October Newsletter

News Flash! My story, Her/She/Me, won the Ginosko Literary Journal Flash Fiction Contest for 2025. Click on the link to the website, or you can read it on my social media pages.

Hello friends and family.

I am writing to you from the City of Roses where we love getting together for coffee, walking through our many parks, wandering down to the river, listening to music and much more. Portland is a great city brimming with energy and countless activities, contrary to what you might be hearing in the news or from our government. I have been writing, attending workshops, and hitting the streets to protest all that is wrong with our country. If you are interested in joining the resistance, go to 50501 (50 Protests. 50 States. 1 Movement.) or Indivisible to connect to local protests and national initiatives. None of us can afford to be silent.

As always, there are opportunities for writers, announcements of new books published, and more. Check out the hyperlinks for more information. And thanks for joining me on this journey. Please remember, if you have writing news to share, email me so I can mention your achievements and events in my newsletter. Stay in touch!
Talk soon, 

Margi

Where can you buy my books in Portland and beyond?

Upcoming Publications

  • The Songs of Summer: Poems about Baseball. “Everybody is a Mets Fan Today,” Tom Erickson, Ed Werstein, editors.
  • The Telephone Game is “a message, changing forms as it travels across the world from artist → artist.” This project has 1350 artists in more than 900 cities and 64 countries. The project will launch on October 10th with artist get-togethers. I will be joining the one in Portland.
  • Unbroken: A Reel Poetry Anthology. Pen and Leaf Press. “I Do Not Have to Be Good.”
  • Ginosko Literary Journal. Winner of the 2025 Flash Fiction Contest. “Her/She/Me”. The story is online and will appear in print. 
  • The Fringe 999 Poetry Forum. “Vision.” Issue 3.1 Laura Daniels, editor.

Upcoming Readings 

Newly added!  10/6/2025 Poetry Near and Afar. Oceanside Library Reading Series. Virtual. 7 pm EDT (4 pm PDT.) Free. “We are delighted to announce the return of Poetry Near & Afar! This series, started during lockdown in 2020, brings together poets from around the world. Poetry: Near & Afar, is an online poetry reading with two features: one from the NY area and one from “afar”. Features get 20 minutes and then we have an open mic (one non-epic-length poem, please!) Monday, we feature poets from Oregon and right here in Oceanside, New York.”

  • 11/7/2025 Calling All Poets. Virtual reading. 7 pm EDT. Follow the instructions on the website to register. There is a $5 admission fee ($4 if you are a member.) A generous open mic. Usually 5 minutes. Register for the virtual call ahead of time.  
  • 12/11/2025 Parkland Poets Open Mic Host. 6 pm PST (9 pm EST).
  • 01/08/2026 Parkland Poets Featured Reading. 6 pm PST (9 pm EST).
  • 4/14/26: Word Fest, St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 1428   22nd Ave, Longview, WA, 6:00-8:00 pm PDT. My first featured reading in the Pacific Northwest.

Podcasts and Videos

  • Ameerah Shabazz, editor of Whisper, Whisper, Shout, interviewed me for her When Women Speak podcast. Ameerah is an amazing poet, spoken word artist, visual artist, editor, and interviewer. This was a great conversation. I also had an opportunity to read a poem by Anita Nahal during the podcast, one of the 80+ contributors to the anthology, Subscribe to Ameerah’s podcast. Read the anthology. And share. (Click on this link to purchase the book: Whisper, Whisper, Shout.)
  • For Poetry of Protest and Struggle, September 1, 2025, I recorded my poem, “A Good Storyteller” (originally published in Poetry X Hunger and Mary Oliver’s  poem “Tecumseh.” Steve Bloom, curator and creator, wrote “Anyone who would like to participate in the Poetry of Protest and Struggle project we are projecting three videos per year, one every four months, and we are always looking for new voices. Send a sample of your work to steve@stevebloompoetry.net.”
  • The Italian American Writers Association (IAWA) hosted a virtual reading called “Share your Works in Progress.”  Amazing writers! I read a section of one chapter from my novel, very much in progress. 


Recent Publications

Mentions

Made new friends at the Italian American Writer’s Association reading, who recently published:

-and-

  • Life Aid 4 Palestine Performed by Do It Now (Paul Richmond (spoken word) & John Sheldon (harp guitar). Their remarkable piece was part of a whole afternoon of artists who donated their time to raise money and awareness for the genocide in Palestine at the Latchis Theatre in Brattleboro, VT.
  • Finally, my apologies to Paul Rabinowitz, whose book, Syncopated Rhythms, is being released on November 28, 2025, not 2026 as incorrectly noted in my last newsletter. Paul’s book is available for pre-order from Finishing Line Press.

