- Ohio poet laureate Dave Lucas among readers at Lorain's Speak of the Devil, by Carissa Woytach
Saturday, January 26, 2019
Speak of the Devil--
From the Chronicle Telegram:
Thursday, January 24, 2019
Valentine's Reading in Sandusky
Saturday Feb. 9th we will feature author Robert Smith and an Open-Mic Valentine's Reading. We have been doing Coffeehouse Readings for about 18 years here in Sandusky, Ohio...sponsored by the Firelands Writing Center and Bottom Dog Press. All are welcome...The writing is celebrated.
Monday, January 21, 2019
Madhouse is coming to Cleveland!
Madhouse, a Michigan-based arts event, is coming to Cleveland at Guide to Kulchur, 5222 Lorain Ave., February 1st @ 7 pm.
Self-described as an artistic spectacle of music, poetry, and mayhem, Madhouse has been a flourishing community series staple in lower Michigan.
The initial Northeast Ohio event features the following performers:
Donora Rihn
Andrew Rihn
Michelle Smolarski
Erika Blakemore

Ray Swaney
Leo Todd Jarret
Barry Graham
John Burroughs
w/ musical guest, Pavlica
Open mic to follow!!!!
Self-described as an artistic spectacle of music, poetry, and mayhem, Madhouse has been a flourishing community series staple in lower Michigan.
The initial Northeast Ohio event features the following performers:
Donora Rihn
Andrew Rihn
Michelle Smolarski
Erika Blakemore

Ray Swaney
Leo Todd Jarret
Barry Graham
John Burroughs
w/ musical guest, Pavlica
Open mic to follow!!!!
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Poet Claudia Rankine at Cuyahoga County Public Library
Claudia Rankine will visit the Parma Snow Branch of Cuyahoga County Public Library on January 23 at 7pm.
(2121 Snow Road, Parma, OH 44134)
The event is FREE but registration is required. Register here.
(2121 Snow Road, Parma, OH 44134)
The event is FREE but registration is required. Register here.
Claudia Rankine is the author of Citizen: An American Lyric and four previous books, including Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric. A provocative meditation on race, Citizen recounts mounting racial aggressions in ongoing encounters in twenty-first-century daily life and in the media. The book was a finalist for the 2014 National Book Award in Poetry and the National Book Critics Circle Award in Criticism and has won the National Book Critics Circle Award in Poetry, the NAACP Image Award, L.A. Times Book Prize and PEN Open Book Award.
Rankine is a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, the winner of the 2014 Jackson Poetry Prize, and a contributing editor of Poets & Writers. She is also the Frederick Iseman Professor of Poetry at Yale University.
Rankine will be joined at this event by Ohio Poet Laureate, Dave Lucas. Born and raised in Cleveland, Lucas earned his B.A. (English) at John Carroll University, M.F.A. (Creative Writing) at the University of Virginia, and M.A. and Ph.D. (English Language and Literature) at the University of Michigan. His first book of poems, Weather, received the 2012 Ohioana Book Award for Poetry. He has been awarded a Creative Workforce Fellowship from the Community Partnership for Arts and Culture and a 2016 Cleveland Arts Prize.
Books will be available for purchase and signing courtesy of Mac's Backs - Books on Coventry.
This event is part of the NEA Big Read and is presented in partnership with The Baker-Nord Center for the Humanities at Case Western Reserve University and The Center for Arts-Inspired Learning.
This program is made possible, in part, by Ohio Humanities, a state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Saturday, January 5, 2019
Looking back at Poetry in 2018
Michael Dirda, discussing the Best American Poetry 2018 volume, says that the theme that most characterizes American poetry is "American poetry’s reverence for genuineness, for authenticity":
In the introductory essay, Dana Gioia points out an odd statistic: for years, surveys show that youngest group of adults (ages 18–24) read more poetry than any other segment, and poetry reading is increasing, not decreasing. He suggests that a huge cultural shift has occurred with literary performance and digital media. Technology has allowed poetry to reconnect with its auditory origins:
and Tracy K. Smith, in the New York Times, proclaims "political poetry is hot again".
