Poets in the Park Report, Summertime Revising Season, and MS Energy Conservation
- At July 08, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Summer is the Season of Revision
Hope you all had a good holiday week. I spent a good deal of the holiday sick as a dog with an upper respiratory thing, which meant we stayed home and listened to locals shooting fireworks from noon to midnight. I took the opportunity (as I was not able to sleep much) to revise my sixth manuscript again. Last time I went through it very carefully and didn’t find anything to cut. This time I was like, “Why are these six poems even in this manuscript” and found the same poem in two different places. Sigh. But the good things about the relative downtime of summer is that it releases the time for revision, which I don’t know about you, but I usually need to do quite a bit of.
On the plus side, my roses are finally flourishing now that the deer have for some reason stopped eating them. I surrounded all of them with edible herbs, like thyme and rosemary, which seems to have helped deter the cute but pesky flower-eaters. The hummingbirds are still going crazy now that the dry season has finally started – I did manage to catch a rainbow a couple of days ago during a brief storm. I love rain in the summertime. Where I grew up in Tennessee, there was a brief rainstorm almost every afternoon in the summer. And it was always wonderful – you could smell the air getting cleaner and the flowers being happy.
- Hummingbird at feeder
- Rainbow
Poets at the Park in Redmond – a Delight
- Natasha Moni, Risa Denenberg, adn me
- Natasha reading
- me reading a poem of resistance and resilience
I managed to cold-medicine myself up and make it to my PR for Poets talk and reading with Jack Straw at the yearly Redmond poetry festival Poets in the Park. It was great opportunity to reconnect with old friends (especially a few I hadn’t seen in a while) and hear poetry and sell some books. The PR for Poets talk was crowded and people asked a lot of really good questions. The reading part – I read some new poems as well as a couple from Field Guide to the End of the World on the subject of resilience seemed to go well, except I need to remember that reading while standing makes my MS symptoms really act up – vertigo, the shakes, even trouble breathing (!) Reading while sitting seems to not bring these on, which my neurologist explained was because trying to keep your balance when you have brain damage in your brain stem and balance center takes quite a bit of work, so the other stuff gets a little iffy while you’re doing it. A reminder to me that I need to ask for a chair at readings from now on. I don’t want to fall on anyone and then get a rumor started that I’m a drunk or something. (I can’t even drink so that would be a very unfair rumor!)
MS Energy Conservation Lession #212
I got to see my friend Natasha Moni read at Poets in the Park, as well as the new Washington state Poet Laureate Claudia Luna and Jack Straw alums. I wish I could have stayed longer, and done more socializing, but even that three hours and a half made me super shaky and exhausted. Right. So. Trying to remember to keep that MS energy meter thing controlled. Energy conservation seems to be a repeated lesson I am not good at learning. Especially in the summer time, because, in case you ever have any friends with MS, it’s a struggle because heat, sun and humidity all increase MS symptoms. Which I remember because, that’s right, this is exactly the time last year I was in the hospital and I couldn’t walk, talk, or swallow. So at least I’m better than that, but management is still something I have to continuously remember.
So today I am taking it easy, resting in an air conditioned room, and quietly reading and writing – not even watching any television. Staying cool and quiet seems to help the MS symptoms recede a bit. It’s really like a miniature lesson in life balance that becomes super annoying really quickly. LOL. I have a meditation app on my phone now (no eye rolling) and practice things like breathing and balance (the literal kind) on these down days, too. Oh and sip things like watermelon juice and take extra vitamins. Man. If I didn’t get to visit with you at the festival, I’m sorry, and please feel free to shoot me an e-mail. I’m much better one on one these days anyway! I’m pretty sure I’m behind on some paperwork (backed up grant paperwork, e-mails, blurbs, and etc) so if I owe you something, please remind me. I’m just a little slower at getting things done these days, and I guess that’s the new normal, especially in summer. The forced slow-down does give you something, I’ll give you that – I pay much more attention to little things like the garden and my birds and the texture of a piece of clothing or the taste of something as simple as juice. You check in with yourself and your body more, too – am I cold or hot? Am I thirsty? Do I need to nap? It’s like advanced accelerated AP self-care but instead of grades you just get zapped with a million symptoms if you fail. I bet a lot of people with a chronic illness feel this way – if I don’t do everything carefully, slowly and meaningfully, my body will spiral into some kind of terrible disaster zone. Anyway, if you’re out there reading this, I feel you. I’m going through the same things. We have to adjust our expectations, the pace of our lives, even the breadth of our ambitions to make money, be successful, be a great friend/spouse/etc. We have to accept the lessons without fighting against them every day. It’s tough. It’s revision on steroids, revising your life to just the simplest, most necessary things. Sometimes I want to be able to do things like a poetry festival appearance, but I have to remember that before and after, I’ll need a ton of rest. Resist, resilience, revise, refresh, rest.
