Sunday, November 09, 2008

25 POETS TO COMMIT ‘RANDOM ACTS OF POETRY’ ACROSS CANADA



Random Acts of Poetry, a celebration of poetry and literacy, begins its fifth year during the week of October 1st to 5th, 2008.



Random Acts of Poetry is a project of the Victoria READ Society, a non-profit literacy organization, established in 1976. Random Acts of Poetry is funded by The Canada Council for the Arts.

During the week, 25 acclaimed poets across Canada, from Victoria to Newfoundland, will commit Random Acts of Poetry in their cities and adjacent small towns. On buses and subways, in donut shops and cafes, police stations, grocery stores, shelters, curling rinks, on city streets and country lanes, poets will read poems to strangers and give them their books. Poets will also read their poems in ESL and Adult Literacy classes and, as well, will present poetry in middle school classes, and give the students a book of poetry written by middle school students, We Can Say This, published with support from of the TD Bank Financial Group.

Patrick Lane, one of Canada’s premier poets, says of Random Acts of Poetry, "There are no accidents. Nothing is random. A poem sits in a poet’s pocket and jumps out when you least expect it. It can nestle in a mechanic’s ear, a politician’s hand, a waitress’s bright eye, somewhere, anywhere. You look up from work and there’s a poem. It reads itself to you. It asks you to take a break. It says: Right here. Right now."

"Poetry," says Wendy Morton, founder of Random Acts of Poetry, "is the shortest distance between two hearts. I have read poems to hundreds of people, many of whom hadn’t heard a poem in thirty years, and watched their eyes fill up with tears. Some burst into laughter or laid a hand on my shoulder, hugged me, took my hand. Poetry can connect us with each other as humans as no other art form I know. Poetry is a gift that we can create from whatever life has in store for us."

Across Canada poets will commit random acts in: Victoria, Nanaimo, Vancouver, Kelowna, Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Toronto, Pickering, Trenton, Ottawa, Port McNicoll, Windsor, Montreal, Laval, Fredericton, Edmundston, Charlottetown, Halifax, and St. John’s.

Saskatoon RAP photos

Poeming at a TD bank in Saskatoon.

Saskatoon RAP photos

Randomly poeming a gang of girls who already had a predisposition to poetry.

Saskatoon RAP photos

Reading to a couple on their wedding day. They said this was their first wedding gift!

Saskatoon RAP photos

Sharing No Apologies for the Weather with a young couple in Kiwanis Park.

Saskatoon RAP photos

Kamikaze poet. Enjoying the leaf pile in Kiwanis Park.

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Mary Ann Mulhern RAPs an ESLE class.


Mary Ann Mulhern RAPs an ESLE class.


Sheri-D Wilson Random Acts PIX

www.sheridwilson.com

www.calgaryspokenwordfestival.com

Sheri-D Wilson Random Acts PIX

www.sheridwilson.com

www.calgaryspokenwordfestival.com

Sheri-D Wilson Random Acts PIX

www.sheridwilson.com

www.calgaryspokenwordfestival.com

Sheri-D Wilson Random Acts PIX

www.sheridwilson.com

www.calgaryspokenwordfestival.com

Sheri-D Wilson Random Acts PIX

www.sheridwilson.com

www.calgaryspokenwordfestival.com

Monday, October 20, 2008

Danielle Shelton shares a haiku with Mexican/Uruguay poet Victor Sosa.


Patrick Coppens poems a few internet cafe users.


Élizabeth Robert poems François Tardif.


Agathe Brisebois se fait coller un poème.


Patrick and Élizabeth both poeming.


Patrick, Danielle and Élizabeth kick off this year's edition of les Randonnées aléatoires de poésie (RAP), with Agathe Brisebois.


Élizabeth Robert poems Cristina Rascon Castro.


Marian White


Marian White
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
This group photo was taken during an ESL class. These students were reading my poetry and then translating into Chinese. A great week all around.

Laurence Hutchman

Laurence Hutchman reads to future teachers at Edmundston Campus of the Université de Moncton.

Laurence Hutchman

Laurence Hutchman reads to Jean Francois Pinel at Radio CFAI in Edmundston.

Laurence Hutchman

Laurence Hutchman reads in the Sullivan Esso Station to Bill Sullivan.

