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	<title>Anne Haines &#8211; Webbish6</title>
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	<description>Jeannine Hall Gailey&#039;s Poetry Blog</description>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeannine Gailey]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 2009 19:24:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Anne Haines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[book publishing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eduardo Corral]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[exploring Napa Valley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetry book contests]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetry submissions]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[Finally feeling human again &#8211; and able to eat solid food &#8211; so I&#8217;ve finally gotten back to my neglected poetry work.The leaves on the hills around Napa are starting to change, though it was still a sunny eighty degrees yesterday. Autumn means school starting, apple-related baking, and oh yes&#8230;a million and one poetry book [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Finally feeling human again &#8211; and able to eat solid food &#8211; so I&#8217;ve finally gotten back to my neglected poetry work.<br />The leaves on the hills around Napa are starting to change, though it was still a sunny eighty degrees yesterday. Autumn means school starting, apple-related baking, and oh yes&#8230;a million and one poetry book contest deadlines. I was thinking about <a href="http://lorcaloca.blogspot.com/2009/10/and-then-there-were-four.html">Eduardo&#8217;s recent post</a> &#8211; about which book contests are worth sending to. One comment on his post &#8211; Anne Haines&#8217; &#8211; talked about how she didn&#8217;t want to be published with a press who can&#8217;t get her book into academic libraries, which is an interesting condition that I really don&#8217;t know anything about. I&#8217;d assume that would be most big university presses? (Feel free to comment here, Anne!)<br />But it is a useful, pertinent question, as you print out your manuscript and write the check and fix the stamps &#8211; what criteria do you use to decide where to send your work to be published? For me, it would have to be a press I admired, a press at which I already liked the editor&#8217;s taste and the books they&#8217;ve done in the past. That&#8217;s my main criteria. Do you balance the number of contest entries versus open submissions? Because I&#8217;m sending out a second book, the answer is yes, first, because I admire and want to support presses who do open submissions, and secondly, because there just aren&#8217;t that many contests for second books. (On that note, here&#8217;s a great list of <a href="http://www.dacushome.com/Poetry%20Book%20Publishers.htm">publishers with open submissions, thanks Rachel Dacus</a>!)<br />It&#8217;s been three years since <em>Becoming the Villainess</em> came out, and I admit to feeling antsy, like I need to make the next step or I&#8217;ll feel stale, mired, bored. I&#8217;ve written a ton of work, work I still like and am proud of, and would like to get the work out into the world soon. (Can you say three manuscripts stacking up?) I&#8217;m not a super-patient person &#8211; to me, I&#8217;d rather have the book out there so I can quit obsessing and start working on the next one than wait six years to be taken by the &#8220;right&#8221; prestigious contest. The important thing for me is to get my work into people&#8217;s hands, working with an editor/publisher who is enthusiastic about my poems. I know that in some ways Eduardo is right &#8211; without a &#8220;big&#8221; publisher/contest win, without ads and reviews in the &#8220;right&#8221; places, it can be hard to get any attention for your book. It&#8217;s definitely an upstream swim. Promoting poetry is hard work. I still marvel at some of my students who will happily fork over xxxx number of dollars for my class to have their poems workshopped, but resist spending the $75 for books of contemporary poetry. And that&#8217;s MFA students, who should be interested in the stuff, right? Anyway, I know where Eduardo&#8217;s coming from, but I think there are a plethora of good publishers out there, and sometimes, whether you make a big splash or not, the poetry will fight for itself over time.</p>
<p>Besides book submissions, I&#8217;m trying to get back in the swing of regular poetry subs as well &#8211; something I&#8217;ve neglected for months, something about knowing I&#8217;m moving keeps me from sending out for fear it will get lost in the mail confusion. I know I write less when I teach and in the months around moving, but I want to write some new work soon, too &#8211; it&#8217;s been over a month since the last poem&#8230;</p>
<p>On top of that, I need to do some exploration of my new locale. Sunday we drove around Sonoma a bit. Yesterday we went to my new doc in Yountville and kicked around that charming area (Bouchon Bakery next door has discus-sized macarons in twenty flavors!) Today I want to drive out to St. Helena, since I haven&#8217;t been there yet. Hoping to meet some poets out here soon too. Already plotting my escape over to San Fran, though husband G says the city will be difficult to navigate on crutches&#8230;</p>
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