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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Gina Ferrara, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Window of Isolation: Louisiana's Leprosarium

Carville: Amid Moss and Resurrection Fern
Poems by Gina Ferrara

Poet Gina Ferrara's new chapbook, Carville Amid Moss and Resurrection Fern
(Finishing Line Press 2014) delivers a new way of looking at leprosy, now known as Hansen's disease. The beauty of these poems is arresting and surprising, given the once taboo subject of leprosy. The leprosarium at Carville operated for over a hundred years.

As a child in catholic school in New Orleans, Ferrara grew up hearing about lepers. Four years ago, when she visited the colony in Carville, Louisiana, she learned more about the lives of the patients. Carville is located off River Road, near Baton Rouge. However, it is essentially in the middle of nowhere. Ferrara captures that sense of isolation in her Carville Poems. The title references the fact that moss and resurrection fern can be found in the oak trees at Carville. Ferrara was taken by the physical beauty of the landscape at Carville and how the beauty of the land was intertwined and connected to the personal experiences of the patients. From "A Perfect Terrain": 'Drenched in moss and resurrection fern, the oaks stayed stoic--/a perfect terrain for the ostriches, swift-footed and flightless/that would never arrive.'

In writing these poems, Ferrara never lost sight of the loneliness experienced by Carville residents. "I wanted to convey how people who had the disease became isolated--very removed from the lives they had lived and previously known, " she said. "They no longer saw their families or loved ones. They had to establish a new and different way of living."

Residents at Carville may have been isolated, but they lived life to the fullest, put on dances and Mardi Gras balls, and published a newspaper with a circulation of over 250, 000. The poem, "Tea Hour on Point Clair Road," shows how the ladies would take their tea, 'The fingerless/Even the unmarred waited for the sips and stains of tea hours,/ Something miraculous as a cure/under a sun no longer at apex.'

Gina first began writing the poems in the spring of 2010 and finished the book over a period of two years. She approached Finishing Line Press because they had published her first poetry chapbook, The Size of Sparrows, in 2006. She met one of  the patients, Pete from Trinidad, who was about ten years old when he arrived and is now in his eighties. He is one of the last patients to live there, rides around on his bicycle, and is eager to talk to visitors. The lyrical poems, along with photographs by Elizabeth Garcia, offer a window into life at Carville, Louisiana.
Gina Ferrara


Carville in the Spring
Gina Ferrara

Sugar surrounds this sanctuary
far from ordinary or Galapagos.
The road ends each time
I check my appendages
for open wounds, red splotches in tandem.
I remember the last pliant hand I held.
Would the constellated sky feel like a hand?
Each finger with its own unblemished identity—
supple and tapering to a square tip,
the bony range of knuckles
buckling only to brush inside my palm.
I squint and scan for semblances of past lives.
Who is the gypsy? Who is the physicist?
I have my suspicions.
Today a woman arrived.
She strolls through the covered corridors
with memories of her identity and scepter,
helpless and unable to reign over the bacilli
waiting to uprise in time as unwanted suns.

Gina Ferrara's work has previously been featured on La Bloga. Her latest full-length poetry book, Amber Porch Light was also recently reviewed by Frank Mundo in the Examiner.


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2. Carnival Rambling and Readings in New Orleans


Melinda Palacio

Peter Nu accompanies hostess, singer, and poet Delia Tomino Nakayama




Three days after Mardi Gras, I participated in an International Women's Day Celebration, make that two. The first took place at the National Jazz Park in the French Quarter. The five-minute radio plug at WWOZ sure helped bring in a last-minute audience at 3pm on a Friday. Also, the fact that the auditorium was a stone's throw away from Cafe du Monde probably helped as well as the wonderful talent of women singing, playing the piano like nobody's business, and reading poetry. Most people who have never been to New Orleans might know of Cafe du Monde's beignets, fried donuts with fluffy powdered sugar to make you think you are eating a taste of heaven, a cloud with your chicory coffee. 
Cafe Du Monde, where locals and tourists stop for beignets and chicory coffee.

Delia Tomino Nakayama put together a stellar last-minute celebration. I was especially impressed with Kanako Fuwa who is blessed with the ability to sing the blues and performed a perfect rendition of a Nina Simone song. It's great fun to hear her sing jazz standards intermixed with Japanese and traditional Japanese songs reinterpreted with New Orleans Second Line rhythms.
Poet Amanda Emily Smith

Singer and Pianist Kanako Fuwa


The following Saturday, March 8 at 2pm, I read with the Poetry Buffet. Unlike the impromptu reading at the Jazz Park, I've had the Poetry Buffet on my calendar since late last year. Hostess Gina Ferrara (Amber Porch Light, Word Tech Press 2013), originally had included Tulane Professor and Poet Peter Cooley. However, with Peter Cooley out sick (apparently he overdid it at AWP in Seattle and was already not feeling well when he got to the conference) that left Gina, myself, and Louisiana State Poet Laureate Ava Leavell-Haymon. Our material worked so well together, we couldn't have planned a more synchronous program. We dedicated our reading to International Women's Day and we were graced by a new generation of women, twin baby girls attended our reading at the Latter Library on St. Charles Avenue. The Latter Library is a special place to read. The old mansion has been restored but there's no question that the ghosts and old world charm remain.
Gina Ferrara, Ava Leavell-Haymon, Melinda Palacio at the Latter Library on St. Charles

While I missed all the gente at AWP, having front row viewing seats to the Thoth Parade a few days before Mardi Gras was worth missing a year of the Associative Writers Program and Writers Conference. Even with Mardi Gras being the coldest in over a hundred years, the weather for the parade passing in front of my house was perfect. While I chose to revel in carnival over AWP, I'm glad I will get to see many friends at the July International Latino/a Studies Conference in Chicago, where la Bloga will be on a panel and celebrate its 10-year anniversary. 

Some Mardi Gras Photos...
I caught the first of three coconuts at the Mardi Gras Indian celebration at Woldenberg Park.

My King Cake turned out crescent shaped rather than round, but delicious. 

This is what a round, store-bought King Cake looks like.

People watching is so much fun during carnival.

Marilyn Monroe came to watch the parade with us.
Photo by Anthony Posey



Photo by Anthony Posey.
I caught a rose with a broken stem, so I blew the petals to the wind. 


April is National Poetry Month.  Upcoming Readings
April 2, I will read with Fleur de Lit's Reading Between the Wines at Pearl River Winery.
April 5, I have the honor of reading with Richard Blanco and finalists Joseph Millar, Aaron Smith and Richard Silberg at the Patterson Poetry Prize Reading.
April 19, the Santa Barbara Sunday Poets, TBA
April 30, I will read at the Little Theatre at UCSB in the College of Creative Studies.

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