A Sneak Peek at the Cover of my Next Book, Unexplained Fevers
- At January 09, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
5
This is a sneak peek of the cover of my upcoming third book, Unexplained Fevers. The art work is by Michaela Eaves. Let me know what you think! Would you buy this book?
Prepping for a third book – what are the steps these days again?
- At January 07, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Hello, dear readers! Now that it is the new year, I have bought a new wall calender and am looking at planning out the next year, not just the Redmond Poet Laureate events, but now, planning for the launch of Unexplained Fevers from New Binary Press in the spring, and all the accompanying la-di-da.
So, what are the necessary steps to launch a book?
1. Plan a book tour. Yes, even if it’s just in and around your own city, you should probably do this six months in advance at least. I have to remember that some reading series and schools book up to a year in advance, so the time to start asking about readings is…right now.
2. Redo your web site – I try to redesign my web site around the themes of every book that I put out! Did you know that? So, besides redoing the theme, I want to the new site to make some new things (like buying books, booking a reading, signing up for editing services) easier, and I’m going to try to do it in WordPress, which seems really terrible-and-migraine-inducing for someone who has been using FrontPage and Blogger for, oh, seven or more years, but I think it’s time to make the switch. My sister-in-law Jen Gailey, a graphic designer, my artist friend Michaela Eaves, my little brother (who is starting his own web site business) Michael Duke Hall, and my kind techie husband Glenn are all conspiring to help me to do this, thankfully, because left to my own devices, I’m pretty sure my web site would end up looking very strange.
3. Planning some PR. Putting together a mailing list for book cards and a reviewer copy list. (Which, by the way, if you want to be on the reviewer list for Unexplained Fevers, leave a comment or e-mail me.) I’m also looking at using the PR services of YouDoPR, which makes it very easy for authors to do some basic PR services for themselves. What else? Blog tours, book giveaways? Facebook page for the book? I’m not sure what kind of promo is the most successful these days. Leave ideas in the comments! I’d love to know what you are doing, what you’ve done that was or wasn’t worth it, etc!
Poet Laureate Event on January 5, A New Review, and New Poems Up at Rose Red Review
- At January 04, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Poet Laureate Event Alert – If you are looking to talk about multi-culturalism in poetry and discuss the language of science in poetry – look no further than Redmond Library tomorrow, Saturday January 5 at 3 PM, where I’ll be hosting a panel with guest poets Natasha K. Moni and Raul Sanchez. http://www.redmond.gov/cms/One.aspx?portalId=169&pageId=82418
A new review of She Returns to the Floating World is up at Poets Quarterly, written by Ann E. Michael. She did a really nice job of talking about the book. It’s always interesting to see which poems reviewers focus on and their take on the messages of the book. I learn something with every review! http://www.poetsquarterly.com/2013/01/she-returns-to-floating-world-by.html
Two new poems from my upcoming book, Unexplained Fevers, at Rose Red Review.
Rapunzel, After and Snow White Dreams by Jeannine Hall Gailey
In other news, over the break I managed to partially dislocate my first rib, sprain my knee, and get the flu. Today I had to go to an emergency physical therapy appointment so she could put the rib back. Which is super painful, but better than having that rib pressing on a nerve, which by the way, can literally make you see stars. Then I dressed up, went to Bellevue Art Museum, read poetry and taught a class, and now I’m home preparing for tomorrow’s event. No rest for the wicked? I feel that perhaps now I am due a time of strength and good health for the rest of January. Can you hear that, universe? I mean, I haven’t even seen The Hobbit yet!
Starting 2013 Off with a Little Poetry and Art
- At January 02, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Happy 2013 All!
If you’d like to celebrate the new year with a little poetry and a little art, then I’d like to invite you out to Bellevue Art Museum on its free first friday, January 4.
You can listen to some of my recorded poems from She Returns to the Floating World along with information about the new Japanese art exhibits – follow the instructions here:
http://www.bellevuearts.org/exhibitions/featured.html
Check out this information about the whole Japanese celebration event on the 4th here:
http://www.bellevuearts.org/calendar/#search-by=featured-event&query=1/4/2013&title=Celebrating%20Japanese%20Traditions%20at%20BAM
The whole day’s schedule looks pretty cool. Besides my reading with art show by Michaela Eaves, there’s also manga lessons, a talk with one of the featured artists, and a bunch of cool stuff. Plus my book will be available at the gift shop!
