Launch for PR for Poets, Open Books Talk on PR for Poets on April 8, and Sylvia Plath Quotes
- At March 26, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Launch for PR for Poets in Seattle and Online!
Well, the day is here! PR for Poets is officially available now on Amazon and Two Sylvias Press, and I’ll be hand-bringing the very first copies to Open Books on April 8!
Here it is on Amazon: PR For Poets: A Guidebook To Publicity And Marketing and for slightly less as a pre-order from Two Sylvias Press: PR For Poets: A Guidebook To Publicity And Marketing.
I’m really hoping this book will be of use to people and help poets who feel uncomfortable with book promotion or feel totally at a loss when launching their books. That’s really the goal of the book. I’m so thankful to the many experts who allowed me to put their advice and wisdom inside this book, including Sandra Beasley, Robert Lee Brewer, Marie Gauthier, Kelly Davio, and many others!
Open Books, April 8 at 4:30 PM – Jeannine Hall Gailey talks PR for Poets!
I’ve been a bit of a recluse lately, but the spring will be bringing me out into the open again! On April 8 at 4:30 PM (it’s a Sunday,) I’ll be giving a talk on the basics of PR for Poets, on topics from social media to web sites to readings and reviews! Come out, say hi, and get your copy – Open Books will be the very first brick-and-mortar bookstore to carry copies of the book! Plus, they’re always fun to visit.
Obligatory flower pictures here! Cherry Trees and One Apple Tree!
Glenn and I took a trip to UW’s famed quad full of cherry trees on a Tuesday (and it was still crowded,) and then I took some more pictures of Woodinville’s apple and cherry blossoms. Definitely feeling more like spring! I’m sooo ready for it!
- UW quad cherry blossoms
- Apple tree in bloom
- Cherry blossoms
- Me underneath the cherry tree
- Glenn and I smiling into the sun
- cherry branches
Sylvia Plath quotes, Writers – Ego and Expectation
You know I’ve recently finished The Letters of Sylvia Plath Volume 1: 1940-1956 – all of over 1300 pages of it! I only do this kind of background reading on women writers I’m very interested in – Flannery and Sylvia were both on the list. And I talked a little about in my last post, but I wanted to give you some quotes I made notes on while I was reading it – either the quotes are ironic, funny, or display something about her expectations as a writer. These are mostly from her time living and studying in Cambridge, England. She loves her cookbooks, has definite opinions about her own writing compared to other women writers of her time and expected, like most of us, to get her first book of poetry published much sooner than it actually got published.
1956 in a letter to her brother, Warren: “Am hoping to get scattered poems published this spring & get together a book for a contest in June at which Richard Wilbur and 4 other poets whose style is congenial to mine will judge; won’t know till October, but am determined to publish a book of 33 poems within next year.” (Her first book of poems, Colossus and Other Poems, wasn’t published until 1960, three years before her death. Her Pulitzer-winning Collected Poems (1956-1963) wasn’t published until almost twenty years after her death, in the 1981! I bet she wouldn’t be surprised, but she would be irritated they waited that long!)
1956 in a letter to her mother: “When and if you have the chance, could you send over my Joy of Cooking? It’s the one book I really miss!” (Hilarious, right?)
1956, in a letter to her mother: “I know that within a year I shall publish a book of 33 poems which will hit the critics violently in some way or another; my voice is taking shape, coming strong; Ted says he’s never read poems by a woman like mine: they are strong and full and rich, not quailing and whining like Teasdale, or simple lyrics like Millay; they are working sweating heaving poems born out of the way words should be said.”
1956, in a letter to her mother: “I shall be one of the few women poets in the world who is fully a rejoicing woman, not a bitter or frustrated or warped man-imitator, which ruins most of them in the end. I am a woman, and glad of it, and any songs will be of fertility of the earth and the people in it through waste, sorrow and death. I shall be a woman singer, and Ted and I shall make a fine life together.” (None of this turned out to be true, unfortunately – she turned out to be the patron saint of frustrated women writers, and not remembered as a particular celebrator of female fertility. And her life with Ted, while described by many in different ways, was not quite as happy and starry as she anticipated at 25.)
