Jeannine Hall Gailey's Blog, page 88
December 8, 2012
Colleen McElroy reading, Christmas Parties, and a Family Visit
Well, I managed to make it though the Poet Laureate Event on Thursday night (a panel on e-publishing which was pretty well-received, I thought) AND get out the next day and go to both a poetry reading and Glenn's corporate Christmas party! And today we're cleaning and cooking in preparation for my little brother's visit from where he's living in Chiang Mai, Thailand. We're making Osso Bucco and cranberry meringue pies, braised endive and mashed potatoes.
Here's a little pic of me with Colleen McElroy at Open Books, who read from her latest book, Here I Throw Down My Heart. She's been having some health issues, but she looked and sounded terrific - if she hadn't mentioned it, I would never have known. I was really glad to be there. Colleen is a wonderful, courageous writer and person. Really generous.
And this is a little picture of Glenn and I all dolled up for the night with our Christmas tree in the background. Glenn's work party had lovely gluten-free dishes this year, and a band, in comparison to totally cutting the holiday party last year, so maybe his company is doing a little better? One can hope. Maybe it's a good sign for the economy. Anyway, I had fun and even was tempted to get on the dance floor...
Here's a little pic of me with Colleen McElroy at Open Books, who read from her latest book, Here I Throw Down My Heart. She's been having some health issues, but she looked and sounded terrific - if she hadn't mentioned it, I would never have known. I was really glad to be there. Colleen is a wonderful, courageous writer and person. Really generous.
And this is a little picture of Glenn and I all dolled up for the night with our Christmas tree in the background. Glenn's work party had lovely gluten-free dishes this year, and a band, in comparison to totally cutting the holiday party last year, so maybe his company is doing a little better? One can hope. Maybe it's a good sign for the economy. Anyway, I had fun and even was tempted to get on the dance floor...
Published on December 08, 2012 11:52
December 3, 2012
A Long December, a few bits of news, and a panel on poetry and technology
Yes, it's already December. The solstice with its apocalyptic overtones is creeping nearer. I watched the disturbing apocalypse-by-water movie Beasts of the Southern Wild recently, which reminded me alternately of Miyazaki's Ponyo and Princess Mononoke, but Miyazaki manages to make his apocalypses slightly less depressing. A lot of my recent poems have end-of-the-world-type references in them, I've noticed, and I believe the YA section of the local Barnes and Nobles is nothing but apocalyptic dystopias now. Margaret Atwood should be watching her back!
The Winter 2012 issue of Rattle is here, with a special section of speculative poetry, which I'm happy to be part of. The poem, "Elemental," is part of my "Robot Scientist's Daughter" manuscript. Also present in the spec section are Kristin Berkey-Abbott, Deborah P. Kolodji, Noel Sloboda and Lesley Wheeler, among others. Definitely worth a winter's night read.
Thanks to The Pinch journal, which nominated another poem from that same MS, "Lessons in Poison" for a Pushcart. I am always thankful for these little boosts, even though I know the chances of actually getting into the Pushcart anthology are slim.
As I prepare for next year's Unexplained Fevers book launch, I realize I am already a bit behind the eight ball on scheduling readings. How is that possible? Also, setting up a book is even more complicated now than it was a couple of years ago - there are more social media options (and therefore responsibilities,) more e-book options, more places for us to remember to set up for review. I have to redo my web site to look a little bit more modern and reflect the mood of the new book (wintry fairy tale landscape?)
So, if you're interested in how technology is affecting poets, from e-book publishing to social media use for poets, and you live around Seattle, come out to this Thursday's panel on Poetry and Technology, hosted by me at the Redmond Library and featuring special guests (and e-book publishers) Kelli Russell Agodon and Annette Spaulding-Convy. More here!
The Winter 2012 issue of Rattle is here, with a special section of speculative poetry, which I'm happy to be part of. The poem, "Elemental," is part of my "Robot Scientist's Daughter" manuscript. Also present in the spec section are Kristin Berkey-Abbott, Deborah P. Kolodji, Noel Sloboda and Lesley Wheeler, among others. Definitely worth a winter's night read.