January 4, 2013
Celebrating Japanese Traditions at BAM
11am to 7pm
Free
Post-Christmas – Gearing Up for 2013!
- At December 26, 2012
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
So, now that the world hasn’t ended and Christmas is behind us, I guess we can get down to the serious work of figuring out what we will do with ourselves in 2013!
First of all, I want to thank my husband and his keen gift-getting skills for this little load of thoughtful (and cute!) gifts: a hedgehog set of measuring cups, a set of arctic-fox and snowflake canape plates, and a carnelian necklace (carnelian is supposed to be good for healing! I hope it works!)
I was very happy to get some good news from the Jack Straw Writers Program on Christmas Eve, along with a check from my poem published in American Poetry Review a few months ago. What a lovely surprise from Santa – Poetry good stuff! (I also, strangely, got two rejections on Christmas Eve. Ho Ho Scrooge?! But that’s okay. The other things made up for it.)
So, in the beginning of January, I’m going to be reading at the Bellevue Arts Museum and giving a short workshop on haiku and haibun on January 4 at 4:30 PM. The next day, January 5th, I’ll be hosting a panel at Redmond Library on multi-cultural poetry and the language of science (featuring Natasha K. Moni and Raul Sanchez) at 3 PM. Whoosh! Starting the year with a bang. Then I’m reading on January 11th at King’s Books in Tacoma. So, if you want to know where to find me in January, I’ll probably be running around in a panic. (I also have several freelance writing and editing deadlines in January, and I start teaching again in February, so…)
Which leads me to the question of – what is it you want to do in 2013? I’m very excited about my new book coming out from New Binary Press in April of 2013, Unexplained Fevers (and I’ve been collaborating with artist Michaela Eaves on doing some special-edition art for a UK special edition which is going to be available along with the regular soft-cover edition and an e-book! That’s three editions! Craziness!) I am hoping I will be healthy enough to get out to the UK for a few readings at some point, otherwise I’m starting to put together readings for 2013 in the Norhwest.
What else? I’m planning a book party/40th birthday party sometime in the spring as well, because if you can’t celebrate turning 40, well, what’s the point? And I’ll be doing Poet Laureate stuff AND Jack Straw things as well next year. It seems like a year of busy poet work. And who can complain about that? I want to spend 2013 getting healthier, wealthier, and writing and reading more poetry. Maybe paying off some student loans. But especially the writing part. And finding a home for my fourth book. And I have 46 good pages on a fifth book that really hones in on the nerdy stuff – engineering, algebra, apocalypses, more superhero poems. I should probably also try to send out some work – see, a poet’s work is never ever done!
So, what are your plans for 2013? I am wishing you all a healthy, happy, and more peaceful and prosperous new year!
Apocalypse Wow – A poem, a puzzle, a review, and warm wishes
- At December 20, 2012
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Yes, friends, it could be the end of the world, but nevertheless, and even more so, warm wishes, happy holidays, and etc! In the midst of darkness in a dark time, it’s time to light a fire, tell people you love them, hand someone a present for no reason, write a poem, paint a picture, make a feast.
I also had a review of Elizabeth Austen’s Every Dress a Decision up at Galatea Resurrects.
I’ve been pretty sick after a whirlwind of holiday activities and family last week, and with the bad news all over the television, sick at heart as well. There are only so many ways to respond to these things – with humor, and love, and encouragement, and gathering the ones you love around you, with anger or grief. I’m no wise woman or spiritual sage, but I hope that you remember the season is about comfort and joy, even on the coldest, darkest day of the year. Let’s make some wishes for 2013, for a renewed world that protects its children, that reminds us that our hard work in our fields can make a difference, for the old sense of apocalypse – the drawing aside of a curtain, and a revelation – a clear reading of something that’s been obscured.
Okay, hokey well wishes over. Merry Mayan Apocalypse, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
The Next Big Thing Interview
- At December 18, 2012
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Thank you to Ivy Alvarez who kindly asked me to participate in The Next Big Thing Interview at the Dumbfoundry:
http://dumbfoundry.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/the-next-big-thing.html
Unexplained Fevers
What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
Unexplained Fevers is a book about women finding their way out of boxes – fairy tale heroines in deserts and dark places, leaving behind towers and glass coffins, and contemporary women fighting through issues that trap us in the body – anorexia, illness, unexpected pregnancy, drug addiction, etc. But seriously, it’s a barrel of fun! (More than one sentence can make it sound like, anyway!)
