Category Archives: news

Accents Blog Internship Opportunity

Bronson reads at the Lexington Poetry Month gathering at the end of June 2013.

Bronson reads at the Lexington Poetry Month gathering at the end of June 2013.

As the editor of the Accents Blog for three and a half years, I’ve had incredible opportunities and developed lasting relationships that have changed my life in innumerable ways. There’s really no measurement of what Accents has done for me. For this reason, I’ve asked Katerina if she would allow me to train someone else into the position of Blog Editor, giving them the same opportunities I was given as well as truly break out into online mediums the way that no other literary website or blog has before. And after this person is ready, they will replace me as the Accents Publishing Blog Editor.

To begin, I’d like to share a little bit about my journey and what this job has done for me. Afterwards, I’ll go into why I have chosen to leave, which will lead into who my ideal candidate would be for this position. Continue reading

Lost and Found by Andrew Merton

lost and found by andrew mertonWe are proud to announce Lost and Found by Andrew Merton. It is currently available at the Accents store.

Merton’s first book, Evidence that We Are Descended from Chairs (Accents Publishing, was named Outstanding Book of Poetry for 2013-2014 by the New Hampshire Writers’ Project. Lost and Found continues the poignant, personable humor from this first work, but adds a confessional flavor that gives his new work a more nonfictional feel.

 

Praise for Andrew Merton’s poetry

Almost every one of his poems has a surprise waiting for the reader, either some astonishing figure of speech or a witty observation we are not likely to forget anytime soon.

Charles Simic

Andrew Merton has masterfully condensed his life into potent, brilliantly composed, minimalist snapshots. Chronologically arranged, delicately layered, and driven by savage honesty and subtle tenderness, Lost and Found is an intense injection of love, loss, loneliness, and above all, the unrelenting question of one’s existence. I’ll slot this on my shelf next to Raymond Carver.

—Jessica Bell

This poet pinpoints the extraordinary in the day to day; he makes the reader see things anew, and even when they appear tawdry and tough, they are rich and sweet. The calm and gentle voice of these poems is nevertheless fierce in its focus on life, aging,disappointment and death, and that makes for the tremendous tension that keeps each poem taut with drama, inviting from the very first line, and powerfully moving until its conclusion.

John Skoyles

This marvelous book—ruefully charming on one page, charmingly rueful on the next—goes cradle to grave in its coverage of a lifetime’s worth of erratic heartbeats. I love Merton’s poems for how they completely dissolve the thin line between bafflement and amazement. Their story is the story of a most companionable endurance, with no pun left unspoken. A deeply humane, entertaining, wise book.

David Rivard

 

Fifth Grade Air Raid Drill, 1955

I tell Mr. Carter there’s a crack in the ant farm,
but he has more important things to talk about today:

After the bomb, trees will wither, milk will glow.
You might live a year before the insects get you

but first you have to survive the blast.
Duck under your desks

and stick your heads between your knees.
I pretend to do as I’m told.

When he turns his back I crawl away
on six legs, triumphant.

Andrew Merton,
Lost and Found
(Accents Publishing)

Holler 88: upfromsumdirt, Bianca Bargo, Shaker Ray

image by John Lackey

image by John Lackey

The Holler Poet Series will have its 88th installment tonight with two debuts: upfromsumdirt and Bianca Bargo.

upfromsumdirt is the nom de plume of Ron Davis, one of the owners of The Wild Fig bookstore in Lexington, Kentucky. The Wild Fig is currently celebrating reopening at its new location. upfromsumdirt is also celebrating his book release, Caul and Response, a collection of poetry and artwork.

Bianca Bargo’s newest chapbook is How I Became an Angry Woman (Accents Publishing) which, according to Sarah Freligh, is a book that “autopsies a doomed love”. You can get a copy by clicking here, or you can read some of the poems by clicking here.

Musical guest Shaker Ray is a project from Thomas Usher, also known for Long Jumper and occasionally filling in with the Blind Corn Liquor Pickers.

Open Mic sign-ups begin at around 7pm and the show starts at 8pm. For more information, visit the Facebook Event page.

When: Wednesday, September 30, 2015 @ 8pm
Where: Al’s Bar
601 N. Limestone
Lexington, KY 40508
(859) 309-2901

20 Years in the USA: Katerina Stoykova-Klemer’s Anniversary Reading and Celebration

Katerina passportAccents founder and Senior Editor Katerina Stoykova-Klemer will be hosting a reading and celebration tonight at the Lexington Public Library’s Farish Theater!

September 22nd is the 20th anniversary of the day I stepped on American land. A lot has changed since then – countries, homes, people, cities.

I would love for you to join me on that day at 6:30 pm at The Farish Theater to let me read you a few poems about immigration, immigrating, making a space yours, making your self into your home.

Bring your handkerchiefs, but also your smiling faces, for this will be a celebration!

This will be an opportunity for me to thank you in person for making me feel welcome and loved in your wonderful country.

Love and light to you, good people of Kentucky!

