“It’s based on a true story I heard on Colorado Public Radio.”
David Rothman is the poet in residence at CPR. He teaches at The Lighthouse, the University of Colorado, and Western State Colorado University — where he directs the Poetry Concentration of the new MFA in Creative Writing. He published three books this year, poetry collections Part of the Darkness and The Book of Catapults and a book of essays about life in the mountains.
David, fellow contributor Chris Ransick, and eight other poets will appear as part of a benefit for victims of the Colorado floods. The event will take place at 6 p.m. Nov. 1 at Lighthouse Writers Workshop, 1515 Race Street in Denver, and is open to the public. More details.
The Colorado Independent‘s “News-Stained Poetry Project” features poems that are about the news, products of the news, responses to the news. “News stained” is meant as a badge of honor, a reference to the long tradition of the poet as witness. As Carolyn Forché wrote, politics can sometimes be seen as a “contaminant to serious literary work,” something to be avoided. But that way of thinking, she said, “gives the political realm too much and too little scope… It renders the personal too important and not important enough.” News developments, whether or not they are reported, shape our personal lives every day. We don’t often think in the moment about how that is happening and what it means. We should think more about it. Poets think about it. And we want to help encourage them to write more about it.
Please send submissions to tips@www.coloradoindependent.com, subject line “poem,” with a short bio and some mention of where and when the poem was written.
[ Photo from Water Archives]