A Post from San Juan Island – Whiteley Center Day 1
- At September 16, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
We arrived today after an uneventful afternoon ferry ride through the scrubby, evergreen-covered San Juan islands, and immediately upon entering the residency center I hopped out of the car to be confronted by a half-grown fawn, who, upon seeing my stumble forward, stepped closer rather than farther away.
San Juan Island is everything about the Northwest or Seattle on steroids – artsy sculptures in front yards, eccentric but friendly women in alpaca sweaters (not fleece, not on this alpaca-farming island, no sir), watery sunshine mixed with grey cloud, thick thickets of blackberry and forests of evergreens, golden and bald eagles, numerous deer, foxes, orca fin views from parks and the occasional otter and seal bark from the water. I happen to think it’s pretty close to perfect. The occasional chill in the wind, the rain dripping periodically through the trees, don’t dampen spirits here (I did have to buy a coat – I’m used to traveling with nothing heavier than a cardigan or raincoat – and cursed myself that I hadn’t thought to bring some warm gloves – the regular September Seattle chill is just a tad chillier here, so far north we’re almost to Canada (and your cell phone thinks you are in Canada!) I’m thankful for the radiant floor heat in the cabins tonight.
After doing a little sightseeing – the alpaca farm, Lime Kiln Points to see some whales (where we had this handsome black fox encounter, where he trotted within steps of us) and many more deer:
I came home to the cabin to remember there was no phone and no television – and proceeded to read Amy Uyematsu’s The Yellow Door. Amy’s a poet I’ve been following for some years, and she deserves more attention than she’s gotten. I wrote a poem. I’m writing this blog post. So far, a productive start to the trip! One of my beliefs is that if we writers could just stay away from the phone, television, and internet for a good portion of our lives, we’d achieve so much more…but maybe that’s just a residency mentality. There’s something interesting that happens when you go somewhere with the intention of reading and writing. You actually do those things!
Transitions – a new review, farewell to a friend, and the importance of taking time out
- At September 13, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Well, first of all, thanks to L.A. Lanier for this new review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter up at The Spark, The Alternating Current’s blog: Seriously, I am grateful for each and every new review that comes in!
Last night was a get-together, a kind of Bon Voyage party, for my good friend Kelly Davio, who is moving, alas, to London. (Here is her exit interview from the Seattle Review of Books: http://seattlereviewofbooks.com/notes/2015/09/09/exit-interview-kelly-davio-is-moving-to-london/) It was nice to hang out, but sad to say goodbye to someone who is so full of good energy and has been such a force in the literary world. It was also probably our last 80-something day, one of those long Indian summer days. I woke up and this morning it was in the sixties and raining.
I am taking time out, after the stress of selling our house, looking for a new house, then walking away from our last house after a bad inspection, after all the crap going on the literary world, to go to a writing residency on San Juan Island. I haven’t done this for some years, and I’m looking forward to having time without TV, phone, or (maybe?) internet. But if I don’t get back to you, that’s why. I’m hoping when we come home we find a house, I’ll come back with some new poems and some more progress on my “PR for Poets” book, maybe a good look at my book of poetry in progress on apocalypses and disasters. I will have time to read books for fun (not just for reviews and blurbs) and maybe do some sketching (I’m an absolutely terrible artist, but I enjoy it.) I’m hoping, since it’s September, we’ll even see some whales! I’ll be on the lookout for porpoises, otters, seals, golden eagles, foxes and rabbits (all of which I’ve seen before on San Juan Island.) If my significant other and I were both free of needing to see doctors and go to work, it’s definitely a place I would buy a house.
I think it’s important for writers, visual artists, and other creative types to take time out from their “regular lives” to deal with their art at least for a week once a decade at least, right? It can be a week, or a month, or six weeks, or a whole summer if you can afford to do that. There are so many residencies that you can apply for (See this list for some ideas: http://thewritelife.com/writing-residencies/#.oxkna1:m4F)
I like this one, on San Juan Island at U.W.’s Whiteley Center, because it affords a kitchen as well as a dining hall (so I can make my own food, because of those pesky food allergies) and it has handicapped-accessible cabins. Plus it has a working field station! And it’s only a few hours away from home, but is remote enough to definitely feel like you’ve gotten away from normal life. So wish me some luck and some quiet down time and some creative spark.
