People and Their Poems
By Sandy Carlson
My name is Sandy Carlson, and I will be your host. I am a member of the Connecticut Poetry Society as well as poet laureate of Woodbury, Connecticut.
People and Their PoemsNov 27, 2022
A Visit with Margaret Hunt - Why Poetry Deserves an Audience
For 22 years, Margaret Hunt was a high school English teacher. Currently, she is a student teacher evaluator for the Alternate Route to Certification. She also teaches a GED prep course to adult learners. Margaret holds a BA from Smith College, and an MAT from Columbia Teachers College. A lifelong amateur and professional canoe racer and wilderness canoe paddler, Margaret is a contributing writer for the My Musings blog on the Friends of Topsmead State Park website.
Margaret started a poetry club when she taught at Torrington High School. She also created and taught courses in creative writing and poetry at Pomperaug High School.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- Dana Gioia
- Introduction to Poetry - Billy Collins
- How to Eat a Poem - Eve Merriam
Nature Poetry - A Visit with Tom Nicotera and Sherri Bedingfield
Sandy Carlson, poet laureate of Woodbury, Conn., talks nature poetry with Tom Nicotera and Sherri Bedingfield.
Sheryll (Sherri) Bedingfield is a family therapist, psychotherapist, and a counselor with the Youth & Family Resource Center. She is the proud mother of two sons and twin grandsons. She has two poetry collections, Transitions & Transformations (Antrim House, 2010) and The Clattering, Voices from Old Forfarshire, Scotland (Grayson). Read more about Sherri here.
Tom Nicotera has taught poetry classes and workshops in Washington, D.C., and in Maryland. In Connecticut, Tom ran a poetry series at Susan's Cafe in Granby, and for 25 years was involved as cofounder/coordinator of the Bloomfield Library's Wintonbury Poetry Series. He was editor of Charter Oak Poets II, an anthology of Hartford area poets, and was on the organizing committee for the 2001 Connecticut Poetry Festival at Middlesex Community College. For several years, he was a mentor for the student poetry collaboration between the American School for the Deaf and the Greater Hartford Academy of the Arts. He has a book of poems titled What Better Place To Be Than Here? , and he has published poems in various journals, magazines, and anthologies. “Nathan Hall State Forest” previously appeared in Woodlands, the magazine of the Connecticut Forest and Parks Association.
A Visit with Slava Konoval - Poet and Lawyer
Sandy Carlson, poet laureate of Woodbury, Conn., visits with Vyacheslav (Slava) Konoval, a Ukrainian poet and lawyer whose creative works have been translated into six languages. A writer of poetry for the past two years, Slava's poems have appeared in more than 60 literary magazines and anthologies. He is a member of the Scottish Writer's Federation and has a wide interest in the arts. EPISODE EXTRAS
- Slava on All Poetry
- Slava on Linked-In
- Slava's reading in "Poetry of Struggle and Solidarity" (Takoma Park City TV)
- Slava's reading in War Art Project for Ukraine
- Slava Konoval reads his poem ДО ВОДИ (Trukhaniv’s Island) with The Allingham Arts Festival
- Ukrainian Poet Slava Konoval - Translatit Intae Scots - with the Scots Language Centre
Learn more about Sandy as a local poet laureate and learn more about the People and Their Poems podcast.
A Visit with Rick Magee, poet laureate Bethel, Connecticut
Rick Magee, poet laureate of Bethel, Conn., and an English professor at Sacred Heart University, grew up in California and moved to the East Coast to work on his PhD. His wife Rebecca is also an English professor, and their son Cormac wants to be a writer when he grows up. Rick has published in a variety of online journals and has just recently signed with a publisher for his poetry chapbook.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- VIDEO: An Evening with New Connecticut Poet Laureates - Ridgefield Library
- Opinion: Proud members of the Cool Weirdos Club
- Opinion: My son taught me how to write life’s next act
- Opinion: People think they hate poetry, but aren’t we all poets?