Laurence Hutchman

Laurence Hutchman reads as Louise Fife dances holding a jar of exotic tea at Café Lotus Bleu

Carmelo Militano

A man, his motorcycle and a poet and his poems.

Carmelo Militano

A lovely lady in an Asian shop reading my poems upside down as I read to her. Amazing!

Carmelo Militano

Family out for a sandwich for lunch & a poem for dessert.

Carmelo Militano

Couple enjoying a fall day & a poem down by the river.

Carmelo Militano

The amazing kitchen staff at 'Oui' Restaurant pause to listen and enjoy a
Poem.

RAP 2008 pics from Kim Goldberg in Nanaimo.

Kim Goldberg lays some rhymes on a bronze likeness of Nanaimo¹s longtime mayor of yesteryear, Frank Ney, who was fond of donning a pirate costume and proclaiming "Here in Nanaimo, we prefer corn to culture!" Random Acts of Poetry may change his mind.

RAP 2008 pics from Kim Goldberg in Nanaimo.

Kim Goldberg takes it to the airwaves on Nanaimo¹s Radio CHLY, poeming show host Dirk Becker.

RAP 2008 pics from Kim Goldberg in Nanaimo.

Dorothy Mandy and Larry Whaley get poemed by Kim Goldberg at the a farmer's market in Nanaimo.

RAP 2008 pics from Kim Goldberg in Nanaimo.

Sarah de Bakker and a friendly totem turn an ear to roving poet Kim Goldberg in Nanaimo¹s Bowen Park.

RAP 2008 pics from Kim Goldberg in Nanaimo.

7-month-old Nathan Nakagawa takes time out from teething to catch a poem from Kim Goldberg. Future poet-in-the making?

RAP from Edmonton

RAP 2008 was a blast.

It started with a CBC Radio morning show interview where I read Billy Collins' "Introduction to Poetry," Amazing how many people heard the interview and said they hoped they would be poemed.

From there, I went to Lis Cressey's Grade 6 class at Parkdale School where I took We Can Say This and did a poetry workshop with the kids.

Here are some excerpts from the poems:

If my poem were a superhero it would be my mom,
because she loves me and that is her power.

If my poem were a laugh it would be a laugh with a snort in the middle,
because I love the sound of a pig.

If my poem were a hairdo it would be a funky spiky pink
because it reminds me of myself.

If my poem were the end of a story, it would be mysterious
because it makes me think of what will happen next.

We had fun.

Friday was a beautiful day--sunny and golden--and my able poetry assistant Kirstin Mayo and I poemed all kinds of people in Churchill Square and City Hall. Some memorable moments:
Bill the underground parking attendant who was delighted to get a poem and a book.
Tom, a homeless man who played the grand piano in City Hall beautifully, and who traded me for my poem and book with his playing and with a spirited rendition of Hamlet's To Be or Not To Be soliliquy.
Glen, a folkie busker in the underground causeway, who read one of my poems--"The Debt Tango"--amazingly well.
Margo, who laughed with such gusto.
The Mayor, Stephen Mandel, who is a big poetry supporter.

Saturday I poemed at the Carrot Cafe on 118 Avenue and at the Anarchist Book Fair in the Ukrainian Hall, an event that draws activists from all over Canada and the States.

Monday, I visited Amiskiciy Academy, an aboriginal school, where I joined the community for morning drumming circle and prayers, before visiting a Grade 10 and Grade 8 class.

Thank you for the opportunity!

Jannie Edwards

RAP from Edmonton


RAP from Edmonton


Pictures of Mary Ann Mulhern.


Pictures of Mary Ann Mulhern.


Pictures of Mary Ann Mulhern.


Susan McMaster photos in gym.


Susan McMaster photos in gym.


Wendy Morton


Wendy Morton
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
Students at Journey Middle School, Sooke, B.C. discover poetry .

Wendy Morton


Wendy Morton
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry

Wendy Morton reads to the manager of Save on Foods in Victoria and his twin.


Janet Rogers


Janet Rogers
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
Hi All;
It was a lot of work! For poets and Wendy our (tireless?) organizer.

