Dang! And Happy Mother’s Day to you Mothers!
**Update: I think both my contact form and book order form work again now. Try sending me a message for fun!
Thanks to this blog, I found out my webbish6 contact form is totally broken. Urgh! I hate it when my web site breaks (especially some of the creakier old code.) The code that my web site provider requires for a form mail has changed (without notice – thanks guys!) Plus I think my hotmail account is blocking my form mail. So I have to recode it to make it work, then redirect to my newish gmail account instead. I find gmail’s mail threads extremely hard to follow, so I’ve resisted gmail for a long time, but hotmail has given me a lot of headaches this year.
So, if you have used my contact form in the recent past, and not received a response, it’s not because I hate you – it’s because I never received your mail. I’m very, very sorry. I’ll try to get my contact form code back up and running soon.
In other news, I was browsing around at Open Books (best poetry bookstore ever, in Seattle) today and someone came in looking for my book. The minute she said “Becoming the Villainess” I was all “brrrt?” What are the odds? Hi-larious. So glad I stopped in! Plus I picked up that new women-in-poetry mentoring book. And another copy of Daisy Fried’s My Brother is Getting Arrested Again (to replace the one that disappeared from my book shelves after I lent it out.) I love love love that title. In the book, the title poem is (which I think is a persona poem) is about the speaker’s brother getting arrested for some kind of righteous protesting. It would have been more fun if he had been knocking over a liquor store or something. Also, that’s what young men in the neighborhood I grew up in were more likely to be arrested for. I mean, it’s still a good poem, but, you know…
Coming soon: a review of the new Rhino 2008, since I just got my contributor copy in the mail.

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.


