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Decatur Book Festival

The Festival is over now. I'm packing my bags (heavier now) and getting ready to be shuttled back to the airport. I'm looking forward to going home, but I'm also a little sad it's over. The energy here over the weekend, the sheer number of people interested in books, has been amazing. Every event I attended was completely full, and the whole festival area crawled with Atlantans.



There are too many highlights to list, but the most amazing event was probably Natasha Trethewey's reading with her father, Eric. Natasha's style is more restrained, lyrical, oblique, and Eric's more forward, narrative, blunt—and the interplay was amazing. I've not been to many readings where the readers alternate turns at the microphone like this, but this was definitely the best one I've ever heard, as the poems and the poetic styles perfectly complemented and amplified one another.

I enjoyed talking with Natasha throughout the weekend, who introduced me to Kevin Young, who gave a wonderful reading from his new book Dear Darkness, and Ron Rash, a writer I've been following for a while now, probably the Appalachian writer you need to be reading. I got to see Dan Albergotti again, who continues to amaze me with his collection The Boatloads, and Juliana Gray, who's almost completed a new manuscript, Daniel Wallace, and the inimitable John Egerton and John T. Edge. I met David Kirby, finally, early in the festival, and was nervous to read with him and Tony Morris, and Chad Prevost, all extremely funny gentlemen; reading with such hilarious poets is probably the most difficult thing in the world.

How Decatur brings this together, I'll never know, but it is amazing, an event so large and well-attended. It gives me, and many others, I'm sure, a lot of hope for books.

Atlanta, Decatur, I can't wait to be back.

On The Web



Poems


  • "Double Negatives" at ConnotationPress.com
  • Two poems at Anti- (Finalist for the 2008 Sundress Best of the Net)
  • "A Field Guide To Northeast Alabama" (four poems on video) at Southern Spaces
  • "At Liberty" and "Love"at Memorious
  • "The Crowd He Becomes" at DIAGRAM
  • "At Genesse," "Aubade," "DeSoto, After," and "In Arizona When Howard Finster Dies" at Diode
  • Selections from A Map of the County at RealPoetik
  • "At Liberty," "Substantiation," "For Reverend James Reeb," and "For Lamar Smith" at Blackbird
  • "Bunk Richardson," "Consolation," "On Tallaseehatchee Creek," and "Vigil" at Blackbird
  • "Vigil," "Negatives," and "Elegy for James Knox" at Campbell Corner
  • "Walt Whitman in Alabama," "Hush," "Negatives" and "York" at Colorado Poets Center
  • "Signal" at DIAGRAM
  • "Elegy for James Knox" at DIAGRAM
  • "Interferometry" at Greensboro Review
  • "Aubade," "Doppler," "What You Wish For," "Under," "Fell," "Heat," and "Regret/Egret" at H_NGM_N
  • "Legba Says" in Octopus
  • "Still" and "Bye Bye Blackbird/Blackbird Bye Bye" at Shampoo
  • "Panoramic: Landscape With Repeating Figures," "Double Exposure" and "Elegy for Little Girls" at Terrain.org
  • "Virga," "Radiotherapy," and "Diphthong" at Typo
  • "Radiotherapy" at Poetry 365.


  • Interviews


  • With Natasha Trethewey at Southern Spaces
  • With New South
  • With Blackbird, in text and audio.
  • With Kate Greenstreet (first book interview)
  • With Dislocate's Nate Slawson
  • With Town Creek Poetry


  • Reviews


  • Ron Slate's review of A Murmuration of Starlings
  • Bruce Alford's review of A Murmuration of Starlings for the Alabama Writers Forum
  • Microreview of A Murmuration of Starlings at Yalobusha Review
  • Simmons Buntin's microreview of A Murmuration of Starlings
  • Susan Settlemyre Williams's review of Murder Ballads at Blackbird
  • Simmons Buntin's review of Murder Ballads at Terrain.org.
  • Clay Matthews's review of Murder Ballads at H_NGM_N
  • Jeff Newberry's review of Murder Ballads at Poetry Southeast


  • Essays &c

  • "The Marrow of the Bone of Contention: A Barbecue Journal" at storySouth, a 2003 Arts & Letters Daily Article of Note
  • An introduction to Alabama barbecue, on the Southern BBQ Trail at the Southern Foodways Alliance
  • "Recovery: Learning the Music of History" at Terrain.org
  • Five favorite poems at JMWW

  • About



    I am the author of three books of poems: Murder Ballads (Elixir Press 2005); A Murmuration of Starlings (Southern Illinois University Press 2008) the winner of the 2008 Colorado Book Award in Poetry; and Persons Unknown, forthcoming in 2010 from Southern Illinois University Press.

    You can find new work in issues of The Cincinnati Review, Shenandoah, The Southern Review, and Blackbird.


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