Yours,
Katerina Stoykova-Klemer

We would love to have you there, and if you’re able to come, feel free to RSVP on the Facebook Event page.

Lexington Reads: Jonathan Miller

On Your Own by Jonathan MillerJonathan Miller’s On Your Own is a collection of “short stories and vignettes about people who feel alone and disconnected from the world.” (source)

Miller was born in Owenton, grew up in Nicholasville, and has lived in Lexington for the past 22 years. A little while back, Katerina gave him some advice on a short story and they’ve kept in touch ever since.

On Your Own is currently available from Amazon.

For more information:

LexPoMo 2015 Selections for Anthology

The following poems have been chosen to be included in the upcoming anthology of Lexington Poetry Month 2015 poems! Our editor for the anthology (and Editor for Accents Publishing), Christopher McCurry, picked a poem from everyone who submitted this year. Once again, we can’t thank you enough for participating and making this the biggest LexPoMo yet, and even though it seemed like it just happened, we can’t wait to have you all back next year!

Poets are listed alphabetically by first name or pseudonym. If you submitted a poem and don’t see yourself, contact us by clicking here. If you would like to see all submissions for LexPoMo 2015, you can check those out here. Continue reading

A Reading of Bobby Steve Baker’s “This Crazy Urge to Live”

Bobby Steve BakerBobby Steve Baker (author of Numbered Bones) has a new book called This Crazy Urge to Live: Poetry, Photography, and More Fine Art from The Linnet’s Wings Press, and the Morris book shop will host a reading this Saturday at 3pm.

For more information, check out the Facebook Event page or the Morris book shop Event page.

For an interview with Bobby Steve Baker by Bop Dead City earlier this year, click here.

When: Saturday, August 29, 2015 @ 3pm
Where: the Morris book shop
882 E. High Street
Lexington, KY 40502
(859) 276-0494

 

About Flight by Frank X. Walker

about flight thumbnailAccents Publishing is proud to announce About Flight, a poetry chapbook by Frank X. Walker.

“Up until this point in American history, no poet has written an honest and believable lament about the crippling effects from the tornado swirl of a crack pipe, how a little rock being melted between thin mesh screen creates pallid smoke: a monster, a slave to the white lady that is cocaine. In About Flight, Frank X Walker gives us the beautiful ugly narrative of a brother who is wrestling with chemical dependency, and losing. The high, in all of its beautiful contradictions takes on the metaphor of flight, and so we soar through the terrible highs and lows of a protagonist who carries his family with him into the den of iniquity.”

—Randall Horton,
author of Pitch Dark Anarchy & Hook: A Memoir

Grief & Other Animals by Patty Paine

grief & other animals by patty paineGrief & Other Animals takes the reader on a stunning emotional journey through the process of coping with tragic loss from the “knife-stab sudden” pain of initial grief to the reemergence of hope in a poignant new poetry collection from Patty Paine.

What Others Say About Grief & Other Animals

Patty Paine’s superb new collection arises from the nearly unbearable—a mother’s death, but most especially the senseless death of a husband. And, as the crucial elegiac poets know, grieving never truly arrives in “stages,” and never ends in “closure.” It is a process infinitely more intricate and nuanced than the platitudes suggest, and it ends, at best, in only a fraught and vexed consolation, what one of her poems calls, “a sorrow deeper than solace.” Yet even a vexed consolation can be a form of quiet triumph, and these poems—spare, heartbroken, and always utterly precise—arrive repeatedly at such a triumph. Patty Paine has written a book of bravery and consummate artistry.

—David Wojahn

 

Elegy, in making grief a living thing, brings the dead back to life. But elegy is also how we ask ourselves to accept, a touching of the wound to accustom ourselves to pain. This stunning book both resurrects and more truly buries, and does what the best poetry does—shows me the world of another, and in doing so, brings me closer to my own. I feel bitten by these haunted poems.

—Bob Hicok

Grief and Other Animals reminds us of the great but elusive presence that stays with us after great loss, like a shadow without a subject. Paine takes on the ineffable through metaphor, action through repetition, and life through catalogs. From North Carolina to Doha, Qatar, these lyrics chronicle dates and their respective weights. She insists we “have to believe that language is a body / that won’t die.” These poems then offer us a body in which to live, an hourglass container that Paine skillfully turns over and over so it never runs out.

—Emilia Phillips

Grief & Other Animals is now available from the Accents Store.

The LexPoMo 2015 Writing Challenge in Summary

June is over, which means that it's only 336 days until the next Lexington Poetry Month!

This year's LexPoMo Writing Challenge has been a huge success. We are all so grateful to be in this amazing community. And to demonstrate how amazing this community is, here are a few numbers about this year's Writing Challenge:

I think it's interesting to see a familial theme in the most viewed posts, but it's also not entirely surprising, because the nice thing about Lexington's poetry community is that everyone feels part of the same family. 

Once again, thank you so much to everyone who participated and supported each other. In fact, it doesn't have to end; you can see all of the poems submitted this month by viewing the list of poets and you are still encouraged to leave as many comments of support as you'd like.