Thanks to The Pinch journal, which nominated another poem from that same MS, "Lessons in Poison" for a Pushcart. I am always thankful for these little boosts, even though I know the chances of actually getting into the Pushcart anthology are slim.
As I prepare for next year's Unexplained Fevers book launch, I realize I am already a bit behind the eight ball on scheduling readings. How is that possible? Also, setting up a book is even more complicated now than it was a couple of years ago - there are more social media options (and therefore responsibilities,) more e-book options, more places for us to remember to set up for review. I have to redo my web site to look a little bit more modern and reflect the mood of the new book (wintry fairy tale landscape?)
So, if you're interested in how technology is affecting poets, from e-book publishing to social media use for poets, and you live around Seattle, come out to this Thursday's panel on Poetry and Technology, hosted by me at the Redmond Library and featuring special guests (and e-book publishers) Kelli Russell Agodon and Annette Spaulding-Convy. More here!
Published on December 03, 2012 07:00
November 25, 2012
Shopping List? A few recommended Poetry Books of 2012
If you are looking for poetry books from 2012 to buy as gifts (or for yourself) I do have just a few must-buys and recommendations. It's always hard to pick exactly what I enthusiastically endorse each year, because I get so many books as a reviewer, and so many of them are worthy of praise. However, these are books I have read closely, already given to others myself, and can truly say - this book was a great read more than once! So, this is a short list, I'm leaving out a ton of other great poetry books, but rest assured these would all be great books to give as gifts or keep for yourself.
Yes, I'm including links to these books on Amazon, with the caveat that if you can buy them directly from the publisher or from your local independent bookstore (Seattle's Open Books is a nice place that I'd like to see stay open!) that is probably the best way to support your publishers and bookstores.
Annette Spaulding-Convy's In Broken Latin
I blurbed this book but I've been a fan of it (reading it in different iterations) for years. Annette writes with compassion, grace, and a surprisingly sharp and humorous eye about her experiences as a nun. This is not your grandmother's nun poetry - expect a wonderbra or two flying at you from these pages. I can genuinely say Annette is not only a friend but probably one of the best poets I've ever read. You will not regret buying this book.
Juliana Gray's Roleplay
This book of poetry has "geek cred" written all over it. You can read my review up at The Rumpus (http://therumpus.net/2012/10/roleplay-by-juliana-gray/) but suffice it to say that if you enjoy any combination of formal poetry, zombies, and Hitchcock trivia, you will enjoy this book. Juliana's poetry is funny and smart and the kind of "gateway drug" that will get your comic-loving little brother to believe that poetry can be fun.
Kathleen Flenniken's Plume
It's not every book about America's nuclear history that you can say: the author has actually lived that history. Kathleen worked at Hanford as an engineer, her father worked at Hanford, and she grew up in Richland cheering on teams with names like "The Bombers." (For sci-fi geeks, a little trivia: Orson Scott Card was also born in Richland, WA.) This book is an amazing and dynamic combination of history of the Manhattan Project, Memoir, and Poetry. This is one book of poetry I could give to my engineer father that he actually read and enjoyed. (My formal review of the book is up at The Rumpus: http://therumpus.net/2012/05/lie-down-patriot-dont-ask/)
Eduardo Corral's Slow Lightning
Sure, he's everybody's literary darling now, and his book won the Yale Younger Poets Prize, etc..but Eduardo has been writing insanely good lyric poetry for years now. He's one of those poets I was begging other poets to read the minute I after I read his first poem seven or eight years ago. Besides some sensitive and keen-eyed tributes to his mother and father - those are my favorites in the book - Eduardo manages to address issues of immigration, sexuality, language, and being the "other" in a way that few other poets could pull off. (Not for anyone who would be put off by a blow job reference or three - these are definitely poems for adults.)
Also want to give a shout-out to: Poet's Market 2013, a must-have for aspiring and beginning poets and Anything from Kitsune Books: This wonderful small publisher is closing at the end of the year due to the editor/publisher's serious illness. Please go and buy a title before they go away and do what you can to support them- http://www.kitsunebooks.com/catalog-genre.html. I know you won't be disappointed with any of their poetry books, but they also have Young Adult, Geek-friendly lit crit, and fiction.
