Tuesday 19 December 2017

Sydney Launch of 'fourW twenty-eight'


The warm weather didn’t deter Sydney Booranga supporters, with almost 50 people in attendance for the launch of the  fourW twenty-eight at Gleebooks.


Michele Seminara’s speech gave a beautiful overview of this year’s edition, and with many writers in attendance it was a rich afternoon of poetry, prose and conversation, with late arrivals sprawled on the floor at the back.

Many thanks to Gleebooks in Glebe for their continued support of fourW.

All photos courtesy of Michele Seminara





An excerpt from Michele Seminara's launch speech.

"Today I am delighted to be launching this year’s fourW anthology, and give thanks to Editor David Gilbey, as well as those from Booranga Writers Centre and Charles Sturt University, for asking me to launch this important literary journal as it celebrates its 28th year of continuous publication.

Michele Seminara launches fourW twenty-eight
This is a watershed year for fourW. As is the case for many literary journals, the economic viability of the anthology has been brought into question as funding to cover the printing of the magazine has this year been withdraw, and the Booranga Writers Centre Committee explore new ways forward.

This hasn’t stopped fourW twenty-eight coming into being however, albeit in a slightly modified form, and the committee are determined that it won’t stop the anthology continuing into the future. As they explore alternatives such as downsizing the print run, printing on demand, or publishing online, one thing is certain – the creativity and open mindedness that shape the anthology will see it continue to adapt and reflect our contemporary transnational landscape, in form as well as in content.

From Russia to Hong Kong to Sri Lanka, from rural to urban and outback Australia, fourW twenty-eight sees its subjects seeking – internally and externally – for meaning; questing, in all the various ways we do, for happiness, and living in states of connection and disconnection that are by turns helped and hindered by modern technology.

...Australians love to travel the long roads, or blue skies, or expansive seas, or more seldom the circuitous pathways of their own minds in search of that elusive connection to self, others, and sometimes even a higher power. It is these connections which make life meaningful and – dare we say it – passable, if not always pleasurable...One thing is for sure: whatever path you might be travelling, it’s a good bet the far-reaching writing in fourW twenty-eight has got you covered. Because ultimately...we’re all just riding the wave of change as best we can. And, just as the creators of fourW are doing, we’re all watching to see what’s next."


Just a few of the many writers on-hand to read their work from fourW twenty-eight.


Les Wicks
Elanna Herbert




Tug Dumbly
Biff Ward

John Carey
Erwin E Cabucos
Carol Chandler

New Year Letter from Booranga President, David Gilbey

Dear Booranga Members and Friends,

The good news, as you will read elsewhere in this newsletter, is that Booranga has received a grant from Create NSW for its 2018 program and infrastructure. This means our excellent part-time staff, Kathryn Halliwell (Creative Director) and Sandra Treble (Office Manager) can continue and will be paid. And that our proposed program of writers-in-residence will proceed …

At our recent Committee meeting, we identified a number of strategies to bolster our profile and our ongoing financial security. In particular we decided to make a concerted effort to attract more/new members. With this in mind we thought we would promote a couple of new inducements for members only:

·        with each visiting writer, we would make available a number of one-on-one consultations/mentorships

·        at the beginning of each writer’s residency we would have a special ‘members only’ meet-the-writer evenings at Booranga

At the end of 2017 there are around fifty paid-up members. Membership begins each new year (or at the fourW launches in November if you’ve already signed up). If we can increase our membership base we can underwrite more projects and secure all of the funding for eg. fourW, and undertake new and more extensive regional writing activities. We also want to increase the funding of the Booranga prizes to $500 each, so more memberships would help with this.

Towards that end, for 2018, membership and workshop attendance fees have been increased:

·        full membership with fourW: $50

·        membership without fourW: $30

·        student/concession (no fourW): $20

·        workshop attendance: $10 for non-members

Already we have cut some of the costs of producing fourW and we are implementing a small submission charge for entries to the 2018 Booranga Prizes – and of course, inclusion in fourW twenty-nine. Submission costs will be: $5 per poem and $10 per short story – this seemed to us comparable with similar submission charges by other journals/anthologies/competitions. This will allow us greater security in continuing fourW into the future.

We are planning to have some fundraising activities in 2018 – a literary dinner and a trivia night have been discussed – if you are interested in being involved in the planning and/or implementation of these, please contact us.

Booranga Writers’ Centre is a unique and culturally significant presence in this region. We link local writers to national and international writing communities. We work with other arts and writing groups to foster creativity in our home paddock. We know we have a significant effect on the lives and amenity of writing-interested people and actively encourage writers in various styles. We need to take, and be seen to be taking, some responsibility for our financial security, above what we receive in grants and in-kind from NSW Government, Wagga Wagga City Council and Charles Sturt University.

Sooo, please do join us – and encourage any other people you know who might be interested in supporting Booranga Writers’ Centre through membership and attendance/participation.

