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 Thursday, April 30, 2009
Nifty Tool!
Posted by Robert
Thank you to Anders Bylund who created a nifty tool to search for poems in the challenge. His little gadget allows people to search by day, by name, or full-text search. He recommends searching by name (and that seems to make the most sense to me as well).
If you want to check it out, go to http://dintur.net/cgi-bin/pc2009.pl
It takes a little while to churn through everything, but (at least on the few names I searched for) it works! Very, very cool!
Again, thank you so much, Anders! Poetry Challenge 2009
Thursday, April 30, 2009 4:10:18 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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April PAD Challenge: Day 30
Posted by Robert
Hard to believe, but we made it through the entire month of April. Go us!
Please check back tomorrow to learn the details of what to expect in the future as far as receiving notification of the April PAD completionists and those who make the Top 50 eBook. With more than 25,000 comments on prompt postings this month, it's going to be quite a challenge just to get through all of them. (Remember: You have until noon EST tomorrow, May 1, to get all your posting done.)
If you still want to keep the prompt-poem magic going throughout the rest of the year, I'll be continuing our Wednesday Poetry Prompts on...umm...Wednesday (5/6).
If you need a break, tune back in here this November to take part in the November PAD Chapbook Challenge--when we write a poem-a-day with the goal of creating a 10-20 page chapbook at the end of the month. (Even though I don't want to make any promises or commitments until later this year, I have a feeling that we may be able to create an eBook for the winning manuscript.)
*****
For today's prompt, I want you to write a farewell poem. After all, we are saying farewell to another wonderful National Poetry Month. Say farewell to this month; say farewell to a vacation spot; say farewell to a bad relationship; say farewell to work; say farewell to school; say farewell to saying farewell even. Hopefully, I won't be saying farewell to you; please stay in touch and let me know of your successes as we keep poeming toward the horizon.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"In Season"
We began by the dock--
the fog and waves warning us to stay ashore (or so I thought)--
though soon you were motoring across the lake as I turned back toward my car
stopping to listen to the fading whirr of your boat parting the water
and geese honking overhead. Personal Updates | Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Thursday, April 30, 2009 12:48:13 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Get Your Poetry Published!
Posted by Robert
On May 29, I'll be leading an online seminar on how to go about publishing your poetry. After all, it's one thing to write great poetry, but getting it published? That's an entirely different hurdle.
Topics I plan on covering include:
- How to identify appropriate markets for your poetry.
- How to avoid many common submission mistakes.
- How to handle your cover letters, including the tricky bio (even if you have no previous publication credits to mention).
- How to manage your submissions (and avoid upsetting editors).
And I'm sure I'll cover more. The seminar will begin at 1 p.m. (EST) and will last one hour. You can learn more details and register at https://writersonlineworkshops.webex.com/writersonlineworkshops/j.php?J=683166157. Advice | Personal Updates | Poetry News | Poetry Publishing
Wednesday, April 29, 2009 7:44:38 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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April PAD Challenge: Day 29
Posted by Robert
Wow! More than 450 comments are already posted to the sestina prompt. You guys are tough to shake or rattle. I promise the last two prompts of this month will be softballs compared to yesterday.
For today's prompt, I want you to title your poems "Never (blank)" with you filling in the blank with a word or phrase. Then, write a poem based off your title, which could be "Never look both ways when crossing the street" or "Never blush in public" or "Never ever" or "Never write a poem with the word never in the title." You get the idea, right?
Here's my attempt for the day:
"Never let them find you in love"
Reason: There's no upside when everyone starts kite high in a branch-filled
forest. There's no reason behind love anyway: Either you do or don't
believe. No questioning someone's faith, not upon this topic we call Love.
We either snag or get snagged. We can hide our eyes, count, shout "Ready or not,"
and hope we can be found. Personal Updates | Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Wednesday, April 29, 2009 12:49:25 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, April 28, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 28
Posted by Robert
Apparently, Day 27's comments were wiped clean sometime last night. Please re-paste your poem in the comments for Day 27. (Click here to go to Day 27's prompt.) I apologize for the inconvenience, but luckily, we're only a few days from the finish line.
*****
After today, we'll have made it 4 weeks into the month. Only 2 days left! Of course, being so close to the end, I have to throw in a special challenge, right?
For today's prompt, I want you to write a sestina. (Click here to find out the rules for sestinas.) So start figuring out your 6 end words and get writing.
But wait! Today is Tuesday, so you have one other option. You can write a poem about the sestina (your love, hate, frustration with, etc.).
Whether you decide to write a sestina or write about sestinas, remember to have fun. We're almost done!