Yes, I'm including links to these books on Amazon, with the caveat that if you can buy them directly from the publisher or from your local independent bookstore (Seattle's Open Books is a nice place that I'd like to see stay open!) that is probably the best way to support your publishers and bookstores.
Annette Spaulding-Convy's In Broken Latin
I blurbed this book but I've been a fan of it (reading it in different iterations) for years. Annette writes with compassion, grace, and a surprisingly sharp and humorous eye about her experiences as a nun. This is not your grandmother's nun poetry - expect a wonderbra or two flying at you from these pages. I can genuinely say Annette is not only a friend but probably one of the best poets I've ever read. You will not regret buying this book.
Juliana Gray's Roleplay
This book of poetry has "geek cred" written all over it. You can read my review up at The Rumpus (http://therumpus.net/2012/10/roleplay-by-juliana-gray/) but suffice it to say that if you enjoy any combination of formal poetry, zombies, and Hitchcock trivia, you will enjoy this book. Juliana's poetry is funny and smart and the kind of "gateway drug" that will get your comic-loving little brother to believe that poetry can be fun.
Kathleen Flenniken's Plume
It's not every book about America's nuclear history that you can say: the author has actually lived that history. Kathleen worked at Hanford as an engineer, her father worked at Hanford, and she grew up in Richland cheering on teams with names like "The Bombers." (For sci-fi geeks, a little trivia: Orson Scott Card was also born in Richland, WA.) This book is an amazing and dynamic combination of history of the Manhattan Project, Memoir, and Poetry. This is one book of poetry I could give to my engineer father that he actually read and enjoyed. (My formal review of the book is up at The Rumpus: http://therumpus.net/2012/05/lie-down-patriot-dont-ask/)
Eduardo Corral's Slow Lightning
Sure, he's everybody's literary darling now, and his book won the Yale Younger Poets Prize, etc..but Eduardo has been writing insanely good lyric poetry for years now. He's one of those poets I was begging other poets to read the minute I after I read his first poem seven or eight years ago. Besides some sensitive and keen-eyed tributes to his mother and father - those are my favorites in the book - Eduardo manages to address issues of immigration, sexuality, language, and being the "other" in a way that few other poets could pull off. (Not for anyone who would be put off by a blow job reference or three - these are definitely poems for adults.)
Also want to give a shout-out to: Poet's Market 2013, a must-have for aspiring and beginning poets and Anything from Kitsune Books: This wonderful small publisher is closing at the end of the year due to the editor/publisher's serious illness. Please go and buy a title before they go away and do what you can to support them- http://www.kitsunebooks.com/catalog-genre.html. I know you won't be disappointed with any of their poetry books, but they also have Young Adult, Geek-friendly lit crit, and fiction.
Published on November 25, 2012 09:23
November 22, 2012
Black Friday Poetry Deals!
In case you're in the mood to shop - for poetry!
Black Friday through Cyber Monday, get a special deal - receive both of my books ( Becoming the Villainess and She Returns to the Floating World with free (Domestic) shipping and a free gift (surprise!) for $20! Remember, She Returns to the Floating World is about to go out of print at the end of December, so get your copy now! To get this deal, e-mail me at jeannine dot gailey at live dot com with the subject line "Black Friday Poetry."
Black Friday through Cyber Monday, get a special deal - receive both of my books ( Becoming the Villainess and She Returns to the Floating World with free (Domestic) shipping and a free gift (surprise!) for $20! Remember, She Returns to the Floating World is about to go out of print at the end of December, so get your copy now! To get this deal, e-mail me at jeannine dot gailey at live dot com with the subject line "Black Friday Poetry."
Published on November 22, 2012 23:08
November 20, 2012
Happy Thanksgiving Week - Is it really almost December?
