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  • It takes four to make a Dream Poetry Team

    San Jose Mercury News, USA

    It takes four to make a Dream Poetry Team

    By Sue Gilmore
    Contra Costa Times
    Article Launched: 08/10/2008 12:02:11 AM PDT


    A powerhouse quartet of poets steps into the spotlight at La Pena
    Cultural Center in Berkeley tonight for a series of readings they're
    calling "Arte Poetica ' The Dream Poetry Team." The participants
    include Jack Hirschman, the activist and writer Gavin Newsom appointed
    to the post of San Francisco poet laureate in 2006. Hirschman, 74, has
    an amazing 60 volumes of poetry to his credit, including his latest,
    "All That's Left," a collection of poems about social justice that
    came out in April. He earned early renown when a letter he wrote at
    age 19 seeking Ernest Hemingway's advice netted this somewhat surly
    but admiring reply: "I can't help you, kid. You write better than I
    did when I was 19. But the hell of it is, you write like me. That is
    no sin. But you won't get anywhere with it." When Hemingway killed
    himself in 1961, the Associated Press, where Hirschman had worked as a
    copy boy, reprinted it as the "Letter to a Young Writer," and it got
    worldwide distribution.

    Joining Hirschman on stage will be the celebrated Chicano poet
    Francisco X. Alarcon, author of bilingual poetry books for children
    and 10 adult volumes, including "Sonnets to Madness and Other
    Misfortunes" and "From the Other Side of Night." Painter, poet and
    activist Jose Montoya, poet laureate of Sacramento, will also be
    reading. In addition to authoring the famous "El Louie" poem about the
    Korean vet whose life was destroyed by drugs, Montoya is the founder
    of the Royal Chicano Air Force art collective responsible for so many
    political murals in public places. The fourth Dream Teamer is
    Oakland-based poet and media producer Nina Serrano, former director of
    the San Francisco Poetry in the Schools program, co-founder of the
    Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts and a longtime program
    producer for KPFA-FM in Berkeley.

    Admission to hear the Dream Team is $5; the program begins at 7
    p.m. at La Pena, 3105 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley. Contact 510-849-2568 or
    www.lapena.org.

    ALL HAIL SAROYAN: Author, playwright and Fresno favorite son William
    Saroyan (1908-1981) is the focus of a daylong Salute to Saroyan in
    this, his centennial year, at the Mechanics' Institute in San
    Francisco on Aug. 19. Things kick off at 12:30 p.m. with a panel
    discussion on the late Pulitzer Prize-winner's life and work with
    Heyday Books publisher Malcolm Margolin, noted San Francisco novelist
    Herbert Gold, California writer Aris Janigian (a fellow Fresno native)
    and William E. Justice, editor of the just-published "He Flies Through
    the Air with the Greatest of Ease: A William Saroyan Reader" (Heyday
    Books, $24.95).

    At 2:30 p.m., writer-director Paul Kalinian presents his award-winning
    1991 documentary "William Saroyan: The Man, the Writer," followed by a
    discussion with the audience. Dramatic readings of some of the
    author's finest short stories by local actors begin at 4 p.m. The
    closing event is a 5:30 p.m. showing of a 1976 TV movie of a Broadway
    revival of "The Time of Your Life," starring Kevin Kline and Patti
    LuPone. That 1939 play, featuring a motley assortment of characters
    interacting in a San Francisco saloon, won Saroyan both the Pulitzer
    and a New York Drama Critics Circle Award.

    Admission for the entire day is free to members, $10 for the general
    public. Food will be available at the Cafe, where the cuisine goes
    Armenian for the day. The Institute is at 57 Post St., S.F. Contact
    415-393-0100 or www. milibrary.org.

    ROCKIN' THE LIBRARY: Original soul, reggae, R&B and hip-hop mix with
    the vociferously spoken word Aug. 20 as the Oakland Public Library
    plays host to a Teen Slam Jam. Young poets and musicians sponsored by
    the national Youth Speaks program and BUMP Records hold sway from 5 to
    7:30 p.m. in the Main Library West Auditorium, 125 14th St. Contact
    510-238-7233 or www.oaklandlibrary.org.

    Bookends appears every other Sunday. Sue Gilmore is the Times book
    editor. Reach her at sgilmore@bayareanews group.com.
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