A Visit with Chris Gaffney - Comedian, Poet, Dad
Chris Gaffney is a stay-at-home dad to a 3-year-old girl and 1-year-old boy residing in Wolcott, Connecticut, where he also serves on the board of education. Chris has won the National Society of Newspaper Columnists’ award for best humor column in its category (2019) and served as a keynote speaker at the National At-Home Dad Network’s annual convention (2022), where he presented a talk titled “What Do You Do All Day? Sharing Your Story with Authenticity and Humor.” Currently, he is working on a book called Baby Bump: Poems for and About Expectant Parents. This is the cornerstone of Chris’s initiative to get fathers involved with their childrens’ development at the earliest possible moment in their child’s development.
EPISODE EXTRAS
A Visit with Nicole Garcia - Poet, Educator, Editor
Listen as Sandy Carlson, poet laureate of Woodbury, Conn. (https://sandycarlson.net,) talks with Nicole Caruso Garcia, whose full-length debut poetry collection is Oxblood (Able Muse Press, 2022). Oxblood was named a finalist for the Able Muse Book Award and the Richard Wilbur Award.
Educated at Fairfield University, Nicole holds a BA in English and Religious Studies. After seven years in the corporate sector, she earned her MS in Education from the University of Bridgeport and taught English at Trumbull High School for fifteen years.
Nicole's poetry appears in Best New Poets, Light, Mezzo Cammin, ONE ART, Plume, Rattle, RHINO, and elsewhere. Garcia serves as associate poetry editor at Able Muse and as an executive board member at Poetry by the Sea, an annual poetry conference in Madison, Conn.
EPISODE EXTRAS
A Visit with Jack Powers, Retired Teacher and Poet
Jack Powers taught high school special education, English and writing for 38 years. He won the 2015 and 2012 Connecticut River Review Poetry Contests and was a finalist for the 2014 and 2013 Rattle Poetry Prizes. Jack earned MFAs in fiction and poetry from Sarah Lawrence College, and a BFA in Painting from Syracuse University. He has two poetry collections: Everybody's Vaguely Familiar (2019) and Still Love (2023). Jack has published scores of poems in various journals, including Rattle, The Cortland Review, and The Southern Review.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- Jack Powers Website
- Bard Institute for Writing and Thinking
- Connecticut Writing Project
- Hudson Valley Writers Center
- Everybody's Vaguely Familiar by Jack Powers on Amazon
A Visit with John Stanizzi, Poet
John L. Stanizzi is author of the collections Ecstasy Among Ghosts, Sleepwalking, Dance Against the Wall, After the Bell, Hallelujah Time!, High Tide – Ebb Tide, Four Bits, Chants, Sundowning, and POND. John’s poems have been widely published and have appeared in Prairie Schooner, The Cortland Review, American Life in Poetry, Praxis, The New York Quarterly, Paterson Literary Review, The Caribbean Writer, Blue Mountain Review, Rust + Moth, Tar River, Poetlore, Rattle, Hawk & Handsaw, and many others. His work has been translated into Italian and appears widely in Italy, including in El Ghibli, The Journal of Italian Translations, Bonafini, Poetarium, and others. His nonfiction has been published in Stone Coast Review, Ovunque Siamo, Adelaide, Scarlet Leaf, Literature and Belief, Evening Street, Praxis, and others.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- John L. Stanizzi on The Poetry Foundation
- Article on Combustus
- Brainwaves Video Anthology, featuring three John Stanizzi poems
- John Stanizzi books on Amazon
A Visit with Julie Cook, Musician and Poet
Julie Cook lives in Woodbury, Connecticut, where she is a poet, musician, and music teacher. She has been writing poetry and making music ever since she was a child, playing on the piano her musician father bought for her and her sister. Julie is a member of the Orenaug Chapter of the Connecticut Poetry Society. She is also a member of Feminina Melodia and Music for People.
