Monday, November 30, 2009

Tiger & Chevron, A Story Of Substance

Tiger Woods Deserves Your Scrutiny
By Dave Zirin
The Nation


During the Bill Clinton impeachment idiocy of 1998, many on the left said that if Clinton were removed from office, let it be for gutting welfare or for imposing sanctions on Iraq, and not l'affaire Lewinsky.


Today, Tiger Woods, the famous, wealthy and most PR-conscious athlete on earth, finally finds himself subject to scrutiny. But, similar to Clinton's scandal, his scandal has more to do with his personal life than more substantive issues. The media has staked out his Isleworth home for round-the-clock coverage about a bizarre "car accident" this past week involving his wife, a fire hydrant and a golf club. The questions being posed are as breathless as they are weightless: "Were Tiger's facial lacerations the result of the car crash, or an attack from his wife, Elin?" "Is this about the rumored 'other woman' in New York City?" "Did Elin Woods smash the rear of his car with a golf club to rescue Tiger, or was she smashing up the car as he pulled away?" One last question: Who the hell cares? Granted, there is a "man bites dog" aspect to this story. In Woods's roughly fourteen years in the public eye, he has never even been caught littering. His image has been cemented as a man of ungodly intensity.

This squeaky-clean reputation has helped Woods become the richest athlete in history. His career course earnings are $92 million. When you factor in advertisements, corporate appearances and other off-course aspects of "Tiger Inc.," it makes sense that Tiger Woods is America's first athlete to reach billionaire status.


As the saying goes, behind every great fortune is a great crime. Following his car "accident," Woods's agent says it's unclear whether he will attend his foundation's Chevron World Challenge Golf Tournament. In 2008 Chevron entered a five-year relationship with Tiger Woods's foundation under the guise of philanthropy. But if Woods had a shred of social conscience, this partnership never would have existed. Lawsuits have been issued against Chevron for dumping toxic waste all over the planet. Alaska, Canada, Brazil, Angola and California have all accused Chevron of dumping. Even worse, Chevron has a partnership with Burma's ruling military junta on the country's Yadana gas pipeline project, the single greatest source of revenue for the military, estimated at nearly $5 billion since 2000.

  • Complete Article


  • Chevron Seeks Money from Wounded and Tortured Protesters
  • Social Media Jobs

    h/t
  • RickHancock




  • Job Posts
  • Saturday, November 28, 2009

    This Is Your Brain On Jazz: Researchers Use MRI To Study Spontaneity, Creativity


    -- Painting by
  • Debra Hurd

  • h/t Region 19 BOE Gazette

    ScienceDaily — A pair of Johns Hopkins and government scientists have discovered that when jazz musicians improvise, their brains turn off areas linked to self-censoring and inhibition, and turn on those that let self-expression flow.

  • Complete Article
  • Thursday, November 26, 2009

    VIDEO: Iceman John Scully, CT Boxing Hall Of Famer & Keynote Speaker @ Upcoming Young Writers Event

  • Registration Form pdf


  • video

  • Registration For Jan. 15 Event @ The Hartford Club


  • Registration Form pdf




  • NB Herald Notes Entry Deadline For Young Writers Competition



  • Iceman Greets Michael Nunn

  • CT Boxing Hall Of Fame Photos


  • Iceman John Scully


  • Scully's Utube


  • Ice Ice Baby -- Vanilla
  • NB Herald Notes Entry Deadline For Young Writers Competition

  • Registration Form pdf




  • Wednesday, November 25, 2009 7:09 PM EST
    Special to the
  • New Britain Herald


  • The Connecticut Young Writers Competition, now entering its 13th year, is seeking prose and poetry entries.

    Teenage writers of prose and poetry from across Connecticut are being encouraged to submit original entries to an annual literary competition which awards winning entrants with cash prizes and the possibility of having their work published in the literary journal
  • Connecticut Review.


  • The literary awards competition, for ages 13 to 18, is a project of the Connecticut State University System and the Connecticut Young Writers Trust.

    The awards competition is designed to encourage young writers and poets. During this academic year, two young writers from each of Connecticut’s eight counties will win cash awards for either prose or poetry.

    Entries must be nominated by a teacher in a public or private school, and postmarked on or before February 1, 2010. Home school entries are also accepted.

