Janine Pommy Vega reads.
Janine Pommy Vega (February 5, 1942 – December 23, 2010)[1] was an American poet associated with the Beats.
Vega grew up in Union City, New Jersey. At the age of fifteen, inspired by Jack Kerouac’s On the Road, she travelled to Manhattan to become involved in the Beat scene there.
In 1962, Vega moved to Europe with her husband, painter Fernando Vega. After his sudden death in Spain in 1965, she returned to New York, and then moved to California. Her first book, Poems to Fernando, was published by City Lights in 1968 as part of their City Lights Pocket Poets Series. During the early-1970s, Vega lived as a hermit on the Isla del Sol in Lake Titicaca on the Bolivian-Peruvuian border. Out of this self-imposed exile came Journal of a Hermit (1974) and Morning Passage (1976).
Following her return to the Americas, she has published more than a dozen books, including Tracking the Serpent: Journeys to Four Continents (1997) which is a collection of travel writings. Her last book of poetry was The Green Piano.[2]
In the 1970s, Vega began working as an educator in schools through various arts in education programs and in prisons through the Incisions/Arts organisation. She has served on the PEN Prison Writing Committee. Pommy Vega was a pioneer of the women’s movement in the United States. She had worked to improve the lives, conditions, and opportunities for women in prison. Vega had traveled throughout the North American and South American continents, all throughout Europe, including Eastern Europe, countries in the Middle East, often alone. She made friends everywhere, approaching all on the same, basic, human level, with love and compassion.
By 2006, Vega was living in Willow, New York, a small hamlet near Woodstock. She spent the last 11 years with poet Andy Clausen, tending her garden when she wasn’t traveling the world performing her magnetic and politically engaged poetry. She continued writing, performing, and working for human rights up to her death.
Never heard of her! Wow! I love the art of travel and its stories of adventure! “She made friends everywhere, approaching all on the same, basic, human level, with love and compassion.”–sounds like a true poet and enlightened individual.
I smiled when i read about the ‘Pocket Poet Series’ books by City Lights. We gotta get Lawrence Ferlinghetti on here too, some day! I love the idea of the ‘pocket book’ whose dimensions truly are ‘travel-worthy’, practical, personal, and like a bibliographic friend you can cozy up with in a chair in a corner by a window.
I appreciate the bio here–sounds like she had an extraordinary life and followed the beacon that fueled her life. Peace be with you!
I was lucky enough to meet her in Walla Walla. She had style for miles.