Tuesday, September 30, 2008

ScienceDaily Top Science Headlines -- for Tuesday, September 30, 2008

ScienceDaily Top Science Headlines

for Tuesday, September 30, 2008


Parental Warning: Second-hand Smoke May Trigger Nicotine Dependence Symptoms In Kids (September 30, 2008) -- Parents who smoke cigarettes around their kids in cars and homes beware -- second-hand smoke may trigger symptoms of nicotine dependence in children. The findings are published in the September edition of the journal Addictive Behaviors in a joint study from nine Canadian institutions. ... > full story

New Way To Control Protein Activity Could Lead To Cancer Therapies (September 30, 2008) -- Investigators at the Stanford University School of Medicine have found a way to quickly and reversibly fine-tune the activity of individual proteins in cells and living mammals, providing a powerful new laboratory tool for identifying — more precisely than ever before — the functions of different proteins. ... > full story

Wetlands Restoration Not A Panacea For Louisiana Coast (September 30, 2008) -- Counting on wetlands restoration projects to protect storm buffeted infrastructure along the Louisiana Coast is likely to be a "losing battle" that provides "false hope" and prevents endangered communities from clearly planning for their future, says a researcher from Western Carolina University (WCU). ... > full story

Robotic Surgery Lowers Risk Of A Rare But Serious Complication Of Gastric Bypass, Study Suggests (September 30, 2008) -- The use of a robot to assist with the most commonly performed weight-loss surgery appears to significantly lower a patient's risk of developing a rare but serious complication, according to a study published in the Journal of Robotic Surgery. ... > full story

Zeroing In On Wi-Fi 'Dead Zones' To Inexpensively Fill Gaps In Wireless Networks (September 30, 2008) -- Rooting out Wi-Fi "dead zones" in citywide wireless networks is an expensive proposition. The paucity of techniques for mapping areas that lack coverage is an impediment, both for pre-deployment and post-deployment testing. New research could change that. A new test method lets engineers refine their networks using readily available information about basic topography, street locations and general land use. ... > full story

Community-based Behavior Change Management Cuts Neonatal Mortality In Half (September 30, 2008) -- A community-based program that reinforces basic childbirth and newborn care practices can reduce a baby's risk of death within the first month of life by as much as 54 percent, according to a new study. ... > full story

Solar Cell Sets World Efficiency Record At 40.8 Percent (September 30, 2008) -- Scientists at the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory have set a world record in solar cell efficiency with a photovoltaic device that converts 40.8 percent of the light that hits it into electricity. This is the highest confirmed efficiency of any photovoltaic device to date. ... > full story

How A 'Stuck Accelerator' Causes Cancer Cell Expansion (September 30, 2008) -- What allows cancer cells to divide uncontrolled? The cellular oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes are analogous to the accelerator and brake pedals in a car. If an oncogene is permanently active, similar to a stuck accelerator in a car, cells divide without restraints and a tumor develops. ... > full story

A Robot In Every Home? (September 30, 2008) -- Observers like Bill Gates believe that by 2025 we could have robots in every home. In labs across Europe, researchers are creating designs that could become the robo-butler of the future. ... > full story

Age Alone Should Not Be Used To Determine Whether To Treat Prostate Cancer With Hormones, Research Suggests (September 30, 2008) -- Concerns regarding the association of hormone therapy used to treat prostate cancer with cardiovascular disease in some older men may lead doctors to forgo hormone treatment solely on the basis of age. But a new study shows that men over age 70 with high-risk prostate cancer lived longer and experienced increases in PSA less frequently when treated with long-term androgen deprivation therapy. ... > full story

Carbonate-hosted Avalon-type Fossils In Arctic Siberia (September 30, 2008) -- Our present understanding of the origin of animals and Phanerozoic ecosystems depends critically on the ability to interpret impressions left behind by soft-bodied Ediacaran organisms, and to document their spatial and temporal distribution, which conceivably relate to strong environmental gradients in terminal Proterozoic seawater. ... > full story

