4 comments


  • Hope you feel better, Jeannine!

    I am stoked re: our reading. Woohooooo!

    December 13, 2006
  • Tom

    Jeannine,

    I too hope you feel better. Seems like the cold wet north does some people in, when they she really be out, out in the nice warm t-shirt weather of Texas. Of course, some say intelligent culture is lacking here, and I guess I am no help.

    To add to the cartoons and culture bit, Vendler is 98% vacuous, but there are possibly three parts to a poem as I see it; subject, props, form. Young writers tend to depend on ‘props,’ such as characters, events, weather, politics, death of a relative, family problems, and a million others, and then ignore subject. Young writers also ignore form, voice, nuance, point of view, etc, and rely on shock or hype. This goes for novelists as well. It doesn’t really make any difference if a poem has a cartoon element or a redwood forest instead of an orchard, and this may be what Vendler is mentioning in a highly diplomatic manner.

    I may be one of the first people around with Expression Web delivered to my door. Do you know anything about it? I looked over the manual and discovered I have no idea what they are talking about.

    I may be needing some more help soon, if that is all right with you. January.

    December 14, 2006
  • Dear Mary – thanks! Me too!

    Hey Tom! I agree with you re: Vendler. My last poetry advisor at school, Pattiann Rogers, who is primarily a nature poet, was so excited to help me with my anime poems – she even volunteered to watch anime at home! So a good reader/critic can read poems whether they are about sunsets or cartoons. Vendler’s just blowing off a bunch of poets, like me, who choose not to write about orchards. Although I do have nightingales reappearing with some regularity. Poems do transcend their subjects. One hopes.
    As far as Expression – I’d love to hear your thoughts on this. From the buzz I’ve heard, it’s less user-friendly than FrontPage and more buggy (not news for most MS fans – their new products are notoriously buggy the first year.)
    And – I’d love to help out 🙂 I’ll be gone the second week of January for my last residency (I’ll even get a fake diploma handed to me, like a real student!

    December 14, 2006
  • Tom

    Jeannine,

    I haven’t even loaded EW. I looked at the requirements and saw I needed 1GB RAM, and then realized that I would have EW open, along with Word, several tabs on the IE7, and several hundred photos at once, so I had to run out and buy 2(two)1GB RAMs, since I only had 256MB. There went another $280. The EW Microsoft forum so far is positive, I think. It is the CSS that really matters, for me, since each page had to be set in FP, except for borders–I am not a real geek, but I could see for what I want to do that FP wasn’t going to work for me, and DW was going to be a bog learning curve. Any, under a $100 bucks upgrade couldn’t hurt. What a difference 2GB RAM makes!
    Take a look at my “virtual read” on my website. It was really fun to do. No need to buy the poetry book–read it “virtually” on line.

    I still haven’t read your book. In the spring I will.

    Take care of yourself. I will let you know about EW. You wouldn’t happen to know if when I load it up–will it wipe out the webs I have now?

    December 14, 2006

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