Cool Women Poets Chill Out With Free Reading

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The Princeton area-based Cool Women poetry group will read new works and selections from “Cool Women Volume 7” at the Lawrenceville Branch of the Mercer County Library on Thursday, November 30, at 6:30 p.m.

The 10-member critique and performance group comprises noted regionally based and often published poets who have been meeting and presenting for almost 30 years.

They include Gretna Wilkinson, Sharon Olson, Maxine Susman, Judy Rowe Michaels, Juditha Dowd, Lois Marie Harrod, Joyce Greenberg Lott, Eloise Bruce, Betty Lies, Penelope Scambly Schott, and Carolyn Foote Edelmann.

The November-themed poetic jazz performance, titled “Fall Forward, Smile Back,” will be followed by a reception with refreshments. Admission is free.

Here are samples from three of the poets:

Nightlight

As if your lips had brushed me I awoke,

saw that this was not our room,

my mind a rambler, too full of gloom

to share your sleep. The moon was partly cloaked

by cloud, but I sensed in its chilly face

a life unfolding elsewhere, yet close to me,

as when a siren makes me look up from my tea.

Why would that indifferent gleam be solace?

But I lifted toward it in just the way

I caught a breath, learning someone I’d treasured

once is dead a year. Bitterness gone stick

as mints left in a pocket. The beam crept down, lay

itself across my feet. I could almost misread

it as the cat, a silvered whisker glinting.

— Juditha Dowd

Community Garden, Lawrenceville, NJ

The voices of cicadas sizzle.

The weight of the well’s water

creaks in the Muslim woman’s red wagon wheels.

A bee buzzes within a closed squash blossom.

The Chinese couple hoe the earth softly

As with a calligrapher’s brush. The garden

is filled with the small sounds of so many breathing.

The man from Trinidad chirps to the tall African

wondering what stinks to high heaven.

My manure is making a lot of noise.

If a place in time is a destination,

I have arrived in a chorus of tongues,

wing beats, and the breeze through the stalks of corn.

Here even the dirt speaks, the sun

beats down on us, pulsing like our blood.

I have grown gourds to rattle.

— Eloise Bruce

Ascophyllum nodosum, Knotted Kelp

Acadia National Park, Maine

At low tide we lie

tangled,

a jangled heap

thrown on stone

but when the tide

glides in,

our bead-like

bladders,

those little knots

of air,

lilt us up

like ballerinas—

and we drown.

Twice daily—

dried

and drenched.

Why do we

worry so?

Even as we die,

we dance.

— Lois Marie Harrod

Fall Forward, Smile Back, readings from “Cool Women Volume 7,” Mercer County Public Library, Lawrence Headquarters Branch, 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrence Township (at Darrah Lane), Thursday, November 30, 6:30 p.m. Free. Registration requested by calling 609-883-8292, e-mail ing lawprogs@mcl.org, or visiting www.mcl.org.

For more information on Cool Women Poets, visit coolwomenpoets.org.


CE – US1

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