Reinventing the Life of a Poet in the Modern World

Category: Poetry News (Page 4 of 6)

Margaret Atwood Forsakes Book Blurbs

AtwoodA poet friend of mine from Sarah Lawrence College (now living in Los Angeles) recently sent me an envelope full of newspaper clippings and I’m enjoying reading and discussing them with him via email. One he sent me was the following piece from the LA Times, “No, Margaret Atwood Will Not Blurb Your Book

I really wanted to like this article when at first I assumed she would be forsaking blurbs on her own books; but the article was only about how she was refusing to give out anymore helpful blurbs to other authors.

A more revolutionary act would be for her to eschew blurbs on her own book covers. I mean, is she taking and refusing to give (just because she’s so busy)?

I get it that published authors are unbelievably busy and can’t keep up with these requests. I even respect Ringo Starr for recently notifying the fans of the world that he won't be signing autographs anymore. Totally acceptable because he’s not out there asking anybody for autographs. If you can't keep up with requests, then silently not keep up with requests. That's all you need to do. Why make a grandiose statement about it?

Blurbs are cliquish, overblown statements of meaningless PR, part of anyone’s book marketing plan; and we’ve been conditioned to believe we need them on our books and to convince us that a book is worthy of reading. If Atwood’s career was helped in any way by book blurbs (and it's hard to believe it wasn’t), it doesn't mean much to me that she's now refusing to give out blurbs. It’s just uncharitable and bad vibes. Speak out against the system at least while you're at it.

My friend told me it would take courage as an author to go blurb free. And yes it would.

Irked as I am with Atwood, I did add her to my Pinterst board of poets with sexy hair.

 

Poetry News: Poetry Used for Good and Evil; The Robot Poet Critic

It's been a while since I've done a news and link roundup so I have some good stuff:

Poetry Used for Good and Evil

The Automated Poetry Critic

How can you tell the difference? Ha! (Knee slap.) A program has been designed to pare out the professional poets from the amateurs: Poetry Assessor! I
just put my favorite poem in there (by a somewhat controversial poet)
and it spit back a score of 3.2! I couldn't get the evaluating PDF up for a justification on that outrage. Put your favorite poem in there and tell me what you get.

Publishing

Tips from the Dead & The I-Thought-They-Were Dead

Check Into It

 

The Case for a Poet in Tennessee Williams


MftI can't tell you of many good literary rags from St. Louis, Missouri. Although I lived there for almost two decades (1977-1995), I was not connected in to the literary scene. I could tell you all the animal welfare organizations I used to belong to, however, from my futile and depressing animal rights involvements when I was 21. The only holdover of literariness I still receive from St. Louis is the literary review belle lettres from Washington University, the university Tennessee Williams attended.

Notably, we didn't study Tennessee Williams in either high school or college in St. Louis. I assumed this was because he was controversially gay and plays like Suddenly Last Summer (I only saw the movie but it was brilliant) were often gay. We did read plenty of depressing Russian authors so it couldn't have been his sense of tragedy. We also studied T. S. Eliot briefly; but only briefly because he was, after all, an ex-patriot and therefore an anti-midwestern snob. But we still were forced to read "Love Song of J. Alfred Profrock" before we were ripe for it. Why no class in Tennessee Williams at the University of Missouri? 

Anyway, belle lettres just reviewed the new book on Williams, My Friend Tomby William Jay Smith who was in a casual university group with Williams called The Poetry Factory. Smith makes a compelling argument that Williams (due to his descriptions, stage directions and early poems), was more of a poet than a playwright and that his final, experimental plays have been misread and his entire oeuvre should be reconsidered as poetry. The book reviewer (and Wash U professor of drama and comparative literature) agrees, which is a significant enough opinion for me to jump on board with that.

 

May Poetry News Roundup


Boromir

General News

  • Poetry plagiarism story from Harriet blog: I always wonder why people bother to plagiarize poetry (unless it happens by accident–like confused notes in a notebook or something: Was that my thought? Or did I read that somewhere?). There's so little to gain. But apparently Brits have been plagiarizing US poets lately and winning awards! Criminy!
       
