Thursday, February 28, 2013

The Ides of March

Women of Word/Man Made Words 
 March 13th at 6pm
A free performance, part of Edinboro’s Women’s History Month

Edinboro University’s Alexander Center.
Contact 814-873-3930 or tannetaf@yahoo.com for further information.

A dedicated group of poets performing several sets of poetic conversation.

Includes: Marjorie Wonner, Thasia Anne, Kat Wolper, Marisa Moks-Unger, and Tracie Morell, Darryl M. Brown, Elliot Smith, and Marc Smith.

In its third year, the show covers such diverse topics as domestic violence, grief processing
and human trafficking.


Pure Doctor
March 23, 2013 @ 7:00 p.m.

PACA 1505 State Street, Erie, PA


A series of original poems
themed to a medical perspective
read by a diverse cast.

Includes intermission.

Geoff Peterson
Tony Snow
Colleen Hammon
The Sarah Reed Choir
Shawn Sledzianowski
Penelope Chapman
Dennis Borczon
Dawn Joy
Cee Williams
Monica Igras
Chuck Joy

Suggested donation
ten dollars

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Erie to Tucson




I’m moving



forward.  I’ve already walked

away, you know I have. I grew up leaving

people I loved when things got hard. It’s not

a pattern but learned.



There is no working through –

just dismissal. It’s best

to stay at arm’s length or farther-

my heart didn’t listen. The word



love is looked down on in a poem

but it fits here,



for you.



I can’t leave without saying



I love you.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Christmas Movies



I was on a quest to find a snapshot of the scene in “Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer” where a couple of elves are being tossed around in the wind in a huge snowstorm.  The reason for the quest doesn’t really matter.  I somehow got sidetracked into finding the best Christmas movies –EVER. I searched list after list and found that people who put these lists together are complete idiots.



First of all any person who lists “A Christmas Story” in the top ten has never seen a good movie. Okay, maybe I shouldn’t just come out and say that. But really, that movie, even with its great cast, is not a great movie. It just isn’t. And if you listed it as #1 you really need to see a psychiatrist pronto!



If your list does not include “Desk Set,” with Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, just go into your little corner now because you realize you have made an enormous error in judgment and need an extensive time out.



If you have listed “Miracle on 34th Street,” or “The Grinch who Stole Christmas,” other than the originals or “A Christmas Carol” that was not the 1951 classic. You get coal in you stocking and nothing under the tree.



If you have listed “The Santa Claus” or “National Lampoon’s Christmas” before “Elf” you are doomed to hell.



The ten best Christmas movies ever:



1. A Christmas Carol/Scrooge – 1951

2. Desk Set


3. It’s a Wonderful Life


4. Meet Me in St. Louis 





5. Little Women 1949 & 1994

 ***
The following are of equal value -
6. The Grinch Who Stole Christmas - 1966

A Charlie Brown Christmas

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
 ****
7. Miracle on 34th Street -1947

8. Elf

9. Bad Santa


10. Home Alone





Honorable mention



Love Actually

While You were Sleeping





Thanksgiving movie greats

Nobody’s Fool

Hannah and Her Sisters

Planes, Trains and Automobiles

I know there are more, I just can't think of them right now. 

Monday, October 22, 2012

The Feature

Book Reading and Signing at 
The Erie Book Store
 December 15, 2012
at 1:00 p.m.
Tucumcari & The Perry Square Gospels
Meet the authors
 Geoff Peterson & Megan Collins



The original Book Release and Reading 
of Tucumcari now available on YouTube. 
Thanks to Darryl aka DrDmarc65
 



click cover for video





Geoff's new release

The Perry Square Gospels


click cover for info


Available at your local independent book store and 
Amazon.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Living on the Edge - watching "The Master"



I came to a few realizations today during and after watching the movie, “The Master.” Not sure which I want to go into first so I’ll start with me.

First of all “The Master” is a film starring Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin Phoenix.  Hoffman plays a compelling, crazy ass writer that starts his own cult. His followers call him “The Master.”  Phoenix plays a broken WWII crazy ass vet who, at times, falls under his spell. I won’t give any spoilers as to why he could possibly be called “The Master” as well.  Upon leaving the theater my jaws were sore because I’d spent much of the time grinding my teeth. Watching the birthing of a cult, which is the beginning of any mainstream religion, is as disturbing as organized religion itself. What is most troubling to me though is that I realized I have so much in common with not only followers of cults, but the cult leaders themselves.

I am not a "normal" person. I just can't live a "normal” life, not for long anyway. I dread the thought of a 9-5 job, marriage, a white picket fence and bonuses at Christmas. I can't do it, I tried, I really did. I’m only a woman looking for where she fits in. I’ve lived half of a century and still don’t know where that is. It’s not that I don’t know what I want to do when I grow up. I’m grown and want nothing to do with that “American Dream”.

On the topic of that other “American Dream," the one where you get anything you want- I’ll let George Carlin fill you in on that one. While it’s a very good point that I completely agree with, it isn’t the one I’m making here.

Who decided that a matchbox house, disposals and Father Knows Best,  are what is normal, acceptable, and virtuous anyway? Who is that elusive “they” that decided that hopping trains and sleeping on park benches was unacceptable, unworthy, despicable and owning a house in the suburbs was the proper, correct, moral and valuable life to lead? Why is there only one way to live? What prick made this rule?

As I’m writing this I realize that for some people they do want that dream and can’t attain it. Others, like me, can attain and have had it but threw it away.


This is more difficult than I realized so I’ll post


More later -

Monday, August 13, 2012

Upcoming Poetry Events


Every Thursday @ 5 pm
An open forum for local poets, attempting talents and those with curiosity and maybe something to get off their chests.
Flagship Café
915 State Street
Erie, PA

Every Friday @ 6 pm
Poetry hosted by Lady D
Open mic
25 East 10th Street
Erie, PA

Every 2nd Tuesday @ 7 pm

Second Tuesday Community Writers' Workshop

Mercyhurst College Campus
203 Old Main
Erie, PA

The meetings last about two hours. Short poetry is the most common genre, but any genre is welcome—short stories, short plays, and five-minute excerpts of longer works are often brought to workshop. Please bring enough copies of your work for members to comment upon. We have anywhere from eight to fifteen participants per meeting. There is no commitment from month to month, and the workshop is free and open to the public.

Monday, August 27 @ 7 pm

Erie County Poet Laureate Finalist Reading

Hirt Auditorium in the Blasco Memorial Library
160 E Front St
Erie, PA 16507

Eleven Erie Countians who submitted applications to the County Council Office for the 2012-2013 Erie County Poet Laureate position will be whittled down to four or five finalists based on cumulative scores of their poetry and projects. Those finalists will participate in this reading.


1136 East Lake Road
Erie, PA

Saturday, September 1 @ 8 pm
Book Release
will read portions of the book Tucumcari and will be available for signing.
Food and Drink – Public Welcome!
All things far away are worthy of meditation, say the authors of Tucumcari, a travel journal tracing the crazy routes backwards from hometowns to westward visions of an alternate life. Presented in essay, poems and four unabashed interviews, public & private demons, as well as decisions made in a family’s past that alter the course of our lives.

Saturday, September 15, 22 & Thursday September 27 @ 8 pm
Friday, September, 28 @ 7-9PM
Poetry Open Mic


Sunday, September 16 - Celebrate Everyday Art in Erie @ 2 pm – 3 pm
Poetry Park, E 22 St, between Ash and Reed
Erie, PA

For the Governor's Arts Awards
with a poetry open mic, hosted by
Chuck Joy