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Featured on Oct 18th, 2003
The first thing I want to mention about tonight's guest writers is that
Suzanne Paola and Bruce Beasley, who have both received Fellowships from
the National Endowment for the Arts, teach at Western Washington University
and live in Bellingham, are married. That particular fact seems to have
struck a strong chord somewhere in my brain that tickles when I read their
work, perhaps a reaction from watching Ozzie and Harriet as a child.
I mean, not only do we have here a couple of extremely intelligent human
beings, both who have independently developed habits of thinking in metaphysical
terms about the world in which they live, and then filtering their own
difficult life-experiences through two uniquely crafted crucibles of internal,
intellectual critique....they have also undergone self-reinvention. Add
to the mix that they have educated, reflected upon and re-educated themselves
about an enormous and dizzying array of topics having to do with things
theological, historical and current. Then, I ask you, consider these folks
at breakfast. I smell overdone eggs, burned toast, boiling coffee. ("Not
so," says Suzanne, "we are mundane, normal. The eggs and coffee are perfect.")
Suzanne Paola, author of poetry books Petitioner, Glass,
and Bardo, which won the 1998 Brittingham Prize in Poetry,
and most recently The Lives of The Saints, is also Suzanne
Antonetta, author of her memoir Body Toxic, winner of the
2002 American Book Award. In Body Toxic, she writes of heroin
addiction, the saints of every day, of god, of a quiet nuclear and chemical-dumping
disaster she still experiences, we will all experience, for the rest of
our lives, in horrific images and beautiful language.
Please welcome Suzanne Antonetta Paola.
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