  • Poetry Magazine has joined the eBook revolution. Thank God. There have been some technical issues with publishing poetry in eBooks, problems with hanging indents and controlling the look of heavily formatted poems. I explored these issues when I formatted my book for eBook last year.  Most of the formatting issues have been resolved by some scrappy html hack/poets. I knew if I searched around, html workarounds would be available. And so they were for almost all devices except a Kindle published through Smashwords' Meatgrinder formatter (which isn't too big of a problem considering you can publish an acceptable Kindle version directly via Amazon and Smashwords is working to allow direct ePub uploads).
        
  • Publishers Weekly posts and feature about "6 Authors Who Never Quit Their Day Job." In my 2013 poverty, I'm beginning to see the benefits of this.

Allen Ginsberg News

Lord of the Rings Poetry News
So Monsieur Big Bang and I have just given up our DirectTV not being able to afford the $70 a month we pay to not even get all the basic channels. We're switching over to Hulu which is less than $10 a month for unlimited streaming. We can then watch the new Hulu original comedy Quick Draw coming out in June. It stars John Lehr, famous for playing the Geico Caveman and starring in the TBS show 10 Items or Less. John Lehr and Monsieur Big Bang are longtime friends and Monsieur Big Bang did consulting and research for this show. So check it out. It's "a comedic half-hour western set in
1875 that centers on a Harvard-educated sheriff and his quest to
introduce the emerging science of forensics to an unruly Kansas town."




Quickdraw

Anywho, Mr. Big Bang and I spent our first cable-less week watching the uncut version of The Lord of the Rings. I have two related poetry items that seem appropriate to mention now:

        

Latest Poetry Journals and Catalogs

ApI enjoyed this season's American Poet issue (from The Academy of American Poets) much more than last issue. The articles were less dense and obtuse. Carl Phillips does a great explication of Frank O'Hara's poem "To The Harbormaster." Jane Hirshfield reviews the new book Black Aperture by Matt Rasmussen (who won The Walt Whitman Award). I like the poems she excerpted about grief and gun violence, especially "Trajectory" ("After spiraling twice/it exits the barrel") and "Chekhov's Gun" ("Nothing ever absolutely has to happen. The gun/doesn't have to be fired").

I usually like David Wojahn poems and the ones in here don't disappoint. Mark Doty talks about Brenda Hillman's poetry. Mark Doty never disappoints either. Edward Hirsh talks about Gary Snyder. I like his poem "As for Poets." Like the last issue, I love the Manuscript Study feature, this one focusing on May Swenson's "The Question." Wow, what a revision there.  There are some new books out that look interesting to get: The Collected Poems of Ai, Anne Carson has a new book, red doc>, and Susan Wheeler's Meme looks good. I hated the send-up gravitas of the cover when I first got it, but something about it has stuck is my paw and I keep looking at it.

AprGerald Stern is on the cover of the latest American Poetry Review. Another chance to figure him out. Another failure. His "companion" Anne Marie Macari also has a review in the issue. Anne Marie was in my class with Jean Valentine at Sarah Lawrence. I sat next to her a few times. She was newly divorced, she told me. Soon after I graduated, it was rumored she had "hooked-up" with Gerald Stern. Gossip, gossip. So it's interesting they're in this issue together. Another one of my classmates, Ross Gay (in my class with David Rivard) has poems in this issue as well. Now Ross I remember better. I had a crush on him. And that was my only crush at Sarah Lawrence. But I never got to know him. He seemed very private.

