Jeannine Hall Gailey's Blog, page 96

March 13, 2012

A few things: Appearances, APR, Opportunities to Review, haiku get-togethers, Lessons from a person with a degree in poetry, and More...

If you are at all interested in still writing a review of She Returns to the Floating World, Galatea Resurrects has a copy waiting to be reviewed...here's a link to this and other books they have available! I love reviewing for Galatea Resurrects. Eileen is so wonderful!

I am very excited to announce that I will have a poem in the upcoming May/June issue of American Poetry Review! Eeeep! I have been reading APR for so many years and can't believe I'm finally appearing there! And it's from my third book manuscript. Which I may have news about soon...

Speaking of appearances, here is an appearance that I am honored to be be invited to...the Japan Language Meetup on April 10, where we will be talking about haiku. Here's a little bit more about it.

In other news, have been running a 101 fever and head feels like it is rattling full of hammers. Going on a week now. Note: this is not as conducive to poetry, dear universe, so how about a break with the thundersnow and such, just some regular nice spring weather would be great! (My home town of Cincinnati today was a sunny 77 degrees. Way to make us look bad, midwest!) Basically, every time I walk outside, I get sicker. Cough. Achoo. Blusterhailsnow. On the plus side, my husband has provided me a vase full of daffodils, some British fashion magazines, and a page of My Little Pony stickers as "get-well-soon" totems. And he learned how to make wheat-free crepes.
On the downside, even looking at consolidating my student loans made me so depressed I had to quit looking at them, and still in the anxiety-about-finances-provoking state of house-searching. Kids, a little life lesson courtesy of Auntie Jeannine: if you're going to spend a lot of money on a degree, be sure it enables you to do something that actually makes money. That is all.
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Published on March 13, 2012 23:09

March 9, 2012

My poem, Anime Girl Delays Adulthood, is up as Indigest's poem of the day!

One of the poems from my book, She Returns to the Floating World, is featured as Indigest's Poem of the Day podcast today! Check out a reading and description of "Anime Girl Delays Adulthood:"
http://workflowwriting.com/657298/poem-of-the-day-jeannine-hall-gailey-%E2%80%93-%E2%80%9Canime-girl-delays-adulthood%E2%80%9D-03-09-12.php
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Published on March 09, 2012 06:19

March 8, 2012

Crisis and Creativity

So, I've noticed there is a connection in my life between crisis - of health, of emotion or intellect, - and my creative output.
This weekend, for instance, I had a dangerous allergic reaction to a new medication that, ironically, was meant to tone down the allergic reactions I've been having. The day I had the anaphalaxis, I was wiped out and tired. But the next day, I found a creative solution to the problems we've been having looking for a house. And the day after that, I wrote three new poems - after weeks of not much writing, they came to me easily. It reminded me about how I felt after I was hospitalized for pneumonia in California - despite being wiped out physically for months afterwards, creatively I became driven, focused, and energized.
This - along with a feature article someone sent me about the Fukushima area 1 year later and the cleanup effort brought to mind our whole world's differing responses to crisis. How we survive by figuring out new ways to live. How Japan mobilized a ton of people to protest nuclear power and its government and company's responses to the disaster, how Japan's disaster may change the direction of not only Japan, but America's commitment to safer energy sources.
There are several ways to respond to a threat - you can panic, which, as we know from Douglas Adams, is never the answer (and bring a clean towel,) you can give up, or you can figure out a way to adapt and respond in a way that will help you deal with the next problem you encounter. It also reminded me of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Katniss in the Hunger Games - when confronted with a new monster, or a new trap, every time, they had to continually improve.
Or maybe this is all the ramblings of a madwoman. Anyway, a couple of new poems, there's some sunshine outside, and I may have found a permanent place to live for us in this cloudy mountain wetland (well, in six months or so, after it's finished...)[image error]
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Published on March 08, 2012 12:42

March 2, 2012

Arietty, Hunger Games, Missing AWP...

Just got home from seeing The Secret World of Arietty, Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli's new film, based on the English novel that I loved as a child, The Borrowers. This version has an extra touch of heart provided by the threat of Borrower extinction and the illness of the main human character of the film. A surprising dialogue on death and dying at the center of the film provides depth to what is essentially a light adventure children's film, along the lines of My Neighbor Totoro and Kiki's Delivery Service (for those of you familiar with Miyazaki's other films for children.) The animation was, of course, beautiful and bucolic, a speciality of Ghibli studios.