Here's my attempt for the day:
"The green cactus"
This morning, I found a cactus beneath the desk lamp on my desk. It's made of plastic, the cactus. Somehow these things just happen. I have my usual suspects,
though I'm not sure they suspect I know about the cactus, not yet. My boys were happening to hang around my lamp just yesterday. This is how boys lose toys made of plastic
then expect new ones. Whether by plastic or cash. I stash the suspect toy in a file cabinet. How long will I hide the cactus? Who knows? The heat of my lamp could've melted it. I happen
to think that could happen, though I'm not certain of plastic and its melting point beneath desk lamps. Maybe I'm guilty of suspecting too much. It's only a cactus, and I'm sure that's exactly how
I was as a boy. That's how behavior passes, and they happen to have a forgetful father with a cactus made of cheap, green plastic. My mind is as suspect as anyone's held under a lamp
and analyzed. Read my palm to suggest the what and how of dealing with little male suspects who love me and just happen to leave their little plastic toys as offerings. This little cactus,
sweet cactus, re-emerge beneath my lamp in your skin of plastic. Show how a father can return a love never suspect. Poetic Forms | Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Tuesday, April 28, 2009 12:51:25 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, April 27, 2009
Interview With Poet Laurel Snyder
Posted by Robert
Interesting (maybe only to me) story: This interview with Laurel Snyder came about after Laurel responded to one of my "tweets" on Twitter. (By the way, you can follow me there at http://twitter.com/robertleebrewer.) Yes, social networking really can benefit all writers--even (or maybe especially) poets.
In 2007, No Tell Books published Laurel Snyder's collection, The Myth of the Simple Machines. No stranger to publishing, Laurel has published several books with her recent titles for children, including Inside the Slidy Diner (Tricycle Press).
Here's one of my favorite poems from The Myth of the Simple Machines:
The Truth
Listen. My grandmother died and we burned her
up in a fire but when we went to dump her ashes in water--because water is cool and makes us feel
better--she refused to be put under. She floated
until my uncle held her down. He forced her--to swallow the end and the water to swallow her body. Then we drove
away quick. Didn't stare too long at the spot. She was
horrible, my grandmother, and that's the truth, though my uncle pretended. "She was a good old girl, just
the dog done lost her bite." But no. "But no she
never did," we told him. If only she had. The witch. There she was--rising, biting at us from the very end.
Trying to claw her way to beyond her welcome, which
died about the time she began. It's a terrible thing-- hatred. Of family, the dead, water that isn't heavy enough
to pull things down and keep them. "I love you," I said to her as she died.
"Yes, but you love lots of people," she growled back faintly. "Not enough," I should've told her then, "nowhere near."
*****
What are you currently up to?
Tonight? I'm playing a desperate game of catch-up with several little deadlines, eating half a roast beef sandwich, listening for the kids to wake up screaming (which they do EVERY night), and then, at last, going to bed with a copy of Searching for Mercy Street, which is awesome, and totally messing with my head.
You write poetry and children's books. So when you start writing, how do you know you're working on a poem or a children's book?
Hmm. In the beginning, I didn't. Back when I started writing for kids, the genres blended together a lot. Prose poems would become picture books, and stories would turn into poems. Most of them messy and unacceptable to everyone. Nowadays, I have a clearer sense for what I can actually sell as a book for kids. And that tends to limit some of what I'm doing (though I try not to let it). But there's still some back and forth, and lines I snip from my novels often make their way into my poems.
Do you consider yourself a children's book writer who writes poetry, or a poet who writes children's books?
This is a hard question for me right now. Inside myself, I'm a poet. I always have been, pretty much. I think in lines, in forms, and with the kind of attraction to language that we call poetry. But as time goes by, and I do more and more books that aren't poetry, it only makes sense that others will see the poetry as secondary. I haven't stopped writing poems, but a book of poems is a lot harder to sell than anything else in the world. I'm not even sending out my current manuscript.
There's a storytelling element to your poems. Did you grow up around stories?
I think everyone grows up around stories. But I absolutely did, and more than that, I grew up around fables. I'm very interested in mythology, allegory, fairy tale. The idea of narrative as inherently more. I spent a lot of college reading Eastern European poetry, and I think that reinforced my sense of fable as poetry.
How do you handle the submission process?
I don't do a very good job of it lately. I just submitted a poem to an anthology this month, because it was something that I desperately wanted to be part of. But I no longer take a terribly organized aproach to submissions. Partly because my current manuscript is a lot of tiny poems, and they don't work well as stand-alones. So I'm kind of building up the steam to send the book out as a whole. In general though, I try really hard not to submit to magazines I don't actually read. Which means, increasingly, that I submit to online magazines.
What do you feel makes a great poem?