Episode Extras
A Visit with Deborah Nash Ott - Teacher, Poet, Writer
Born and raised in Rochester, New York, Deborah Nash Ott holds a Masters of Education in Secondary Education, English. She taught for 35 years in the US and abroad. She has led writers' workshops in Bern, Switzerland, and edited the annual creative writing journal Voices for East Granby High School. Deb has published in various small presses. The poetry volume Twin Soul is Deb's collaborative work with Welsh poet Heather Gatley. Her novella Canopy is part of the Connecticut Indie Book Project, published in the Connecticut Bard Review in 2022. She also published a children's book with artist Helen Galick in 2016. Currently she is working on Solid Miss, her first solo collection of poetry.
EPISODE EXTRAS
A Visit with Patricia Lee Lewis - Writer, Educator, Poet
Patricia Lee Lewis has led more than 70 creative writing and yoga retreats in 10 countries and hundreds of creative writing workshops and retreats in the US--mostly at Patchwork Farm Retreat on a little mountain in Westhampton, Massachusetts. Patricia holds a BA from Smith College and an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts in Poetry. She has published an award-winning chapbook of poems, A Kind of Yellow, as well as High Lonesome, a full book of poems. Other publications include a variety of feature articles and photographs on "inner and outer" experiences as a traveler and individual poems in a variety of journals and anthologies over the years. Patricia says, “I've lived a long and active life in grass roots politics, advocating for civil rights, women's rights, peace, social justice.”.
EPISODE EXTRAS
A Visit with Antoinette Brim-Bell, Poet Laureate, State of Connecticut
Antoinette Brim-Bell of West Haven is Connecticut’s eighth poet laureate. She is the author of three full-length poetry collections: These Women You Gave Me, Icarus in Love, and Psalm of the Sunflower. She is a Cave Canem Foundation Fellow and an alumna of Voices of Our Nations Arts Foundation (VONA). Antoinette will be a featured guest at Woodbury Public Library’s Celebrating Poetry day on April 29.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- Antoinette Brim-Bell's website
- Celebrating Poetry Day - Woodbury Public Library - April 2
- Antoinette Brim-Bell - The Poetry Foundation
- Capital Community College
A Visit with Laurel Peterson, Poet Laureate Emeritus of Norwalk
Laurel S. Peterson is a community college English professor whose poetry has been published in many literary journals. She has two poetry chapbooks--That’s the Way the Music Sounds (Finishing Line) and Talking to the Mirror (Last Automat)--as well as two full-length collections–Do You Expect Your Art to Answer? and Daughter of Sky (Futurecycle). She has also written two mystery novels, Shadow Notes and The Fallen (Woodhall). Laurel is on the editorial board of Inkwell magazine, and the Norwalk Public Library Board. Laurel served as Norwalk's poet laureate from April 2016 to April 2019.
EPISODE EXTRAS
A Visit with Melissa Studdard, Poet and Professor
Melissa Studdard is the author of five books, including the poetry collections Dear Selection Committee and I Ate the Cosmos for Breakfast, the poetry chapbook Like a Bird with a Thousand Wings, and the young adult novel Six Weeks to Yehidah. Her work has been featured by NPR, PBS, The New York Times, The Guardian, Ms. Magazine, and Houston Matters, and has also appeared in a wide variety of periodicals, such as POETRY, Kenyon Review, Psychology Today, New Ohio Review, Harvard Review, New England Review, and Poets & Writers. She is a professor in the Lone star System.
EPISODE EXTRAS
A Visit with Dennis Barone - Poet, Professor, Editor
Dennis Barone, professor emeritus at the University of Saint Joseph, was born in New Jersey. He attended Bard College and the University of Pennsylvania. In 1992 he became the Thomas Jefferson Chair in American Studies, The Netherlands. In 1997, Dennis received the America Award in Fiction for Echoes. He received the first faculty scholarship award at the University of Saint Joseph in 2016. He has published 27 books as author or editor, including Garnet Poems: An Anthology of Connecticut Poetry Since 1776 (Wesleyan UP 2012), Beyond the Red Notebook: Essays on Paul Auster (U of Penn P 1995), Beyond Memory: Italian Protestants in Italy and America (SUNY P 2016), New Hungers for Old: One Hundred Years of Italian American Poetry (Star Cloud 2012), Second Thoughts (prose, Bordighera P 2017), Frame Narrative (poetry 2018), Walkers in the City ( a COVID poetry chapbook anthology Rain Taxi 2021), A Field Guide to the Rehearsal (poetry 2022).
