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HOST:
Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC -- VOA's radio magazine in Special English.
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This is Doug Johnson. On our program today,
We play music from the movie "Chicago" ...
Answer a listener's question about how American states were named ...
And report about a month-long celebration of poetry.
National Poetry Month
HOST:
April is National Poetry Month in the United States. The American Academy of Poets started the yearly observance in nineteen-ninety-six. People across the country organize and take part in many kinds of poetry activities. They include poets, booksellers, reading groups, teachers and librarians. Steve Ember has more.
ANNCR:
One goal of National Poetry Month is to show the importance of poetry in American culture. Other goals are to influence more Americans to read poetry, to increase the importance of teaching poetry in the schools and to increase support for poets and their work.
Throughout the month, thousands of bookstores, libraries and schools hold readings, workshops and other activities. One of these is the National Poetry Month Reading Series in New York City. On seven nights this month, groups will gather to hear and discuss the work of several poets. One of these poets is Charles Simic (SEE-mitch).
Charles Simic was born in Yugoslavia in nineteen-thirty-eight. He came to the United States as a teenager. He and his family lived in Chicago, Illinois. His first poems were published in nineteen-fifty-nine, when he was twenty-one years old. Now he is a professor of English at the University of New Hampshire in the northeastern United States.
Charles Simic has published more than sixty books of poetry in the United States and around the world. He has also published many translations of French, Serbian, Croatian, Macedonian and Slovenian poetry. He has won many awards for his work, including the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. And he has been honored by the MacArthur Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Here is an example of Charles Simic's work, a short poem called "Watermelons," read by Barbara Klein.
POETRY READER:
Green Buddhas
On the fruit stand.
We eat the smile
And spit out the teeth.
(From "Return to a Place Lit By a Glass of Milk," by Charles Simic, copyright 1974. Published by George Braziller. Used with permission.)