    Central Connecticut State University in New Britain, Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic, Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven, and Western Connecticut State University in Danbury will receive the initial entries and host county award ceremonies in April 2010. Last year, more than 580 entries were received.

    From the select group of county winners, a distinguished panel of judges will select the state’s top poet and prose writer, to be announced at a special awards ceremony next spring.

    Last year, the ceremony was held at the Mark Twain House &Museum. The two winners will each earn an opportunity to be published in CT Review, the literary journal of the Connecticut State University System.

    For more information, including entry forms, visit
  • The CT Young Writers Website

  • or contact Andy Thibault of the Connecticut Young Writers Trust at 860-690-0211 or tntcomm82@cs.com

  • Registration For Jan. 15 Event @ The Hartford Club


  • Registration Form pdf




  • Iceman With Poet Gaby Calvocoressi Prepping For January Event


  • CT Boxing Hall Of Fame Photos


  • Connecticut Review


  • Announcement Also @ The Darien Patch
  • Monday, November 23, 2009

    Philip Roth Keeps On Punching; Is Nobel Overdue?



    -- Photo Via The Guardian, UK

    Creative force

    By David Mattin
    The National


    Philip Roth must be accustomed by now to being called America’s greatest living writer. His extraordinary productivity in the past decade has brought forth novels at a rate of more than one every two years, and upon each publication critics queue to rehearse the superlatives: Roth is a genius, they tell us, the pre-eminent chronicler of that strange, accelerated, furious place that is early 21st-century America. Surely, they say, the Nobel is long overdue.

    And the literary world is at it again with the publication of Roth’s 30th novel, The Humbling, about a stage actor who fears that his talent has deserted him.

  • Complete Article


  • Masterful & Disturbing


  • Next Year: the Nemesis


  • Bad Sex Award Shortlist


  • True Confession: Hard Competition


  • New Statesman Interview
  • Sunday, November 22, 2009

    CT Boxing Hall Of Fame Photos



    Mr. & Mrs. [Rita]Iceman
    -- Photo by Kirk Lang, Courtesy of Iceman John Scully


    Sammy Vega, the 7-time national amateur champ, with Hall of Famer Iceman John Scully and Lance Henry, who trains at Richardson Boxing
    --Photo by Kirk Lang, Courtesy of Sammy Vega



    Sammy Vega with renowned boxing judge and HBO analyst Harold Lederman
    --Photo by Kirk Lang, Courtesy of Sammy Vega


  • CT Boxing Hall Of Fame Annual Awards Event


  • Iceman John Scully


  • Iceman With Poet Gaby Calvocoressi Prepping For January Event




  • Registration For Jan. 15 Event @ The Hartford Club
  • Thursday, November 19, 2009

    REGISTER NOW FOR SPORTS WRITING, POETRY WORKSHOPS @ THE HARTFORD CLUB

  • Registration Form pdf




  • Registration Form pdf


  • Connecticut Young Writers Trust
    231 Beach St.
    Litchfield, CT 06759

    * 800-814-6931 * Fax- 860-567-9119







  • Registration Form pdf


  • Hartford Courant Post On CT Young Writers Triple Knockout Event


  • MUSIC
    VIDEOS



  • Jen Allen Big Band @ Twain House May 2009



  • Jen Allen Big Band @ Litchfield Inn June 2008


  • Binnie The Demon Barber Klein Featured In CT Jewish Ledger




  • Prince of the City @ Hartford Club


  • CT Young Writers Trust Home Page
  • Binnie The Demon Barber Klein Featured In CT Jewish Ledger



    SHE'S APPEARING
    JAN. 15, 2010 @ THE HARTFORD CLUB
    AS PART OF UNDERCARD
    IN
    GABY VERSUS ICEMAN:
    A CT YOUNG WRITERS TRIPLE KNOCKOUT EVENT

    Yale prof puts on her gloves...
    and goes a few rounds in a new book about boxing


    Via
    Connecticut Jewish Ledger
    Published: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 1:54 PM EST



    By Cindy Mindell
  • The Jewish Ledger


  • Binnie Klein is a psychotherapist, radio-show host, and lecturer in the Yale University Department of Psychotherapy, where she supervises psychotherapy trainees. It may be surprising to learn that in January, SUNY Press will publish Klein's book, "Blows to the Head: How Boxing Changed My Mind," a memoir that also forays into other areas, like Jewish boxers in the U.S. and immigration history, to name a few.

