Halloween Poetry Reading
2009/10/22 by Liz Bennefeld
Since 2006, I’ve been coordinating the Science Fiction Poetry Association’s Halloween Poetry Reading page. SFPA members make digital recordings of themselves, reading one of their own poems. Some really fun stuff, and some a bit too edgy or twisted actually to be children’s Halloween poetry. This year, as in 2007, I wrote a new poem for the page; my recording is way at the bottom, if you’d like to hear me reading it. Here’s the text of this year’s poem:
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Halloween at the End of the Universe by Elizabeth Bennefeld
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In the asteroid belt, the veil between the worlds grows thin. Here, graveyards are orbits around the rocks that once were home to those who circle round and round, peering through our windows with empty, farseeing eyes.
Beyond, one by one, the stars blink out, with no short, clear path from Earth– a failure of applied topology– to the one bright-burning star that promises the beginning of a new beginning.
So, Trick or Treat? Here we sit on this hunk of rock and ice, watching through the windows for the ghosts of Grandpa Pat and Great-Aunt Selene to push aside the thinning veil, resume their bodies, and guide our spaceships through the wall between our worlds– to celebrate Halloween together at the beginning of a new-born universe.
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Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged halloween, poem, sfpa | 4 Comments
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That is a nice poem. Thanks for sharing it. {SMILE}
Anne Elizabeth Baldwin
Oh, and that’s a nice reading, too. {Smile}
I do hope you don’t mind if I save a copy for myself. {SMILE}
Anne Elizabeth Baldwin
That’s fine, Anne. Thanks for asking! I’m so glad you liked the reading. I have lots of fun doing that stuff. The Halloween Poetry Reading, this year, has had the best turnout so far. I believe I have one more person who’s going to try to get a poem in before the cut-off date.
I am so very pleased with SFPA’s efforts… and the chances I get to show off. ::grin::
Thanks! {SMILE}
I just finished formatting a Mocrosoft Word version, and printed out a copy for my “Friends’ Writing” folder by my bed. I did that with your other poems that I’ve copied, too. I do like being able to read it without having to turn on the computer. {Smile}
Anne Elizabeth Baldwin