August 2025 Newsletter

More of a list than a letter, between traveling to the coast and the mountains, seeing our children and grandbaby, going to farmer’s markets and parks, Alex and I have been busy and happy. We continue to set up our home, including our writing and art studios.  As always, there are opportunities for writers, new books published, and more. Check out the hyperlinks for more information. Thanks for joining me on this journey. Please remember, if you have writing news to share, email me so I can mention your achievements and events in my newsletter. Stay in touch!

  • In June, I read my poem, “Bras for Breasts,” with an amazing group of women to celebrate the publication of the International Women’s Writing Guild’s Write Forward anthology. This group of international writers were from Malta, Colombia, Spain, Germany, Greece, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; and in the U.S. from Martha’s Vineyard, New York City, Long Island, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Portland, Oregon (yours truly), and Longmont, Colorado.
  • I took part in the annual Bigfoot Poetry Festival in Portland and read at Powell’s Books for my first open mic in my new city. The organizers offered writing workshops. It was there I was introduced to slam, Portland style. There was a tournament with teams from Iowa, Utah, California, and Oregon. Alex and I attended the finals. What a great event!
  •  Poetry Superhighway is conducting its annual poetry contest, and I am one of many sponsors. Reasonable rate of $1 per poem to submit, and the money will be divided among the 3 award winners. Poets submitting work received something from the sponsors. I am giving away 4 books. 
  • And on a political note, I am joining up with Miller Street Indivisible in Portland to write postcards to get out the vote in New Jersey. If you want to know how that’s going, email me. I am always looking for opportunities to stand up and speak. This is What Democracy Looks Like!

Where can you buy my books in Portland and beyond?

Upcoming Publications

  • 2025, Baseball Anthology “Everybody is a Mets Fan Today,” Tom Erickson, Ed Werstein, editors.
  • The Telephone Game is “a message, changing forms as it travels across the world from artist → artist.” This project has 1247 artists who have completed their work, with around 350 in process. You can still join in by signing up here, but hurry, the submission portal will close soon. The project will launch on October 10th.

Upcoming Readings

  • 8/14/25: Italian American Writers Association, Share your Progress at All Open Mic. Free registration is required before the reading. Come and listen or join in! 6-8 pm EST; 3-5 pm PST.
  • 9/13/25: Sustained Resistance: Our Resilience time TBD, virtual, free
  • 11/7/2025 Calling All Poets. Virtual reading. Follow the instructions on the website to register. There is a $5 admission fee.
  • 4/14/26: WordFest, St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 1428-22nd Ave, Longview, WA, 6:00-8:00 pm PST. My first scheduled feature reading in the Pacific Northwest.

Workshops and Writing Groups in Portland A shout-out to groups I have been working with and/or joined since I got here. The writing community is welcoming and exciting. Look them up!

Mentions

Sad PostScript

  • The poet, Neil Silberblatt, passed away this month. He was the founder of Voices of Poetry, an 11,000- member Facebook group, and an avid promoter of the arts. Throughout his career, besides writing and performing his own poetry, he ran readings and featured poets in libraries, community centers, museums, and more, in New York, Massachusetts, and Connecticut for years. There is a GoFundMe donation site set up for his wife if you wish to help.
  • Albert Knutson passed away. He was the husband of Sharon Knutson, editor of the Storyteller Poetry Review. At Sharon’s request, someone set up a GoFundMe page to help support wildlife in Arizona, where she lives, as well as provide goods and services for Sharon. Albert and Sharon have been caring for the animals in the Sonora Desert, providing food and water, for 25 years.

June 2025 Newsletter

Here we are in Portland, Oregon. Happy to be in our new home. The newsletter has been inconsistent because of the move and moving and looking for a new home and everything that goes along with upending your life. 


In early June, I took part in the Hobart Festival for Women Writers in the Western Catskills. I led a workshop on using work experience to generate writing. You never know how a workshop will go, there are so many variables. The writers in my group were inspiring. We learned so much from each other. I visited with old friends and made new ones. 

In the meantime, I have tried to keep myself grounded in the world of all things writerly. Since we last connected, I read with Writers Speak Out: Words of Resilience poetry readingAn act of speaking out as resistance to injustices in the many forms it takes.  In April, Ameerah Shabazz-Bilal interviewed me for her podcast. We discussed my contribution to the anthology she edited and produced,Whisper, Whisper, Shout. And for Poetry Month, I completed two April Poetry month challenges: Elk River 30/30: A National Poetry Month Challenge and River Heron Review NaPoMo ’25. 


I submitted an audio poem to Telephone! Which is connecting artists worldwide. And like the game, someone whispers in your ear and you pass the message on. I received another artist’s contribution and responded in-kind. This “game” that takes a huge amount of organizing and organization is brilliant.

