Snow Day and Merry Holiday Wishes
- At December 20, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Woke up to snow this morning, which is surely making the children of Seattle very happy as they will have a much-beloved (and rare, here) Snow Day! As for me, I’m just happy my husband had the foresight to mail off all our Christmas packages late yesterday! I’ve got hot gluten-free blueberry crumbcake muffins in the oven and nowhere important to be, as well as a stack of good books to review (new Rachel Zucker and Natalie Diaz’s When My Brother Was an Aztec.) Outside my window at 7 AM I already here the happy shrieks of kids playing in the very picturesque (and probably gone by noon) white stuff.
I was happy to see Natalie Diaz read a couple of days ago courtesy of local publisher Copper Canyon and really enjoyed hearing her voice. We’re a lucky city in terms of who we get coming to town to read, I think.
This holiday I am grateful for the following: being able to walk, being able to eat more foods without sudden anaphylaxis fits, a great group of creative and encouraging friends, a husband who is better at domestic stuff than I am (I think he baked about a hundred Christmas cookies for various friends’ gift bags!), a family who is for the most part healthy and happy (even if some of them are on different continents right now) and a feeling of hope for 2014. How about you? I am wishing you all a very merry holiday!!
From “Community” “That’s What Christmas is For:” (“Thanks, Lost!”)
“She Had Unexplained Fevers” on Verse Daily today, family visits and holiday thankfulness
- At December 12, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Hooray! The title poem from my book, Unexplained Fevers, “She Has Unexplained Fevers” is featured on Verse Daily today! It’s the only poem I’ve ever written in the voice of a cranky dwarf (from the famous Seven Dwarfs, of course!) Thanks Verse Daily!
My parents are visiting from Ohio and instead of going crazy this holiday like I normally do I’m trying to stay thankful, centered, relaxed *at least some of the time. I’ve been wrapping presents and watching my fave holiday movies late into the night after my chores are done (so far: Christmas in Connecticut (the working girl holiday movie before there was Brigit Jones,) the original The Bishop’s Wife, Charlie Brown’s Christmas, etc), enjoying the constant smell of sugar cookies baking (we’ve been baking them to give as Christmas presents!) My friend and talented musician Matt Price sent me one of the best presents ever – he wrote and performed and recorded a song in the voice of the father character from my “Robot Scientist Daughter” poems, and I’m giving it to my Dad for Christmas (along with a little robot kit.) It’s such a funny song with a combination of disturbing humor and sentiment, that I laugh and get teary every time I hear it (I’ll share it when I get permission from the musician.) This is one of the many serendipities of working with other artists in unexpected ways, in this case, working with the Bushwick Book Club and Jack Straw. We’ve bought tickets to go see the Hobbit part II this weekend, which seems very much in keeping with the Hall family holiday traditions, such as they are. The lights and tree are up, our forty-degree-ish weather has returned after our cold snap, and plus, to brighten your holiday, this adorable leopard cub, courtesy of ZooBorns.com: http://www.zooborns.com/.a/6a010535647bf3970b019b025e8d30970c-popup.
I’m feeling blessed and lucky in other ways too – this last few years my immune system has been so insane (hives, spontaneous anaphylaxis, etc) that I was about to start monthly injections of an experimental drug that shuts down the IgE system, (which, though I’m against GMO food and farming, would make me a GMO person!) but yesterday my immunologist doc said I was doing so much better we could hold off! I really have had improvements in my health, I’m not just imagining it! I love hearing that kind of news around the holidays! My big brother, little brother, and nephew all got great new jobs recently, which I’m also celebrating, as it’s still a dang hard time to find a good job these days. So I’m just going to say, I’m thankful. And also feeling very warm and fuzzy, much like that leopard cub.
A Tour of Gaileyland, a Reading Video, 2014 Goals, and a Poem on Verse Daily this week
- At December 10, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
After months of very little in the way of good poetry news of any sort, I’ve been inundated with news, mostly good news, things I want to be able to stop and be grateful for in the middle of the holiday hustle. (We’ve rearranged furniture, broken a microwave, built cabinets in the laundry room/pantry, got together a variety of Christmas presents, and restocked the upstairs bed and bath with necessities in the last few days…) So here are a few things:
Lesley Wheeler talks a little bit about her adventures in teaching, and I do mean adventures! Lesley had her class at Washington and Lee University produce this web site, Gaileyland, which is a travel-guide-type exploration of my book Becoming the Villainess. Pretty much the most creative and cool example of teaching a book of poetry in a way that won’t put students to sleep. The whole thing is hilarious; I particularly like the restaurant reviews.