What genre does your book fall under?
Poetry
Where did the idea come from for the book?
I was reading a book of Japanese short fiction called Blue Bamboo by Osamu Dazai, which introduced a family of siblings all telling different versions of the story “Rapunzel.” I thought about the way each of them recasted the heroine and what that revealed about their personality, and decided to go back and look at the heroines I had left out of Becoming the Villainess because they were too boring or passive and see if I could create stories for them I was more interested in. While writing, I also discovered I was especially interested in getting women out of their boxes, metaphorically – and for me, that was often about writing about pain and illness, although there are an awful lot of poems about love gone wrong…that may be Grimms’ fault, not mine. All those happy endings made me suspicious. I also read Haruki Murakami’s After Dark, which is basically a story of Snow White and Rose Red, re-set in contemporary setting – and that triggered in my mind the story of two sisters – the tragic beautiful teen model, trapped into a certain immobility by her good looks, and the more active but less romantic Rose Red, who never sleeps and is always looking for answers.
How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
I started the poems for this book almost immediately after finishing the first draft of my second book – so maybe around 2008-2009? And I was still polishing and writing new poems at the end of 2012. My books take a little while to mature, usually, and I not to linger too long with any one “finished” project – I like to have a couple of things going at once.
Who or what inspired you to write this book?
Besides the books I’ve already referenced, I’m fascinated by fairy tale archetypes and felt I hadn’t quite exhausted them in my first book, Becoming the Villainess. I think I was also writing my way through a very dark time personally – several years when I was too sick with somewhat mysterious immune system problems to walk, eat anything beyond rice and broth, or basically do anything but read and write. Happily I did not stay that sick, but the question occurred to me – how can one escape the “trap” of the body? Women are subjected to so many expectations about our bodies – our weight, our looks, our sexuality – including our own fairly reasonable expectations, of course – that our bodies will work properly from day to day, allow to us to eat, sleep, reproduce, work, etc. And when, as they sometimes do, our bodies betray us or let us down, how we can respond to that. How to be victorious in a battle against those things that weigh us down and contain us.
Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
Unexplained Fevers will be published by New Binary Press in spring of 2013.
What other works would you compare this book to within your genre?
Oh, that’s a tough one. I’ve had several reviewers of my work mention Anne Sexton, but more realistically based on my readings, my literary influences are more likely to be fiction writers, like A.S. Byatt or Haruki Murakami or Kelly Link. If I were pressed to give a list of “books you might like if you like Unexplained Fevers” they might include
- Margaret Atwood’s Selected Poems II
- Carol Ann Duffy’s The World’s Wife
- Louise Gluck’s Meadowlands
- Denise Duhamel’s Kinky
I can also blame many of these poems on my life-long obsession with Grimms, Hans Christian Andersen, Andrew Lang’s Fairy books, and tough chicks from pop culture like Buffy and Sydney Bristow and Annie Walker.
What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?
I think this is probably a funnier book that you might think from the description. Especially towards the end, I think I wrote some of the poems that are the most fun to perform onstage – more puns, more risk, that kind of thing.
- Collin Kelley, with his latest collection, Render, soon to be released by Sibling Rivalry Press.
- Julie Brooks Barbour whose book Small Chimes is forthcoming.
- Kelly Davio, whose book Burn This House will be out soon from Red Hen Press.
- Kelli Russell Agodon, whose new book Hourglass Museum will come out from White Pine Press in 2014.
*
Reading Futuristic Poetry with Hello the Future and a Week of Crazy
- At December 13, 2012
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
In case you’re looking for something to do tomorrow night, you know, getting ready to celebrate the Mayan-end-of-the-world solstice and all that, I’m reading all apocalypse and futuristic poetry at 6 PM opening for a band called “Hello the Future” at Soul Food Books Friday.
http://www.songkick.com/concerts/14860894-hello-the-future-at-soulfood-books-and-café
I have had the nuttiest week – my little brother and his wife came in to visit from Thailand, so we took them on a tour of all the fun stuff you can do here in the cold rainy season – wine and beer tasting in Woodinville, sushi dinner and the Sorrento Hotel lounge for cocktails, a pilgrimage to Caffé Vita and helping them catch up on any American things they’d missed (Whole Foods! Book stores! Back episodes of Community and Family Guy! Ah, America…) I also had several poetry events and was trying to get everything together for New Binary Press for my third book, “Unexplained Fevers” – copyediting, updating acknowledgements, getting an author photo (hopefully) and working with Michaela Eaves on the cover art. I think I’ve gotten about seven hours of sleep over the past seven days, which hopefully will be fixed over the weekend. (Along with working on a friend’s manuscript, writing my Poet’s Market articles, and getting Christmas shopping finished…and Christmas cards, um, started? And responding to all the e-mails I’ve been ignoring?)