Poems in Tinderbox, a New Review of PR for Poets, a new Poetry Star, and Summer Downtime
- At July 02, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
3
Tinderbox Poems
Thank you to Tinderbox Poetry Journal, its new issue has two new poems from me, the apocalyptic When It All Falls Apart and Almost April, the story of how I was almost named April and instead was named after Joan of Arc or Jeanne d’Arc. It’s a great new grouping of poems, including poems by friends of mine like Jason McCall, Sally Rosen Kindred and Lena Khalaf Tuffaha.
A New Review of PR for Poets at the Handy Uncapped Pen
Thank you to J.R. Jackson for this new review of PR for Poets at the Handy Uncapped Pen, which is a blog with great resources for disabled and neurologically divergent writers.
A New Star of the Literary World
Remember how I posted last time about having poems in the new issue of Prairie Schooner? And I posted a picture of kitten Sylvia holding the issue? Well, guess who was the cover girl of the latest Prairie Schooner e-newsletter? Now someone’s poetry-famous!
Here’s a hint:
Well, she’s going to be impossible to live with, now that she’s “poetry-famous.” I did tell her “poetry-famous” is not the same as “Instagram-famous” or “real-famous.” But cats don’t always get those kinds of nuances.
Summer Rain, Summer Virus, Summer Downtime
While a heat wave hits the rest of the US, Seattle’s been cold and rainy for a week – I actually went out and snapped these two pictures from my garden in the rain!
Along with the rain, I’ve caught some nasty upper respiratory virus thing – sore throat, aches, stuffiness – which has left me totally wiped out. Between that and the rain, I’ve slept way too much (MS, stress, and viruses are a bad match for my immune system – it’s like, oh, I give up!) but managed to work a little bit on my latest book manuscript, send out a couple of submissions, read a little poetry (for fun! not just for reviewing!) and dealt with a flurry of “business” e-mails about upcoming readings, publications, etc and rescheduling doctors and dentists that I had put off while my dad was in the hospital. If I still owe you something, please remind me.
Usually the summertime brings a flurry of activity to my part of the country, people desperate to get outdoors and in the brief season of sun, and usually also unofficially doesn’t start until the day after July 4 – and this kind of weather is why. By next weekend we’re supposed to be back in the sunny seventies, and I hope I’m over this cold/MS double-hit by then! I’m not a sun-lover – MS folks are supposed to avoid sun and heat, and I was allergic to the sun since I was a kid (hence my lovely vampire-esque complexion, LOL.) But the long string of grey days gave me time to think about how I’m spending my time, how much time I should give to political activism vs arguing politics on social media, to dealing with insurance/prescription/medical-related nonsense (it could literally take over my entire life if I let it, but it’s dangerous to ignore it) and writing new work vs revision vs manuscript shaping vs submitting vs writing. How much time I can afford to spend alone in nature, which seems to me to be restorative both health-wise and spiritually. I’m usually a go-go-go type of girl, but MS has taken a bit of that out of me, and being a bit slower and more deliberate hasn’t actually really made my life worse, though I often feel frustrated by not “getting enough done.” I have to quit judging my life by the amount I get done, and start appreciating the good things that happen without a deadline, outside of time.
Poems in Prairie Schooner, Poets in the Park, A Summer Twitter #PoetParty and More
- At June 28, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Taking a Break for Poetry
It’s been such a terrible week, I’ve been so frustrated I’ve not only called my representatives and donated but have been posting political things on Facebook (a recipe for disaster, eh?) in the hopes some of the people in my family and circles who are republicans or moderates might see “the light.”