    Klein told the Ledger about coming to the sport as an unlikely contender in middle age, and how boxing changed her life.


    Q: Okay, boxing?

    A. It's still a little mystifying to me, even after spending a few years learning to box, covering professional fights, working the corner for a young fighter, and interviewing boxers on my radio show. The basic narrative is that, some years back, when I was in my mid-50s, I fell in my back yard -- it wasn't exotic like skiing -- and broke my ankle and my foot. I was in a cast for eight weeks. I was bored in physical therapy, I had never been athletic, and one day I spotted a pair of boxing gloves in the gym. I asked the trainer, "Could you teach me to box?" He took me as far as I could go with punch mitts, and I fell in love with it because it was the first time I felt good in a physical activity. As a psychotherapist, there's a lot of sitting, talking, listening, thinking. With the punching and hitting, I was feeling my body's power for the first time.

    The trainer told me, "You need a coach" and I said "Huh?" Around the same time, the AARP magazine came in the mail, which in and of itself was a shocker, and there was an article about a middle-aged guy teaching women to box. My book chronicles how I found a way to get this guy, John Spehar, to take me on. He's co-owner of Fighting Fitness Gym in Orange, where he offers classes, but I wanted one-on-one training. Most of my training went on in my living room. For about six months, we weren't boxing; John was training me, holding up the punch mitts, and he said, "You're getting professional training just like my male and pro fighters," and one day he takes out gloves and headgear and we're sparring.

    Q: How did you decide to write "Blows to the Head"?

    A. My first idea was to write the book with my coach, like "Tuesdays with Morrie." But John told me, "This is your story." Before I became a psychotherapist, when I was in my 20s and living in New York City, I was trying to be a writer, but I was a poet. Poets can't make a living except through teaching, and I knew I needed a career. When I was training to be a psychotherapist, I left the writing behind. In 2003, I started writing a novel but didn't finish. I got a scholarship to the Wesleyan Writers Conference through the General Federation of the Women's Clubs of Connecticut. The novel didn't get finished, but as my boxing journey had already started, I felt I had a story to tell.

    Q: In your book, you talk about more than just your own experience. How did those other inquiries unfold?


    A. One day during a boxing lesson, I asked John -- who was really knowledgeable about American history and is a student of history and a former middleweight state champion, and would talk during our lessons and teach me things -- "Were there ever any Jewish boxers?" and out comes the information. In the early part of the century, there were tons of them. That just keeps my interest, because like a lot of people, I grew up thinking that Jews were the pale scholars and that we were not athletic. I learned a lot from writing the book. I didn't have a lot of ethnic pride: we were very assimilated in Newark in the '50s and I was really very disconnected from any Jewish community, though we were cultural Jews. We didn't belong to a synagogue, I didn't go to Hebrew school, I was alienated from the religion.

    I started reading about Jewish boxers and felt connected to them, felt compelled to learn about their lives and what drove them to become boxers.

    I started reading about immigrant history. I wasn't knowledgeable about immigrants to this country, despite the fact that my mother came here at age 8 from a shtetl in Poland. It made me do some genealogical research. The experience changed me completely. I met people in the boxing community, who were the opposite of what I thought they'd be like. I always thought boxing was repulsive and violent. My father loved it but we had a contentious relationship; he was actually a little scary. All kinds of links started to happen -- to my father, to my mother's immigrant past, and I developed more sense of and pride in my body.

    In amateur boxing, which I was more involved with, you're wearing headgear, there are three three-minute rounds, there's not a lot of blood, but there's a lot of sweat. That was thrilling. Another "Yes" moment was getting a press pass to cover a live pro fight in Hartford.

    The other hat I wear is at the alternative radio station WPKN, where I've hosted a show for 30 years. Every Thursday, from 9 a.m. to noon, I do music and interviews. I started "In Your Corner," where John Spehar and I interview people in the world of boxing -- Burt Randolph Sugar, a beloved Jewish sports writer and an idol of mine; Yuri Foreman, a Jewish boxer studying to be a rabbi.

    Q: Has your approach to psychotherapy changed since you took up boxing?

