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Next you will find a selection of this fine poetry anthology, edited by Tammy Nuzzo-Morgan with Edmund Miller, Allen Planz and Peter Thabit-Jones.
This work includes 212 poets, 157 from Long Island, 4 from Upstate NY, 24 from NYC, 10 from other states in the Union and 17 from other countries: Canada, China, England, Germany, India, Ireland, Panama, Romania, and Wales. As George Wallace states "When you consider the breadth and scope of the field of writers that represents, there´s good reasons to claim that pound for pound there is hardly a region of this country (USA) that has fone more for poetry and prose than Long Island." *** Here´s the selection. Hope you enjoy it. *** RUSTING - David B. Axelrod Rust populates those parts of things that are not touched. Others are oiled by fingertips, or polished by the brush of cloth. Deeper crevices decay. Even the thickest iron will grow porous. For ships there is comfort in dry-dock, welders´ arcs of light. For me, waiting and wasting. Unlike love, entropy is slow .::: PERFECT PITCH - Byron Beynon I´m reading the club manager´s letter inside and intimate room overlooking a bay where colour change at a secret pace; he once shared a space with Dizzy Gillespie, a story of perfect pitch and smoke- filled notes, informing me of how the jazz trumpeter once listened to him shave, the almost-contact of his face in the cold mirror of light as he told him something real, shelled a musician´s car his way, towards the sound he´d never forget, that the electric razor held him calmly in his right hand was in E flat. .::: MUSIC - Kathaleen Donnelly The low notes of a cello settle in my solar plexus, fill the air between beats, cushion all other sounds; make me want to lie supine on the earth´s floor, in the grass, on the sand, look up from the line along the bottom. .::: PHYSICS LESSON - Tom Romeo How polite The particle of light It waves as it goes by .::: MOUTHING GOD - Kausalya Venkateswaran & Pramila Venkateswaran I love the word seed in Sanskrit -beej. I roll it in my mouth: It travels from my pursed lips to stop short of the roof. My tongue barely holds it before it vanishes. Seeds are magical; how they sprout an entire pantry to feed a world created from an original. This sound I pronounce is the first sound that holds millions of facsimiles, multiverses, theories. It feeds its singular syllable to this frivolous verse. Translation from the Tamil by Kausalya Venkateswaran --
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