767 Chelwood Road, RR #1, Gabriola, BC V0R 1X1. lipstickpress@shaw.ca. www.lipstickpress.com
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Looking for a chance to win a prize?
Malahat 2013 Long Poem Prize!
Deadline:
February 1, 2013
(postmarked)
Prize: two $1000 CAD prizes will be awarded
Entry fee:
$35 CAD for Canadian entries
$40 USD for entries from the USA
$45 USD for entries from elsewhere
(entry fee includes a one-year subscription to The Malahat Review)
Prize: two $1000 CAD prizes will be awarded
Entry fee:
$35 CAD for Canadian entries
$40 USD for entries from the USA
$45 USD for entries from elsewhere
(entry fee includes a one-year subscription to The Malahat Review)
Enter
one long poem or a cycle of poems between 10 and 20 published pages (one
published page = 32 lines or less).
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Congratulations to Adrienne Gruber
Lipstick Press was honoured to have Robert Martens' Poltergeist among the short-listed, including:
- Spencer Gordon, Feel Good! Look Great! Have a Blast!, Ferno House (Toronto)
- Liz Howard, (skullambient), Ferno House (Toronto)
- Elizabeth Rainer and Michael Blouin, let lie, above/ground press (Ottawa)
- Hugh Thomas, Opening the Dictionary, above/ground press (Ottawa)
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Wishing Keith Wilkinson, author of Winter Gifts, a happy birthday
Keith, now retired from his paid professional work, reflects back on his life:
What's unrealized—
is it potential
or was it a dream?
Lipstick hopes the dream never dies, and that it realizes its potential in the world of new poetry.
What's unrealized—
is it potential
or was it a dream?
Lipstick hopes the dream never dies, and that it realizes its potential in the world of new poetry.
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Impermanence book launch December 7th on Gabriola
You are invited to a
Book launch:
Book launch:
Impermanence
poems by Janet Vickers
published by Ekstasis Editions, 2012
December 7, 7pm
at the Rollo Centre, 685 North Road, Gabriola Island
Cover art: Mindy Joseph. “Aquagain” 2008, 24" x 18", oil and encaustic on wood. Mindy lives on Gabriola Island, BC. www.mindyjoseph.com
In Impermanence, Janet Vickers explores the roots of a profound energy driving the universe: why things change, grow old, die, and then life seems to flourish again. Heraclitus said that you cannot set foot in the same river twice. The river, like the passage of time, is in constant flux and change, never stopping, always flowing. Nothing remains the same, nothing remains still, all passes away in the flow of time and all is impermanent in a constant state of transformation. Life itself seems fleeting and transient, as each moment sifts through our hands like sand on an endless beach. It is the impermanence of existence that transforms all that is and all that will ever be: without death there is no birth, without the seed there is no flower. Those being born are already dying, as Bob Dylan said. Seed becomes the flower, the cradle becomes the grave and all is charged with the electricity of temporality, all is changed from moment to moment. In her first book of poems, Impermanence, Janet Vickers has captured these ephemeral moments in tranquility and grace, driven by a succinct and powerful spark that ignites all existence.
"Where are the measures of impermanence?" asks Janet Vickers in this extraordinary volume of poetry. In Vickers' world, even the self is a bubble that must constantly be renamed. Her poetry, however, measures impermanence against abiding things: the joys of nature, the struggle against power external and internal, unconditional love. A potent and magical book that swings deftly between tears and laughter. Robert Martens
Books available for purchase
Refreshments
RSVP if you can: 250-247-2077
welcome if you can't
welcome if you can't
Saturday, November 3, 2012
Pause - Response Tanka by Naomi Beth Wakan and David Bateman
Two very distinct voices, Naomi Beth Wakan and David Bateman have created a beautiful new blog of response tanka. Not only is it finely crafted, it is free. You can find it here . . . Pause
the honesty, my token
flower – profuse in seeding.
I too aim
for its transparency so that
you can see right through me
Naomi
seeing in the dark
all the lightness we have shared
ink woman, diva
we unite in othered woods
infirm against firm earth
David
Says David "When I approach haiku, and response tanka, I approach them through a phrase from a Wallace Steven’s poem - “uttered word by word.” These forms graciously offer me the opportunity to deposit my emotions into a very measured, and for me, liberating form. Writing response tanka can be an act of reclamation and self-preservation. The literal translation of kokoro, a healthy heart, contributes literally and figuratively to my personal sense of an idea of order in the midst of a chaotic world."
Naomi asks "What on earth could a rather domesticated, unsophisticated woman living on a small, very rural island have in common with a transvestite, city-smart man twenty-five years younger? How could they have enough in common to cause them to write back and forth for several months sharing their momentary thoughts in the form of tanka? Even here the gap between them is large, as he sticks, for the most part, to the 5,7,5,7,7, syllable count of traditional Japanese tanka form, while she adopts the short, long, short, long, long lengths of line that many non-Japanese tanka writers have adopted."
You'll find the answer to Naomi's question if you read some of them.
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Robert Martens' Poltergeist shortlisted for 2012 bpNichol Chapbook Award
![]() |
cover painting: Chiu Ming Chiang |
Lipstick Press is proud to congratulate Robert Martens on being shortlisted for the bpNichol Chapbook Award.
Meet the Presses collective took over the administration of this annual award, originally launched in 1996. Named for the late poet bpNichol, the prize is awarded to the author of the best poetry chapbook published in the previous year.
The finalists are chosen by contest judges, Bill Kennedy and Maggie Helwig, and the winner will be announced at the Meet the Presses Indie Literary Market, on November 17, 2012, noon to 4:30 p.m., at the Tranzac Club, 292 Brunswick Street, in Toronto.
The finalists for the 2012 bpNichol Chapbook Award are:
Spencer Gordon, Feel Good! Look Great! Have a Blast!, Ferno House (Toronto)
Adrienne Gruber, Mimic, Leaf Press (Lantzville, B.C.)
Liz Howard, (skullambient), Ferno House (Toronto)
Robert Martens, Poltergeist, Lipstick Press (Gabriola, B.C.)
Elizabeth Rainer and Michael Blouin, let lie, above/ground press (Ottawa)
Hugh Thomas, Opening the Dictionary, above/ground press (Ottawa)
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Review of Disease and Desire in current issue of PRRB
Yes, Kim Clark has been very busy of late, publishing, travelling and reading. Now a review in The Pacific Rim Review of Books written by Linda Crosfield. And there are still copies available at Lipstick Press.
Friday, October 5, 2012
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Reading at Sunshine Coast Festival of the Written Arts - August 19
Kim Clark
author of Disease and Desire
(published earlier this year)
will be part of
the New Voices reading
at 2:30pm, on Sunday, August 19
along with Robyn Michele Levy
moderated by
Host of CBC's North By Northwest
Sheryl MacKay.
Visit the Festival's page for more information. It's a big event.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Lipstick Press is not publishing books now
Dear Poets Sorry to let you know we have not been publishing chapbooks since 2010. We did some online publishing - mainly for social iss...

-
rob in New Orleans, photo by Stephen Brockwell Born in Ottawa, Canada’s glorious capital city, rob mclennan currently lives in Ott...
-
i don't like to tell this story, i sd, & sipped my coffee black, because people will think i'm crazy, & i smiled,...