    A. It has. In the most overt way, I have occasionally and very selectively referred people for boxing lessons, people who I felt could really benefit from experiencing their own physical power: for example, gay men who were beaten up as kids and felt scared and weak just walking on the street; a guy with a huge problem with his own aggression, and who was working with me on anger management. I said, "Let's put it in the ring."

    The other, more subtle way is that I'm more conscious and aware of how people seem to inhabit their bodies and their relationship with their physicality. I became more aware of issues of aggression; boxing forces you to face your own aggression. In many Jewish families, "aggression" is a dirty word -- we're an intellectual, peaceful people. But aggression is part of the natural world and it's better to work with it and understand it than to pretend it's not there.

    Q: What happened to the Jewish boxers?

    A. Boxing has always been a way out of various ghettos. People on the lowest rung of the ladder get involved as a way out, and as more opportunities opened up, Jews moved on to other things. For some Jewish boxers, there was a feeling of pride: they would go into the ring with a Jewish star on their trunks. For some of the parents, it was considered a shame, a shanda, but they would bring home the money and the parents would say, "Box." It was more than they could make in a sweatshop.

    There are still people -- Yuri Foreman, Dmitriy Salita - who are speaking openly about their Judaism and their boxing. For example, Salita doesn't fight on the Sabbath.

    Q: Did you ever consider trying to professionally?

    A. I'm so peripheral to competition; I only sparred with my coach. I wanted to go further but I developed the problem with my leg. The way I would go further is to spar with other women. In the book, I interviewed a bunch of women who box, like Samantha Danes, an emergency-room physician and ringside physician, and her partner, who is a referee, as well as women who take John Spehar's boxing classes. On my radio show, I interviewed Dutch boxer Lucia Rijker, one of my heroes. She was in "Million Dollar Baby," and was the first woman inductee into the World Boxing Hall of Fame. Women boxers are going to the Olympics in 2012 for the first time.

    AUTHOR BINNIE KLEIN AND COMPLETE LINEUP
    POETS & WRITERS JAN. 15, 2010
    @ THE HARTFORD CLUB

    ALSO FEATURING
    THE JEN ALLEN BIG BAND
    WITH VOCALISTS


    USA BOXING BOUTS
    TO CONCLUDE THE EVENING




    Special thanks to our sponsors
    listed as
    heavyweights, middleweights, golden gloves and fans.


  • Binnie Klein


  • Prince of the City @ Hartford Club


  • The Jewish Ledger
  • Mickey Sherman - Jim Belushi Morph With Diane [Murphy Brown] English - Barry [Homicide] Levinson For TV Drama


    Via
  • Variety


  • Belushi, TV vets plot courtroom drama
    ICM packaging series for actor post-'Jim'


    By MICHAEL FLEMING

    Here's an unusual group of creative collaborators: Jim Belushi has teamed with Diane English and Barry Levinson for a prospective TV drama that would cast Belushi as a defense attorney character based on the lawyer and TV commentator Mickey Sherman.

    ICM is in the process of packaging the series and hasn't brought it yet to studios and networks, but it would mark a switch for Belushi to drama after his long run in the ABC sitcom "According to Jim."

    English, the "Murphy Brown" vet who wrote and directed the remake "The Women," teams with Levinson just as Showtime begins airing "Poliwood," the docu he directed about the convergence of celebs on the Democratic and Republican national conventions and its impact on the 2008 presidential campaign.

    Sherman penned the memoir "How Can You Defend Those People?," and the idea is for Belushi to play a likable lawyer who defends the guilty and the innocent with equal vigor.

    Levinson, who featured Sherman in a cameo in his film "Man of the Year," is best known on the TV front for exec producing "Homicide: Life on the Street" and "Oz"; he most recently exec produced "The Philanthropist." Levinson directed HBO's upcoming Jack Kevorkian biopic "You Don't Know Jack," which stars Al Pacino as the controversial champion of euthanasia.

  • Mickey Wiki
  • Tuesday, November 17, 2009

    Cyber Stalkers Beware



    "Facebook usage depicts a snapshot of the user's relationships and state of mind at the time of the content's posting."
    -- U.S. District Judge Janet Arterton





    By RICHARD MEEHAN
    The Cool Justice Report
    www.cooljustice.blogspot.com
    Nov. 17, 2009

    EDITOR'S NOTE: This column is available for reprint courtesy of The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com



    Computer social networking has coined a new type of crime: cyber stalking.

