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Showing posts with label libraries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label libraries. Show all posts

Sunday, May 18, 2025

DELUSION

by Jocelyn Ajami


AI-generated graphic by NightCafé for The New Verse News.


In the libraries of distortion
eyes blur mites with dust

they scan empty racks 
like x-rays of aging spines

the shelves bend and tilt 
from the heft of books

once held with reverence
tossed out like easy trash 

In the libraries of distortion
mirrors line the walls 

from ceiling to floor, multiplying
a gleaming buzz

that binges on translucence—
Narcissus on steroids— 

In the libraries of distortion
there are no chairs, tables

or stools, only beds
that glitter, bearing pallid 

corpses, ensured 
a good read on life


Jocelyn Ajami is a painter, filmmaker and poet. She turned to writing poetry in 2014 as a way of connecting more intimately with issues of social conscience and cultural awareness. She has been published in various anthologies of prize winning poems and has been nominated for Pushcart and Touchstone awards.

Wednesday, April 02, 2025

CALLING OUT THE NUMBERS

by Sharon Olson


DOGE Has Decimated the Institute of Museum and Library Services —artnet, March 31, 2025


In some retellings the Library of Alexandria
was burned by Julius Caesar, accidentally,
a casualty of war.

No accident the flashlights of the Doge,
peering with damning light, threatening
the rolled-up scrolls sitting pretty
next to 21st-century flash drives.

I can think of Dewey numbers 
the Great Leader would not like: 
sexual relations both gay and straight, 
301.424, public measures to prevent 
disease, 614.5, the library as refuge 
for the homeless, 362.5, Palestine 
and Israel shelved together, 956.94, 
even something so benign
as 351.1, federal jobs.

Not a bad idea to digitize, lest the temperature
rise to Fahrenheit 451, and only an AI librarian
available to operate the hose.


Sharon Olson is a retired California librarian who now lives in Annapolis, Maryland. Her book The Long Night of Flying was published by Sixteen Rivers Press in 2006. Her second book Will There Be Music? was published by Cherry Grove Collections in 2019.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

ALLAHU AKBAR, GOD IS GREAT

by Zeina Azzam



A group that said it was affiliated with Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attacks on the two mosques in San’a, where suicide bombers detonated explosives just after noon as people gathered for midday prayers, local security officials said. When survivors fled, a second pair of bombs exploded outside the mosques, killing more people. By evening, the official death toll had risen to 135. —WSJ, March 20, 2015




They've made it so there is no room for me,

she said defeatedly, like an old building
about to be torn down.



The spectrum of Greatness is now a narrow alleyway
in ancient San'a or Kabul. Few may pass.

Guns the price.



They've elbowed out the ones
whose crescent shines on the courts and libraries,

schools and shelters.



How do we make room in this crazy world.
How do we make the world believe that this is not

what we believe.


Zeina Azzam is a Palestinian-American educator and writer. She works as executive director of The Jerusalem Fund in Washington, DC.