!!! POETRY CONTEST !!!  

Write a poem inspired by a news article or news headline of your choice—whatever catches your eye. See an article about a camel beauty contest? Write about it! See an article about a diver who was swallowed and spit out by a humpback whale? Write about it! There are so many news stories available in print and online, so start your search today and get writing! Poems will be judged anonymously; 1 winner and 1 runner-up will be determined. DETAILS HERE.

BACK TO IN-PERSON READINGS!

All in-person PEP events will be taking place at Russell Books, 747 Fort Street in downtown Victoria. Doors open at 7:00pm, event starts at 7:30 and sign up for the open mic is between 7:00-7:20. Masks are encouraged but no longer required; proof of vaccination will still be required until April 8. In person events will be livestreamed HERE (Meeting ID: 494 660 4447 /Passcode: 2129) **please note, livestream begins at approx. 8:00-8:15pm with featured readings**

Planet Earth Poetry gratefully acknowledges all of its supporters.


March 2022


in person

Ellie Sawatzky’s None of This Belongs to Me

friDAY, march 4, 2022

Poetic Opener: Joey Scarfone

Ellie Sawatzky

Ellie Sawatzky is a writer from Kenora, Ontario. A finalist for the 2019 Bronwen Wallace Award, and the recipient of CV2 ’s 2017 Foster Poetry Prize, her work has been published widely in literary journals such as Grain, The Fiddlehead, The Puritan and Room. None of This Belongs to Me is her debut poetry collection.

In this vibrant debut, Ellie Sawatzky rustles the underbrush of identity, seeking clarity on the nature of ownership and belonging. Haunted and inspired by old boyfriends, girls named Emily, ancestral ghosts, polar bears and mythic horses, None of This Belongs to Me plots a young woman’s coming of age in a time of environmental and socio-economic peril. From Ontario to Kitsilano to Burning Man, Sawatzky inquires into girlhood learning—what is inherited, what is acquired, what begins to take form in the iridescent space between innocence and experience.

Poetic Appetizer
But hope / this evening is a post-Tinder codeine dream

where I see two of me / make love to each other while

the earth quakes / I believe this is the beginning / of something

— from “New Moon, Gemini Season”

Instagram handles:
@elliesawatzky @impromptuprompts (prompts and literary inspiration)


March 4 Poetic Opener

Joey Scarfone

Joey Scarfone has written lyrics for songs all his life but over the last two years he has been focusing on short stories and putting poetry over artwork. The pandemic has forced his creativity into the comic format titled Pandemic Fatigue which is ongoing.

in person

Alan Hill’s In the Blood

IN PERSON

Sarah de Leeuw

in person

Spring fling! All open mic.

zoom only

sign up for link HERE

Jude Neale’s Inside the Pearl

friDAY, march 11, 2022

Poetic Opener: Wendy Donawa

Alan Hill

Alan Hill was born in the UK and immigrated to Canada in 2005 after meeting his wife while working in Botswana. He is the former Poet Laureate of the City of New Westminster (2017–2020), former president of the Royal City Literary Arts Society (RCLAS), and was the editor and curator of A Poetry of Place: Journeys Across New Westminster, published in partnership with New Westminster Arts Services. His writing has been published internationally and his poetry has appeared in Event, CV2, Canadian Literature, The Antigonish Review, subTerrain, and Poetry is Dead, among others. He works in the field of community development and immigrant settlement and lives in New Westminster, BC.

In the Blood traces the relationship of two brothers through childhood to adulthood and in and out of institutions to reveal the intricate, often hidden bonds that are broken and forged by the effects of mental illness.

Poetic Appetizer
That night a girl with smudgy glasses danced with the banisters, a teen with a wispy beard clapped in a corner, nobody touched:

In fact, nobody ever did touch, not here, where surviving in your own body was enough

knowing it was still there, still moving, however out of step, to your commands. 

 From the “Hospital Dance”   

Instgram: caitlinpress.daggereditions
FB: caitlinbooks
Twitter: @caitlinpress


March 11 Poetic Opener

Wendy Donawa

Wendy Donawa spent much of her adult life in Barbados, where she was educated, and worked as a college instructor and museum curator. She has returned to her Victoria birthplace on the unceded traditional territory of the Songhees and Esquimalt people. Her poems have appeared in magazines, chapbooks, anthologies, and public transport buses; she has read in libraries, bookstores, literary festivals, reading series, parks, and pubs! Her first book, Thin Air of the Knowable, was a Gerald Lampert Award finalist. Her second collection, Our Bodies’ Unanswered Questions, was recently published by Frontenac House.

friDAY, March 18, 2022

Poetic Opener: Carol Halligan

Sarah de Leeuw

Award-winning writer and Canada Research Chair, Dr. Sarah de Leeuw is a Professor with the NMP, a distributed site of UBC’s Faculty of Medicine. In 2017 she was appointed to Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists. She grew up on Haida Gwaii and now lives in Lheidli T’enneh/Dakelh and Syilx Territory.