OK, I know everyone probably says this every year, but Oh my God how did it get to be almost December? Have I been asleep in some sort of time machine? Is everyone else ready for the holidays now? Because I am not. Yesterday there was flooding around town, some downed tree branches, but nothing big enough to use as a Christmas tree.
Thanksgiving will mean Osso Bucco and crustless cranberry meringue pies this year. We're adjusting to my new dietary restrictions and plus, meals made in a Dutch oven rule for going out to the movies on Thanksgiving! (James Bond perhaps? Why isn't The Hobbit out yet?)
I actually felt really good about the last Redmond Poet Laureate event, Kathleen Flenniken's reading (for a summary and pictures here: http://redmondpoetry.blogspot.com/2012/11/kathleen-flennikens-redmond-reading-and.html) and loved meeting people interested in poetry. I mean, maybe I feel like I'm starting to have a little bit of a community out here in the tech-center-outskirts of Seattle. Yes, I might even say I feel optimistic. I'm looking forward to Kelli and Annette's talk on December 6th on E-publishing and social media for poets at Redmond Library (7 PM.) Did I mention how great our library system is? Well, I feel thankful for that too.
I'm starting to get a little nervous/stressed/excited about getting all the book stuff for Unexplained Fevers ready by the end of December for a spring launch with New Binary Press - like, getting a new author photo, working with the artist to get cover art, starting to (eek!) think about setting up readings for the new book next year. Maybe a book trailer? (I do not currently have the skills to make a book trailer, so if you ever see one, it's because someone helped me out. Maybe more than one person.) I may work with a PR service for the book this time around (YouDoPR is a very affordable PR service that is creating services for poets!) This is all new territory for me. Does having a book coming out seem lie it requires a lot more skills than it used to? But I am so thankful to have a publisher and a publishing date for this book.
So Happy Thanksgiving, you guys, however you celebrate, I hope you are warm and safe and loved. I'm going to decorate for Christmas early this year. We don't have much money to spend - paying mortgages and car repairs and such has really curtailed our usual spending festivities - but we can start the celebration whenever we want.
Thanksgiving will mean Osso Bucco and crustless cranberry meringue pies this year. We're adjusting to my new dietary restrictions and plus, meals made in a Dutch oven rule for going out to the movies on Thanksgiving! (James Bond perhaps? Why isn't The Hobbit out yet?)
I actually felt really good about the last Redmond Poet Laureate event, Kathleen Flenniken's reading (for a summary and pictures here: http://redmondpoetry.blogspot.com/2012/11/kathleen-flennikens-redmond-reading-and.html) and loved meeting people interested in poetry. I mean, maybe I feel like I'm starting to have a little bit of a community out here in the tech-center-outskirts of Seattle. Yes, I might even say I feel optimistic. I'm looking forward to Kelli and Annette's talk on December 6th on E-publishing and social media for poets at Redmond Library (7 PM.) Did I mention how great our library system is? Well, I feel thankful for that too.
I'm starting to get a little nervous/stressed/excited about getting all the book stuff for Unexplained Fevers ready by the end of December for a spring launch with New Binary Press - like, getting a new author photo, working with the artist to get cover art, starting to (eek!) think about setting up readings for the new book next year. Maybe a book trailer? (I do not currently have the skills to make a book trailer, so if you ever see one, it's because someone helped me out. Maybe more than one person.) I may work with a PR service for the book this time around (YouDoPR is a very affordable PR service that is creating services for poets!) This is all new territory for me. Does having a book coming out seem lie it requires a lot more skills than it used to? But I am so thankful to have a publisher and a publishing date for this book.
So Happy Thanksgiving, you guys, however you celebrate, I hope you are warm and safe and loved. I'm going to decorate for Christmas early this year. We don't have much money to spend - paying mortgages and car repairs and such has really curtailed our usual spending festivities - but we can start the celebration whenever we want.
Published on November 20, 2012 22:43
November 17, 2012
Washington State Poet Laureate Kathleen Flenniken visits Redmond!
