Saturday, December 30, 2006

Terry and Jenifer on the Road to...

Upcoming Events for Jenifer and Terry. Burning Word to to be added soon.

Saturday, January 13, 2007, 8 p.m. Richard Hugo House, Jenifer and Terry. New Voices from Blue Begonia Press. Co-sponsored by the Richard Hugo House. 1634 11th Ave, Seattle, WA (206) 322-7030. http://www.hugohouse.org/events/ email programs2@hugohouse.org

Sunday, January 28, 2007, 7:30ish, Sirens Pub & Restaurant 832 Water Street, Port Townsend, WA. Jenifer will be joining her favorite group of Fort Worden diehard writers for a weekend retreat, culminating in an open mic pub invasion. Stop by Sunday evening for a beer and a poem if you’re in town.

Thursday, February 8, 2007, 7 p.m. Northwind Arts Center. Jenifer and Terry. Northwinds Art Center, 2409 Jefferson St, Port Townsend, WA (360) 379-1086. http://www.northwindarts.org/poetry.html

Thursday, February 15, 2007, 7 p.m. SoulFood Poetry Night, Jenifer reading with Dan Peters. SoulFood Books, 15748 Redmond Way, Redmond, WA 98052 (425) 881-5309 Redmond, WA http://soulfood.booksense.com/NASApp/store/IndexJsp email info@soulfoodbooks.com

Tuesday, March 6, 2007, Noon, Foothills Writers Series, Jenifer and Terry. Reading held in the Little Theater, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd
Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 452-9277 http://www.pc.ctc.edu/news/foothills.asp email tinah@pcadmin.ctc.edu

Saturday, May 19, 2007 at 4:00 p.m. Newberry Books, 561 NE Ravenna Blvd., Seattle. PoetsWest features Chris Jarmick, David Keysor, Jenifer Browne Lawrence. Open mike. MC Robinson Bolkum. Contact J. Glenn Evans 206.682.1268 or info@poetswest.com.

Saturday, June 2, 2007, 7 p.m., Jenifer at the Poulsbohemian Coffeehouse, 19003 Front St, Poulsbo, WA (360) 779-9199 http://homepages.donobi.net/pbch/ email carriegilstrap-nettle@bbwc.biz

Friday, December 22, 2006

The Secret Language of Women, First Review





from the Midwest Review


The Secret Language of Women
Terry Martin
Blue Begonia Press
224 South 15th Avenue, Yakima, WA 98902-3821
0911287574 $15.00
www.bluebegoniapress.com

English teacher and published poet Terry Martin presents The Secret Language of Women, an anthology of free-verse poetry that reexamines domestic life from the feminine perspective, reflects upon the sad fragility of all things, and explores innermost hopes and dreams. A gentle, reflective, and insightful whisper into the true meanings behind the building blocks of language. "Until They Told You What it Did to Rachel": and you never even thought about it, / never once considered / how your offhand comparison / to those who had slaughtered / her aunts and uncles / in Dachau, Auschwitz, Treblinka // discounted unfathomable loss, / trivializing her heartbreak / with your careless use / of that one small word. / Tonight, dark trains clatter / the tracks of your dreams.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

One Hundred Steps' First Review





"Within the ever-growing population of poetry, Jenifer Browne Lawrence is a voice to follow, for in the following one will be amazed for all the brightness achieved amidst shadow."


Here's the full review from Rattle: Poetry for the 21st Century:

review by: Natasha Kochicheril Moni

ONE HUNDRED STEPS FROM SHORE
by Jenifer Browne Lawrence


Blue Begonia Press, 225 S. 15 th Avenue, Yakima, WA 98902; ISBN-13: 978-0-911287-56-1 (pbk.: alk.paper), ISBN-10: 0-911287-56-6 (pbk.: alk.paper), 79pp., $15.00 www.bluebegoniapress.com


In photography, the technique of burning an image is employed to darken what may otherwise appear too light or under-exposed. To dodge stands for the reverse, as in lightening an overexposed item thereby rendering more crisp. Jenifer Browne Lawrence's first collection One Hundred Steps From Shore, demonstrates the poetic equivalent of dodging and burning. Through the vehicle of explored memory, Lawrence provides a lucid picture of what keeps/distorts in the presence of grief.

