Eileen R. Tabios is a poet working in multiple genres and in-between. She also loves books by writing, reading, publishing, critiquing, romancing and advocating for them. This blog will feature her bibliophilic activities with posts on current book engagements and links to her books and projects related to books.

Sunday, October 14, 2018

MARSH HAWK REVIEW--FALL 2018 ISSUE IS RELEASED!


As its Guest Editor, I'm pleased to release the Fall 2018 issue of The Marsh Hawk Review. Thank you to the poets for sharing their works. Here are the participants to one of the largest (if not largest) issue conducted by the Review:

Mark Young
Irene Willis
Peter Vanderberg
Lynne Thompson
Susan Terris
Eileen R. Tabios
John Simonds
Mara Adamitz Scrupe
Barry Schwabsky
Susan M. Schultz
Janice Lobo Sapigao
E. San Juan, Jr.
Barbara Jane Reyes
Randy Prunty
Paul Pines
Naomi Buck Palagi
Gwynn O’Gara
David O’Connell
Geoffrey O’Brien
Rich Murphy
Michelle Murphy
Daniel Morris
Sandy McIntosh
Tricia McCallum
Agnes Marton
Mary Mackey
Hank Lazer
Amy Grace Lam
Basil King
Burt Kimmelman
Sherry Kearns
George Kalamaras
Jacqueline Jules
Paul Ilechko
Michael Hardin
Grace Grafton
Anne Gorrick
Kirk Glaser
Robert Gibb
Danny Gallardo
Thomas Fink
Thomas Fink and Maya D. Mason
Carol Dorf
Shira Dentz
Aileen I. Cassinetto
Tom Beckett
Ryan Bayless
Ivy Alvarez




Saturday, October 13, 2018

MODPO CITES HAY(NA)KU!


Al Filreis is the Kelly Professor of English, Director of the Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing, and Faculty Director at Kelly Writers House / University of Pennsylvania. He’s also crafted a fabulous  ModPo – Modern & Contemporary American Poetry – series you can follow on YouTube. You can tell Al Filreis must be a great teacher by the extemporaneous flow of his insights as he discusses poetry with others.  The ModPo Live Webcasts are great to watch—I so appreciate how its participants take poetry … seriously. Last but not least, I do appreciate his citation of the hay(na)ku -- about 22 minutes into THIS VIDEO per
“Eileen Tabios’ edition – 15th year anniversary edition of these remarkable hay(na)kus that she’s been promoting. I think Eileen Tabios is doing kinda her version of ModPo by assembling communities of people who are writing in an accessible form, and this is a great thing.”

Btw, I chuckled over his pronunciation of “hay(na)ku”—he says “hay” as in what we toss at the horses to eat. I’ve always thought it as “hai” as in haiku. But you know what I’ve always intended about the hay(na)ku—variations are welcome and all are acceptable.

Salamat
Al Filreis
For your vision.




Thursday, October 11, 2018

LENY STROBEL JOURNALS WITH MDR FOR A HUNDRED PAGES!


How amazing is it to get a 100-page response to one of your books!?!

Yes. Massively amazing.

Leny M. Strobel wrote one-page responses to lines from the MDR Poetry Generator database—see HERE more information about MDR—for a few months and doesn’t disappoint: she goes as varied as MDR does!

And now some excerpts from Leny’s Journaling with MDR Poetry is up at #allpinayeverything curated by Barbara Jane Reyes. Thanks to Leny and Barbara!

Here’s an example of how Leny engaged: to my MDR line

841    I forgot darkness was the key, not the lock.

Leny begins by recalling the “childhood trauma of sexual abuse” and goes from the personal to the political to conclude

The fear of Dark as Other … is also named

Woman
Filipina
Brown Monkey
Sevant of Globalization
Prostitute
Comfort Woman
Imeldific

What power, what energy, lies within Leny. I’m glad she is now an Elder. Salamat, Leny.

Four excerpts of Leny's engagement are available HERE. YOU ARE INVITED TO READ. And perhaps you want to use MDR, too, to spark off new writings ... which you can do through the book MURDER DEATH RESURRECTION. Have fun! Have power!




Wednesday, October 3, 2018

NOTING THE WITNESS IN THE CONVEX MIRROR


Beginning the production phase to my next book, WITNESS IN THE CONVEX MIRROR, made me think about the Selected Notes to the Poems section in the book. This is the collection of poems where each of its first 1-2 lines are from John Ashbery's poem "Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror." I decided to share them here as possible enticement for you to check out WITNESS ... when it's released by the fantastic Tinfish Press as part of its three-part "Pacific Response" to John Ashbery's work.  Sometimes--or at least for me--the Notes to a book reveal an extra layer to the work: So FYI:


Selected Notes to the Poems:

65% Surveyed Vote Against Banning Football
The poem’s title is after Debate.org’s question “Should the NFL be banned?” (http://www.debate.org/opinions/should-the-nfl-be-banned). The poem quotes from Matthew Thorburn’s poem “Dear Almost.”