Poems in Prairie Schooner
But there are still good things. A wonderful new issue of Prairie Schooner came in the mail. The issue starts with wonderful poems by Alicia Ostriker, and if you look, it has two poems from me as well in there somewhere (“Self-Portrait as February Morning,” and “When I Thought I Was Dying It Was Easy”) I really enjoyed reading the whole issue, which contained some truly inspired work (and a few pieces from friends – always welcome!)
Strawberry Moons and Poet Parties on Twitter
Yesterday there was a beautiful full moon and sunset over Mt. Rainier. I didn’t catch the Strawberry moon early enough to get its rosy hue but it was still ghostly in the clouds. It’s been gloomy – like my mood, like the news – the last few days, I’ve been fighting off a virus going around, and catching up on reading and writing after last week’s debacle.
This upcoming Sunday I’m hosting a special Twitter #PoetParty (6 PM Pacific, 9 PM Eastern) with guest Dr. Erika Dreifus of the Practicing Writing Blog, where we’ll be talking about places to send in the summertime (and more!) So bring your questions, follow the hashtags and we’ll lose ourselves in poetry talk for a few minutes.
Poets in the Park 2018
And speaking of losing ourselves in poetry for a while, Redmond’s Poets in the Park festival is coming up July 7 at Anderson Park! I’ll be giving a talk at 1 PM on PR for Poets, and I’m part of a reading at 3 PM with Jack Straw current poets and alumni. It should be fun – see here for more information! It is one of the best events that happens on the East side of Seattle, just for poetry. If you’ve never been come out! Redmond’s full of trendy ice-cream and indie coffee shops now.
PR for Poets And America and Poetry and All
Besides giving a talk on the subject next week at the Poets in the Park festival, in the new issue of Poets & Writers (the one with Terrance Hayes on the cover) which also features a fascinating interview with fiction writer Lauren Groff, there is hidden inside a real-live ad for PR for Poets.
And I also had a nice feature on The Book Connection with a little excerpt from PR for Poets.
I’m still waiting to hear about my sixth book manuscript which is still out with a few publishers. (It has been out with one publisher for a year and six months now!) I had a few acceptances for poems that came in to balance out a month or so of straight rejections. I know this is not the most important thing on the landscape – not even on my own landscape. My father’s still slowly recovering from pneumonia, my own MS likes to act up every time it gets hot, reminding me “I’m still here,” the news is full of shootings again, of bad men being in power doing bad things. It made me think of Langston Hughes “Let America Be America Again” with its powerful refrain “America never was America to me.” Can America be made better? Can we get good people to care and to vote for good people? Can some kind of conscience spring up and be stronger than the lowest common denominator, prejudice and money? Maybe America was never that great. But I know it can be better than it is right now.
After the Storm, and a New Review of PR for Poets
- At June 25, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
After the Storm, Pt 1
Thank you to everyone for their good thoughts last week. My dad is finally home from the hospital and recovering slowly. I feel like I can breathe a little easier. The shot is from Seattle’s Japanese Garden, solstice edition. Only a few blooms left – water lilies and water iris are the last things to bloom at the Japanese garden – so hurry out and get a look.
Besides my dad being in the hospital, having multiple specialist appointments last week, we had a nightmare storm of terrible government stuff – children being locked in abandoned Walmarts, parents having no idea where their children were taken or when they would be reunited, etc – it was just a rough week. My MS symptoms acted up and I had to take a break from Facebook (although I was able to contact my local representatives. Letter writing is old-fashioned but effective!) I also had to wrangle problems with not getting essential MS prescriptions for added fun (and the mere thought of switching PCPs is stressing me out.)
New Review of PR for Poets
And I woke up today to a lovely new review of PR for Poets up at Suko’s Notebook, part of the Poetic Book Tour. This one was particularly interesting to me because it provided the perspective of a non-poet on the book! It was a really thoughtfully-written review.