On the political front, which none of us can afford to ignore, I am keeping active with the local Portland groups and on a national level. The latest in a series of actions was the No Kings March. There are more protests to come. Heartwarming to see so many activists from around the country (and world) take part.  Remember, my friends, writing is an act of resistance. 

Thanks for joining me on this journey. Please remember, if you have writing news to share, send me an email so I can mention your successes in my newsletter. Stay in touch!


Upcoming Publications

  • 2025, Baseball Anthology “Everybody is a Mets Fan Today,” Tom Erickson, Ed Werstein, eds. 
  • National and International Goddess Anthology: Moving Forward Together! Women Educating and Inspiring Generations: “One of Many Secrets,” Debbie Tosun Kilday, ed. 
  • Poet Heroic: “When I Was 18, A Reflection So Many Years Later.”  Timothy Arliss O’Brien will read my poem and publish on their website and on Instagram, Bluesky, Facebook, and Tumblr (@thepoetheroic) on 7/25/25.
  • Shabdaguchha, “Collage of Misery,” Hassanal Abdullah, ed.


Recent Publications

If you are interested in submitting to these publications or to make a purchase, click on the hyperlinks.


Upcoming Readings

  • This one happening soon! 06/26/2025 Anthology Reading: Write ForwardInternational Women’s Writing Guild (IWWG). Register here to attend (free). Time: 12 pm-2 pm EST, 9 am -12 pm PST.
  • 11/7/2025 Calling All Poets. Virtual reading. Follow instructions on the website to register. $5 admission.


A Mention

Dynamite review of Rob Polner and Michael Tubridy’s, An Irish Passion for Justice: The Life of Rebel New York Attorney Paul O’Dwyer in USA Today. 


If you want to buy signed copies of Even the Dog Was Quiet and If There Is No Wind, you can purchase them through my Kofi site. They are $15 each, plus shipping and handling. There are discounts available for large quantities. Contact me for more info. Support independent publishers and writers by purchasing their books.

January/February 2025 Newsletter

Friends and family,

The big news since my last newsletter was that the Eyelands Book Awards named me a finalist for my book, Even the Dog Was Quiet. I was honored to be among five international poets. In the meantime, adventures await as Alex and I move westward and I concentrate on compiling a new book. 

If you are interested in attending the spoken word performances, reading the publications listed, or submitting your work to literary magazines, click on the hyperlinks provided. 

Meanwhile, my Ko-Fi site is up and running if you wish to buy signed copies of Even the Dog Was Quiet and If There Is No Wind from me. They are $15 each, plus shipping and handling. There are discounts available in my Ko-Fi shop for large quantity orders. Contact me for more information. Support independent publishers and writers by purchasing their books.

Best,

Margi

Upcoming Events (Events are free and in EST unless otherwise noted.)
1/27/2025 First Floor Walk Up, Feature. One and One, 76 E. 1st St. @ 1st Ave (take the F train to 2nd Ave. station), 7 pm. Wayne Kral, host. Reading with Penny Melis, Gerald Wagoner, & Marie Sabatino. 

02/01/2025 Allen Ginsberg 2024 Poetry AwardAnthology reading. The Hamilton Club, 32 Church St., Paterson, NJ at 1 pm. Accessible by elevator.

2/08/25 Poets House ShowcaseReading with other poets from the exhibition. The Poet’s House 29th Celebration showcases thousands of poetry publications: books, chapbooks, broadsides, and poetry-related nonfiction, published in 2022 and 2023. This exhibition includes Even the Dog Was Quiet and If There Is No Wind. They will place books in their permanent collection at the conclusion of this event. The reading begins at 4 pm.


02/13/2025, Parkland Poets, Feature. Open mic (2 min.) Virtual reading. 9:00-10:30 pm. I’ll be reading with Susan McCaslin and Hiram Lirew. 

06/06/25-06/08/25, Twelfth Annual Hobart Festival of Women WritersParticipating Poet. Hobart, N.Y., the Book Village of the Catskills.

11/7/2025 Calling All Poets. Virtual. More information to follow.

Recent and Upcoming Publications (If you are interested in submitting to these publications, check out the hyperlinks.)

Sharon Knutson featured my work on her Storyteller Poetry Review blog as the “Storyteller Poet of the Week.” Sharon hosts a writer every week highlighting their work. The poems included were “Fixer Upper,” “Inspired,” “Pine Scent,” “Starlight Serenade,” and “The Spirit in Sarah’s Clay.”

Fixed and Free Quarterly, “Enough is Enough,” “Phoenix is Falling,” and my review of In the Year of Hurricane Agnes by Michelle Reale (reprint), Billy Brown, editor. 

Voices in Italian Americana“I Excommunicated Myself at 12.”

