The student news site of Los Altos High School in Los Altos, California

The Talon

The student news site of Los Altos High School in Los Altos, California

The Talon

The student news site of Los Altos High School in Los Altos, California

The Talon

Writers Week Ends with Evening of Poetry Performances

The 28th annual Writer’s Week, which featured authors of almost every background and genre, ended with An Evening of Pure Poetry today, March 7, in the Eagle Theatre at 7 p.m.

Guest poets Paul Flores, Mario Chard, Chinaka Hodge and Amy Glynn Greacen each performed two of their poems and spoke about their experiences as a poet. Senior Noah Schramm and sophomore Elizabeth Kristian, winners of the Poetry Slam held last week, also performed their poems.

Assistant Principal Galen Rosenberg started the evening by thanking everyone who participated in and made Writer’s Week possible. Noah then performed a poem which he had written for a class assignment. The poem reflected his love of music.

“He’s a saxophone player,” Rosenberg said.  “I’m also a saxophone player, so he definitely deserved to win, just on that note alone. But I think if you hear the poem you’ll understand why the students in the audience and the judges have thought it was so amazing.”

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Afterwards, prominent “spoken word performer” Paul Flores introduced his poem, “Spanglish.” Flores first asked the audience what their thoughts on Spanglish were, including what they believed it to be. After a little discussion, he launched into song, danced around the stage and flowed into his poem. His poem reflected on his culture and the “in-between” of Spanglish.

“I’ve been doing this for so long that I don’t really care where I’m at when I perform, and I try to
turn it all into my own shower or living room or mirror or whatever,” Flores said.

After Flores’s performance, award-winning poet Amy Glynn Greacen read a piece written recently, titled “Gravity is Always Attractive.”

“I don’t normally … read something that I wrote really recently,” Greacen said. “I usually let things kind of cure, like concrete, for a really long time, and I feel like I’m naked on stage for doing this but I figure, why not?”

Mario Chard, a Wallace Stegner Fellow in Poetry at Stanford University, read his poem “Angel” next in a soft tone that contributed to the impact of his words on the audience. Poet and playwright Chinaka Hodge went last, performing her poem “For Those of You Who Must Know How I Am Doing in New York.”

“New York has this thing every year called winter,” Hodge said. “Yeah, anti-that. I wrote this poem in the winter of 2004 when all of my best friends were enrolled at UC Santa Cruz and were going surfing at the beach. So, they called me to ask how New York was. Um, well, snot was freezing my scarf to my face, my hair was breaking off cause it was so cold,  and I was bundled up top to bottom.”

After these performances, the poets spoke about their experiences, starting from their earliest memories of poetry to their current hardships as poets. Some of the poets also offered advice to aspiring young writers.

“Read,” Chord said. “Read as old as you can and as new as you can and that will sustain you.”

The guest poets each performed one last poem before Elizabeth performed her winning poem, “Restless.”

“I really enjoyed [the evening],” audience member senior Amelia Evard said. “The small turnout was pretty disappointing to see, but it was an absolutely amazing performance. It was exciting to see the school branching out in picking keynote speakers, and I liked the mix of different kinds of poets.”

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