updates connected to the book Idylls for a Bare Stage
& to performances of the Idylls
& other initiatives related to the Art of the Poetic Monologue
2011-2016
Showing posts with label twentythreebooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label twentythreebooks. Show all posts

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Slideshow for April 28th, CruMoPoPerFest in Waverly neighborhood, Balto

The links below can give you a feel for the course of the whole day in Waverly: Idylls with Stephen Mead, Sue Struve, and Genna Davidson; beatboxing with Max Bent; open mic poetry and music; plus sidewalk and side-of-building chalk drawing and writing. (My daughter Hero shows up frequently throughout the day, on the mic, and with the chalk).




Documentation by Douglas Mowbray, publisher of twentythreebooks, publisher of Idylls for a Bare Stage.



 

Thursday, June 14, 2012

IDYLLS FOR A BARE STAGE Now Available at SPD books

New Arrival this week at Small Press Distribution:   Idylls for a Bare Stage 



Congratulations to publisher Douglas Mowbray and twentythreebooks;  the press expands into national distribution.  check out twentythreebooks' offerings on the SPD website.



Here's where you'll find all of my books currently available through SPD, including
Idylls for a Bare Stage



Thursday, April 19, 2012

SPD and PiC: Strength of the Small Presses

Good news for Idylls for a Bare Stage:  Small Press Distribution accepted twentythreebooks as an SPD publisher, so soon the idylls book will be available through bookstores and outlets nationwide, and you'll be able to find it with my other published books at http://www.spdbooks.org

The SPD website is an excellent resource for readers to explore what's going on in independent publishing.

About the unparalleled level of support and dedication only possible through the small presses, one picture (even in a literary context) says it all.  I wasn't there, but here's twentythreebooks publisher Douglas Mowbray at  Baltimore's CityLit Festival - where else but with the indies can an author find such personal publisher attentiveness to a book?

Doug Mowbray with the Idylls in hand

And it goes beyond promotion and marketing, this attentiveness of people involved in the independent publishing world:  it starts, and follows through, and makes an end of itself of the creative process itself, with energies squarely pressed into the service of artistic values above all. Thus, with regard to such personal publisher involvement in the poetics and purposes of the work, Doug recently posted a quote about the Idylls from another publisher of mine, Christophe Casamassima. 
When the arts, the approaches to art, the interpretation of art—poesis, or the subjective—and the world in its totality of forms, genres, disciplines—the objective worldview—are in sync, then life and art disintegrate into ways of thinking and knowing. Idylls for a Bare Stage is the only book in which poetry, theatre, philosophy, philology, psychology, myth, history take precedence—an always spiraling inward precedence with no one discipline taking the foreground. No other book does this so eloquently and purposively. This is the soul of the Idylls—an exploration of knowing and how to know with the knower at the center point, struggling with being and meaning and what it is to know. It is not empirical. It is not quantifiable. And for the sake of students and humans everywhere, it’s time to unveil the cloak that keeps us rooted, no, subjugated, to the past. Let the Idylls open the way, compassionately and expansively.

-Christophe Casamassima, poet; proprietor, Furniture Press Books; co-founder, Poetry in Community
Acts and Words:  these are serious, energetic, outspoken instances of (multiple) publisher support for an author and the work - the intense take, interpretation and belief exhibited here are an above-and-beyond engagement with the book's artistic intention.  Nothing less has been my experience with both publishers as publishers, Mowbray for Idylls for a Bare Stage, and Casamassima for Heraclitean Pride and my soon-to-be-published book-length poem The Re-echoes.

The quote above was posted on a Facebook group page for Poetry in Community; and you can join the group on Facebook PiC page on Facebook; Mowbray and Casamassima worked together to create Poetry in Community, devoted to poetry as a way of life and living and knowing.  Or, as it says on the PiC page itself, "Poetry in Community will be both a physical center of activity (a meeting place, workshop, classroom, event space, library) and a virtual center of activity (web presence, catalogue, blog, forum) dedicated to creating and coordinating a community that will sustain the aesthetic and professional endeavors of emergent poets and publishers. Poetry in the Community will work with local communities—at the street, block, and neighborhood level—as a partner in community growth and sustainability efforts. Poetry in Community will create a more expansive tradition in which the whole of the community is invited to be present and represented. Poetry in Community will foster poetic practices as a collaborative effort to foster creative literacy and personal growth."

PiC is Baltimore-based, as are all of my publishers so far (although I'm based in the D.C. metro area):
Douglas Mowbray, twentythreebooks
Christophe Casamassima Furniture Press
and Justin Sirois (author of the Iraqi war novel Falcons on the Floor, just out!), Lauren Bender, and Jamie Gaughran-Perez, all three of Narrow House
I don't know what it is about Baltimore, but it has fostered an incredible scene for lit, and nourishing soil for what I do...

and so it's fitting The Idylls will come to Baltimore in a week and a half,
to wrap up the Cruellest Month Poetry and Performance Festival (CruMoPoPerFest)
on April 28th at the Waverly branch of the Enoch Pratt Free Library
400 East 33rd Street, Baltimore Maryland 21218    11-4pm
I'll post the cast list and exact Idylls performance schedule soon...

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Starting off the New Year

Looking forward to activities in 2012, some focus going to Baltimore right now, home base of Idylls publisher twentythreebooks.  Performances in development there for April.  I'll keep this blog updated as to details.

Meanwhile, for in-store browsing and buying in D.C., Capitol Hill's BackStage Books - a key source in our area for theater books, costumes, and supplies - now carries Idylls for a Bare Stage.

Go in at the following location or call ahead to reserve your copy (and while you're at it, pick up a mask or face paint for yourself or the kids - Mardi Gras is next around the corner, and then Purim!)


Backstage, Inc.
The Performing Arts Store
545 8th Street, SE 
Washington, DC 20003
Phone: (202) 544-5744

Participants in the thriving theater community of D.C., should they go to BackStage and flip through the pages, will notice that Idylls for a Bare Stage - as book, play, and specialized form for theatre - is a three-in-one offering relevant to their own engagement in contemporary performing arts:

1, as a book, just out from a Baltimore-based independent publisher, poetry for poetry readers / poetic monologues for the auditioning actor - juicy, challenging, skills-showcasing monologues.

2, as a play, for production by theater companies, troupes, or individual performers, either in part (with individual scenes or "idylls") or as a whole.

And 3, as a new - an old-new - theory and practice for theatre:  through the ancient form of the "idyll," reinvented by poet and playwright Magus Magnus, monologue becomes theatre in and of itself, easy to mount, capable of being performed almost anywhere.

Especially for the actor...   just as much as these are monologues useful for auditioning, the book's overall concept actually encourages a turning of the audition monologue on its head, providing the means for a showcase of his or her skills through the art of the Idyll - poetic monologues designed for performance - thereby affirming the actor as an individual artist, as self-determining as the poet, the painter, and the musician / songwriter.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

twentythreebooks publisher Doug Mowbray documents Idylls launch

 November 20th, Idylls Show at the Athenaeum in Alexandria

http://www.nvfaa.org/

 I'll post highlights over the next little while, but you can check out a slew of pics directly from publisher Douglas Mowbray at the following links for the Cruellest Month website and Flickr:


http://crumopoperfest.blogspot.com/2011/11/idylls-show-and-launch-party.html?spref=fb

http://www.flickr.com/photos/buddhakowski/sets/72157628162249269/with/6392465665/


and don't forget the twentythreebooks website itself:

http://twentythreebooks.com/


all best from M.