In the introductory essay, Dana Gioia points out an odd statistic: for years, surveys show that youngest group of adults (ages 18–24) read more poetry than any other segment, and poetry reading is increasing, not decreasing. He suggests that a huge cultural shift has occurred with literary performance and digital media. Technology has allowed poetry to reconnect with its auditory origins:
"The chief way American poets now reach their audience is through readings, either live or transmitted by radio, television, and internet... Print now coexists with other equally powerful media for poetry."
and Tracy K. Smith, in the New York Times, proclaims "political poetry is hot again".
(but I still hate political poetry*).
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
"We Need Writers Now More Than Ever..."
"Authoritative lying debases the truth. The resulting confusion of fantasy and reality is the definition of psychosis, a perilously vulnerable mental state.
"...By writing and reading, we remind ourselves of the value of empathy, subtlety and contradiction. Literature is an antidote to the blunt distortions—good vs. evil, us vs. them—that are so easily exploited by those who would manipulate us."
--"We Need Writers Now More Than Ever. Our Democracy Depends On It," Jennifer Egan, Time
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
Another Season of The City
With the turn of the weather toward coolness, and the approach of the holiday season like a freight train loaded with turkey and tinsel, it's another season of The City poetry, Kathy Smith's electronic zine of poetry and art:
Wednesday, November 14, 2018
Mark Kuhar celebrates d.a. levy
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| Collage by d.a levy. "Agent from Vega H.S." , collage by d.a. levy 1967, Cleveland, Ohio" handwiitten by levy verso. The collage was used in levy's underground newspaper The Buddhist Third Class Junkmail Oracle. |
Sunday, November 11, 2018
Dave Lucas: Poetry for People who hate Poetry
The new Poet Laureate of Ohio, Dave Lucas, has been appearing one week every month in Scene Magazine, with "Poetry for People Who Hate Poetry."
You can find it here:
You can find it here:
--He'll be reading in Arkon on November 21 at Latitudes Poetry Night (which happens the third Wednesday of each month, Compass Coffee, 647 East Market Street, Akron).
Thursday, October 18, 2018
Come Write in Appletree Books’ Windows! (Plus Contests!)
Have you ever thought about writing in the windows of an independent bookstore?
For a third year, Appletree Books invites Cleveland-area writers of all ages, formats, and genres to come write in our store windows this November in celebration of National Novel Writing Month!
You do not need be a novelist. Whatever you write, whether you write for love or money or a grade or the glory of winning NaNoWriMo, we want you to come write with us! Bring the tools of your trade; we’ll provide you a small table, a chair, and an electrical outlet in our store windows. Pick up your pen (actual or metaphorical), take a seat in our independent bookstore, a fixture in the Cedar-Fairmount district since 1975, and let your view of our vibrant neighborhood inspire you. Sign up at https://tinyurl.com/yawkke8n. For questions or more information, contact Jane Rothstein at jane@appletree-books.com.
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tinyurl.com
Welcome to Appletree Books' 2018 Writer in the Window event sign-up! In
celebration of National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) in November, we
are, for a third year, inviting Cleveland-area writers of all ages and
all genres (you need not be writing a novel) to spend some time writing
in our front windows. Sign up below for Writing in the Window 2018, and
our NaNoWriMo coordinator will get back to you ASAP. **Please note:
writers under age 12 must be accompanied by an adult. Writers under 12
should have a parent or guardian complete this form and indicate
arrangements for adult supervision in the "Requests" area below. Thank
you! **Note the second: I try to respond to sign-ups within a day, but
that is not always possible. Please be patient. If not, I can be reached
at jane@appletree-books.com. (Personal information will not be shared.)
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Appletree Books Writing Contests
For the first time, Appletree is sponsoring two writing contests in conjunction with our month-long Writer in the Window program this November. 1) Student writers in elementary, middle, or high school are invited to submit a short work, no more than one page, in whatever format they wish. 2) In conjunction with Heights Arts’ Heights Writes Committee, we invite adults writing poetry to submit 1-3 poems that speak to the part that books and reading play in our lives. Contestants in both contests must be signed up to be Writers in the Window at Appletree, and they are encouraged to write at least part of their entries in our windows. Entries are due no later than midnight, Saturday, December 1, 2018. Winners will be announced on December 10 and will be invited to read their work at a celebratory reception at Appletree Books on Friday, December 14. Multiple prizes, including Appletree gift certificates, will be awarded in each contest. Sign up to be a Writer in the Window at https://tinyurl.com/yawkke8n. For questions or more information, contact Jane Rothstein at jane@appletree-books.com.