A Unique Urgency
The reference to Christina Peri Rossi reflects the inspiration provided by her book, STATE OF EXILE (City Lights Books, San Francisco, 2008)

Bark’s Forthcoming Fact
Written after and during extrajudicial killings during Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s war against drugs.

Beautiful Lovers
Written after Marina Abramovic’s TED Talk, “An Art Made of Trust, Vulnerability and Connection.”

Bizarria
Bibliograpy: “OUR SEXUAL FUTURE WITH ROBOTS: A Foundation For Responsible Robotics Consultation Report” Prepared by Noel Sharkey, Aimee van Wynsberghe, Scott Robbins and Eleanor Hancock; “Up close and personal with rubber sex dolls in Japan” by Alastair Himmer and Behrouz Mehri, AFP Correspondent, July 19, 2017; “Silicone Sally: Japanese men find true love with sex dolls” Channel NewsAsia, June 30, 2017; and “Bizzarria” in Wikipedia.

Broken Sunlight
The indented quote is from a Facebook post by Maria Damon, May 15, 2017, quoted with permission.

Caron Poivre
Caron Poivre is cited in “The World’s Most Expensive Perfumes” by Cory Barclay, The Richest, Aug. 26, 2014

False Meteors
Written after “How The Oceans Became Choked With Plastic” by Dominique Mosbergen, The Huffington Post, April 27, 2017.

For the Dreamers
Bibliography: “White Christmas” written by Irving Berlin and the “Top 22 Benefits of Trees,” TreePeople.org

Genocide’s Point of Diminishing Returns
The incident in the poem paraphrases from John Cusack’s and Arundhati Roy’s “Things That Can and Cannot Be Said,” Truthout.org, Nov. 16, 2015.

Graceless Days
Bibliography: “Mother Earth Water Walk” (http://www.motherearthwaterwalk.com), “Plants That Clean Water” at (http://www.kellogggarden.com/water-conservation/plants-that-clean-water/)
and a Christine Balmes post on Facebook (Aug. 4, 2017) from which the poem quotes with her permission.

Grasping Radiance
Written by reading through an earlier poem, “Hotel Narrative (06 APR 1996).”

Integrity
Written after “My Family’s Slave” by Alex Tizon, The Atlantic, June 2017.

Marhaba Shayrat
“Marhaba” is “Hello” in Arabic; Shayrat was the Syrian area bombed by the U.S. in April 2017.

Pathos
Written after “Up close and personal with rubber sex dolls in Japan” by Alastair Himmer and Behrouz Mehri, AFP Correspondent, July 19, 2017.

Post-Death
The referenced photograph is “She was the song of my dark hour” by Paul Tañedo.

Rape Wardrobe
Written after the art installation “What Were You Wearing?” at University of Kansas, Sept. 5-15, 2017, and the article “’What Were You Wearing? exhibit takes aim at age-old sexual violence myth” by Heidi Stevens, Chicago Tribune, Sept. 14, 2017.

Red Pistil, White Lily
The second-to-last line of the first stanza, “You’re the one who knows better,” begins the rest of the poem which is quoted from an earlier poem entitled “Bread.”

Seasonality
“It ought to be a song” quotes Andy Bassich in “Life Below Zero,” Season 4, Episode 15.

Tense Past Tense
After the first line, the rest of the poem consists of the second and third stanzas of an earlier poem entitled “Metaphor.”

Though She Should Have Known Better Than To Play An Asian Superpower, This Poem Is For Scarlet Johannsen
Written after the controversy over Scarlett Johansson’s playing a character with Japanese roots in the movie Ghost in the Shell (her last name is deliberately misspelled in the poem’s title) and “New Study finds that men are often their own favorite experts on any given subject” by Christopher Ingraham, The Washington Post, Aug. 1, 2016.

Translating Summer
The quoted phrase is from The Dirty Life: A Memoir of Farming, Food, and Love by Kristin Kimball (Scribner, New York, 2010).

Uppity Ilokano on Louboutin Vulvas
The Ilokano “Nagadu ti ammok” translates to “I know plenty.” Bibliography: Wikipedia on the vulva and “Sole Mate” by Lauren Collins, The New Yorker, March 28, 2011.

WAGWAG
Ilokano-to-English translations:
wag wag - used clothes
tuk tok - head; top of head
pis pis - side of forehead
ping ping - cheek
aklo aklo - back of knee
ukel ukel - balls
kuko - nails
neng neg - not too smart; knucklehead
ngel ngel - not too smart
lag lag - stupid; dumb
los los - roll up pants/sleeves
les les - roll up pants/sleeves
anting anting - amulet
ut ot - pain
kut kot - dig
kud kod - scratch
kab kab - dead skin
gul gol - to shampoo (hair)
bul bol - pubic hair
ri ri - trouble; argument
rut rot - torn rags
ulo ulo - without head
ipo ipo - tornado
suso - nail
suso - breast
sel sel - insert; push in
bit bit - to carry
dut dot - feather
mul mol - thumbsuck
ngut ngot - scraping flesh off a bone; dog chewing a bone
but bot - hole in a fabric (of clothes or furniture)
ngal ngal - chew food
sub sob - snout of a pig
sing sing - ring
rung rong - cigarette butt
araw araw - everyday
kare kare - pilipino dish
gung gong - knucklehead
abal abal - a type of beetle that comes out during the rainy season; edible beetle



Tuesday, October 2, 2018

WHY I DIDN'T REPORT ...

