Founded in 2001 as a poetry collective, Marsh Hawk Press has evolved into a self-sustaining publisher that prides itself on its authors’ involvement in every stage of the publishing process. Our books' forms and sensibilities assimilate modern and post-modern traditions of poetry and memoir but expand from these without political or aesthetic bias.
Tuesday, January 3, 2017
SANDY McINTOSH DOCUMENTED
Sandy McIntosh is soon to be featured in a number of documentaries on Donald Trump:
PBS Frontline has recut it's Donald Trump documentary and it's airing tonight at 10:00 pm. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/watch/
The Japanese network TBS will air an interview with Sandy on the same subject tomorrow, but it will be featured in Japan only.
Finally, around Inauguration Day the BBC will air it's own show, in which Sandy has a part.
Monday, December 26, 2016
GALATEA RESURRECTS Recommends MARSH HAWK PRESS!
Marsh Hawk Press is among the recommended list of poetry publishers over at Galatea Resurrects! From Galatea:
Galatea Resurrects’ 2016 List of Poetry Recommendations will be released in the first week of 2017. But we wanted to present a separate list of the publishers, partly to highlight their variety.
See List HERE.
Galatea Resurrects’ 2016 List of Poetry Recommendations will be released in the first week of 2017. But we wanted to present a separate list of the publishers, partly to highlight their variety.
See List HERE.
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
SUMMARY LETTER RE. BASIL KING
Opening night of Basil King: Between Painting and Writing,
Black Mountain College Museum and Art Center.
Hello-
Hope this letter finds you well. I write to you as one of the “ Friends of Basil King.”
First off, I am so glad to let you know of:
A Basil King exhibition at the John Molloy Gallery, 49 East 78th Street, #2, NYC, opens on Saturday, February 25, 2017. This will be the first solo exhibition of King’s work in the city in an art gallery venue. All previous exhibitions took place in literary venues – from the Gotham BookMart to Poets House. Plans are in progress for events during the month-long show including a screening of “Basil King: MIRAGE” and a special celebratory publication from Local Knowledge magazine.
Basil’s newest book of poetry – History Now from Learning to Draw/A History -- is due from Marsh Hawk Press in spring pf 2017. It gathers new works and a few previously published pieces --Grey, Crownstones, Rite of Passage, and For My Seventy-Fifth Birthday that were published in magazines including Talisman, Local Knowledge, Cy Gist, Tears in the Fence, and Exquisite Corpse.
I was very glad to host with Vyt Bakaitis, the Kings for a salon reading and screening of “Basil King: MIRAGE” in September here in Chicago. The night before, the Kings read at Myopic Books. Thank you to Myopic organizer Larry Sawyer.
The Friends of Basil King are delighted to celebrate two exhibitions of Basil King’s art that opened this autumn.
Basil King: Between Painting and Writing
9/2 to 12/24 in Asheville, NC
9/2 to 12/24 in Asheville, NC
Curated by Vincent Katz and Brian Butler, at the Black Mountain College Museum & Arts Center, Asheville, NC. This show includes paintings using images from playing cards, texts of King’s poetry, his covers for poetry books and journals, along with a large selection of his works on paper. On 9/1, Basil gave a reading in conjunction with a screening of the Nicole Peyrafitte & Miles Joris-Peyrafitte film, “Basil King: MIRAGE”. Basil gave a ‘walk-through’ talk on his work at the opening on September 2 . On 9/ 4, Martha King and Basil King shared their experiences of reading and editing each other’s work in a full–to-capacity workshop with the community.
For the exhibition, Soho Letterpress printed a limited edition broadside and the BMC Museum issued a chapbook, Basil King: Between Painting and Writing, that included work by King and curatorial statements by Butler. Katz, and Joshua Gardner.
Basil King’s Birds
10/28 to 11/19 in Laurinburg, NC
Curated by Tom Patterson, at St. Andrews University, Laurinburg, NC. The university was the site of a 2nd Black Mountain Festival that ran from August to the end of November. Martha and Basil King were interviewed and gave readings. The festival also included performances by the Douglas Dunn dancers, and readings and/or talks by Jonathan Greene, Lisa Jarnot, Nathanial Mackey, Tom Meyer, Peter O’Leary, and Musa Mayer among others.
Art works from the collection of Jonathan Williams were exhibited as part of the festival.
Five of the 17 works from ” Basil King’s Birds” on exhibit
at St. Andrews University Gallery.
Take care.
Kimberly Lyons
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
MHP POETS REVIEWED IN NEW GALATEA RESURRECTS!
Eileen Tabios engages the following books in Galatea Resurrects No. 27!
Sowing the Wind: A Requiem in the Modern World by Ed Foster
Abandoned Angel: New Poems by Burt Kimmelman
Sowing the Wind: A Requiem in the Modern World by Ed Foster
Abandoned Angel: New Poems by Burt Kimmelman
Monday, December 12, 2016
PAUL PINES ON EPIC MELANCHOLY
Paul Pines, author most recently at Marsh Hawk with CHARLOTTE SONGS, presents a good read with his essay, "Epic Melancholy," which he describes as a reflection on friendship and art centered on the Jewish abstract expressionist Philip Guston and those around him. The essay appears in the online journal dispatches, and can be read/downloaded at the following link:
Sunday, December 11, 2016
NEW REVIEW FOR SANDY MCINTOSH
Sandy McIntosh receives a lovely review of his memoir A Hole in the Ocean in Dan's Papers. You can see entire review HERE, but here's an excerpt:
A Hole in the Ocean is a beautiful written recollection of a simpler time on the East End when main streets were quiet even during the summer and one could hear “the crashing of the ocean waves a half-mile away.” e.e. cummings said “A hole in the ocean will never be missed.” Neither should this book.
Friday, November 11, 2016
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN READINGS
Norman Finkelstein will have two readings this weekend, Nov. 12 and 13, 2016:
“From their earliest setting out, the poems of Norman Finkelstein have fetched a new Vision, not only mapping but marking the Vision with supernal inscription, the signature of Heaven as it were. And theirs is not a cold heaven. Nothing in these poems is imposed or rehearsed. What is permanently remarkable here is that the work goes forward to imagine what no American poetry has imagined before: a society of Vision.” — Donald Revell
On Saturday
"Total Midrash"/A Talk and Reading
1:15 PM - 2:30 PM
Society for the Advancement of Judaism (SAJ)
15 W 86th St (Just off Central Park West)
New York, New York
Norman writes: "In my poetry and criticism, I have used to the term "midrash" (however cautiously) to help me to better understand how my (Jewish) imagination works, and more specifically, to conceptualize what I’m up to in a given poem. In this talk, I will discuss these concepts and read some of my poetry, considering how my work, somewhere on the borderline of the sacred and the profane, may be considered an instance of contemporary midrashic writing."
On Sunday
Book Launch Reading and Celebration
3 PM - 5 PM
Suite Bar
992 Amsterdam Avenue @ 109th Street
NYC
Red Harlem Readers invites you to a gala reading and celebration of the publication of The Ratio of Reason to Magic by Norman Finkelstein. The festivities will begin with a brief introduction and reminiscence by David M. Katz and will end with a reading by Norman. In between five brother-poets of Norman's will read a poem of Norman's plus a poem of their own in response. Besides Norman, the readers will be Michael Heller, David M. Katz, Burt Kimmelman, and Hugh Seidman.
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