Appletree Books
12419 Cedar Road
Cleveland Heights, OH 44106
(216) 791-2665
Appletree Books
12419 Cedar Road
Cleveland Heights, OH 44106
(216) 791-2665
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
OCFB Interviews Poet and Journalist Lee Chilcote
This month the Cleveland Public Library's Ohio Center for the Book interviews Literary Cleveland's own Lee Chilcote:Tuesday, September 11, 2018
Wick announces their poetry season
The Wick Poetry Center at Kent State University has announced their slate of events, readings, exhibits, and a creativity festival, starting this Thursday (!) with a poetry reading at the Akron Art Museum.
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Friday, September 7, 2018
Spoken Word Every Last Friday in Akron
Michael DeBenedictis has been hosting a poetry series the last Friday of every month at Nervous Dog Coffee Bar, 1530 W. Market Street in Akron, Ohio. The show often features music in addition to spoken word.
This month's installment (September 28th from 6 to 9 p.m.) features several Cleveland poets including Ray McNiece, Kisha Nicole Foster and John Burroughs.
This month's installment (September 28th from 6 to 9 p.m.) features several Cleveland poets including Ray McNiece, Kisha Nicole Foster and John Burroughs.
Thursday, August 23, 2018
Waiting for the Wind to Rise August 30th at Mac's Backs
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| poster by Christopher Franke |
M.J. Arcangelini's new chapbook, Waiting for the Wind to Rise, was released today by Greater Cleveland's own NightBallet Press. Originally from Ohio, Arcangelini now lives in California but will be returning to Cleveland for a special book release event and reading on August 30th at Mac's Backs Books on Coventry.
Sunday, August 19, 2018
Four Ohio Poets
A handful of books published by Ohio poets recently happened to cross my path, so I decided to read them to see what's new in Ohio. All of them had something to admire; I tend to judge books mostly on the strongest poems in them, not on the weaker ones, although none of the books had poems that I though were actually bad.
Invisible Fish, Susan F. Glassmeyer, Dos Madres Press 2018 (www.dosmadres.com)
Invisible Fish featured nature poems, interspersed with several poems that dealt with the narrator’s childhood in the land of “polished cotton pinafores, church bonnets, shiny shoes with bows, Friday night bingo”— laid out most explicitly in “From the Land of Stuffed Mangoes.” “Invisible Fish”, the title poem, was amusing and insightful, a nostalgic defense of naïveté and imagination against a world that laughs with those who fool you. Threaded through the book are poems about a darker side of the same upbringing, a tale of escaping from a cycle of family abuse and small-town oppression. Near the end, the prose-poem “Miss Carlton” is a poignant view of the other side, a brief slice of life of an inconsequential encounter in a grocery checkout line. One comment, though is that in my opinion, one dead animal poem would have been enough.
- Glassmeyer is interviewed about Invisible Fish here: http://ohiopoetryassn.blogspot.com/2018/10/casting-line-for-susan-glassmeyers.html
How the Universe Says Yes to Me, M. J. Werthman White, Main Street Rag Publishing 2017 (www.mainstreetrag.com)
How the Universe Says Yes to Me is a short book with a lighter take on the subject. A handful of the poems are simple list poems (most amusingly “Lies I’ve Told”), inviting the reader to draw the lines between the items. It has a few very amusing poems where the universe itself is personified, including the title poem, and “The Universe Speaks,” in which the ways of the universe are hard to understand: I found these whimsical, somewhat surrealistic, and quite charming. Some of the poems are historical— “Tycho Brahe’s moose,” for example, is about a real moose that the astronomer Tycho Brahe really brought to parties; “For Alex, the African Grey Parrot” is an elegy for the death of the celebrated parrot of animal psychologist Irene Pepperberg, feaured (among other places) in Scientific American.
A Green Line Between Green Fields is the only book of the four books here daring to venture into rhymed verse (although most of the work is unrhymed), with the rhyme (often slant) of “The Fool’s Boy” and “Trained.” I have to admit to an unabashed admiration for form— a twelve-stanza terza rima using only two rhymes (as in “The Fool's Boy") is not easy! “ The Torturer’s Daughter” ventures (obliquely) into political commentary; and “Pulling Yourself Up by Your—“ somewhat less obliquely. The title poem is a tribute to the late Maj Ragain, an anecdote showing his humor and wordplay, and a bit of his buddha-nature.