Don’t Give up on Poetry (or the Poetry World) Yet
- At September 08, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
9
I am writing this at the end of a few of the most rancorous and scandal-ridden months that I’ve experienced in the poetry world. A few of my friends have told me (though they are great and accomplished poets) that they are thinking of quitting poetry altogether – when the poetry world gets ugly, and when the poetry world gives so little in terms of rewards, it’s understandable to feel this way.
But let me say a few reasons why you shouldn’t give up on poetry – or even the poetry world – yet.
- Poetry is a fantastic art form and outlet, regardless of the people involved. There are some poems I can read and re-read endlessly with delight. They’re more satisfying and take less time than a novel, while providing many of the same rewards. When I get hit with a poem idea in the middle of the night, the middle of a movie, or whatever, one of my happiest times is writing that first draft of a new idea for a poem. This kind of happiness remains whether or not the poem gets published, recognized, whether I get paid for it, or whether anyone ever notices anything you or I do. So, the reading of and creation of poetry should be happy-making, regardless of “poetryworld.”
- I would say the poetry world is made up of 75 percent excellent people. Friendly, open, willing to help, empathetic, and enthusiastic about promoting the art form that is the least profitable and the most obscure, they are often teachers or professors or editors, wanting to do something to make the world a better place despite their individual burdens. There are probably, max, seven percent of the poetry world that are true sociopaths – needlessly mean, selfish, and uncaring about hurting others. There’s probably another seven percent of narcissists – mostly harmless, but definitely not interested in helping others, only themselves. And there’s one percent of genuine saints of poetry – those who go out of their way to donate their time, energy and money to worth causes, willing to lend a hand, thinking of others above themselves. So, think about this – don’t let 14 percent of all poets hijack the good parts of the poetry world for you. They make the most noise. The make the “news.” Some of them win awards and wreak havoc as much as they can. But they are in fact, not the majority, not by far, at least in my unscientific experience with the poetry world. And make sure if you run into that one percent of poets who are saints, that you say thank you and help promote their work, because they’ll be too busy helping others to do it themselves.
- Maintaining hope, a sense of humor, and kindness in the face of negativity is maybe the most important (and hardest) thing you can do in life. I have a hard time doing it most of the time, when I watch the news, when I get a rejection letter, when someone is mean to someone else in front of me for no reason, when a jerk gets the rewards while the talented, kind and unselfish get passed over, I get angry. I want justice, of course. Working towards justice is a good thing, and you can use any anger to propel forward to the things you want to achieve – if you’re outraged by classism, racism, sexism, etc., then take some action towards making the world a better place for the people around you, the poets you love that get no attention. Sometimes the larger world – and the poetry world – can appear to be so overwhelming and chaotic you think you’ll have no impact, so you give up to despair. But I am here to tell you, you are already probably having more of an impact than you think. If you called a friend to cheer them up, or worked vigilantly for free as an editor, or the runner of a reading series, or with underprivileged students, you are making the world a lighter, better place.
- Protect your art. Practice it. Let it make you happy. Don’t worry about where it’s going. Your poems could change the world, could light up the heart of a kid 50 years from now, could make someone who is suffering feel that they are not alone. You don’t control where your writing goes, all you control is writing it and sending it out with intention and hope. The bitterness and jealousy and pettiness and cruelty – all those things will only distract you.
- Poetry – and the poetry world – will be there waiting for you if you want to take a break.
New Poet’s Market, and a new house?