Drinking Alcohol Before 15 Years Of Age Is Risky For Later Alcohol Problems (September 30, 2008) -- Researchers have known that age of first drink (AFD) is associated with the later development of alcohol-use disorders (AUDs). New findings show that an early AFD, before the age of 15, is especially risky for later AUDs. Experts recommend delaying the onset of drinking behavior as late as possible, until 18 or older. ... > full story

Out Of Iraq Emerges Hope For Those With Severest Of Head Injuries (September 29, 2008) -- There may be more hope than has been recognized for some people with severe brain injuries, according to a US neurosurgeon who earlier this year spent four months in Iraq treating soldiers and civilians. ... > full story

Popular COPD Treatment Increases Risk For Cardiac Events, Cardiac Death (September 29, 2008) -- The use of the most commonly prescribed once-a-day treatment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for longer than one month increases the risk of cardiovascular death, heart attack or stroke by more than 50 percent, according to new research. ... > full story

Helping Dogs With Cancer May Benefit People (September 29, 2008) -- A new study may one day help not only our canine friends with cancer, but also people with the human form of the disease. ... > full story

New Predictive Tool Can Help Determine Treatment Of Breast Cancer Patients (September 29, 2008) -- A new predictive measurement, called a PEPI score, could bring good news to many women diagnosed with early stage breast cancer -- a low PEPI (preoperative endocrine prognostic index) score could show that they have little risk of relapse, and can safely avoid chemotherapy after surgery. ... > full story

Tweezers Trap Nanotubes By Color (September 29, 2008) -- Singled-walled carbon nanotubes are graphene sheets wrapped into tubes, and are typically made up of various sizes and with different amounts of twist (also known as chiralities). Each type of nanotube has its own electronic and optical properties. Physicists in Japan used colored light to selectively manipulate different types of carbon nanotubes. ... > full story

Helping Students With Mental Illnesses: Support Services Prepare For 'What If' Scenarios (September 29, 2008) -- Nationally, an estimated 15 percent of students experience some form of mental illness such as major depression while in college. Many often struggle with where to get support. ... > full story

Getting Lost: A Newly Discovered Developmental Brain Disorder (September 29, 2008) -- Researchers have recently documented the first case of a patient who, without apparent brain damage or cognitive impairment, is unable to orient within any environment. Researchers also believe that there are many others in the general population who may be affected by this developmental topographical disorder. ... > full story

Deadly Rugby Virus Spreads In Sumo Wrestlers (September 29, 2008) -- Rugby players may get more than just the ball out of a scrum -- herpes virus can cause a skin disease called "scrumpox" and it spreads through physical contact. Researchers have studied the spread of the disease among sumo wrestlers in Japan and have discovered that a new strain of the virus could be even more pathogenic, according to an article in the Journal of General Virology. ... > full story

NASA's Mars Rover To Head Toward Bigger Crater (September 29, 2008) -- NASA's Mars Rover Opportunity is setting its sights on a crater more than 20 times larger than its home for the past two years. ... > full story

Black Patients At Higher Risk For Colon Polyps (September 29, 2008) -- Compared with white patients, black patients undergoing screening colonoscopy have a higher prevalence of colon polyps. ... > full story

Warming Of 4 Degrees Celsius Depressed Plant Growth And Reduced Land Carbon Absorption (September 29, 2008) -- Scientists are reporting findings on the long-term effects of warming anomaly on grassland productivity and ecosystem carbon cycling. They found that warming by 4 degrees Celsius in the Reno greenhouse not only depressed plant growth and suppressed land carbon absorption in the treatment year but also resulted in prolonged suppression of plant growth and carbon absorption in the following year. ... > full story

Independent Brain Pathways Generate Positive Or Negative Reappraisals Of Emotional Events (September 29, 2008) -- Scientists now have a better understanding of how the human brain orchestrates the sophisticated pathways involved in the regulation of emotions. New research identifies brain pathways that underlie reinterpretation of aversive images in ways that reduce or enhance their negative emotional intensity. ... > full story

