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Community

The First Snow

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The first true snow of the season, Morgantown West Virginia ~ Tuesday, January 6th.

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Categories
Poetry

West Virginia Poets

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 In the last year I have enjoyed many new and familiar poets in the state of West Virginia.

A few of my favorites are below.  51W3L56qYHL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_

WV Poet Laureate Marc Harshman recently released A Song for West Virginia to commemorate WV’s 150th year as a state.

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Susan Shaw Sailer read from two books at a reading hosted at the MAC this past year; Coal (above) and Ship of Light. The Morgantown Poets host readings followed by an open mike every third Thursday of the month.

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 Erin Veith, a young poet and friend recently published I Closed My Eyes to Tell That Story through Latham House Press. I enjoyed every poem. Read one poem at The Citron Review here.

maryannS  Renee Nicholson Book

Mary Ann Samyn and Renee Nicholson are both professors at WVU. I’m fortunate that West Virginia University has offered the opportunity for people in the community to be a part of the English Department lectures.

house where a woman  MaryLucilleDeberryBook   alice-saw-the-beauty-4

I have also enjoyed the books of two women who I have had the opportunity to workshop poems with over the last year, Lori Wilson and Mary Lucille Deberry.

Categories
Book Review Poetry

Breathing Poetry

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This past fall I participated in a Madwomen in the Attic Workshop led by local Morgantown poet, Lori Wilson. The class of five women, including Lori, provided an intimate setting in which I felt comfortable reading raw work in an effort to produce better poetry. The class also made me focus on writing. Lori’s insightful comments have continued to echo in my thoughts while I rework many of the poems presented in class. Last year I read Poetry for Dummies for the first time, which gives additional suggestions for inspiration and refining poetry. I thought I’d share a few examples from it below.

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I’m finding these exercises below very helpful:

Chapter 9 – Going for the Breath: Framing individual lines

As you read poetry you become sensitive to the way you breathe. You read a group of words and then pause before reading another group of words -it’s just natural. Pay attention to that when you write poetry as well. Let those natural pauses determine where lines end. The breath, as it’s called in the poetry world, is a natural way to frame individual lines. -pg 162

My poem went from this:

To this:

Chapter 10 – Working with Traditional Forms of Verse : Traditional Ballads

Ballads take many forms. A popular one is the four-line stanza in which the first and third lines are written in iambic tetrameter (four iambs) and the second and fourth are written in iambic trimeter (three iambs), with a rhyme scheme of ABXB (the third line, X, need not rhyme or may rhyme with A).

Here’s what two such stanzas may sound like:

The winter moon had tipped and spilled
Its shadows on the lawn
When Farmer Owen woke to find
His only daughter gone;

She’d taken all the clothes she had
Against the biting cold,
A
nd in a note to him she wrote,
“I’ve taken all your gold.”

pg 170

Chapter 10 – Sonnets

  • It must consist of 14 lines.

  • It must be written in iambic pentameter (duh-DUH-duh-DUH-duh-DUH-duh-DUH-duh-DUH).

  • It must be written in one of various standard rhyme schemes.

If you’re writing the most familiar kind of sonnet, the Shakespearean, the rhyme scheme is this:

A
B
A
B

C
D
C
D

E
F
E
F

G
G

Every A rhymes with every A, every B rhymes with every B, and so forth. You’ll notice this type of sonnet consists of three quatrains (that is, four consecutive lines of verse that make up a stanza or division of lines in a poem) and one couplet (two consecutive rhyming lines of verse).

Ah, but there’s more to a sonnet than just the structure of it. A sonnet is also an argument — it builds up a certain way. And how it builds up is related to its metaphors and how it moves from one metaphor to the next. In a Shakespearean sonnet, the argument builds up like this:

  • First quatrain: An exposition of the main theme and main metaphor.

  • Second quatrain: Theme and metaphor extended or complicated; often, some imaginative example is given.

  • Third quatrain: Peripeteia (a twist or conflict), often introduced by a “but” (very often leading off the ninth line).

