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August 2016   
 ČERVENÁ BARVA PRESS NEWSLETTERGloria Mindock, Editor   Issue No. 94   March, 2017
 INDEX  It has been awhile since a newsletter reached your way!
Some catch up news. In 2016, we have released the following books:
| Full-lengths: | 
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  
| Fire Tongueby Zvi A. Sesling
 (March, 2016)
 | Secret Lettersby Erika Burkart,
 translated from the German by Marc Vincenz
 (June, 2016)
 | A Peaceful Color From The Silenceby Gulnar Ali Balata
 (September, 2016)
 | Melancolía by Roberto Carlos Garcia
 (October, 2016)
 | Geography of Love and Exileby Susannah Simpson
 (December, 2016)
 | Twenty-one Ghazalsby Alisher Navoiy/Translated from the Uzbek by Dennis Daly
 (December, 2016)
 |  
| Chapbooks: | 
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  
| Duinoby Martin Burke
 (June, 2016)
 | No More Happy Endingsby Milan Djurasovic
 (July, 2016)
 | Cimmeriaby T. M. Devos
 (March, 2016)
 | The Last Gunby Anne Harding Woodworth
 (March, 2016)
 | Housing for Wrensby Edward Morin
 (September, 2016)
 | Benign Protectionby Anne Elezabeth Pluto /Anya Vladimirovna Pluta
 (September, 2016)
 |  
 More news from 2016 that you missed.Some very exciting news about the Cervena Barva Press staff.   Our international editor, Flavia Cosma, has a new book out called "The Latin 
Quarter" (MadHat Press) 
   Tim Suermondt has a new book published called, "Election Night and the Five 
Satins"( Glass Lyre Press) 
   Pui Ying Wong has a new book out called,"An Emigrant's Winter" (Glass Lyre Press) 
   My new book, "Whiteness of Bone" is published by Glass Lyre Press 
 It is a good year for all of us at Cervena Barva Press. How wonderful it is for all of 
us to have new books out all in the same year around the same time. Wow! It was very 
exciting!  Tim and I want to thank all of you who attended our book launch and thanks to 
everyone who bought our books. We can't thank you enough. Here are a few 
pictures from our launch. The rest you can see on our FB pages. Pui Ying Wong, and 
Cervena Barva Press authors Annie Pluto and Gulnar Ali Balata celebrated their book launches at 
Sherrill Library at Lesley University. Gulnar was unable to attend so I read some of her poetry 
and represented her. 
 
 Now we can move into 2017 news.Cervena Barva Press announces the release of "Slow Transit" by Michael C. Keithand a chapbook, "The Path of Thunder" by Susan Donnelly.
     
 
 
 I would like to welcome two new interns, Jamie Magrid and Tyler Wright, from Lesley University, 
who will be helping me until May. I am so very happy to have them. They both are wonderful and a big help! 
 
 AWP was absolutely wonderful. It was great to see so many of my authors and future authors, friends, 
publishers, and so many writers. I would like to give a special thank you to Annie Pluto, Heath Brougher, 
Steve Ostrowski, Hope Jordan, Lucy Lang Day, and Joani Reese for helping out at the Cervena Barva Press 
booktable. You are the best! I loved reading for Hot Pillow and hearing so many wonderful writers. Wow! 
Thank you to Joani Reese for asking me to be a part of it. Also a very big thank you to Jonathan Penton 
of Unlikely Stories. We had a reading of our authors which was great. A lively place in Washington DC. 
I would like to thank my authors for reading. They were: Bill Yarrow, Joani Reese, Annie Pluto, and 
Mark Vincenz. Also other presses that were part of the reading were River Writers, Delete Press and Tenderloin. 
Thank you!!! Thank you to Glass Lyre Press. I had a book signing of my book, "Whiteness of Bone" at their table. 
It was so great to see Royce and Steve. I missed Ami Kaye and hope she will attend next year.
All of you are the best! Garland Press was the table next to them. I got to see Laurel Dire King who I know from when I spoke to 
Gian Lombardo's publishing class at Emerson College. I was so excited she has her own press! I bought a 
wonderful book by one of her authors. They had their table decorated so cool to go along with their 
authors book. I loved it!  It was the best. I was thrilled that she bought my book.
I returned to Boston in the middle of a snow storm. I missed 2 while away. A busy week for snow but in 
Washington DC, the weather was great except one windy day. Some pictures from AWP 2017 in Washington D.C. 
 
 
 
 Now for the biggest news!  Mark your calendar for Thursday, April 27th, 7:00PM. Cervena Barva Press will be celebrating 12 years!!!! 
OMG 12 years!!!! Please come help us celebrate. Everyone is invited. 
I would like my authors to pick a poem from their book to read. It will be so much fun and I will have tons 
of goodies to eat. I need my authors to RSVP so I can plan. Exciting!!!! Come party with me!!!! 
There will be a few friends of Cervena Barva Press sharing a poem too! Also to all authors and friends of Cervena Barva Press: October is Cervena Barva Press Reads Around the World. 
I need you to set up a reading in your city/country. It takes time to find a place so do this right away. 
Send me info of who is reading so I can publicize it. Authors can pick who they want to read with. 
This was a big success last time so please get ready to do this. It must have the heading of 
Cervena Barva Press Reads Around the World.
This happens every other year. So get busy and plan. It will be so much fun and good exposure for everyone and the press.   Finally, I have not done a fund-raiser in the last few years so I am doing one this year. The press really needs 
to raise money. I am asking everyone to send in $12.00 to represent the 12 years we have been around. I really 
hope you can help us out with this amount. I am not asking for much. Just this amount because it is affordable 
and if many do this, it will all add up. Of course we will accept more but I am asking only for a modest 
contribution to the press. So this is my begging paragraph and I will be sending out emails and posting it 
all over. Instead of fund-raising in October, November, I am doing this now and will continue for awhile. 
So many of you, have been great to the press so thank you. No amount is too small. 
We appreciate anything you can do. Thank you! 
 In January, I was selected as Somerville's Poet Laureate for 2017 and 2018. I am so excited about this. 
I follow in the footsteps of Nicole Terez Dutton who did a wonderful job and was Somerville's first Poet Laureate. 
I recently had a Poetry Roundtable. Thank you to everyone who joined me. Here is a picture. It was a blast! 
The next Poetry Roundtable will be Saturday May 20th from 1:30PM-3:30PM. As Poet Laureate, I also have office 
hours once a month. It is the last Tuesday of every month from 6:30PM-7:30PM. No office hours in December. 
Come by and say hi and find out what I am up to as Poet Laureate. I will be doing many projects and will 
publicize when they are happening. I want to thank the panel for selecting me to represent the city of 
Somerville, MA. 
   