- At September 03, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
9
Got my shiny new contributor’s copy of the 2016 Poet’s Market in the mail yesterday, complete with Kelli Agodon’s happy face on the back, which included a reprint of my article on poets and collaboration and a new article I wrote on “Six Ways to Promote Your Book (Without Alienating Your Friends.)” I admit I love to get each year’s Poet’s Market, full of articles and market possibilities. Robert Lee Brewer deserves kudos for a job well done. It’s a nice way to start your September, with its calls for submissions and back-to-school briskness, new pens and updated Excel spreadsheets. I’ve already sent out two submissions and a book! (here’s a sneak peek below!)
Speaking of which, September is here! Seattle obliged anyone yearning for fall weather by inundating us with rain and wind. I ended August on a bit of a low note, spraining my ankle and then promptly getting some kind of devil stomach flu, but now I am hobbling around a bit and back to eating solid food again. I’m just hoping to be both capable of walking and eating at the same time during my Whiteley Residency on San Juan Island later this month! I haven’t done a residency in years, and I’m really needing this one – just time to write, and not concentrate on houses, or the politics of the poetry world, or anything else.
So, if you’ve been following the blog, you know we sold out house a bit ago, and have been in the awkward transition phase that involved looking at a lot of bad houses for way too much money for a longer time than anyone would find comfortable. But we may finally have a house (pending inspections next week…but I’m hopeful!) It’s in Woodinville, one of my favorite neighborhoods around Seattle, it’s a roomy one-story rambler, and has space for Glenn and I to each have our own offices as well as a guest bedroom. The kitchen has an espresso nook for Glenn’s coffee obsession and there are built-in bookcases right next to a window reading bench for me. If we get through the inspections with no problem, we should be in there by Halloween! So cross your fingers for me that everything goes according to plan with no more health dodges or lousy inspections! I’m wishing everyone a productive, brisk, beautiful September!
Book Snob Review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, Tramping Through Houses, and PR for Poets progress
- At August 28, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Thanks to the Book Snob blog for this new review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter (in a paired review with The Girls of Atomic City). I had just been saying to Glenn yesterday how I was feeling anxious because there hadn’t been any new reviews of my book lately! So this helped. I’m telling you – I’m thankful for every blog review, lit mag review, and Amazon review I get, especially now at the five-month mark of the book being out.
The poetry world has been awash in vitriol this last week, so bad I actually had nightmares about it! It serves me right for being too aware of the ins and outs of the poetry world sometimes, too much Facebook and twitter, not enough books and writing.
In other news, I’ve had a pretty bad ankle sprain (due to tripping on, yes, electrical cords around my work desk) and have been hobbling through countless one-story houses with my cane, even going to far as to pre-inspect one yesterday. Hmmm, the pre-inspection had just begun when a complicating factor arose – the house’s crazy next door neighbor started yelling at and berating the inspector for taking pictures of the roof. So, um, that kind of ruled out that house for me before the pre-inspection was over. Crazy neighbors? No thanks. I was wondering if there was a reason such a nice house was so affordable. So the search continues.
On the plus side, the sprained ankle afforded me more time at my laptop, and that means some actual progress on my “PR for Poets” book to the tune of 32 pages now! It stood at 25 pages for the last few months, so I was happy to be able to go in and reformat, clean up, reorganize and write some content. A lot of the beginning of the book is just about setting poets’ expectations for what will and won’t happen when they publish a book of poetry – a bit depressing, but better to be aware and to arm yourself with the facts before you go into the process, right? And then a lot of difficult decisions about what is and isn’t worth a poet’s time and energy – I mean, everyone has to make these decisions – do you help the publisher buy an ad with your own money? Do you send out review or prize copies yourself? How many readings do you schedule for the first few months of the book coming out? Have you laid a groundwork for good publicity before your book is even accepted for publication? That sort of thing. Then I realized I was mentioning things without defining them – PR kit, pitch letter, Netgalley – and went back and inserted little callout pieces to talk about each of those things. See? Progress!
