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  • The Cuban Drumbeat, by Piero Gleijesis - $15.00
    In waging a long war against oppression and misery in the third world, Castro's Cuba sent more troops into battle on foreign soil in defense of besieged populations than all but the U.S., Russia and a few Western European countries. Gleijeses wonders what's next for a post-Castro Cuba. […]
  • Two Underdogs and a Cat, by Slavenka Drakulic - $17.00
    Drakulic, well known to readers of The Nation, the New York Times and the New York Review of Books, ponders the fate of the communist idea through three stories: "An Interview with The Oldest Dog in Bucharest," "A Guided Tour of the Museum of Communism" and "A Cat Keeper in Warsaw" […]
  • The Idea of Communism, by Tariq Ali - $15.00
    "What Was Communism" series editor Ali ponders the over-arching question, and argues for a new form of socialism and global planning. […]
  1. POETS! Yaryan & Olmsted

    November 21, 2011 by Eric

    Monday, November 21, 7 pm

    Poets! Daniel Yaryan & Marc Olmsted

    open mic follows

    As a teenager in Santa Cruz, Daniel Yaryan fell under the thrall of poetry, particularly the poetry of the beats,  in a big way.  With his work, as a writer and as a impresario of poetry readings celebrating and extending the beat ethos, he has become, while still a young man, a major figure in the west coast poetry scene.

    We’ve lost track of how many readings Daniel has staged in venues all over the state in the series he calls “Sparring With Beatnik Ghosts” — each boasting a deep roster of energized and engaged voices revealing the breadth and depth of the poetry impulse that persists today.

    Daniel’s own voice will be on display at our reading tonight.

    He has invited Marc Olmsted to join him on this reading, indicating his respect for a poet who in the 1970s threw himself with abandon into the sphere inhabited by Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs and their peers.

    Ginsberg said of Marc that he “inherited Burroughs’ scientific nerve & Kerouac’s movie-minded line nailed down with gold eyebeam in San Francisco.”

    He has made films, had a band during the punk days of the Mabuhay Gardens, has been a practicing Buddhist for more than thirty years, and has published reams of poetry through the years.

    Our twice-monthly Monday night poetry series has been hosted by peripatetic troubadour Jerry Ferraz since its inception, and includes an open mic segment which is one of the liveliest in this town of poets.

  2. Ambush Review reading

    November 14, 2011 by Eric

    Monday, November 14th, 7 pm

    Ambush!

    A reading to celebrate issue #2 of a great new San Francisco literary magazine

    Co-Editors and Co-Publishers Bob Booker and Patrick Cahill host a raft of contributors at Bird & Beckett to present the beautifully done second issue of Ambush Review — a terrific addition to the long tradition of literary magazines emanating from this most literary city!  Join us for a toast to the creators, writers and artists involved.

    Watch this YouTube video of Bob Booker introducing the first issue at Live Worms Gallery in North Beach in December 2010.

  3. Jazz in the bookshop / patchen

    October 31, 2011 by Eric

    Friday, November 4 – double date!

    jazz in the bookshop
    + the jazz of poetry:
    a Kenneth Patchen Moment

    Seabop rides the waves

    and then, Jonathan Clark reads
    from the poems of Kenneth Patchen
    while Don Prell lays down a bass line

    Every week, the neighborhood gathers for a long running jazz party we’ve hosted since late 2002– now, as we enter our tenth year of Friday jazz sessions, it’s got a life of its own for sure, and at the heart of it all is bassist Don Prell, who assembles a terrific ensemble on the first Friday of each month to play some of that west coast bebop we love so much… he calls his band the Seabop Ensemble, and it’s always a fine thing. If you want to meet the neighbors, there’s no better place to do it than at Bird  & Beckett on a Friday evening…

    And tonight, we’ve got something extra, when the regular session concludes… The folks at Kelly’s Cove Press, a new local publishing operation offering some dazzling literary gems in book form, have just put out Kenneth Patchen: A Centennial Celebration gathering some of the iconic poet’s best work.  Once the drummer has packed his kit and the band has had a chance to quaff a glass of wine, editor Jonathan Clark, who was close to Patchen and his wife from the ’60s forward, will take the stage to read some of the man’s lovely poems to a jazz bass line laid down by none other than Don Prell…

    Kenneth Patchenwas one of the most prolific American poets of  his time. Born in Niles, Ohio in 1911, Patchen attended school at the University of Madison-Wisconsin where he met his wife, Miriam Oikemus. They moved to Greenwich Village and befriended many writers including E.E. Cummings, Anais Nin, and Henry Miller. In 1950, he and Miriam moved to San Francisco. Patchen’s love poems to Miriam are among the finest ever penned by a writer. Patchen passed away in 1972, but has never left us.

    His “experimental protests” in poetry, painting, and prose remain unprecedented.  He’s a poet dear to the heart of legions of San Francisco poets, and his “picture poems” — humorous, ascerbic, ironic, and heartfelt — comprise, in all their apparent naivete, an irrefutable tribute to the genuine goodwill we extend to each other despite the strife and trials that always seem to surrounds us.

    In San Francisco clubs in the 1950s, Patchen’s experiments combining poetry performance and jazz blazed the way to a natural symbiosis of expression, embraced and extended with unabashed enthusiasm by the likes of ruth weiss, David Meltzer, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Jack Kerouac and so many others. Celebrate the intersection of jazz and poetry this Friday at Bird & Beckett, and you’ll know why we’ve consider that nexus to be at the heart of what we’re all about.