Poetry of Protest and Struggle: January 1, 2025  I recorded “Crossing the Line” (originally in Panoply, A Literary Zine) for this video. Poetry selected and video compiled by Steve Bloom. Featured artists in this edition: Zigi Lowenberg, Gary Johnston, Michal Rubin, Basman Derawi, Chris Brandt, Katharine Beeman, Rayomnd Nat Turner, Ana Lopez-Betancourt, Margaret Sáraco, Wilfred Owen. If you would like to submit your work to “Poetry of Protest and Struggle,” send a sample to steve@stevebloompoetry.net.

The Opiate, “Ladder to Adulthood,” “Death, Then Grief,” and “I Try Not To Grow Old” to be published Spring, 2025.

Both of my books will travel on the Vagabond Poetry Caravan with Mark Lipman. He is going on a world poetry tour on a converted international school bus, “connecting people from all corners of the planet through arts, music and poetry as a Poetry Ambassador for Peace.” You can follow Mark (National Beat Poet Laureate for 2024-2025) and his bus on the website hyperlinked. 

Photos (clockwise from left to right): Paterson Literary Review Anthology Reading, the Alternative New Year’s Day Poetry Reading, IAWA’s Holiday Party at the Calandra Institute, Voices in Italian Americana flyer, Eyelands Book Award (Finalist) and Fixed and Free Quarterly. 

Congratulations to Friends and Family

There is always good news to share. If you have something to mention, drop me an email.

*Congratulations to Jessica Lewis on the publication of her book, The Poetry of Our Love . “… a collection of love poems that explores the many facets of love – its joy, its ache, and its transformative power. Jessica invites readers on a journey through the tender moments of falling in love, the bittersweet pain of loss, and the enduring beauty of connection. Whether you are seeking comfort or celebration, this book is a companion for every heart in search of meaning through love’s many expressions. You can follow Jessica on Instagram and Facebook at i_write_poems_jl.”

*Congratulations to my former colleague, Zetta B. Cool, on the launch of Ms. Blue Blazer Creative Director and Event Curation Service. (See her flyer below.) You can email her at msblueblazer@gmail.com.

December 2024 Newsletter

From the desk of Margaret R. Sáraco:

December 2024

Friends and family,

I am thrilled to have met so many new writers and friends this year and enjoyed much on professional and personal levels. Alex and I took a mini-vacation and spent a few days in Washington, D.C. going to some art museums. The visit, at times, was surreal as people we passed on the street discussed job insecurity and we wondered if the museums would lose funding over the next few years. What will 2025 bring? As a poet, I remind myself to live moment-to-moment while keeping a keen eye on the road ahead. 

Last Saturday, I took part in a workshop with Saida Agostini and 29 other writers at The Poetry Center at Passaic County Community College (Maria Mazziotti Gillan, founder). Saida centered the workshop around joy and love. In that spirit, passing on good news about my published work and readings including what some friends are doing. 

The big news? Even the Dog Was Quiet received a finalist nomination in the Eyelands Book Awards. I am both humbled and thankful. 

And, I have just set up a Ko-Fi site if you wish to buy signed copies of my books directly from me. They are $15 each, plus shipping and handling. There are discounts available in the shop. Contact me for more information.

It is still fall for a few weeks, but winter is approaching, and the holiday season is in full swing. Good wishes to all of you. Sending joy and love.

Best,

Margi

**P.S. Support independent publishers and writers by purchasing their books. **

Upcoming Events 

Events are free and in EST unless otherwise noted. Click the links for more information.

12/14/24-2/14/25 Poets House Showcase The Poet’s House 29th celebration showcases thousands of poetry publications: books, chapbooks, broadsides, and poetry-related nonfiction, published in 2022 and 2023. Even the Dog Was Quiet and If There Is No Windare included in the exhibition which will be on view during library hours. There are also readings scheduled. Check the website for more information.

12/15 Baithak (“informal gathering”) on South Asian Poetry and Prose. Discussion of poet and filmmaker, Nishi Chawla’s book of poetry, Random Circles of Belief (Human Error Publishing). Host: Anita Nahal. Panelists: K. Satchidanandan, Ashwani Kumar, and myself. 9 am EST. (7:30 pm in India). Topic: NishiChawla-PoetryBkDiscussion, Join Zoom Meeting, Meeting ID: 889 7097 9595, Passcode: 607745

12/15 Human Rights Day! Anthology Reading. Moonstone Arts. Host: Larry Robin, virtual, 2 pm. Register through the Moonstone Arts website.

And in 2025!

1/1/2025 The Alternative New Year’s Day Spoken Word/Performance Extravaganza at the Westbeth Community Arts Center, West Village, NYC. More information to follow. Start the year right, with a poetry marathon.

1/27/2025 First Floor Walk Up, One and One, 76 E. 1st St. @ 1st Ave (take the F train to 2nd Ave. station), 7-8 pm. Wayne Kral, host.

