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Thursday, 26 March 2026

A-Frame News: Al and Eurithe Purdy Poetry Prize/Stuart Ross Workshop

 

from Jean Baird

March 25, 2026




A few spots are still available for the Stuart Ross workshop, details below.

THE GREAT POETRY HEIST

Sunday April 26, 2026 at 1 - 3 p.m. ET, via zoom

Stuart Ross offers a fun and productive workshop for poets at all levels of
 experience. We will explore strategies for mining the works of contemporary
 poets to create our own poems, employing a range of strategies involving
 ethical thievery, faux translation, ruthless erasure, unconscious collaboration,
 and affectionate imitation. Arrive with an open mind and leave with a heap
 of new poems unlike any you’ve written before.

Stuart Ross is the author of 23 full-length books, most recently the poetry
 collection The Sky Is a Sky in the Sky, the Trillium Book Award–winning
 memoir The Book of Grief and Hamburgers, and the short story collection
 I Am Claude François and You Are a Bathtub. He has received the Canadian
 Jewish Literary Award for Poetry and the ReLit Award for Short Fiction, as
 well as the Harbourfront Festival Prize for his contributions to Canadian
 literature. Stuart has led scores of workshops in Canada, Chile, and the
 U.S., and has taught at the University of Toronto School of Continuing Studies
 for a decade. He was writer in residence at Queen’s University and the
 University of Ottawa and has mentored at the Banff Centre. Stuart lives
 in Cobourg, Ontario, just down the highway from Ameliasburgh.

To register for the class send an e-transfer for $20 to info@alpurdy.ca
Enrollment is limited.

 Canadian Gothic
 
https://www.alpurdy.ca/donate/

Thank you for your consideration, and your support!
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Wednesday, 25 March 2026

On An Icy Minneapolis Street: Patrick Connors poem

 By Patrick Connors 


“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. 
It was their final, most essential command.” - George Orwell, 1984



Renee Nicole Good was a citizen of the United States.
She was a wife, a mother, a poet, and a human being.

On January 7th, she engaged in civil disobedience.
She idled her car crossways and blocked two lanes.

An ICE agent approached the left front of her car.
She said, “That’s fine, dude. I’m not mad at you.”

He advanced on her, recording with his cell phone.
She reversed, turning left, as she tried to get away.

If she had been trying to run him over, she would 
have turned right in reverse, then turned hard left.

She turned left in reverse to get the open space 
to turn right. The ICE agent shot her three times.

He shot her point blank, turned and walked away,
called her a hateful name for all the world to hear.

On an icy Minneapolis street, in broad daylight,
Renee Nicole Good was murdered in cold blood.


*This poem is also in Where Words Defeat Bullets, published last week on Asemana Books, and available on Amazon and Lulu.

Sunday, 22 March 2026

Canadian Hero Niilo Makela Remembered from Spanish Civil War: Charlie Angus

 

Saturday, 21 March 2026

Trump crumbling under Iran stress test: Daily Kos