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Mattapoisett Public Library Hosts Three Renowned Area Poets

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  • Mattapoisett Public Library Hosts Three Renowned Area Poets

    MATTAPOISETT PUBLIC LIBRARY HOSTS THREE RENOWNED AREA POETS
    By Robert Chiarito

    Wanderer
    April 9 2008
    MA

    With each passing week the Mattapoisett Public Library opens the
    curtain to one of the many new features that the newly-renovated
    facility has to offer. This past weekend the Friends of the
    Mattapoisett Free Public Library christened the building's sparkling
    new conference room as it presented "An Afternoon of Poetry" on Sunday,
    April 7. The event featured three area poets of national renown:
    Franklin D. Reeves, Diana Der-Hoavanessian and Margot Wizansky.

    It would take a poet's mind to find the advantage hidden beneath the
    gloomy, rain-filled clouds that have been haunting the SouthCoast
    of late, but Margot Wizansky, who has been helping to organize
    the library's spring poetry readings the last several years, said:
    "We're kind of glad that it rained today. We get a better turnout
    when it rains because people tend to do yard work on nice days in the
    spring around here." Humor was just one of the many elements that the
    three poets used as they each offered pieces of recent work during
    the hour-long reading.

    After being introduced to the capacity audience by Friend's board
    member Ellen P. Flynn, Mr. Reeves took the mike first, reading from his
    book, Toy Soldiers. Mr. Reeves, who has won hundreds of awards for his
    work and who has been published in countless journals and periodicals,
    chose pieces that drew from his personal experiences that have taken
    him from being a combine operator and a long shoreman on the Hudson
    River, to the heights of academia as a professor at both Columbia and
    Wesleyan Universities. His most personal piece spoke of his father
    who he described as "the most irresponsible man"in introducing a poem
    about him called, "The Lover."

    The personal was a theme with each of the three poets throughout the
    reading. One of the most moving moments of the afternoon came as Diana
    Der-Hovanessian read a poem that she had written about her Armenian
    grandmother who chose to lose an arm to the Turkish interrogators who
    tortured her rather than give up information about her son whom they
    suspected was a part of the Armenian resistance that preceded the
    genocide the Armenians suffered at the hands of the Ottoman Empire
    during World War I.

    For Ms. Wizansky her personal reflection came in the form of the work
    that she and her husband have done with adults who suffer disabilities
    as well as a series of love poems. She described, in loving detail,
    her appreciation of her husband's willingness to wash her delicates
    as sign of his affection saying, "He knows what I need when I place
    the basket in the kitchen."

    The event concluded with a question-and-answer session followed by a
    reception and refreshments. The occasion also gave Library Director
    Judy Wallace the opportunity to share a collection of antique maps
    and charts that had been donated by Bill Betts, Jr. The maps made
    for handsome wall decorations and ranged from a reproduction of a
    1527 map of the globe to a 130-year-old cadastral map of Mattapoisett.

    The next event scheduled at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library
    leading up to this summer's grand opening will be a Family Reading
    Night. The reading night, on Wednesday, April 16 from 6:00 to 7:30 pm,
    is be presented jointly by the Mattapoisett Public Library and the
    Tri-Town Early Childhood Council as part of a nationwide celebration
    of the Week of the Young Child. The program will be geared to children
    from 2 to 6 years old and is free of charge. For further information,
    please contact the Early Childhood Office at 508-748-1863.
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