02/01/2025 Allen Ginsberg 2024 Poetry Award ReadingThe Hamilton Club, 32 Church St., Paterson, NJ. Time tbd.


02/13/2025, Parkland Poets, Feature. Open mic (2 min.) Virtual reading. 9:00-10:30 pm. 11/7/2025 Calling All Poets. Virtual. More information to follow.

Recent and Upcoming Publications

If you are interested in submitting to these publications, check out the hyperlinks.

Exit 13 Magazine, “Grand Central Ambassador,” Tom Plante, editor.

Fixed and Free Quarterly, “Enough is Enough,” “Phoenix is Falling,” and my review of In the Year of Hurricane Agnes by Michelle Reale (reprint), Billy Brown, editor. Anthologies will be available on Amazon after the publication date.

My review of One Day I am Field by Amy Small McKinney in Philadelphia Stories, Sarah van Clef, reviews editor.

The Fall edition of Platform Review is out! Congratulations to contributors Adina Kastner, Barbara Worton, Caroline Giovanie, Lisa “Rubi G.” Ventura, Michelle Ortega, Hannah Burns, Joe Del Castillo, Frank Rubino, Alberto Rodriguez, and Matthew Weisser. The PR team: poetry editors: myself & Mary Brancaccio; prose editors: Kristine Chung Salcedo & Shane Wagner; web development: Liz Hunt; operations: Meghan Hunt. An ARTS By The People publication; founder & executive director: Paul Rabinowitz.

“Obscurations,” “Natural Order of Things Resumes After a Summer Storm,” and “Eternal Hope” in The Nature of Our Times: Poems on America’s Lands, Waters, Wildlife and Other Natural Wonders (Poets for Science), Luisa A. Igloria, Aileen Cassinetto, and David Hassler, co-editors.

A review of Even the Dog Was Quiet appeared in Trampoline: A Journal of Poetry by Benjamin Schmitt.


Congratulations to Friends and Family

There is always good news to share. If you have something you’d like to mention, drop me an email.

This month’s congratulations include Podcasts, YouTube channels and blogs to check out. 

Adventures of the Baker’s Daughter: Rochelle Udell’s “web-memoir” with Barbara Worton. “Be the outsider. Be curious. Tell the truth. These are lessons to be learned from Rochelle Udell’s web-memoir — a personal and professional history of how to change your world by changing the way you see yourself.”

Dimitri Reyes YouTube Channel author of Papi Pichón, and Every First & Fifteenth. His videos showcase his performances, offers writing advice, and shares insight. 

let the dead in (Alan Squire Publishing) by Saida Agostini.

Paul Richmond, YouTube Channel publisher and founder of Human Error Publishing, New Generation Beat Poet Laureate (lifetime). Latest book, The Ice Cream Melted.

The Wildstory: A Podcast of Poetry and Plants by The Native Plant Society of New Jersey hosted by Ann E. Wallace, Former Poet Laureate of Jersey City. “Art and nature intercept in each episode to bring listeners inside the world of poetry about the natural world and to introduce them to other well-known voices from the world of ecology. This show challenges us all to think about our own relationship with nature.”

Writing the Land “Writing the Land is a collaborative outreach and fundraising project for land protection organizations. Through our anthologies, poets help raise awareness of the importance for land conservation.” Poem Video Podcast and Poem Videos on YouTube.

November 2024, Newsletter

While the leaves turn, so do the pages of my manuscripts. October was wonderful, reading with old friends and making new ones. However, the news on the political front has been devastating for many of us. While we try to make sense of a world turned inside out again, I ask myself, what can I do? I will not be silent (I rarely have) and will continue to be active in pursuit of justice on all fronts, whether through writing or taking it to the streets. In the meantime, reading and writing poetry and stories, and listening to writers read, bring comfort. 


I began October at Ray Cicetti’s Poetic Voices in Mountain Lakes, NJ, then found myself at Word Seed “Words Around the World” at the Great Fall’s Amphitheater for the Paterson Poetry Festival under the guidance of Talena Lachelle Queen, and Felicia Sherelle. ARTS By The People sponsored the Moving Words program, which screened poems-to-film at the Quad Cinema in Manhattan. Bobe Wu (film director and student at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts) and I won first place with my poem, “Dear Rorschach.” We were over the moon! You can watch all the Moving Words 2024 films on the ABTP website.


In November, I returned to Paterson and I read with many writers for the Paterson Literary Review #52 anthology, hosted by Maria Mazziotti Gillan on a gorgeous day. And, I just returned from the NJEA Teacher’s Convention in Atlantic City, where I met educational professionals from New Jersey. A personal welcome to all the newsletter subscribers from the convention. Special thanks to my lifelong partner and illustrator of Even the Dog Was Quiet, Alex Polner, who helped in every aspect of the show. 

