S6:E13 Geneffa Talks with Faris Sabbah & Beau Beausoleil

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Join me for this special episode of poetic witness for Palestine, featuring Faris Sabbah and Beau Beausoleil. Listen as Santa Cruz County Superintendent of Schools, ⁠Dr Faris Sabbah⁠, shares movingly about his Palestinian background and reads a poem he penned for his late father. We discuss a poem from Beau Beausoleil’s latest volume, WAR NEWS–a collection of poems written daily since October 2023 to witness the effects of hearing news out of Gaza. Beau himself then joins me to read from this collection and discuss these very necessary poems.

AGITATE! Journal has partnered with the poet to provide WAR NEWS as a free digital download.

They write,

War News is a collection of 90 poems written everyday by Beausoleil since 8th October, 2023. The poems in the collection reflect on what it means to bear witness to war, killing, and destruction in Gaza, Palestine. It asks, what it means to be alive at a time when even the death and suffering of children fails to elicit a response strong enough to end the war. This collection of 90 poems is a witness testimony from afar. It is an archive of grief, mourning, and solidarity. It is an accounting of the cost of war. Through these powerful and devastating poems Beausoleil reminds us that we cannot turn away. In the poet’s own words, “[O]ur humanity, our collective morality, requires that we bear witness and then take some kind of action” (agitatejournal.org).

The entire volume may be downloaded as a PDF or read online, providing a useful reference as you listen to this thought-provoking episode.

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Beau Beausoleil is a poet and activist based in San Francisco, California. His two most recent chapbooks are: The Killing of George Floyd (Intermittent Press, 2023) and Poems for Ukraine (Barley Books, UK, 2023). These poems also appear in the online Moving Parts Press Digital Poetry Series as Poems for George Floyd and In Ukraine: Poems.⁠ He is the founder of ⁠Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here⁠a global arts response to the car-bombing of Al-Mutanabbi Street (the street of the booksellers) in Baghdad, Iraq in 2007. It is a project of witness, memory, and solidarity with the Iraqi people by poets, artists, and writers. A selection of 24 poems from War News was also published by ⁠Moving Parts Press

S6 E7: Elizabeth Vignali Chats with Dion O’Reilly

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Bellingham poet Elizabeth Vignali buzzes in to read from her newest book and also to read and discuss ⁠Dorianne Laux⁠⁠‘s poem ⁠”Facts about the Moon. ⁠

Elizabeth Vignali is the author of the poetry collection House of the Silverfish (Unsolicited Press 2021) and three chapbooks, the most recent of which is Endangered [Animal] (Floating Bridge Press 2019). Her work has appeared in Willow Springs, Cincinnati Review, Poetry Northwest, Mid-American Review, Tinderbox, The Literary Review, and others. She lives in the Pacific Northwest, where she works as an optician, produces the Bellingham Kitchen Session reading series, and serves as poetry editor of Sweet Tree Review.

S6: E4 Carla Sameth Chats with Geneffa Jahan

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“I Am a Woman of Almost 62 Years Old / of no special bravery.”

With this poem, ⁠Carla Rachel Sameth⁠ begins her hour on The Hive Poetry Show, reading from her first full-length collection, Secondary Inspections, released in January 2024, as well as newer poems. For a voice both introspective and self-aware, Sameth’s writing pours itself into the people around her–her biracial Black son, a mother succumbing to dementia, siblings, lovers, and her wife going through the process of transitioning into her husband.

As Eduardo C. Corral notes about Carla’s work, “Blossoming and decay are the twin forces in these powerful poems. Addiction, death, raising a child blessed with more than one story, and queerness are the threads woven throughout the book, but they also vibrate with their own particular music.” Particular, yes, but always leaning into the shared experience, several of these poems, such as “Love Letter to a Burning World,” and “June 2020,” decipher the intersecting perplexities of the pandemic, the intensification of racial unrest, and the fires–literal and figurative–that raged around us during that season. Sameth’s gaze shrinks from none of the distress but does not linger in the emotions, arresting us instead with a captivating image or wry undertone. She says of her family, “We used to argue over the hearts and gizzards; now no one wants those parts.” 

“Secondary Inspections invites us to take a second look at what we thought we knew and shows us how things are not always what they seem—identity can be questioned, provoke danger, and leave us impacted by how others see us; the bedrock of a family can be forever shifting and we too shift along with it. Through powerful narrative and vivid imagery, Sameth’s poetry travels, searches, stumbles, and ultimately, returns. Even amidst heart-staggering moments, she reveals a rich cultural life that is both within, and that is further made possible by deeply being in the places you love with the people you love” (⁠carlasameth.com⁠). 

Carla Rachel Sameth is the co-poet laureate of Altadena (2022-2024) and a Poet Laureate Fellow with the Academy of American Poets. Her chapbook, What Is Left was published in December 2021 with Dancing Girl Press. Her memoir, One Day on the Gold Line was reissued by Golden Foothills Press in December 2022. Her work has been selected three times as Notable Essays of the Year in Best American Essays. A Pushcart and Best of the Net nominee. a Pasadena Rose Poet, a West Hollywood Pride Poet, and a former PEN Teaching Artist, Carla has taught creative writing to high school and university students, incarcerated youth and other diverse communities.

Listen to Carla read her poems and talk candidly with Geneffa about the experiences that informed them–a conversation relatable to those who are mothers or have otherwise had to learn to embrace while letting go.

Secondary Inspections is now available for ⁠order⁠.  

Danusha Laméris and Dion O’Reilly read and discuss poems about Santa Cruz

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Hear this fun episode RIGHT HERE!!!
The first in a series, Santa Cruz Poet Laureate Danusha Lamérisand poet Dion O’Reilly host a show featuring poems about Santa Cruz. Included is work from Ellen Bass, Joseph Stroud, Gary Young and also a few written by the hosts.
Read more poems by these writers here:
Joseph Stroud’s book launch for his latest collection Everything That Rises will be December 8th, 2019 at 3:00 pm at the beautiful Cabrillo College Horticulture Center
For information and to RSVP on the Patricia Smith reading December 8th, 2019 7:00pm at MAH: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/patricia-smith-at-the-mah-december-8-tickets-77655350243?aff=ebdssbdestsearch

Episode 28) The Halloween Show: Dion O’Reilly hosts The Willing Suspension Armchair Theater reading Edgar Allen Poe

Did you miss The Hive Poetry Collective’s Halloween show because of the power outage? Yes you did!!! Listen to it here. Dion Lissner O’Reilly hosts The Willing Suspension Armchair Theater reading the fab and spooky Edgar Allen Poe. This was a super-fun show!!

Listen RIGHT HERE on a dark and stormy night. You won’t be sorry.