Monthly Archives: April 2013

Daniel Shapiro Part IV

dan reads in cambridge 3.7.13 (1)The final questions with Daniel Shapiro and another sampling of his work.

VAH – Do you have a favorite, inspiring quote?

DAS – I’ve been a fan of Borges as long as I’ve known about him. He once said, “Writing is nothing more than a guided dream.”

VAH – What are three random non-writing related facts about you?

DAS – I still listen to heavy metal from time to time. My 4-year-old son’s favorite song is “Iron Man.” I have the worst sense of direction of anyone. I have gotten lost inside my own house before. I moved to Pittsburgh nearly seven years ago and have adopted many habits of native Pittsburghers. I like to say “yinz.” I’m an English teacher, but I’ve been known to drop “to be” and say, “These clothes need washed.” I eat pierogies. I enjoy chipped chopped ham now and then. I am a Steelers fan. I refer to places that no longer exist. I love Pittsburgh in a big way.

Daniel’s Chapbook The 44th Worst Album Ever and a Sampler of his work online: at Softblow.org, The Camel Saloon, and at Orange Room Reviewdan at fallingwater 3.28.13 (1)

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And Then They Were Done…

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The final 85 poems for the Pulitzer Remix project have posted. Taking part in this project was an experience that I won’t soon forget and will likely remain one of my writing life memories that I will cherish. In this project, I met a deadline to have a new poem, found from my assigned source text, every day for a month. I varied the forms some over the thirty poems but in the process discovered that I really like writing a narrative thread within the poetry I create. I discovered two Remixers (as we started calling ourselves) that lived locally to me and made other online writer friends with some of the other participants. I read some lovely, challenging, funny, striking, entertaining and so much more poetry across the span of April.

Working with a finite resource of words, for me what was found on two facing pages from the source, meant that I had to be exact with my selections. Each poem found was created with the anticipation similar to searching for the prize in a Cracker Jack box – not the prizes now, but the really cool ones from decades past.

I don’t really know how I was on the list of poets invited to participate. I am very glad, and grateful that I was. Jenni B. Baker over at the Found Poetry Review created a tremendous opportunity for poets that participated. I’m proud of what we collectively and individually created. There is some very beautiful wordsmithing over at Pulitzer Remix. If you’ve not read the work there, surf over – but hurry because after the middle of May, it will all be gone.

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Pulitzer Remix Day Thirty and Final Remix for National Poetry Month

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For the final poem of the Pulitzer Remix project, number 30, I turned to the final page of the book. There, I found the story An Influx of Poets. Fitting, perhaps, as 85 poets took part in the project. The final poem from page 488, entitled Pages of a Book

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month is done. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Nine

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Local Legend is the reply when noisy old men strike up a conversation. Found in the story A Reading Problem on Pages 324-325.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only one more day of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Eight

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Today brings a haiku entitled Summit, sourced from pages 318-319 and the story The Liberation.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only a few more days of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Seven

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From pages 306-307 and the story The Liberation the found poem Bereft.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only a few more days of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Six

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Grief aches the soul. From In the Zoo, and pages 298-299 Requiem was found.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only a few more days of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Five

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Two Women contemplate life, found on pages 284-285 from In the Zoo.

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

Only a few more days of Pulitzer Remix and National Poetry Month. What have been your favorite entries?

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Pulitzer Remix Day Twenty-Four

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From pages 276-277 and the short story Bad Characters comes the poem Emboldened.

The presentation of this entry is different from all the others. Funny story – I was on vacation happy with myself that I’d scheduled ahead till the 24th, with enough posts to ensure a new poem each day would publish on the Pulitzer Remix site. Then my spouse reminded me that we returned home on the 23rd, not the 22nd. And that our flight would arrive late and we’d not get home till almost midnight. And with the time difference, tomorrow posts while it is still today here.

And so, I was SOL and behind a day.

And did not bring my computer, being so happy with myself for being ahead a day (I thought).

And this is where I mention I also didn’t being the source text.

Went to buy the e-book. There isn’t one. (I now have a more tolerant attitude towards the Google book project.)

Discovered it was $5 a minute in the hotel business center computer.

The thought of pecking each letter of each word in on my phone was so not appealing.

One day, knowing this story could get you a win in a poetry trivia game….

Pulitzer Remix is a project of the Found Poetry Review.

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Daniel Shapiro, Part III

Three by Five Presents Daniel Shapiro, Part IIIdan reading 4.7.12

Visit Daniel’s work with the National Poetry Month initiative, Pulitzer Remix, where he and 84 other poets from 7 different countries have posted a new poem each day in April created from text of a Pulitzer Prize winning fiction book.

VAH – Daniel, What books or authors keep you up at night because you can’t put them down?

DAS – The most recent book I read almost all the way through in one sitting was Brian Mihok’s The Quantum Manual of Style [http://www.aqueousbooks.com/author_pages/23_mihok.htm]. It’s a jarring book because it tricks you into thinking it’s funny but then turns heartbreaking. And then it goes back to being funny. I love its deadpan delivery, by the way. Sometimes it reads like a textbook, and then the bottom falls out, and you just keep asking yourself, “What is this guy going to do next that’s better than what he just did?” And then he does it.

VAH – And in a movie about your life and times, who would play you? What would the theme song be, and why?

DAS – I’ve actually written a couple of poems in which actors play me. Ethan Hawke plays the younger, more arrogant version of me. Woody Harrelson plays the more laid-back, present-day me. I picked those actors because I resemble them somewhat. The theme song for the movie would be Coleman Hawkins’ 1939 version of “Body and Soul” or Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five’s 1928 version of “West End Blues.” A key element of the movie would be my continual need to rank everything (especially music and films), and those two jazz tunes are probably the best ever.

VAH – What would your super power be and why that one?

DAS – I would have to go with time travel, if only to fix some of my mistakes. And to see the Velvet Underground in concert.

VAH – Are you a finish the book once you’ve started kind of reader or leave it for another if don’t like the book sort of reader?

DAS – I have left many books once I’ve decided I won’t like them. I don’t think it makes sense to tough it out just to finish a book. I go to the library a lot, and libraries make it easier to start a book and quit on it.

VAH – Tell us what little known fact about you will amaze and/or amuse?

DAS – I once edited a lingerie catalog. My wife tells me I know more about bras than she does. And, as she is with most other things, she’s right.

Read Parts I and II.

The final part to our visit with Daniel Shapiro comes at the end of the month. Until then, check out Dan’s poems with the Pulitzer Remix project or a Daniel Shapiro Sampling:

Poem for Tim Buckley’s “Love from Room 109 at the Islander (on Pacific Coast Highway)” published at Lily

Archibald on an Empty Stomach published at Bacon Review

Four Poems published at Dead Mule School

 

 

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