After the Storm, Pt II
Today is cool and rainy, after a beautiful solstice weekend punctuated by another thunderstorm last night. I got a couple of shots of late June blooms, goldfinch visitors, and Glenn and I taking a short break from the stress of last week at one of my favorite local retreats, the Japanese Gardens.
- Glenn and I at the Japanese Gardens
- Goldfinch Closeup
- June Dogwood
I’m catching up with correspondence from last week and my reading, including the new issue of Poets & Writers (I especially enjoyed the interview with Lauren Groff and the feature on Terrance Hayes) and an interesting book called Light the Dark: Writers on Creativity, Inspiration, and the Artistic Process. Essays by some problematic writers are included (inc. Sherman Alexie and Junot Diaz) but essays by Aimee Bender, Roxane Gay, Elizabeth Gilbert and many others made this an easy and inspirational read, and I needed a little bit of that after last week. Plus I liked the title. I actually wrote a poem and worked on my sixth poetry manuscript and sent it out to a new place. And we had a friend’s good news to celebrate – Natasha Moni won the Floating Bridge Press Prize this year, so looking forward to seeing that!
What a Difference a Year Makes
I actually meditated on the differences between last year’s solstice – still reeling from a stage IV liver cancer diagnosis, right before the MS flare that sent me to the hospital and left me house-bound for several months with problems eating, talking, and walking and this year’s – relatively calm, despite the first paragraph of this post. Last solstice, I had a coyote sighting on my street – this year, it was a pair of quail and an immature eagle, and seeing a turtle laying eggs in the Japanese garden. I’m learning, slowly, how to manage symptoms, avoiding MS triggers like stress and heat, and after having to be “up” for a day, taking a day of rest. Being thankful that my liver tumors have been “stable.” I’ve learned to appreciate the good days, the small things like the visits of goldfinches and hummingbirds, time spent talking poetry with a friend. I’ve also learned I have to prioritize things that bring joy, because life will certainly bring you enough stress and pain, so it’s important to take an afternoon to just focus on writing, on one other person, or on the changes of the seasons. I am trying to schedule these things in between the necessary evils. I’m trying not to get overwhelmed by the dark.
Crisis Mode, My review of Oceanic up at the Rumpus, Redactions New Issue, Lit World Gender Representation, Crisis Mode Again
- At June 19, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
3
Crisis Mode
Hey guys, it’s beautiful outside but I’ve been in crisis mode since my last post. My Dad’s been in the hospital with pneumonia and he hasn’t been let out yet. It’s tough – I’ve had pneumonia a bunch of times, so I kind of know how it goes, but he’s older and has never had pneumonia before, so it’s all new to him. It’s also the fact that I’m stuck here while he’s across the country but MS makes it tough to travel. Dang.
Also, of course, the heartbeat of tragedy in our country as young children are put into cages and ignored and lost. This cannot be ignored.
What can I do about either situation? It feels like very little. Not enough.
Oceanic Review in The Rumpus and New Issue of Redactions
In good news, my review of Aimee Nezhukumatathil’s newest book from Copper Canyon, Oceanic, is up at The Rumpus. Oceanic is a wonderful book to read right now – both intense, crisis-minded and hopeful.
The newest issue of Redactions is out – and several friends are in there with me, including Steve Mueske and Kelli Russell Agodon. My poem, “Grief Language,” was about trying to put into words my feelings about the terminal cancer diagnosis I received eighteen months ago. Here’s a picture of Sylvia, my kitten, a vase of sweetpeas, and the new issue, all together.
I’m still waiting to hear from several presses about my latest book manuscript, which deals with the cancer diagnosis and then the MS diagnosis, along with apocalyptic news and weather events. I’m hoping my sixth poetry book finds a home soon. And the VIDA numbers just came out this year, which actually made me feel depressed this year – not enough representation for women, for women of color, for the disabled. Come on, literary community – you need to do better. I’m thinking about where I’m spending money on lit mags and books more carefully these days – who am I supporting?
More Crisis Mode
So, it’s been beautiful but hot here – record-breaking heat across most of the country, which is very bad for MS patients, who are warned to avoid heat. So I’ve been dutifully going to specialist appointments every day this week and last week, trying to avoid going out during the beautiful sunny days as much as possible, not stress out about the state of the country or my Dad’s health (because stress also brings on MS symptoms – whoops!)