I think a really great poem has two things--a veneer of accesibility (whether narrative structure, playful language, an emotional hook, a huge image, whatever). Something a reader can grab onto. Something that functions as an entry point. And then the requirement for a second/ third/fourth/ fifth read. I'm not interested in work that's only pleasurable or evocative or lyrical. But I also have very little time for work that doesn't grab me.
Who have you been reading recently?
I've been going back to Sexton and Plath, neither of whom (I'm embarassed to say) I've ever read seriously . I loved them in high school, and sort of dismissed them after, BECAUSE I'd loved them in high school. Isn't that silly? As a woman and mother and someone interested in myth and storytelling, this seems insane.
If you could pass on only one piece of advice to fellow poets, what would it be?
Lighten up. The things that matter--like the poems themselves, and the community you build around yourself to support this crazy thing you do--aren't going anywhere just because you don't win a contest or get into a certain magazine or a certain university job. I think the academic world we've pushed poetry into is problematic, and the rewards are easily quantifiable, and that brings a heavyness to the business of writing. Which limits what we write about and how we write. Which is sad. When I had my kids, and stopped teaching adjunct, I kind of gave up on all of that, and I've been happier ever since. Though I do feel like a goof at AWP, with no affiliation to claim. But what can I do--it's a good party!
*****
You can learn more about Laurel Snyder at http://laurelsnyder.com/.
Also, you can check out her publisher, No Tell Books, at http://www.notellbooks.org/.
And, while researching Laurel, I found this interview by my co-worker/boss, Alice Pope at her CWIM blog: http://cwim.blogspot.com/2009/01/blogger-of-week-laurel-snyder.html
*****
If you're a poet or publisher interested in an interview, check this out.
Personal Updates | Poet Interviews | Poetry Craft Tips
Monday, April 27, 2009 10:54:48 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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April PAD Challenge: Day 27
Posted by Robert
After today, we'll be just three days away from closing out this challenge. 3 days! We're so very, very close. I know we can do it.
For today's prompt, I want you to write a poem of longing. You or someone (or something) else should be pining for someone or something. Maybe a cat is longing to get outside the house. Maybe a teenager is longing to get away from his or her small town. And, of course, there's always the longing poem of love.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"The Librarian"
She stands beside a bookshelf over- whelmed by so many exposed spines. She creates stories she'd like to read that haven't been written. Then, she struggles to get the words right. Maybe tomorrow will be better, she thinks. But she knows, she knows. She knows yesterday is a prediction for tomorrow. The clever and cute boy who doesn't let it get to his head never appears beside her desk. Her shirt forgets the body it's holding until she disappears behind her glasses, a sweater and flower-print skirt. Personal Updates | Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Monday, April 27, 2009 2:30:34 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Sunday, April 26, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 26
Posted by Robert
For today's prompt, I want you to write a poem involving miscommunication. It can be miscommunication between two people or misinterpretation of some sort. I will leave it up to you guys to deal with it however you want.
Here is my attempt for the day:
"If Shakespeare taught us anything, it's that it doesn't take much to flip a picture upside down"
"Can you smash the yellow jacket for me," she asks. He says, "What's wrong with your birthday present? I saved to buy it after you said you wanted it." He pushes her off him. Just seconds ago, they were talking about the fools who think they're rushing things. "Really? You're an idiot," she says, "I was just asking a question." He clenches his fists and says, "And now you're calling me names, too." "Listen: I wasn't talking about my yellow jacket but that bee which, like our happy moment, has now wandered off never to return." Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Sunday, April 26, 2009 2:37:26 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Saturday, April 25, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 25
Posted by Robert
Only 5 more days left to go!
For today's prompt, I want you to pick an event; make that event the title of your poem; and then write a poem. Think birthday. Think holiday. Think whatever.
Here is my attempt for the day (which will give you a pretty good idea about what I have planned for the day):
"NFL Draft Party"
Fans of every franchise watch and hope the front office people are as smart as them. They say, "Pass on the flashy guy with red flags and take the sure thing," all the while admitting there's not a sure thing; each pick is full of potential.
Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Saturday, April 25, 2009 2:13:31 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, April 24, 2009
April PAD Challenge: Day 24
Posted by Robert
Sorry for the late posting time this morning. Computer issues. In fact, I hope this attempt to post actually goes through before it crashes again. :)
For today's prompt, I want you to write a travel-related poem. It can be human travel, the migration of swallows, the trafficking of drugs, etc. Some sort of movement from point A to point B.
Here's my attempt for the day:
"Should"
Fog fills the valley so that he can't see her little village. She should be making her way to him, but he won't know until she does. He imagines her determined face, body bent forward and legs still moving. Just then, a bird lifts out of the fog and on out of sight.
Personal Updates | Poetry Challenge 2009 | Poetry Prompts
Friday, April 24, 2009 2:43:40 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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