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POET MARIA VERES TO READ AT DEPOT SUNDAY, JUNE 8 PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 26 May 2008


    To the Blond God
    Who Checks My Electric  Meter

    You saw me
    once.
    You never looked past
    my sensible shoes.

    How could you know?
    If only you asked
    I'd sell my Toyota
    move with you to Borneo
    and buff your toenails
    every Tuesday
    until I died.

    --Maria Veres

The June 8 Performing Arts Studio Second Sunday Poetry Reading will feature Maria Veres.  Held in the Norman Depot, 200 South Jones, the reading begins at 2:00 PM.  There is no admission charge.  Light refreshments are served.  Everyone is invited to attend.

Maria Veres began writing at age eleven. To support her literary habit, she has worked as a legal secretary, Medicaid clerk, fundraiser, copyeditor, and magazine publisher. She is now a homeschooling mother and part-time teacher at Francis Tuttle Technology Center.

Her poetry has been published in many literary magazines over the years. Her first chapbook, Waiting for Miracles, was released in 2007.

Veres lives in the Oklahoma City area with her husband and daughter. When not writing or teaching, she confides that she spends hours vacuuming tufts of hair left behind by the family's various pets.

“As you can surmise from the short bio and poem, this reading promises to be a light hearted and delightful treat.” says PAS Executive Director Nancy McClellan.

Also enjoy “First Time Around,” Photographs by Emily Dutcher, in the PAS Gallery while attending the poetry reading.  For additional information about Performing Arts Studio programs, phone 307-9320.

 
POET SHEILA TIARKS TO READ AT DEPOT MAY 18 PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 12 May 2008

Sheila Tiarks will be the featured poet at The Performing Arts Studio Second Sunday Poetry Reading May 18.  The reading begins at 2:00 in the Norman Depot, 200 South Jones Avenue.  There is no admission charge.  Light refreshments will be served.

Tiarks, a retired social worker, began writing poetry only seven years ago.  Her first one person extended reading was at PAS Second Sunday Poetry in 2006.  She has since become a prominent personality in the metro poetry scene and is now the host/coordinator of the monthly poetry readings at Full Circle in Oklahoma City. 

“Sheila Tiarks is an accomplished poet in her own right, one whose poetic vision has delighted audiences who have found her warm and perceptive.” says Carl Sennhenn, host of Second Sunday Poetry.  “We look forward to her second reading at the Depot.”

For additional  information on Performing Arts Studio programs call 405-307-9320.  PAS hours are 8:00 am to 3:00 pm Tuesday through Friday and 1:00 to 5:00 Sundays.

 
THE POETRY OF FRED ALSBERG TO BE FEATURED AT DEPOT PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 10 April 2008

Fred Alsberg will be the featured poet at the April 13 Performing Arts Studio Second Sunday Poetry Reading.  There is no admission charge for the reading, which begins at 2:00 pm in the Norman Depot, 200 South Jones Avenue.  Light refreshments will be served.

Alsberg’s work has appeared in Blue Unicorn, Kansas Quarterly, Oregon East, Rhino, Greensboro Review, Sundog, Louisiana Review, Oklahoma Today, Pennine Ink, and elsewhere. He has poems forthcoming in Talking River and has done readings accompanied by acoustic and electric jazz piano.

His most recent book of poetry, Reassembling Dust, was published by Pudding House Publications (2007) and was a finalist this year for the Oklahoma Center for the Book award in Poetry.

Alsberg is an English professor at Southwestern University in Weatherford and, for many years,  was the poetry editor of that university’s literary journal. 

PAS invites all who are interested in poetry to attend this reading.  It promises to be outstanding.

The final Winter Wind Concert of the season featuring singer/songwriter Johnsmith, is scheduled the evening of April 13, beginning at 7:00 pm.  Winter Wind tickets are $10.  Advance ticket purchase is recommended.