Today I have the chance as Poet Laureate of Redmond to host the Poet Laureate of the whole state of Washington, Kathleen Flenniken, as she reads at Redmond Library from her new book, Plume, at 3 PM. Afterwards I'll host a short Q&A, and we'll serve refreshments, and Kathleen will sign books! I'm really looking forward to hearing Kathleen read poems from Plume again - this is one of my favorite books of 2012 - I liked it so much I bought one for myself and one for my father!
It's a stormy day out, perfect for curling up with a good book at the library, so come by if you can! (Refreshments include sea-salt-and-cocoa-dusted almonds and peppermint-chocolate cookies...)
It's a stormy day out, perfect for curling up with a good book at the library, so come by if you can! (Refreshments include sea-salt-and-cocoa-dusted almonds and peppermint-chocolate cookies...)
Published on November 17, 2012 06:39
November 13, 2012
Unexplained Fevers Goes to Ireland – Book Announcement for 2013!!
I am grateful and happy to announce that Unexplained Fevers, my third book, will be coming out in the Spring of 2013 from New Binary Press, a wonderful new press from Ireland with an anthology coming out at the end of the year! The book will be distributed overseas and over here – my first International escapade! And there will (hopefully) be a wonderful book party and you will all be invited!
If you’d like to know more, follow this link:http://newbinarypress.com/jeannine_hall_gailey.htmlAnd if you’d like to follow this new press on twitter (that’s how I found them – Margaret Atwood herself twittered about them!) then use @NewBinaryPress and you can sign up for their mailing list at their site (www.newbinarypress.com.)
Here are two blurbs about the book:
Unexplained Fevers plucks the familiar fairy tale heroines and drops them into alternate landscapes. Unlocking them from the old stories is a way to “rescue the other half of [their] souls.” And so Sleeping Beauty arrives at the emergency room, Red Riding Hood reaches the car dealership, and Rapunzel goes wandering in the desert - their journeys, re-imagined in this inventive collection of poems, produce other dangers, betrayals and nightmares, but also bring forth great surprise and wonder.
- Rigoberto González, author of Black Blossoms
Unexplained Fevers begins with that most familiar of phrases, “Once upon a time,” but the world we find inside these covers is deeply defamiliarized. Trapped by physical ills, cultural expectations, and the constraints of marriage, these heroines interrogate the world and propel themselves through it with cunning and sass. We follow, for example, Jack and Jill though a prose poem where they “somehow turned thirty without thunderous applause,” after having sworn they “would follow each other anywhere, but anywhere turned out to be a lot like Ohio.” At the center of these poems - urgent, mysterious, evocative - we find the great topic of all fairy tales, transformation. Read Unexplained Fevers, and be transformed.
- Beth Ann Fennelly, author of Unmentionables
Published on November 13, 2012 06:56
November 11, 2012
Anticipation, New Mexico Poems, E-publishing, and a Tuesday Announcement!
I've been busy with things that involve anticipation.
I'll have an announcement about my third book on Tuesday!
Helping my mom prepare for a big job interview (Good luck Mom!) and signing contracts (!) and thinking about planning events for Redmond all the way through next spring. And November and December are so busy! Also we're trying to squeeze in all our doctor and dentist appointments before December 31 as our company health care plan is getting much more expensive and paperwork-heavy next year (I hate to say it, but mainly due to the government's new health care changes. They hurt me more than they help me, but I know I'm probably in the minority that way.) Still, these things require planning. And I'm already worried about next year's taxes! This is going to be our most complicated tax year ever, I think. So, onward...
I'd like to direct your attention to the innovative project "200 Poems for New Mexico" - and one of the poems is one of mine, "America Dreams of Roswell."
And Rachel Dacus has an interested post about the lack of e-book publishing here. I would like here to make a pitch for those local to Seattle to come out and hear my friends Annette Spaulding-Convy and Kelli Russell Agodon talk about this very topic, e-book publishing for poets at the Redmond Library at 7 PM on December 6th, as part of the "Geeks for Poetry" initiative that I started as Redmond's Poet Laureate. We'll talk all about e-books, twitter, social media in general. It'll be grand times! These guys know what they're talking about, as they have already produced a fantastic e-book of women's poetry called Fire on Her Tongue. You know, my new publisher is also interested in doing e-books! I think we poets need to embrace new ways to read poetry and get it out to as big an audience as possible.
