Local poet’s words make a permanent mark

Most all of us have written, at one time or another, on the sidewalk.

And we’ve heard about, or visited, the Dayton Regional Walk of Fame and the Hollywood Walk of Fame, each with sidewalk pavers that memorialize accomplished individuals.

Now, a local poet, David Lee Garrison, will have his work memorialized in a unique literary project in Youngstown, Ohio.

“Just recently I was notified that the first stanza of my poem, “Chant of Change” will be stamped into a sidewalk in Youngstown as part of the city’s public poetry project,” David shares.

Lit Youngstown (lityoungstown.org) is a literary arts non-profit founded in 2015 to celebrate and support the literary arts.

Its “Words Made Visible Sidewalk Project” stamps the words of writers from their excerpted works. (Learn more at https://lityoungstown.org/2017/08/29/words-made-visible-sidewalk-project/)

Though the opening stanza alone will be stamped in the Youngstown sidewalk, David shares, with permission his poem in its entirety. It is particularly appropriate for this time of year.

Chant of Change, by David Lee Garrison

Set the clock one hour ahead

and that vague redness

of budding trees glows

against the blue air.

The first warm day

flies out of its nest

and perches inside you,

pecks at your heart.

Turn the clock back an hour

and lose in one day

all the light you saved.

Morning air is lake water.

The wind’s sharpened edge

cuts you open as you cling

to branches, and with their reds

and yellows you fall into winter.

Spring forward, fall back.

The saying that reminds you

not to take root,

the command — like the echo

of a jump rope chant —

to keep on living

and dying. It tells you

what you will do, want to or not:

swim against the current

and drift back, back.

David’s poem is from his collection, “Sweeping the Cemetery,” published by Browser Books. (Though the book has sold out at his publisher, it is still available via Amazon.com and other online publishers.)

The Ohio Poetry Day Association named David, Wright State University Professor Emeritus in Modern Languages, as one of two Ohio Poets of the Year in 2014 in honor of his recent book “Playing Bach in the D.C. Metro.” The title poem from “Playing Bach in the D.C. Metro” was featured by Poet Laureate Ted Kooser on his website, “American Life in Poetry,” and other poems by David Lee Garrison have been read by Garrison Keillor on his radio program, “The Writer’s Almanac.”

His newest poetry collection is “Carpeing the Diem: Poems about High School.” More information about this book may be found at his publisher’s website, www.dosmadres.com.

Learn more about David and his work at www.greenvillepoets.org/profiles/dgarrison.html

Upcoming Literary Events

Monday, Oct. 9, 1-3 p.m., Washington-Centerville Public Library, Centerville Library Lobby, 111 Spring Valley Road — This month's "2nd Monday Authors" program will celebrate nationwide Indie Author Day with five indie authors. Visit www.wclibrary.info, click on "Programs" in the upper right corner, and then on "2nd Monday Authors" for more details.

Through Oct. 10, 10 a.m. (deadline) — The 12th Annual Dottie Yeck Good Life Award Writing Contest, run by the Washington-Centerville Public Library, is open to any teen enrolled in a grade 7-9 curriculum who lives or goes to school in Montgomery County. The contest awards a $3,000 cash prize to the top essayist. Learn more and enter online at https://www.wclibrary.info/gla/

Tuesday, Oct. 10, 7 p.m., Books & Co. at the Greene — Tom Watson, popular children's author and illustrator, will introduce two new books, "Stick Dog Craves Candy" and "Stick Cat: Two Catch a Thief."

Wednesday, Oct. 11, 7 p.m. Books & Co. at the Greene — Astronaut Terry Virts will introduce his book "View From Above: An Astronaut Photographs the World."

Sunday, Oct. 15, 2:30 p.m., Wright Memorial Public Library, 1776 Far Hills Ave., Oakwood — Writers' Café, a casual hang out for writers ages 18 and up and of all experience levels, meets the first Friday (7:00 p.m.) and third Sunday (at 2:30) of each month. (Meets again Nov. 3, Nov. 19, Dec. 1, and Dec. 17.)

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