• 0 items$0.00

Alan Squire Publishing

A Small Press With Big Ideas

  • Home
  • Authors
  • Books
  • Events
  • ASP Bulletin
  • Reviews/Press
    • Legacy Series
  • Submissions
  • Staff
  • FB
  • Twitter
  • IG
Home / home / Grace Cavalieri Releases New Podcast with Jeffrey Lamar Coleman

Sep 10 2020

Grace Cavalieri Releases New Podcast with Jeffrey Lamar Coleman

Coleman is a professor of English at St. Mary's College of Maryland. He is the editor of Words of Protest, Words of Freedom: Poetry of the American Civil Rights Movement and Era (Duke University Press) and author of Spirits Distilled: Poems (Red Hen Press).

GraceXColeman

Grace Cavalieri's new series on the poets of Maryland, for which she was recently funded by Maryland Humanities, is off to a strong and engaging start. This week's guest, professor of English, Jeffrey Lamar Coleman, is the editor of Words of Protest, Words of Freedom: Poetry of the American Civil Rights Movement and Era and an accomplished poet in his own regard (his latest collection Spirits Distilled: Poems, is available from Red Hen Press).

In this podcast, Coleman discusses and reads many poems from his own work and from black poets of the civil rights era. Grace and Coleman also talk about the erasure of black voices from the "classic rock" canon, especially the multi-talented Prince. Coleman impresses with his unique cadence, his breadth of historical knowledge, and his passion for social justice.

Listen Here

DID YOU KNOW...

Grace Cavalieri's Other Voices, Other Lives includes transcripts from some of her best interviews of US Poets Laureate on "The Poet and The Poem"?

Listen to the Podcast More About Coleman Grace's Other Voices, Other Lives

“On the Road, Columbia, South Carolina, Spring 1959” A Poem by Reuben Jackson

October 7, 2018

“There’s much said in what’s not said in Reuben Jackson’s poetry. His cleverly sparse style often convincingly veils the complexities of which he writes, just until the poet sharply corrects our deception.” Linda Stiles

Those deceptions Ms. Stiles refers to above often come from Reuben’s use of the child’s point of view. As a child, the narrator, and reader by proxy, is looking up at the absurdity of adult interests and actions with a renewed curiosity. The narrator misses the cut of the barber’s words when asked “aren’t you proud of being negro?” The narrator cannot reason why the neon lights of the roadside motel are fading in the rear-view window, and yet his father seemed once so confident…

New Poem by Reuben Jackson, “Radio Nights”

October 5, 2018

Radio Nights by Reuben Jackson ASP is proud to premier the new Reuben Jackson poem, “Radio Nights.”  From Reuben: As I mentioned during the interview with Rose Solari, my childhood […]

Reuben Jackson Reads his Poem “Second Grade”

October 4, 2018

Reuben Jackson Reads “Second Grade” “Reuben Jackson’s poems are gateways to possible worlds. With the finesse of a real sleight-of-hand artist, he transforms the truly personal—hopes, dreams, desires—into universal memories.” Richard […]

  • « Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 98
  • 99
  • 100
  • 101
  • 102
  • …
  • 122
  • Next »

Written by Alan Squire Publishing · Categorized: home

© Copyright 2026 Alan Squire Publishing. All Rights Reserved. Website by Sara Chandlee. Graphic design by Dewitt Designs