Poetry Month

April is National Poetry Month! Who knew? And who cares?

We all do! To encourage us to acknowledge the importance of poetry in our lives, the citizens of my hometown have been asked to participate in a community project: we will each select a treasured poem, or write one, and submit it for publication in a volume titled North Brookfield’s Favorite Poems: A Town Collection Vol II.

I’m not a poetry fan–I’m more partial to prose, perhaps due to some innate unease with imagery and nuance. In other words, I don’t have a life-list of hundreds of poems I really love. So in less than 24 hours after hearing about the project, I produced the following list of ten poems I’m considering for submission. In alphabetical order by poet’s name, they are:

  • W. H. Auden, “September 1, 1939”
  • Matsuo Basho, “Whippoorwill Haiku”
  • Wendell Berry, “A Timbered Choir”
  • C. P. Cavafy, “Ithaka”
  • Mahmoud Darwish, “Remainder of a Life”
  • Willem Kloos, “Sonnet”
  • Federico Garcia Lorca, “Rider’s Song”
  • W. S. Merwin, “Fox Sleep”
  • Ozcan Yalim, “Inside-Outside”
  • Adam Zagajewski, “Try to Praise the Mutilated World”

By the May 1st deadline, I’ll have to pick one of these and write a paragraph or so about why the poem is important to me. Stay tuned. . .

Now, does anything strike you about these choices? Hmm, for one thing, there are no women represented. Do I have a subconscious preference for the DWM (Dead White Male) literary tradition? But no, there’s the Japanese poet (thank goodness for the seemingly accessible haiku form), and a few of these guys are gay, so I’ve got that gender thing covered. And seven of the ten did not write in English, so maybe my tastes are not that conventional after all.

If you’d like to read the text of any of the listed poems, please email me or leave me a comment. Due to copyright infringement issues, I will not post them in this blog.

Note from the sponsor: This program is supported in part by a grant from the North Brookfield Cultural Council, a local agency that is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

Best of 2007

Most of the major news outlets have presented their “Year in Review” stories by now, so I’m posting my version here. I’m considering only movies and books because. . .well, it was rather a bad year. We won’t go there.

I saw 46 movies in 2007, on DVD and in theaters or shown on network TV. The genres ranged from animated to documentaries; some were based on true stories or adapted from novels; there were comedies and tragedies and others in between. Here are my top 6, in alphabetical order:

  • Babel
  • Blood Diamond
  • Bridge to Terabithia
  • Little Miss Sunshine
  • October Sky
  • Pan’s Labyrinth

I read 35 books in 2007, of which 18 were fiction — short stories, mysteries, classics, and modern novels — and 17 non-fiction, with subjects ranging from science and medicine to language and history. Here are my top 5, in alphabetical order:

  • Coming Out of the Ice – Victor Herman
  • Gilead – Marilynne Robinson
  • Independence Day – Richard Ford
  • Snow – Orhan Pamuk
  • Team of Rivals – Doris Kearns Goodwin

I won’t post the complete lists; if you’re interested, please leave me a comment. And no, I don’t do the five stars thing. I don’t post reviews on Amazon and I don’t rate movies so that Blockbuster can recommend titles for me. I won’t even do the thumbs up or down thing, as I can find merit in almost any book or movie — otherwise, why even bother with it?