My heart is full. I am deeply moved and grateful to everyone who attended our 20th Anniversary Reading. Thank you for all the love you showed me, Morgan Paige, Toni Lumbrazo Luna, and Art At The Cave. There is no way that a reading can remain fun, exciting, enriching, and a safe space for all without the participation of every reader, friend, and listener. I am very blessed.
Here are some photos from the event. If you took photos or video, please send them via printedmattervancouver@gmail.com.
Next I will be putting together packages for our contributors and Kickstarter supporters, having taken the reins from Morgan because she will soon be giving birth. At the reading, Morgan announced that she wants Toni and I to be the child’s Poetry Godmother and Godfather. We are honored to accept.
Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic emcee Morgan Paige by Jennifer Pratt-Walter
Susan Dingle applauds by Jennifer Pratt-Walter
Toni Lumbrazo Luna and Christopher Luna caught mid-gesture by Jennifer Pratt-Walter
Ghos tTown Poetry Open Mic co-host (2007-2020) and Printed Matter Vancouver founder Toni Lumbrazo Luna: photograph by Jennifer Pratt-Walter
Clark County Poet Laureate Susan Dingle, Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic host Morgan Paige, and past featured reader Joann Renee Boswell: photograph by Jennifer Pratt-Walter
Joe Poulton, Susan Dingle, Toni Lumbrazo Luna and Christopher Luna by Morgan Paige
Matthew Eiford-Schroeder by Morgan Paige
Moregan Paige, Christopher Luna, and Toni Lumbrazo Luna
Christopher and Toni kick things off by Morgan Paige
The opening moments of our four-hour anniversary reading captured by co-host Morgan Paige
Tom Kniffin by Morgan Paige
Al Haley by Morgan Paige
Alex Vigue by Morgan Paige
Armin Tolentino by Morgan Paige
Thanks to Morgan for picking up this cake!
Christopher Luna and Leah Jackson, whose Angst Gallery was Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic’s home from 2015-2020 Photo by Morgan Paige
Leah Jackson and Christopher Luna by Morgan Paige
Christopher Luna and Linda McCarty by Morgan Paige
Christopher Luna gestures at someone by Morgan Paige
Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic founder Christopher Luna by Morgan Paige
Christopher Luna with clipboard by Morgan Paige
Eric Fair-Layman (aka Papasquatch) and Christopher Luna by Morgan Paige
Erin Iwata by Morgan Paige
Grace Valentine by Morgan Paige
Jim Martin and Christopher Luna by Morgan Paige
Jim Martin, who has attended Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic since our very first reading in November 2004 receives a warm introduction from Christopher Luna
Joann Renee Boswell by Morgan Paige
Joann Renee Boswell eads her poetry to the crowd by Morgan Paige
Kristin Bulger and Galen by Morgan Paige
Kyle David Congdon reads as Tony Blaine looks on by Morgan Paige
Lori Loranger by Morgan Paige
Lori Loranger by Morgan Paige
Clark County Poet Laureate Susan Dingle shares her poetry
Toni and Christopher by Madilynn Klein
Jim Martin
Armin Tolentino reads a poem
Morgan introduces Christopher by Ian Caton
Joe Poulton, Susan Dingle, Toni and Christopher by Ian Caton
Christopher trying to keep it together as Morgan praises him by Ian Caton
Morgan gestures as Christopher, Linda McCarty, Colin Sandberg, and Laneta Johnson-Meeker look on by Ian Caton
Morgan, Christopher, and Linda by Ian Caton
Poets Laureate Selfie: Armin Tolentino, Christopher Luna, and Susan Dingle
Susan, Toni, and Christopher by Ian Caton
Toni and Christopher by Joann Renee Boswell
Toni and Christopher share a laugh with our Ghost Town Poetry family by Joann Renee Boswell
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.
Susan Dingle moved from the East End of Long Island, aka ‘Strong Island,” New York, to Washougal at the invitation of her son Jake in 2020, the year after her husband died. Susan’s first chapbook, Parting Gifts, won honorable mention and publication by Local Gems Press, NY in 2020. A second chapbook, In Pilgrim Drag, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2020.