Also, some personal notes: She liked Elizabeth Bishop but not Auden (she described his poems as “grinding metal”), thought the New Yorker published a lot of trite poems about birds, took classes from CS Lewis, liked Tolkein, and thought Ted Hughes would make a great children’s book author whose work would be acquired by Disney. She studied a lot about Chaucer (obv. liked the Wife of Bath) and Paul’s letters (problematic in terms of his attitudes towards women and sex, she thought – and I agree!) Lots to think about. Still an inspiration. Though she disparages Edna Millay all over the place in these letters she had a lot in common with her – did you know Edna got famous for an early poem about suicide? And was notoriously egotistical and famously sexual? Kind of a mean person, sort of like Sylvia. I like both poets, although I’m pretty sure I would have been afraid to be friends with either.
It does make you think about the job of ego in the work of women writers. I was thinking about this is terms of Emily Dickinson too – even with lots of rejection, she kept at it. Without a pretty sizable ego, women writers in the twenties – or fifties – wouldn’t even have attempted to make a splash. Sylvia expected to be more successful than she was, which may have led to being disappointed at a more crushing level than if she’d tempered her expectations. On the other hand, who succeeds without having the expectation of succeeding? We must all retain some hope of this, even if we say we don’t. Otherwise…
Measuring Up and Marching Towards Spring
- At March 20, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
3
I’ve probably mentioned I’ve been reading Sylvia Plath’s newest collection of letters for a while now. I’m finally getting to the end of Volume I, which ends when Sylvia’s about 24 (on page 1300). By 24, Sylvia had already been a Fullbright scholar, had poems accepted by Poetry, The Atlantic, The Nation, had an internship at Mademoiselle and sold several short stories. Looking at her, I look at myself at 44 and think: how do I measure up? I mean, she didn’t publish many books while she was alive, and I have five, but I’ve had fourteen extra years on her already! I didn’t publish my first book until after age 30! I still haven’t had acceptances at any of those magazines (and Mademoiselle is defunct.)
Now Sylvia Plath, along with a few other poets, remains one of the best poets of the past hundred years. You can watch her poetry get better in her letters over the years, from 15 to 21 to 24. Dating Ted Hughes, whatever kind of decision that was for her life-wise, was great for her poetry – she suddenly starts putting a lot of nature in her poems when she starts dating him, specific names of plants and animals, adopts the fierceness of the natural world as her own. (By the way, even before Ted, her preferences for boyfriends ran to the “handsome, healthy, big, brutish” variety – why the emphasis on “health” and what did she mean by that? Weird. So I don’t think she was going to ever end up with a nice guy type. She was also kind of a “mean girl.” Way meaner than me.
Who do I admire among today’s poets? It’s hard for me to say who the strongest/best poets are. I know which writers I admire and look up to, to aspire to be, so to speak (even though some of them might be younger than I am:) Louise Gluck, Dana Levin, Matthea Harvey, Kelly Link, Tracy K. Smith, Margaret Atwood. Beth Ann Fennelly, Brigit Pegeen Kelly, Lucille Clifton (though the last two have sadly passed away now, they remain in my bag of poetry heroines.) Will I ever be as good as any of them? It feels like I don’t measure up. I need to work harder to shape my work to be the best it can be. That never really stops, years after my MA and years after my MFA, that desire to keep getting better, to keep tweaking.
Today is the first day of spring, which feels like it should be an upbeat poetry day. I’m working on a couple of AWP panel ideas, and was just invited to be part of one. But I received a rejection for my latest book/collection in my e-mail box, and with the Sylvia stuff, just feeling a little discouraged. Plus, I have to get cancer tested again for my liver (MRI and blood work) – they do it every six months – and on top of the constant MS appointments, it’s a lot. Along with dental work, something I wish I could put off indefinitely! Thank goodness I’m finished up with Sylvia’s letters, and now I’m moving on to the latest essay collection by Zadie Smith!
But I will post some pictures of local blooms! Spring seems to be a bit odd this year, with storms coming to the east coast and a forecast of snow (!!) here on Saturday. Our spring blossoms have arrived several weeks late this year, so my daffodils haven’t yet bloomed, our hyacinths and cherry blossoms just now peeking out. And some local peacocks!
- Magnolia blooming in Kirkland
- Cherry blossoms across from my house
- Woodinville Peacock pair
Signs of Spring, Post-AWP Comedown, and PR for Poets!
- At March 12, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Signs of Spring
It’s been a dreary winter here, so I was so thankful yesterday for some early spring sunshine and some signs of spring. Went for a whirlwind tour of the flowers and creatures of La Conner – we saw lots of trumpeter swans, snow geese, four seals, herons, a bald eagle. Even more exciting – hyacinths, tulips, forsythia, and one field of early daffodils. I have to say I am looking forward to our season of flowers!
- Cherry blossoms, snowdrops, daffodils, and me!