It makes me think about how Americans deal with the moral crises going on in their country now, how close we are to creating new internment camps like America did in World War II for the Japanese-Americans, like the Germans did for the folks in their community who were too Jewish, too Catholic, or just didn’t fall in line enough. Remember no one really put up a fuss in either situation. Who knows how ashamed they were afterwards? I think now might be a good time to put up a fuss. We still have freedom of speech and we should use it. Call your congressperson, or write to them, and don’t let your Trump-voting friends get away with parroting lies about how they’re “just carrying out the law” or how the Bible justifies it (I’m a former Sunday School teacher who knows the Bible back and forth, and I can saw without the equivocation that it does not. And a lot of Christians agree with me.) It’s unacceptable. And who are we as poets if we don’t agitate at least a little? I mean. It’s sort of our job. We are supposed to remind people of souls, empathy, human capacity for good or evil.
In this body, which has become increasingly fragile as I age, I worry I can’t do enough – for others, for my country, for my dad. What can my contribution be? Well, I can at least not stay silent. I can at least let my politicians who care about my vote know where I stand. I can let my Dad know I’m thinking of him with care-packages and advice. I feel like I’m on the verge of yelling or crying almost all the time these days. None of it is enough. I can write my way through it – probably the only thing I feel competent to do right now.
How do you get through Crisis Mode? How do you take care of yourself and still help take care of the world? How do you, as a poet feel we should respond?
New Review of PR for Poets, Mermaid, Faerie Magazine, and Me, and the Latest in Poetry Life, Early Summer Edition
- At June 13, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Early Summer in Seattle
A little peek at the change of seasons – here, sunflowers are blooming and they’ve attracted goldfinches! Another sign of summer? Butterflies and…we went to an outdoor concert (I haven’t been healthy enough to go to a concert for over a year and a half!) at beautiful Marymoor Park – KT Tunstall, Better Than Ezra, and The Barenaked Ladies – where the first two acts were really fun, and I caught a guitar pick from the lead singer of Better Than Ezra, but then – it started raining a few drops, then boom! We were evacuated because of lightning! If you’ve ever seen a large park full of concert goers emergency evacuate, it’s a mess – and I was holding a metal cane and a metal umbrella – talk about lightning rods! I also got to attend the prenuptial reading at Elliot Bay for Kaveh Akbar and Paige Taylor, who invited a ton of friends to read with them at Elliot Bay – it was like a baby AWP! Much less lightning. Poetry folks everywhere and standing room only. What a fun way to celebrate the beginning of a marriage.
- Kaveh and Paige
- Concert-goers, pre-evacuation
- Better than Ezra
- Swallowtail and lilac
- goldfinch, sunflowers
New Review of PR for Poets at the Soapy Violinist
Thanks to Toni Colleen of The Soapy Violinist for this new review of PR for Poets! This is part of the Poetic Book Tour blog tour this summer for PR for Poets! I really appreciate these reviews – it’s such a weird little niche book that I was worried we wouldn’t have any! But I’m happy to see them adding up.
Mermaids, Faerie, Sylvia and Me!
I know I posted a little bit about this on the last post, but I finally got my contributor copy of Faerie Magazine’s Mermaid issue yesterday, and it is beautiful! I have three illustrated poems in it (including one about mermaids) and the whole issue is just really fun to read – from mermaid makeup to learning a bit of mermaid folklore. I got a picture of little Sylvia – sadly, not in a cat mermaid costume though – with the Mermaid issue!
The Poetry Life, Early Summer Edition
Ah, summertime is almost here – the weather (despite storms) is getting warmer, the days are getting long, summer reading periods are open…I just got two more rejections today, one from a grant/fellowship I was really hoping to get, but I have such bad luck with grants, I am thinking about never applying again! I just don’t have the gene for grant applications – ugh, I hate them so much I would rather fill out dental forms. Or taxes.