Dark, his eyes
spark memories that crack
like the chocolate coating
on soft-dipped cones we mouthed
on our trips to town--how the hard shell
flaked off, where vanilla pushed out
dripping, how it had to be licked at once,
before any of it touched our skin.
(from "Replacing the Deck")

Lyrically masterful yet spare, Lawrence invites her readers to witness as in these lines from the title piece "One Hundred Steps from Shore":

The policeman asks what I saw, what I heard.
He wants to know if I heard a screech.
I tell him no, just a thud and I ran to see
and I saw her. He asks me what I saw,
what I heard. I tell him I smelled pennies.

The characters in Lawrence's poems continue their attempts to rescue--mallards, garter snakes, a porcupine "in my shirt mews and mews / how did I come to be / the ferryman burying over / and over the same stick in the water" (from "Porcupine Child") as they cope with the loss of the young Carolyn. And with this impulse "The lesson has been passed through / generations like a relay baton: We do not save each other." (from "Making Out") But there is more than the relationship of family-to-family, "Learning To Paint" (section 3) is thick with growing up in Valdez, Alaska while "Tales From the 20 th Century" (section 4) revises the story of love.

One Hundred Steps From Shore, as with skilled creative nonfiction, achieves the delicate, critical balance between personal/universal with grace and precision. Lawrence creates a world within each quarter slice of her collection, drawing light where necessary:

Once, she thought she was going to do it,
hold her breath exactly forever,
but she awoke with a leaf on her chest,
dizzy and missing her mom.
(from “A Cottonwood Leaf Can Be Taken Apart”)

A sensory experience, One Hundred Steps From Shore speaks to an audience in the language of layered tongues. Within the ever-growing population of poetry, Jenifer Browne Lawrence is a voice to follow, for in the following one will be amazed for all the brightness achieved amidst shadow.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

One Hundred Steps in the News

Jenifer Lawrence's first book, One Hundred Steps from Shore, is a Best Seller!

One Hundred Steps was recently listed in the top five paperbacks sold by Eagle Harbor Books.


Also, the poem "
It was Snowing and it was going to Snow" is going to be in an anthology called "Poem, Revised-- A behind-the-scenes look at writing poetry". Marion Street Press will publish the book in 2008. Several versions of the poem together with a kind of running commentary on how the changes came about will be printed in their entirety.

Check back soon for more information on Jenifer's upcoming readings and a video of her first reading from the book at the Poulsbohemian.

Monday, November 13, 2006

100 Steps from Shore at Eagle Harbor Books














John Willson introducing the poets















Jenifer reads from her book

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Upcoming Readings for Jenifer Lawrence

Join Jenifer for a special book launch celebration for One Hundred Steps from Shore this Saturday!
(*click links for more information)

October 21, 2006, 7pm Poulsbohemian Coffeehouse, Poulsbo

Then, be sure to mark your calendar for the following dates. Check back for more TBA readings

(maybe you can follow her around in a van like a Deadhead...a JenHead?)

November 12, 2006, 3pm Eagle Harbor Books, Bainbridge Island, WA

February 8, 2007, 7pm Northwind Gallery, Port Townsend, WA

February 15, 2007, 7pm SoulFood Books, Redmond, WA (reading with special guest, Dan Peters)

March 6, 2007 , 12pm Foothills Writers Series, Peninsula College, Port Angeles

June 2, 2007, 7pm Poulsbohemian Coffeehouse, Poulsbo, WA

Saturday, October 07, 2006

The Secret Language in the news


From Kim Nowacki the Yakima Herald Republic:(click for entire article)


The book is a warm, candid and insightful memoir of the nonverbal traditions -- gesture, habit, disposition -- that pass among women. Martin's prose is subtle in its power to relate what connects a mother and child, sisters, friends and romantic relationships.

---

Martin conveys with a poignant but astute observance, the wide-eyed wonderment and reckless abandonment of childhood, as well as the perils of growing older and then finally solace, and where to find it.

"It's absolutely the best work I can do at this point in my life," she says.

"So now it's a blank page again."

Friday, September 29, 2006

One Hundred Steps from Shore


Jenifer Browne Lawrence reading Red Shrine from her debut book from Blue Begonia Press


Please join Jenifer and Blue Begonia Press for a special book launch reading and celebration, Saturday, October 21st, at the Poulsbohemian Coffehouse.

for more information and to order, visit Blue Begonia Press

*Correction to the credits: Cover Design by Craig Naugle.

The Secret Language of Women


Terry Martin reads from her new book, "The Secret Language of Women".

Please join Terry and Blue Begonia Press for a special book launch and reading, Saturday, October 7th, 7pm at Oak Hollow Gallery in Yakima.