 
   ADMIT ONE: AN AMERICAN SCRAPBOOKPoetry by Martha Collins
 University of Pittsburgh Press, Pitt Poetry Series, 2016
 Reviewed by Tim Suermondt
We Americans have never come to a satisfactory grip on race. Even now in the year 2017 racial matters seem 
to bedevil us as much as ever, and Martha Collins in her new book of poems shows exactly why this is so. From 
the brilliant opening poems set in The World's Fair in 1904 St. Louis-where the new, modern age is proclaimed-to 
the ending poem, Collins gives us the sad history of racism and it's scientific theories, focusing mainly 
on early 20th century America yet showing how far, even now, we haven't come. In these poems we are reminded that people of different races were actually put on display, 
like animals at the zoo-making it clear as to the ones who were deemed inferior. The African 
"Pygmy" Ota Benga is one of the main characters, and his story is not only a tale of great 
injustice and humiliation, but is made even worse by the knowledge that this was seen by many 
as being normal-part of a whole package of laws-anti-immigrant, sterilization and more-that
men like the eugenicist Madison Grant believed were acts a Christian society had a right to foist 
on "others," often necessary actions to keep civilization "pure." 
I like the way Collins uses her scrapbook approach by including much of the news sources of 
the day. It reminds me of John Dos Passos' great novel U.S.A., and also of the novels of James 
T. Farrell. A powerful testament, but how does the book stack up as poetry? There are parts that are 
stronger than others, but the sheer thrust and conviction that Collins employs in her narrative 
gives the poetry its justice. I mentioned the strong ending poem-but here's one of the poems I 
liked best:  Zoo Zoo-      logical      garden      plantan antelope elephant tree
 zoo-    logical park    as in
 enclosure meant    for game
 for us we parked
 the car could leave
 
   WORKS ON PAPERPoems by Jennifer Barber
 Reviewed by Pui Ying Wong
Working in spare and precise language, Jennifer Barber captures passing moments in everyday 
life in poems filled with resonance and nuance.  These moments are easy to miss and Barber 
draws us to them with visual details: a pear riddled with wasps, a drifting soul in the snow, a 
woman framed by the doorway in the early morning, a man whispering to himself in the 
library...quiet moments rich in their suggestiveness. Whether writing about nature, family, faith, 
or love and dying, poems in Works on Paper, Barber's latest collection radiates intensity. It is a 
composite of life quietly observed, seasons changing, children growing up, the life cycle. Barber 
is inspired by the everyday natural world, birds, flowers, breezes, farm animals and a falcon 
picking apart a pigeon.  In "Rooms", a poem about the mother and her children opens with, "I held my son, my 
daughter/ I set them down."  The poem describes taking care and watching the children going 
through the teenage period. Barber uses unadorned language and lets the moments speak for 
themselves. With just selective details and deliberate straight- forwardness, the poem avoids 
sentimentality, the moments stay fresh and vivid, and it ends with:    My daughter took the blue notebookof the hours she kept to herself.
 My son left behind
 a sweater, a pair of jeans,
 a crumpled page of sheet music.
 She took a swollen suitcase.
 He left a keychain that lights in the dark."
 Barber's meditation in these poems brings on lovely images such as "the moon a doorknob to a
dark/  so large no one can see it..", or in another one  "the dusty wideness of the streets/  like the 
contagion's aftermath.."  We, too, slow down as we read these poems in their desolation and 
beauty. One of my favorite poems, Trope, quoted here in its entirety is wonderful in its 
strangeness. The turn comes in the lines " I take my glasses off..". To me, it is at once an allusion
to the wolf dressing up as grandmother in the Little Red Riding Hood story, and seeing the many 
sides of things. Trope Morning emerges like a long egg from a hen.
 A gazelle is wearing
 antelope pants.
 The clouds are baby goats.
 The clouds have hooves.
 I take my glasses off
 the better to see you with
 and the leaves
 in front of the sun.
 Barber also writes about God, faith and prayers, as well as the comfort found in literature and 
art. She writes, "who could stop/ from burnishing the lines/ that arrive like birds..." In the poem, 
Galway, Fireplace, she shows the painstaking effort art demands and the protectiveness the artist 
suggests about the creative flame.  Galway, Fireplace The way the peat burnswith a low, slow flame
 could break your heart
 if you wanted
 the sound of wood crackling.
 You're still cold.
 You put on a new briquette
 carefully, so as
 not to bury the flame,
 small and blue as a child's thumb.
   
   
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