Contrasting this is the drumbeat of promotions for The Hunger Games, the new movie based on the hyperviolent trilogy about a killer teen heroine and her futuristic dystopia scarier than anything Atwood's come up with. Katniss Everdeen is like Buffy without the quips and fashion sense, an action hero for the Millenial generation. There's nothing calm, soothing, or sweet about this trilogy of movies or books; I found them disturbing as an adult, including scenes of dismemberment, torture, brainwashing... and they must be super disturbing for the younger readers they're meant for. I'm torn because part of me cheers for the female teen heroine Katniss, who is tough, unconcerned about the young men falling in love with her as she tries to save herself, her family and eventually, her political cause. She's too busy trying to survive to worry about boys; her moral sense comes more as a contrast to the evil, corrupt adults around her than any specific goodness. As a metaphor for young people navigating a kill-or-be-killed adult world with a kind of horror and disorientation, it works pretty well. However, I'd much rather my imaginary children watch Arietty, at least into their midteens, than the Hunger Games.

Missing AWP this week has been tough, especially as my heroine Margaret Atwood was the keynote, and hearing on Facebook all week about the parties, readings, etc, made it hard not to be there. But this year I'm tightening my belt to afford my first house in twelve years, and a house in this area, even after years of house prices dropping, still isn't cheap. This means I'm relying on you bloggers lucky enough to go to post your impressions, anything great, etc! And pics![image error]
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Published on March 02, 2012 19:52

February 27, 2012

Montaigne Medal Finalist!

Just had a little good news this morning, after a week of on-and-off flu and accompanying blues...that my second book, She Returns to the Floating World, is an Eric Hoffer Montaigne Medal finalist! If it wins, this means the book will get coverage in the US Review of Books, which would be pretty great for a little poetry book like mine, so cross your fingers for me!
I'm not even sure who nominated me, but whomever it was, thanks a big bunch!

In other news, I wrote a new poem yesterday. I've been feeling a bit blue with the illness stuff and maybe a bit of burnout and missing AWP and doing all those grant applications where you feel your chances are one in a billion...sometimes the poetry world can get us a little down. So every piece of good news should be celebrated! A new poem! A little award finalist news!

Going to see a house this afternoon that might be the one, though it's a little pricey. In lovely Kirkland, a community I like a lot, woods in the backyard...but it's a re-done 1950's house so we have to see the inspection before we decide anything...Cross your fingers for me house-wise too!

Thanks again, blog readers, for your encouragement and support. It means a lot. I think this little community of folks is like my almost-family.
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Published on February 27, 2012 10:13

February 21, 2012

Teaching persona poetry, and a Face to Meet the Faces

Happy Mardi Gras! Appropriate for a day of masks, today I had the lovely opportunity to teach the persona poem to a great group of students at Cascadia Community College. It was a lovely and enthusiastic group of people and I always enjoy talking about persona poetry, which I happen to still feel passionate about. We talked about zombies, the Hunger Games, Buffy versus The Vampire Diaries, anime and haibun, as well. Good times.

Arriving about two hours too late for the class, my contributor copy of the persona poetry anthology A Face to Meet the Faces: An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry came in the mail today. I was happy to be keeping company with wonderful poets like Collin Kelly, Jericho Brown, Ivy Alvarez...an interesting aspect is that the editors had the writers write a short note about their use of persona at the end of the book, so if you're using this as a teaching tool, that would be great for students! It is true there is not a lot of material available for those teaching persona poetry, so this anthology is a welcome addition. I'm looking forward to using it next time I teach persona poetry!

Happy Fat Tuesday! AWP is almost upon us. I'm sad to be missing it but hope you will all have a great time and bring home to your blogs lots of gossip. I am so ready for February to be over already - this is Seattle's meanest month, for sure. I saw a branch of cherry (or plum?) blossoms outside of a decaying barn on the way to see a house a few days ago, I think that was the first sign that indeed there may be life in this earth after the long winter...
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Published on February 21, 2012 22:36

February 17, 2012

Interview at Collin Kelley's blog, last night's reading video, and The Pinch

Collin Kelley graciously asks me five questions at his blog today. Thanks, Collin!
http://collinkelley.blogspot.com/2012/02/five-questions-for-jeannine-hall-gailey.html

If you are interested, you can see video of last night's Redmond reading with Martha Silano at SoulFood Books:
http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/20496574
There's some odd guitar music over part of the reading, I think I start reading at about minute five. There's also an odd extreme closeup around minute 6.