Ancient Arctic Ice Could Tell Us About Future Of Permafrost (September 29, 2008) -- Researchers have discovered the oldest known ice in North America, and that permafrost may be a significant touchstone when looking at global warming. ... > full story

Do 'Light' Cigarettes Deliver Less Nicotine To The Brain Than Regular Cigarettes? (September 29, 2008) -- So-called light (low) nicotine cigarettes act in a similar way to regular cigarettes by occupying most of the common nicotine receptors in the brain. ... > full story

Cool Summer, Warm Future: Extreme Heat Days Increase For Southern California (September 29, 2008) -- Despite a moderate summer, the heat is rising in Southern California. Scientists now forecast that in coming decades, 10- to 14-day heat waves will become the norm. And because these will be hotter heat waves, they will be more threatening to public health. ... > full story

Childhood Cancer Survivors Continue To Have Higher Mortality Rates than the General Population (September 29, 2008) -- Survivors of childhood or adolescent cancer have a greater than 8-fold increased risk of death than the general U.S. population 16 to 32 years after hitting the five-year survival mark. ... > full story

Carbon Dioxide Emissions Booming, Shifting East, Researchers Report (September 29, 2008) -- Despite widespread concern about climate change, annual carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels and manufacturing cement have grown 38 percent since 1992, from 6.1 billion tons of carbon to 8.5 billion tons in 2007. ... > full story

Sexual Practice Of Polygyny Skews Genetic Variability (September 29, 2008) -- Researchers have found DNA evidence that polygyny, the practice among males of siring children with multiple female partners at the same time or successively, has led to an excess of genetic diversity on the X chromosome relative to the autosomes. ... > full story

Microscopic Version Of CT Scan Reveals Secrets Of Bone Formation (September 29, 2008) -- A new version of the computerized tomography (CT) scan, which revolutionized medical imaging during the last 25 years, is giving scientists precious new information about how Mother Nature forms shells, bones, and other hard structures in animals ranging from guppies to mice. ... > full story

Discovery May Help Diabetic Gastric Problem (September 29, 2008) -- Researchers have found what may provide a solution to one of the more troubling complications of diabetes -- delayed gastric emptying or gastroparesis. The researchers showed in animal models that a red blood cell derivative increases production of a key molecule, normalizing the digestive process. ... > full story

No Oxygen In Eastern Mediterranean Bottom-water (September 29, 2008) -- New research shows that there is an organic-rich bed of sediment in the floor of the Eastern Mediterranean. This bed formed over a period of about 4,000 years under oxygen-free bottom-water conditions. A wet climatic period was responsible for the phenomenon. According to climate scenarios, the climate may become wetter in this area, potentially giving rise again to a period of oxygen-free bottom-water. ... > full story

Why Does Gecko, A Chinese Traditional Medicine, Have Anti-tumor Effects? (September 29, 2008) -- Gecko is a Chinese traditional medicine. It has definite effect on malignant tumor, especially on digestive system tumor. A research group in China found that Gecko powder could inhibit EC9706 and EC1 growth and proliferation. Gecko can also decrease vascular endothelin growth factor and basic fibroblast growth factor expression in tumor tissue and induce tumor cell apoptosis. ... > full story

Protecting Patient Privacy The New Fashioned Way (September 29, 2008) -- The Medical De-identification System (MeDS) is a highly accurate and speedy computer software program designed to de-identify patient information while retaining the essential data key to medical research, according to a new study. ... > full story

Risky Behaviors On TV May Be Modeled By Inexperienced Viewers (September 29, 2008) -- Inexperienced viewers are more likely to mimic unsafe behavior on TV, regardless of the consequences displayed, a new study finds. ... > full story

Dark Energy: Is It Merely An Illusion? (September 29, 2008) -- Dark energy is at the heart of one of the greatest mysteries of modern physics, but it may be nothing more than an illusion, according physicists at Oxford University. ... > full story