Going to hobble off now and visit yet another home today, this time in the newly-arrived rain, including a potentially Novembery-bluster tomorrow. It’s about time for some rain out here in Washington – with our drought (!!) and wildfires (!!!) – we could definitely use it. And there’s something relaxing about rain, isn’t there, something that prompts us to shrug our shoulders at yard work or errands and pick up a good book…
Unsettled – Moving, and Deciding When Poetry is Worth the Pain
- At August 23, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
14
There’s a kind of energy that comes from not knowing where to go next. The discomfort of being, technically, emotionally, and physically “unsettled” can make you edgy, uncertain, but also forces you to reevaluate what’s important to you, where you’d like to go, what bothers you about your current situation and imagining what a better situation would look like.
As I may have mentioned in previous posts, we’re going through a move, in town, but still, a slow process. We’ve now sold the house, and are living in it for the next couple of months as renters as we shop the crazy real estate market for a house without too many downsides. Because what is really important? What are you willing to spend money for? Is it a garden, built-in bookshelves, seclusion, a quiet neighborhood, convenience, safety, a neighborhood where things are “happening?” Sometimes shopping for a house feels like a reflection of where we are in our lives right now. We don’t have kids, so we don’t need a sprawling home; Glenn works too hard and I’m not able to do as much gardening and landscaping as, say, an acre of land might require, and besides, land is so expensive! Where do we picture ourselves in five years, in ten? Will we still be here? Will Glenn want to keep this particular job at this particular company? Will we have friends in a different part of town, will we be as enamored with this or that neighborhood then? I know we’re moving because doctors have said I’m not going to recover stair-climbing ability – but what else do I need to worry about?
Another thing selling the home did was make me think about my student loans, those outstanding debts that seem like they will be outstanding forever. Student loans niggle at the back of my brain, reminding me I don’t make enough money, I don’t have a steady job anymore, remind me of the expenses that are part of being a poet that really, I can’t afford. I think about my dream of getting a (probably impractical) Phd someday. Where am I going with this whole poetry thing, anyway? I make some money freelance writing, editing, teaching, and other sort of piecemeal things, but from my books? I hardly make enough in a year to buy our groceries for a month. It’s discouraging. Then I think: maybe I should do something else, something steady, something that pays the bills. My health is pretty regularly not great, but I could do something from home, maybe go back to tech or marketing writing – a grind, not inspirational, but steady and monetarily rewarding.
Being an artist of any sort requires sacrifice, and it’s not always just your sacrifice – it’s your spouse, your kids, your friends and family that have to sacrifice the time and money you might otherwise have that’s devoted to that art. Is that sacrifice worth it? As a poet, I have to say, I don’t always know the answer. Rejections are many and payment is rare; poets, even when they win significant prizes, do not usually become rich and famous, or even gainfully employed. I am older than when I started, and not just in age, but in reduced expectations and increased cynicism. But there is a part of me that still loves reading and writing poetry for its own sake, and that part of me won’t give it up. It’s impractical, it’s often unrewarding, but it is something I’m passionate about and, just like visual art, makes me happy to be around.
Yesterday I went to a coffee shop to meet and talk shop with other writers, to take stock of what we were trying to accomplish, what we had accomplished. Then I came home and read poems I loved from my first time in college, in my twenties – Margaret Atwood, Louise Gluck, Rita Dove, Susan Musgrave. Times like this afternoon are very important to my sense of “what I’m doing with my life” – that even though where I live is impermanent, the state of my health impermanent (as well as, sadly, as I’ve seen lately, the state of my spouse’s health), and often writing is a lonely and discouraging venture – we are not alone in our pursuit of our art, we are not crazy for wanting to be published, read, recognized, and paid, and one of the most important things we can do as writers is encourage each other along a rather rocky path as our lives change and our paths veer wildly. Writing is something we take with us wherever we go, at any age and income, something we can hold onto, our way of interpreting and interacting with the world. Buying an MFA (one route to a writing community) may be expensive, but it is free to go and meet a friend and exchange manuscripts, talk about rejections and acceptances, or talk to a writer you admire and ask advice. As I try to find a house, define what I want going forward personally and professionally, I hold on to the fact that writing can make a difference in my life, in others’ lives, and that we can help each other out along the way.
