetje’s Poulin Prize-winning book, Beautiful in the Mouth, was just published by BOA and Keetje has agreed to share her experiences as a first-time author. Enjoy!

Beautiful in the Mouth by Keetje Kuipers

Beautiful in the Mouth by Keetje Kuipers

My dad has a joke which, like all his signature witticisms, he likes to repeat whenever he has an opportunity to squeeze it into conversation. Someone I’d never even met once repeated this joke to me in a letter—that is, after he’d been seated next to my dad on a plane for three hours. Unfortunately, I have only myself to blame for this joke and its persistence in my life.

As most any poet will tell you, much of the “work” of writing poems happens in a nearly invisible way, or so it might seem to the untrained observer. I stare out the window, I take the dog for a walk, I make a cup of coffee—but really, I’m writing poetry. All writers are thieves and scavengers, and poets especially are always on the look-out for anything they can steal for their verse. While it might look like

April 16, 2010

More 2010 AWP Conference Photos

You know what they say… “a picture is worth a thousand blah blah blah whatever…”

Now for more BOA pics from AWP!

Craig Morgan Teicher, David Mura, Matthew Shenoda

Craig Morgan Teicher, David Mura and Matthew Shenoda gather for a picture at the BOA booth.

Dinner with poets and friends

The BOA staff had a great time dining with both poets and friends.

Judith Kerman and Mel

Judith Kerman and Melissa Hall hanging out at the BOA booth

Peter, Fred Courtright, Mel

Peter and Mel were very excited to see Fred Courtright at the conference!

Wyn Cooper and Thom

Thom goofing around with Wyn Cooper at the BOA booth.

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

April 15, 2010

Kuipers Returns to Swarthmore

It’s always a treat for an author to return to their college campus and share their new work! On Monday, April 12, Keetje Kuipers got to take a “victory lap” around Swarthmore and the college paper, The Phoenix, captured the spirit of her visit. Regular readers to this blog know that Keetje is our guest blogger for April, so keep an eye out for her next entry very, very soon…
Beautiful in the Mouth by Keetje Kuipers

Beautiful in the Mouth by Keetje Kuipers

Poet and alumna Keetje Kuipers ’02 returned to Swarthmore on Monday to read from her first published volume of poetry, “Beautiful in the Mouth,” which was released by BOA Editions, Ltd. last month. The book deals heavily with themes of love, loss, place and the body. It won Kuipers the 2009 A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize, the reward for which is publication. Kuipers also judged the 2010 student poetry prize winners, whom she announced directly following the reading.
Elizabeth Dickey ’10, who was selected as winner of the Lois Morrell Poetry Prize, was present both at the reading and for a classroom discussion in Professor Nathalie Anderson’s “Contemporary Women’s Poetry” course on Tuesday. Dickey, who bought and began to read “Beautiful in the Mouth” only after attending the reading, commented on the differences in reading and listening to Kuipers’ poetry.“[S]he feels to me like a really solid presence, like she herself she has just a gorgeous voice and she presents herself in a way that’s very solid, and she’s very clear on who she is,” Dickey said of Kuipers’ reading.

Read the rest of the article here [Alum sheds light on poetry, creative process]

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

April 13, 2010

Barbara Jane Reyes on AWP

Barbara Jane Reyes. BOA poet.

Barbara Jane Reyes. BOA poet.

Barbara Jane Reyes has shared some of her thoughts on the 2010 AWP Conference at the Poetry Foundation’s blog, Harriet. Barbara’s next book, Diwata, will be published by BOA in Sept 2010. We’re thrilled to have Barbara in the BOA family and are so happy to hear that she’s thrilled as well. She writes: “First, I want to say that I am so pleased to have met the BOA Editions editors, Thom Ward and Peter Conners, who have been so kind and respectful via our telephone and e-correspondences. In person, they are more so. So thank you again to Thom and Peter, and actually, especially to Matthew Shenoda, for bringing me into the BOA Editions world. Peter tells me some folks were coming to the table at the book fair, asking about Diwata. I am so pleased to hear there is interest.”

Read the rest of Barbara’s blog here [AWP Some Thoughts]

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

April 12, 2010

2010 AWP Conference Photos

Keetje Kuipers was signing her new book Beautiful in the Mouth at the BOA table, AND giving away bottles of wine.

Keetje Kuipers was signing her new book Beautiful in the Mouth at the BOA table, AND giving away bottles of wine.

Dan, Cecilia, and Keetje pose after a fantastic reading

Dan, Cecilia, and Keetje pose after a fantastic reading

Keetje Kuipers reading at D'vine Winery

Keetje Kuipers reading at D'vine Winery

Cecilia Woloch reading at D'Vine Winery

Cecilia Woloch reading at D'Vine Winery

Dan Albergotti reading at D'Vine Winery

Dan Albergotti reading at D'Vine Winery

Peter Conners with Judy Kerman.  Check out her new translation, Praises and Offenses!