I like Jennifer Militello's poems "Corrosion Therapy" and "Criminal How-To." Kathleen Ossip does an interesting light piece on Anne Sexton. I like Charlotte Matthews' "Patron Saint of the Convenience Store" and "The End of Make Believe." There's a huge excerpt on Trobairitz (female Troubadour) poetry from around the 13th century. I felt I should have liked this more than I did. It teetered on having some feminist interest for me but I just couldn't get into it. I felt the same way about Ray Gonzalez's "Crossing New Mexico with Weldon Kees" series of poems. After all, I am in New Mexico now. I should get all the references.  What blew my socks off was the poem "Woman and Dogs" by Adam Scheffler. Like I loved it enough to pin up.Here's how it begins,

My girlfriend's dog is small and fat and neurotic
and smells at night like an African meat flower.
It loves her more than some people love anyone
in a riddle of love it worries at, lying there on the floor.

Also liked James Galvin's "Simon Says," and "Long Distance" and Kettje Kuipers' "A Beautiful Night for the Rodeo." Although I enjoyed it, I have no idea why that article on TV cars was in there, except to point out the American-ness of cars. I liked that long Christopher Buckley poem and Alex Lemon's "The Righteous Man is an Advocate of All Creatures." I felt the poems were stronger than the essays this issue.

CcrThe Spring 2013 Copper Canyon Reader also came to my mailbox this month. Merwin's book of Selected Translations seems interesting in light of all the translations we read and discussed in the Nobel Prize winning poets class I just finished.  There wasn't as much that appealed to me in this issue, which is unusual. I liked Michael McGriff's excerpt from his poem "My Family History as Explained By the South Fork of the River." I also liked Robert Bringhurst's "A Quadratic Equation" and David Wagoner's "A Brief History," an ars poetica:

without knowing what it was waiting for
in places where it didn't belong,
how it broke down, how
but not why it made marks again
and again on pieces of paper.

I'm a sucker for quote-books, so I'm sure I'll buy Dennis O'Driscoll's book Quote Poet Unquote. From the excerpts,

Poems are never made out of 100% good will and good tidings. There is always a little cold wind in a good poem. — George Szirtes

 

Comment on My Poem on a Virtual Poetry Circle

PoetrySavvy Verse & Wit was very kind to choose "Starbaby," one of the poems from Why Photographers Commit Suicide, for their 200th Virtual Poetry Circle.

 Please check it out and leave some comments!
http://savvyverseandwit.com/2013/05/200th-virtual-poetry-circle.html

I've also been meaning to complete the National Poetry Month blog circle on Savvy Verse & Wit. Here are my favorites from the second half of the month:

To see the full list, visit the tour's homepage.

Here are my favorites from the beginning of the blog tour.

 

Poetry News: Pulitzer Prize 2013, Poet Interviews, Publishing News

Some news items over the last few weeks:

Poets

Publishing

    

Goings On In The Thick of National Poetry Month

NapomoThis is my first year of close National Poetry Month awareness. And beyond the normal readings, there are some really interesting projects going on out there.

NaPoWriMo

For my part I decided to participate in NaPoWriMo, or National Poetry Writing Month, which challenges you to write a poem a day and post them somewhere online. Let me tell you, this has not been easy. It's difficult to relinquish a poem (for the time being) to be read after working on it only one day. And even a short poem takes a lot of energy and some days I barely skate a poem past the finish line. On the other hand, I'm glad I'm doing this. It's been rewarding to get to know and use the site Hello Poetry to post poems and get feedback. Two weeks in, my breakout stats look like this: 3 poems about death, 3 poems in meter, 4 poems with pop culture topics, 1 narrative about a murder, 3 poems "in the moment," and 3 ars poetica.

Check them out: http://hellopoetry.com/-mary-mccray/

 

Pulitzer Remix

My friend and poet Ann Cefola is involved with the project Pulitzer Remix. Poets were asked to read a Pulitzer Prize winning novel to excerpt 30 found poems. Visit the site and you can search for poems from novels you know (like The Yearling or Age of Innocence or The Color Purple). I also highly recommend Ann Cefola's poems posted so far (http://www.pulitzerremix.com/category/now-in-november/)  from the book Now in November. She is a master at picking out really striking scenes and then ending them with a punch.