Reading in Issaquah with Kelly Davio tomorrow, more house excitement, and the news
- At August 17, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
I’m reading at Issaquah’s Talking Pages Poetry Night tomorrow night, with a craft talk by Kelly Davio! Here’s the info…
Talking Pages Poetry Night
August 18, 7 p.m.
Historic Shell Station
232 Front St. N., Issaquah
We are pleased to welcome featured poets Jeannine Hall Gailey and Kelly Davio for our August event.
Jeannine Hall Gailey is a former Redmond poet laureate and the author of four books of poetry. Kelly Davio is poetry editor of Tahoma Review and author of the poetry collection Burn This House. |
Talking Pages is co-sponsored by the City of Issaquah Arts Commission. You should come out! It will be fun!
And if everything goes smoothly, we’ll be closing on our house sale (gulp) this Thursday! Crazy! Have we found another house to live in yet? No!!! We went in and saw another do-able house, but the pre-inspection revealed mold, this time both under and over the house. It’s a big problem with older homes here, unfortunately, and I’m super-sensitive to mold. So, onward!
Terrible stuff in the news today – a bombing in Bangkok, where my little brother lived until recently, and shellings in the Ukraine. A big explosion in China that they sort of, but not really, covered up. On a lesser level, a dustup about AWP not awarding a creative non-fiction award this year. (With 178 entries, they should have been able to find one they could at least edit into excellence, right?) I’m taking my husband, G, to the doctor today to follow up on his hospital test results, which were somewhat worrying, so we hope they have some good answers and advice for us there. A lot of unease out there right now, in the atmosphere, in me. You feel powerless in the face of bad things, because in some ways, we are. We can only do what we can in the space and time we are given.
Moving, Impermanence, Home, Writing and Sense of Self
- At August 13, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
I would say I’ve probably moved more than the average person, and I’m getting ready to move again. I was born in New Haven, Connecticut, then my parents moved the family to LA. From LA we moved to Knoxville, and from Knoxville to Cincinnati. They stayed in Cincinnati. I got married and left for Richmond, VA, until I started working in Northern VA, commuted to a job in NYC, then took a job in Seattle, WA. I spent a couple of years, recently, in Carlsbad and Napa, California, before I moved back to the Northwest. I’ve moved fifteen times in seventeen years; this will make it sixteen moves in eighteen years. For some people, that is their idea of hell. For me, it’s more or less “normal.” Our marriage is 21 years old, and in that time, we’ve never lived anywhere longer than three years, the amount we’ve spent in our current condo.
What does it mean to pick yourself up and separate yourself from “home?” Does it change how you write? I would say, yes. When you move a lot, you’re more careful about picking up things – heavy furniture, friends, commitments. You write flash fiction and prose poems with your life, not novels and epic poems. Today I’m starting to pack up this house, and we are looking even more aggressively for our next house – one with no stairs, and a little space for a writing office for me, since I’m often working from home. Maybe a garden. Modest needs. We’ve been outbid on a couple of houses, already, turned down a couple after bad pre-inspections that found large problems, and in this crazy-hot Seattle-area market, if you like something, you have to bid on it right away, waive inspections, and offer more than asking. Then, you still only get it if you’re lucky, or there’s something wrong with it.
I was thinking about how this stuff affects my sense of self, my writing. I probably don’t write as well when I’m unsettled – say, that time between deciding to leave one place and settling into another. I also stop purchasing things, because they become just one more thing to pack. I clean out closets, peek in long-unopened boxes, give books and lit mags to friends. On the other hand, I tend to send out work more. It’s a good time to cleanse oneself of ghosts, bad feelings, illnesses, and extra stuff. It gives you a sense of impermanence, of mortality, but also of freedom and possibility. Your sense of self can absolutely never be tied to a piece of land, to a house, to a piece of furniture, because you know in your gut that those things are all transitory. They are not you. I’ve lost boxes of important memories in moves, left behind friends that didn’t stay close. Things have been damaged and misplaced. And you are left, perhaps, wistful for a place to call home; in fact, when people ask, you’re not really even sure what to list as your “hometown.” I usually say Knoxville, because I lived there from 3-10 years old, and it seems like the place that fit me best. Now I consider the Seattle area my home for the foreseeable future, with its funky art scene, terrible traffic, overpriced real estate, mountains and rivers and oceans, herons and fleece-wearing folk. I don’t call myself a southerner, or a midwesterner, or a Northwesterner. You adjust the fit to your needs. You say: I am leaving one place and going to another. How long will I stay? I never say things like “forever” as in “this is our forever house.” Because you never know. But I’m okay with that.