    Information on where the user lives, phone numbers, schools attended, friends and activities can give the potential stalker a personal road map. Add to that a bevy of pictures, sometimes displaying the Facebooker wasted at some frat party or describing some other social excesses. What emerges is a profile of a potential victim.

    Users can limit who may access their private information by allowing access only to "friends." Friends are people who have requested access to you and whom you approve. Information can be published only for friends but Facebook allows "Friends of friends" to access your pages. You cannot control this expansion of your cyber universe.


    Future employers, your boss, your teacher and your parents can often gain access to what you believe is a side of you that you are sharing with a limited few. Routinely, in litigation we are seeking information on social networking sites about potential witnesses and adversaries. Cyber stalkers gain access to this wealth of personal information that feeds their obsessions and empowers their eventual access to their intended victims.

    Recently cases have been reported where cyber stalkers have been sued or prosecuted as a result of vicious, demeaning posts. In Connecticut it is a crime to use a computer to harass or threaten another:

    "Sec. 53a-183. Harassment in the second degree: Class C misdemeanor. (a) A person is guilty of harassment in the second degree when . . . with intent to harass, annoy or alarm another person, he communicates with a person by . . . computer network, in a manner likely to cause annoyance or alarm. . . ."

    If the cyber stalker has a previous serious felony conviction the level of crime is elevated to Harassment int he First Degree, a five year felony.

    Victims are now striking back and seeking production of social network posts and pages.


    In a recent federal lawsuit in Connecticut, U.S. District Judge Janet Arterton ordered the production of more than 650 pages of Facebook posts. The minor plaintiff had sued Miss Porter's School of Farmington claiming that she had been the victim of harassment and bullying that led to her suspension and an attempt to expel her. Her alleged taunters had reportedly used text messaging and internet posts.

    The plaintiff subpoenaed pages from her own Facebook account that she could no longer access and the defendants sought an order that all of the Facebook pages be produced, asserting that those posts would reveal information describing the plaintiff's own conduct. In ordering the production of most of these pages to the defense, Judge Arterton observed: "Facebook usage depicts a snapshot of the user's relationships and state of mind at the time of the content's posting."

    Criminal sanctions and civil damages await the cyber stalker or reckless posts. Users, and especially parents of youngsters permitted access to these sites, should understand that comments posted in the seeming safety of one's study or dorm room that are thrown out to the cyber universe are there for all to see, for all time.

    Bridgeport,CT attorney Richard Meehan Jr. was the lead defense counsel for former Bridgeport Mayor Joseph Ganim's corruption trial. Meehan has been certified as a criminal trial specialist by the National Board of Trial Advocacy since 1994 and serves on the organization's Board of Examiners. He is a Charter Fellow, Litigation Counsel of America -- Trial Lawyer Honorary Society. Meehan has also obtained multi-million dollar verdicts and settlements in complex medical and dental malpractice and personal injury litigation. He is a past president of the Greater Bridgeport Bar Association and appears regularly on TruTv. His column also appears in the Sunday Norwich, CT Bulletin. Website, www.meehanlaw.com


  • Meehan law firm
  • VIDEO: We Know How You Guys Become Judges

    PRINCE OF THE CITY
    @ THE HARTFORD CLUB



    -- Actor Treat Williams With Director Sidney Lumet During Filming of Prince of the City


    EDITOR'S NOTE: Rarely do readers get the real story on cops and courts. When the public focuses on corruption in the so-called justice system, virtually all the weight falls on the cops. The lawyers and judges are much more adept at evading justice. Author and former NYPD Detective Bob Leuci knows the score. He lived it. Leuci will be appearing in Connecticut Jan. 15, 2010 as part of the CT Young Writers Triple Knockout event at the Hartford Club. Following are some video excerpts of Prince of the City and links to Leuci books and details about the upcoming event.

  • Scene From Prince Of The City


  • Trailer: IT HAPPENED


  • Undercover Life Gets Complicated


  • Prince of the City Wiki


  • Sidney Lumet Interview



  • THE BOOKS

  • Prince Of The City: The True Story Of A Cop Who Knew Too Much


  • All The Centurions: A New York City Cop Remembers His Life On The Street


  • Captain Butterfly


  • Odessa Beach


  • The Snitch


  • Doyle's Disciples



  • AUTHOR BOB LEUCI AND COMPLETE LINEUP
    POETS & WRITERS JAN. 15, 2010
    @ THE HARTFORD CLUB

    ALSO FEATURING
    THE JEN ALLEN BIG BAND
    WITH VOCALISTS


    USA BOXING BOUTS
    TO CONCLUDE THE EVENING




    Special thanks to our sponsors
    listed as
    heavyweights, middleweights, golden gloves and fans.


