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!
Adrienne Rich, the invaluable advice of others
I was so saddened yesterday to learn of the passing of Adrienne Rich from complications of rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune disease. It’s amazing how many of my writing heroes have autoimmune problems. I met her years ago at a writer’s conference in Arizona, one of my first poetry heroines I actually saw reading in person. I was so excited I called her a rock star. She was gracious and warm, a fantastic reader, just everything I would like to be when I grow up. You can tell why I love her in this quote, from her poem, “Planetarium:” “A woman in the shape of a monster/ a monster in the shape of a woman/ the skies are full of them.” (Click here to read the whole poem.) Science, mythology, feminism, and a singular voice. She will be missed.
You know, even though I’m getting ready to publish a third book next year, I am just as eager and anxious for good advice about publishing and publicity as I ever was. I am ready to learn more about how to do everything better! I’m plotting different tactics for the next book’s readings – how to make them more dynamic and exciting, exploring new kinds of venues like art galleries and shops, etc.
Here are two good write ups for writers:
—Julianna Baggott on Agents
—Laura Elizabeth Davis interviews fiction writer Karen Lillis on book touring when you’re paying for it yourself
I spent two hours yesterday signing financial paperwork for the house deal, even though we don’t close til May. Urgh. I will be glad when the whole thing is over! It is a huge distraction from writing, submitting, you know, everything that is not buying a place to live. I did discover, upon visiting the townhouse for the first time in actual sunlight a few days ago, that the cul-de-sac we’ll live on is across the street from a charming wetlands pond complete with reeds full of singing red-winged blackbirds. I’ll just be steps away from feeding ducks all year round!
I’m also applying for a job which I can’t talk about yet, but the prep for it is really stressful. Cross your fingers for me – this would be a terrific opportunity!
A Weekend of Sunshine and Art – Red Current at Roq La Rue

My favorite art gallery in Seattle, Roq La Rue, did a fabulous show this weekend called “Red Current” in which an all-female lineup of over thirty artists showed their work, including my collaboration partner on “Unexplained Fevers,” Deborah Scott. Here’s a pic of us with her piece, “Consumption of Innocence.”
One of the great things about the show was the unified feel despite a variety of methods and material…there was a hulking black pelican made of knitting cloth…abstract pieces that brought to mind moonscapes by Port Townsend artist Counsel Langley…forests…nudes…a gun holster made out of amethyst…the show is up til April 7, I’d go check it out before it’s gone!
In other news…our inspection is tomorrow. The sun was out yesterday, so we braved the toll on the 520 bridge and we walked in the Japanese gardens downtown and drove through the arboretum. Only a few things were blooming…camellias, a few rhodies, and some early cherry blossoms…spring is springing late this year for sure in the Northwest. By the way, if you’re looking for an old television, portable freestanding air conditioner, or old laptop with no hard drive, please let me know as we are cleaning house before the move this time! Make an offer!
In Which Many Things Happen All at Once
So, signing the new book contract with Kitsune, and signed on a final offer for a townhome near Glenn’s work within the same 24 hours. The place needs a little work, but is mostly in good shape. Hope the inspection and appraisal both go okay! Today I talk to my money person to see what stuff we need to get together and by when. It’s been a bizarre process shopping for a house during this so-called buyer’s market – because of the low prices, there’s been very little inventory, and so, very few houses to look at over the past four months that were even close to being okay to live in without needing, say, 75K worth of work. Two interesting web sites for those of you interested in Seattle real estate: the Seattle Bubble blog and The Mortgage Porter, both of which I’ve been reading religiously for about four months along with scouring real estate listing site Redfin. I’m glad I can finally stop reading them all ! This is the last time I want to move for a while.
Now, my National Advanced Poetry Class is starting up in a week or two, plus I’m putting together a proposal this month for a very exciting possible project that I can’t talk about yet but I will ask you guys to cross your fingers for me on…And writing a bunch of reviews. With the writing life, it’s so much about a life of months of waiting, followed by two weeks of hectic opportunities that must be accomplished all at once…
Amid all the excitement, I want to say I’m excited about the upcoming April 4 reading at Hugo House for the persona poetry anthology A Face to Meet the Faces: An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry ; I’ll be reading my own poem included in the anthology, “When Red Becomes the Wolf,” and also Charles Jensen’s “After Oz.” The other readers are all fantastic and I expect it to be a really fun happening.