As a climate activist, I wanted to bring attention to the virtual Climate Consciousness Summit 2024. I attended the free version last year. The summit runs from November 15th through the 21st sponsored by the Pocket Project Team. Speakers include poets, racial and environmental justice advocates, storytellers, scientists and healers. In their email, they wrote: “Whether you’re here to gain insights, build connections, or deepen your commitment to climate action, you’ll find ample opportunities to engage and contribute to meaningful dialogue. Together, we’ll reconnect to embodiment, earth and the emerging future for a new climate consciousness. We will equally hear directly from voices at the UN COP29 and communities on the frontlines of the climate crisis. We will overcome our sense of separation and understand how we can contribute towards a global healing movement.” 

Best, 

Margaret

Upcoming Events: Events are free and in EST unless otherwise noted. Click the links for more information.
11/14/2024, Parkland Poets. I will host this event. David Brydges, Diane Robitelle & Rena Joy are the featured poets. Open mic. Virtual reading. 9:00-10:30 pm (EST).

11/16/2024 Black Dog Books. Philippe R Hebert and I will sign books, which will also be available for purchase. 103 Route 15 South, Lafayette, NJ, 12 pm – 4:30 pm. 

12/07/2024 Brownstone Poetry Anthology Reading Hosts: Patricia Carragon and Roxanne Hoffman, virtual, 2 pm. $5 admittance fee.

12/15 Baithak (informal gathering): On South Asian Poetry and Prose. We will discuss poet and filmmaker Nishi Chawla’s book of poetry, Random Circles of Belief (Human Error Publishing). Host: Anita Nahal. Panelists: K. Satchidanandan, Ashwani Kumar, and myself. 10 am. (7:30 pm Indian time.)

And in 2025
1/1/2025 The Alternative New Year’s Day Spoken Word/Performance Extravaganza at the Westbeth Community Arts Center, West Village, NYC. More information to follow.

1/27/2025 First Floor Walk Up, One and One, 76 E. 1st St. @ 1st Ave (take the F train to 2nd Ave. station), 7-8 pm. Wayne Kral, host.

02/13/2025, Parkland Poets, Feature. Open mic (2 min.) Virtual reading. 9:00-10:30 pm. 11/7/2025 Calling All Poets. Virtual. More information to follow.

Recent and Upcoming Publications

  • Ovunque Siamo, reviewed gutter rainbows (Querencia Press) by Melissa Eleftherion.
  • Voices of Italian Americana: “I Excommunicated Myself at 12”
  • Meat for Tea, Looseleaf Volume 18, Issue 3: “Children with Backpacks” & “Teaching Fibonacci” 
  • Silver Birch Press published, Box of Sixty-Four in their All About My Mother series.  (Painting: CRAYOLA by Audrey Flack (1973). So many heart-warming poems included. One poem comes to your inbox daily if you sign up. The snapshot below is a photograph of my godmother Ruth, holding me with her husband and my godfather, Tom next to her. My mom is standing next to Ruth. 

Congratulations to Friends and Family

There is always good news to share. If you have something you’d like me to mention, drop me an email.

Edna Shochat’s, Decent Exposure: Poems (Poetica Mea). Edna will read with Poetry: Near & Far, Host: Tony Iovino, on 12/2/24. Zoom link. 7 pm. 

Cathy Longano, is a children’s book author I met at the NJEA convention. Her book, Meatballs Mixed-Up Moods, is for the 4+ age group with an activity book. 

Tell Me a Story About This Crazy World Called High School: A Survival Guide for Adolescence by Mrs. D., illustrated by Tara Balboa, a self-help book from an author I met at the NJEA Convention.


Jennifer Juneau, host of the Phoenix Poetry Open Mic in NYC, published Maze (Roadside Press), a collection of short stories. 


Louise Polner, my mother-in-law, exhibited her paintings and collages at a multi-genre art show at Bristal Assisted Living in Jericho, New York. We were thrilled to support her and attend the show. Congrats!

October 2024 Newsletter

What a wonderful month October has been both personally and professionally. I celebrated my two-year anniversary on September 27th of If There Is No Wind and on October 17th Even the Dog Was Quiet will turn one.  If you find yourself in Mountain Lakes NJ, Paterson, NJ or NYC it would be great to see you at one of my readings. 

Hope to see you soon.

Upcoming Events  (Events are free unless otherwise noted.)