EPISODE EXTRAS
A Visit with Pegi Deitz Shea - Author and Poet
Pegi Deitz Shea, two-time winner of the CT Book Award, has published more than 500 works of poetry, nonfiction, fiction, and children's books. She founded and directs Poetry Rocks, and was the inaugural Poet Laureate of Vernon. She is president of the CT Coalition of Poets Laureate.
EPISODE EXTRAS
A Visit with Jessica Cuello - Poet, Editor, Teacher
Jessica Cuello is poetry editor at Tahoma Review and has been a French and English teacher in the public schools for 27 years. Her books include Liar (Barrow Street 2021), Yours Creature (JackLeg 2023), Hunt (Word Works 2017), and Pricking (Tiger Bark 2016). Cuello was the recipient of The 2018 New Ohio Review Poetry Prize, The 2013 New Letters Poetry Prize, and a 2015 Saltonstall Writing Fellowship. In 2014 she was awarded The Decker Award from Hollins University for outstanding secondary teaching.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- Jessica Cuello's Website
- The Bird Girl on Interim Poetics
- Laundromat with Single Mother in Missouri Review
- Out, Out by Robert Frost on The Poetry Foundation
- Tahoma Literary Review
A Visit with Tom Nicotera - Poet, Teacher, Performer
Tom Nicotera has taught poetry classes and workshops in Washington, D.C., including at Immaculata College and Georgetown University. Tom ran a poetry series in Takoma Park, Maryland, that included Beat writers such as Charles Plymell and Herbert Huncke. He also coproduced a Jazz-Poetry Day on the Washington Monument Grounds in D.C.
In Connecticut, Tom ran a poetry series at Susan's Cafe in Granby, and for 25 years, was involved as cofounder/coordinator of the Bloomfield Library's Wintonbury Poetry Series. He was editor of Charter Oak Poets II, an anthology of Hartford area poets, and was on the organizing committee for the 2001 Connecticut Poetry Festival at Middlesex Community College. He was a member of the performance poetry trio "Not Just Any Tom, Vic and Terri" and for four years produced the "Celebrate Bloomfield" Poetry Event featuring 17 Bloomfield poets. For several years, he was a mentor for the student poetry collaboration between the American School for the Deaf and the Greater Hartford Academy of the Arts.
To earn money, Tom has worked as a Report Department Editor and Proofreader at the accounting firms Coopers & Lybrand in Washington, D.C., and Blum Shapiro in Connecitcut. In addition, Tom was a professional mime and juggler for six years, performing at deaf schools around the country, and street performing in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Baltimore, and New Orleans. He has a book of poems titled What Better Place To Be Than Here? (Kanona, NY: Foothills Publishing, 2016), and he has published poems in various journals, magazines, and anthologies.
Contact Tom via email at tomdnicotera@gmail.com to purchase his book.