IthacaLit and a Tuesday Night Reading
So happy to be the featured poet up at IthacaLit. You can click here to read my interview there or here to read some poems (including some sneak peek new poems from my upcoming third book, Unexplained Fevers…see previous post for more news about that!)
And my last March reading…I happen to be reading in a coffee shop tonight with a few other talented writers in North Seattle at Seattle Mobile Espresso, 13000 Linden Avenue North – one block west of Aurora, from 7 PM to 8:30, part of the ThirdTuesdays Poets and Writers series.
The weather has been weirdly wintry, my life is in a whirlwind of upheavals, most of which are good. If we hear back positively tomorrow from a seller, we may have a new – and permanent – little homestead to move to within a month! Whereupon we will start the bookshelf-building and painting preparations…
A few things: Appearances, APR, Opportunities to Review, haiku get-togethers, Lessons from a person with a degree in poetry, and More…
If you are at all interested in still writing a review of She Returns to the Floating World, Galatea Resurrects has a copy waiting to be reviewed…here’s a link to this and other books they have available! I love reviewing for Galatea Resurrects. Eileen is so wonderful!
I am very excited to announce that I will have a poem in the upcoming May/June issue of American Poetry Review! Eeeep! I have been reading APR for so many years and can’t believe I’m finally appearing there! And it’s from my third book manuscript. Which I may have news about soon…
Speaking of appearances, here is an appearance that I am honored to be be invited to…the Japan Language Meetup on April 10, where we will be talking about haiku. Here’s a little bit more about it.
In other news, have been running a 101 fever and head feels like it is rattling full of hammers. Going on a week now. Note: this is not as conducive to poetry, dear universe, so how about a break with the thundersnow and such, just some regular nice spring weather would be great! (My home town of Cincinnati today was a sunny 77 degrees. Way to make us look bad, midwest!) Basically, every time I walk outside, I get sicker. Cough. Achoo. Blusterhailsnow. On the plus side, my husband has provided me a vase full of daffodils, some British fashion magazines, and a page of My Little Pony stickers as “get-well-soon” totems. And he learned how to make wheat-free crepes.
On the downside, even looking at consolidating my student loans made me so depressed I had to quit looking at them, and still in the anxiety-about-finances-provoking state of house-searching. Kids, a little life lesson courtesy of Auntie Jeannine: if you’re going to spend a lot of money on a degree, be sure it enables you to do something that actually makes money. That is all.
My poem, Anime Girl Delays Adulthood, is up as Indigest’s poem of the day!
One of the poems from my book, She Returns to the Floating World, is featured as Indigest’s Poem of the Day podcast today! Check out a reading and description of “Anime Girl Delays Adulthood:”
http://workflowwriting.com/657298/poem-of-the-day-jeannine-hall-gailey-%E2%80%93-%E2%80%9Canime-girl-delays-adulthood%E2%80%9D-03-09-12.php
Crisis and Creativity
So, I’ve noticed there is a connection in my life between crisis – of health, of emotion or intellect, – and my creative output.
This weekend, for instance, I had a dangerous allergic reaction to a new medication that, ironically, was meant to tone down the allergic reactions I’ve been having. The day I had the anaphalaxis, I was wiped out and tired. But the next day, I found a creative solution to the problems we’ve been having looking for a house. And the day after that, I wrote three new poems – after weeks of not much writing, they came to me easily. It reminded me about how I felt after I was hospitalized for pneumonia in California – despite being wiped out physically for months afterwards, creatively I became driven, focused, and energized.
This – along with a feature article someone sent me about the Fukushima area 1 year later and the cleanup effort brought to mind our whole world’s differing responses to crisis. How we survive by figuring out new ways to live. How Japan mobilized a ton of people to protest nuclear power and its government and company’s responses to the disaster, how Japan’s disaster may change the direction of not only Japan, but America’s commitment to safer energy sources.
There are several ways to respond to a threat – you can panic, which, as we know from Douglas Adams, is never the answer (and bring a clean towel,) you can give up, or you can figure out a way to adapt and respond in a way that will help you deal with the next problem you encounter. It also reminded me of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Katniss in the Hunger Games – when confronted with a new monster, or a new trap, every time, they had to continually improve.
Or maybe this is all the ramblings of a madwoman. Anyway, a couple of new poems, there’s some sunshine outside, and I may have found a permanent place to live for us in this cloudy mountain wetland (well, in six months or so, after it’s finished…)

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.