  • Couplet: Summarizes and leaves the reader with a new, concluding image.

    pg 172

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Chapter 11 – Writing exercises for Poets pg 184-185

1. Using language from one subject to write about another. (By Bernadette Mayer)

2. Hiding half of your poem from sight. Take one of your poems and fold it in half horizontally, so you can see the top half of the poem but not the bottom half. Rewrite the half you can’t see- without looking at the original. Compare the original to you revisions. (By Maxine Chernoff)

3. Reworking poems you don’t like. Select one of your poems that you’re dissatisfied with. Read it through. Now put it away. Try to write the same poem again without referring to the older version. (By Maxine Chernoff)

 

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Check out Lori’s work, and join the Madwomen in the Attic local class as we host Mary Lucille DeBerry in the celebration of her new book. Hope to see you next Saturday, at 2:00 on January 10th at the MAC in Morgantown, WV.

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Categories
Community Poetry

Join Local Morgantown Poet

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Categories
About Me Travel

A family in Giulianova, Italy

Our family took a trip to Italy this past spring. My Mom and I had been taking language lessons for two years, and all of us were searching for relatives that my great-aunt and grandfather had visited over the past twenty and forty years. We did find them, but it was only by chance. I’ve been writing a piece on it ever since we returned and wanted to share how we started our search.

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How to find your family: Collect Names, Find Family Tree services online, Type in Names and find links, and finally, Try to seek out other people living today and follow their lineage back to your tree.

Easy, right?  The last two years have  been spent trying to do just this.

The following was found on Trip Adviser: Put your surname in the box labeled “Cognomi” to see the heaviest concentrations of your family name at this website here.

I knew that my family was from Giulianova in the Abruzzo region along the coast of the Adriatic Sea.

Abruzzo_in_Italy-Image from Wikipedia

Abruzzo

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Next, try looking family up in that region by using the Italian phone book online here.

You could also contact the comune in Giulianova, specifically the “Ufficio Anagrafe”. The “Ufficio Anagrafe” is where all the people who were born in a town are registered.   Commune Giulianova Translated Email them at: info@comune.giulianova.te.it

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Go to: Ellisisland.org and see what ships brought them to America.

Build a Family Tree at Ancestry.com or throughFamily Search.org

Seek your local Sons of Italy club.

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Find Publications about your area:

Locali dautore

and

From the Giulianova is a pleasant and prosperous town located at the foot of the Appennini and facing the Adriatic Sea. Giulianova can be considered as an ideal seaside resort thanks to its golden and fine sand beach, but even as a town rich in art and ancient treasures. Giulianova is located both on the sea and near the mountains, offering in this way a really great vacation to the tourists.
Being the Gran Sasso very near, it is possible to visit the National Park of Maiella, the National Park of Gran Sasso-Monti della Laga, the Regional Park Sirente-Velino and the National Park of Abruzzo. During the winter it is possible to go skiing. For those who love nature the caves of the calcareous mountains in Abruzzo, easy to reach, offer landscapes of spectacular interest: The Cavallone Caves exalted by the poet D’Annunzio, the Stiffe Caves still crossed by the water, the Beatrice Cenci Caves where important archeological finds dating back to the Stone Age have been discovered.

– Emmeti Website

My Italian Family. com

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When you think you’ve found them, and want to go visit make sure you bring family photos on your journey! It’s the only way we found our relatives.

More to come.

Categories
Travel

Paw Paw Tunnel WV

For a quick stretch-of-the legs and a history lesson in engineering head to the Paw Paw Tunnel.

My brother took a bike-ride through this tunnel a few years ago and I’ve been wanting to explore it ever since. The tunnel is one along the C&O Canal Towpath.

On the trail headed to The Paw Paw Tunnel near Cumberland, MD

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Trails.com

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You can do a few-mile loop hike that leads you through the tunnel, and then on a newly prepared trail back to the entry of the tunnel. Bring a flashlight to get through the tunnel though, the worst thing that may happen is stepping in a puddle. The second, higher half offers views down onto the Potomac. Take a trail to the right as you come from the tunnel into the light to access this trail. The U-shaped trail signs are confusing, so be sure to take the trail that is large and cut like an access road. The other trail will lead you high above to areas where fill was left from boring the tunnel.

 The image below is an overview of the Potomac River in the area. See the lower left side of the image for Paw Paw, WV.

overview map near Paw Paw Tunnel

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Categories
Travel

White Grass XC Skiing

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Welcome to White Grass, a cross-country skiers haven. Located in Canaan Valley, where so many attractions of Appalachia are combined, this venue offers 60 kilometers of cross-country skiiing trails and a small lodge to keep warm. A delicious lunch menu of homemade cookies and vegetarian options are available too. Check out the daily report to find the most current conditions.