I’m really hoping to hear positive news from a certain publisher that’s been holding my latest poetry manuscript for, ahem, a year and five months at this point! If not, I’m ready to revise and send it out some more. I’m feeling that the book is “ready…”
I also got my numbers (yay!) from Moon City Press for Field Guide to the End of the World. The numbers were good enough that I’m getting a royalty check (double yay!) and I think, well, for a time period in which I got diagnosed with terminal cancer the month the book came out, then had my first serious MS flare, then the testing and recovery for three months after the diagnosis, well, I don’t think I did too badly. I’m going to try to get out and about a little more this summer – I’ve got a reading planned for Olympia, the Redmond Poets in the Park festival, and a couple of other things. I’m also think about doing a giveaway for an hour Skype consult on the subject of PR for Poets – what do you think? Is that something that would be helpful?
Well, this week has been doctors, dentists, more dentists, and more doctors…so I haven’t gotten as much accomplished poetry-wise as I was hoping. What about you? What are you looking forward to as the summer solstice approaches?
Speculative Poetry Interview and A Guest Blog Post on PR for Poets – Getting Out of Your Comfort Zone and Getting Through the Hard Parts
- At June 07, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Goldfinches and Sunflowers
Good morning from a slightly gray northwest June day. This pair of goldfinches I caught two nights ago at almost dusk. Then yesterday morning one landed on my deck and tried to eat from the hummingbird feeder! I think sunflowers attract goldfinches. Can anyone tell me if that’s true? Anyway, I bought a sunflower for my back deck and since then, I’ve seen goldfinches way more often.
Interview about The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, Science Fiction Feminism, and Speculative Poets I Love
Thanks to T.D. Walker for interviewing me on her blog for her “speculative poets in conversation” series. I talk about my love of Tennessee, the impacts of nuclear pollution, why I wrote The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, the dangers of scientific forefathers, and more!
Guest Blog Post on PR for Poets and The Importance of Getting Out of Our Comfort Zones
Also thank you to Anna of The Diary of an Eccentric Bookworm for hosting me as a guest blogger for this post on PR for Poets and an anecdote about the importance of getting out of our comfort zones. Read it if you want to hear about one of my first and most uncomfortable reading experiences!
Getting Through the Hard Parts
The last few days have been a little rough. My husband’s been sick with a summer cold, that I caught and laid me low for a couple of days. I got disappointing news from the blood tests for my liver, a few things were “out” – which could mean cancer, or could mean a reaction to medications, or nothing – and I have to get them redone in two weeks. If you follow this blog, you know I’ve lived with the uncertainty of cancer – diagnosed first as terminal and metastatic, now a big question mark – for the last two years. And then I was diagnosed with MS. Not a banner time for me, personally, emotionally, or professionally. You may have noticed I start most blog posts with positive things – birds, flowers, favorite places. This is intentional – a reminder to myself that there is still beauty in the world, despite the news, despite what I’ve been going through personally.
So when I read the news about Kate Spade’s death by suicide it felt personal. Here was one of my heroines – successful businesses woman who supported charities I cared about, creator of interesting and artistic accessories still appropriate for working women (probably the first purchase I made as a working woman to prove to myself I had “made” it was a Kate Spade bag.) It’s horrible thinking about her 13-year-old daughter going through the trauma. It’s a loss.
But here’s the thing – hidden illnesses are just that – hidden. I’ve never seen a picture of Kate Spade where she wasn’t perfectly put-together and smiling. She had plenty of money, plenty of success. But that had nothing to do with it.
I twittered about my sadness over her death, including a string of her accomplishments. A Trump supporter (literally that’s all I could tell about this person from their Twitter bio) wrote to me asking me about her charity involvement. I was wary – usually Trump supporters only write to me to say racist, sexist, hate-filled things – but it turned out through our twitter conversation that this twitter person was struggling to understand the suicide of a seemingly good, happy person, much like the rest of us.
It’s a reminder that many of us have struggled without showing obvious signs. It’s a reminder that we are all trying to get through the hard parts.
