Assumption College, Emmanuel d'Alzon Library
D'Alzon Arts
Past Poetry Readings, 2003-2004

Student Poets from the Phoenix
plus Michael Milligan
Featured Poet
Friday, April 16, 7:00 p.m.

Judith Ferrara & John Gaumond
Featured Poets
Friday, March 19, 7:00 p.m.

Eve Rifkah & R. Joyce Heon
Featured Poets
Friday, February 20, 7:00 p.m.

Stephen Campiglio &
Francine D’Alessandro

Featured Poets 
Friday, November 21, 7:00 p.m.

John Wild

Featured Poet 
Friday, October 17, 7:00 p.m.

Leila Philip & David Thoreen
Featured Readers
Friday, September 19, 7:00 p.m.


2001-2002 2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005
2007-2008
D'Alzon Arts Schedule
Future Poetry Readings Poetry Gallery

Michael Milligan. Michael Milligan is the co-founder of Poetry Oasis, an organization that fosters a community of writing that furthers the historical heritage of Worcester poetry. For more information, check out   http://spokenword.to/oasis/founders.html .





Phoenix (Literary Magazine)

The Phoenix is the official literary magazine of Assumption College. The journal features poetry, short fiction, essays, and artwork contributed by Assumption students. Submissions of writing and art for The Phoenix may be sent to the Editor-in-Chief throughout the academic year. All Assumption students are also welcome to become part of the staff that organizes and distributes the magazine. The staff meets for planning and organizational reasons, but occasionally gathers to discuss poetry, fiction, and creative writing topics. The group also attends local amateur and professional poetry readings throughout Worcester and literary readings at Assumption. The Phoenix page appears in every bi-weekly issue of Le Provocateur . The annual issue of The Phoenix is published in the spring.



Poet and visual artist Judith Ferrara Writer and visual artist Judith Ferrara was awarded a 2003 Worcester Cultural Commission/Massachusetts Cultural Council fellowship for work on her manuscript, Reciprocity: Selected Poems and Paintings. Twenty-one of thirty-five reciprocally inspired painting/poems are currently on exhibit at the Emmanuel d’Alzon Library at Assumption College. She received the Jacob Knight Award in 2000 for emerging artist. She has shown her art work in many group and solo exhibitions since 1999, as well as creating the set design for The Moon Also Rises: A Tribute to Frank O’Hara, presented at the Performing Arts School of Worcester (2001).
 
Judith, who received her Ph. D. from the University of New Hampshire in Literacy and Schooling, has published numerous books and articles in the fields of English/Language Arts and conflict resolution (Peer Mediation: Finding a Way to Care-Stenhouse; Ready-to Use Writing Workshop Activities-Prentice-Hall). In 2000, her first book of poetry, Gestures of Trees, was published (Mellen Poetry Press). Her poems have appeared in Schuylkill Valley Journal of the Arts, The Comstock Review, The Portland Review Literary Journal, The Black Fly Review, and others. She was the featured poet in the summer 2002 issue of Sahara: A Journal of New England Poetry.

For more information about Judith's work please go to: http://www.assumption.edu/dept/Library/events/dalzonartscurr.html#Judy_Ferrara

John Gaumond

Photographer and poet  John Gaumond is a professor emeritus from Fitchburg State College. In 2001, he was honored by Worcester State College for his "Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Education." 
    His poetry has appeared in The Connecticut River Review, Sahara, The Leaflet, The Longfellow Society Journal, Worcester Magazine , and The Issue. He hosts a Poetry Workshop at Borders in Shrewsbury on the third Monday of every month.        
    His photographs have been exhibited at Assumption College, The Italian American Cultural Center, Massachusetts Bay Community College in Wellesley, and Worcester Windows For Art.
   



Eve Rifkah and Michael Milligan
Eve Rifkah is the co-founder and artistic director of Poetry Oasis, Inc., a not-for-profit poetry organization and Co-editor of. Poems and/or essays have appeared in The MacGuffin, Porcupine Press, The Worcester Review, California Quarterly,  Re Dactions, Jabberwock Review, Southern New Hampshire Literary Journal,  Literary Lunch - a Knoxville Guild Anthology and translated into Braille. Her chapbook Zodiac of the Misbegotten was a finalist in the Portlandia and the Main Street Rag chapbook contests. She has been a finalist in the Pecos River Cabin Poetry Contest and a winner in the 2002  and 2003 Worcester County Poetry Association contest. Most recently, Revelever Publications announced that Eve's chapbook, "At the Leprosarium" is the winner of their 1st Annual Chapbook Competition. She received her MFA in Writing from Vermont College and lives with her husband poet Michael Milligan.  Photograph at right is by Andrew Wildowsky.

Joyce Heon
R.  Joyce Heon -- Lunenburg (MA) poet R. Joyce Heon is active in the Worcester County poetry scene, and is currently involved in the Poets in the Gallery project at the Worcester Art Museum, writing ekphrastic poems about their permanent collection and participating in monthly poetry readings in the galleries. 

Her poems have been published in Diner, Sahara, The Issue, Tapestries, Voices Along the River, and The Maine Scholar.  This past year her poem "Raspberries" placed third in Worcester Magazine’ s poetry contest.

