Reading Report from Open Books, Poems in Pirene’s Fountain, Jack Straw Reading this Friday!
- At April 29, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
I’m happy to report that yesterday’s reading – my first for the new book – with Kelly Davio at Open Books went really well. And Glenn, my wonder-husband, set up a surprise 40th birthday for me afterwards at a nearby restaurant with 20 of my nearest and dearest. It was really wonderful but now I have completely lost my voice! Ha! The crowd for the reading was not only healthy in size but included some old friends I rarely get to see and some new faces, and was really warm and supportive, and Kelly was a great reader – full of energy and combustion. The interesting thing about this first reading from the new book was how the characters in the poems sort of possessed me – I was angry when I read one character’s poems, sad when I read another’s, etc. It occurred to me that some of my persona poems might be taking on their own life, which I am just channeling when I read. I don’t remember that happening with my other books, but maybe it did!
My friends – based on their Facebook posts – may have better pictures from the reading than I do, but here are a few with my reading partner Kelly Davio, poets Kelli Russell Agodon, Kathleen Flenniken, and Raul Sanchez, who were among the warm and wonderful aforementioned crowd members.
Thanks to Pirene’s Fountain, where I have a few new poems up (including two from Unexplained Fevers:)
http://pirenesfountain.com/poetry/gailey.html
It’s a wonderful issue so if you have time read the whole thing.
And, I have another reading on Friday May 3rd at 7 PM with the Jack Straw Writers – which you can read more about here.
It’s a great group to read with and if you haven’t been out to the Jack Straw building downtown, it’s fascinating – a recording/studio space and a reading space and rooms where they teach artists, writers, and other creative types how to record and perform on the radio. Pretty cool!
An online interview with Joanne Merriam, Tomorrow’s Reading, and Advice from the Pages of Grimm’s
- At April 27, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
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Hope you are all planning to come out to Open Books tomorrow to me and Kelly Davio read at 3 PM. It should be some fun! Kelly is a terrific reader and I promise to be extra fun.
A new interview with me by Joanne Merriam is up at her web site here:
http://www.joannemerriam.com/2013/04/26/intermittent-visitors-jeannine-hall-gailey/
She asks about some of the inspirations for Unexplained Fevers, and I included this tidbit about how some of the poems came about:
“It’s not hard to imagine Sleeping Beauty as a drug addict, or Snow White as someone with chronic fatigue syndrome, when you’re spending a lot of time in hospitals.”
Here’s a poem from Unexplained Fevers called “Advice From the Pages of Grimms’:”
Advice Left Between the Pages of Grimms’ Fairy Tales
Life is not a fairy tale, and this isn’t your pumpkin coach.
You’re not lost in some magic wood,
and that blood on your hands isn’t from an innocent stag
at all. Princess, remember to fill your pockets
with more than bread crumbs, and
if you can’t sleep don’t blame the legumes
beneath the sheets. One look at that glass coffin
they’ve set up for you should tell you
everything you need to know about their intentions.
Remember a lot of girls end up dismembered, and
every briar rose has its thorn.
Forget the sword and magic stone,
forget enchantments and focus on the profit margin,
the hard line. Read the subtext.
Tulip Therapy After a Tough Week and Upcoming First Reading for Unexplained Fevers
- At April 25, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Dear Readers,
Now that my passwords are all reset and my mother is safely out of the hospital and recovering, I am able to relax a bit and get back to concentrating on things like poetry, books, etc. Yesterday my husband snuck me out of town and took me up the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival, where we had glorious warm sunny weather (for April, a 70 degree sunny day is fairly unusual here, so we had to take advantage of it) and got to see a lot of flowers. Want to see a picture?
Here are three!
See? Isn’t that better that staying home worrying? This was one of the biggest spring-birthday-month rituals – driving out to see the tulips, stopping in our favorite gluten-free bakery and farmer’s market and little bookshops and stores – I missed when I lived in California, so I try to go every year now. Besides, this Windmill picture will probably be the closest I get to Holland!
Now, all you Seattle friends, notice that this Sunday is my first Seattle reading for my third book, Unexplained Fevers, just out from New Binary Press! I’m reading with the esteemed and talented Kelly Davio (pictured below – I’m standing with her book next to the bear) at Open Books, Seattle’s Wallingford-located all-poetry bookstore, at 3 PM. Don’t be late! It’s the end of poetry month and I think we should all embrace fun and springtime and all that is good in the world…
Hacked and Mom in the hospital
- At April 23, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Dear friends,
I apologize if you got any strange e-mails from me in the last 24 hours – one of my e-mails was compromised – the password was changed but should be fixed now – and I probably didn’t get your e-mails if you sent them in the last days. Of course, if you got anything suspicious from me yesterday, do not click on any of the links. And again, I know I missed some e-mails from people, so if you sent me anything in the last 24 hours or so, you might want to re-send.