I shared poetry with the executive board members of the B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres in Victoria B.C. and did this in the Family Literacy room - what could be more appropriate. There were some families there too.

Conducted a writing class at the Tribal School on the Tsarlip Reserve on Vancouver Island. Some of the students in this class were contributors in the "We Can Say This" publication and read their poems to the class when they received the booklets.

Then I committed Random Acts of Poetry at an event called "Shop the Wild B.C. at the Royal Roads University, but dang-it, forgot to bring my camera that day as I was selling my crafts and had too much to pack. But during that weekend, read to Elders, teachers, moms-to-be and a Band council contingent from Haida Gwai.

As a result, my books are now in a variety of communities throughout British Columbia, such as Prince Rupert, The Queen Charlotte Islands, Penticton, Cowichan etc.

Janet Rogers

Friday, October 17, 2008

Janet Rogers


Janet Rogers
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry

Janet Rogers


Janet Rogers
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
Hi All;
It was a lot of work! For poets and Wendy our (tireless?) organizer.

I shared poetry with the executive board members of the B.C. Association of Aboriginal Friendship Centres in Victoria B.C. and did this in the Family Literacy room - what could be more appropriate. There were some families there too.

Conducted a writing class at the Tribal School on the Tsarlip Reserve on Vancouver Island. Some of the students in this class were contributors in the "We Can Say This" publication and read their poems to the class when they received the booklets.

Then I committed Random Acts of Poetry at an event called "Shop the Wild B.C. at the Royal Roads University, but dang-it, forgot to bring my camera that day as I was selling my crafts and had too much to pack. But during that weekend, read to Elders, teachers, moms-to-be and a Band council contingent from Haida Gwai.

As a result, my books are now in a variety of communities throughout British Columbia, such as Prince Rupert, The Queen Charlotte Islands, Penticton, Cowichan etc.

Janet Rogers

Mary Ann Mulhern

Hello,

Here are some of the photos for Random Acts of Poetry. We had such a phenomenol response from the members of the books club, library patrons and the Young Adults who came. They are looking forward to more poetry at the library!

Thank-You for your Wisdom, Talent and Time!

Mary-lou Gelissen MLIS
Public Service Librarian
Windsor Public Library
Windsor, On.

Mary Ann Mulhern


Mary Ann Mulhern


Mary Ann Mulhern

Hello,

Mary Ann Mulhern asked me to send this photo to you-- she stopped by
the Lance offices at the University of Windsor to read to us during
Random Acts of Poetry week. This is a photo of Mary Ann with our
sports editor, Michal Tellos.

Thanks!
--Lindsey

Audrey McLaren

www.audreymclaren.com
Write pen write!
Ejaculate a storm of new creations.

Audrey McLaren


Audrey McLaren


Audrey McLaren


Audrey McLaren


Susan McMaster poeming.


Susan McMaster at Kennetcook School.

Susan McMaster at Kennetcook School.

Susan McMaster with Grade 5-6 students at Kennetcook.

Susan McMaster with Grade 5-6 students at Kennetcook.

Susan McMaster

Susan and Sarah, Ottawa Folklore Centre.

Susan McMaster (left) and June Rogers, New Edinburgh Square.

Susan McMaster (left) and June Rogers, New Edinburgh Square.

Luciano Iacobelli


Luciano Iacobelli


Luciano Iacobelli


Luciano Iacobelli


Luciano Iacobelli


Domenico Capilongo

Domenico and Luciano Iacobelli read at an adult ESL school in Scarborough.

Domenico Capilongo

Domenico poems in front of the TD Bank in Etobicoke.

Domenico Capilongo

Domenico is poeming.

Domenico Capilongo

Domenico is interviewed with Luciano Iacobelli and Kate Marshall Flaherty on CIUT Howl Show.

Domenico Capilongo

Domenico poems while kicking at the North York Wado-Ryu Karate Club in Toronto.

Kate Marshall Flaherty

That's me, Kate Marshall Flaherty, poeming Wendy Potter, our children's
piano teacher ... I thought that she brings such lovely music to our home,
why not bring poetry to hers?

Kate Marshall Flaherty

That's Kit from the MSC yin yoga class, being poemed by Kate Marshall
Flaherty.