Got my contributor's copy of the Spring 2012 The Pinch in the mail, which contains two of my poems, "Lessons in Poison" and "She Ought to Be In Politics." It's a lovely well-produced magazine, with color art, as well as poems from Marge Piercy and Alison Pelegrin.

I also got a real-live medal from the FPA President's award for my book, and a $10 check from Indiana Review. All in all, a good mail day for a poet.
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Published on February 17, 2012 10:52

February 14, 2012

Happy Valentine's Day and an upcoming reading with Martha Silano in Redmond

Happy Valentine's Day out there! Today is a day for exuberance. For chocolates and flowers and celebration! I used to love getting Valentines in that little cardboard box in grade school...and later in junior high and high school, at my school you could buy pink and red carnations and have them sent to someone's locker and someone always left me one anonymously each year, and I never found out who, but the mystery of it cheered me up! So today, give someone something unexpected. Leave a bigger tip, give them a kiss on the cheek, stay on the phone a little longer than usual. Show yourself more love too.
Glenn made me pink marshmallow hearts dipped in dark chocolate for Valentine's Day. Gluten-free and delicious! He gets an "A." And, after getting stuck with needles at the allergist's all day yesterday, I think I deserve a day of fun, so we are going to see that new meaningless-yet-fun looking movie with Reese Witherspoon and spies.
To honor the day, here's one of my favorite love poems, by Robert Graves, short but perfect:

She tells her love while half asleep,
In the dark hours,
With half-words whispered low:
As Earth stirs in her winter sleep
And puts out grass and flowers
Despite the snow,
Despite the falling snow.

And now, make sure you mark on your calendars - I'm reading with Martha Silano in two days at Soul Food Books in Redmond! 7 PM February 16th, Soul Food Books. Be there!
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Published on February 14, 2012 07:05

February 12, 2012

Cosmic Fire, Lost Icons, and New Laureates

I was fascinated by the news story about a heart-shaped coronal mass coming from a solar storm that will hit earth around Valentine's Day. The headline Cosmic Log went with was somewhat less romantic than I would have chosen...

Sorry to lose Whitney Houston, if not surprised. In the eighties I thought she was one of the most beautiful women I'd ever seen, and what a gorgeous voice. Losing a lot of my teen icons, these days...

A new Poet Laureate of Washington State was announced, and it was Seattle's Kathleen Flenniken. Her second book, Plume, I'm reviewing soon deals with subject matter close to my heart - the complicated environmental, personal and political history of Hanford, Washington state's nuclear plant. Congrats to Kathleen!
(Kathleen is the tall brunette in the middle of this lovely group of poets at Open Books last year:)
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Published on February 12, 2012 11:56

February 8, 2012

Bringing Me Back Down to Earth...

Yes, inevitably, after good news, something happens that brings you back to earth. In my case, every day stresses - Glenn working long hours, must-do-costs like dental work, my folks having some health issues (my dad) and pet health issues (my mom's little papillon dog), trying to find a place to live permanently here in the NW - have been filling my head.

The house hunt has brought up some internal conflict as well. I'm forced into admitting this autoimmune arthritis means some adjustments. I can't just run out and buy a cute townhouse with two sets of stairs because of my wonky ankles, which sort of sucks, you know? It's not the fact that I can't buy the townhouse - which of course is only sad in the short-term and on a surface level - it's facing up to my own real limitations these days. My brothers wanted me to fly home to see my nephew who was returning from five years in the Navy, and I had to tell them I couldn't - right now. Ditto AWP.

So, you take the good news (Dorothy Prize!) with the bad (family stress, health stuff) and try to be gracious and open and keep up your life up as best you can. Life is never all sugar and sunshine - and if it was, we would probably be out enjoying all the good stuff instead of trying to create art, right? Speaking of creating art...I need to get writing AND submitting! I need to make up for a very laggy (is that a word?) January. I've got two book reviews - both of books I'm really looking forward to - on my "to do" list as well.

On the up side, Valentine's Day is on its way - check out Kelli's offer of cute poet valentines - and make sure you order a copy of Karen Weyant's new chapbook, Wearing Heels in the Rust Belt. I love Kelli's devotion to snail mail and Karen's combo of grit-and-glamour depictions of women.

And, in case you are feeling a wee bit stressed, here is my personal stress attacker: wee polar bears!
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Published on February 08, 2012 11:50