500 Cleveland Haiku, Michael Ceraolo, Writing Knights Press 2018 (https://writingknightspress.blogspot.com)
I have to admit to some degree of envy that Michael Ceraolo published this one first, since back in 2011, I published on the web my own haiku series, "52 Cleveland Haiku," with one Cleveland haiku for each week through the year (find it here, here, and here.). So, Michael goes there and a few hundred more. His haiku (not to mention senryu, zappai, and various other 'ku forms) span the range from observations of the cityscape, to cynical observations about people and politics, very often focussing on observation of the many ways in which Cleveland is a very different city for the rich than for poor. He winds his way through the seasons of the city, watching with alternating compassion, passion, and scorn, celebrating the cracked concrete and the ice-covered lake equally.
500 Cleveland Haiku, Michael Ceraolo, Writing Knights Press 2018 (https://writingknightspress.blogspot.com)I have to admit to some degree of envy that Michael Ceraolo published this one first, since back in 2011, I published on the web my own haiku series, "52 Cleveland Haiku," with one Cleveland haiku for each week through the year (find it here, here, and here.). So, Michael goes there and a few hundred more. His haiku (not to mention senryu, zappai, and various other 'ku forms) span the range from observations of the cityscape, to cynical observations about people and politics, very often focussing on observation of the many ways in which Cleveland is a very different city for the rich than for poor. He winds his way through the seasons of the city, watching with alternating compassion, passion, and scorn, celebrating the cracked concrete and the ice-covered lake equally.
poet Mary Jo White is from Xenia, OH
Michael Ceraolo is from Cleveland, OH
Michael Ceraolo is from Cleveland, OH
poet Steve Abbott is a native of Columbus, OH
Susan F. Glassmeyer is from Cincinnati, OH
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
The Atlantic: how poetry came to matter again
A long article in this month's Atlantic about the new poets making poetry matter today:
Sunday, July 22, 2018
The City returns!
Say, I see there's a new issue of The City Poetry, Lady K's 'zine of art and words: Summer 2018.
Check it out!
Check it out!
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| Misha Cat photo by Lady K |
Saturday, July 21, 2018
John Burroughs in Audio and Video--
| John Burroughs |
And if you can't get enough of John, he's featured in a 40-minute video on "The CookBook" ("food/art/conversations"), a video series brought out from the Sundress Academy for the Arts hosted by Darren C. Demaree and Christopher Bowen:
Wednesday, July 18, 2018
Ten Years Old!
Clevelandpoetics: the blog just turned ten years old, with the first post by Michael Salinger announcing the blog on July 17, 2008.
Happy birthday to us! There's been 1,181 posts since then-- oops, that's 1,182 now-- and it's hard to believe we're still going. Year 11, here we come!
Now, with that said, if we're going to survive another year, I have to say we need your help-- we've always needed your help, and we need it now more than ever. The blog isn't a one-man show: this blog belongs to the Cleveland poetry community: this blog is your blog.
So, we want you to contribute. Join the team! We want you! Write up what happened at a poetry reading you attended, or a slam, or an author reading! Tell us about your philosophy of poetry, or why poetry is dead (or isn't dead)! Tell us why Cleveland is unique! Tell us about a poet we don't know, or about a part of the Cleveland poetry community that we haven't been covering-- Cleveland poetry is a big, big tent, and we each sometimes only see our only little corner of it: show us where poetry lives in your community.
Please-- we need you! We don't want your money-- Clevelandpoetics: the blog has been free (and ad-free!) since the beginning. What we want is your posts.
Want to join team? Want to just write a guest post? We want you. Write us at clevelandpoetics@gmail.com and volunteer to join the team now!
Happy birthday to us! There's been 1,181 posts since then-- oops, that's 1,182 now-- and it's hard to believe we're still going. Year 11, here we come!
Now, with that said, if we're going to survive another year, I have to say we need your help-- we've always needed your help, and we need it now more than ever. The blog isn't a one-man show: this blog belongs to the Cleveland poetry community: this blog is your blog.
