Poetry news via Google, MSN, and Yahoo!
- Belfast Poetry Festival marks fourth year - VillageSoup Belfast
Belfast Poetry Festival marks fourth yearVillageSoup Belfast, USA - 7 hours agoBELFAST (Oct 10): The fourth annual Belfast Poetry Festival will take place Friday and Saturday, Oct. 17-18. The weekend includes a poetry and performance ...
- Great reads to alleviate the off-to-school jitters - Fort Worth Star Telegram
Great reads to alleviate the off-to-school jittersFort Worth Star Telegram, TX - Aug 6, 2008The climax comes at Rachel’s birthday party when Alli learns an important lesson about friendship. Why read it: The story is told through Alli’s journal and ...
- John Lichfield: Racy goings-on in la France profonde (Independent)
The nearest town to our house in Normandy is a sad place which has never fully recovered from the summer of 1944. In June of that year, it was pointlessly bombed by the British. In August, it was partially burned by the SS. Sixty-four years later, shops and restaurants are struggling to survive. The population is ageing and glum. Excitement is hard to find.
- Movie review: The Secret Life of Bees -- 2 out of 5 stars (Orlando Sentinel)
The thing about honey is that it's not just sweet, but awfully gooey.
- Vaughn author overcomes disability to pen first book (Peninsula Gateway)
Donna Smeall of Vaughn has published her first book called “Com PEN di um: A simple collection of many thoughts.” Smeall’s book is a poetry collection that highlights key events and rites of passage in her life.
- The Roustabout (New York Times)
What kind of poetry does the British cultural polymath Clive James write? It involves, as you might expect, a little bit of everything.
- ACT and Intiman get new CEOs to guide them through a rough economy (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
ACT and Intiman get new CEOs to guide theaters through a rough economy.
- Rushdie traces the roots of his latest award-winning tale - Star-ecentral.com
Fatehpur Sikri, the old, abandoned capital of India's Mughal King Akbar, is a somewhat deserted place these days, a bit off the beaten tourist path, outdone by the popularity of the Taj Mahal about an hour away. Here, guides spin questionable tales ...
- The Airborne Toxic Event - Self-Titled Review - 411mania.com
The Airborne Toxic Event - Self-Titled Review411mania.com, TX - 1 hour agoBut I think the most appropriate description I’ve seen was in the LA Times: “poetry you could dance to.” Yeah, that’s it. I was hooked after I watched the ...
- Striding Forward: Fall Fiction - New York Sun
In fiction, the fall will be a season not of bright debuts or treacherous sophomore efforts, but of crucial mid-career landmarks. Of course, John Updike will have a new novel, and Philip Roth will publish what might be his best novel in years ...
- Upstate religious retreats open to visitors (The Buffalo News)
NEW LEBANON -- At the former Shaker village, where the Taconic Mountains roll into the Berkshires and New York touches Massachusetts, Yaqin Aubert read aloud Hindu, Buddhist, Taoist, Zoroastrian, Judaic, Christian and Islamic texts during the Sunday service at the Sufireligious retreat.
- Roddy Lumsden for August 'Over The Edge: Open Reading' - Indymedia Ireland
Leading Scottish poet Roddy Lumsden for first Over The Edge: Open Reading after summer break. Roddy Lumsden The August Over The Edge: Open Reading takes place in Galway City Library, St. Augustine Street, Galway on Thursday, August 28th, 6.30-8pm ...
- Peter rabbit and his eclectic band in the deserts of Iraq - The Age
The AgePeter rabbit and his eclectic band in the deserts of IraqThe Age, Australia - 2 hours agoTHE MARX BROTHERS DON'T USUALLY spring to mind when you talk about Australian poetry. And it wasn't JSHarry's full-bodied and frequent laugh that did it. ...
- And Another Thing: in Manchester this weekend - Metro
MetroAnd Another Thing: in Manchester this weekendMetro, UK - 11 hours agoThe free event is bigger and better this year, and it will include a barbecue, poetry readings and a Q&A session with council representatives. ...
- It’s time we all suffered for the sake of our art - Evening Standard
Bad times are just around the corner. We can't even enjoy the schadenfreude of the fat cats' failures. Central banks throw good money after bad, down the sewers of the City and Wall Street. There is no escape from the apparent meltdown of capitalism ...
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