    EDITOR'S NOTE:
    Paul "Ding-a-Ling" Doyle has graciously agreed to take handoff from George "The Wolf" Kimball for sports writing workshop. Both guys worked the Dawson fight.

    Doyle has been a sports reporter and columnist at The Hartford Courant for 20 years. A member of the Baseball Writers Association of America, he has been a baseball beat writer and most recently a general assignment reporter. He has also written for the Boston Globe and The Sporting News.


  • Hartford Courant Post On CT Young Writers Triple Knockout Event


  • Gaby Heating Up Miami Beach ...

  • A Punch In The Face From Gaby "She Be Stinging" Calvocoressi


  • Odes To The Champ, Including Shankar Poem On Dawson Victory


  • The Iceman John Scully's Utube


  • Also @ gotpoetry.com


  • Quick Hits
    On More
    Of Our Poets & Writers


  • News Times Features Author Shouhua Qi


  • Retired CT State Trooper Jerry Longo Reviews NYPD Bomb Squad Book


  • Chandra "Bonecrusher" Prasad Featured In CT Mag


  • Iceman John Scully


  • Kate Rushin


  • Kate Rushin's Black Back-Ups


  • Franz Douskey


  • Binnie Klein


  • MUSIC
    VIDEOS



  • Jen Allen Big Band @ Twain House May 2009



  • Jen Allen Big Band @ Litchfield Inn June 2008
  • A People's History Of the Revolutionary War, aka Jim Smith Novel



    Via
    The Laurel

  • Complete Article


  • Also See
    Jim Smith Short Story
    Fall 09 Ct Review


  • Ct Review
  • Saturday, November 14, 2009

    VIDEO: Wally's Wishin' and Hopin' Time Machine



    Via
    HarperCollins

    It's 1964 and ten-year-old Felix is sure of a few things: the birds and the bees are puzzling, television is magical, and this is one Christmas he'll never forget.

    LBJ and Lady Bird are in the White House, Meet the Beatles is on everyone's turntable, and Felix Funicello (distant cousin of the iconic Annette!) is doing his best to navigate fifth grade—easier said than done when scary movies still give you nightmares and you bear a striking resemblance to a certain adorable cartoon boy.

    Back in his beloved fictional town of Three Rivers, Connecticut, with a new cast of endearing characters, Wally Lamb takes his readers straight into the halls of St. Aloysius Gonzaga Parochial School—where Mother Filomina's word is law and goody-two-shoes Rosalie Twerski is sure to be minding everyone's business. But grammar and arithmetic move to the back burner this holiday season with the sudden arrivals of substitute teacher Madame Frechette, straight from Québec, and feisty Russian student Zhenya Kabakova. While Felix learns the meaning of French kissing, cultural misunderstanding, and tableaux vivants, Wishin' and Hopin' barrels toward one outrageous Christmas.

    From the Funicello family's bus-station lunch counter to the elementary school playground (with an uproarious stop at the Pillsbury Bake-Off), Wishin' and Hopin' is a vivid slice of 1960s life, a wise and witty holiday tale that celebrates where we've been—and how far we've come.

  • Time Machine Links Page
  • Friday, November 13, 2009

    Gaby V. Iceman Updates



    Special thanks to our sponsors
    listed as
    heavyweights, middleweights, golden gloves and fans.


    EDITOR'S NOTE:
    Paul "Ding-a-Ling" Doyle has graciously agreed to take handoff from George "The Wolf" Kimball for sports writing workshop. Both guys worked the Dawson fight.

    Doyle has been a sports reporter and columnist at The Hartford Courant for 20 years. A member of the Baseball Writers Association of America, he has been a baseball beat writer and most recently a general assignment reporter. He has also written for the Boston Globe and The Sporting News.


  • Hartford Courant Post On CT Young Writers Triple Knockout Event


  • Gaby Heating Up Miami Beach ...