Existing Anti-obesity Drugs May Be Effective Against Flu, Hepatitis And HIV (September 29, 2008) -- Viruses dramatically increase cellular metabolism, and existing anti-obesity drugs may represent a new way to block these metabolic changes and inhibit viral infection, according to a new study in the journal Nature Biotechnology. ... > full story

Is The Salad Bar Safe? Produce Concerns Linger After Summer Scares (September 29, 2008) -- Widespread reports had most people afraid to eat tomatoes this summer and when tomatoes were vindicated, eating peppers became a fear. A food safety expert says there is only so much that can be done to assure produce is safe to eat. ... > full story

Vascular Marker Of Ovarian Cancer Identified (September 29, 2008) -- Researchers have identified TEM1 as a specific genetic marker for the vascular cells associated with tumor growth, a finding that could aid in diagnosis and treatment of ovarian cancer. ... > full story

Voice-Commanded Robot Wheelchair Finds Its Own Way (September 29, 2008) -- A new kind of autonomous wheelchair under development can learn all about the locations in a given building, and then take its occupant to a given place in response to a verbal command. ... > full story

Ethical Argument: Include Pregnant Women In Research (September 29, 2008) -- Why aren't pregnant women included in most clinical trials? That's the question posed by leading bioethicists, who say it's time to confront the challenges that have led to the exclusion of pregnant women from important research that could positively impact maternal and fetal health. ... > full story

Tsunami Invisibility Cloak Could Make Structures 'Disappear' (September 29, 2008) -- Rather than building stronger ocean-based structures to withstand tsunamis, it might be easier to simply make the structures disappear. ... > full story

New Understanding Of Diabetes Drug Target (September 29, 2008) -- Scientists have made a new advance in the study of major diabetes drug target. The advance -- described by the researchers as 'very significant' -- could lead to new drugs being developed to target a protein that plays a critical role in controlling the way the body breaks down sugar. ... > full story

Pistachio Nuts May Improve Heart Health (September 29, 2008) -- Going green may be heart healthy if the green you choose is pistachio nuts, according to researchers who conducted the first study to investigate the way pistachios lower cholesterol. ... > full story

Hormone Therapy May Be Safe For Postmenopausal BRCA Mutation Carriers (September 29, 2008) -- The use of hormone therapy was associated with a reduced risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women who carry BRCA mutations, according to a case-control study. ... > full story

Mercury's 'Spider' Pantheon Fossae Formation Linked To Asteroid Impact (September 29, 2008) -- A new model suggests that the origin of the Pantheon Fossae on the planet Mercury, a radiating web of troughs located in the giant Caloris Basin, is directly linked to an impact crater at the centre of the web. The Caloris Basin is the youngest-known large impact basin on Mercury. ... > full story

Optimism Experts Handicap The Presidential Election With About 6 Weeks Remaining Until Nov. 4 (September 29, 2008) -- Researchers have determined that the most optimistic candidates win more than 80 percent of presidential elections dating back to 1900. A new study measures the optimism of this year's candidates. ... > full story


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Monday, September 29, 2008

Whack the PM

Jako-Lantern

Booklover Quote of the Day

About Vegetarian Food: Leftover rice and fried rice

About.com Vegetarian Food
In the Spotlight | More Topics |
from Jolinda Hackett



In the Spotlight
What to do with leftover rice?


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Easy Vegetarian Fried Rice
Fried rice with vegetables is an easy and versatile dish perfect for vegetarians and vegans, and kids like it too. My secret for a great vegetarian fried rice recipe is to squeeze some fresh lime juice and a dash of extra sea salt on top just before serving. read more





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About Art History: Roman Art from the Louvre

About.com    Art History
In the Spotlight | More Topics |
  from Shelley Esaak

Greetings!

I got into a heated debate last week over whether or not visual art is ever political. I heard that, no, it's not. To which I countered that, if you take into account that ruling classes so often paid for the stuff, art has been politically motivated more often than not. I'll stand by that spur of the moment observation, so take my not-really-off-topic next sentence in the spirit in which it is intended. The deadline for voter registration looms large in the United States. Please don't fail to take advantage of this privilege.

