UNDOCUMENTED: Reading from New Anthology at Content Bookstore by Five Great Lakes Poets Laureate (May 20, 2019)

“Poetry,” W.H. Auden famously asserted, “makes nothing happen.” Well, I am not so sure of that.

On Monday, May 20, a capacity crowd gathered at Content Bookstore to hear readings from five of the poets laureate whose work is included in Undocumented: Great Lakes Poets Laureates on Social Justice, edited by Ron Riekki and Andrea Scarpino (Michigan State University, 2019).

Ken McCullough, James Armstrong, and Emilio DeGrazia, all of Winona, Minnesota; Sheila Packa of Duluth, Minnesota; and our own Rob Hardy of Northfield, Minnesota shared their contributions to the anthology as well as other poems. The group reading was followed by questions, informal conversation, and book signings.

This thoughtful and bold anthology presents work that stands at the intersection of personal vision and collective voice in order to document various forms of current and historic injustice. Politically pointed and aware, while remaining poetically adept, the poems of these seventy-three poets–of all ages, from many backgrounds–who have been honored by civic office speak up, cry out, seek to raise awareness and indignation, and stir readers, too, to break voicelessness and take action.

To that end, the structure of Undocumented is well suited. Using the Southern Poverty Law Center’s “Ten Ways to Fight Hate: A Community Response Guide” as the organizing principle, the editors have arranged poems in sections titled “Act,” “Unite,” “Support Victims,” “Do Your Homework,” “Create an Alternative,” “Speak Up,” “Lobby Leaders,” “Look Long Range,” “Teach Tolerance,” and “Dig Deeper.” The table of contents includes a short summary of various ways for individuals to take action, and most of the biographical notes on contributors include at least one recommendation for an effective organization to amplify action.

Providing an array of poetic voices and points of view, this collection encourages everyone, poet or not, to confront the silence that allows injustice in all its manifold infestations to flourish, and provides examples of witness and protest lyrics for our own time.

Rob Hardy (Photo: Bonnie Jean Flom)
Ken McCullough (Photo: Bonnie Jean Flom)
Sheila Packa Photo: Bonnie Jean Flom
James Armstrong (Photo: Bonnie Jean Flom)
Emilio DeGrazia (Photo: Bonnie Jean Flom)

Undocumented, as well as other titles from these fine poets, are available from Content Bookstore, which can be browsed in person or online! Special thanks to Bonnie Jean Flom for permission to use her photographs of the poets.

CONCERTINA: Update on an Evening of Poetry and Music

Hengel Concertina (Photo: Bonnie Jean Flom)
Rob Hardy, Northfield Poet Laureate, with Leslie Schultz (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Jake Bastyr (Photo: Bonnie Jean Flom)

On May 9, 2019, Hot Spot Music was the site of a combined poetry reading and concert. Jake Minar Bastyr, of New Prague, opened the program with tunes played on a Hengel concertina he had made with his grandfather, Jerry Minar. Then Rob Hardy, Northfield’s Poet Laureate, introduced Jake and me, and I read a selection of poems from my new collection, Concertina. Poems were followed by uplifting melodies from Jake, refreshments, and conversation. There was even some singing along, and some toes tapping, along with a few heels kicked up, during the course of that lively evening!

It was a warm-hearted and unforgettable evening for me, that’s for certain. If you were not able to attend, here are some photos and video clips that will give you the flavor of the evening. LESLIE

(This video begins with Jake playing and has some poems as they were read. Below, following the photographs, are two more short clips of Jake playing on May 9.)

View from the Stage (Photo: Leslie Schultz)
Hot Spot Music (Photo by Mattie Lufkin)
Floral Artist Mattie Lufkin (Photo: Leslie Schultz)
Tim Braulick and Leslie Schultz (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Refreshments and Floral Art (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Patricia Smith and Kristin Kasten (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Reception (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Eric Johnson with Lin and Bob Bruce (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Tim and Luke Braulick (Photo: Bonnie Jean Flom)
D. E. Green with Cahrene Dimmick and Leslie Schultz (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Becky Boling and Jake Bastyr (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Book Table (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)

Reading of CONCERTINA by Leslie Schultz
and Music with Jake Bastyr
for May 9, 2019, Hot Spot Music, Northfield, MN
 