On behalf of all of us at Booranga I wish you and yours all the very best for the Festive Season. I look forward to catching up with you in the New year.

david

David Gilbey
Editor, fourW; President, Booranga Writers' Centre
Adjunct Senior Lecturer in English
Charles Sturt University
Locked Bag 588, Wagga Wagga
NSW, 2678, Australia




Wagga Wagga Launch of 'fourW twenty-eight'



Booranga Writers' Centre welcomed poet Ivy Alvarez to Wagga Wagga to launch fourW twenty-eight at the Wagga Wagga City Library. A crowd of more than 50 people attended and the winners of the Booranga Prizes were announced. The 'best' poem in fourW twenty-eight is Daniel King's 'King Henry X'; and the 'best' fiction is Mitchell Grabois' short story 'Stinky Cheese'. Congratulation to Daniel and Mitchell.

An excerpt from Ivy Alvarez's launch speech.

"What always strikes me about fourW, as a literary publication, is its boldness of position, its openness to fun, adventure, experimentation and the raw original voice. I value fourW as an Australian journal unabashed in its outward-looking perspective, one unbound by location, while prizing writing that resonates, whether it is from Wagga, Australia, or beyond.

                                              Ivy Alvarez                          (Photo Claire Baker)
I like to imagine what larks the editorial panel gets up to when it comes to making their selections — maybe sitting together, paper everywhere, poems and stories scattered every which way. There would be laughter, and impassioned arguments, as people campaign for their favourite line of poetry or short story. Someone would bang on the table so hard, the glasses clink and the pizza slices leap out of their boxes. Then they’d laugh some more. (I don’t want to know if this scenario is untrue, by the way.)

According to the Booranga Writers’ Centre’s page, twenty-eight contains “more than 50 poems and nearly 20 short stories stretching the boundaries of writing in multi-layered, allusive writing that engages, challenges, seduces”[1] so I urge you to reserve your copy, whether as a last-minute standby present or as a beach-reading treat — for the season of gift-giving is well and truly upon us.


David Gilbey
I can think of no better way to honour the work that goes into stitching together this journal, number twentyeight, by writing a cento in dedication. The word cento comes from the Latin word for patchwork. The cento, or collage poem, is a poetic form made up of lines from poems by other poets.[2] For this cento, I am lifting the gate, and have included fiction writers, too.



Please join us in celebrating local, national and international literary achievement — through the hand-stitched quilt that is fourW — as we declare fourW twenty-eight launched into the world."


    
Joan Cahill (photo Claire Baker)

Our thanks to Ivy for her wonderful launch speech and for contributing to the success of this year's launch. We are greatly indebted to the Wagga Wagga City Library for allowing us to use this wonderful public venue for the launch and for the staff for their invaluable assistance in preparing and setting-up and for their assistance on the day.




[1] David Gilbey, Booranga Writers’ Centre FB page, 15 November 2017, www.facebook.com/Booranga/posts/1664426170274189
[2] poets.org, Cento: Poetic Form, 21 February 2014, www.poets.org/poetsorg/text/cento-poetic-form
  
Ivy Alvarez and David Gilbey






The fourW28 cento
by Ivy Alvarez

with thanks to the authors in this edition


By the way, did you know / rain is the buzzing of bees vertically landing on flowers? Even bliss        has its palsy to yank. The river of ghosts / spatters over rocks   the young man shifted about, as though trying to coax more comfort from the chair                                             beer in hand, sack open.
                                                                     kay okay lang kami, don’t worry about us, we are fine here. Drugged icy air, dazzling light      we climb knuckled fault lines / when we find anything following through with sharp attacks // on sensitive parts of the body                 another memento from when things were more in control.         He is my third eye, my spinal rod.                         Suffocation and empty lungs
                                 and a hundred men blinded by your charm
But the real estate man was looking at his clip board and gave no sign of hearing.     Mare and foal gaze through cicada haze
                        though I doubt you’ll remember details of the affair
Want your miracles / fat, loud & obvious?
              the itch goes away, but not the
              itches in her brain
                                 allowed to recreate Philadelphia from its
insides out                its bourgeois interior rich with brocade and (suggestion)           Her goats have breasts.
                                                                     though I know I’m
currently employed   at Kentucky Fried Chicken
my mother was born in a town like this       in creek water shallow
sometimes oddly neglecting to mention       whatever the clock
Where are the people / In the cars, in the glass       if I said where
would you be there?                  “But we were speaking of oysters,”
cos I’ve got that bearded brown face?    Dissolves under erasure’s X
In the other lounge a fire has been lit, but no one is present. My balcony is their dining table!          I dive into a clarity
Beneath the waves is hot and silent
                                                      stretching to match the murders
The woman pregnant / with a skin of health      “I’m not dressed.”
Katerina brushed back her long black hair      Vanya felt in a stupor, unable to take it in      Stiff quiffs, soft cocks, shit music.
before its lines / were said        i’ve encountered three irish accents
Summer seeps through flannelette.  The jetty burns with fireworks
Begin with a verb     escaped from a London winter   Writing pretty letters   windows leaking life    she pauses. like lightning.
a holy & blessed ascension               a hundred respectable denizens
I feel slightly sick   A drink of water.           A hole in the ceiling
She and I / are getting to know the puddles     dewdrop of longing
he’s under the filleting knife                        A boot was kicking
the heat & itches you must shed    blood fixed      an extended wing
escape, a reverb under                                 to grant saintliness