Oh yes, and don’t forget She Returns to the Floating World is going out of print at the end of the year with Kitsune Books’ close, so buy it now on Kindle or print! Great for holiday gifts for your anime-and-Japanese-folk-tale-loving friends!
Colleen McElroy reading, Christmas Parties, and a Family Visit
- At December 08, 2012
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Well, I managed to make it though the Poet Laureate Event on Thursday night (a panel on e-publishing which was pretty well-received, I thought) AND get out the next day and go to both a poetry reading and Glenn’s corporate Christmas party! And today we’re cleaning and cooking in preparation for my little brother’s visit from where he’s living in Chiang Mai, Thailand. We’re making Osso Bucco and cranberry meringue pies, braised endive and mashed potatoes.
Here’s a little pic of me with Colleen McElroy at Open Books, who read from her latest book, Here I Throw Down My Heart. She’s been having some health issues, but she looked and sounded terrific – if she hadn’t mentioned it, I would never have known. I was really glad to be there. Colleen is a wonderful, courageous writer and person. Really generous.
And this is a little picture of Glenn and I all dolled up for the night with our Christmas tree in the background. Glenn’s work party had lovely gluten-free dishes this year, and a band, in comparison to totally cutting the holiday party last year, so maybe his company is doing a little better? One can hope. Maybe it’s a good sign for the economy. Anyway, I had fun and even was tempted to get on the dance floor…
A Long December, a few bits of news, and a panel on poetry and technology
- At December 03, 2012
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Yes, it’s already December. The solstice with its apocalyptic overtones is creeping nearer. I watched the disturbing apocalypse-by-water movie Beasts of the Southern Wild recently, which reminded me alternately of Miyazaki’s Ponyo and Princess Mononoke, but Miyazaki manages to make his apocalypses slightly less depressing. A lot of my recent poems have end-of-the-world-type references in them, I’ve noticed, and I believe the YA section of the local Barnes and Nobles is nothing but apocalyptic dystopias now. Margaret Atwood should be watching her back!
The Winter 2012 issue of Rattle is here, with a special section of speculative poetry, which I’m happy to be part of. The poem, “Elemental,” is part of my “Robot Scientist’s Daughter” manuscript. Also present in the spec section are Kristin Berkey-Abbott, Deborah P. Kolodji, Noel Sloboda and Lesley Wheeler, among others. Definitely worth a winter’s night read.
Thanks to The Pinch journal, which nominated another poem from that same MS, “Lessons in Poison” for a Pushcart. I am always thankful for these little boosts, even though I know the chances of actually getting into the Pushcart anthology are slim.
As I prepare for next year’s Unexplained Fevers book launch, I realize I am already a bit behind the eight ball on scheduling readings. How is that possible? Also, setting up a book is even more complicated now than it was a couple of years ago – there are more social media options (and therefore responsibilities,) more e-book options, more places for us to remember to set up for review. I have to redo my web site to look a little bit more modern and reflect the mood of the new book (wintry fairy tale landscape?)
So, if you’re interested in how technology is affecting poets, from e-book publishing to social media use for poets, and you live around Seattle, come out to this Thursday’s panel on Poetry and Technology, hosted by me at the Redmond Library and featuring special guests (and e-book publishers) Kelli Russell Agodon and Annette Spaulding-Convy. More here!





Jeannine Hall Gailey served as the second Poet Laureate of Redmond, Washington and the author of Becoming the Villainess, She Returns to the Floating World, Unexplained Fevers, The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, and winner of the Moon City Press Book Prize and SFPA’s Elgin Award, Field Guide to the End of the World. Her latest, Flare, Corona from BOA Editions, was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award. She’s also the author of PR for Poets, a Guidebook to Publicity and Marketing. Her work has been featured on NPR’s The Writer’s Almanac, Verse Daily and The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror. Her poems have appeared in The American Poetry Review, Poetry, and JAMA.


