Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic Featuring Julene Tripp Weaver at Art At The Cave November 13, 2025 [UPDATED to include photos]

Julene Tripp Weaver reads to the crowd at Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic
Julene Tripp Weaver reads from Slow Now with Clear Skies,
Greg Bee’s art visible behind her
Moss and Addison find a great vantage point (photo by Morgan Paige)
Moss, Addison, and Toni Lumbrazo Luna (photo by Moregan Paige)
Elise Hoekstra and Christopher Luna by Jacob Salzer
Moss with his poetry godfather Christopher Luna (photo by Morgan Paige)
Elmo Shade reads his poetry at Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic (photo by Jacob Salzer)
Jim Martin by Jacob Salzer
Ghost Town Poetry emcee Morgan Paige by Jacob Salzer
Moss and Morgan at the mic by Jacob Salzer
Moss, the newest addition to the ghost Town Poetry family, enjoys his floor time

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic

Featuring Julene Tripp Weaver

Hosted by Christopher Luna and Morgan Paige

7 pm

Thursday, November 13

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 by sending to Christopher Luna via CashApp (ChristopherLuna9), PayPal (christopherjluna@gmail.com), or Venmo (@Christopher-Luna-66). 

Julene Tripp Weaver has four poetry collections; Slow Now with Clear Skies (MoonPath Press, 2024) truth be bold—Serenading Life & Death in the Age of AIDS (Finishing Line Press, 2017), which won the Bisexual Book Award, four Human Relations Indie Book Awards, and was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards; No Father Can Save Her, (Plain View Press, 2011); and a chapbook, Case Walking: An AIDS Case Manager Wails Her Blues, (Finishing Line Press, 2007). Her poems have appeared in many journals, and anthologies that include: Rumors Secrets & Lies: Poems about Pregnancy, Abortion & Choice, I Sing the Salmon Home, and The Power of the Feminine I: poems from the feminine perspective, Volume 2. She worked in AIDS services for 21 years, is a retired psychotherapist, and lives in Seattle.

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 Rebecca Bluemel at Art At The Cave on October 9, 2025

Note: Erin Aurelia, our original featured reader for October, had to reschedule her reading for December 11.

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic

Featuring Rebecca Bluemel

Hosted by Christopher Luna and Morgan Paige

7 pm

Thursday, October 9

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), PayPal (search via christopherjluna@gmail.com), or Venmo (username @Christopher-Luna-66). 

Rebecca Bluemel is a Gateless© certified facilitator, group leader, and writing coach. She lives in Portland, Oregon with her two adorable gingers, leads a current series of generative writing workshops virtually, and owns and operates her pet sitting business, Home Sweet Home Pet Care. Her book Excoriation, chapbook Womanhood and Other Scars, and More Water Than Tears have been published by The Poetry Box.

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 Peter Ludwin at Art At The Cave on September 11, 2025

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic

Featuring Peter Ludwin

Hosted by Christopher Luna and Morgan Paige

7 pm

Thursday, September 11

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). 

Peter Ludwin is the award-winning author of four books of poetry. His newest collection, An Altar of Tides, focused mainly on his native Northwest, won the 2024 Trail to Table Editors’ Award in Poetry from Trail to Table Press. His previous book, Gone to Gold Mountain, which addressed the little-known massacre of over thirty Chinese gold miners in Hells Canyon in 1887, was nominated for an American Book Award by the Before Columbus Foundation. In addition to receiving a Literary Fellowship from Artist Trust, he won the 2016 Muriel Craft Bailey Memorial Award from The Comstock Review, judged by Marge Piercy, and the W.D. Snodgrass Award for Endeavor and Excellence in Poetry from the San Miguel Poetry Week in Mexico. An adventurer who has traveled from the Amazon to Morocco to Tibet, he is particularly focused on history, physical/spiritual aspects of the natural world and different cultures.  Ludwin lives in Kent, Washington. Find him at www.peterludwin.com.      

