Susan Rich's Blog, page 56
January 27, 2012
One Day Class at Hugo House with Elizabeth Austen - or Easy in the Islands

My friend Elizabeth Austen will be teaching a one day poetry writing workshop February 4th from 1:00 -5:00 pm. You can register at Hugo House by calling (206) 322-7030. It's super easy to do.
Or on line at Richard Hugo House. Every writer I know takes classes and/or teaches here. It's a place you want to check out and a teacher who will not disappoint. She's a master.
Poems from Poems: Call and Response"Good poems are the best teachers. Perhaps they are the only teachers," writes Mary Oliver in A Poetry Handbook. This workshop explores ways to let others' poems not only teach you, but lead to new poems of your own. We'll experiment with po-jacking, sonic translations, echo translations and other ways to use one poem as a jumping off point for another. Come prepared to write and stretch your craft – participants will leave the workshop with fresh drafts of new poems.
And if Lopez Island is more to your liking (or your location) Elizabeth will be teaching this class for free at the Lopez Public Library on February 26th from 2:00-4:00 pm.
Published on January 27, 2012 10:06
January 24, 2012
Grant Proposals - Some Random Thoughts - Hopefully Helpful

1. Ask for help when you need it. After several frustrating hours, an entire afternoon, I wrote and then called the people at the NEA. Here is what I learned: government computers don't play well with Mac computers. In fact, Google Chrome and downloads from government documents actually don't work. Why this isn't stated anywhere is a mystery -- one that took up hours of my life I can't get back. On the other hand, if I hadn't called, I would have just given up and not applied at all.
2. Take your time. Take a break. Look again. I needed to read over my writing sample several times in order to feel good about it. From my experience on the other side of the table, when I have been part of a committee of judges instead of an applicant, I've learned that a cohesive application helps weary readers remember the work. This means a delicate balance between a manuscript packet that has cohesion but is not redundant. I had about half the poems set from the start, it was the middle poems that I kept changing.
3. Don't go it alone. I was working on my two applications at the same time as my good friend Kelli Russell Agodon. I was able to let her know that FireFox was the only way for Mac users to download the NEA application and she was able to help me create a header in the way the NEA required. More than those extremely helpful hints, we were able to urge each other on. Knowing that someone else was struggling through the same quagmire of bureaucracy as I was made for a less lonely time. A friend who is in the same boat as your are is invaluable. And whichever one of us wins takes the other one out for dinner. We are hoping for at least two dinners, one for each of our wins.
4. Find a way to stay positive. I would fluctuate wildly between thinking that I was insane to spend precious snow days grant writing instead of writing poetry, but then I would move to the notion that I was taking myself seriously as a writer and being open to the universe of support. Somebody has to win an NEA; somebody needs to win the Artist Trust Fellowship. Why not me and all my good friends too? If nothing else, I did important revisions on poems that I had thought were done until now.
5. You will be glad you did. It feels wonderful to have finished two proposals. And the truth is, they weren't that hard to do, they just took time. Organizations are switching to new on-line programs. When I wrote Miguel at Artist Trust with a question concerning the synopsis of my project, he was thankful that I was (unknowingly) pointing out a discrepancy in the instructions. For the record. you can send in 13 pages -- 12 pages of poems and one page with an overview of the work.
If you decide to put your hat in the ring for one of these awards, best of luck! May we all win!
Published on January 24, 2012 21:37
January 18, 2012
In Praise of Snow Days - in Seattle!
Published on January 18, 2012 23:38
Trethewey Named Sate Poet Laureate - And Sexism

This article mentions that Tretheway received her MFA from the University of Massachusetts. Since she mentions (not by name) the institution where she received her degree in the video I posted previously, I was fascinated. My undergraduate degree is also from UMass --- and I also struggled profoundly with the male professors I had there. In fact, because two of those male professors felt they needed to single me out to tell me that I would not be a writer, I stopped writing for ten years.
In today's very small poetry world it's not polite to mention the sexism that goes on in creative writing programs --- and perhaps it's better now? I don't know. My MFA experience at the University of Oregon was not undercut by any sexist treatment -- but as an undergraduate I suffered a great deal without being able to give sexism it's rightful name.
What I meant to say -- here is one of my all time favorite books of poetry from an amazing poet.