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Sunday, July 30, 2006

Weathered Pages and Terry Martin


Jewel Box Theatre, 225 Iverson St., Poulsbo, WA 98370,
contact Jenifer Lawrence at jewelboxpoets@comcast.net


Coming up on September 17, 2006
Terry Martin and the Weathered Pages Poets.


Terry Martin is the author of The Secret Language of Women, just out from Blue Begonia Press. Says Lucinda Roy of Terry’s work: “…Terry Martin paints a portrait of a world in which the most crucial language is often wordless and mystical. In these powerful poems, the sublime is housed within the domestic: kitchens are cathedrals, and the geometry of rituals sustained by women teach us how to sing. Even as she acknowledges the transience and fragility of all things, Martin finds constancy in the patience of boulders, and locates hope in the brilliant firelight of the firefly. This is a collection about what we dare to love and what dares to love us back. It’s a celebration of the many paths we take as we edge toward the warm, the changing light.


In addition, this program will bring together several writers from the Weathered Pages Anthology.


A six-foot cedar post, the word POETRY carved on both the east and west sides, planted in a garden on a street corner in Yakima, pushpins stuck in the wood. For ten years, hundreds of people have pinned thousands of poems to the Poetry Pole at Blue Begonia Press. After time in the weather, the pages have been taken down and saved—until now. This book includes over 200 poems by poets from all corners of the country and from around the world, who have joined poets from Yakima in posting their work. Some contributors are being published here for the first time; others are internationally known. Poems collected here represent a decade of testimony pinned and flying from a cedar post planted in a garden. They may trigger what you're looking for in your own life.

There is room on the Poetry Pole for everybody.


October 15 brings to the Jewel Box--Kevin Miller and Joseph Green, outstanding Washington poets, and November 19 features the last program of the year with the fiery wit of Jeannine Hall Gailey, reading with Seattle poet Judith Skillman.


The Jewel Box Poets are taking December off to shop, wrap, rest and plan for 2007. The first reading of the new year will be held Sunday, January 21, 2007.

Sunday, June 04, 2006

Saturday, June 03, 2006

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Friday, May 19, 2006

Lynn Martin Reading Tuesday May 30th

From Wauna--Lynn Martin



Parker Room, Higher Education Center, YVCC
Reading Begin at 730







“Arising from a sequence of great losses, Lynn
Martin’s poems walk straight into the deepest sorrow. There, face to face with the most terrifying state of not knowing, they expand outward to the farthest rim of
affirmation—where the blue bowl holds everything.”
—Noelle Oxenhandler, Essayist, The New Yorker


Wednesday, May 10, 2006

YVCC Weathered Pages Reading

730 pm Parker Room, Higher Education Center,

Free and open to the public

Featuring YVCC Students and Staff

From YakimaMay 15th: Editors, Weathered Pages Anthology Jim Bodeen, Terry Martin, and Rob Prout.


A six-foot cedar post, the word POETRY carved on both the east and west sides, planted in a garden on a street corner in Yakima, pushpins stuck in the wood. For ten years, hundreds of people have pinned thousands of poems to the Poetry Pole at Blue Begonia Press. After time in the weather, the pages have been taken down and saved—until now. Poems collected here represent a decade of testimony pinned and flying from a cedar post planted in a garden. They may trigger what you're looking for in your own life.

There is room on the Poetry Pole for everybody


Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Scenes from Gayle Kaune Lecture/Reading

Gayle Kaune at YVCC's Writers and Ideas Reading
April 3rd.









with Travis Hantz













with Ashley Hood

Scenes from Cashmere Reading






Thanks to Derek Sheffield for setting up the reading and sending these images.
Next reading, Burning Word Festival, Whidbey Island

Sunday, April 16, 2006

From Friday's On Magazine YHR

from YHR's Kim Nowacki, in On Magazine First Anniversary Issue


Writers and Ideas poetry class returns this spring to Yakima Valley Community College.

But you don't have to be a YVCC student to attend....A portion of the class is open to the public and features free readings by poets who have been published in Yakima's Blue Begonia Press.

All readings are on Mondays at 730pm at YVCC in the Parker Room of the Deccio Higher Education Center, 1000 S. 12th Ave.

(This week's) reading will be by Charles Potts, a member of the 1968 Berkeley poetry explosion and author of numerous books, including an underground class "Valga Krusa."

A serious poet with a political bent and a smirking sense of humor, Potts can be found these days working out of an old Masonic temple-turned-Bohemian paradise--a place of literary and artistic worship--in downtown Walla Walla.