“Under the Murmur”                                     
“Marches”                                                      
“Concertina”                                                  
Lapis Philosophorum”                                 
“Goldfish, Oboe, Paintbrush, Guitar”            
“Minou”                                                         
“Simple Beauty”                                            
“Silhouette”                                                   
“Sonnet Despite Rain”                                   
“City Rain”                                                    
“The (Not-So) Easy-Bake Oven”                  
“Music So Loud We Can’t Hear”                  
“In the Produce Aisle”                                   
“Antique Absinthe Glasses”                                      
“Prayer in Stillness”                                                   
“Weather”                                                                  

Jake Bastyr’s Play List

Thanks for this event go to Rob Hardy, Northfield’s Poet Laureate:

to the Northfield Public Library, for sponsoring the Poet Laureate program:

to the Southeastern Minnesota Arts Council (SEMAC) for funding support, through funds from the people of Minnesota and the Legacy Amendment:

and to Hot Spot Music and Martha Larson for hosting the event in this flexible and inviting space!

Martha Larson of Hot Spot Music (Photo: Mattie Lufkin)
Coral Plant (Photo: Leslie Schultz)

“Compass” for April 3, 2019

Compass
 
My cherished friend (a sonic artist,
a mother, a teacher) and I were
streaming north, last month,
toward a favorite museum to celebrate
the creativity of all that is northern,
Scandinavian, both in the old world
and here, in Minnesota.
 
We were flying out
of our tiny town, laughing
because the back of winter
seemed to be finally broken, the ice
and injuries that had kept us
cooped up far too long
had migrated at last.
 
Ahead, (though we didn’t suspect)
we’d encounter—I kid you not—
a gigantic solar egg—gleaming,
golden—perched on a nest
of iron-brown sticks, magic and witchy,
with a ladder inviting us
to peer inside the padlocked
 
glass door forbidding entry.
Here, saunic heat could hatch
for humans lighted on cedar wood
if they could just catch the right
moment at sunset. But then and there,
in late morning’s blue thaw,
we watched in awe as a pair
 
of sandhill cranes elegantly soared
across our highway, light
and strong, clearly aligned
with the Minnesota River.
Their long necks reached, outstretched,
toward their future, their making
of eggs born to be broken, from the inside.
 
They seemed to know that the fire of life
would soon be poking fierce, new sooty
beaks into this burnt-out season, would
demand to be fed, demand to sing
and try the air. They seemed sure
that parental care could renew the year,
help each unfold our inborn direction.
 
Leslie Schultz

Like the first two poems for this April, “Compass” recounts a true story. (I am not sure whether a theme is arising or not. If so, it is an unconscious one. )

This poem, which turned out to have a fairy tale quality, is based on an excursion to the American Swedish Institute with Bonnie Jean Flom. We love the human scale of this place, its mix of old and new, in its architecture and exhibitions.

We also like its stimulating exhibitions, and the rare dining experience of the award-winning in-house restaurant, Fika. We are both photographers, with Scandinavian roots, and, on this trip, we were keen to see the work of eco-Photo Shop artist and former farmer Erik Johansson, called “Imagine” (which is up until April 28, 2019.)

“Demand and Supply”

En route to seeing “Imagine,” however, we glanced into the inner courtyard of the museum and were amazed by….what? A space pod? A Christmas pear? No, an out-sized solar egg sculpture called “Reflect” by artistic duo Bigert and Bergstrom that turned out to be also a functioning sauna, visiting Minneapolis until April 28, 2019.

Photo by Bonnie Jean Flom

Then it was back inside to savor first the masterful surreal photography, then enjoy a lunch worthy of portraiture and with flavors redolent of northern forests.

(Note the pine-flavored home-made soda, the bright surprise of the egg in the center of mushrooms and rye bread, and the golden glow of the shared pear cake dessert.)

Does time with a friend get any better than this? Well, maybe.

At the end of this enchanted day, that began with cranes flying high, there was more enchantment. We crossed to Saint Paul to visit the Goldstein Gallery on the University of Minnesota campus to see the collection of ceramics by our mutual friend, Ruth Crane.

Despite the handmade porcelains that I use every day in my kitchen, this exhibition made me understand ceramics in a whole new way. It is open until May 19, 2019.

Just before leaving the campus, Bonnie Jean and I took this double selfie!

Guess what? I have booked a Solar Egg sauna later this month. I hope I am not too relaxed to drive back home!

Until tomorrow, LESLIE