Tutor and poet has book release reading

By Jonathan Baca, Copy Editor | Photos Courtesy of Jessica Lopez and Facebook.com

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Award winning slam poet, activist, former student, and ACE tutor, Jessica Helen Lopez brings a passion for language to everything she does, painting vivid pictures with words, and bringing wit and attitude to her many causes.

Lopez is scheduled to read from her second published book of poems, “C*nt. Bomb,” at Bookworks on 4022 Rio Grande Blvd NW, April 15 at 7 p.m.

C*nt Bomb is a follow-up to her highly acclaimed collection “Always Messing with Them Boys,” and is a provocative exploration of gender, sexuality, power, and the realities of being a woman and Mexican American in the modern world, Lopez said.

As for the controversial title that the Chronicle has cen­sored, Lopez said it is an attempt to take the power of the word “c*nt” back from people who use it to abuse women, and instead use it to empower them.

“It used to be a fertile word. It’s only been taken and misappropriated over the centu­ries, abused just like women have been abused: raped, pillaged and oppressed to this day,” Lopez said.

The book features femi­nist poems about the violence against women in Juarez, the beauty of the female body, reproductive rights, the process of transitioning from girlhood to womanhood, and Chicana pride, she said.

Lopez has been involved in the Albuquerque slam poetry scene since 2005, when she took a creative writing class at CNM, she said.

One of her assignments was to attend a poetry read­ing, where she met instruc­tor and local poet Don McIver, who convinced her to perform for the first time, she said.

“That was it— man, I was hooked,” Lopez said.

She has since been on five poetry slam teams, and has com­peted in eight national events, she said.

“Then I found my place in this community. And I’ve been writing, performing, publish­ing, and been an educator of spoken and written word ever since,” Lopez said.

In 2012, she was the Women of the World slam poetry cham­pion for Albuquerque, and she repeated this feat just two weeks ago, and will once again go on to represent the Duke City in the national competition.

Her first collection of poems, “Always Messing with Them Boys,” was published in 2011 on West End Press, and has won the Zia Book Award and was featured on the Southwest Book of the Year readers list.

The book has since been part of the curriculum for several literature classes at UNM, where Lopez also teaches poetry, she said.

“I found a lot of success with that book. It really opened my eyes to the publishing world, and the ability to tour with a book that was published by a press,” Lopez said.

Lopez was also featured at TEDxABQ in 2012 where she spoke about the power of poetry to tell personal stories, which can be found on youtube.com.

She said that without the help of mentors like McIver and support from a tight-knit com­munity of local writers and per­formers, her teammates in the Albuquerque Slam Team, and the rest of the poetry community, she would never have gotten to where she is today.

“I really had to model myself after my teammates, who were more experienced than I, and I learned a lot from them. It’s like that within Albuquerque, it’s a mentorship model,” Lopez said.

Lopez said that her advice for anyone who wants to break into the world of the written and spoken word is to read and write as much as possible, to find a community that can support you, and most of all, to never be afraid of failure.

“Allow yourself to be sur­prised, allow yourself to be disap­pointed, but don’t allow yourself to be stagnant. If you want to be a writer, writing will find you; it won’t leave you alone, it will gnaw on you like a bone, and you just have to meet it in the middle,” Lopez said.

The following is an excerpt from the poem “C*nt. Bomb.” by Jessica Helen Lopez. C*nt. Bomb. the c is as insidious as a paper cut as pleasurable as a paper boat — if you happen to know how to fold one and let it ride the u of it lies between your legs look down lovingly lucky you if you happen to have one pet it if you will pet it as if it is the pet rabbit your mother never let you have the c*nt is absolutely not a bomb it will not hand-grenade explode your skull open like a cantaloupe brain matter writhing against the wall behind your head it will not shred your hands to lace if you happen to finger the trigger every now and now the c*nt is most definitely a bomb
The following is an excerpt from
the poem “C*nt. Bomb.” by Jessica
Helen Lopez.
C*nt. Bomb.
the c is as insidious
as a paper cut
as pleasurable as a paper boat —
if you happen to know how to fold
one and let it ride
the u of it lies between your legs
look down lovingly
lucky you if you happen
to have one
pet it if you will
pet it as if it is the pet
rabbit your mother
never let you have
the c*nt is absolutely
not a bomb
it will not hand-grenade explode
your skull open like a cantaloupe
brain matter writhing against
the wall behind your head
it will not shred your hands
to lace if you happen to finger
the trigger every now and now
the c*nt is
most definitely
a bomb

To find Lopez’s book C*nt Bomb online CLICK HERE.

 

Poetic License; Instructor shares his words with the world

By Jonathan Baca, Copy Editor

Don McIver under­stands the power of words, and as a part-time SAGE and English instructor as well as a Learning Center Supervisor, he shares his love of language with his students.

In his free time, he has been a vital part of Albuquerque’s poetry scene, as an award winning poet, editor, host and member of the Albuquerque slam poetry team, and on top of all that he is a host and producer of KUNM’s Spoken Word Hour.