I'm off to Annette's reading for her first book, In Broken Latin at Open Books at 3 PM this afternoon. It's a wonderful book. Check out this blurb. I wrote it, so you know I believe it!
"Annette Spaulding-Convy's In Broken Latin is a collection that leads us with intelligence, wit, and compassion through a woman's life in a nunnery and her slow disenchantment with the church. There's a spark of hidden sensuality and humor hidden beneath the habit, as displayed in one of my favorite poems of the collection, 'There Were No Rules about Underwear,' where a fireman breaks into a nun's room as she sleeps nude, saying he 'needs to feel your walls to see if they're hot.' The poems here contemplate the gruesome origins of desserts created for saints, the daily rituals of women in the convent, performing a fascinating balancing act of playful irreverence and deep thoughtfulness about spiritual exploration."
I'll have an announcement about my third book on Tuesday!
Helping my mom prepare for a big job interview (Good luck Mom!) and signing contracts (!) and thinking about planning events for Redmond all the way through next spring. And November and December are so busy! Also we're trying to squeeze in all our doctor and dentist appointments before December 31 as our company health care plan is getting much more expensive and paperwork-heavy next year (I hate to say it, but mainly due to the government's new health care changes. They hurt me more than they help me, but I know I'm probably in the minority that way.) Still, these things require planning. And I'm already worried about next year's taxes! This is going to be our most complicated tax year ever, I think. So, onward...
I'd like to direct your attention to the innovative project "200 Poems for New Mexico" - and one of the poems is one of mine, "America Dreams of Roswell."
And Rachel Dacus has an interested post about the lack of e-book publishing here. I would like here to make a pitch for those local to Seattle to come out and hear my friends Annette Spaulding-Convy and Kelli Russell Agodon talk about this very topic, e-book publishing for poets at the Redmond Library at 7 PM on December 6th, as part of the "Geeks for Poetry" initiative that I started as Redmond's Poet Laureate. We'll talk all about e-books, twitter, social media in general. It'll be grand times! These guys know what they're talking about, as they have already produced a fantastic e-book of women's poetry called Fire on Her Tongue. You know, my new publisher is also interested in doing e-books! I think we poets need to embrace new ways to read poetry and get it out to as big an audience as possible.
I'm off to Annette's reading for her first book, In Broken Latin at Open Books at 3 PM this afternoon. It's a wonderful book. Check out this blurb. I wrote it, so you know I believe it!
"Annette Spaulding-Convy's In Broken Latin is a collection that leads us with intelligence, wit, and compassion through a woman's life in a nunnery and her slow disenchantment with the church. There's a spark of hidden sensuality and humor hidden beneath the habit, as displayed in one of my favorite poems of the collection, 'There Were No Rules about Underwear,' where a fireman breaks into a nun's room as she sleeps nude, saying he 'needs to feel your walls to see if they're hot.' The poems here contemplate the gruesome origins of desserts created for saints, the daily rituals of women in the convent, performing a fascinating balancing act of playful irreverence and deep thoughtfulness about spiritual exploration."
Published on November 11, 2012 12:03
November 2, 2012
A new review on The Rumpus, and some upcoming readings you shouldn't miss (but they're not mine)
I've got a new (non-poetry) book review up at The Rumpus, of Jeffrey Skinner's The 6.5 Habits of Moderately Effective Poets. I hope you enjoy it; I tried to have some fun, and the book itself doesn't take itself too seriously, either.
Here are a couple of local events you all shouldn't miss. They aren't even my events, that's how serious I am.
One is the debut reading at Open Books of Annette Spaulding-Convy and her new book on November 11, In Broken Latin. Here's the link for more info: http://www.openpoetrybooks.com/calendar/archives/000546.html but just let it be known that you are in for some great poetry, AND it's saucy nun poetry, which I don't think really we have enough of. It'll put you in a good mood no matter how worried you are about the election!