Kate Marshall Flaherty

That's me, Kate Marshall Flaherty, poeming Barbara Landry in O'Dooney's Bar on Friday night.

VanKampen's Greenhouse Ch'town 08

Here are the photos from Hugh MacDonald's Random Acts of Poetry on Prince Edward Island. All photos are taken by Sandra MacDonald.

We had a great week with lots of beautiful responses from the people being 'poemed'.

Waterfront Montague PE


RD Roy


RD Roy
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
Had a great time with this project...thanks for all your support.

RD Roy


RD Roy
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry

RD Roy


RD Roy
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry

Nancy Holmes


Nancy Holmes
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
Great day on the streets of downtown Kelowna this afternoon in spite of some rain. Got my students to come with me and take photos.

Nancy Holmes


Nancy Holmes
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry

Nancy Holmes


Nancy Holmes
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry

Kate Marshall Flaherty and Luciano Iacobelli poeming people over the airwaves.

RAP 08 004--That's me, Kate Marshall Flaherty and Luciano Iacobelli poeming people over the airwaves at CIUT 89.5 fm for the HOWL radio show with Nancy Bullis.

Kate Marshall Flaherty with St John's grade five class.


Hugh MacDonald's Random Acts of Poetry on Prince Edward Island.

Here are the photos from Hugh MacDonald's Random Acts of Poetry on Prince Edward Island. All photos are taken by Sandra MacDonald.

The CBC shot is with Matt Rainnie on Mainstreet. The Atlantic Fitness East shot includes Steve Sharratt, a reporter for the Charlottetown Guardian. Thought you might be interested in one with a sponsor, TD bank.

We had a great week with lots of beautiful responses from the people being 'poemed'.

Hugh MacDonald's Random Acts of Poetry on Prince Edward Island.


Hugh MacDonald's Random Acts of Poetry on Prince Edward Island.


RD Roy does R.A.P.


RD Roy does R.A.P.


Nancy Holmes - RAP photos from Kelowna

Great day on the streets of downtown Kelowna this afternoon in spite of some rain. Got my students to come with me and take photos. It was a big crowd.

Marian White - Day 1 in St. John's, NL.


Marian White - Day 1 in St. John's, NL.


Marian White - Day 1 in St. John's, NL.


Marian White - Day 1 in St. John's, NL.


Marian White - Day 1 in St. John's, NL.

Hi there, here's a few snaps from Day 1 of RAP in St. John's, NL. I mostly
imposed on people taking their lunch break, managed to get a chef out of his kitchen and a cleaning woman to stop vacuuming long enough to hear a poem. A couple visiting St. John's wanted a book each so they would not have to fight over who got the book when they travelled separately. Today I am off to the ESL Class at Cabot College. Enjoying the ride that is RAP! Marian.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Nancy Holmes


Nancy Holmes
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
Nancy Holmes has published four collections of poetry, Valancy and the New World (Kalamalka Press), Down to the Golden Chersonese: Victorian Lady Travellers (Sono Nis) and The Adultery Poems (Ronsdale) and most recently, Mandorla from Ronsdale Press (2005). She is an Associate Professor of Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia Okanagan in Kelowna BC.

Danielle Shelton

Danielle Shelton est pdg des Éditions Adage, une maison de littérature orientée vers l'écriture migrante. Elle distribue au Canada certains titres des éditions Maelström (Belgique) et de la Maison de la poésie Rhône-Alpes (France), dont ceux en coédition avec Adage. Elle fait également de la coédition avec trois autres maisons d'édition françaises: Le Temps des Cerises (Pantin), Blanche (Paris) et Association français du haiku (Lyon) et une maison d'édition catalane : Pagès (Lleida)

Elle est aussi présidente de Diffusion Adage, un organisme sans but lucratif qui produit des événements culturels.