She is currently in the MFA program at Pacific University, completing her thesis of poems. With Julie Sparling, Susan co-hosts an open mic called Poetry Street PNW at the Camas Library on the 4th Wednesday each month. In March 2024, Susan Dingle was selected as Clark County Poet Laureate (2024-2026.) Following in the footsteps of Armin Tolentino, Gwendolyn Morgan and Christopher Luna, she leads workshops and projects to encourage people of all ages, ethnicities and gender identification to find their voices.
Susan graduated from the Creative Writing Program at the University of Illinois/Chicago in 1971, with publications including the Ohio Review, Partisan Review and APR. After teaching briefly at Colgate University, she left it all for Hollywood, to write epic poetry about LA and read it on the Merv Griffin Show. Fortunately, she returned to New York and got sober in 1981, performing her LA epic at open mics including the Nuyorican Poets Café in NYC and on Long Island as a one-woman show, The Hollywood Dream-Catcher. Becoming a clinical social worker in 2008 and a preacher in 2017, she is an ardent advocate for the power of poetry as a healing modality. She collaborated with Maggie Bloomfield on Break Out! a two-woman show about recovery, based on their poems. With Robert A. Brown, Susan founded Poetry Street in Riverhead, NY in 2014.
Christopher Luna founded Ghost Town Poetry Open Mic in November 2004. The reading began at Ice Cream Renaissance before migrating to Cover to Cover Books, Angst Gallery. The series has called Art At the Cave home since 2022.
Ghost Town Poetry Volume Three Cover Collage Art by Christopher Luna, Toni Lumbrazo Luna, and Morgan Paige
On Friday, November 8, Art at the Cave will host a book launch party for Ghost Town Poetry Volume Three, featuring poetry from throughout the twenty year history of the series. Join us at Art At The Cave from 4-7 to purchase a copy of the new book, edited by Christopher Luna, Morgan Paige, and Toni Lumbrazo Luna, who co-hosted the reading from 2007-2020.
Send an email to printedmattervancouver@gmail.com 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.
The joyous finale. l.to r,: Poetry Moves poets Louise Wynn, Bethany Kim-Yin, Claudia Saleeby Savage, Em Gallup, Marcia Smith, Brittany Mishra, Sherri Levine, Gwendolyn Morgan Clark County Poet Laureate (CCPL) 2018-2020, Armin Tolentino CCPL 2021-2024, Susan Dingle CCPL 2024-2026, Artstra Chair and Director of Poetry Moves LaRae Zawodny, Poetry Moves Manager Derek Klein, Poet Emmett Wheatfall, Chair of the Clark County Arts Commission Debbie Nagano, Washington State Poet Laureate Arianne True, Christopher Luna Inaugural CCPL 2013-2017. Image from video by Angela Cochran.
I was so moved by the Celebration of Poetry at the Magenta theater on March 10 that I asked Artstra Chair LaRae Zawodny and outgoing Clark County Poet Laureate Armin Tolentino for permission to reprint their remarks. I am very grateful to both Armin and LaRae for their service to the poetry community. It is my hope that publishing their beautiful words here will inspire those in our community who were present at the event. Christopher Luna
LaRae Zawodny, Artstra Chair, Director of Poetry Moves, Director and emcee of A Celebration of Poetry Image from video by Angela Cochran
LaRae Zawodny Why POETRY?
Preparing for today, I felt a need to answer this question, at least for myself. I reflected … for months. I realized that poetry charmed me very early on in the form of lullaby and song, comforting and melodic. Then there were books with rhymes and pictures, adding the visual magic of words. The classics for children…you know them. Playfulness of sound with silly drawings to match were Edward Lear’s gift to me.
A more serious encounter with poetry played out countless Sunday school mornings when “what does it mean?” challenged me to interpret stories …to learn lessons from strange words in cadence unfamiliar.
The door opened for me…come right in, have a love affair with language. It is endlessly mysterious, amusing, magical, full of possibility, powerful.
Why am I sharing this personal story with you? There are many poets in the house today, each with a story of “why poetry?” Others may be here just to support a poet, with hopes of getting home in time to see the Oscars. Maybe, listening today, a door to poetry will open for you. There are many doors. Poets, all of you, please know that YOU ARE recognized and honored today.