So, we want you to contribute. Join the team! We want you! Write up what happened at a poetry reading you attended, or a slam, or an author reading! Tell us about your philosophy of poetry, or why poetry is dead (or isn't dead)! Tell us why Cleveland is unique! Tell us about a poet we don't know, or about a part of the Cleveland poetry community that we haven't been covering-- Cleveland poetry is a big, big tent, and we each sometimes only see our only little corner of it: show us where poetry lives in your community.
Please-- we need you! We don't want your money-- Clevelandpoetics: the blog has been free (and ad-free!) since the beginning. What we want is your posts.
Want to join team? Want to just write a guest post? We want you. Write us at clevelandpoetics@gmail.com and volunteer to join the team now!
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Inkubator is coming
Literary Cleveland is once again holding their free Inkubator literary arts week, with events every evening from July 31 through August 3, and then the all-day Inkubator conference & book fair on Saturday August 4.
The event starts Tuesday, July 31st, with the Lit Cleveland Book Swap and NEOMFA reading at 6:30-9 pm at the Market Garden Brewery in Ohio City, 1947 W. 25th Street.
Check it out! You can register online.

- Literary Cleveland website
- Lit Calendar of events
Wednesday, June 20, 2018
Smith and Burroughs July 7th at Visible Voice Books in Tremont
Steven B. Smith is the author of Where Never Was Already Is [2018, Crisis Chronicles Press]. John Burroughs is the author of Loss and Foundering [2018, NightBallet Press]. They will read from their new books and more. An open mic will follow, for anyone else who wishes to share. For more info, visit www.visiblevoicebooks.com.
Friday, June 8, 2018
Sunday, June 3, 2018
Lots of upcoming events!
(and if that's not enough for you, don't forget that John Burroughs keeps a longer list of upcoming poetic events right here on the clevelandpoetics blog... just scroll up to the top! Or access it on google calendar.)
Thursday, May 31, 2018
The Volume of Our Incongruity
by Diane Vogel Ferri
Poetry Chapbook $14.99
PREORDER SHIPS SEPTEMBER 21, 2018
RESERVE YOUR COPY TODAY
Diane Vogel Ferri taught children with special needs for over thirty years. Her poems can be found in many journals including Plainsongs, Rockford Review, Poet Lore and Rubbertop Review. Diane has essays published by Scene Magazine, Cleveland Christmas Memories, and by Cleveland State University among others. She is the author of a poetry chapbook, Liquid Rubies and a novel, The Desire Path. She is a founding member of Literary Cleveland and a tutor at Seeds of Literacy.
Please mail all orders to the Finishing Line Press or order online at:
or go to www.finishinglinepress.com and type in the name or author.
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Reviews for The Volume of Our Incongruity:
A certain irresistible sincerity marks these poems. They invite us into sacred space, where grace and unapologetic longing reside and rule, where the singular voice we hear is so quiet and prayerful we must lean in to listen. The Volume of Our Incongruity, however, is more than a collection of poems. It’s a narrative, the story of a granddaughter, now recollected as one of eight “graphite markings on [a] basement two-by-four;” a wife, whose “love is a tundra, vast and white;” a mother, a “thirsty woman drinking every last drop of the sea.” In language that is clear and deceptively simple, Diane Ferri reaches into a life lived deeply and pulls out truth.
–Lou Suarez, author of Ask and Traveler
In The Volume of Our Incongruity, Diane Ferri chronicles life-shaping moments by alternately slowing down the kind of speeding landscapes seen from a station wagon window, and zooming in to examine life’s discrepancies up close and in person. These are poems for our times, stirring a compelling swirl where the past intersects with the present, where hope for the future can spring from a single sonogram.
–Gail Bellamy, author, poet and Cleveland Heights poet laureate, 2009 and 2010
These intimate, powerful poems about family, love, and memory settle on your skin and won’t wash off. Diane Ferri’s voice is every woman’s, grappling with being a wife, mother and individual. In this vividly rendered collection, the specific details of a life become something wondrous.
–Lee Chilcote, author of The Shape of Home
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The poet doesn't invent. He listens. ~Jean Cocteau


















In peace and poetry,











