Mary Biddinger's Blog, page 10
August 31, 2015
Back to Work.
Even though it ended on a high note, with the restoration of the University of Akron Press, I’m glad to kick August to the curb and get back to work. Akron Poetry Prize stuff! Two excellent classes (one world poetry, one an MFA class on first books)! Plenty of student questions to answer! Once again I am taking far too much time writing, revising, and over-honing my syllabi. But what would a new semester be without all that?
In terms of my own poems, I’m still waiting. I can be patient. Last week we got to announce the good news about The Czar, and any day now Small Enterprise will roll off the press. Nothing against the desolation of the marshes and woods, but I rather like being able to talk to people again.


August 24, 2015
Czar Day
So excited to announce that my collaborative collection of poetry with Jay Robinson, THE CZAR, is forthcoming from Black Lawrence Press in 2016.
Originally posted on Jay Robinson:
It’s official! We are happy to announce that The Czar is forthcoming in 2016. The inaugural ball is going to be most excellent. Here’s a link to some propagandist literature from Black Lawrence Press:
http://www.blacklawrence.com/welcome-robinson-biddinger/


August 19, 2015
World’s Biggest Thank You Note
I don’t even want to tell you how many dreams I’ve had about the University of Akron Press over the past month. Some of them were ordinary dreams, like eating yogurt and scrolling through Submittable, and others were argumentative and involving closed-door meetings where people were angry. Every morning I’d wake up and have to once again remind myself that the press was gone.
Thanks to the amazing activism of our fans, authors, colleagues, and students, the University of Akron Press has now been restored. I feel like I need to find the world’s biggest thank you note (the kind that would put a huge novelty check to shame) and share it with you. This has been a dramatic and soul-wrenching summer, but I am so emboldened by the fact that our efforts were successful in bringing back the press, including the Akron Series in Poetry.
I’m gradually returning my owl pictures and post-its and books to my office. I may have to treat myself to some new office supplies, just to ring in this next phase. As of yesterday, I can now also say, See you at AWP 2016 in LA. Barn Owl Review and the University of Akron Press will be at table 313. All was lost for us, and we are incredibly thankful to have it back.
Maybe I’m a sentimental and overly dramatic poet, but in the past weeks I kept thinking of my little press office, and empty desk, frozen in time in its home in Quaker Square. Needless to say, after I’d dusted things off and settled in yesterday, it was like old times, but also not like old times. We’re shaken, but we are stronger. I can’t wait to tell my students this semester that poetry really does have power. The revival of the University of Akron Press is proof of it.


August 16, 2015
Reflective overload.
One nice thing about August is that it hasn’t been dull. I’ve been both “off” from work and working the full time job of responding to messages. Every small thing (and not-small thing, as in back to school shopping for two kids) seems like a miracle when it’s finally done.
I’ve been trying to spend as much time in nature as possible. I recommend it.
Otherwise, I am looking forward to getting back in the classroom, and to the arrival of Small Enterprise, which has been overshadowed by dramatic recent events. Also: new poems. Come on, new poems.


July 31, 2015
Love Song for the Akron Series in Poetry at the University of Akron Press
I’m not sure where to start, so I will send you to the Kenyon Review blog, where I say a few things about my editorial home since 2008, the University of Akron Press.


July 25, 2015
A beginning.
What’s the best way to celebrate the arrival of a new book? Maybe by thinking about the past? Here’s how I welcomed A Sunny Place With Adequate Water. It feels like just yesterday!
In the spirit of nostalgia, here’s a throwback to February 2007, and the birth of Prairie Fever, my first collection.
Contrary to early predictions, July has not been The Month of New Poems. That’s okay, however. It’s bound to happen soon, and when the poems are back, there’s no suppressing them.
I am starting to feel itchy for the new academic year. Itchy, but by no means ready.


July 15, 2015
Full Cover Reveal: Small Enterprise
July 8, 2015
Take a peek inside with Black Lawrence Press
My love for Black Lawrence Press is eternal, and what’s even more awesome? They’ve now added the “peek inside” feature for titles over at SPD. Try a free sample of A Sunny Place with Adequate Water (or O Holy Insurgency, or Saint Monica), over at the SPD site.
Learn more about BLP over here. I’ve got a freshly updated BLP author page here, too.


July 6, 2015
Small Enterprise, Small Price
Black Lawrence Press has cooked up an excellent pre-order deal on my fourth full-length collection of poems, Small Enterprise. It’s only $11.95! Here are the details.
Here’s the title poem, from Verse Daily by way of Gulf Coast. Here’s another poem (historical mattress factory included) from Ampersand Review. There’s one at interrupture, too. And one for the road, thanks to Kettle Blue Review.


July 3, 2015
July: The Month of New Poems
Perhaps this is a bit of wishful thinking. Could July be the month of new poems?
We had an amazing response to this year’s Akron Poetry Prize submission window (509 manuscripts!) which left little time for poems of one’s own. Submittable also makes it much easier to read in odd segments of time, but then the manuscripts also cross not just the UA Press transom, but end up in my dining room.
So I’m hoping to sequester myself in the poetry equivalent of this photograph for the month of July.
For me, the hardest part is getting disciplined about taking notes when ideas strike.
Note to self: notes.