I write about the good things in my life but I have also tried to share some of the bad parts, too, because I don’t want to try to pretend. No one’s life is perfect. Every writer or creative person struggles first to create, then get their creations into the world, then the responses to their creations – then the cycle starts again. Chronic illness takes a toll. I carefully construct an image – you don’t often see pictures of me in the hospital, getting blood drawn or getting yet another MRI, or the days when I feel too bad to get out of bed. But that doesn’t mean bad days don’t happen – of course they do. Just a reminder that we should have compassion for each other, for ourselves, because no matter what a life looks like on the outside, each of us has days when it can all seem like too much.
Top 5 Tips for Promoting Your Poetry Book, Poems in Faerie Magazine and Cincinnati Review, and Summertime Poetry
- At June 05, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Top Tips for Promoting Your Poetry Book
First, thanks to Serena Augusto-Cox for hosting my blog post at Savvy Verse &Wit – my post is “Top Five Tips for Promoting Your Poetry Book” from my book PR for Poets!
Poems in Faerie Magazine’s Mermaid Issue and Cincinnati Review’s Summer Edition
Yesterday brought an abundance of poetry – the new Summer 2018 issue of Cincinnati Review, which contains, among other things, one of my new poems, “Self-Portrait as Late August Evening” – and the new Mermaid issue of Faerie Magazine is out, with three illustrated poems by me, including “The Little Mermaid Warns You.” They do a beautiful job with their magazine!
- Sylvia poses with Cincinnati Review Summer edition and sunflowers
- Sylvia, sunflowers, Cincinnati Review
- Faerie Magazine – my poem “The Little Mermaid Warns You”
Summertime Poetry Season
Summertime is almost here, and along with it, eating salads for breakfast, some excellent bird-watching and gardening experiments, and a weird season for poetry because we seem to have more time to write – those late still sunny nights…but fewer lit mags are open to submissions. It’s a great time to schedule some catch-up time with friends and work on neglected poetry manuscripts.
I was sitting out on my back deck watching herons swoop by, the towhee swishing around my trees, and saw this beautiful and rarely seen Western Tanager. It swooped into a sunbeam long enough for me to get these pictures.
- Western Tanager and Towhee
- Western Tanager
So, as I’m going around talking about PR for Poets, I’ve been investigating the latest news in promoting books. I’ve even been trying out Instagram (check out my attempts @webbish6) and reading up on the newest ways publishers are trying to promote books, like the power of Goodreads (read a case study of Little Fires Everywhere here.) Now there’s talk of the coming demise of Barnes & Nobles and how that will affect the book world. Yet the world needs poetry more than ever, and I notice that I read more books in the summer myself. So what are your summer strategies for staying motivated and inspired?
A Poetic Book Tour for PR for Poets, a New Poem in Gingerbread House Literary Magazine, and Looking to Summer
- At May 31, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Kicking Off PR for Poets Poetic Book Tours Book Blog Tour with a review from Serena Augusto-Cox!
Thanks to Serena Augusto-Cox for including PR for Poets in her latest book blog tour, which kicked off with Serena’s own kind review of the book here today! And here’s the schedule for the rest of PR for Poets Poetic book blog tour! https://poeticbooktours.wordpress.com/2018/05/31/pr-for-poets-by-jeannine-hall-gailey-summer-2018/ You can also follow posts about the tour on Twitter with the hashtag #PR4Poets
Thanks To Gingerbread House – A Poem in the Newest Issue 30!
Check out the new issue of Gingerbread House Literary Magazine, which contains great poems with accompanying art work – including my poem, “The Case of the Missing.” The rest of the issue is really fun to read too!
Spring in Seattle, End of May – Writers’ Edition
Spring is moody in Seattle, some days with hot sun and butterflies, some days rainy and cold. A few pics of the less rainy days – a brand new baby bunny chomping grass, Glenn and I in Kirkland in water iris and roses:
- Baby Bunny Eating Grass Blade
- Glenn and I with yellow water iris
- Glenn and I with roses and yachts
- me among boats and roses
May can mean a lot to writers, besides spring flowers – it means the closing of a bunch of literary magazines to submissions, which also means many of us have received a flurry of rejections (and if you’re lucky, a few acceptances) in the last month. Summer is slow season for writers trying to publish their work – some go to conferences, residencies, festivals, some just dedicate time to write. It’s sort of seasonally-affected downtime for writers. Summer here in the Northwest offers the rare chance to get out and enjoy everything the area has to offer without having to wear waterproof gear most of the time – the ocean, the mountains, the forests and waterfalls.