Sources: Sofial Azam’s To a Gunman, Christopher Barnes’s Lord Byron Joins a Dating Site, Robert Beveridge’s The Poetry Bowl, Craig Billingham’s The Messenger, Julie Briggs’s White Christmas, Erwin Cabucos’s Lights of Different Colours, Joan Cahill’s One-Eyed Trust, Chloë Callistemon’s X, John Carey’s Post Truth, Carol Chandler’s Watched, Sue Clennel’s Frida, Lucy Coughran’s Hera, Michael Crane’s A Café in Marrakesh, Louise D’Arcy’s Alex and Max Go for a Walk, Sally Denshire’s after Horses, Michel Dignand’s Next Door to Charles, Tug Dumbly’s Incredible, Claire Feild’s Palpable, Adam Fieled’s Nights I Staggered Drunkenly, David Gilbey’s ‘To Speak of the Woe ...’, Mitchell Krockmalnik Grabois’s Stinky Cheese, Jonathan Greenhause’s I am a God, Rory Harris’s road, Elanna Herbert’s Road to Gallipoli : between Cappadocia and Pamukkale, Matt Hetherington’s Seidel’s, Ross Jackson’s Waking something, Jill Jones’s Undoing, Christopher (Kit) Kelen’s practice of a disappearance, Maryanne Khan’s Sideways, Zohab Khan’s Untitled, Daniel King’s King Henry X and The Astrological Coasters, Vanessa Kirkpatrick’s The balcony, Andy Kissane’s Caught, Mran-Maree Laing’s The raw faces, Gary Langford’s p154, Wes Lee’s Airbnb Weekend, Alison Lesley’s Weightless, Rosanna Licari’s All Saints’ Eve, Natalya Lowndes’s The Professionals, Julie Maclean’s Joel and Jess on the Verge, Alex McKeown’s qu’est-ce que c’est qu’un sansonnet?, Derek Motion’s birds poem, Jan Napier Kennels’s The Black Dog, Damon O’Brien’s Catching the Last Wave, Mark O’Flynn’s (Missing)(The)(Point), Nathanael O’Reilly’s (Un)belonging, Liam Perry’s Fool’s Gold #1, Andrew Purches’s Individual Cities, Caroline Reid’s the kid, Graham Rowlands’s Absolutely, Rajith Savanadasa’s To Keep Pace, Steven Sharman’s The Kill, Dorothy Simmons’s In Your Face, Ali Jane Smith’s Christmastime!, Barnaby Smith’s Docklands, Ian C. Smith’s Mixed Fruit, Rob Walker’s Tommy Ru, Biff Ward’s To the West, Les Wicks’s The Mad Book, Gail Willems’s Woman Holding Roses Standing Between Two Springs, Jena Woodhouse’s Wild Geese Migrating, Mark Young’s or part thereof, Robyne Young’s Afternoon Tea  

Extension 2 Study Day


Recently Booranga collaborated with the Wagga Branch of the English Teachers’ Association to host what has become an annual Extension 2 Writing Day.

Presenters included Shaun Ellis, President of WETA (Mater Dei College), Corrina Hawke (Wagga Wagga High) and David Gilbey (CSU). Students came from several Wagga high schools and focussed on both strategies for writing and on developing their particular project for Extension English 2018.

Students found the day a lively and stimulating set of challenges about the nature and focus of writing and worked through ‘speed-dating’ sessions to refine and critique their projects. It was evident the networking amongst students was a creative and productive aspect of the day.


English Teachers Association Extension 2 study day at Booranga Writers Centre at CSU.

Poetry Book Collection Donated to Booranga



A very generous donation of books has been made to Booranga Writers' Centre by member and long time supporter Ian Stewart.

David Gilbey and Ian Stewart


With the closure of his store, On the Shelf Second Hand Books, in October a new home was needed for the remaining stock. Booranga Writers' Centre is now custodian of this wonderful collection which Ian collected over many years.

"As my second-hand bookshop developed, from its beginning in 2003, I accumulated a growing collection of Australian Poetry, both recent and late 19th/early 20th century.


A major contribution to this collection I bought at an auction in 2006. The bulk of that came from the library of a former University of Sydney academic, Harold Oliver. Now that the bookshop has closed I have decided that the best place for this collection is at Booranga."



The collection in includes anthologies of Australian poetry, literary theory, as well as volumes of poetry by individual poets. These include many famous Australian poets such as Bruce Dawe, Kenneth Slessor, A.D. Hope, Grace Perry, Lesbia Harford, Gwen Harwood, Dorothy Porter and many more too numerous to mention.


We thank Ian for entrusting Booranga with this diverse range of Australian Poetry.