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 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

The Work Poetry Workshop moves to its new home at The Arts Hub on July 12/Birdhouse Books migrates to Ronald Records

Collage by Christopher Luna featuring Anne Sexton, Anne Waldman, Emily Dickinson, Diane di Prima, Wang Ping, Sylvia Plath, Alice Walker, and Alice Notley (clockwise from bottom left)

The Work Poetry workshop has a new home. Beginning July 12, the workshop will take place at the Vancouver Arts Hub from 2-5 on the second Saturday of every month and 9-12 on the fourth Saturday of the month. The Arts Hub is located at 1007 E Mill Plain Blvd, Vancouver, WA 98663 in the former home of the Vancouver library. The cost for this workshop will be a $25 suggested donation. No one will be turned away due to lack of funds.

The Arts Hub is operated by The Arts Centered, under the superb leadership of Christine Richardson. I encourage everyone in the community to take advantage of all that this important organization has to offer. Learn more here: https://theartscentered.org/

According to their website, “theARTScentered is a 501c3 non profit organization in Vancouver, WA, working to provide resources, space, professional expertise, and collaborative opportunities to local visual and performing artists & arts/culture groups and organizations since 2021. Why theARTScentered? It takes action to center something and active focus to keep something centered… it takes work! In all we do, we center our work around the arts and serve our community with the arts at the heart of it. We are connectors and master creative problem solvers, and we are passionate about creating opportunities for equity in cultural access.”

I will lead one more First Friday Poetry Reading on June 6 and two more drop-in poetry workshops at Birdhouse Books before bookstore owner Lucas Gubala moves his inventory to Ronald Records. My final workshops at Birdhouse Books will take place from 9-12 on May 24 and June 28. You can learn more about these workshops on the Creative Writing Workshops page of the Printed Matter Vancouver website. 

I am very grateful to Lucas Gubala, Sarah Summerhill, Kirsten Hull, and all of the volunteers and customers who made Birdhouse Books a home for our poetry community. I will miss the cozy environs, the freeflowing tea, and the wonderful and generous Local Authors section. I am among the poets whose books could always be found on their shelves. Few have done more to support local writers.

Here is Lucas’s announcement regarding the move: “Birdhouse Books will be migrating! We will now share space with the incredibly groovy Ronald Records. Construction will be happening alongside the Main Street project, but you can look forward to a new space to browse books and records very soon. This does mean that our events will be put on hold after next first Friday (June 6), but stay tuned to https://birdhousebooks.store/ and @Birdhousebookstore on Instagram for announcements and call to action while we are moving. Thank you all!”

I encourage the community to continue to support Birdhouse Books as they make this transition.

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic Featuring Brian Stephen Ellis at Art At the Cave on June 12, 2025 [UPDATED to include photographs]

Christopher Luna, Jim Martin, and Kyle David Congdon at Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic on June 12, 2025.
Photo by Jacob Salzer.

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic
Featuring Brian Stephen Ellis

Hosted by Christopher Luna and Morgan Paige

7 pm
Thursday, June 12

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).

Brian Stephen Ellis is the author of five collections of poetry and one collection of short fiction. His most recent collection of poems, Against Common Sense, is a finalist for the Oregon Book Award. He is also the recipient of the 2014 William Stafford War No More Award. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

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.

Matt Eiford-Schroeder plays a mean saw

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic Featuring Jan Harrington and Victor Griggs at Art At The Cave on May 8, 2025 [UPDATED to include photographs]

Featured Reader Victor Griggs
Featured reader Victor Griggs reads from his book Rolling Through Life
with a little help from his mother
Kyle David Congdon shares his poetry as his daughter Rowan listens on nearby
Kyle and Rowan
Kyle and Rowan
Featured Reader Janis Harrington
Janis Harrington reads her poetry as her fellow featured reader Victor Griggs listens
Janis Harrington
Jacob Salzer

Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic
Featuring Jan Harrington and Victor Griggs

Hosted by Christopher Luna and Morgan Paige

7 pm
Thursday, May 8

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 PayPal account (christopherjluna@gmail.com). Include a memo stating that the money is for Ghost Town Poetry.

Janis Harrington is a poet living in North Carolina. Her poetry collection, How to Cut a Woman in Half, written as a novel in verse, was a finalist for the Able Muse Book Award. Her first book, Waiting for the Hurricane, is a collection of narrative poems about three generations of a family and the dark secrets they keep. It won the 2017 Lena Shull Book Award, given by the North Carolina Poetry Society. Her work has appeared in anthologies and literary journals, including Tar River Poetry, Journal of the American Medical Association, and North Carolina Literary Review. She won the 2023 James Applewhite Poetry Contest sponsored by the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association. She co-hosts a monthly poetry reading series at an independent bookstore.