The other is the November 17 reading, at Redmond Library, of Washington state's Poet Laureate Kathleen Flenniken, from Plume. And after I will ask her questions in a nice little Q&A session and you can meet her and buy books and get them signed and ask her questions about Hanford. There will be refreshments. Come out! Did I mention this is the kickoff reading for my ambitious plan as Poet Laureate to get everyone to read one book of poetry a quarter, called "Redmond Reads Poetry?" Well, it is!
The last note is: one more month til my second book, She Returns to the Floating World, is about to go out of print from Kitsune Books, as they are closing at the end of the year. So if you want to buy it in either print or e-book form, get on it! I hear it's a pretty good book!
And, I may have good news to announce soon about my third book, Unexplained Fevers, which was orphaned after Kitsune Books decided to close. It may be that I've found a new publisher. Who might it be? Stay tuned to find out...
Here are a couple of local events you all shouldn't miss. They aren't even my events, that's how serious I am.
One is the debut reading at Open Books of Annette Spaulding-Convy and her new book on November 11, In Broken Latin. Here's the link for more info: http://www.openpoetrybooks.com/calendar/archives/000546.html but just let it be known that you are in for some great poetry, AND it's saucy nun poetry, which I don't think really we have enough of. It'll put you in a good mood no matter how worried you are about the election!
The other is the November 17 reading, at Redmond Library, of Washington state's Poet Laureate Kathleen Flenniken, from Plume. And after I will ask her questions in a nice little Q&A session and you can meet her and buy books and get them signed and ask her questions about Hanford. There will be refreshments. Come out! Did I mention this is the kickoff reading for my ambitious plan as Poet Laureate to get everyone to read one book of poetry a quarter, called "Redmond Reads Poetry?" Well, it is!
The last note is: one more month til my second book, She Returns to the Floating World, is about to go out of print from Kitsune Books, as they are closing at the end of the year. So if you want to buy it in either print or e-book form, get on it! I hear it's a pretty good book!
And, I may have good news to announce soon about my third book, Unexplained Fevers, which was orphaned after Kitsune Books decided to close. It may be that I've found a new publisher. Who might it be? Stay tuned to find out...
Published on November 02, 2012 14:26
October 30, 2012
Looking for some good news?
The storm coverage is still swirling, NYC underwater, the Jersey Shore in tatters. Election coverage is an incessant background noise in everything from comedy sitcoms to twitter.
So I know we are all looking for some good news, some hope. And then, I don't know, Disney goes and buys Lucasfilm and announces yet another (inevitably terrible) Star Wars movies? Penguin and Random House are merging. The world, for writers, is looking a little grim. But when has it ever been otherwise? (Yes, I'm also writing this post after a brutal dentist visit - three fillings today with no Novocaine, so perhaps I'm looking for a little cheering up.)
I want to call your attention to a couple of articles I thought were worth reading. One was about the proposition of value that publishers bring to authors. My little brother asked me recently, what is the purpose of finding a publisher for your poetry books instead of just publishing them yourself? In the old days, I would have had a much clearer answer - something about publishers offering authors marketing, financial support, distribution into bookstores, legitimacy, even. Now, in this new era, still emerging with its e-books and Amazon dominancy and ever-shrinking-and-hard-to-find-poetry-audiences, I'm not so sure of the answer. So, do publishers need to offer more value to authors?
Poets are generally so grateful to have a publisher that they will waive almost everything - marketing expectations (even modest ones, say, an ad in Poets & Writers or even on a web site somewhere,) promised prize monies, royalties, say to where and how their work appears - in order to be published, to be "legitimate". Is the author's only other option to go rogue, self publish, and push their wares at readings and on twitter? As a reviewer, I've often found that small presses' books are inevitably more interesting and better written than either large press or self-published work. I am a fan of the small, struggling press with one or two people trying to make it work; they have the courage to have a point of view, an integrity of taste, that even when it isn't your taste, you have to respect.
And onto reviewing - many years ago a female poet told me that I have a duty to review, that there are not enough women reviewing books, and not enough books by women being reviewed. I did start reviewing because I felt it was something I owed the poetry community, to find interesting books and talk about them in a way that might make a reader, you know, want to read poetry. In particular, I wanted to find poetry that other people weren't already celebrating, poetry that deserved celebration.