- trumpeter swans
- hyacinths
- tulips
- First La Conner daffodils
- In front of the windmill
- snow geese distance
- heron
- Mt Baker
Suffering from Post-AWP Comedown?
Are you experiencing Post-AWP Comedown? Hungover? Tired? Feeling insecure, overwhelmed? Just remember a couple of days of regular sleep, regular food, and not having to be constantly “on” will probably fix it. My other advice is be sure to actually read your AWP haul of lit mags, books, and do something with your swag before it disappears into the ether. Here’s my faux-AWP haul (books and lit mags I acquired in the wild here in Seattle during AWP) with my kitten Sylvia – not too shabby – and I sent out a couple submissions and wrote a little, so I didn’t feel too left out this year. I’m still recovering from the MS flare that put me in the hospital last summer, believe it or not, so I didn’t want to try the whole travel-cross-country-to-a-not-very-accessible-convention center this year. I’m sure I’ll get a handle on this MS stuff before next year’s AWP in Portland, plus I can drive there! Now to start thinking about panels for AWP 2019!
What Are You Looking Forward to This Spring of 2018?
So what are you looking forward to this spring? Besides stalking flowers and birds? Here are some cherry blossoms not far from my house. I am looking forward to being outside a little more, being a teensy bit more social, and of course the launch of my PR for Poets book! I’m looking forward to the Skagit Valley Poetry Festival in May, I may try to make it up to the Port Townsend Writers Conference this summer, and of course, another trip up to La Conner during the Tulip Festival in April!
More PR for Poets!
Here’s another link to the pre-order at Two Sylvias for PR for Poets!
Thank you everyone who wrote me about the cover! This book will give you everything you need to help sell your first/second/third book of poetry! Stop being afraid, start getting read!
Thanks to all the experts who contributed, including Sandra Beasley, Robert Lee Brewer, Kelly Davio, Kelly Forsythe (formerly of Copper Canyon Press), Marie Gauthier of Tupelo Press fame, and many more. This book was mostly written two years ago but came to a bit of a slowdown when I got my cancer diagnosis in 2016 and then my MS hospitalization and diagnosis in 2017, so I’m happy we were finally able to get it out the door after I got a little better and I think we made it even better with the last editing pass and updates! Thank you to my intern Sylvia and all the beta readers who helped me get this ready for press! And my Two Sylvias editors, Kelli and Annette! (Is it so coincidental that my publisher is Two Sylvias, my cat is named Sylvia and the intern who worked with me to proof the book was also named Sylvia?)
I may even be doing a few talks on “PR for Poets” in the Northwest, so keep watching this page. I hope it will be a book that is helpful to poets who have always felt they didn’t know exactly what they were supposed to do once their books actually came out, and to poets who haven’t known exactly what their role is in the whole publishing whirlwind. I wanted this book to be empowering to poets, not discouraging, but some practical advice on what you could do with a “normal” budget (AKA not $7500 a month!) and a little time. You don’t have to be a natural extrovert, and a lot of the basics are much easier than you think!
PR for Poets covers, MS Awareness month, and International Women’s Day! (Plus Poems up at Wordgathering)
- At March 08, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
5
Yes, it’s March, which is MS Awareness month, and today happens to be International Women’s Day, so I felt it was appropriate to post some news. I mean, a lot of folks are at AWP right now, but not everyone! So here are a few poems about MS and some PR for Poets news!
And, for those of you keeping track, I finally have covers (front and back) for the PR for Poets book coming out this spring from Two Sylvias Press! (Ooh, late edition – here’s the pre-order link from Two Sylvias!) Thank you to everyone who contributed to this book as a beta reader, as an interviewee, or just moral support, and of course my two wonderful editors, Kelli Russell Agodon and Annette Spaulding-Convy! (And by the way, if you want me to talk to your class via Skype about this subject, contact me and let me know!) So for those of you waiting, the book should be out soon! My hopes and ambitions for this book are really just to empower more poets to feel confident about doing their best to promote their book and get it into the hands of readers, and not feel guilty/weird about it. Maybe I’ll pitch an AWP panel on it for Portland!
I’ve got a cold today but a lot of my friends and family are locked-in with snow on the East Coast and midwest, so it could be worse. It’s cold and rainy today, but we are supposed to get sunshine (finally) this weekend, so prepare to see some pics of any possible flowers! Remember it’s Daylight Savings Time starting Sunday! That means our sun won’t be setting til almost seven really soon – yippee!
What are you doing for International Women’s Day? Maybe I’ll go on Twitter and talk about some favorite women poets!
