Megan Falley's Blog, page 85

March 19, 2013

Hi Megan, I've been considering submitting to Write Bloody (for years now actually), but never went through with it. Any advice for a writer with a lot of self-doubt regarding whether she can produce a manuscript of 40 "quality" pieces? Don't submit and ju

Just do it. The deadline is tomorrow. Submit things with variety (in terms of style on the page, subject matter, tone) so they know what you can do. All you need for this first round is your three best poems. It doesn’t matter if you don’t make finals. The only losing that happens is letting another year pass by without trying.


I submitted to Write Bloody twice. My first year I only had a handful of great poems. I was a senior in college trying to graduate, to wrestle the tiger of an abusive relationship, to figure out my role in the ever-daunting “real world.” I was selected for the second round and had to submit a full manuscript of 40 poems. I did NOT have 40 good poems. I probably didn’t even have 40 poems at all. But I worked my butt towards creating something I could call a manuscript. I wrote like a motherfucker. I edited old work. Asked friends for help. Put my entire being into it. And I was rejected. And it burned.


Cristin O’Keefe Aptowicz assured me that Write Bloody was not the end-all be-all of publishing, and encouraged me to submit the poems of that manuscript to different literary journals. Some were rejected, the best ones were accepted, and I got some publishing credits under my belt.


Then, a year of living later, I submitted again. I made finals again. I’d spent the year writing poems and living and reading and though it was still a hustle to get 40 quality poems together (I was writing 9-5 in coffee shops and libraries and then returning to write more at night), I was far more confident in the new manuscript than the first. That manuscript became After the Witch Hunt, a book I am tremendously happy to be my first.


And you know what? I wouldn’t have been able to write it if I hadn’t experienced that first “failure.” “Failure” is a push in the right direction. A kick in the seat of your pants. A double doggie dare.



Submit. I double doggie dare you.

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Published on March 19, 2013 12:18

Hi Megan, I've been considering submitting to Write Bloody (for years now actually), but never went through with it. Any advice for a writer with a lot of self-doubt regarding whether she can produce a manuscript of 40 "quality" pieces? Don't submit and ju

Just do it. The deadline is tomorrow. Submit things with variety (in terms of style on the page, subject matter, tone) so they know what you can do. All you need for this first round is your three best poems. It doesn’t matter if you don’t make finals. The only losing that happens is letting another year pass by without trying.


I submitted to Write Bloody twice. My first year I only had a handful of great poems. I was a senior in college trying to graduate, to wrestle the tiger of an abusive relationship, to figure out my role in the ever-daunting “real world.” I was selected for the second round and had to submit a full manuscript of 40 poems. I did NOT have 40 good poems. I probably didn’t even have 40 poems at all. But I worked my butt towards creating something I could call a manuscript. I wrote like a motherfucker. I edited old work. Asked friends for help. Put my entire being into it. And I was rejected. And it burned.


Cristin O’Keefe Aptowicz assured me that Write Bloody was not the end-all be-all of publishing, and encouraged me to submit the poems of that manuscript to different literary journals. Some were rejected, the best ones were accepted, and I got some publishing credits under my belt.


Then, a year of living later, I submitted again. I made finals again. I’d spent the year writing poems and living and reading and though it was still a hustle to get 40 quality poems together (I was writing 9-5 in coffee shops and libraries and then returning to write more at night), I was far more confident in the new manuscript than the first. That manuscript became After the Witch Hunt, a book I am tremendously happy to be my first.


And you know what? I wouldn’t have been able to write it if I hadn’t experienced that first “failure.” “Failure” is a push in the right direction. A kick in the seat of your pants. A double doggie dare.



Submit. I double doggie dare you.

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Published on March 19, 2013 12:18

A Little Encouragement for My Writer Friends

Hi Word-Wranglers!


How ya doing? Any chance that today you’re feeling not worthy? A big sham? A waste of paper? BOO. Such is often the blueprint of the writer, constantly doubting and questioning the worth of one’s work, BUT, as the brilliant Marge Piercy said “The real writer is one who really writes. Work is its own cure. You have to like it better than being loved.”


