"I am trying to check my habits of seeing, to counter them for the sake of greater freshness. I am trying to be unfamiliar with what I'm doing." - John Cage


Saturday, June 20, 2026

A gathering of poets with the Thompson Peak Writers: Lara Gularte updates on teaching in Nepal

 

https://www.lassennews.com/el-dorado-countys-poet-laureate-emeritus-lara-gularte-visits-susanville

I spent the afternoon last weekend in Susanville, CA at the Lassen Trails and Tales Trust for a gathering of poetry with the Thompson Peak Writers. Lara Gularte shared her experience at the Himalayan Literature Festival in workshop and teaching in the school

Lassen Land and Trails Trust and the Thompson Peak Writer’s Workshop celebrated poetry Sunday, June 14 with this special appearance by El Dorado County’s Poet Laureate Emeritus Lara Gularte at the Historic Railroad Depot.

Lara Gularte shared her California rancher background and recent participation at the Himalayan Literature Festival. She read new poems from her book delayed in Portugal by US tariffs.

Every few months I drive up 395 through the changing development and rolling spaces of open cattle range to visit these prolific poets. Several local poets read their work, including Dianna Henning, founder of the Thompson Peak Writer’s Workshop, myself, Emily Avelon and Juley Harvey. Afterwards, pizza and beer at Lassen Ale!


 

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Mountain Words Festival in Colorado: expand your territory as a creative

As a writer and poet, balancing the creative and business sides of our existence is a shared challenge. We call the actions of being engaged in the literary community being a "literary citizen". These actions include going to readings and open mics, supporting authors, buying their books, visiting our independent bookstores. Our arts community in Truckee and Nevada County has been blossoming over the last ten years. The third Tahoe Literary Festival is October 9-10 this year and draws writers and participants from Tahoe, Sacramento, San Francisco, LA, across Nevada, and beyond to the East Coast this year. I recommend extending your territory as a writer and looking beyond our own region to find events that open you to new inspirations.

The Mountain Words Festival in Crested Butte, Colorado, is a four day gathering "for writers, readers, and life-long learners" and this year Terry Tempest Williams, one of my favorite writers, presented as keynote for the festival. I've attended almost every year and this year was special because I was honored to participate as a presenting writer. I love that their tagline mentions readers and life-long learners. This festival offers much for everyone. Thank you to photographer Manuel Aragon @spacejunc  for the photos!

 Here's a little something of what I learned:

Arvin, owner of Townie Books, novelist and organizer/networker and visionary, is the brains and the brawn behind this festival!

Thursday May 21, the opening evening hosts an art gallery opening and the film showing of Andrea Gibson, the Colorado Poet Laureate who passed from cancer, sharing her journey through poems and film. Not a dry eye in the house. one take away from Gibson in the film: "Don't try harder; try softer."

Friday May 22, I began the morning early with a generative poetry workshop led by poet Wendy Videlock. "The world is a place of soul-making," she began. She quickly pushed the room of open minds to begin experimenting with language on the page. "Trust language and what it may do on its own." You can find her beautiful poems here and info on her insightful books. 

Poet Rajiv Mohabir presented the next poetry workshop that he titled "On Jumpstarting the Associative Mind" We got jumpstarted! Rajiv spoke to the paradox present in our lives and how this parallels the paradox in a poem. "We are living in a world of incredible beauty; we are living in a world of shock and horror." This is actually the reason to include the outside world in our poems, he said. In his workshop he offered approaches and tools for connecting our own lives with the facts and truths of the world around us. "Poems are not written until the moment of revision happens." He opened our writing process to an associative magic. 

Later that afternoon, I presented my generative poetry workshop "Writing Poems of Imagination and Resistance: Responding to current events" to a roomful of writers of all ages, interests, and genres. Through the big windows we could watch ravens above the town park and clouds gather behind the mountain peaks of Paradise Divide. I was thrilled to be joined by some of my oldest friends in Crested Butte this afternoon. This quote from Martin Espada inspired my approach to prioritizing imagination in these poems that can touch on the political: 

“I see the poetic imagination as essential to the political poem. For poetry, truth is necessary but not sufficient. The imagination you cite in your question—that imagined afterlife, that imagined justice—goes to the heart of the poem as vision. William Blake wrote: “What is now proved was once only imagined.” We must imagine justice, even the impossible, even if this requires leaps that some might call surreal.”

Saturday May 23 began with a wonderful workshop led by Brooke Williams, writer and walker, a re-enchantment and a meditative walk to Totem Pole Park by the Coal Creek. He led us through a visualization tapping into the collective unconscious for allowing our mind to let go, to learn from dreams and their imagery, and to warm laughter. He shared his own path of learning leading through Robert Johnson, Inner Work Dreams, Environmental storytelling at Colby College, Imaginal Ecology (with links back to Mundis Imaginalis in the 8th century) and the innate intelligence explored in Jungian studies. His assignment on our walk was to notice and write about what flirts with you?