Written in a time of ostensible Truth and Reconciliation in so-called Canada, when the Government of British Columbia declared support for the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples but continues to arrest Indigenous peoples in their homes and on unceded lands, Lot draws a firm, and yet poetic, line between historic and present-day white-Euro-colonial violence. Through structure, form, and sound, in Lot insist on the possibilities of poetry to create better worlds, to utter something anew.  

Facebook and Instagram: @KelseyAndrewsWriter

Poetic Appetizer
as in                 royalty paid to mine owner, ore

as in                 forming part of a larger whole

as in                 person regarded as having a special quality (bad lot)

as in                 plot of land

FB: Sarah De Leeuw
Twitter @SarahNdeLeeuw


March 18 Poetic Opener

Carol Halligan

Carol Halligan, former resident of Winterpeg, now spends her time in beautiful Victoria writing poetry and doing stand up comedy instead of shovelling snow. Usually.
So far, Carol has not published her poetry in a book or entered any contests. Her daughter calls her a “master procrastinator.”
However, if anyone knows an artist who could draw a Roy Lichtenstein romance comic book cover, please get in touch.

friDAY, March 25, 2022

SPRING FLING ALL-OPEN-MIC NIGHT

“April comes like an idiot, babbling and strewing flowers.”
– Edna St. Vincent Millay

We made it through the dark months! Let’s celebrate with an entire night of spring-related poetry. For this special all-open-mic night of PEP, we are allowing poets to read up to 2 poems each, for a total of 6 minutes – BUT to get the longer time-slot at least one of the poems you read must connect to our springtime theme! Please do time your readings and make sure they will fit into the 6 minutes. There will be a prize for the “springiest” poem!

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Jude Neale & Kamal Parmar

Jude Neale is a Canadian poet, mentor, educator, opera singer and spoken word performer. She publishes frequently in print and online journals, including The Antigonish ReviewAscent AspirationsQuill, and Leaf Press.

“I just read Inside the Pearl and what a delicate beautiful tone comes by. A light bell sound. Wonder. Grace...”
Joy Kogawa, Order of Canada (CM),Order of British Columbia (OBC), novelist, poet, activist. 

This book challenges readers to look at Canadian history in a new way so we can face the wrongs committed by the government with the complicity of this nation.


Kamal Parmar

Nanaimo poet Kamal Parmar is currently an Associate member of the League of Canadian Poets, a board member of Federation of BC Writers and a member of The Writers Union of Canada, the Canadian Authors Association as well as of Haiku Canada. She is the current Poet Laureate for the City of Nanaimo.

Poetic Appetizer
Lost in a dream,

I see folds of green on the distant hills

rise and fall.

Waves crash in, on the shores of my mind

sucking me into the whirlpool of my  past.

What does the wind say? is available at Chapters; Windowseat Books and Well Read Books in Nanaimo; and online.


POETS CARAVAN

We are excited to launch our latest project to share poetry!

The Planet Earth Poetry Poets Caravan highlights the rich cultural landscape of the CRD, with readings from poets in all of its nine regions. Each poet is represented by a pin on Google Earth of a spot meaningful to them in the CRD – somewhere they like to do their writing or find particularly inspiring.

CLICK HERE to go to google earth & watch our poets.

(Be patient, the program needs a bit of time to load in your browser.) We have eight CRD poets up; one more to come. After that, we’ll be adding more poets who live in Victoria, thanks to a grant from the City of Victoria.)

The Poets Caravan is accessible to audiences both in the CRD and worldwide. This interactive experience will be available over time and provides a way for poets and poetry to reach a wide audience in this time when in-person reading events aren’t possible. Digital projects come with accessibility challenges for those who may not have access to a computer or have disabilities which stop them from using the selected platform. We have made the videos and text available for download separately on request. Please email Planet Earth Poetry if you’d like this option.

Thank you to the CRD Arts and Culture Support Fund, the BC Arts Council and the City of Victoria for their support and funding of the Poets Caravan. Thanks to videographer Lorraine Scollan for capturing each poet's unique voice with care and enthusiasm!

The Planet Earth Poetry reading series is a launching pad for the energies of writers and poets established and not. It is a place where words are most important. A venue in which all manner of poets and writers are welcome; a place for excellence, innovation, collaboration, diverse projects and experiments. Planet Earth Poetry takes place at Russell Books, 747 Fort St. in downtown Victoria. Doors open at 7:00; sign up for the open mic between 7:00-7:15. The evening begins at 7:30 with an open mic, followed by a featured reader(s). Planet Earth Poetry acknowledges with respect that we read and write on the traditional territories of the WSÁNEĆ (Saanich), Lkwungen (Songhees), Wyomilth (Esquimalt) peoples of the Coast Salish Nation.