Whidbey Island MFA and my review of Oracle on The Rumpus
- At August 10, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Hey guys! Glenn perked right up after being given a hefty dose of meds by the hospital docs so off we went to Whidbey Island’s NILA MFA Program as scheduled. Yesterday it was just lovely – high seventies, sunshine, so much wildlife. We drove out here, I taught my class, then we went mucking around on a couple of beaches (Double Bluff, Ebey’s Landing) and a garden (Meerkerk Gardens) and took lots of pictures. The locale of the MFA program is right on the water in Coupeville, a part of Whidbey I had never explored before. There’s a garden on the premesis and my cabin looks right out over the water. Today the day began with rain, but I’m looking forward to teaching a class and then giving a reading on the very last night of the residency.
Also, The Rumpus ran my review of Cate Marvin’s excellent Oracle right as I was leaving, so here’s a link to that. I talk about how the Cold War affects poets, why my pet peeve is women poets being compared to Sylvia Plath, and Marvin’s slippery use of persona.
Here are a few pics of Whidbey’s Captain Whidbey Inn, where the MFA program takes place, as well as wildlife, a view of Mt Baker, some inspiration-postcard-type shots of beach sunsets and beach clouds.
A Whidbey MFA Visit, Hospital Trips and More
- At August 07, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
5
Looking forward to escaping out to Whidbey Island to the NILA program to be a guest faculty member (along with friends such as Donna Miscolta and Daemond Arrindell) and teach classes on persona poetry and PR for poets as well as give a short reading. It should be fun! And I could use some fun because…
While the house was on the market last week, I picked up a seriously violent stomach bug, so getting out of the house for each showing and inspection and such was sort of miserable – I was just in a cloud of “I don’t feel well enough to stand” the entire week (but I did lose two pounds. Why is that always my silver lining? Nearly died of pneumonia – but I lost two pounds! What is wrong with me??) Immediately after I got well from that, while we were negotiating paperwork with a prospective buyer, Glenn started having stomach trouble, but his was more serious than mine, and required a visit to the hospital for lots of tests and it turned out several sort of serious things were wrong. Sometimes “healthy” people are people who just haven’t had enough CTscans or blood work! I forget that with us in our forties, men are suddenly susceptible to a host of strange maladies. Anyway, I’m way worse at being the one worried about a sick person than being the sick person, if you know what I mean. The men in my family need to settle down and start being healthy again! Anyway, my sweet husband is home resting, on antibiotics, and hopefully on his way to feeling better too (dude turned down morphine at the hospital like a champ! I hate that stuff too!) Plus now we have to send him to a couple specialists. I’m the one usually doing the specialist merry-go-round, and these are specialists I don’t have any experience with. And we were confronted with the fact that being a one-car household sometimes sucks, like if you both have doctors appointments at the same time in different places.
So it’s been a trying last week with no luck finding a new house, which means we may need to look at renting somewhere one-story-like soon. You know, not stressful at all. Just kidding, totally stressful. Plus, I think I’ve been sick with something or other most of this summer, which makes you feel like you’re missing out on something as it drifts into mid-August. I wish I could say I was turning this all into material, but I’m not sure that’s true – I’m just skittish and unsettled, without the well of creativity that stress sometimes brings. I’m hoping Whidbey, with its beautiful landscapes and opportunities to talk writing, will bring me back to my usual, normal, still-kind-of-skittish-but-more-creatively-productive self.
Wish us some housing, health, and happiness luck!