Parmi ceux-ci :

La poésie prend le métro et le bus, un projet de diffusion de poésie dans les transports en commun, qu'elle a créé à Montréal; et le concours de poésie de la STM, pour les 40 ans du métro de Montréal (2007); aussi, le jumelage poétique avec les métros de Paris (été 2006) et Bruxelles (automne 2007), ainsi que La poésie prend le bus à Laval (2008).

le volet montréalais du Festival international du livre mangeable en partenariat avec l'Institut de tourisme et d'hôtellerie du Québec - et le site Web international de cet événement (Books2eat) dont elle gestionnaire les Noches de poesia créées par Élizabeth Robert et dont elle est productrice. Depuis 2007, elle est également d.g. de la Société littéraire de Laval et éditrice de la revue littéraire de l'Association, Brèves. Danielle Shelton est en nomination pour un des prix de la culture 2008, décerné par Ville de Laval.

Elle a une formation en arts plastiques, en graphisme et en éducation (doctorat). Elle a été chroniqueuse littéraire au magazine Recto-Verso. Elle a réalisé un quiz littéraire dans le cadre de Montréal capitale mondiale du livre: Un roman, c'est comme du cinéma.

Marian Frances White

Marian Frances White is a writer who has published in many different genres. Her published works include ten editions of A Woman's Almanac, Voices of Newfoundland and Labrador Women (1987-1992), and A Woman's Almanac, Voices of Atlantic Canadian women (1993-1996). In 1997 a collection of Almanac interviews was published in The Finest Kind, a compendium of Newfoundland and Labrador Stories. In 1994 White published the biographical book Not A Still Life, the art and writings of artist Rae Perlin. In 1995 she published a History of Newfoundland and Labrador with Grolier Ltd., as part of their Canadian series on the provinces. In 1996 it was translated into French. Prior to this, White started a women's newspaper called Waterlily.

In 1997 White published her first book of poetry, Skinny Dipping. George Elliott Clarke wrote in the Halifax Chronicle Herald: Forget Toronto, St. John's rules English Canadian poetry. Her film work has won awards in both Canada and the United States. In 2000, she was named Artist of the Year by the Newfoundland and Labrador Arts Council. White's second book of poetry, Mind Your Eyes, was released by Killick Press in 2003. Since then, through the League of Canadian Poets, she has given poetry readings in St. John's, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Durham Ontario, and Victoria, B.C, as well as Victoria, C.B. In these readings her celebration of life in Newfoundland comes to life.

In 2005, White released her first children's book, Sights Before Christmas, co-authored with her partner, Beni Malone. In 2006 Sights was named one of the best­selling children's books in Canada. In 2005 she co-produced a dramatic CSI-style documentary, Stealing Mary: Last of the Red Indians ­ a film that explores the demise of the Beothuk people of Newfoundland. In 2007 she released Tricksters, a documentary that takes viewers for a unique adventure to the northern Innu communities in Labrador.

White is currently working a poetic chapbook called Good Grief, to be released in May 2009.

Douglas Roy


Douglas Roy
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
R.D. Roy is originaly from Montreal. His Anglo/Francophone heritage and working class background are often reflected in his writing.

He's published two collections of short stories, The Colours Found in Bruises, (Panegyric Press) and a short novel, A Pre-emptive Kindness, (Hidden Brook Press). His work has appeared in several anthologies and Montreal's Matrix magazine. Roy's first book of poetry, Three Cities, was released by Hidden Brook Press in 2008.

Roy was a feature reader at the International Book Fair in Havana (2007, 2008), the Al Purdy People's Poetry festival, 2007, Hot Sauced Words, Toronto (2008), and with Toronto's DUB poetry collective (2006, 2007). He is the "Official House Poet" to the Organic Undergound Reasaurant in Belleville, and a member of The League of Canadian Poets, PEN Canada, and the Canada-Cuba Literary Alliance. Roy is a contributing editor to the CCLA's quarterly, The Ambassador.

He is currently working on the Street Health Centre's Writers' Anthology. Also, a collaborative collection of poems that examine Life & Death in Cheap Motels will be released some time in the future by Roy and Kingston writer/poet Jen Londry.

Audrey Jean McLaren

Audrey often says that she was writing poetry long before she knew how dynamic and therapeutic poetry is. She reminisces about the times when a favourite playmate moved away, and from her heartbreak, she moulded a poem; or when she was punished and from her anger emerged poems that calmed her soul. Some of her best poems were written after a dear friend died and her only consolation came from the jubilation of the poems as they came to light.