Have a great week!



 
In the Spotlight
Roman Art from the Louvre

Gail S. Myhre caught this very special exhibition during its viewing at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art, and recommends it to everyone who lives within driving distance. Read the review to learn why you, too, should make haste and see these treasures before October 12th.

 
           More Topics
Image Gallery: Roman Art from the Louvre

And here are some of the splendid Roman art treasures the Louvre so graciously allowed to travel throughout the United States. My personal favorite? It's hard to say but, to my thinking, it's also hard to beat portrait statues.

 
Renoir Nude Recovered

The part of this story that continues to fascinate me is the bit where children were throwing balls around in a Milanese villa with a Renoir hanging on the wall. Seriously! My children weren't allowed to throw objects inside a home containing nothing more valuable than a dieffenbachia...

 
 
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Poetry Daily Newsletter September 29, 2008

Contents
  1. Letter from the Editors
  2. Sponsor Messages:
    • Academy of American Poets: 2008 Poets Forum
    • The Kenyon Review archive is now available via JSTOR!
    • Poetry Out Loud Online Anthology
    • Get ready for the 2008 election, New York poets!
    • Ellipsis: Submission deadline
    • Colrain Poetry Manuscript Conference
    • Tupelo Press $10,000 Dorset Prize
    • Conduit
    • More....
  3. Poetry news links
  4. Selected new arrivals
  5. This week’s featured poets
  6. Last week’s featured poets
  7. Last year’s featured poets
  8. Two poems
Subscription Information

1. Letter from the Editors

Dear Readers,

On Tuesday we continue our series of prose features with Thomas Reiter's Atlantic Flyway To Whirl is King: An Interview with Brendan Galvin, from the Fall issue of Shenandoah:

"Once you realize that writing is a process and nobody out there is waiting with bated breath for what you'll do next, you can relax a bit. It becomes a habit of being. Seeing a poem grow from my hand onto the page feels good to me, and I'm not in a race to finish it. It isn’t piecework. That film image of the suffering artist is a bourgeois American joke as far as I'm concerned, but it's interesting how many poets feel they have to buy into it. Almost as if that alleged suffering is a justification for what they do, and the public will have more regard for them if they claim to sweat and toil. You’re lucky if you manage to get the time to go along with your inclination to write. It's not a curse; it’s a chance to give yourself an authentic life instead of an excuse."

Look for it on Tuesday on our news page.

We hope you enjoy this week's poems!

Warmest regards,


Don Selby & Diane Boller
Editors


2. Sponsor Messages

* Academy of American Poets: 2008 Poets Forum
Join the Academy of American Poets in New York, Nov. 6–8, for the 2008 Poets Forum, a 3-day exploration of contemporary poetry in America. Events include discussion sessions with distinguished poets, readings, literary walking tours of New York City, and more. Participants include Frank Bidart,Victor Hernández Cruz, Louise Glück, Lyn Hejinian, Sharon Olds, Ron Padgett, Robert Pinsky, U.S. Poet Laureate Kay Ryan, Gary Snyder, and others. Purchase tickets online ....

* The Kenyon Review archive is now available via JSTOR!
The Kenyon Review archive is now available via JSTOR!  Enjoy all that the rich literary history of KR has to offer. Not part of a participating institution? Sign up for individual access here, and access the archive from any internet connection, anywhere.

* Poetry Out Loud Online Anthology
With nearly a quarter of a million students engaged nationwide in Poetry Out Loud, the program's online anthology is likely the largest conduit today for high school students discovering the work of living poets. In 2008, page views of this anthology reached a high with 221,000  in a single day (January 21, 2008). Since January 2008, the site has averaged 7,568,512 page views or a monthly average of 840,946. That's a lot of high-schoolers reading poetry!

* Get ready for the 2008 election, New York poets!
Study poetry and literature at New York’s 92nd Street Y Unterberg Poetry Center. Get ready for the 2008 election with Joshua Mehigan’s Political Poetry seminar/workshop (class begins Oct 5). Revisit some of your favorite classics with poet and essayist Ben Downing’s British Country-House Novels seminar (class begins Oct 6). To register, call 212-415-5500 or visit us online. 92nd Street Y, 1395 Lexington Ave, NYC.