I’d also like to ask for your thoughts for my mom who is normally pretty healthy and spunky, who is currently in the hospital with possibly serious heart problems and also possible pneumonia. I can’t go out to see her in Ohio because I’ve been running a high fever for a week and it wouldn’t be good to expose mom to more germs…but I’m awfully worried. So far this April has not been shaping up to be stellar, would be my understatement.
A Week of Sadness, of Returning to Field’s End, and Technological-Poetry Marvels
- At April 17, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
It has been a dramatic few days. Watching the terrible Boston marathon bombings – I happened to have the news on in the background when it happened – reminded me a few things, besides the heart-stopping sadness that accompanies these disasters. None of my ponderings will be more profound than anyone else’s on the subject, but it did reawaken that awareness that we are not safe as we usually assume ourselves to be, whether going to the movies, to a race, or to school (one of my friends had a stabbing incident – 14 people – at her community college a few days before the Boston bombings, where one of her students helped stop the attacker. I hope he gets an A!)
We are not permanent, we humans. We better ensure that we are doing the important things with our lives that we always meant to, because there may not be those extra years to make up lost ground. It reminded me that the little things we do to build the world up – telling someone you love them, maybe doing some volunteer work in the community – that they do add up, in the end, to more than the destruction some random terrorist might enact.
And with exactly that in mind, yesterday I made the trek over to Bainbridge Island Library to my own former home town to give a talk for Field’s End on building community, which seemed like an appropriate topic given the latest events. I talked about maybe how the most important thing I’ve learned from being Poet Laureate of my little city of Redmond has been – you do not need to be a Poet Laureate to do good in your community, to make a difference, to start a reading series or work with your local library or go into your local schools or work with an art museum or gallery. No – I could always have been doing those things, but I wasn’t brave? empowered? enough to do them. But now I know that I can. And I got to see one of my old friends, Lana Ayers, who was in the audience! (In less glamorous news, we did manage to have our car stall – and needed a jump to get off the Bainbridge ferry and had to drive around a bit to get our battery some more juice. For those of you who have never experiences needing a jump on a a ferry boat, let me tell you, it is both embarrassing and stressful. We blame our new/used car’s keyless on and off button, which it’s possible we haven’t quite mastered.) But Bainbridge is still the favorite of my former-home-towns, still charming as ever, maybe with slightly better restaurants than we had when we live there, and it was an oasis of sunshine on a stormy day.
And then today we used the internet to have a live meeting – across many states – to talk about poetry. I was honored to be part of the group – moderated by Robert Lee Brewer – that included Mary Biddinger, an overachiever for poetry if ever there was one, Nate Pritts and Aaron Belz. There was an interesting discussion of kindness versus the attributes of not-kindness in the poetry world, talk about our top poetry moments – mine were admittedly a little scattered, and of course a few of our poems, which seemed strangely thematically linked, not sure how that happened. Here’s a link to it at Writer’s Market:
http://www.writersdigest.com/whats-new/four-poets-read-poems-and-talk-poetry
The neat thing about the event was that somehow Google was trying to support the literary arts for poetry month and helped us use Google Hangout for our event, and here again I thought – here is a company which often I think of as nameless, faceless, etc – that is trying to do some good out there. I know companies do what they can, but it’s always encouraging to have an actual brush with corporate do-gooding. (You know, Microsoft matches employee charity donations, Capital One sent us out to work with Habitat for Humanity, so it does occasionally happen, you cynics!) And it was wonderful to see some people for the first time – I’ve never met Robert Brewer though I have been corresponding with him for years about Poet’s Market! And see Mary Biddinger, with whom I read on my very first book tour (U of Akron to Fredonia!) many years ago, again! Anyway, it made me think that in the future, maybe more poetry readings and lectures could be virtual – that perhaps we might be able to chat with someone famous that we love “virtually face to face” – and the ability to go to poetry readings would be greater for people who live far away from literary cities, or have disabilities or other things that keep them away from a lot of literary social events. Maybe some events at AWP Seattle will be done with Google Hangout! We’ll see.
Anyway, the week has left me emotionally drained, physically exhausted, but strangely, feeling hopeful about humanity rather than doubtful. There were so many more people doing good at the Boston Marathon than evil. The former army guys who ran to carry injured folks to the hospital, the runners who kept running to donate blood in the aftermath, the first responders who no doubt saved many lives that day. Look at humanity. We keep fighting against death, and pain, and anger, and sadness. We keep at it. We don’t give up.
Where am I going to be for the rest of April? And a wonderful review of Unexplained Fevers
- At April 15, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
I woke up this morning to a wonderful blog review (the first one!) of Unexplained Fevers by Kristin Berkey-Abott here.
Thanks, Kristin, for the lovely review! Not to belabor the point, but you can get your own copy of Unexplained Fevers here, here, or here!