Her first chapbook, Winter Keeping Apples, centers on the four seasons.  She is compiling a book of ekphrastic poetry, aiming at early 2004 publication.  You can find her web site at http://members.tripod.com/r_joyce_heon/index.htm


Campiglio on the trail Stephen Campiglio
A full descendant from the Italian region of Abruzzo, Campiglio received his B.A. in English from Worcester State College and M.A. in Education from Assumption College. He was recently named a commendable in New England Writers 2003 free verse award, and an honorable mention in their 2002 award. He was also a semi-finalist in Two Rivers Review 2002 annual poetry contest. He is a regular contributor to the Worcester-based journal, Sahara , and also has work forthcoming in The Peralta Press, The Anthology of New England Writers, and an international anthology of Italian and Italian American poetry.

ENSEMBLE

Pushing down on the OPEN button of the toaster oven as the tongue-rack pops out where the ticket stub from last night's show was placed like an undigested host, I read the stub with nostalgic delight: it was a good show....but the dream is all business and moves on – inside the necropolis of a rusty mattress spring, the first grass growing through caked, blue leaves beside a white washing machine gleaming in what light comes through the canopy. In that light the remains of the swing set are endowed somehow with the spirit of swingers, and their creaking draws me into place as if I was dumped here too, an ensemble of the appliance that need no longer apply, of the discarded artifact that has lost its art, every last atom of us with this last chance to SWING, this dumping ground our final stage in the middle of the woods.

 
Francine & Fish Francine D'Alessandro is a native New Yorker who has lived in Worcester for twelve years. She says,  "After a few tentative efforts in high school and college, I really started writing poetry in 1998.   I felt truly encouraged by the energy and generosity of the Worcester poetry community, learning along the way by reading, listening and writing.  And I’ve been fortunate to meet up with very talented poets in workshops around Worcester.  My poetry has appeared in Sahara, Diner, The Longfellow Society Journal, The Issue, Windfall, and the Poets’ Asylum anthology As We Do Most Sunday Nights.  I will also have a poem in the upcoming issue of The Worcester Review, having recently tied for Second Place in the WCPA  2003 Poetry Contest.  I am currently President of the Worcester County Poetry Association." 

VELOCITY

Try to imagine us then
All awkward teenage grace
Your loping strides
My own long-limbed gambol
All forward movement
No sober progression
We careened into life
Fast and wild and hungry
Life is art is change
Eats us alive
Every seven years leave
Old cells, old selves behind
Seven times seven times
Renewed, evolved to ether
Einstein was right
At this velocity we are
Curved back on the past
All awkward grace of age
And watch earlier selves
Rushing toward this moment




October 17, 2003
(Nancy A. Henry was unable to be a featured reader due to illness.)

John Wild at the open mic, April 25, 2003 John Wild works in the Registrar's Office here at Assumption College, where he is pursuing an M.A. degree in education, serves as manager for the men's and women's cross country and track & field teams, and participates in intramural sports and musical and literary events--like this.







September 19,  2003
Leila Philip
Leila Philip is the author of A Family Place, the story of Talavera, a farm that has been in her family since 1732. Her first book, a memoir of her apprenticeship to a master potter in Japan titled The Road Through Miyama, won the 1990 PEN Martha Albrand Citation for nonfiction. She teaches creative writing at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts.

A Family Place book jacket Reviews of A Family Place

"The writing is poetic, haunting, the subject riveting, the research prodigious, the people just wonderful...I read this one over a few sunny afternoons and have been thinking about it ever since."—Bill Roorback, author of The Smallest Color

"Philip grafts history, natural history and autobiography into a stunning performance." —Maureen Howard, author of Big as Life

"Exquisite...as detailed and colored as a Persian miniature." — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Narrative threads are profoundly personal. Braided together with insight, they pay homage to the ideals of home and family with a resonance that should extend beyond her home region."—Publisher's Weekly
 
"After all the books about houses in France and Italy, it's nice to see a truly American story about a house and the family that has owned and loved it for nearly 200 years. Philip deftly interweaves the personal and the historical into a memorable narrative. Although nonfiction, the book's flow and vivid descriptions make it read like almost like a novel. Talvera may be the most interesting American country house since Tara." --pvbm from Forest Hills, NY (posted on Amazon.com, Jan. 7, 2002)

[Photographs c2001 Macduff Everton]


David Thoreen teaches writing and literature at Assumption College.  His fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry have appeared or are forthcoming in The South Dakota Review, Minnesota Monthly, American Literary Review, The Worcester Review, Diner, The Journal , and Slate.  

Even This Is an Advertisement


I’m in the car, NPR, Terry Gross,
an interview with a poet who has a voice
makes you think you ought to drink scotch
and a laugh so deep and barrel-chested, thoughts
glance off like shrapnel.  Chap writes poems unreal

as children.  Afternoon’s July.  I boost the air
then swell the volume, smooth my fragments in
the measured cadences of British culture.
My workday over, it’s safe to have a thought,
to trace these glowing rounds, this elegant

discussion aimed at me, or those like me
(and maybe we are the same), conceived by a team
from marketing, rendered pie-faced on charts
that foretell the day I pull into the driveway
noticing and not seeing my children running Pokémon

and Indian through the back yard as fast as legs
across the grass and out of childhood.  I kill
the engine but keep the key ignitioned, keep the laughing
poet laughing, then turn the key again, until
the voice is silence and I’m in the driveway with my kids

on the other side of this rolled-up window,
their mouths opening, closing, opening,
small fish or young birds, aquarium, aviary, then
they’re shouting and pulling the door handle and I’m thinking,
I should really read some Geoffrey Hill.

            --David Thoreen
               from The Journal



D'Alzon Arts Schedule

Emmanuel d'Alzon Library, First Floor
Assumption College
500 Salisbury Street
Worcester, MA  01609
508-767-7272

Page last updated: August 25, 2005