Last Day of Poetry Month, New Interview, and a Poem in APR – Happy Birthday!
- At April 30, 2012
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
4
So, it’s the last day of Poetry Month AND my birthday – that very last birthday of my thirties. So how should we celebrate? How about some links and news and stuff?
Celia Lisset Alvarez interviewed me over at her blog as her last poetry month feature.
And, the May/June 2012 of American Poetry Review is out, with my poem, “Once Upon a Time,” amid some really wonderful writers!
And, one more sticker for She Returns to the Floating World – here it is, all official – it didn’t win, but it was a finalist for the Eric Hoffer Montaigne Medal.
A quick recap of some other poetry news of April:
- A poem up featured at The Rumpus
- My third book, Unexplained Fevers, a collaborative book of fairy tale poems with artist Deborah Scott, is officially slated for publication by Kitsune Books in late 2013!
- “Morning of Sunflowers (for Fukushima)” was a Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg prize winner.
So yes, there was lots of stress, job interviews, a large handful of rejections, house-buying business, some health stuff…but all in all, I feel extraordinarily blessed this month and grateful. Especially with my husband baking me gluten-free birthday chocolate souffles tonight!
I also have some other exciting news I can’t officially reveal yet. But I promise I will soon!
And, finally, don’t forget to leave a comment at this link for one more chance to participate in the great poetry giveaway.
Coming to the End of Poetry Month, and my birthday…
I’m exhausted but happy coming to the end of Poetry Month! A new class of poetry students, way too many scheduled readings to attend or even try to attend, wild, unpredictable weather, falling cherry blossoms, chocolate bunnies, my birthday – I mean, let’s face it, April can be hectic but fun. Along with celebrating turning another year older successfully, I’m about to be take the plunge into home ownership again, possibly start a new job (more on that later) and it feels like I’m entering a new chapter of my life. A good chapter. I hope! Less “post-apocalyptic survivalist reality show” and more “Girl Finds Love and Success in the Big City!”
It has also started to occur to me, at this birthday go-around, that if we want good things to happen in our community, if we want people around us to get to know and love poetry, that we need to take an active hand to make that happen. To paraphrase a popular saying, we have to become the arts advocates we are looking for.
I had a wonderful time working with local musician Joy Mills at the Bushwick Book Club event at Hugo House. Hearing the song she wrote based on “Sleeping Beauty Loves the Needle” was just fantastic, and she is pretty great live, too. I’m glad they didn’t ask me to sing! I just had to read the poem, thank goodness. Had fun meeting other local poets, too. Always a pleasure being at Hugo House.
And now, onto the birthday-end-of-month-scurry-to-get-packed-and-ready-to-move-and-some-other-things-I’ll-reveal-later!
Poets and Music at Hugo House!
Do you enjoy listening to local hip musicians? AND do you enjoy poetry! Then tonight’s event at Richard Hugo House, featuring the Bushwick Book Club‘s collaborative meeting of Seattle poets and musicians, is probably your kind of thing! It’s $8 at the door, but this kind of unique performance is totally worth it. My poem “Sleeping Beauty Loves the Needle” is going to be turned into a real, live song by the genius work of Joy Mills. Pretty exciting!
Poets include: Ed Skoog, Evan Peterson, Bill Carty, Daemond Arrindell, Elaina Ellis, Jeannine Hall-Gailey, Amber Flame and Elissa Ball.
Musicians include: James Kelly Pitts, Scott Adams, Joy Mills, Karen Lindenberg, Shawnmarie Stanton, Susy Sundborg, Elijah Sussman and Wes Weddell.
Hope to see you there tonight!
And, you know, I may post a bit more about this later, but you may want to keep your eyes open for the May/June issue of American Poetry Review. No special reason, you know, just…
Mini-review of two new books, superstress week, poetry month
Wednesday is the big presentation day that determines whether or not I’ll get the job I’ve been stressing out over for a month or two now. Wish me luck! Contractor meeting this afternoon. And grading. Also, Wednesday night, I’ll be teaching a class with RASP with teens on anime, haiku and haibun. Then, the next day, off to Hugo House for an amazing musician/poet collaborative presentation. Then, I’ll turn 39, then celebrate a few days by signing a lot of papers that will plant us some roots – finally in the Northwest. But whew! This month is killing me! And May is going to be just as busy!
Still trying to keep up with my mini-reviews of my poetry-book-reading-a-day April project, but falling a bit behind. To remedy some of that, here are a couple of reviews of two local writers’ recent books:
Molly Tenenbaum’s The Cupboard Artist, recently out from Floating Bridge Press, presents the every day world: food, music, household objects like ugly paint colors and swing sets – in a way that reflects on human relationships, science, and the universe. Her whimsical sense of humor and music shine through in poems like “Birthday Cake:” “She’s a cartoon, she’s splashing the spoon,/ she’s a mud-flapping lab coat/ dark stream swirling marbling smoothing/ /he doesn’t like chocolate, he doesn’t -” Floating Bridge always does a loving, lovely job with their production, so the book is a really beautiful artifact as well.