How to Survive (and Thrive) Not Going to AWP Tampa
- At March 01, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
3
How to Survive (and Thrive) Not Going to AWP 2018
Perhaps you can’t afford it. Perhaps it’s too far away this year – after all, Tampa is the opposite corner of the country from some of us. Perhaps you just didn’t feel like going. Whatever the reason, here are a few things to cheer you up about NOT going to AWP 2018! (I am aware that my blog has been a little downbeat lately, so I thought I’d write a blog post that’s a little more cheery. Here you go!) I am a veteran of going to AWP and NOT going to AWP (I’ve been going on and off for twenty years!) so I can offer a few solaces for those of us not facing the circus this time around.
- Well, they say AWP is all about networking and making connections. But you’re a writer – chances are, you’re an introvert who hates small talk and big crowds. In my case, I’m an extrovert who’s very susceptible to germs, needs a wheelchair to make it down long hallways (or a bookfair). and is not only allergic to a lot of foods, I can’t drink alcohol. So even with every wire of my sparkling personality turned on, it’s tough to make a good impression at a conference that revolves around often inaccessible venues and a ton of alcohol. So what to do instead? Write a sparkling fan letter to a writer you love. Write a sparkling cover letter and send your manuscript to that press you’ve been dreaming about. So what if you don’t spend time at a party with them? They probably won’t remember it anyway, because seriously, everyone at AWP is sleep-deprived or hammered. (Love you, AWP!)
- One of the best parts of AWP, everyone agrees, is the bookfair. The chance to discover new literary magazines, small press publishers, or stumble upon the book that will change your life. But here’s a little secret: your university or indie bookstore is a great place to browse for lit mags and poetry books! Spend a little extra time poking through the magazine section, even at B&N, and I bet you’ll find something new. Spend a little money on a couple of poetry books either by people you’ve heard about or writer you love who have something new out. Order some books through the library. You can enjoy the exposure to new work from your own hometown. A staycation bookfair, as it were! (In Seattle, Boston, or Boulder, you could visit the local poetry-only bookstores and get your poetry high there.)
- Get some extra sleep. Drink a green smoothie, or at least, eat some vegetables. Wash your hands. Put on a face mask. It’s still winter, after all, and flu season, so take this non-AWP time to restore whatever’s been missing from your health – whether that’s time outdoors, extra C, going to the doctor or dentist, or just plain taking some down time. Yeah. Those AWP-goers won’t be doing any of those things, I promise. By day three, they will be jealous of your extra sleep! Plus, no AWP flu!
- Call a writer friend and get together to talk shop. Bonus points if it’s someone you haven’t talked to in a while, or someone who works in another genre who has tips to share you might not have heard elsewhere.
- Go to a reading. It doesn’t have to be big and expensive – it can be at your local coffee shop. Dress up for it, go out for coffee afterwards, make it an evening event. Don’t you feel a warm glow from supporting your local writing community. Take some pictures and post them on social media. See? You are networking after all! Then send some work to a journal you’ve never sent to before. (You’ve already done the homework in Step 2!)
Bonus: Save up for next year’s AWP, because it’s in Portland, and Portland is cool but it can be pricey, especially if you 1. like food or 2. like books, or 3. like doing anything. Have to park. Stay in a hotel. And let’s face it, Portland is a way more hip city to visit than um, Tampa. (No offense, Tampa-ites, but just…I can’t think of a less literary city. No, I probably can. Give me some time.) Every time I go to Portland I come back thinking of the things I should probably be doing to be hipper, then not doing any of them. But hey, maybe you will decide now’s the time for that cool haircut/neon hair color/tattoo. Anyway, start that fund now. Put a few pennies in a jar. That’s what you’re saving by not going to Tampa. (PS I am also allergic to the sun, another reason why Tampa may not appeal to me in particular, and Portland does. Vampires love the Northwest for a reason! So if you like me hate the sun, whee, enjoy not being in Florida in March where it’s 80 degrees!)
PS: No awkward AWP moments, no AWP creepers (listen, it happens every year) and no AWP hangover! OK, that’s all the bonuses I can think of right now. But feel free to add yours in the comments! #AWPsurvivaltipsforthosewhoarentgoing
And for extra cheer, here are a few upbeat pictures! Cats in flowers! Pigs! And thankfully, finally, Glenn and I ditching the reno for a few minutes to bask in some sunshine!
- Sylvia’s perch surveying reno from
- Pig peeking
- Glenn and I in March sun!