In the afternoon Terry Tempest Williams, writer, activist, teacher, presented two conversations, the first around the writing of her most recent book The Glorians, visitations from the holy ordinary. She was interviewed by Ben Goldfarb, author of How Road Ecology is Shaping the Future of our Planet.  She is currently teaching at Harvard Divinity School. Have you read Refuge, or Hour of the Land, or When Women were Birds by Tempest? go read her! As an environmental writer, Terry spoke about how the students at HDS experience climate change and collapse as a spiritual problem. She spoke about wanting a more spiritual life, about asking herself what is the vow I've forgotten, and finding a mission in this current book. A glorian she said "is an encounter when our attention is focused and nothing else exists, an encounter unannounced, unexpected, unearned, a moment of grace." Our best teachers, she said, are the land, birds, rivers, Nature, and the West.

In her next conversation,  Terry spoke with Nina McConigley, author, playwright and professor who wrote a fan letter to Terry as a 15 year old high school student. They struck up a pen pal relationship that has continued into a long friendship as writers. They spoke about questions such as, how do we renew? how do we have silence, how do we not be distracted in a culture of distraction? She recommended Pico Iyer's book Flame, and said that retreat can mean gather ourselves. And as humans beings engaged in the world, "How can we not respond? Each of us responds in our own way." The room was tearful and wonder-filled.

Sunday May 24 opened with a generative poetry workshop led by the dynamic poet Suzy Q Smith, artist and music maker, titled "Intertextuality". Writing into an absence or erasure of another text, inviting or continuing a conversation with another text, possibly bringing something new that wasn't there originally. In this process, Suzy Q encouraged us to find for ourselves what is at stake personally, why are we writing about this now and what does it matter to us? What is your relationship with this subject?

After her workshop, a poetry reading in the Atrium with Suzy Q, Wendy Videlock, Erica Reid (Poet Laureate of Fort Collins, CO), and myself. This was possibly my highlight of the festival, to meet and read my poems with these other poets. In Round Robin style, we chose to read a poem that responded to the poem read just before, one after another. We surprised each other with our poems and that led to some candid and organic craft discussions between poems. Thank you Suzi, Erica, and Wendy for your inspiration!

 

 

 

 

Monday, May 11, 2026

Molly Fisk: First featured author reading at Tangled Roots Open Mic & Reading Series, May 14, 6-7:30 pm

 Molly Fisk, our first featured reader at the Tangled Roots Open Mic & Reading Series on May 14 started at an early age:

April was National Poetry Month and I'm still catching up from a whirlwind of events in Truckee, Grass Valley/Nevada City. More on those highlights soon. The whirlwind is not over! Right here in Truckee this coming weekend May 14 - 17 we have a cluster of free poetry and literary events for all ages, collaborations between Tangled Roots Writing, Trails & Vistas, Truckee Pride, Alibi Ale House - Truckee, Church of the Mountains, and author/poet/radiocaster Molly Fisk. Wow - I dare you to keep up.
I'm not sure where to start with my introduction to Molly Fisk. As our county's first Poet Laureate from 2017-2019, the author of 4 collections of poems and 5 collections of essays, her voice is confident and powerful. Here's her own description: Poet, radio commentator, life coach, writing teacher, painter of barns and mason jars full of water, mentor, speaker, feminist with a capital F, political activist, sister, aunt, cousin, godmother, honorary grandparent, not-very-old elder, swimmer, former banker, one-time sweater designer, long-walk taker, rearranger of furniture, color maven, nature lover. 

You can listen to her radio essays on KVMR’s News Hour, Friday at 8:06 a.m. Pacific, 89.5 on your FM dial, streaming at kvmr.org 

I founded the open mic and reading series at Alibi in Truckee last November. My vision always involved the opportunity to invite local, regional, and nationally-recognized poets and writers as featured readers to open the event. The open mic serves as a gathering place for literary community, poetry-curious locals, and adventurous serendipitous visitors dining and drinking at Alibi. So far, poets and writers and singer-songwriters of all ages and levels of experience have supported each other, cheered on their peers, and stepped onstage to perform. An open mic provides the nurturing ground for developing and discovering voices, ideas, passions, and desires. 

I'm so excited for Molly Fisk to be our first featured reader at the event! She'll be sharing new work from her most recent book published this past April, titled Walking Wheel.  

I've pulled some blurbs from Molly's website:

"Walking Wheel is a tender, lyrical portrait of pioneer love and labor that revives the quiet heroism of everyday life in 1875, where intimacy, resilience, and devotion shape the story of home.

In this rich new collection, Molly Fisk braids together the ordinary tasks of love and work in 1875, a century we’ve almost forgotten but whose human concerns are universal and timeless."

The form is experimental in a way, as the book is historical fiction, a novel-in-verse. And each page used the techniques of verse, with line breaks and shaping on the page, integrated into her rich storytelling. The two main characters are newlyweds Phoebe and Miles Imlay. The journey moves from "their birthplace in central Oregon to California’s Surprise Valley. These are quiet, lyrical poems building a private world of intimacy and effort in alternating voices. From sawing timber, turning the heel of a sock, and measuring a pie’s baking with verses of a song, through sex, pregnancy, and childbirth, the couple’s first year of marriage working side by side is offered to us in resonant, unexpected detail."

Bring your own poems and prose and songs to share on stage this Thursday. Or join the most important people in the room, you! the audience, and cheer on our artsy community!