  • A Punch In The Face From Gaby "She Be Stinging" Calvocoressi


  • Odes To The Champ, Including Shankar Poem On Dawson Victory


  • The Iceman John Scully's Utube


  • Also @ gotpoetry.com
  • A Punch In The Face From Gaby "She Be Stinging" Calvocoressi

    APOCALYPTIC
    SWING




    Be prepared to be knocked out!
    -- C. Dale Young, poetry editor, New England Review


  • A Little Taste Of Gaby Verse ...


  • Appearing @ Miami Book Fair


  • Calvocoressi reads from Apocalyptic Swing on Sunday, November 15 at 1:30 p.m. in Auditorium Pavilion C (Parking Lot #9), along with fellow poets Kelle Groom, Stacey Lynn Brown, and Helen Pruitt Wallace.

  • NEW: Gaby, Her Speed Bag, Miami Memories ...


  • We Can Only Expand the Boundaries When We\'re Up Against the Ropes ....


  • Guerilla Girls On Tour



  • AMAZON READER REVIEWS


    Heartbreaking and glorious: a masterpiece.

    By Josie Bliss (Brooklyn, NY USA)

    poems about boxing, music, violence, sexuality, longing, love, race, Los Angeles, and the small towns of America. a heartbreaking - and ultimately redemptive - look at American culture in its danger and beauty. it reads almost like a short story collection; each poem is complex yet utterly readable, finely polished but wholly alive. i could almost feel the book breathing in my hands. if you love poetry, or if you have ever been curious about poetry but haven't found a way in, i couldnt recommend this book more highly. i'm grateful to Gabrielle Calvocoressi for bringing these poems into the world.


    set in many locations
    with a major nod to the world of boxing

    By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA)

    What's a punch in the face? "Apocalyptic Swing" is a collection of poetry from Gabrielle Calvocoressi which focuses on the tenacity of the human spirit. Set in many locations with a major nod to the world of boxing, "Apocalyptic Swing" is a moving and intriguing collection of poetry ...


    A rising star in the poetry world

    By Charles A., Fowler (Concord, MA)

    If you like poetry, you'll love Gabrielle Calvocoressi's new collection, "Apocalyptic Swing." If you're not a poetry lover, read these gems and you'll become one.
    This small volume - 69 pages - is divided into three parts: 21 short poems; a longer - 15 pages - story about the travails of a boxer, "Training Camp: Deer Lake, PA"; and ends with eight powerful poems with more boxing themes, brutality, sadness, spirit and survival.

    Other words that come to mind in describing Ms. Calvocoriessi's poems are insightful, intriguing, disturbing, even a hint of salaciousness; all overlaid with a spirit of optimism.


    Impatiently awaiting the great reviews
    By PersimmonVillage

    Calvocoressi's writing joins that pantheon of writers such as Levine, Gluck, and others who cut clean through pretension to reveal pictures of our world as we sometimes wish not to see it. And this is the beauty of her poems. They sway, and indeed swing, and stop the reader cold, and to the many voices that reside in her lines, Calvocoressi contributes her own sweet, mournful timbre. There isn't much that the reader won't feel after reading the last line of her book: "We are almost champions now." Amen to that. Calvocoressi champions the boxer, the beaten, the beloved, and the broken with frightening intensity and clear-minded truth. In nearly flawless form and phrase, she champions the map of our 20th/21st century America with a veneration that humbles us all. This is jazz, blood, bones, and grit, all somehow bearing a joyous refrain. Her work contains clippings straight from hospital wards, asylums, parents and priests -- such saviors, from Sister Perpetua to Mother to the man who "could have passed me by and saved yourself" may not, in the end, rescue anyone. One leaves feeling that in some essential way, Calvocoressi's poems about the fight to save the self have in fact saved us.


    Ask This World To Remember

    By Rangi McNeil

    Calvocoressi's voice is rooted firmly in America. These thirty precise poems remind us of the body's holiness & its necessity. They speak of love: sometimes desperate, sometimes bloody - always hard-won & worth its cost.

    Apocalyptic Swing is a mesmerizing & necessary respite from the four walls of our daily lives. Reading it will inspire you to do everything you do (write, sing, love, breathe), better.



  • Hartford Courant Post On CT Young Writers Triple Knockout Event


  • The Iceman John Scully's Utube


  • Also @ gotpoetry.com