  • 10/12/2024, Paterson Poetry Festival: Words Around the World. Host: Talena Lachelle Queen. Great Falls Amphitheater at 72 McBride Ave. Paterson, NJ, within the Great Falls National Park. My reading begins at 1 pm. The event goes from 1 to 4 pm. There are many events the organizers are holding throughout October in Paterson. 
  • 10/27/24, WordShed NYC.  Host: Leah Elimeliah, at P & T Knitwear, 180 Orchard St, NYC. Featured reading (with Paul Rabinowitz.) Sunday, 5:00-7:00 pm.
  • 11/14/2024, Parkland Poets. I will host this event. Ron Bremner, David Brydges, & Rena Joy are the featured poets. Open mic. Virtual reading. 9:00-10:30 pm (EST).
  • 11/16/2024 Black Dog Books. Philippe R Hebert and I will be signing books, which will also be available for purchase. 103 Route 15 South, Lafayette, NJ, 12 pm – 4:30 pm. 
  • 01/09/24, Parkland Poets, Feature. Open mic. Virtual reading. 9:00-10:30 pm.

Recent and Upcoming Publications

  • “Enough is Enough” and “Phoenix is Falling, April 2010” (Fixed and Free Quarterly: December 2024 issue.) Journal available on Amazon, once published.
  • Over the summer, my poem, “Confrontation Rant” appeared in the Hobart Festival of Women Writers literary journal, NOW.
  • “Glen Falls, NY 1979” Poetry is Dead Anthology, Volume II. My poem, “Eyes of the World,” appeared in volume I. Thrilled to have another Dead poem published in volume II. 

CONGRATULATIONS TO FRIENDS AND FAMILY!

There is always good news to share, if you have something you’d like me to mention, drop me an email.

  • Many poetry friends are taking part in the Dodge Poetry Festival this year that takes place in Newark, NJ from October 17-19th.
  • Congratulations to ARTS By The People, who just celebrated their 15th anniversary! Kudos to Paul Rabinowitz, Founder and Executive Director, and all the good people at the organization that make the programming at ABTP possible. 
  • Pre-orders are available for Theta Pavis’ chapbook, The Red Strobe (Finishing Line Press). Congratulations Theta!

Happy Summer!

Margaret R. Sáraco’s June Newsletter, 2024
I am back in town, having traveled to Portland, Oregon, Port Hadlock, Washington, Mason, Ohio and Hobart, New York for several weeks. Alex and I had a blast, whether we were scoping out a new place to live, taking part in a writing festival or visiting our glorious children and their partners.


The Eleventh Annual Hobart Festival of Women Writers celebrated women and literature. My workshop, “Writing the Politics of Climate Change into Poetry” was a success. Grand to write and experience the festival alongside friends Linda Mead, Toma Zbrizher, Ysabel Gonzalez, Esther Cohen, Kathy Kremins, and Leslie Neustadt and to meet so many engaging writers. I am already looking forward to next year. 

Mom Egg Review just published my review of Genevieve Bett’s excellent poetry collection, A New Kind of Tongue (FlowerSong Press).

I was out of town for the book launch for the Lips 2024 reading, but I heard it was a resounding success. 


On the day I was scheduled to feature with Martin Farawell at Poetry at the Barn, the weather was steamy, but host Karen Lee Ramos kept us cool by offering a big bowl of strawberries and ice cubes. Again, old and new friends attended. Some met at virtual readings, so these were our first in-person hellos.


EVENTS

Settled in again and back to writing in Montclair, I wanted to let you know about some upcoming events.


Brownstone Poets, Saturday, June 29 at 2 pm ET, on Zoom, pre-registration required

Featured readers: Margaret Saraco, Jada Gordon, and Ron Bremner Plus, a limited open mic. 

Please follow the directions below, completing both steps at least two days before the reading to avoid delays entering the meeting room. Note the order of the open mic follows the order of signup. The cutoff for Zoom access for an open mic slot is noon on 6/29/24. Late registrants are not guaranteed Zoom access to join the open but will receive a link to watch the reading live-streamed on YouTube. 


Instructions:

Step 1: Make your $5 contribution. (Your contribution is not refundable.)

Step 2: Register in advance for this meeting.

Step 3: After making your contribution and completing your registration, you will receive a confidential confirmation email containing your unique link to join the event.


New York Poetry Festival with the Italian American Writers Association, Sun., July 14 @ 2:30, Feature. Nolan Park, Governor’s Island, NYC. The 2-day festival runs from 11-6pm on 7/13 & 7/14. The festival is free but advance registration is suggested. Governor’s Island is accessible by ferry from Manhattan and Brooklyn. I’ve never been to the island; you may have to reserve a spot on the ferry. 


WordShed NYCAug. 25, 2024, Feature. Host: Leah Elimeliah, 180 Orchard Street, NYC. Reading with Paul Rabinowitz. Time, tbd.

JUST ADDEDNJEA Convention Nov. 7 & 8 2024. I will be in Author’s Alley selling and signing my books in the Exhibit Hall at the Atlantic City Convention Center, at the New Jersey Education Association Convention. You must be a member of NJEA to attend.

