Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Creating A New Normal, One Poetry Reading at a Time

Creating A New Normal, One Poetry Reading at a Time 
Michael Sedano

 Welcome to the new normal. Slowly, local arts awaken from a half decade of solitude behind closed windows and things that stopped being. Poetry readings and close-packed community gatherings disappeared, and with them the synergy that comes of poets and listeners in a live poetry gathering.

Toti O'Brien inaugurates resumption of Eagle Rock's Saturday poets' gathering.

The recent reading at Eagle Rock library, a branch of the Los Angeles city system, underscores the burgeoning new normal of poetry readings. 

Poets never stopped writing during the GOPlague-forced halt, and they hunger to read their work to audiences. Places never stopped being available to host readings. 


Nowadays, audiences wear, or don't wear, plague-phylactic face coverings. Audiences in distant locations virtually participate via telecommunications. In some instances, readers zoom their performance. In many cases, poets glue their eyes to a glowing screen and talk into their hand. More than ever before, Diversity matters because community matters.

The February second afternoon event, dubbed "Poetry Open Mic", resumes regular Saturday at 1 p.m. assemblies. The initial gathering post-plaguetime stoppage featured Toti O'Brien. The multitalented poet, sculptor, dancer, singer, "is known as the Italian Accordionist with the Irish Last Name. Toti is the author of Other Maidens (BlazeVOX, 2020), An Alphabet of Birds(Moonrise, 2020), In Her Terms (Cholla Needles, 2021), Pages of a Broken Diary (Pski’s Porch, 2022), The Past, Ineffable (Cholla Needles Press, 2023), Odd Arcana (Cholla Needles, 2023) and Alter Alter (Elyssar Press, 2024).

O'Brien reads expressively, freely allowing emotions forming inside her cerebral writing to flow out of her face and body into her rapt audience. There's no question of Toti O'Brien's musicality; at times her body dances the poem in time with the words.


American Sign Language translator Mona Jean Cedar recites with more than her full person. Her gestures, her hands, the position of her fingers speak expressions heard only by speakers of American Sign Language.

Cedar recites her own poem from memory, her body, arms, hands, face a single expressive element that creates a poem apart from yet because of the spoken word. For all the audience knows, gesture precedes verbal in this poet's work?

Audiences have a golden opportunity to ask themselves that when Mona Jean Cedar features at the next Eagle Rock "open mic" gathering. Watch La Bloga-Tuesday for details.


Hunger to speak, hunger to hear, hunger to be here with the local poetry scene were satified. Moderator Pat Cross at first announced seventeen sign-ups, then added a couple of late-arrivers and the "open mic" turned out to be 18  readers. An equal number attended to sit and enjoy. Some hollered and clapped for familiar poets not seen since before the GOPlague shut-down. Reunion and joy, two essential elements of community abound today.

Who knew there's an Eagle Rock poetry scene? How about your local community?

Moderator Pat Cross

Why shouldn't there be? Put out an open call, reserve free space in the local library, and open the doors on time.

Given that there's been a long time between readings, it's a good reminder to work with what happened, plan the next one. There will be a next time, the country is opening up. It's a new normal. 

Let the new part be how you read your stuff aloud, gente.

Poets and organizers benefit from writing down: three concrete elements that satisfied goals. Enumerate three concrete elements that will benefit from change, stuff not to do again, do more of, do less of. Next reading, you have a set of goals because you conducted a thorough post-joy analysis.

Foto Gallery

This gallery of Eagle Rock open mic poets challenges readers to remember two pointers: when there's a camera in the house, look into the lens now and then, and the rest of the reading, make eye contact, eye contact, and more eye contact.

Here's a La Bloga-Tuesday column dedicated to reading off a manuscript (link).









5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank goodness the world is opening up again to poets' readings. Only good things can come from this, and will. Thanks for your guidance on how to maximize the impact of the spoken words.

Toti said...

Thank you, Michael, for this unexpected and wonderful gift of words, images, witnessing and point of view

Mona Jean said...

Oh, Michael! So cool of you to acknowledge and support our humble and raucous reading with your charming words! Hope to see you at my feature there on May 25th and at future readings in the area. There's another sweet venue just around the cornor from the Library - St. B's (Barnabus, a church). On March 2nd, curator/poet Lee Boek will be prroducing a variety show with music, poetry, dance,... (I'll be in it too) Let's play our poetry performances!!!!! Gracias!

Alice said...

What a wonderful acknowledgement of this reading! I have known Toti for many years and indeed she is an amazing Renaissance woman. I was sorry I missed this reading. I have been running readings in LA for over 20 years, having started "Moonday" on the West Side, which then moved to the East Side. When Moonday went on hiatus, I took over the Village Poets reading at Bolton Hall in Tujunga, which is on the 4th Sunday of the month. Next month, March 25, we feature James Ragan & Amy Gerstler with open readers as well. I welcome all LA poets and lovers of poetry to our reading. Please check out our blog: https://villagepoets.blogspot.com/

A. Jay Adler said...

Thank you for championing poetry in this way!