The remaining Writers and Ideas reading dates and poets are:

May 1: Judith Skillman, Seattle
May 15th, "Weathered Pages" editors, Yakima
May 3oth: Lynn Martin, Wauna, Wash.

Charles Potts at YVCC


April 17th: Charles Potts has had a dozen books of poetry published since 1996, the most recent: The Portable Potts from Albuquerque’s West End Press in 2005. Other new titles still in print include three from Blue Begonia Press in Yakima: Kiot: Selected Early Poems, 1963-1977, Lost River Mountain and Slash & Burn; Across the North Pacific from Slough Press; a reprint of Little Lord Shiva: The Berkeley Poems, 1968, from Glass Eye Books; and Nature Lovers from Pleasure Boat Studio. Other books in print include How the South Finally Won the Civil War: And Controls the Political Future of the United States.

Friday, March 24, 2006

Writers and Ideas Reading Spring Series

ALL READINGS at YVCC in the PARKER ROOM, DECCIO BUILDING, Beginning at 730pm
Click for video preview.

April 3rd: Gayle Kaune has published widely in literary magazines including Willow Springs, Seattle Review, Greenfield Review, Centennial Review and South Florida Poetry Review. Her poems have won several Washington Poets’ Association Awards, the Ben Hur Lampman Prize and been nominated for a Pushcart prize. Her chapbook, Concentric Circles, won the Flume Press award and her book, Still Life in the Physical World is available from Blue Begonia Press. Gayle has recently relocated from the Eastern Washington desert to Port Townsend, WA.

April 17th: Charles Potts
has had a dozen books of poetry published since 1996, the most recent: The Portable Potts from Albuquerque’s West End Press in 2005. Other new titles still in print include three from Blue Begonia Press in Yakima: Kiot: Selected Early Poems, 1963-1977, Lost River Mountain and Slash & Burn; Across the North Pacific from Slough Press; a reprint of Little Lord Shiva: The Berkeley Poems, 1968, from Glass Eye Books; and Nature Lovers from Pleasure Boat Studio. Other books in print include How the South Finally Won the Civil War: And Controls the Political Future of the United States.


May 1st: Judith Skillman is the recipient of numerous awards, including the Eric Mathieu King Fund from the Academy of American Poets for her book “Storm,” Blue Begonia Press, 1998. Grants include a Writer’s Fellowship from the Washington State Arts Commission, a publication prize and public arts grant from the King County Arts Commission. Her poems have appeared in FIELD, Poetry, Southern Review, Seneca Review, The Iowa Review, Prairie Schooner, Journal of the American Medical Association, Fiberarts, Northwest Review, and many other journals. Skillman’s “Heat Lightning: New and Selected Poems 1986 – 2006 “ was published in early 2006 by Silverfish Review Press. “Coppelia, Certain Digressions,” is due out in the fall of 2006 from David Robert Books. Skillman is a Faculty Member at City University in Bellevue, Washington.

May 15th: Editors, Weathered Pages Anthology, Jim Bodeen, Terry Martin, and Rob Prout. A six-foot cedar post, the word POETRY carved on both the east and west sides, planted in a garden on a street corner in Yakima, Washington, pushpins stuck in the wood. For ten years, hundreds of people have pinned thousands of poems to the Poetry Pole at Blue Begonia Press. Weathered Pages is a sampling of the work of those who have used the Poetry Pole as a source of inspiration.

After time in the weather, the pages have been taken down and saved—until now. Poems collected here represent a decade of testimony pinned and flying from a cedar post planted in a garden. They may trigger what you're looking for in your own life. There is room on the Poetry Pole for everybody.


May 30th: Lynn Martin “Arising from a sequence of great losses, Lynn Martin’s poems walk straight into the deepest sorrow. There, face to face with the most terrifying state of not knowing, they expand outward to the farthest rim of affirmation—where the blue bowl holds everything.” —Noelle Oxenhandler, Essayist, The New Yorker

Friday, February 24, 2006

Blue Begonia at Burning Word


The Washington Poets Association presents

Burning Word 2006

The Festival of Poetic Fire!

At Historic Greenbank Farm on Whidbey Island, WA
Saturday, April 29, 2005 - All Day!

All Day-All Event Passes: only $15 Adults, $7.50 Students

The Washington Poets Association will commemorate its 35th anniversary Saturday April 29th by presenting "Burning Word 2006", a dynamic, all-day celebration of poetry, music, performance, and workshops, featuring more than 40 talented poets and musicians, ranging from renown award-winning poets to hot new talents you'll want to discover.