Here's a link to Margaret Atwood writing in 1976 - when I was three years old - about being a woman writer, and about the problem of reviewing in particular.
http://thisrecording.com/today/2010/8/29/in-which-we-change-diapers-and-collect-china.html
The same sexual put-downs, the old sexist stereotypes - is she an "Emily" or a "Sylvia?" - are still sadly pretty freaking wide-spread. Read VIDA's count to find out if the numbers have changed, because, for the most part, they haven't.
Did I promise you good news at the beginning of this post? Somewhere floating around the internets this morning was a picture of a big rainbow over NYC, a reminder of the Biblical flood and its inexplicably happy rainbow ending:
(Source: http://cdn.theatlantic.com/static/mt/...)
If we believe the rainbow, things will get better for us. We will keep writing, even if we're unsure of our audiences, how to reach them effectively, even how to communicate with our fellow human beings. We will keep creating because it is in us to create, to paint the rainbow even if it is absent in the story, because we all want to believe in happy endings.
So I know we are all looking for some good news, some hope. And then, I don't know, Disney goes and buys Lucasfilm and announces yet another (inevitably terrible) Star Wars movies? Penguin and Random House are merging. The world, for writers, is looking a little grim. But when has it ever been otherwise? (Yes, I'm also writing this post after a brutal dentist visit - three fillings today with no Novocaine, so perhaps I'm looking for a little cheering up.)
I want to call your attention to a couple of articles I thought were worth reading. One was about the proposition of value that publishers bring to authors. My little brother asked me recently, what is the purpose of finding a publisher for your poetry books instead of just publishing them yourself? In the old days, I would have had a much clearer answer - something about publishers offering authors marketing, financial support, distribution into bookstores, legitimacy, even. Now, in this new era, still emerging with its e-books and Amazon dominancy and ever-shrinking-and-hard-to-find-poetry-audiences, I'm not so sure of the answer. So, do publishers need to offer more value to authors?
Poets are generally so grateful to have a publisher that they will waive almost everything - marketing expectations (even modest ones, say, an ad in Poets & Writers or even on a web site somewhere,) promised prize monies, royalties, say to where and how their work appears - in order to be published, to be "legitimate". Is the author's only other option to go rogue, self publish, and push their wares at readings and on twitter? As a reviewer, I've often found that small presses' books are inevitably more interesting and better written than either large press or self-published work. I am a fan of the small, struggling press with one or two people trying to make it work; they have the courage to have a point of view, an integrity of taste, that even when it isn't your taste, you have to respect.
And onto reviewing - many years ago a female poet told me that I have a duty to review, that there are not enough women reviewing books, and not enough books by women being reviewed. I did start reviewing because I felt it was something I owed the poetry community, to find interesting books and talk about them in a way that might make a reader, you know, want to read poetry. In particular, I wanted to find poetry that other people weren't already celebrating, poetry that deserved celebration.
Here's a link to Margaret Atwood writing in 1976 - when I was three years old - about being a woman writer, and about the problem of reviewing in particular.
http://thisrecording.com/today/2010/8/29/in-which-we-change-diapers-and-collect-china.html
The same sexual put-downs, the old sexist stereotypes - is she an "Emily" or a "Sylvia?" - are still sadly pretty freaking wide-spread. Read VIDA's count to find out if the numbers have changed, because, for the most part, they haven't.
Did I promise you good news at the beginning of this post? Somewhere floating around the internets this morning was a picture of a big rainbow over NYC, a reminder of the Biblical flood and its inexplicably happy rainbow ending:
(Source: http://cdn.theatlantic.com/static/mt/...)
If we believe the rainbow, things will get better for us. We will keep writing, even if we're unsure of our audiences, how to reach them effectively, even how to communicate with our fellow human beings. We will keep creating because it is in us to create, to paint the rainbow even if it is absent in the story, because we all want to believe in happy endings.
Published on October 30, 2012 23:21