If you wish to purchase either If There Is No Wind or Even the Dog Was Quiet from me directly, let me know. You can purchase books online at most bookstores. I am booking features into next fall. Please reach out if you are looking for readers. Also, if anyone is interested in reviewing either of my books, let me know of your interest and I can ship you a review copy. Remember to post reviews on Amazon, Barnes and Noble Bookshop and GoodReads for writers. It helps.

CONGRATULATIONS TO FRIENDS AND FAMILY

Alex Polner is exhibiting artwork in the 23rd Annual Gaelen Juried Art Show & Sale (West Orange, NJ) through July 28th. Two pieces are also being exhibited in the Art Centre of Riker Hill member’s show at the Livingston Senior/Community Center (204 Hillside Ave, Livingston, NJ) through the end of July.

Sam Roberts interviewed Rob Polner on New York Times Close Up about the biography he co-wrote with Michael Tubirdy, titled An Irish Passion for Justice, The Life of Rebel New York Attorney Paul O’Dwyer (Three Hills).

Carlos Ramos is exhibiting some of his artwork at Spiro Harrison & Nelson, in “Colors Galore.” (363 Bloomfield Ave, 2nd floor, Montclair, NJ: entrance in the back of the building.)

June is Bustling with Poetry

There are 3 events happening in June that I am participating in. Come and join if you can!

Hobart Festival of Women Writers, June 7, 8, and 9

Join the Hobart Festival of Women Writers 2024 for a weekend of inspirational literary Workshops! Secure your spot for a transformative experience!  More information at hobartfestivalofwomenwriters.com #WomenWriters #LiteraryWorkshops #HobartFestival. Esteemed leaders include:

  • Esther Cohen** offers a **Good Stories Intensive**, dissecting masterful narratives and discussing writing techniques.
  • Nancy Agabian** leads **Shifting Perspectives / Point of View**, exploring alternative narrations inspired by authors like bell hooks.
  • Lynne Elizabeth** shares secrets in **What Publishers Need**, with insights into crafting compelling pitch letters.
  • Cheryl J. Fish** presents **Writing the Abecedarian**, encouraging creativity through alphabetical order poetry.
  • Mary Johnson** explores transcendental experiences in writing with **The Naughty Nun**.
  • Linda Lowen** provides insider knowledge on the publishing process in **Understanding What “They” are Looking For**.
  • Natalia Molebatsi** enlivens poetry in **Enlivening the Inner Self in Poetry**, using personal narratives.
  • Stephanie Nikolopoulos** focuses on **Crafting the Right Narrator for Your Story**, experimenting with different perspectives.
  • Elisabeth Nonas** encourages a nurturing writing habit in **Practice Makes Perfect**.
  • Bertha Rogers** delves into **The Art of Crafting Limericks**, teaching this classic poetic form.
  • Margaret Saraco** combines poetry and activism in **Writing the Politics of Climate Change into Poetry**.
  • Jane Schulman** reflects on war’s complexities in **WRITING IN RESPONSE TO WAR**.
  • Lisa Wujnovich** explores poetic language in conflict with **High Conflict Poetry Workshop**.

Poetry at the Barn, June 23 at 2 pm

Please join us for an afternoon of poetry featuring Priscilla Orr, Martin Farawell & Margaret Saraco followed by an open mic & refreshments. Attend just to listen or sign up to read, everyone’s welcome! POETRY at the BARN is located in the historic Carriage Barn Gallery of Ringwood State Pk, 1304 Sloatsburgh RD, Ringwood NJ 07456. For questions email RMAApoetry@yahoo.com. Sponsored by @ringwoodmanorarts #poetry #poetryreading #poetryatthebarn

Brownstone Poets, Saturday June 29 at 2 pm ET

Our featured readers are: Margaret Saraco, Jada Gordon, Ron Bremner plus a limited open mic.

Your $5 contribution keeps our annual anthology in print. Hosted by Patricia Carragon, our Brooklyn girl and Editor-in-Chief. Please follow the directions below, completing both steps at least two days before the reading to avoid delays entering the meeting room. Note the order of the open mic follows the order of signup. Sign up early to read early in the program. Last-minute signup means you will read at the end of the program. The cutoff for Zoom access for an open mic slot Is noon the day of reading. After noon, late registrants are not guaranteed Zoom access to join the open but will receive a link to watch the reading live-streamed on YouTube:

  • Step 1: Make your $5 contribution: https://bit.ly/3bkqFmO (Contributions are non-refundable.)
  • Step 2: Register in advance for this meeting: https://bit.ly/3hnpy8D
  • Step 3: After making your contribution and completing your registration, you will receive a confidential confirmation email containing your unique link to join the event.