April is coming up (National Poetry Month) where many poets partake in a 30/30 challenge and write (& post!) a poem each day. It is incredibly important to write daily. Sometimes I forget this myself. But you know what? Musicians practice. Figure Skaters practice. So what’s this delirious idea that we have to wait for inspiration to write? That’s silly. We need practice too, so that when inspiration comes we know which end is up. That being said, start writing now! About anything. About the shape of the clouds, the sounds your cat makes, your least favorite chore. It doesn’t have to be good. It just has to be. I recommend using your good old fashioned hand (if you can!) rather than typing, which is prone to judgment and self-editing.


That being said, it’s also submissions season for many presses, chapbook competitions, grants and fellowships. As I’ve said before, submitting to Write Bloody Publishing was the most important decision of my writing life. All you need to do is read the guidelines and submit just three poems by tomorrow. It doesn’t matter if you’re “not ready.” Finding out that you’re in the top 20 is a way to quickly kick your ass into gear to get ready and produce a manuscript.


Also, I just submitted to the Ruth Lilly Fellowship, which offers $15,000 to 5 American poets between the ages of 21-31 each year. The submission process is super easy. All you need is ten pages of poetry. And you know what? This may be YOUR YEAR.


But even if it isn’t your year to win, it is your year to start trying. To put your name into the publishing and fellowship ether and hope that it clings to something. To be in the process of submitting, waiting, and even being rejected so you learn that it doesn’t hurt so much. What hurts later in life is not the rejections you receive, but the not-trying. The fear masquerading as safety.


So, in the words of Sugar, WRITE LIKE A MOTHERFUCKER. But go submit like a motherfucker too!



I Root For You,


Meg

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Published on March 19, 2013 10:54

March 18, 2013

"Obsess over the dead. Not living writers. Read everything you can. Let it all seep in. Pay attention..."

“Obsess over the dead. Not living writers. Read everything you can. Let it all seep in. Pay attention to the language around you. Don’t discard the lowbrow. Don’t venerate the highbrow. Find a different path. Translate foreign poems into English. Remember: an interesting life isn’t enough. Don’t worship your teachers. Your peers aren’t your competition. Your competition is silence, the Void. Writing is hard work. Don’t forget that.”

- Eduardo Corral’s advice to aspiring poets, as told to Michael Laurenty for Barn Owl Review (via nps2013)
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Published on March 18, 2013 12:46

March 17, 2013

Photo



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Published on March 17, 2013 20:00

March 16, 2013

MOWPS

Some dude on Facebook posted “Why Is There No MOWPS” (Men of the World Poetry Slam) in response to the existence of WOWPS (Women of the World Poetry Slam) so I wrote “Why Is There No MEOWPS” and linked them to “I Could Pee On That” (and other poems by cats.)


A successful day on the internet, I’d Say.


#whyaretherenocemeteriesforalivepeople

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Published on March 16, 2013 20:10

March 14, 2013

Dear Publisher,

Thank you for letting me consider your rejection, though unfortunately I’ve decided not to accept it at this time.


Sincerely,


The Writer

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Published on March 14, 2013 07:56

March 13, 2013

new york living.



new york living.

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Published on March 13, 2013 18:04

"When you break your leg, you go to a doctor. When you break your heart, you go to a poet."

“When you break your leg, you go to a doctor. When you break your heart, you go to a poet.”

- Jeanette Winterson
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Published on March 13, 2013 13:08

SUBMIT TO WRITE BLOODY PUBLISHING

SUBMIT TO WRITE BLOODY PUBLISHING :
HOW TO TURN IN A GREAT SUBMISSION. 15 Tips.

February 27th, 2013



The rejection letter is a lingering nightmare that can either crush you or push you. I get them all the time and it still hurts like someone dogging you in your youtube comments.


The only people I know that succeed in this writing business drink away the burn and laugh it off, saying ‘not my time.’ I used to get a lot of emails from folks when we first started this submission process, just a lot of venom that they weren’t chosen, that the rules weren’t clear, that we were racist/sexist/elitist for not choosing them, that we were short sighted about what true talent was, that we are egoists for forcing these poor souls to make a video of themselves reading a poem out loud if they make it to the final round, that they demand to see a list of the 12 editors so they could tell the world what a bunch of insipid, blind jellyfish they were. I used to just print up my friends cause I liked their style.