For additional information, phone The Performing Arts Studio at 307-9320.

Paperweight

Eight floors down
in a snow-covered parking lot,
a car is sawing itself free.

It leaves a black space its own shape,
then fishtails into the street
where traffic creeps as though underwater.

The whole city is submerged,
and snowflakes filter down
like fishfood in an aquarium,

to where people walk free of their footprints.

Fred Alsberg

 
SANDRA SOLI BRINGS HER POETRY TO THE NORMAN DEPOT MARCH 9 PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 25 February 2008

ImagePoet and author Sandra Soli will share her poetry at The Performing Arts Studio Second Sunday Poetry Reading on March 9.  There is no admission charge for the reading, which begins at 2:00 in the Norman Depot, 200 South Jones Avenue. 

Soli’s first love, she says, has always been poetry.  Her poetry chapbooks, Silvering the Flute and What Trees Know, were both named finalists for the Oklahoma Book Award.  Her first poems and short fiction were published before she reached the age of 20. 

Soli’s work has appeared widely in national journals, featured on NPR Radio, and has received many literary honors, including UCO's Marilyn Harris undergraduate writing award, LSU's Eyster Prize in Poetry, and Author of the Month for Highlights Magazine for Children.  She has also been a finalist for several national book prizes.

Among her careers, Sandra Soli spent more than a dozen years as a radio broadcaster, hosting both morning and late-night programs in Lawton, OK. She served a stint as Tokyo Rose for the U.S. Army, narrated a Tulsa Chamber of Commerce film about the Port of Catoosa, and was part of more than 50 productions as actor, choreographer, and director in regional and community theaters in the U.S. and Europe. 

Soli holds a B.A. in communications/theater and an honors M.A. in English/creative studies.  After marrying and moving to Oklahoma City, Sandra spent a decade traveling as an Oklahoma poet-in-residence, working with more than 5,000 students statewide.  That was followed by nine years as columnist and poetry editor for ByLine magazine.  She continues to speak and conduct workshops for writers of all ages.

Series host Carl Sennhenn says “I am sure our audience at the Depot will like Sandra’s poetry — and her.”

For additional concert information, contact The Performing Arts Studio at 405-307-9320.  PAS office hours in the Depot are Tuesday through Friday from 8:00 am to 3:00 pm, and Sunday from 1:00 to 5:00.

 
FEBRUARY 10 SECOND SUNDAY POETRY FEATURES JENNIFER KIDNEY PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 30 January 2008

Jennifer Kidney Photo
Dr. Jennifer Kidney
Dr. Jennifer Kidney, Director of Literature Programs for the Oklahoma Humanities Council and author of five books of poetry, will be featured at the Performing Arts Studio’s Second Sunday Poetry Reading on February 10, beginning at 2:00 PM in the  Norman Train Depot, 200 S. Jones Avenue.  There is no charge to attend.  Light refreshments will be served.

Kidney’s award winning poetry has been published in numerous magazines and journals.  She has been performing her poetry since 1968 when she won the Great Lakes College Association Poetry Contest and did a reading tour of member colleges.

Among numerous other readings, Kidney has read at the SCLMA convention in New Orleans; the opening of the Dallas Museum of Art; for Paperback Books in Mesquite and Dallas, Texas; libraries across the country; and several venues in Norman.  In the spring of 2005, she was one of ten poets invited to give readings for the Sundown Poetry Series, which is part of the prestigious annual Spoleto Festival hosted by the City of Charleston, South Carolina.

Kidney received her B.A. with Highest Honors in English, from Oberlin College and her Master’s and Ph.D. in English from Yale University.  She has more than twenty years of college-level teaching experience.  She has taught creative writing for adults and children, has worked as a poet-in-the-schools for the Oklahoma Arts Council and, since 1988, has been Director of Let’s Talk About it, Oklahoma, a statewide humanities-based reading and discussion project for libraries and other nonprofit organizations. 

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