By Dorany Pineda
FROM: Los Angeles Times
Every driver stops for the cops and 18 wheelers
Until they loop the river Los Angeles,
Covered in concrete and buried under a stubborn scent of smog,
Last bloom of jacarandas and can’t squeeze a drop of rain until tomorrow.
So goes a verse from “Red Jasper” by Lynne Thompson, the new poet laureate of Los Angeles.
On Wednesday, Los Angeles Major Eric Garcetti honored Thompson, “a native Angeleno whose words tell stories, unite communities and open perspectives,” as the city’s head poet for the year 2021.
“Lynne is an acclaimed writer and outspoken force who uses words to tell stories, bring communities together, and open up new avenues of art and thinking,” Garcetti said in a news release. “Los Angeles is an international capital of creativity, a place for dynamic dreamers who shape global culture, ignite trends, and inspire — and I know Lynne will use her drive to show Angelenos and beyond the immense power of poetry.”
Thompson wrote the 2007 book “Beg No Pardon,” winner of the Perugia Press Prize and the Great Lakes Colleges Assn.’s New Writers Award, and the 2013 poetry selection “Start With a Small Guitar,” which poet David St. John called “a dazzling collection of love poems, wickedly wise and stitched with the darkest nuances of desire.” Her collection “Fretwork” was published in 2019. A recipient of the city’s 2015 Artist Fellowship, Thompson was also awarded the 2016 Stephen Dunn Poetry Prize and the 2017 Tucson Literary Award for poetry. Read Rest of Article Here

