If you love me, buy my chapbook of poems. It’s only $7.
xoxo
Gossip Girl
I went to Iceland by myself from 18 July through 26 July. I recommend everyone go on a solo trip if you are able.
Pictures in order:
1) Me in the airplane bathroom on the way there. Why not?
2) From the top of Helgafell. Nice mountain hike.
3) Recreated Viking ship you could walk around in at the Viking Museum.
4) Stekkjarkot, a peat/sod house lived in until the 1940s
5) Graffiti on Laugavegur in Reykjavik
6) I received two hand-poke tattoos from Habbe Nero at Icelandic Tattoo Corp.
7) Dinner at Dill Restaurant. I’m eating beef cheek and rutabaga there.
8) The gorgeous opera/music hall Harpa in downtown Reykjavik. Made me cry.
9) Me at Yoko Ono’s Imagine Peace Tower on Viðey Island
10) Afangar, a set of basalt columns around Viðey Island by Richard Serra
Printed April 1970. ("AA618" written on back)
They put a Jeff Koons sculpture up at The Dixon in Memphis.
It’s our last reading of the season! Don’t miss these amazing poets. BE HERE. THERE WILL BE A PROJECTOR. DOUGLAS PICCINNINI was born in New York City in 1982. He has been awarded residencies by The Vermont Studio Center, Art Farm in Marquette, NE and, The Elizabeth Bishop Society of Nova Scotia. In 2014, he was selected by Dorothea Lasky as a winner of the Summer Literary Seminars for Poetry. He is the author of Story Book: a novella, and a collection of poems, Blood Oboe.
CHRIS HOSEA was born in Princeton, New Jersey, in 1973, and his first book of poems, Put Your Hands In, was selected by John Ashbery as the winner of the Walt Whitman Award from the Academy of American Poets. His work as a visual artist includes Over Time Across Space, with Kim Bennett, which was the subject of a 2015 full-gallery exhibition at Transmitter in Brooklyn, New York. His poems have appeared in 6x6, The American Poetry Review, Boston Review, Brooklyn Rail, Web Conjunctions, Denver Quarterly, Harvard Review, New American Review, Prelude, White Wall Review, and VOLT. He lives in Brooklyn. JONATHAN MAY grew up in Zimbabwe as the child of missionaries. He lives and teaches in Memphis, TN. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in [PANK], Superstition Review, Shark Reef, Duende, One, Winter Tangerine Review, and Rock & Sling. He’s recently translated the play Dreams by Günter Eich into English. Read more at http://memphisjon.wordpress.com/
May 30, 1947.
I turned 30 on November 18th. It’s been a magical week with white roses, projections of Kurosawa films, dancing, champagne, friends, family, and one huge party with a haiku competition. This year’s haiku theme: me. Memphis, TN. 2015.
My great-grandfather, hunting. 1960s.
Untitled.
Rural mail carriers. Water Valley, MS, circa late 1930s.