It was while coping with the loss of this friend that Audrey decided to complete her M.A. degree and publish her first anthology of poems. She named the book, Bareface Pickney. The book, however, is not about death. Quite the opposite! It takes you through all the corridors of life and intoxicates you with giggles as you immerse yourself in the antics of the barefaced child.

Audrey was born in St. Thomas, Jamaica. She grew up in Duhaney Park, and lived most of her adult life in St. Catherine. She has been a high school teacher since 1986, and while living in Jamaica she taught History at Norman Manley High School and Immaculate Conception High School. She immigrated to Pickering, Ontario in 2000. By 2001 Audrey was back to the job of teaching. After working as a supply teacher for both the Durham District School Board and the Toronto District School Board, she accepted a permanent job with the latter.

In 2007 she published her second book, I am the Djembe. A book that celebrates desires, wants, love, family, life. I am the Djembe reveals the new Audrey. It reveals a poet who believes that the whole expanse of the world is there for her pen to seduce. It hails a poet who writes about two cultures in two languages and loves every verse of it; a poet who plays with adult material and advocates for children.

Audrey has done most of her poetry readings in schools, at Jamaican cultural events, and on Jamaican radio and television. She is excited about Random Acts of Poetry and hopes to put a smile on the lips and a poem in the hearts of the residents of Pickering and Toronto.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Mary Ann Mulhern

Mary Ann Mulhern is a Canadian poet who lives in Windsor, Ontario. The Red Dress , published by Black Moss Press is in third printing. Touch the Dead, also published by Black Moss Press in 2006, is in second printing. Mary Ann Mulhern has read at Shakespeare and Company, Paris, France. Her third book of narrative verse is, The Chosen Ones.

Her third book of narrative verse, When Angels Weep, gives voice to forty-seven women who were sexually abused as children by Father Charles Sylvestre of the diocese of London , Ontario. The April 10 , 2008 launch was surrounded with intense media coverage.

Laurence Hutchman

Laurence Hutchman has taught at Concordia University, the University of Alberta and the University of Western Ontario. At present he is a professor at the Université de Moncton in Edmundston, New Brunswick. He has published eight books of poetry: The Twilight Kingdom (Killaly Press, 1973), Explorations (D.C. Books, 1975), Blue Riders (Maker Press, 1985), Foreign National (Agawa Books, 1993), Emery (Black Moss Press, 1998), and Beyond Borders (Broken Jaw Press, 2000), Selected Poems, Guernica Press, 2006, Reading the Water, (Black Moss Press, 2008). In 2002, he co-edited the anthology, Coastlines: the Poetry of Atlantic Canada. His poems have appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies. He received an honourable mention in the Alfred G. Bailey Poetry competition in 1995 for Emery and The Alden Nowlan Award for Excellence in English-language Literary Arts in 2007. He has given poetry workshops in Canada, the United States, and China and has served as Quebec (1986-89) and New Brunswick / Prince Edward Island (1996-98) representative for the League of Canadian Poets and President of the Writers' Federation of New Brunswick (2000-02).

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Patrick Coppens

Patrick Coppens, né à Orléans en France, poète, écrivain, critique et illustrateur, cofondateur et président de la société littéraire de Laval de 1985 à 1989. Depuis 1969, il est bibliographe responsable du module littérature et linguistique des services documentaires multimédia (SDM). Fondateur, en septembre 1997, et animateur des Mardis de Port-Royal, libre regroupement d'une trentaine d'artistes, en poésie, arts visuels et théâtre. En 2005 et 2008, expérience exaltante, il a lu pendant 4 heures sur les quais du métro montréalais des poèmes d'auteurs québécois vivants.

Il a publié à ce jour plus de 20 livres : poésies, anthologies, critiques, récits et humour. Dernier livre paru, Ciel convertible (42e Parallèle, 2004), à paraître, Joujou dans quatre têtes (Éditions d'Art Le Sabord, 2007) avec une préface de Jacques Brault, et Carnets secrets d'Agathe Brisebois (Adage, 2006).

Découvrez les photos les plus intéressantes du jour!

