Clatsop Community College
1653 Jerome, Astoria OR 97103
For immediate release
Contact: Carol Knutson-Hawes, English Instructor (503) 338-2501
Holocaust Remembrance Day, Sunday, April 15, 2007
April is National Poetry Month
On Sunday, April 15, 2007 at 7pm at the Coaster Theatre in Cannon Beach, Poet
and Oregon Book Award Winner Willa Schneberg will read from her new book of poetry
Storytelling in Cambodia and from her second collection, In
The Margins Of The
World. Admission is free. Poet Willa Schneberg will speak to students on Monday,
April 16, in Seaside at CCC's South County Center at 8am and in Astoria at Clatsop
Community College's Art Gallery at noon as part of Knutson's students' "Brown
Bag" series. All are welcome; no admission charge; bring your lunch. The
CCC Art Center Gallery can be contacted at (503) 338-2501.
Willa Schneberg was born in Brooklyn, New York. Her book of poems, In The
Margins
Of The World, Plain View Press, was awarded the 2002 Oregon Book Award for Poetry.
Garrison Keillor read “Biscuits” a poem from that volume, on the
Nov. 20th, 2002 and 2003 Writer’s Almanac on National Public Radio in the
U.S. Her first volume of poetry is entitled Box Poems, Alice James Books. She
has won two Oregon Literary Arts Fellowships in poetry, and received a grant
in poetry from the Money for Women/Barbara Deming Memorial Fund. The journals
in which her poems have appeared or will appear are: American Poetry Review,
Tikkun, Salmagundi, Michigan Quarterly Review, Exquisite Corpse, Southern Poetry
Review, Rosebud and Mudfish. Her poems also appear in the following anthologies:
Poets of the World Bearing Witness to the Holocaust; Northwest University Press;
Claiming The Spirit Within: A Sourcebook of Women's Poetry, Beacon Press; Point
of Contact: Disability Art and Culture, University of Michigan Press; Knoxville
Bound: A Collection of Literary Works Inspired by Knoxville, Tennessee, Metropulse
Publishing; The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror 2006: Nineteenth
Annual
Collection, St. Martin’s Press. In a textbook entitled: Bearing
Witness:
Teaching About The Holocaust, her poetry is discussed along with the poetry of
Carolyn Forche and Sharon Olds. Through Poetry-In-Motion, sponsored by the Poetry
Society of America, an excerpt from one of her poems can be found on busses and
commuter trains in Portland, She is the coordinator and originator of the annual
Jewish Writers’ Reading at the Oregon Jewish Museum in Portland, now in
its six season. She has been a poetry fellow at Yaddo, MacDowell, the Helene
Wurlitzer Foundation in Taos, New Mexico and the Tyrone Guthrie Center in Annaghmakerrig,
Ireland.
Willa is also a ceramic sculptor, photographer, and a clinical social worker
in private practice in Portland, Oregon. She has facilitated visual and poetry
workshops with the chronically mentally ill, the retarded, the aged, and with
public school students through Artists-in-the-Schools programs in Massachusetts,
Oregon, Tennessee and at American military bases in the Far East. From 1992-1993,
she worked with the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia, first
as a District Electoral Supervisor setting up registration sites in Phnom Penh,
and then as a Medical Liaison Officer, providing counseling and arranging repatriation
for UN volunteers from member countries. She judged the 15th Annual Reuben
Rose
International Poetry Competition for Poets who write in English sponsored by "Voices
Israel," and in Dec. 2004 spent a week in Israel, offering talks, readings,
poetry workshops and presiding over the Awards Ceremony. She was guest poet at
the 2005 Tucson, Arizona Poetry Festival the theme of which was visual art and
poetry. She has been giving readings from her new collection Storytelling
in
Cambodia, Calyx Books, Corvallis, Oregon, throughout the U.S. at bookstores,
literary clubs, universities, poetry festivals and Cambodian community centers,
including KGB Bar in New York City and the Cambodian Community Assistance
Associationin Lowell, Massachusetts. In March, she spoke about “poetry of witness” at
Lewis and Clark College in a symposium entitled "Millions of Intricate Moves"-
Artistic and Spiritual Responses to War and Peace” in honor of a line from
one of Oregon Poet Laureate's William Stafford's poems.