Mary Biddinger's Blog, page 9
February 2, 2016
Friday reading & celebration
This Friday, February 5th, we’ll be celebrating the release of Meg Johnson’s newest poetry collection, The Crimes of Clara Turlington. Join us at The Hub Art Factory in Canton at 7:00 pm for a reading by Meg, as well as yours truly, and Eliese Goldbach, Robert Miltner, and Molly Fuller.
We’ve got Holly Brown’s fab new review of The Crimes of Clara Turlington here at Barn Owl Review.
I’m excited to read some poems from Small Enterprise on Friday, and perhaps something brand new, too.
February is off to an excellent start.
The Hub Art Factory is located at 336 6th St NW, Canton, Ohio. Event link here.


December 24, 2015
SpotiCzar
The Czar is now on Spotify. Give it a listen!
The Czar is now on Spotify. Czarname: theczarofczars.
Hence, the Czar can now make playlists for his playthings and otherwise create the soundtrack to the Czar.
In other updates, consideration of cover art has begun. The book has an ISBN. And the manuscript will be delivered on 12/1/15.


November 6, 2015
Winter Wheat 2015 beckons
It’s a cloudy November day in Akron, OH. What better time to pack up books for next weekend’s Winter Wheat Literary Festival at Bowling Green State University. I’ll be there with tempting titles from the University of Akron Press and Barn Owl Review, and I’ll also have copies of Small Enterprise on hand if you’d like one signed. Hooray for Winter Wheat! Also hooray for countdowns to Winter Wheat, and to Thanksgiving, and to the end of Fall 2015 semester.


October 23, 2015
Ordinary Citizens of Verse Daily
What’s even more awesome than a crisp (yet not too crisp) Friday in October? A crisp Friday in October with a poem on Verse Daily! Many thanks to Verse Daily for featuring “Ordinary Citizens,” from Small Enterprise.
Like many of my poems in this book, “Ordinary Citizens” finds its beginnings in one (or many) of the odd jobs I had while going to school. Thank you for taking a look!


October 12, 2015
Your name here.
I’m giving away four signed copies of Small Enterprise over at Goodreads. Three more days to enter!
So far October is bringing new poems and student work and beautiful autumn Ohio leaves.
Thanks for checking out the giveaway. Happy Fall to all!


September 29, 2015
A thousand uses for SMALL ENTERPRISE post cards.
Whenever I have box of new book post cards I want to throw them EVERYWHERE. I want to fill a bucket or a tub with the post cards. I want to make a sandwich and fill it with post cards. I want to stuff post cards into bottles and send them out to sea (but that’s probably ecologically inappropriate). I want to stitch fifty or so post cards together into a quilt, and then shiver beneath it. I want to ride a giant post card down a snowy hill.
Instead, however, I’ll just put stamps on these and send them into the world.


September 18, 2015
SMALL ENTERPRISE Giveaway at Goodreads
To celebrate the release of Small Enterprise, I’m giving away four signed copies over at Goodreads. Click here to check it out.
She’s also officially in stock at SPD. Exciting times!

Happy shelf. Black Lawrence Press represent.


September 14, 2015
New at the University of Akron Press
The University of Akron Press seems to have a new poetry & poetics publicist these days, and she’s super excited to get the word out about The Veronica Maneuver, debut poetry collection by Jennifer Moore. Ordering and review copy info above.
Isn’t this cover amazing?


September 11, 2015
Small Enterprise is Born.
After a long day of teaching, I didn’t expect this box on my doorstep, and for a moment I thought I should wait until morning to unbox Small Enterprise, but then realized I’d be up all night wondering what she looked like. I have so much gratitude to Black Lawrence Press, photographer Heidi Thoenen, and many more folks. But for this morning, I just want to share two photos welcoming my 4th book to the world.


September 8, 2015
A poem from THE CZAR

My well-loved copy of Wuthering Heights.
One of the many works of literature that we riffed on in THE CZAR is Wuthering Heights. I’ve never been one for heavy allusions, but THE CZAR takes tonal cues from a variety of works, as well as making playful attempts at doubling some storylines. That said, the whole writing of THE CZAR was organic, so our allusions were intrinsic to the poems, just like the pop culture intrusions or snippets of technology that made their way into the book. Here’s a poem from the collection, which is forthcoming from Black Lawrence Press in August 2016.
THE CZAR
is a little worried about how much he loves the novel Wuthering Heights. In private, he whispers, “I am ___________” then sends himself to un-heaven. Who is the naughtier child, Catherine or Heathcliff? And why doesn’t the weather in Czarland Heights vacillate like a northern place with moors and hillocks? He can’t say that heaven wouldn’t want him, as he invented the concept. Why did it have to involve heaps of coconut? Why was his movie in black and white, and replete with ringlets, the dogs dead for decades? In a less probable world, the Czar would have also been a Czar. Yes. In a less probable world, though, Edgar wouldn’t have died. And the peasants would have feasted nightly on more than limburger cheese and half-stale crackers. Before the Brontë sisters, he considered books an accelerant. Like his mistress’s faux bridal lace teddy. Or the Lady Czar’s culinary renderings of aimless heft. At night he stares out the castle windows. A low, accusatory moon in the Czar-like sky. Stray cats in an alley and a pail of warm milk. Low water level in the moat. He sips Glenfiddich by the gallon, tells his mistress he will stay up all night until he finds the right word. But he never does.
–Mary Biddinger & Jay Robinson