A Visit with Suzanne Frischkorn - Poet, Essayist, Editor
Suzanne Frischkorn is a poet, essayist, and editor. She is the author of Fixed Star (JackLeg Press2022) as well as the books Girl on a Bridge and Lit Windowpane (both from Main Street Rag Press). Her chapbooks are American Flamingo, Spring Tide, Red Paper Flower, Exhale, and The Tactile Sense. She is the recipient of The Writer’s Center Emerging Writers Fellowship for Lit Windowpane and the Aldrich Poetry Award for her chapbook Spring Tide, selected by Mary Oliver. Suzanne earned an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Connecticut Commission on Culture & Tourism, and a 2023 SWWIM Residency at The Betsy Hotel – South Beach. Her poems have appeared in Copper Nickel, Ecotone, Indiana Review, The Los Angeles Review, North American Review, Tahoma Literary Review, Verse Daily, Conversation Pieces: Poems That Talk to Other Poems, part of the Everyman’s Library Pocket Poet Series (Knopf), Dear America: Letters of Hope, Habitat, Defiance, and Democracy (Trinity University Press 2020), NPR’s Poetry Moment podcast, and elsewhere. She is an editor at $ – Poetry Is Currency and serves on the Terrain.org editorial board. Her books are available on Bookshop, Barnes & Noble, Amazon, and Indiebound.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- Suzanne Frischkorn website
- Purchase Suzanne Frischkorn's books
- Register for Suzanne's online reading at the Syracuse Writing Center on Jan. 27
A Visit with Barb Jennes, poet laureate, Ridgefield, CT
B. Fulton Jennes ("Barb") Jennes spent the first 25 years of her career as an advertising copywriter and freelance corporate writer and editor. After volunteering to run creative writing programs at her daughter's elementary school, she decided to pursue a teaching degree, leading to a 16-year second career as a public-school English teacher.
Upon retiring in 2017, Jennes returned to her first love: poetry. She is Poet Laureate of Ridgefield, Connecticut, where she also serves as poet-in-residence at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum. Her poems have appeared in The Comstock Review, Tupelo Quarterly, Connecticut River Review, The Night Heron Barks, Tar River Poetry, SWIMM, Anti-Heroin Chic, Pareidolia Literary, Extreme Sonnets II, and many other journals and anthologies. Her poem “Glyphs of a Gentle Going” was awarded the 2022 Lascaux Prize and is a nominee for the 2023 Pushcart Prize. Jennes’s collection Mammoth Spring was a finalist for the 2021 Two Sylvias Wilder Prize and also the Small Harbor Press Laureate Prize. Her collection Blinded Birds (Finishing Line Press, 2022) was named Winner of the 2022 International Book Awards in the poetry chapbook category; “Ghazal: For a Wild Child, Grown” – a poem from that collection – is also a nominee for the 2023 Pushcart Prize.
Barb lives in Ridgefield with husband Chuck. Blinded Birds is available at Bookshop.com or any local independent book seller. Barb's 2023 resolution is to try her hand at writing short stories.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- Barb Jennes on Facebook
- Helix Literary Magazine Interview
- Moth storytelling video
- Blinded Birds - Finishing Line Press
A Visit with Sarah Marze, Musician, Composer, Vocalist
Sarah Marze is a composer, vocalist, and conductor from Canton, CT. She is an Honors Student studying Music Composition and Vocal Performance at the University of Connecticut with professors Dr. Kenneth Fuchs and Dr. Constance Rock. In 2019, she was selected as a UConn Holster Scholar, completing her original song cycle, Songs of Salem, 1692, based on the poetry of local poet Ginny Lowe Connors. Sarah is also the president and co-founder of a student organization, the UConn Composer-Ensemble Collaboration, which has produced three concerts of student compositions.
Sarah also enjoys being the assistant conductor with the UConn Festival Chorus. This past summer, she received an UConn IDEA Grant for her project, Let Us Sing: Contemporary Art Songs for Young Singers, which was a collaboration with six poets from the Connecticut Poetry Society. Among her recent performance credits are singing the role Lucy in The Telephone by Giancarlo Menotti and performing in the concerto competition winners’ concert. Sarah is most looking forward to creating and performing a one-woman opera for UConn Opera’s spring production in collaboration with librettist Alize Rozsnyai.
Sarah was chosen as a Marshall Scholar, and will be pursuing a Master’s of Music Composition at a conservatory in London. More of her music can be found on her website.