It died down a bit last year, I have no idea why. Maybe because we only could afford to choose 4 authors. That’s always been our model, since submission years, 3 years ago. If we don’t get a lot of returns and book sales are jamming, we can do 12 one season and 6 to 8 titles in the fall. It is crazy work but exciting to do that many. We did better than okay so this year we are doing 8 books in the spring and 5 books in the fall. Most folks would tell you that its still a lot for a press with one employee and some dedicated interns working a few hrs a week.


Things to remember:
1. Our press is a small press. It’s wonderful that we finally got international distribution, a pr agency, physical bookstore, street sales team and have a sweet list of places to book readings, but the book deal is always going to go to the author who can not only write well, read well out loud (that only means not awkward-not everyone has to be the real anis mojgani.) but can also get their shit together and work as a team to promote the book. The days of having an agent do all the nasty icky work of social media and bookings are over. Be nice. No one is getting rich. This is a passion and is often only fueled by that.


2. Show diversity in your manuscript. No need to have 3 poems about family or trauma in a row. Remember that the editors usually read about 10-20 submissions a night. Be the one that stands out with beauty.


3. If you have a shorter poem that is strong, make that one first. Editors eyes get tired just like the rest of us. Hook them.


4. Show that you understand the difference between prose and poetry, or prose laid out like a poem.


5. Don’t get caught with your pants down, meaning if you make it to the final round, but only have 12 decent poems, the editors will smell it when reading your 40 poem manuscript. It is hard to sustain skill for 40 poems. Most of my books dont and it kills me to read the ‘junkers’ in some of my books.


6.Every year we have to make a catalog and a sales team person goes around the country (30 of them) and each one sits in a room with that catalog and book buyer and has 30 seconds to pitch why that bookstore should carry your book. ‘Because its so fucking tasty’ isnt enough. You don’t have to be a minority or have some crazy adventure that you identify with only, but what is it about your writing that makes it one of the 700 books I will read before I die?


7. If you never have money and can never save money, wait and submit when you do. If you get brought on to a small press, you will need a good press photo, a great website for booking shows and book stock to buy and sell on the road. That is the fastest way to make money as an author and to build a fanbase. Touring is a mandate at write bloody, but its not too crazy. 20 dates your first year out.


8. Read. Read the authors on our press. See what makes their poems work. But be careful. Do not write 3 andrea gibson poems. We have andrea gibson. We want the real you. Feel free to look at authors we admire outside of the press like Jeffrey McDaniel, James Tate, Kevin Young, Anne Sexton, Mark Doty, Bob Hicok, Natasha Trethewey, and Tomas Transtromer.


9. If you don’t get this, there are other presses. If you don’t get the book deal, what a great chance to do what Cristin Okeefe Aptowicz does and submit to a buttload of journals to get their name out there in the Lit world.


10.No poem submitted in the first round should be longer than 2 pages.


11.Title your poems. Set the scene or mood with the title.


12. All lower case poems look lazy, I wouldn’t recommend it for your first three poems but you can experiment when submitting the full 40 poem manuscript if you make it to the final.


13. Cover letters can be pasted in the cover letter box. Do not attach it to the manuscript. Some editors like to read the manuscript without dwelling on the name or info. I like to read it for all 20 finalists to get a feel of the authors region and taste.


14. What’s the twist? It’s always possible to write ‘this bad thing happened to me’ or ‘Let me count how beautiful you are’ poems. Beware of the grandstanding we have often seen where someone does “To the person that said I was a bad bowler” and the poem ends with triumph- “well guess what, I may be a bad bowler… but I am one. hell. of. a. stepdad.” Show us a unique view of the problems you address. Can you put yourself in the shoes of Laura Bush while she watches her husband sleep deeply? (Size 7) It’s much more interesting than being mad at George Bush and ranting. Can you address gun violence from the perpective of a bullet maker, or a dog and not make the poem too precious? We are a press that loves the tweak, the surprise, the nuance.


15. We are not a slam press but it is true that the slams can be a wonderful family and a great place to feature. I dont think I even know what a slam poem is. It’s like me asking you if you’re a farmer cause there’s an apple core on the floorboard of your car (Anis!) You put on roller skates once and said something beautiful when you ate shit. What is it like to be a roller derby poet? (I think I’m onto something great.)

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Published on March 13, 2013 13:05

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