“People still need to express themselves. If it’s about recreating or process­ing your lived experience, and sharing your words and your perspective, then poetry is extremely healthy and a great thing,” McIver said.

McIver has been pub­lished in several anthologies, and has published several books of his poetry, includ­ing The Noisy Pen. He was also the editor of A Bigger Boat: The Unlikely Success of the Albuquerque Poetry Slam Scene, a book that chronicles the rise of the slam poetry scene in Burque; a scene that has given birth to a few national slam champions.

In 2005, Albuquerque hosted the National Poetry Slam, and McIver said he helped to organize the event.

Albuquerque’s team won first place that year, beating 74 other teams consisting of 350 poets, he said.

“It was a lot of fun,” McIver said.

Slam poetry is a very energetic, performance-based form of poetry that started in Chicago in the 80’s, as a response to the dull, some­times self-indulgent poetry readings that were going on at the time, McIver said.

At slam events, poets are given scores by members of the audience, and at the end of the night, a winner is declared, something that never existed in poetry before, he said.

“I think the difference is that slam poetry, or per­formance poetry, is meant to be heard. It’s designed to be listened to. Other poetry, you may read it out loud, but really it exists on the page,” McIver said.

Traditional poetry can be better suited to writing poems with multiple inter­pretations and complex meanings, and can therefore be harder to grasp when read out loud.

Slam poetry, on the other hand, is typically sim­pler, with strong messages that can be expressed more directly to an audience.

“They can certainly wres­tle with complex issues, but if the audience doesn’t walk away with something they are going to be lost,” McIver said.

When McIver arrived in Albuquerque in the late 90s, there was already a vibrant slam scene, he said. Before that, McIver said he had drifted away from reading his poetry to audiences.

“I was writing but I didn’t have any way to share it. I didn’t really know what to do with it,” he said.

McIver quickly joined the poetry community here, doing readings at Winning’s Coffee, Poetry and Beer events, and eventually host­ing regular events at the now closed Blue Dragon Coffee House, he said.

“I had never been an actor, never got up on stage or performed before, so I had to kind of learn it myself,” McIver said.

In 2002, McIver helped form that year’s ABQ Slam Team, and went on to compete at the national level, he said.

“When I started doing slams, I wanted to be the rock star poet. I wanted to read in front of really huge audiences,” McIver said.

Albuquerque’s slam teams have since gone on to place highly at several national events, and many local poets are now recognized around the country, according to dukecityfix.com.

Being part of a com­munity of writers is impor­tant, McIver said, because the inspiration, feedback and encouragement one gets as part of a community can make a big difference in whether a poet sticks with it or gives up.

“What I learned is that it is much easier to be a writer when you are part of a com­munity,” McIver said.

Since then, McIver has had his poems published in sev­eral anthologies and all over the internet, and he continues to write poetry and essays, he said.

He has also written several novels, but none were ever published, which he said was dis­couraging at the time.

“I almost wanted to give up at that point and say ‘maybe I’m just not a writer.’ But it just doesn’t go away,” McIver said.

McIver said his atti­tude about getting his work published has changed a lot since he was younger, and that today he really writes for himself and for the community of local writers that he is a part of.

Since he began teaching here in 2009, he has found a new calling, sharing his pas­sion for language with his stu­dents, he said.

“For me, I like my job here at CNM, and I like teach­ing. I like getting my work out there, but I don’t need it to pay my bills,” McIver said.

For more information about Don McIver, and to read more of his poems, visit his website at donmciver. blogspot.com, called Confessions of a Human Nerve Ending.

 

Watermelon Man

By Don McIver

Herbie Hancock said he lifted the rhythm from listening,

listening to the rick­ety wheels on the watermelon carts

on the hot summer streets of Chicago.

I’ll take his word for it

and say it became the soundtrack to a late summer morn­ing dancing session.

Coffee cup in hand, the nip, finally, of Fall in the air.

A fridge full of home­made salsa, tomatoes plucked the day before.

The one lone pepper still clings from the plant as it did back in June.

We assume it is danc­ing too–and why wouldn’t it?

Early morning Hancock makes the long, hot summer disappear,

the tomatoes ripen,

and fresh basil swing and snap.

Everything goes better with coffee and jazz,

and summer’s over in New Mexico.

TEDxABQ

By Adrianna Avila, Managing Editor

Instructor searching for speakers for lecture event

To inspire innovation and the sharing of ideas, TEDxABQ, an offshoot of the well-known Tedtalks, is in search of speak­ers for this year’s event and the deadline is closing in, Bill Meador, part-time U.S. History instructor, said.

The three-question applica­tion for the Sept. 7 event, found at tedxabq.com, is due by April 30 so that speaker training can begin in May, he said.

Meador has been involved with TEDx for three years and this year he is trying expand information resources for the community, he said.

“The title of our organiza­tion is TEDxABQ but we’re trying to reach out into other parts of New Mexico and are really looking for speakers and people to attend from all over the state,” Meador said.

Continue reading “TEDxABQ”