 

Savvy Verse & Wit's Blog Tour

I would also recommend the blog tour going on at Savvy Verse & Wit; I really love the variety to be found there:

  • Savvy Verse & Wit kicks it off  with a great video and transcript of Yusef Komunyakaa reading "Facing It" (April 1)
  •  The blog Necromancy Never Pays posts a great poem  by Natalie Shapero called "Flags & Axes" (April 4)
  • Booking Mama does a post of children's poetry reviews (April 6)
  • Rhapsody in Books has two posts so far, one small essay defending poetry in general with a very funny practical use for poetry to be found at the end (April 7), and one post about the poetry found in rock lyrics. She posts the full lyric to Bruce Springsteen's "Thunder Road," a pretty perfect Americana poem IMHO. (April 14)
  • Maximum Exposure has posted my favorite Neruda Sonnet XVII (April 8)
  • The Picky Girl has a fabulous post about how to host a Blackout Poetry party. I'm gonna do this! (April 9)
  • Tabatha Yeatts has an interesting post about Fibonacci Sequence poems. The Fibonacci Sequence is a mathematical form found throughout the natural world. I just learned about this form  from a lecture on poems using mathematics last year in Santa Fe. (April 10)

Check the blog tour timeline to read any or all of these. Explore and learn this month and every month!

 

Monday Poetry News Roundup

Here are some interesting poetry-related news items I've collected over the past few weeks:

National Poetry Month News

Pulitzer Remix

My friend and poet Ann Cefola has become involved with a very interesting poetry project this month through the group Pulitzer Remix (www.pulitzerremix.com). She is one of 85 poets who have been selected to create 30 found poems from any Pulitzer Prize winning novel, posting one a day through the month of April. Ann was assigned the novel Now in November (1935)  by Josephine Wilsow. Check out more of Ann's work and her two books, St. Agnes Pink-Slipped (2011) and Sugaring (2007) at http://www.anncefola.com/.

NaPoWriMo

I've kept to the poem-a-day challenge. It hasn't been easy since a) I've been fighting an allergy-related illness and b) I'm also taking two classes this month. But considering the poems don't need to be good, I'm keeping up the death march of writing. You can see the 6-and-a-half poems I've done so far on Hello Poetry: http://hellopoetry.com/-mary-mccray/

 

Oscar Wilde Gives Advice From the Grave, Treasure Hunting with a Poem and Other News


TreasureOscar Wilde Says Don't Give Up Your Day Job

A draft of one of Oscar Wilde's famous sonnets and his advice to a young writer surfaced this week. He said:

"The
best work in literature is always done by those who do not depend on it for
their daily bread and the highest form of literature, Poetry, brings no
wealth to the singer.


Make some sacrifice for your art and you will be repaid but ask of art
to sacrifice herself for you and a bitter disappointment may come to you."

Read the full story at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/9939664/Literary-success-Dont-give-up-the-day-job-advised-Oscar-Wilde.html

Rich Guy Buries Treasure in New Mexico and Puts Clues in a Poem

Millionaire Forrest Fenn was diagnosed with cancer and concerned that he couldn't take his loot with him to the afterlife. So he buried a for-real treasure chest of gold, diamonds and emeralds somewhere in the state of New Mexico. He's left nine clues to its whereabouts. But treasure seekers will have to spar with a cryptic poem called  "The Thrill
of the Chase" to find them. He hopes this will inspire Americans to get their kids
"away from their little handheld machines." I like his idea but have a feeling people and their kids will use handheld machines and social media to find it.

Read the full story at: http://now.msn.com/forrest-fenn-has-buried-treasure-in-new-mexico

Washington Post Story About Poet Amiri Baraka

http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-03-08/news/37547662_1_leroi-jones-amina-baraka-title-of-poet-laureate

LA Times Article on Poet Paul Muldoon

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/music/posts/la-et-ms-muldoon-music-20130307,0,901450.story

Oxford American Does an Interview with Poet Miller Williams

http://www.oxfordamerican.org/articles/2013/mar/05/poet-interview-miller-williams/

 

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