IMG_8629I was new to the sport and expected to fall more often than I did on my first try. It’s amazing to be able to climb a hill in skis. As an avid hiker, this was a wonderful way to enjoy the winter forest doing what I enjoy most. There are plenty of places to spend the night. Places nearby at Timberline,  The Purple Fiddle, or The Bright Morning Inn to name a few.

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Categories
Travel

Burlington – VT

Last week I sent out my first group of poems to be considered for an anthology collection. One poem was about time spent in Burlington, VT last summer.

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Our friend Evick recommended so many things I thought would be useful to other visitors. So, I’ve included his comments below.

Accommodations in Burlington: Depends on what you’re wanting to spend. The Hilton comes to mind. It’s right downtown near the waterfront. It’s nice, probably expensive. If not that, I’d recommend the Sheraton. It’s right off the interstate, but right on Main Street; just a hop skip walk away from downtown and the UVM campus.

Food: Anything on Church St. Anything. Luenigs is great for lunch (it’s French). VT Pub and Brewery. American Flatbread has wonderful brick oven pizza with a really wide selection of beer. If a restaurant like that interests you, but you don’t want pizza, try the Farmhouse Tap & Grill -it is the place to be; do notice that the building used to be a McDonalds. Henry’s Diner off of Church Street -it’s an old diner car where you have to duck your head going in (best pie and coffee ever). And let me recommend Ri Ra Irish Pub for authentic Irish food (if you like corned beef or lamb.)

Bars: Three Needs is the place to be, hands down. I have a place in my heart for it always. Check it out. Nectar’s is an interesting place if there’s a good band playing there that night (order some gravy fries there). That place is best known for being the starting ground for Phish back in their early days. Das Beerhaus is as German as you can get. Many of the restaurants I mentioned also team up as bar (VT P&B, Farmhouse, Ri Ra).

Sights: Go to Ben & Jerry’s on Church St (their first official shop); you can skip the tour of their ice cream factory in Waterbury. Magic Hat is a neat little tour of a brewery; I recommend that. Shelburne Farms is neat, but you may also look into Shelburne Museum or Shelburne Vineyards.

Hike: Go for Mansfield; you can conquer that in a morning. Climb up the western slope starting in Underhill State Park. It’s the most accessible and the most eye-pleasing of the trails to the summit. Although if you hike from Stowe you do get to check out that little valley (a drive through Smuggler’s Notch is a surreal experience and makes you wonder how they constitute that as a road).

Misc: Pick up some Cabot cheese or some maple syrup. There’s many stores through the area that you can pick up all those kinda goodies like homemade jam or honey butter to send as gifts to friends and family; Dakin Farms is the ideal store.

Most importantly, go to small towns and villages; see the side of Vermont that isn’t Burlington and fall in love. Stop at a general store ( I once walked into one and came across two old men playing checkers on a pickle barrel). There are places up there where it seems that time has stood still since 1957. Just drive around and enjoy the natural beauty of the Green Mountains or look at the historic houses. It’s hard to go wrong up there, it really is. Villages/towns in that area: Montpelier (state capital), Waterbury, Middlebury. Robert Frost is from the VT NH area so there are things to see of him too.

Categories
Architecture

House K by Sou Fujimato Architects

Concrete buildings can do anything. The heavy material draped as in Keiko + Manabu”s Ellipse Sky, as seen in Architectural Record,

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or have planes cantilever or folded like the House K in Nishinomiya, Japan.

‘ Not surprisingly, the roof was the most difficult part of the house to construct.’

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 – Architectural Record 2013

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A concrete structure by CASA BB by BAK Arquitectos in Argentina

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who ‘needed’ a carpenter with proficiency in wood-plank form work.

Architectural Record

Categories
Travel

To Morgantown, WV

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From St. Clarisville

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to Morgantown

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We’ve enjoyed the beauty of nature (West Virginia Botanic Garden) and the thrill of entertainment.

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Banff Film Festival scheduled for April 2015

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A snowy winter and

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spring blooms along the Caperton River Trail in Morgantown

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Surprises in the country and cityscapes.

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