Peter Conners with Judy Kerman. Check out her new translation, Praises and Offenses!

Thom Ward with Wyn Cooper, who signed copies of his new book, Chaos is the New Calm

Thom Ward with Wyn Cooper, who signed copies of his new book, Chaos is the New Calm

Keetje Kuipers hanging out at the BOA table with Thom Ward and Peter Conners

Keetje Kuipers hanging out at the BOA table with Thom Ward and Peter Conners

Peter Conners and Ray Gonzalez, who signed copies of his new book, Cool Auditor

Peter Conners and Ray Gonzalez, who signed copies of his new book, Cool Auditor

Peter Conners with Matthew Shenoda, who signed copies of his new book, Seasons of Lotus, Seasons of Bone

Peter Conners with Matthew Shenoda, who signed copies of his new book, Seasons of Lotus, Seasons of Bone

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News

April 12, 2010

Too Much Good News? Never!

The entire BOA staff has returned from the AWP Conference in Denver, Colorado. Once again, the conference managed to be both exhausting and stimulating all at the same time. We got to spend time with dozens of BOA authors and FOBs (Friends of BOA) and we’ll be posting photos and comments about the conference here soon (if you’re our friend on Facebook, you’ve already seen some of those. If you’re not… why aren’t you?!).

While we were gone, our books and authors accomplished a bunch of great things! Here are some of the highlights:

Craig Morgan Teicher. BOA author.

Craig Morgan Teicher. BOA author.

1) Craig Morgan Teicher’s forthcoming Cradle Book received a “starred and boxed” review in this week’s Publisher’s Weekly. “Starred and boxed” means just that – they put a red star by the review and put a box around it to draw extra attention to the review. This is an amazing start to this unique collection of fables and stories. Cradle Book will be available by May 1st.

Cradle Book Craig Morgan Teicher BOA (Consortium, dist.),$14 paper (72p) ISBN 978-1-934414-35-4

Thirty-three sublime, deceptively simple reflections on states of human awareness comprise this prose collection by poet Teicher (Brenda Is in the Room), who is also PW’s poetry editor. In bedtime-story selections grouped under themes of “Silence,” “Fear,” “Sleep,” Teicher gives voice to our suppressed terrors of the dark, animism, unclean urges, and supernatural convergences: a man is granted the wish of invisibility in “The Reward,” using the power to observe everything he can until he becomes “a repository… of moments that threaten to repeat themselves for all eternity,” in short, a poet; dust collecting in clumps in corners takes on life as “it is simply waiting for us to join it” (“The Dust”); a tree stump finds a remedy for its acute loneliness by engulfing a monk in its gnarled roots so that they can die together (“The Monk and the Stump”). The immutable condition of the stone becomes the metaphor for life in “The Story of the Stone.” Teicher’s subtly composed fables are effortless and enduring, celebrate the virtue of story above all, and render philosophers of his readers. (June)

Jeanne Marie Beaumont. BOA author.

Jeanne Marie Beaumont. BOA author.

2) Jeanne Marie Beaumont’s 5-poem series “Letter from Limbo” from her forthcoming book, Burning of the Three Fires, won the Dana Award in Poetry. The Dana Awards were founded in 1996 by literature professor and poet Mary Elizabeth Parker with the financial backing of Michael Dana. The competition is currently based in Greensboro, North Carolina and has played an important role in launching the careers of several prominent writers, including Michael Pritchett, Danielle Trussoni, and Tina Chang. Congratulations, Jeanne!

Sharon Bryan. BOA poet.

Sharon Bryan. BOA poet.

3) An interview with BOA author Sharon Bryan – whose book Sharp Stars was awarded the Isabella Gardner Poetry Award for 2009 – is available for free at i-tunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/writers-at-cornell/id358133992. The interview was conducted as part of the Writers at Cornell series in which Host J. Robert Lennon interviews visiting writers to Cornell University, including Junot Diaz, Charles Simic, George Saunders, Heather McHugh, and many others.

Sean Thomas Dougherty. BOA poet.

Sean Thomas Dougherty. BOA poet.

4) Sean Thomas Dougherty (Broken Hallelujahs and, forthcoming, Sasha Sings the Laundry on the Line) was interviewed last week on Cleveland’s NPR station public radio 90.3. Sean was interviewed by Dee Perry who also interviewed the conductor for the Cleveland Orchestra and punk rock icon Henry Rollins on the same show. Quite a trio! You can listen to the interview online at: http://www.wcpn.org/WCPN/an/30178

For anyone in the Rochester area, Sean’s interview is a great warm-up for the upcoming Rochester International Jazz Festival. Sean will be in Rochester during the festival to read with some musicians for BOA’s “Jazz is Poetry” event! More details on that soon…

Posted by BOA Editions, Ltd. under: BOA News