Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic Featuring David Pickering at Art At The Cave on August 14, 2025 [UPDATED to include photos]

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic founder and emcee Christopher Luna. Photo by Jacob Salzer
Featured reader David Pickering reads from Jesus Comes to Me as Judy Garland
Featured Reader David Pcikering reads from Jesus Comes to Me as Judy Garland
Featured reader David Pickering reads from Jesus Comes to Me as Judy Garland
Donna P. reads her poetry for the first time
Donna P reads her poetry for the first time
Dean Anthony Brink came all the way from Taiwan to read his poetry to us

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic
Featuring David Pickering
Hosted by Christopher Luna and Morgan Paige
7 pm
Thursday, August 14
Art At The Cave
108 E Evergreen Blvd
Vancouver, WA 98660
https://artatthecave.com
ANTI-RACIST, LGBTQ+ FRIENDLY, PRO-SCIENCE, ANTI-FASCIST,
PRO-CHOICE, ALL AGES, AND UNCENSORED SINCE 2004
https://printedmattervancouver.com/
$5 Suggested donation
No one will be turned away for lack of funds

David Pickering by Dean Davis

Donations can be made in person or through Christopher Luna’s CashApp account (ChristopherLuna9).
David Pickering is a native Oregonian, born and raised in the working-class culture of the north coast (though he will demur if asked the year). His first poetry collection, Jesus Comes to Me as Judy Garland, received the Airlie Prize in 2020. In March of 2025 his poem, “Closing on the Last Home,” was selected for the Neah-Kah-Nie Mountain Poetry Prize. David’s poetry is also published (or forthcoming) in a variety of journals including Cirque, Relief: A Journal of Art and Faith, Passager, Tar River Poetry, Mantis, Fireweed, Lips, Reed Magazine, and Gertrude. Recognized by the GLAPN as a Pacific Northwest Queer Hero, David lives with his husband in Portland where, even as you read this, he has likely had too much coffee.

Send an email to printedmattervancouver@gmail.com or visit
https://christopherlunapoetry.substack.com/
to register to receive The Work, Christopher Luna’s monthly newsletter featuring news and events for poets in Vancouver, WA, Portland, OR and surrounding areas.
The Ghost Town Poetry community respectfully encourages you to support Niche Wine Bar, whose owner, Leah Jackson, provided a home for the reading series from 2015-2020. Stop by their new location at 900 Washington, Suite 130 Vancouver, WA 98660: https://nichewinebar.com.

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic Featuring Amber Marie at Art At The Cave July 10, 2025

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic

Featuring Amber Marie

Hosted by Christopher Luna and Morgan Paige

7 pm

Thursday, July 10

Art At The Cave

108 E Evergreen Blvd

Vancouver, WA 98660

https://artatthecave.com

ANTI-RACIST, LGBTQ+ FRIENDLY, PRO-SCIENCE, ANTI-FASCIST,

PRO-CHOICE, ALL AGES, AND UNCENSORED SINCE 2004

https://printedmattervancouver.com/

$5 Suggested donation

No one will be turned away for lack of funds

Donations can be made in person or through Christopher Luna’s CashApp account (ChristopherLuna9). 

Amber Marie is a writer, maker, and performing artist who thrives at the intersection of these art forms. She both curates and designs original fashion and art for her traveling dark bohemian shop, The Beatnik Bazaar. She has designed and published books of poetry and short fiction, busked typewriter poetry for years, and continues to push the boundaries of performance art and written word. She seeks to get poetry “off the page” through experimentation and play.

Send an email to printedmattervancouver@gmail.com or visit

https://christopherlunapoetry.substack.com/

to register to receive The Work, Christopher Luna’s monthly newsletter featuring news and events for poets in Vancouver, WA, Portland, OR and surrounding areas.

The Ghost Town Poetry community respectfully encourages you to support Niche Wine Bar, whose owner, Leah Jackson, provided a home for the reading series from 2015-2020. Stop by their new location at 900 Washington, Suite 130 Vancouver, WA 98660: https://nichewinebar.com.

Miranda Martin on what Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic has meant to her

I was very moved by what Miranda Martin had to say about her experience at Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic, so I asked her to send it to me. Especially now. it is crucial for like-minded people to gather in a safe public space. We all need to be seen and heard. It is community members like Miranda who keep Ghost Town Poetry fun, relevant, essnetial. Here is what Miranda had to say:

“I first learned of Ghost Town because I happened to walk into Art at the Cave during Ghost Town Volume 3’s book launch. (It was only my second time into the Cave – what serendipitous timing). I had made a promise to myself to seek out more community events after finding myself in a really dark place post November 4 – as many of us did. So, when Chris told me there would be a milestone open mic – the 20th anniversary open mic – I decided to check it out. 

As I sat in the audience, not knowing a soul, I felt wrapped in the love overflowing in that room. Observing this group of people loving each other fiercely and with such passion;  accepting and encouraging one another as they were vulnerable and brave – I knew I would be back. 

Hearing the beautiful words from others sparked something inside me, and I began writing poetry again. And that overwhelming sense of comfort and encouragement you all provide gave me the courage to read much sooner than I ever thought I would – not only once, but twice.

So thank you all for being exactly who you are, and for welcoming me with open arms.”

I also might appreciate this rough draft poem I wrote about this experience:

“The thought of putting these words into paper loomed over me

a dark, guilt-ridden shadow

The more I put the task off

the more the pressure built

The more the pressure built

the more I couldn’t bring myself to complete the task

A task that, once finally complete

Wasn’t so big and scary after all”

Miranda Martin