Poems for Peace Nov 16!

Nov 22, 2021 | 1 comment

THIS POST HAS BEEN UPDATED WITH VIDEO OF ZOË LANDALE’S READING.

https://youtu.be/LlRLq4B8WtQ

This is a recording of Zoë Landale’s SICA ZoomMuse Poems for Peace poetry reading held on November 18, 2021. This event is part of a monthly series of ZoomMuse Poetry Reading of Poems for Peace, co-sponsored by SICA USA and SICA Canada. The Zoom Meeting link on December 16 is https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81799264950 Meeting ID is 817 9926 4950 The featured reader will be announced on this blog.
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This is a video “teaser” for poet Zoë Landale’s upcoming SICA ZoomMuse Poetry reading on November 18.

https://youtu.be/B7dfHkjbSFc

This event is the second of a monthly series of ZoomMuse Poetry Reading of Poems for Peace, co-sponsored by SICA USA and SICA Canada.
The Zoom Meeting link on November 18 is https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81799264950
Meeting ID is 817 9926 4950
The time on November 18 is:
– 11 a.m. Pacific time – 2 p.m. Eastern time – 7 p.m. UK time – 8 p.m. Central European time – 6 a.m. on November 19 in Sydney, Australia
Zoe LandaleZoë Landale is a published poet and writer living on Pender Island, a small island in the Salish Sea off the south-west coast of Vancouver Island. A former President of the Federation of BC Writers, Zoë has a Master’s degree in Fine Arts from the University of British Columbia. She taught creative writing for 15 years at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in Vancouver, British Columbia. After retiring from teaching she crewed for three years on the Marine Search and Rescue boat. Zoë has published eight books, edited two books, and her work appears in over fifty anthologies. Her writing has won significant awards in three genres, including first in the Stony Brook University Short Fiction competition, National Magazine Gold for memoir, and first in the CBC Literary Competition for poetry. Now she is writing speculative fiction for all ages with an emphasis on Norse mythology and interesting magic and is educating herself in indie publishing.

1 Comment

  1. Wonderful Poetess. She drops her voice at the end of each line so we miss the full line in the reading.

    Reply

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