MiPOesias

DIG IT ALL publishing…..GOSS183

new PoetsArtists

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new (double sided) Broadside by Andrew Demcak

available in print or digital download from Magcloud.com

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2011 in review

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2011 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Syndey Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 44,000 times in 2011. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 16 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.

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Flashback: Narcissus Resists by Matthew Hittinger

View this document on Scribd
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OCHO Pushcart Nominations

I have nominated the following works from OCHO #31:

Matthew Hittinger – At the Academy….
Angela Pinedo – Apple Season
J.P. Dancing Bear – Raised by Coyotes
Scot Siegel – Mochi Salvation
Andrea Lawlor – Position Paper #3
Grace Cavalieri – The STalker

Congratulations and Good Luck

View this document on Scribd
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Flashback 2007: Miguel Murphy

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new title: Postscripts to the Dead by Pris Campbell (chapbook)

Available from Magcloud in print or digital download.

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new title: Millie’s Sunshine Tiki Villas

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How do you read MiPOesias, PoetsArtists, OCHO?

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Dmitry Berenson

Recent Publications:

  • Don’t Blame the Ugly Mug Anthology
  • Clever (chapbook)

Website: http://www.facebook.com/dmitry.berenson

Discovery moment: When something clicks at the back of my skull like a new muscle.

*

Framer’s Intent

When I don’t feel like working
I think of Benjamin Franklin
rounding the curve of an ‘f’
on a wooden letter block
in his brother’s print shop.
Or maybe the block was metal,
forged by a blacksmith whose
workshop smelled like soot and leather.
The blacksmith must have carried
that smell into his house every night
like a briefcase and his children never
feared fire. Maybe the blacksmith was
friends with Ben Franklin and Ben
would walk into his shop and ask
him to forge a block or two,
maybe get a discount on a pair
of horseshoes. Then Ben would ink up
the blocks and slide them into a press
where they glistened like wet rubies
or maybe he put them into the press first
and then basted them with an inky
roller that sounded like a parched tongue.
Or maybe he didn’t even work in a print shop,
we all know history can be codified bullshit.
Ben Franklin said “A lie stands on one leg,
the truth on two.” What does a poem stand on?
The confused ghosts of the founding fathers
float around in my head and I ask them questions
about war and justice but I get mostly shrugs.
Ben is still trying to understand how lightning
can be trapped on a screen and twisted into colors,
George Washington is amazed by Fixodent.
Don’t laugh, these men are as close
as Americans get to infallibility. Sometimes
the founding fathers just sit together
and don’t speak, turn their heads away
from the frantic world, and wait for the room
that holds them to unwind into nothing.

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