EPISODE EXTRAS
BONUS: Holiday Peace Poetry Reading Rebroadcast
Several of Connecticut's leading poets and poets laureate share their works in this holiday peace reading, presented by the Oliver Wolcott Library in Litchfield, Conn. Jim Kelleher, of the Oliver Wolcott Poets, is the organizer and host for this seasonal celebration of peace and hope.
- Rennie McQuilkin, Connecticut poet laureate emeritus
- Ginny Lowe Connors, West Hartford, CT, poet laureate emerita
- Joan Hoffman, Canton, CT, poet laureate
- Sandy Carlson, Woodbury, CT, poet laureate
- Robert Piazza, Litchfield, CT, poet laureate
- Barb Jennes, Ridgefield, CT, poet laureate
- Karen Silk, Washington, CT, poet laureate
- Rick Magee, Bethel CT, poet laureate
- Deborah Rose, New Milford, CT, poet laureate
- Jack Sheedy, Harwinton, CT
- Patricia Martin, Torrington, CT
- Jim Kelleher, Goshen, CT
Visit with Katie Schneider, writer, co-host FUMFA Live
Host Sandy Carlson talks with Katherine Schneider, a poet and adult ESL professional living in Norwalk, CT. She holds an MFA from Fairfield University's low residency MFA program where she worked closely with Baron Wormser and the late Dr. Kim Bridgford. She has also received an MA in TESOL and has taught ESL to adult students in the greater NYC area for 10 years.
Being an active participant in writing/poetry community is important to Katie. She co-founded and co-hosts the literary livestream FUMFA Poets & Writers Live (@fumfalive) with her MFA colleague, fiction writer Chris Belden. She is also engaged with combining poetry with music and other creative arts. Her endeavors in this regard can be followed at @the_story_of_how.
Her first chapbook, I Used to Remember the Story of How, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2019. Her publication credits for individual poems include Ruminate, Blue Line, The Poetry Porch, The Paddock Review, and Collateral. Her poem "Breath" was also a nominee for a Pushcart Prize.
Katie has recently completed a manuscript, which constitutes her first book-length manuscript, entitled Breaking the Fever. This manuscript leans even more heavily into vulnerability in religious, romantic, and political social contexts explored in her first chapbook, and it takes the reader as much into personal memory as it does into literal and abstract Holy Land. It brings the reader on a journey of longing, revelation, ecstasy, and pain to arrive at a place of hard-won faith in self-worth.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- Check out FUMFA Poets & Writers Live on Facebook
- I Used to Remember the Story of How is available on Finishing Line Press
SPECIAL PROMO: Sandy and Jim Kelleher Discuss an Upcoming Virtual Poetry Event
Sandy and Jim discuss an event Jim organized, featuring some of the best poets in Connecticut. Listen in and learn more about the Holiday Peace Poetry Reading - Dec. 15, 7 to 8:30 p.m., presented by the Oliver Wolcott Library - with Jim, Sandy, and many more, including previous People and their Poems guests Jack Sheedy, Patricia Martin, and Faith Vicinanza.
ZOOM LINK: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85727527458?pwd=MFZyVDR6Mnk5U3YxWU1zakRlSDdKQT09
A Visit with Jim Kelleher, Poet and Teacher
Host Sandy Carlson (peopleandtheirpoems.net and www.sandycarlson.net) visits with Jim Kelleher, who teaches literature and composition at Northwestern Connecticut Community College. He has published three books of poetry and taught in public schools and libraries across northwestern Connecticut.