* Ellipsis: Submission deadline
Ellipsis is a literature and art journal published each April by the students of Westminster College in Salt Lake City (since 1967). Contributors are paid for their work and eligible for a prize judged this year by poet Kurt Brown. We publish well known writers, up-and-coming writers, and never-before-published writers. Submission deadline: November 1, 2008.

* Colrain Poetry Manuscript Conference
For Poets With a Book-Length Manuscript: first conference to provide the faculty, connections, and method necessary to set poets with a completed or in-process manuscript on a path towards publication.
 
Faculty includes editors and publishers Jeffrey Levine (Tupelo Press), Martha Rhodes (Four Way Books), Jeffrey Shotts (Graywolf Press), Susan Kan (Perugia Press), Peter Conners (BOA) and others; workshop leaders include Joan Houlihan (Concord Poetry Center); Frederick Marchant (Suffolk University), Ellen Doré Watson (Smith College), Steven Cramer (Lesley University), Daniel Tobin (Emerson College) and others.

* Tupelo Press $10,000 Dorset Prize
Tupelo Press $10,000 Dorset Prize: submissions accepted through December 15, 2008 (postmark)
Judge Ilya Kaminsky. Full guidelines online ....

* Conduit
Conduit is a biannual literary journal that is at once direct, playful, inventive, irreverent, and darkly beautiful. Really, it is. Conduit publishes work that demonstrates originality, intelligence, courage, and humanity. If that isn't enough, Conduit reaches beyond the literary by interviewing astronomers, ethno-botanists, artists, musicians, and historians, et cetera, believing a vigorous imagination is one that is cross-pollinated by diverse areas of human inquiry.

* Shenandoah 58/2, Fall, 2008
"Atlantic Flyway to Whirl is King: An Interview with Brendan Galvin" and six new Galvin poems plus poems by Thomas Reiter, Paula Brady, David Wagoner, James Arthur, Erika Meitner, Megan Ronan, Michael Jenkins, Stephen Gibson, William Aarnes, Jake Willard-Crist, Alice Friman, Cori Winrock, Mary Oliver, Jeff Hoffman and Jeanne Murray Walker. Visit Shenandoah ...

* The Bennington Graduate Writing Seminars
Founded in 1994 by poet Liam Rector, building on the long-standing literary tradition of Bennington College (Bernard Malamud, Robert Frost, W.H. Auden, and Theodore Roethke all taught there at one time) the Bennington Writing Seminars was named "one of the top 5 low-residency MFA programs in the country" in 2007 by The Atlantic Monthly. Students work closely with four Core Faculty instructors over as many terms and attend five 10-day residencies, held on Bennington College’s Vermont campus, in January and June. A reading-intensive program that confers an MFA degree in Writing and Literature, our informal motto is: "Read one hundred books. Write one."

* Palm Beach Poetry Festival: Workshop Signup
Palm Beach Poetry Festival, January 19-24, 2009, Old School Square, Delray Beach, FL. Advanced Workshops ($725): Martin Espada, Kimiko Hahn, Laura Kasischke, Thomas Lux, Anne Marie Macari, Gregory Orr and Gerald Stern; Intermediate Workshops: ($525) Denise Duhamel and Victoria Redel. Workshops, limited to 12 poets, include conference, readings and gala party. Visit us online for application and guidelines or phone Call (561) 868-2063. Application deadline: October 31, 2008.

* Sanibel Island Writers Conference 2008
November 6-9, 2008, Sanibel Island, FL. Workshops & panels in fiction, memoir, poetry, creative nonfiction, screenwriting, songwriting, and children's lit ($350).  Lynne Barrett, Eve Bridburg, Jim Brock, Ron Carlson, Camille Cline, John Dufresne, Beth Ann Fennelly, William Giraldi, Stephanie Griest, Jeanne Leiby, John McNally, Leonard Nash, Sena Jeter Naslund, Neal Pollack, John K. Samson, Christopher Schelling, Michael Steinberg, Ian Vasquez. Visit us online for registration info, or call (239) 590-7421.


