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Viewing: altcurrent/angstman (7 bookmarks) [ options: rss or publish on my site or add to friends & faves ]
Gut-wrenching poems of awareness and reality in the wake of September 11, 2001, this is leah's chapbook of poems about the tragedy and the war through the eyes of a then-21-year-old. The poems are young and grasping, trying to find strength through uniting and understanding where there was none. The fear and comprehension is evident, and the words are sudden, impacting, angry, heartfelt, and relevant even now as we still struggle to understand this war and what happened on that fateful day that innocent people paid for the government's mistakes. added on 2008-12-20
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i have seen war today by leah angstman ($4)...
By: altcurrent
A very thick chapbook of poems from veteran underground author leah angstman, this collection is an anthology of years of writing that had gone unpublished. This collection contains most everything written between 1999 and the end of 2001, combining them into one thick book that can hardly find a blank spot on the page to breathe. The poems are fast, tumbling, circular, a bit angsty in their spewing, and at their worst, they are sentimental without reverting to mushiness. The reader can feel the growth, the changing of the guards inside the author's mind as she travels from one landmark of youth to the next landmark of adulthood, leaving a trashing of chaos and words and anger in her wake. You catch glimpses of the refinement of her craft, mixed in with the rawness of her youth, with no rewrite, often penning out three or four poems a day in quickness and intensity, leaving this book as a testament to her true coming of age in the literary world. added on 2008-12-20
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aftermath by leah angstman ($6)...
By: altcurrent
a crime of sorts is leah angstman's little gem of a play short. Created for two characters, this play is written in dueling spotlight form, very nicely adaptable for chorus-work, or as a concentration exercise, as the characters say their own lines, often in slight unison over the top of one another. The play is a humorous take on a situation involving a woman being arrested for feeding the parking meters of others so they are not ticketed, told from the point of view of the officer and the woman simultaneously. The play is approximately ten minutes in length, complete with stage directions and a fun read for all audiences alike. added on 2008-12-20
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a crime of sorts by leah angstman ($2.50)...
By: altcurrent
This poetry journal follows the author on a trail of self-discovery, young innocence, and Route 66 Americana on a cold January trip through the Southwest, revealing the author's take on Southwestern life and the strange curiosities and idiosyncrasies of traveling with a penpal from another part of the country whom the author had never met. When leah and this penpal decided to take a winter cross-country trip together, there was no telling how their minds would click or explode together, and with this book comes the true emotions that poked their heads out to reveal how an unexpected journey could bring out one's true colors. The secret treasures in this book come from some photos of the Southwest, taken by the author, to mirror the desolation, emptiness, and determination of the poetry and the sights around her on her journey. added on 2008-12-20
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next exit by leah angstman ($4)...
By: altcurrent
A very personal tale, almost journal-like, of the award-winning author's brief time in Denver and Boulder, Colorado, where she lived among friends in a large house, sleeping on a hardwood floor below a window to the misty morning outside. The poetry chapbook recounts the tales of unrequited love; the beauty of the landscape; the music nightlife that yielded an obsession with a dark, mysterious, punk rock guitarist; the marriage of a best friend to a man she didn't love who didn't love her in return; the twists and turns and lies of friends, of friendships dying, and of holding on to whatever you have for however long you can for no real reason and with no real way to do it. Even the title, simply named after a rock club in a hip side of town, shows that this is a chapbook of life in the rawest form, accounts of real people making both honest and dishonest mistakes, growing in the eyes of each other, being strangers in the midst of companionship and remaining friends in the face of adversity. This is also, without a doubt, some of leah's best work to date, with experienced writing that is focused, intense, and staggeringly wayward, all in the same breath. added on 2008-12-20
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the cricket on the hill by leah angstman ($5)...
By: altcurrent
fancy that of london takes a quick turn from award-winning author leah angstman's earlier chapbook, this one detailing the sights and sounds of travels to London and Paris in June 1999, often whimsical, light-hearted, and adoring in her fanfare of love for a foreign city. The poems deal with the confusion and bluster of a fast-paced city, the romanticism of strangers, and the ease of not having a care in the world, written in leah's signature tongue-in-cheek style, possibly more concretely detailed and spelled out for you than some of her later, more abstract, work. The joy of this book comes equally in the tiny sketches littered throughout: a London telephone booth, the Louvre, Big Ben, and the Eiffel Tower, to name a few, scrawled across the pages in wild ink sketch fashion, as fast-paced and impulsive as the poems themselves, reflected in a compact sketch/poem diary to complete the reader's journey. This poetry chapbook is definitely a must as a road companion to any European country, a fun and witty little jaunt through the author's mind while seeing the sights for yourself. added on 2008-12-20
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fancy that of london by leah angstman ($5)...
By: altcurrent
poem poorly written is the first chapbook written by award-winning underground poet leah angstman. Young and emotional, this is a book of poetry printed from the pages of leah’s journal at the age of seventeen after the death of her best friend, Christopher J. Kranz. Written between July 1997 and January 1998, the poems are raw and heartbreaking – heartfelt emotion spilling out onto the page, mostly in first draft form with no rewrite, and often rhyming instead of the usual freeform of her later work. The book showcases all the sad, memorable, and honest poetry in the grieving moments of loss; as well as showing that – even in a time of great sorrow – strength, beauty, and understanding come in many forms and show through the pain from somewhere deeper than anyone thought imaginable. This book is leah’s growing up, her coming of age in the written word and in the public face of strangers.

Notes from the author: “poem poorly written is young. It is a book by a young girl, with the emotions of a young girl. When I was seventeen, I was crazy, introverted, lonely, insightful, lost, and grieving. Much like any other teenager, only I spoke less and perhaps thought a lot more. The ska/ska-punk revival was just starting to die out, my friends’ and my bands were all breaking up, my senior friends were graduating high school and moving on, and I was getting involved heavily in politics and the world of zines. My best friend and absolute love of my life died ten days before my seventeeth birthday; the subsequent months that followed are chronicled in the poems of this chapbook, lifted from my journal, placed here in the order they were written. The poems were quick, spilling forth in waves, words I wanted to say to the people who weren’t listening or whom were no longer there to listen, pain I needed to write down and get out of my head and body, lest it consume me in thought. And although this book is unlike any other book I have written or will ever write since, it is perhaps the most brutally honest and emotional, with very little conscious thought or rewrite; and it is definitely a moving tribute to a lost love that will affect anyone who has lost someone too young and too soon.” added on 2008-12-20
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poem poorly written by leah angstman ($5)...
By: altcurrent
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