Carol Levin’s Stunned by the Velocity from Pecan Grove Press is a recounting of a year, 1968, and one couple’s adventures and travels, including women kidnapped into a Greek convent, a couple’s sometimes humorous conflicts with hostesses who throw lamps and attempts to procure transportation along the way. Carol works with me at Crab Creek Review and her attention to detail, to the ironies of the troublesome realities of travel, and her unique perspectives on time and place here are sure to delight.
The Rumpus poetry feature today, New Pages mention, and more!
My poem “The Robot Scientist’s Daughter [brushes with death]” is featured up on The Rumpus today: http://therumpus.net/2012/04/
A nice early birthday present – thanks Rumpus!
Also, NewPages.com coincidentally featured a link to my old essay on Poemeleon on women poets and persona poetry here:
http://newpagesblog.blogspot.com/2012/04/women-writers-and-persona-poem.html
So thanks to New Pages too!
A lot of poets are born in April, aren’t they? Tracy K. Smith celebrated her birthday yesterday with a Pulitzer for Life On Mars, which I also celebrated as a win for “geek” poetry! And for scientist’s daughter poets everywhere. (Women poets whose fathers are scientists include Margaret Atwood, Louise Gluck, Tracy K. Smith, Kathleen Flenniken, and me.) Yay! On the down side, fiction writers everywhere were kicked in the teeth when they didn’t choose any winners for fiction this year. Ouch. Personally I think they should have picked Helen Phillips strange, wonderful collection And Yet They Were Happy.
Remember to pick up a ticket to the April 26 event at Hugo House, “Poets and Music.” Local musicians put some local poets’ work to music, including mine! Collaboration at its finest. Joy Mills is producing a song based on a poem, “Sleeping Beauty Loves the Needle,” from my upcoming third book. I feel really honored.
Here’s a link with more info:
http://www.strangertickets.com/events/4784131/the-bushwick-book-club-seattle-and-the-richard-hugo-house-present
Skagit Valley Tulip Festival
I thought I’d give you a quick peek at our yearly pilgrimage to the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival. We had a lovely day of sunshine and could have spent it packing, grading, finishing up proposals and papers, but decided instead to pack a bowl of popcorn, some macaroons, and make an escape for a few hours to the wheeling eagles, herons, and snow geese, tulips and daffodils in Skagit. Here are a couple of pics. Sometimes taking a few hours out of your real life reminds you of the things that are really important, the moments the air smells like narcissus and hyacinth, the sun on top of snowy mountains and the shine of snow geese in the sky.
Poetry Month with Way Too Much to Do and Mini-reviews of some terrific poetry books
Yes, I’m finishing up a final proposal for my mystery job opportunity, going in to measure the new townhouse for window treatments and signing lots more paperwork for the bank, trying to finish up classes on anime and haibun, and balance my National poetry MFA class at the same time. Totally sane and normal, right? (I think I might be living on adrenaline.)
On top of that, I’ve actually been writing a poem a day, and reading a poetry book a day for fun as well. I thought I’d do a few mini-reviews because you too should find out about these terrific books!
Amy Newman’s Dear Editor
I’m loving this book as the construct is terrific – a series of letters to publishers asking them to publish her fictional poetry book, “X=Pawn Capture,” which, meta-liciously, she describes so fully in the book that we get a wonderful sense of her family history, her mental connections between chess and martyrs, and her inner insecurities as a writer. I laughed out loud a couple of times, and since my father was a huge chess maniac and taught me some of the main moves of chess as a little girl and had me play against a robot – true story – I very much identified with Amy’s meta-story about her grandfather teaching her chess playing techniques while remaining emotionally unavailable, as her grandmother cooked and told her gruesome stories of Catholic saints and the “old country.” Anyway, it’s a terrific book, funny without being overly light or flippant, and something that any poet who has sent out book manuscript after book manuscript will identify with, including the quasi-religious language of submission to publishers and the writer’s always plaintive queries.
Another book in which “the poet” appears as a meta-character – in this case, she’s called “the sliver poet” – is Carmen Gimenez Smith’s Goodbye, Flicker, which uses the structure of fractured fairy tales to illustrate a variety of broken girl archetypes, a sense of being “the other,” the dangers around every corner in mirrors, long hair, frogs. Her work has a lot in common with Rene Lynch’s series, “The Secret Life of the Forest” from which I borrowed a painting for the cover art of “She Returns to the Floating World.” In particular, Gimenez has an owl-girl that keeps reminding me of this painting “The Secret Life of the Forest (visitor)” that you can see here. This book has a lot in common, too, with my upcoming third book, Unexplained Fevers, but Gimenez has more of an exploratory use of language than I do, I think (dare I say – a more experimental take on language?) and I like the way she plays with her different character’s internal landscapes, which are slippery and shift around from poem to poem. Anyway, a definite must-read for fans of fairy-tale themed poetry, and I might add that if you like Mary Biddinger’s work, you’ll probably like Gimenez’ – their poetry has a lot in common! Did I mention Carmen is also the editor-in-chief of Puerto del Sol, and publisher of Noemi Press – like Mary, a super-hard-working multi-tasking poet!