EPISODE EXTRAS
- Mick: A Celestial Drama on Antrim House
- Quarry on Amazon
- Holiday Peace Poetry Reading - Dec. 15, 7 to 8:30 p.m., presented by the Oliver Wolcott Library - with Jim, Sandy, and many more, including previous People and their Poems guests Jack Sheedy, Patricia Martin, and Faith Vicinanza. ZOOM LINK
Visit with Nancy McMillan, Writer and Teacher
In this episode, Sandy talks with Nancy McMillan of Bethlehem, CT. Nancy is the award-winning author of March Farm: Season by Season on a Connecticut Family Farm. Her essay “For the Love of Linen” (CT Lit Anthology 2020) was a Pushcart Prize nominee. Litchfield Magazine publishes her feature stories, one of which won first place in the CT Press Club 2022 Contest. Her work has appeared in Pangyrus, The Sunlight Press, Persimmon Tree, Fiction Southeast, and Edible Nutmeg, and her reviews have run in Connecticut newspapers. She directs the writing program at Arts Escape (Southbury, CT), where she helps students embrace and inhabit their innate creativity.
Episode Extras
Visit with Nadine Cascini and Jim Hinkle, owners Studio Hill Gallery
Host Sandy Carlson (www.sandycarlson.net), poet laureate of Woodbury, CT, talks with Nadine Cascini and Jim Hinkle, owners of Studio Hill Gallery.
Studio Hill is an art gallery, studio, and shop where artists collaborate their talents to offer their artistic creations in a welcoming and imaginative environment. It features both local and international artists of all different medias, along with a bookstore and gift shop where customers can browse with complementary refreshments. It's located on Main Street in the historic small town of Woodbury.
Episode Extras
- Visit Studio Hill Gallery online at https://www.studiohillct.com.
Visit with Patricia Martin, Author, Poet, Communications Professional
Sandy talks with Patricia about the influence of meaningful lyrics on Patricia during the heyday of the Beatles' invasion, about Patricia the roles of mentors, and of responding to opportunity when it presents itself in the development of her craft.
Patricia is an author, poet, performer/actor, and freelance writer/communications professional who has been featured at numerous venues, festivals, on radio and television, and published in various periodicals and anthologies. A member of the Author’s Guild and Nonfiction Author’s Association, Martin is the author of six nonfiction books and a poetry collection. She collaborated on a CD with composer/producer/musician Gus Mancini.
Episode Extras
- Learn more about Patricia Martin
- In Venice I Could Sing on Amazon
- Martin and Mancini
- Contact Patricia via email
Visit with Elizabeth Kutepov, Writer, Painter, Musician
In this episode, Sandy talks with Elizabeth Kutepov, a writer, musician, and painter living in Roxbury, CT. Elizabeth, whose stage name is Rap to God, talks about searching for the truth and finding the creative source at the heart of each of us as she discusses the place of writing in her search for personal peace. Her book is available on Amazon.
Episode Extras
BONUS EPISODE: At the Garden - An Arts Escape Session
During a trip with Arts Escape of Southbury, CT, to Hollister House Garden in Washington, CT, Sandy wrote two poems that she read at an Arts Escape event Sept. 24, 2022.
Hollister House boasts a classic garden in the English manner, with a loosely formal structure, informally planted in generous abundance situated in the Litchfield hills of Northwestern Connecticut. It's an ideal place to capture a variety of flower photos, spend time painting a landscape, to sit and write, or wander meditatively through the pathways.
Visit with Faith Vicinanza, Adventurer, Artist, Photographer, Poet, and Cybersecurity Pro
Sandy talks with Southbury, CT, poet and artist Faith Vicinanza, who discusses her role in slam poetry in Connecticut, the influence of others to drive us toward poetry, and the vital relationship between the poet as performer and the audience.
Episode Extras
- Faith on Amazon
- Faith Vicinanza on Instagram
- See Faith's work on YouTube
- More about Faith in this 2005 article in The Newtown Bee
- Text of Mary Oliver's Wild Geese
- Mary Oliver reads Wild Geese
- Gallery 25, New Milford, CT
- Arts Escape, Southbury, CT
Visit with Jack Sheedy, Journalist, Copywriter, and Poet
In this conversation with Litchfield County (CT) poet and writer Jack Sheedy, Sandy talks with Jack about his experiences as a youthful journalist selling a family newspaper, working as a reporter in local journalism as an adult, and his experiences of poetry as both reader and writer. He shares with us a dramatic reading of Robert Browning's poem "My Last Duchess," a poem by Jean Sands "Close but not Touching," both of which inspired him. He also reads his own work "The Wanting "Place."
