If You Can
Still Dance With It
Mike Adams (aka Stone Belly) on Dolores Peak (Goodtimes photo) |
BELLY BOYS
… Come hear Michael Adams (aka Stone Belly) perform his poems -- with yours
truly (aka Holy Belly) -- at a non-sanctioned Fire Gigglers/TalkingGourds/LoneConePress/NorwoodWritersGuild
special event Thursday (tonight), June 14th at 7 p.m. at Two Candles
Café & Bar in Norwood.
Bring your own poems & we’ll share after … Author of Steel Valley (Lummox Press, 2010 – a powerful mixed prose/poetry
account of growing up in Pittsburgh), son of Lew Welch and a favored bard of
Dolores LaChapelle, Mike was diagnosed with incurable cancer a year ago next
month. He’s just come out with a new book, If
You Can Still Dance With It (Turkey Buzzard Press, 2012) with poem
conversation/translation/interpenetrations of Han Shan, Taoist alter-ego Stone
Belly poems, and his latest coming to terms with “The World As It Is” and
“After the Ashes.” In his introduction to the book, Adams
suggests that he’s trying to “examine what it is like to be confronted with a
life-threatening disease without prematurely seeking answers, solutions or
solace.” The poem Send Some Angels is
exactly that mix of industrial fumes & staring-monsters-in-the-face
lyricism you find in Steel Valley.
Plaintalk about “having set yourself on fire / so many times for a woman or a
cause” and how “there’s no romance in it.” Hard male truth, and how hope lies
with the poem’s final image -- “mountains in the sun.” …
Checking Rucksack |
Mike’s final
meditation in realizing how precious each moment of life is and as regards his
most recent death sentence, The Ones Who
Get the World Ready celebrates those common folk who make the world “solid
and familiar” … Mike is a poet of the solid and the familiar. It’s like talking
with an old friend. A true bard of place, as well as a devotee of the senses. A
Whitman who gives oracular visions of the land we inhabit, and a Han Shan/Stone
Belly extracting essences out of life’s brilliant phenomena … Come join us in
Norwood Thursday night.
NIZALOWSKI TRIO … Well, at least a duo, as John and Isadora Nizalowski play voice &
violin at Caole Lawry’s Planet Earth & the 4 Directions Gallery in Grand
Junction (524 Colo. Ave.) on Saturday, June 16th, 7:00 p.m. at the
Planet Earth & Four Directions Gallery on 524 Colorado Ave. in Grand Junction.
John Nizalowski watching Isadora |
I
get to tag along as ‘Dora’s “godfather” – one of those duties every good
Italian boy takes seriously … This event is free and open to all. Call Caole
for more info: 970-256-9630.
DROUGHT …
Fire bans and water call-ups. Western folks have been talking about
over-stocked forests, and urban folks have been talking about climate changes,
and it all seems to be coming together – unlike our political parties – in a
frightening fire season. Forget about monsoon shroom showers (did I say that?)
and let’s just hope for a gullywasher or two this summer.
FIRE …
Talking about possible worst case scenarios should this monsoon season bring
dry lightning, as predicted, government officials realized that everyone needs
to be personally prepared for sudden evacuation, should that become necessary
in the case of an out-of-control fire this summer. Our local Intergovernmental
meet up at the Mountain
Village last week was
sobering. Even the possibility that the governor may ban fireworks on the 4th
of July was discussed, as happened in the bad drought year of 2002 … We would
all do well to be prepared this year. Burning Man may be coming to a backyard
near you.
Friend helping prep Spud Patch for planting |
CLOUD ACRE SPUDS … Finished up my spud patch this spring. Took me a month to prep the
ground and plant some 50+ varieties of potato (59 varieties, by my count, and
some 208 mounds). Part of what makes the process time-consuming is keeping
accurate records of what was planted where – alternating colors so it’s less
likely to mistake varieties in the fall harvest. I plant 3-4 seed potatoes for
each variety, and usually keep 4 tubers of each kind for my own seed plantings.
I store some for my own food, and the rest is what I sell or trade. Some
varieties have been cloned and adapted for the past 15 years at my place (with
an aberrant year growing in California, while I was taking hospice care of my
dad) … This year I had seed potatoes available at the Norwood Home & Garden
Show and Norwood’s first Farmer’s Market. Next year I hope to have full line of
unusual varieties to offer folks in the region.
WEEKLY QUOTA
… "Poetry is when you can't afford the "v" in poverty." -Doug
Haning, Portland
Jazz Musician
THE TALKING GOURD
Stone Belly’s Poetics
Stone Belly is not gentle
with his poems, does a jig
on the lines to see if they got rhythm,
boogies with the beat, twirls them around
to find there they bend
and break.
After all that, if you can still dance with it,
you know a poem is good.
-Michael
Adams
Lafayette
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