Something happened.

I kept it to myself for decades.

I refused to write this story until after my parents passed.

Because my parents are dead, I wrote "MY TORRANCE" for October as Filipino American History Month ... and for the "Why I didn't Report" movement. You can read it







Monday, October 1, 2018

A POET READS--SEPTEMBER



As of Jan. 1, I began tracking the following stats on a daily basis:

--how many poems I wrote and/or edited
--how many poems I read
--how many poetry chapbooks and/or books I read
--other media that relates to poetry, e.g. audios and videos

On Facebook, where I post my daily list, my favorite comment was from witty Melinda de Jesus who said, “They’re like a FitBit for poetry…” My daily posts can look like this entry:

1/7/18: Today
I wrote zero poems.
I read 6 poems and 1 poetry book

That’s it. No names, which is why I’m posting below the names of poets whose works I read. I name them, whether I read a single poem or an entire book by them. January's reading is HERE, February's reading is HERE, March's reading is HERE, April's reading is HERE, May's reading is HERE, June's reading is HERE, July's reading is HERE, and August's reading is HERE.

These poets make up September's reading (translators' names also are included):

Jonel Abellanoosa
Sascha Aurora Akhtar
William Allegrezza
Alexis Almeida
Billy T. Antonio
Sacha Archer
James Ardis
Cynthia Atkins
Aditya Bahl
Beau Beausoleil
Tom Beckett
John M. Bennett
Charles Bernstein
Wendell Berry
Sonja Hristina Bjelic
Kristy Bowen
Charles Bukowski
Jack Cassinetto
Helen Charman
Catherine Chen
Theodoros Chiotis
Cody-Rose Clevidence
Lucille Clifton
Roberta Curley
Artista Daily
Raymond de Borja
Melinda Luisa de Jesus
Oliver de la Paz
Ellen Dillon
Donmay Donamayoora
Carol Dorf
Ian Dreiblatt
Peg Duthie
Susan Echaore-David
Elaina Ellis
deb y felio
Allen Fisher
Hildegarde Flanner
Andria Nyberg Forshage
Sesshu Foster
Vernon Frazer
Jeannine Hall Gailey
Danny Gallardo
Robert Gibbs
Jody Gladding
Vasilisk Gnedov
Erica Goss
Michelle Greenblatt
Carolyn Gutierrez-Abanggan
Barbara Guest
Sarah Hayden
D.I.
Crag Hill
Luisa Igloria
Loll Junggeburth
Sneha Subramanian Kanta
Mary Kasimor
Sherry Kearns
J.I. Kleinberg
Irene Koronas
Amy Lam
Kathleen Lawrence
Hank Lazer
Li-Young Lee
Jim Leftwich
Jiaoyang Li
Olchar E. Lindsann
Timothy Liu
Dona Mayoora
Sandy McIntosh
Nick-E Melville
Edric Mesmer
Dunya Mikhail
Roger Mitchell
Lani Montreal
Daniel Morris
Claude Nguyen
Jose Padua
Holly Pester
Paul Pines
Pearl Pirie
Aloy Polintan
Cesar Polvorosa
Cristina Querrer
Jenifer Ramsey
Barbara Jane Reyes
Luke Roberts
Lisa Rogal
Alison Rumfitt
Janice Lobo Sapigao
Susan M. Schultz
Zvi A. Sesling
Shloka Shankar
Anahita Shukla
Maria Sledmere
Analicia Sotelo
Heidi Lynn Staples
Belinda Subraman
Hiromi Suzukio
Eileen Tabios
Scott Thurston
Orchid Tierney
Arielle Tipa
Emmanuel Torres
Wendy Trevino
Rhys Trimble
Eliana Vanessa
NIco Vassilakis
Reetika Vazirani
GT Velasco
Cecilia Vicuna
Vicky Ward
Anders Carlson-Wee
Irene Willis
Rose Willow
Jane Wong
Candice Wuehle




INAUGURAL EXHIBIT SHOWCASES MATT MANALO!


I'm delighted to open the inaugural exhibit at North Fork Arts Projects!

"Pocket Paintings"
Matt Manalo
Oct. 1-Nov. 30, 2018

NFAP is a gallery that takes advantage of the internet. That is, most of its public feature will occur online with discourse related to the exhibited works. In this case, Matt Manalo's exhibit of tiny paintings comes with a conversation over scale. You can check it out -- and his lovely mixed-media works -- over HERE.