The 2005 Main Stage will feature the non-stop excitement of more than 40 accomplished poet/performers. Festival headliners this year are internationally acclaimed poets Carolyn Kizer and Tess Gallagher. Also featured will be Madeline DeFrees, Tara Hardy, Ilya Kaminski, and Amalio MadueƱo.

The other outstanding Main Stage talent includes: Caleb and Rijl Barber, Bart Baxter, Jim Bodeen, Gloria Burgess, John Burgess, Lyn Coffin, Barton Cole, Sharon Cumberland, j.d. crosato, J.Glenn Evans, Thomas Hubbard, Holly Hughes, Paul Hunter, Christopher J. Jarmick, Don Kentop, Claudia Mauro, Terry Martin, Jack McCarthy, Tiffany Midge, Kevin Miller, Jed Meyers, John Olson, Peter Pereira, Eve Preus, Martha Silano, Joni Takanikos, Kary Wayson, the Weathered Pages poets, Brian Whittingham, Jane Winslow, and Pieter Zilinsky.

Weathered Pages in the Olympics


FIVE POETS TO READ FROM A WEATHERED PAGES

ANTHOLOGY AT MARCH 14 FOOTHILLS PRESENTATION

PORT ANGELES, Washington (February –, 2006)—On Tuesday, March 14, Peninsula College’s Foothills Writers Series will present a special program featuring readings by five poets whose work appears in the Weathered Pages anthology.

The book had its official debut last September at Bumbershoot and since then Weathered Pages readings have been held all over the state. The five poets who will read their work at the March 14 Foothills have varied backgrounds, and the voices they represent are uniquely their own.

Poets who will participate in the noontime reading in the college’s Little Theater include Port Townsend poet Gayle Kaune, Poulsbo poet Jenifer Browne Lawrence and Bainbridge Island poets Lindsay Brown, Kristin Henshaw, and John Willson.

The story behind the Weathered Pages anthology is a unique one, as are the stories of the individual poets whose work appear. The idea was the brainchild of Blue Begonia editor and press operator Jim Bodeen of Yakima, Washington.

"If wine can age gracefully, why can't words?", he asked. That was the beginning of The Poetry Pole, a six-foot cedar post he stuck in the front yard of his home in Yakima, and on which he invited poets to pin their work. As more and more poems were posted, Bodeen began to collect them, emptying the post from time to time to allow for still more postings.

The Poetry Pole remained in Bodeen’s yard for nearly a decade, drawing poets from all over the state and the country. Eventually, more than 1,000 poems were posted, and Bodeen decided the pole's pinnings were worth publishing.

He enlisted the aid of three coeditors, who helped him sift through the collection. The result is an anthology that contains more than 200 poems by 132 poets from the Northwest, including ones by Peninsula College’s own poet, English and German professor Alice Derry. Derry is also a codirector of the college’s Foothills Writers Series and was instrumental in bringing the following Weathered Pages readers to the college:

Port Townsend poet Gayle Kaune has published widely in literary magazines, including Willow Springs, Seattle Review, Greenfield Review, Centennial Review and South Florida Poetry Review. Her poems have won several Washington Poets’ Association Awards and the Ben Hur Lampman Prize and have been nominated for a Pushcart prize. Her chapbook, Concentric Circles, won the Flume Press award and her book, Still Life in the Physical World, is available from Blue Begonia Press. Kaune recently relocated from the Eastern Washington desert to Port Townsend.

Lindsay Brown of Bainbridge Island used to live just a few sidewalks and a side street away from The Poetry Pole. Now, she lives by the ocean and makes art out of sea glass and says she still can't decide which is better.

Kristin Henshaw has taught Japanese and Language Arts courses at Bainbridge High School for the past 20 years. Her poetry has been published in numerous magazines and journals, including Calyx, Crab Creek Review and convolvulus. She also has had feature articles published in The Bainbridge Review and the Yomiuri newspaper in Japan.

Jenifer Browne Lawrence of Poulsbo has been published in Potomac Review, Windfall, and Comstock Review. Blue Begonia Press will publish her first poetry collection, One Hundred Steps from Shore, in 2006.

John Willson, a poetry instructor for the Bainbridge Island Park District and a bookseller at Eagle Harbor Book company, is a recipient of the Pushcart Prize as well as awards from the Academy of American Poets, the Pacific Northwest Writers Conference, the Artist Trust of Washington and the King County Arts Commission. His chapbook, The Son We Had, was published by Blue Begonia Press in 1999. He was a 1995 finalist in the National Poetry Series.

Scenes from the Whidbey Island