In case you’re wondering what I’m up to for the rest of April (also Poetry month!) here are a few places you can find me:
–April 16th, 2013: http://www.fieldsend.org/2013-roundtables3.aspx – 7 PM at Bainbridge Island’s Library for Field’s End – Jeannine Hall Gailey discusses how to make a difference in your local poetry community.
–April 17th, 2013: https://plus.google.com/events/c87ft4tolfkkf60runr427oaqas?authkey=CL-VxuTKmY_AkAE – 4 PM Pacific/7 PM Eastern on Google Hangouts – a National Poetry Month Promotion with Poet’s Market Editor, Robert Brewer, plus poets Jeannine Hall Gailey, Mary Biddinger, Nathan Pritts, and Aaron Belz – live readings and poetry discussions. This event will be streamed so you can watch it afterwards as well. (And I’ll put up a link after it’s done.)
–April 28th, 2013: At Open Books in Wallingford at 3 PM. I’m reading for my brand new third book, Unexplained Fevers, along with poet and editor Kelly Davio, who is reading from her first book, Burn This House.
If you’d like a copy of my new book, but you just can’t afford it? Sign up for the Great Poetry Giveaway!
The Big Poetry Giveaway
- At April 10, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
22
Okay, at the last minute, not only have I created a Goodreads Giveaway for my new book (see sidebar on the right to enter) but I’m also participating in this year’s Big Poetry Giveaway, started by Kelli Agodon and hosted this year by Seattle poet Susan Rich.
Here’s a link on how to participate:
http://thealchemistskitchen.blogspot.com/2013/03/sign-up-now-to-participate-in-big.html
This year ‘ll not only be giving away my third book, Unexplained Fevers, an exploration of the dangers of the fairy tale world and the lives of contemporary women but a copy of one of my favorite journals, the Spring 2013 issue of Rattle.
To enter, leave a comment here with your e-mail address so I can contact you if you win! Winner will be chosen by random number generator on May 1! Good luck!
What Are You Doing to Celebrate Poetry Month? I Think I’m Going to Celebrate By Turning 40 and Releasing a New Book!
- At April 08, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Yes, I’ve always liked the coincidence that my birthday happens to be during the arbitrarily-chosen National Month of Poetry but this year it seems particularly apt. Turning 40 seems like one of those birthdays that poets write poems about.
So what am I doing during poetry month (and beyond?) Well, I’ve already attended a small press book fair, read for the City Council, and taught a teen poetry workshop, and that was just in the first week! Here’s my upcoming stuff:
1. Well, you may have heard that I just released a little third book of poetry called “Unexplained Fevers,” and so, am involved in sending out book cards, setting up readings, sending out review copies, etc. (Buy it here, here, or here!)
2. Going over to Bainbridge Island’s Field’s End on April 16 to talk about how to build a poetry community, or more specifically, how I’ve tried to build a poetry community in Redmond over the past year’s work as Redmond’s Poet Laureate.
3. On April 17th, I’ll be participating in Google Hangout’s National Poetry Month Poetry Hangout with several other wonderful poets at 7 PM Eastern. Tune in to see if my internet connection holds or if I look terrible on web cam! (Hint: You’ll have to install Google Hangout stuff first, so check it out beforehand.)
4. Signing up for a Goodreads Giveaway and the Great Poetry Giveaway (see an upcoming post for more details.)
5. On April 28th at 3 PM, teaming up with Kelly Davio for my debut Seattle reading at Open Books for Unexplained Fevers. It should be, if I can borrow an overused term, totally epic!
6. On the final day of April, I will be out of my thirties officially! Before then, I hope for one last chance to visit Skagit Valley’s Tulip Festival (which runs all of April) and maybe change my hair radically, wear a really short skirt, and other last-minute-saying-goodbye-to-my-thirties hi-jinks!
“Once Upon a Time” – A poem from “Unexplained Fevers”
- At April 04, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Once Upon A Time
Once upon a time he left me. I left him. It was winter, the white sun is what I remember most. When he called, I cut my hair. When I swayed, he swore. I wore a white dress and promised. He promised me. We chopped wood and parsley.
Once upon a time, I called him. It was hopeful. It was hopeless. One might not have recovered. His hair was white as winter sun.
Once upon a time we broke our crowns. The tumbling came after.
Once upon a time we thought we could. We drank from cacti in the desert and from freshwater pools on an island. We drilled through sheetrock. We stained the ground with blackberry juice.
Once upon a time I have forgotten. There was no veil, because it just sticks to your lips. I didn’t hide. Three days of mourning, three days to come clean.
When we rode off into the sunset, we had no idea where we were going. We should have mapped. Should have paid attention to the steady beat of our bloodstreams. Should have touched the dirt. Gone offroad.
We should have guessed. Should have noted. We paid in gold and heartache. We stood there in the winter sunlight, white as ghosts. It was the end of the road. It didn’t have a fairy tale ending. We couldn’t keep our stories straight. It wasn’t as they had told us.