According to Victor Griggs, “I am from the Pacific Northwest. I always love writing but I really started taking seriously during The pandemic. Never give up on your dreams. For more information about me and my work please visit futurelegs.net.”

Book description from Victor’s website: Rolling Through Life chronicles Victor Griggs’ reflections from 2019-2021, set against the backdrop of the Covid-19 pandemic. In the solitude of quarantine, intensified by his personal challenges with cerebral palsy, Victor immersed himself in the details, stories, and thoughts he lived with each day. This short collection of poetry and prose is a tribute to his resilience and introspection during those times of isolation.

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.

UPDATED Statement on Healthy Spaces from Art at the Cave: We want to provide a healthy space to enjoy art. We have been practicing safety precautions such as regular cleaning, social distancing and mask wearing. As a result of the removal of the mask mandate effective March 12, 2022, we will no longer require the wearing of masks. We encourage you to continue to wear a mask if it makes you feel more comfortable, and we will supply masks and hand sanitizer at the door. As social distancing has become a norm, please be mindful some will still need a bit of personal space while inside the gallery.

“Stimulation,” a poem about autism by Elise Hoekstra/ These Shining Lives at Starbird Theatre

During Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic at Art At The Cave on April 10, Elise Hoeskstra shared a powerful and moving poem about what it is like to be autistic. We are proud to publish it here because we believe her writing can help the community to have more compassion and understanding for their neurodivergent family, friends, and neighbors.

Elise introduced the poem by saying, “As an adult with Autism, I have been attempting to articulate what is ubiquitous in my daily life through writing. One of the topics that popped up was sensory overload, a phrase that has general meaning, but what did that mean specifically? This poem is a breakdown of what sensory overload looks like for me.”

Elise Hoekstra reads her poetry at Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic on April 10, 2025

Stimulation

Hearing: Noise buzzes, seemingly louder with every second. I can’t focus. Individual voices blur. It’s irritating at best. One loud noise won’t simply do it, but many. Like waves braided together, crashing into the back of my head.

Sight: Light shines, eyes squint like staring into the sun, lowlights calm ere white brightness prevails. Yet the sun of California does not bother me.

Smell: Candles. Pungent peonies burning in the background, coats my throat leaving it soar, sits in my clothes, gives me a headache. Grumpy at best.

Touch: Heavy hot air, sweat on the skin, rosacea, drives me crazy. Uncomfortable clothes. Pants, shirts, and skirts that don’t lay just right. Fabrics!

Taste: The feeling of raw octopus on my tongue. The gift of a three year olds germs that leave bogey mucus molded to my throat.

Bio: Elise is a bookworm at heart and was inspired to write based on the vast collection of different works that she has explored as a special education teacher, poet, and avid lover of YA novels. Learning to sing before she could speak, Elise loves to write music, as songs just pop into her head. She has performed collegiately in choir and is an active choral member at Clark College. She serves on the board and is an active thespian for Starbird Theatre. Elise also enjoys coaching high school wrestling. She is also first generation Dutch and was diagnosed late in life with ASD and ADHD. It is her dream to see her work inspire and form connections in the neurodivergent community.

Learn more about Starbird Theatre:

These Shining Lives

This play is based on the true story of women who worked at the Radium Dial Company in the 1920s, painting watch dials with radium-based paint. The women initially took pride in their work, but soon developed severe health issues from the toxic exposure. The play follows Catherine Donohue as she becomes aware of the harmful effects of radium and struggles with her own illness while seeking justice for herself and her co-workers. It explores themes of resilience, friendship, and the fight against corporate negligence. Catherine and the other women ultimately challenge the company, demanding accountability for the suffering they endured. The play highlights the human cost of industrial progress and the courage of those who fought for workers’ rights and justice.

Performance Dates:

May 9th 7:30pm

May 10th 2:00pm

May 10th 7:30pm

May 11th 2:00pm

Location:

TJMS Theatre

3000 NW 119th St

Vancouver, WA 98685

Tickets $20 Online, $22 at the door