For me, summer is usually a quieter time, but this year I seem to be writing more as the weather gets warmer, not less. I just finished up a couple of guest blog posts, a book review, edits for a friend, and I’m even working on a new possible seventh manuscript now (still sending out the sixth to publishers.) This last seven days has been a flurry of specialist appointments, scans, and blood tests. Not the most fun thing in the world, but since I’ve gotten mostly positive news health-wise so far, I’m hoping this summer will offer a bit of a respite from tests and doctor’s offices and hospitals. MS patients have to be careful to stay out of the sun and stay cool, which, let’s face it, if you’ve seen me, is probably sound advice anyway (my skin tone is somewhere between “actual ghost” and “office printer paper” so long hours in the sun were always out.)
So I’ve got a stack of books lined up to read (thanks to some timely birthday presents) and a few official things lined up (a reading and a PR for Poets talk at Redmond’s Poets in the Park festival in July, judging a poetry contest) as well as family visits and hopefully visiting a few favorite places and friends.
I’m reminded that I spent a lot of last summer so sick I couldn’t get out of bed. My ability to write or send things out compromised by new neurological symptoms, my inability to be productive made me feel trapped and stymied. This summer, though I still feel pressure in terms of time and mortality (“stable” with the foreboding – “for now” tumors in my liver, the presence of a degenerative neurological disease with iffy treatments and no cure) to write and send out my work, I don’t feel the dread or frustration of last year, at least not yet. I’m purposefully taking it a little easier, devoting myself to things that might increase joy, instead of things I’m merely “supposed” to do. The television has been a wall of ill news since before the election, and it doesn’t seem that will change any time soon, so I’ve been giving it and social media less of my time, and I haven’t really missed it. I am wishing you all a wonderful summer (even though it isn’t quite summer yet) as May’s full moon signals the change in seasons, the coming of longer days and more cherries than you can eat and time to spend in my back porch rocking chair looking at eagles, ospreys, quail, rabbits, songbirds and woodpeckers. I am wishing you a summer of good books, lots of poems, time spent with loved ones and nature, less pressure, more picnics.
New Poems in Jet Fuel Review, Health Updates, and Seattle Japanese Gardens in Bloom
- At May 24, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
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Seattle Japanese Gardens in Bloom
I stopped by the Seattle Japanese Gardens after a long, grueling neurology appointment this afternoon, and was rewarded by the gardens finally in full bloom: wisteria, water iris, rhododendron, azalea, water lilies. It was the perfect after-treatment after a stressful afternoon in a doctor’s office.
- Me underneath the wisteria with water iris
- Glenn and I posing in front of water lilies and wisteria
- Glenn and I smile beneath wisteria blooms
Thanks to Jet Fuel Review
First thanks to Jet Fuel Review, where I have to two new poems “Post-Life” and “Self-Portrait as Circus Performer” up in their fifteenth anniversary issue. Check them out!
Here’s a quick peek at “Post-Life,” which, for a while, was the title poem of my sixth manuscript:
Health Updates
It’s been quite a couple of days for health updates – good news from my liver specialist includes the news that my liver tumors appear to be “stable” and from my neurologist, that although my vertigo and leg weakness and numbness are the same as six months ago, my speech, thinking, and walking all appear to be “greatly improved.” I’m also starting a new drug for MS-related fatigue that should help my energy levels so I’m looking forward to trying it out. My neurologist also talked about some things in-process promising new drugs. I hold out hope for a real cure for MS, or least something that helps not just prevent flares, but helps repair brain and spine damage.
SFPA’s Rhysling Anthology is Out
I was excited to receive my copy (with amazing mermaid cover art) of this year’s Rhysling Anthology. It includes a poem by me but also many friends (too many to even list!) and luminaries (Neil Gaiman). Even if you’re not a regular Science Fiction Poetry Association member it’s worth it to see a copy – look! Sylvia is telling you to buy it with her eyes (I tried to get a picture of her licking the cover! Yes – she was really licking it!)