Domenico Capilongo

Domenico Capilongo was born in Toronto in 1972 and grew up in Vancouver and Swift Current, Saskatchewan before returning to Toronto where he completed his education. He is a karate instructor as well as a former Ontario Karate Champion and National Black Belt Medalist. He has lived in Japan and traveled throughout Asia. He teaches high school creative writing and alternative education. His work has appeared in several journals and anthologies in Canada and abroad. In 2004, he won an honourable mention in The Toronto Star Poetry Contest. He lives in Toronto with his wife and two sons. I thought elvis was italian is his first collection of poetry.

http://domcapilongo.googlepages.com

Lesley Choyce


Lesley Choyce
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
Lesley Choyce is the author of 67 books for adults, teens and children. He has taught at Dalhousie University for the past 25 years and is the publisher of Pottersfield Press. Lesley surfs year round in the North Atlantic and is considered the father of transcendental wood-splitting.

He's worked as a rehab counsellor, a freight hauler, a corn farmer, a janitor, a journalist, a lead guitarist, a newspaper boy and a well-digger. He lives in a 200 year old farm house at Lawrencetown Beach overlooking the ocean. He also hosts a nationally syndicated TV talk show on BookTelevision. His novel, The Republic of Nothing is
currently being developed as a feature length movie. His animal epic film, The Skunk Whisperer, was broadcast across Canada and heralded at the Maine International Film Festival. Along with the Surf Poets, he has released two poetry/music albums, Long Lost Planet and Sea Level.

Shauna Paull


Shauna Paull
Originally uploaded by random acts of poetry
Shauna Paull is a poet, educator and community advocate. She completed an MFA in Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia in 1999. Since then, she has led creative writing workshops at the Shadbolt Centre for the Arts in Deer Lake Park, Burnaby and at the Emily Carr University of Art and Design. In community, Shauna works together with migrating women for equality, mobility and labour rights. She recently led Poetry for the People workshops at the Rhizome Cafe. roughened in undercurrent, her new book of poems, was published in April 2008 by Leaf Press.

Kate Marshall Flaherty

Kate Marshall Flaherty is an award-winning poet, with poetry prizes from publications such as: Word Magazine, THIS Magazine, Freefall Literary Journal, and Scarborough Arts Council's Surface and Symbol. She was shortlisted for Descant's Winston Collins Best Canadian Poem 2006, and for Nimrod Journal's Pablo Neruda Poetry Prize 2006. Kate is one of the founders of the Childrens' Peace Theatre, teaches yoga/meditation, facilitates teen retreats, guides "writing as a spiritual practise" workshops, and lives in East Toronto with her three spirited children and husband. Her first book of poetry, entitled Tilted Equilibrium, was published by Hidden Brook Press 2006. Her chapbook, Unfathom won the Canadian Poetry Association's Shaunt
Basmajian Award 2007, and follows her first chapbook, Salt. She also has two cd's out, of poetry to soundscape, entitled Deepening Stillness and String of Mysteries. Poetry is her life-line and she has been know to have spontaneously committed random acts of poetry in Banff, Toronto, Ottawa, Parry Sound, Port Perry, Vaughan, Oakville, London, and New York.

Hugh MacDonald

Born 24 July, 1945, Hugh MacDonald retired after 31 years of teaching high school and now writes full time. He has a B.A. from Saint Dunstan’s University in Charlottetown. He lives with his wife Sandra, and two of six children, in the community of Brudenell in eastern PEI on the bank of the beautiful Montague River. He has nine books to his credit: Chung Lee Loves Lobsters (Annick Press, 1992), Looking for Mother (Black Moss Press, 1995), The Digging of Deep Wells (Black Moss Press, 1997), and Tossed Like Weeds from the Garden (Black Moss Press, 1999) and Cold Against the Heart (Black Moss Press) 2003. He also co-edited with Brent MacLaine: Landmarks:An Anthology of New Atlantic Poetry of the Land (The Acorn Press, 2001), and with Alice Reese A Bountiful Harvest: Fifteen Years of the Island Literary Awards (The Acorn Press, 2002). His new novel, Murder at Mussel Cove, will be released in September of 2005 along with a third anthology, Letting Go: An Anthology of Loss and Survival. Chung Lee Loves Lobsters won the LM Montgomery PEI Literature for Children Competition in 1990. He was the recipient of the Award for Distinguished Contribution to the Literary Awards on PEI in 2004.