From one photograph (the one featured here) Tretheway imagines the life of a prostitute in New Orleans. The poems come in the form of letters that "Ophelia" writes to her girlfriend back home. Eventually the frame falls away and the poems are more of an interior dreamscape. Because Bellocq became famous because of the photographs he took of the women at rest -- smoking, daydreaming, washing clothes - there is much here on the nature of photography as well. It's so difficult to write concerning work that one loves. Best to just offer a poem.
Blue Book – June 1911
I wear my best gown for the picture—White silk with seed pearls and ostrich feathers –My hair in a loose chignon. Behind me,Bellocq's black scrim just covers the laundry –Tea towels bleached and frayed, drying on the line.I look away from his lens to appear Demure, to attract those guests not wanting The lewd sites of Emma Johnson's circus.Countess writes my description for the book –"Violet," a fair skinned beauty, recitespoetry and soliloques; nightly she performs her tableau vivant, becomesa living statue, an object of art –and I fade again into someone I'm not.
Published on January 18, 2012 09:54
January 17, 2012
Natasha Tretheway on George Orwell, Race, and "Why I Write"
Natasha Tretheway is one of my absolutely favorite poets. Her book, Bellocq's Ophelia. Poetry's ability to teach us what we have not known. "Across time and space poetry shows us how we are alike. It asks that we be more compassionate, more observant. The soul sings for justice and the song is poetry." This was her talk at Emory University -- listen and keep listening; you won't regret it.
Published on January 17, 2012 00:01
January 16, 2012
A Prose Review --- The Civilized World: A Novel in Stories
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The Civilized World: A Novel in StoriesSusi WyssHenry Holt $15228 pages
What a pleasure to read of strong, smart, and sensitive African women. This work of fiction is no fiction at all in the sense that these characters reflect the women I met and in some cases, became friends with during my four years in Africa. Wyss draws us into these characters with artful simplicity. How could she have passed these salon mirrors so many times a day without looking, without really seeing herself, the protagonist wonders. How can we as lovers of literature, know so little of contemporary African life?
Published on January 16, 2012 01:06
Happy Martin Luther King Jr. Day +17 Minutes

"A nation that spends more money each year on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death."
~ Martin Luther King Jr.
Published on January 16, 2012 00:25
January 14, 2012
A Surprise Review - Who Knew? Thank you Web del Sol and Margaret MK Hess

It's now been 20 months since The Alchemist's Kitchen arrived in the world. I wonder if anyone has read it recently or if the door has closed on this particular kitchen. Sometimes it's easy to feel invisible. And although being invisible is a super power that six year old boys crave, it's not great news for a book.
And so the fact that Web Del Sol Review of Books has just reviewed The Alchemist's Kitchen seems very good news indeed. And not just a run of the mill review, but one where the reviewer, Margaret MK Hess (whom I do not know) really liked the work.
"She takes the whole world and makes it a small and valued place," Hass writes. And Hass also connects "Tulip Sutra" to the tulips in the hospital room of a dying woman -- and to the body. This seems the best a poet can hope for from a reviewer, Hass has showed me new ways to understand my own work.
Published on January 14, 2012 22:02
January 12, 2012
"Death to Traffic" -Travel Trumps Ethnocentricity - Rick Steves
I've just learned how to embed youtubes in this blog, so here we go! TEDx is a trove of ideas --- all talks that last 20 minutes or less. Rick Steves runs tours and writes guidebooks. His style is a bit abrasive but what he has to say is worthwhile. "Fear is for people who don't get out much." or perhaps "Death to traffic."
Published on January 12, 2012 17:49
January 6, 2012
Ashland Creek Press PSA - I Love This!
I love this youtube video. I have two typewriters and would like to have a portable. Ashland Creek Press are the same people that brought us the youtube video concerning authors watching their Amazon numbers.
In addition to creating smart and funny videos, Ashland Creek Press publishes books!
More connected to this video though, the press has started printing artful notecards that feature their beloved machines. You can order them here. Or just admire their beautiful shapes and keys below.


Published on January 06, 2012 15:55