Speaking of multi-tasking editor/poets, I’ve also enjoyed in my April reading series Tom Holmes’ (editor of Redactions) book, Poems for an Empty Church. You may know that I have a soft spot for archetypal explorations, and Tom’s poems here search for the metaphysical and mystical in the everyday, the everyday in the mystical, and he mentions the laws of thermodynamics AND Port Townsend, so basically, everything I love.
I wanted to put up sample poems from all three books but you’ll just have to go read them yourselves to find out more – you won’t be disappointed! Happy Poetry Month!
Japanese Language Meetup and The Rumpus’s Original Poetry Features for Poetry Month!
Had a wonderful time at last night’s Japanese Language Meetup at the Lake Hills Library. My friend Kaori did a wonderful job talking about haiku in Japanese, I read a couple of poems from She Returns to the Floating World, and the folks who showed up for the meeting wrote beautiful haiku, haiku that would rival any of my grad students, and the atmosphere was so fun and lively. The night reminded me that the differences of haiku in Japanese are striking and listening to my own poetry translated into Japanese (which Kaori also read) reminded me of the magic that happens when you shift from one language into another. It also definitely reminded me I need to brush up on my conversational Japanese. I think I can say “hello” and “thank you” and can understand about every third word in a conversation about poetry (because I’ve studied those particular phrases) but seeing something on the page and hearing them out loud are two different things! Anyway, it was great fun and I felt honored to be there.
Also, very excited about the National Poetry Month original poetry feature at The Rumpus, especially the poem coming up on April 17. Check out the poems here:
http://therumpus.net/2012/04/national-poetry-month-2012-lineup/
Also, if you haven’t left a comment yet (with your e-mail addy in case you win) to win some books, go do so!
Great Poetry Month Giveaway! Leave a Comment, Win a Book!
I’m finally putting up my post for the big poetry month giveaway (as described here on Kelli’s blog) so please leave a comment so you can win a book (or two, or three!) I’ll be using a random number generator to pick the winner the first week of May (but I’m closing a house in the first few days of May, so if I’m a day or two off, have patience!)
So, a little about me. I’ve written four books of poetry, Becoming the Villainess (Steel Toe Books, 2006,) She Returns to the Floating World (Kitsune Books, 2011,) Unexplained Fevers (forthcoming from Kitsune Books, 2013) and another book I’m still in process with on Oak Ridge and robots. I’m a poet obsessesed with persona, with pop culture, with the spaces between, with women who turn into foxes and disappear. I write, I review, I teach, I edit, I read. I try to become better. Every book I write I try to take a step in a new direction.
1. The first book I’m giving away is my own second book, She Returns to the Floating World. It’s full of meditations on Japanese folk tales, the role of the female icon in anime movies, women who transform themselves, lovesickness, tragedy, and heroism. Plus a little about Knoxville, imagined voyages, marraige, and dreams. From Kitsune Books, cover art by talented Rene Lynch.
2. The second book I’m giving away is a signed copy of Marie-Elizabeth Mali’s Steady My Gaze is compassionate, spiritual in the most interesting way, interested in Jung’s archetype, in love. No one who reads this book walks away unmoved. From Tebot Bach.
Okay, go ahead, comment away and good luck to you! You may also receive one of the following: The Haiku Handbook, a various literary magazine, or another poetry book of my choosing. You know, depending on how big the box I have to ship stuff is!
Face to Meet the Faces Reading
I don’t know why, but every time I walk into the Richard Hugo House lately, I get a good feeling. I’ve been loving their Cheap Wine and Poetry series (much rowdier and hipper than most poetry readings) and last night’s reading for the Face to Meet the Faces anthology celebration was just as fun. I got to see lots of my friends read – Peter Pereira, Martha Silano, editor Oliver de la Paz, among many other wonderful folks – and I got to meet co-editor Stacey Lynn Brown, which was fun! Another fun reader was Tiffany Midge, who did a wonderful job with the Hulk poem from the anthology as well as her own. I got to read Charles Jensen’s “After Oz” – which reminds me how much I like Charles’ poetry – as well as my own “When Red Becomes the Wolf.” It felt like a really fun time and I really loved the celebration of persona poetry! Yay, persona poetry!
I’ve got a class at National’s MFA program starting up in a few days, so I’m gearing up for teaching that again, as well as prepping for a presentation related to the mystery job possibility, trying to get things squared away with the new townhouse before our close, and, oh, yes, I’m moving in a month so I’m packing things up and getting rid of bags of old clothes and broken things.
So it’s National Poetry Month but my brain is full of many things to keep up in the air and moving forward…surprisingly, I’ve already written a couple of poems this month and I’ve been reading a really fun real-life tale of running an independent bookstore in Utah called “The King’s English.” Since I sometimes daydream about running my own bookstore, it’s a perfect escape book at the end of a long day. I recommend it!