Episode Extras
Visit with Donna Marie Merritt, Poet and Children's Author
In this episode, Sandy talks with poet and children's author Donna Marie Merritt of Watertown, CT. Donna talks about the down-to-earth poetry she read as a young person that showed her it's OK to be yourself. Donna also reflects on the symbotlic relationship between her life and her poetry.
Episode Extras
BONUS EPISODE - "Remembering" - A Studio Hill Session
In this bonus episode, Sandy talks about the importance of "remembering" during a Woodbury (CT) Arts Association Arts Walk Thursday, Aug. 18.
This episode is a part of the Studio Hill Sessions, talks that Sandy has given during the open mic sessions at the gallery during the event.
Studio Hill Gallery at 507 Main Street South in Woodbury, Connecticut (https://www.studiohillct.com/) hosts a spoken word event as part of the Arts Alliance of Woodbury's (https://www.artsallianceofwoodbury.org/) walk on the third Thursdays of the month from May through August. This video is from my contribution to the event, which developed into a conversation about what it means to remember. The book I refer to is Poems on the Edge of Extinction edited by Chris McCabe (https://www.hachette.co.uk/titles/chris-mccabe/poems-from-the-edge-of-extinction/9781473693012/).
Visit with Amy Dorio, educator and poet
In this episode 3, Sandy talks with Woodbury, CT, poet Amy Dorio (@amy_dorio on Twitter), an educator who writes poetry. Amy reflects on her father's influence on her interest in and pursuit of poetry and the potential for poetry to transform students' lives as they learn to read poetic language as well as to write it.
Extras:
- "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOT4NUKBNIU
- Connecticut Writer's Project: https://cwp.uconn.edu/
- Connecticut Writer's Project magazine: https://cwp.uconn.edu/ct-student-writers-magazine-2/
- Gwendolyn Brooks piece: https://www.flickr.com/photos/mongibeddu/63311221/in/album-1366997/
Visit with Polly Brody, Poet, Essayist, and Memoirist
In this episode, Sandy talks with Polly Brody of Southbury, CT, a prolific lifelong writer who has written memoirs and essays as well as poems. Polly talks about the experiences and texts that have influenced her writing as well as how her writing has influenced her life. She reads a poem by contemporary American poet Mark Doty as well a work of her own. For more about Polly's books, contact her at berylline33@gmail.com.
- Samples of Polly's work at Antrim House
- 2005 story on Polly in The Newtown Bee
Visit with Pat Mottola, president, Connecticut Poetry Society
Connecticut poet Pat Mottola, who is president of the Connecticut Poetry Society, and Sandy talk about art history and poetry, the significance of red dresses, Pat's connection to veterans, and Pat's poetry.
In this episode, Pat reads “What Do Women Want?” by Kim Addonizio and her own poem, I Shelve My Lovers Alphabetically, which appears below.
Side by side they fight and bicker
over me, the p’s, pathetic losers, pushing
the s’s, those selfish men who never share.
I treat them like broken toys, boys I used
to love, now useless, taking up space.
I try to forget their flaws, or why I needed
them, the i’s, insensitive and insecure,
the j’s, jealous of the b’s—those bad boys
who keep me coming back, a few to whom
I almost said I do, when I didn’t.
And so it goes, the g’s groping everyone,
the f ’s fighting back, s’s smooth and smug.
I watch the good kissers rub shoulders
with the liars and losers. I wonder
where I found them. Sometimes
I cross-reference, move them around
just because I can. I sort them out,
touch them inappropriately. I can’t let go.
I should make up my mind, decide
who stays. Instead, I keep them all.
By the time I get to the y’s I run out
of space, no room for you,
the one I’ve not yet met, the one
to whom I might have said yes, oh yes.
Introduction
This podcast is coming soon. Look for my first episode in August.