3. Poetry News Links

News and reviews from around the web, updated daily:

  • David Orr reviews Opal Sunset: Selected Poems, 1958-2008 by Clive James. (The New York Times)
  • Mary Karr introduces a poem by Stephen Dunn. (The Washington Post)
  • Valerie Sayers reviews Maya Angelou's Letter to My Daughter. (The Washington Post)
  • Samuel Green honored for The Grace of Necessity. (Seattle Times)
  • Richard Holmes's The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science reviewed by Jonathan Bate. (Telegraph)
  • Four poets on poetry and their day jobs. (The Poetry Society)
  • An obituary for Duncan Glenn, poet and editor of the Scottish Poetry Library. (Edinburgh Evening News)
  • Ted Kooser introduces a poem by Judith Harris. (American Life in Poetry)
  • And more....

4. Selected New Arrivals

These and other new arrivals are available for purchase via Poetry Daily/Amazon.com.

  • Unpacking the Boxes: A Memoir of a Life in Poetry, Donald Hall (Houghton Mifflin)
  • Twings & Knucklebones, Sarah Lindsay (Copper Canyon Press)
  • The Dream We Carry: Selected and Last Poems, Olav H. Hauge, tr. Robert Bly and Robert Hedin (Copper Canyon Press)
  • Harvest of Blossoms: Poems from a Life Cut Short, Selma Meerbaum-Eisinger, ed. Irene Silverblatt and Helene Silverblatt (Northwestern University Press)
  • Octopus, Tom C. Hunley (Logan House)
  • After, Nancy Pagh (Floating Bridge)
  • Woodsmoke, Wind, and the Peregrin, Shaun T. Griffin (Black Rock Press)
  • Marginalia: Poems from the Old Irish, Louis McKee (Adastra Press)
  • The Essential P. K. Page, P. K. Page, ed. Arlene Lampert and Théa Gray (Porcupine's Quill)
  • And more...

5. This Week’s Featured Poets

Monday - Robert Mezey
Tuesday - John Witte
Wednesday - Brendan Galvin
Thursday - Gary L. McDowell
Friday - Victoria Chang
Saturday - Padraig O'Morain
Sunday - Baron Wormser


6. Featured Poets September 22 - September 28, 2008

These and other past featured poets may be found in our archive:

Monday - Euripides / tr. Robin Robertson
Tuesday - Janet Frame
Wednesday - Dennis O'Driscoll
Thursday - Linda Bierds
Friday - Mark Halliday
Saturday - Kevin Young
Sunday - Peter Cole


7. Last Year’s Featured Poets

These poems will be retired from our archive during the coming week.

Mark Jarman - "Epistle 28. To the Trees"
Anna Kamienska / tr. Grazyna Drabik and David Curzon - "On a Sonnet by Leah Goldberg"
Colleen J. McElroy - "Photolinen: La Push Beach"
Sherwood Anderson - "Man Speaking to a Woman" and "A Vagrant"
Stephen Cramer - "The Ark"
Tony Tost - "An Emperor's Nostalgia IV, IX, and X"
Bill Rasmovicz - "Ars Metaphysica"


8. Poem From Last Year


On a Sonnet by Leah Goldberg

Happily
happiness doesn't know justice
It comes when it wants
and it wants unjustly

Time for you to withdraw into the rustle
of black silk attire
rather than to dress up in smiles
But is it your fault
that like rain it caught you on the road by surprise
that you didn't have time to cover your silver head

And now you stand like a lonely tree
open to all the winds and birds

And now you shine like a lake
and whether you want to or not
you reflect the sky

Anna Kamienska / tr. Grazyna Drabik and David Curzon
The Massachusetts Review
Fall 2007

Copyright ©2007 by The Massachusetts Review, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.


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