In the words of poet Rita Dove: “Poetry is language at its most distilled and most powerful.”
To quote Leonardo Da Vinci, “Poetry is nearer to vital truth than history.”
Truth is elusive. Today recognizing truth is, without exaggeration, a survival skill. We count on communication, predominantly linguistic, to solve problems, from the personal to the world stage. We have a basic, some say “essential” human need to express ourselves. How well do our communication skills serve this need to express ourselves…to connect…really.
Today, with an epidemic of loneliness, many people feel unheard. In the political arena, it has been said “we don’t know each other.”
A university teacher laments “language is careless”. Responses to friends …reduced to an emoji, appreciation? an iconic thumbs up. Love?…a tiny electronic image. And the number of things we “love” is amazing. Should we not, then, listen mindfully to those who seek with great care… just the right word, the turn of the phrase that will resonate, be heard.
Let us honor the poets, their voices honed into artistry, who write and speak their truth.
Armin Tolentino passes the pen to newly-appointed Clark County Poet Laureate Susan Dingle at the Celebration of Poetry at the Magenta Theater on March 10, 2024. Image from video by Angela Cochran.
Armin Tolentino
Thank you to the Clark County Arts Commission and to ARTSTRA for your commitment and advocacy for artists of all disciplines. You make our County a richer place to live.
Thank you Gwendolyn Morgan and Christopher Luna for your mentorship and friendship. Thank you Susan for accepting this role and for all I know you’ll do to make poetry alive for Clark County. So proud to be part of this lineage with you three.
Serving as poet laureate for my community has been the greatest honor I’ve experienced as a writer. Over the last three years, I’ve focused on fostering spaces for people to write. These generative workshops were only possible because of following organizations with whom I’m so grateful to have partnered:
Community Organizations and Businesses: NAACP Vancouver, Summer of Pride Clark County, Plas Newydd Farm, Cascades Presbyterian Church, Willamette Writers, and Inspired Learning of Yacolt
Schools: Cascadia Montessori School, Ridgefield High School, Vancouver School of Arts and Academics, Clark College
Bookstores: Birdhouse Books and Vintage Books
Fort Vancouver Regional Libraries: Vancouver Community Library, Cascade Park, Ridgefield, Washougal
Residential Facilities: Knights of Pythias Retirement Center and Clark County Juvenile Detention
As varied as these communities and participants are, the mechanics to these workshops have been identical. We welcome each other and sit down to an empty page. And, without judgement or editing, we fill the emptiness with whatever surfaces with zero regard for whether what we’re writing makes sense or is any good.
In these workshops I’ve talked plenty about the joy of writing. The exhilaration of uncovering a phrase or image we didn’t know was inside us. I’ve talked plenty about the sheer fun of playing with sounds and structures, the mouth feel of words. The lingering warmth of connection when we realize our words made a reader feel something.
What I haven’t talked much about is the fear. Mostly because I don’t have to. Everyone who writes knows that fear. Fear that we don’t know what to say. Fear we know what to say, but don’t know how to say it.
Fear that we’ve written it the best we can and our ability is simply inadequate to ever capture what we’re really feeling. Fear that we’re not good enough and will never be.
When we all gather as writers in a shared space, we recognize that Fear is in the room and we need neither resist it nor feed it. We have plenty of chairs. Fear can pull one up and stay if it likes. I won’t kick Fear out but I also won’t offer Fear a drink.
Because, what I’ve learned writing alongside you these last three years: you’re going to do this regardless of the fear. For many of you, writing isn’t a choice. This craft called you. So, writing isn’t a matter of banishing fear because, over time, the pull to write is simply stronger and more persistent than the fear. Every time I face a blank page, I have to admit to myself that I don’t know how to write a poem. But I’d still like to try. Over and over.
So thank you all for allowing me to face this fear alongside you. As Susan begins her term, I know you will show her the same support and outpouring of welcome I’ve experienced. Reach out to her. Find out how you can support her projects but also her own writing. She will undoubtedly show up for us, so let’s learn how we can show up for her. We as a County are better when we share this space, our words, and our fears and joys.