In case you are interested, here’s a link to the text and the video from my reading on a 16 degree night for the Redmond Lights Celebration and dedication of the sculpture called “The Erratic” by John Fleming: http://redmondpoetry.blogspot.com/2013/12/video-and-poem-from-redmond-lights.html. It was a fun night despite the bitter cold and a nice way to connect with the community there. I also found I really like doing ekphrastic poetry, so I hope I find a way to keep doing it!
I heard that Verse Daily will be featuring one of my poems, I think on Thursday. So keep an eye out!
After almost six months of just rejections, I’ve had four acceptances in the last week, which just reminds me that the writing life is very bipolar – months of nothing, then a week of good news! That’s the way it is, and why you have to grit your teeth and stick with it through the months of bad news. So you can be extra happy when all your good news comes in.
And I’m happy to say that the re-release in print by Two Sylvias Press of my second book, She Returns to the Floating World, should be out by the end of the month! More news on that when I get it! This version will have internal art by Michaela Eaves, so it’s worth getting just for that!
Oh, and if you’re doing any holiday shopping that includes poetry books, Kelli Agodon has a great list of her favorite poetry books of 2013 here, and I really like the list myself (not just because Unexplained Fevers is on the list, either – this resembles very closely my faves of 2013 as well!) So check that out!
My goals after the holidays include starting to be more determined in writing book reviews that pay (as opposed to the ones I do for free) and doing more freelance magazine writing queries. I used to really enjoy freelance writing, and I want to get back into the swing of that, just maybe slightly different kinds of journalism. I know quite a bit about allergy-friendly menu planning, or finding beauty products without wheat, and maybe that info will be interesting to others? I hope so! I feel better about myself when I’m contributing to the household incoming in whatever ways I can, even though, yes, I’m a poet. So that’s part of my goal-setting for 2014. What about you?
Holiday Readings, Redmond Lights, Parties, and Getting Ready for Visits from Family
- At December 07, 2013
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Tonight I’m reading for the art dedication of a piece called “The Erratic” on the Redmond Connector Trail, at 6:30. I think the reading is actually outside, and there’s a luminary walk and hot chocolate booths and such for kids, and I believe the part that I’ll be a part of will last from 6:30 to 7 PM. Did I mention it’ll be outside and last night it was ten degrees outside! Ten degrees in Seattle! It’s the coldest I ever remember it being out here, I have to keep thawing out the hummingbird feeders. I’ve gone up to my “old clothes closet” to dig out: heaviest long winter coat, earmuffs, gloves, and I have to try to find something “festive” to wear for the reading that I won’t freeze in underneath. (The Ugg boots aren’t necessarily festive, but possibly a necessity!) The whole schedule for the Redmond Lights events tonight is here: http://www.redmondlights.com/events/
Last night I went out to see former editor of Poetry Northwest and current critic for The Rumpus David Biespiel do a reading at Open Books. Local luminaries like Linda Bierds (winner of one of those MacArthur Genius Grant) and Martha Silano were there, so that was fun, but it was so cold last night, and someone was coughing all the way through the reading, and I came home with a sore throat, so I’m drinking hot water and honey to fix that before tonight. Sometimes I have to remember to rest the night before a reading!
Did I mention tonight is also the husband’s annual Christmas party downtown? So it’s possible I will race home from the outdoor reading, change clothes, glam up, and head downtown to help the husband do networking and see what the company sprang for this year (in early years at the company, they used to splash out on smoked salmon and champagne and 80’s cover bands, but it’s been a while. Times are lean!)
In the middle of this, I am getting ready for a holiday visit from my parents, which means I am trying to decorate and clean the house and get the upstairs ready for visitors (we have a tiny Christmas tree for the upstairs!) and running around trying to put presents together for everyone (five nieces and nephews, five brothers and brother-in-laws, friends, the parents, various others…) It seems harder to shop this year as the sales weren’t very good and the quality on everything seems a little cheaper – probably due to the recession, shops are trying to make more profit.
Let’s see, I’ve been reading Donna Tartt’s new book The Goldfinch, which I think is horribly repetitive and the voice seems very phony, like she’s never even talked to a teenage boy in her life. It got praised up and down for its wonderful “Dickens-esque” character, but Dickens was more fun than this – and based on the plot, the book should be a lot more fun – art thievery, white trash living in Vegas, snobby Manhattan families, etc. I’m disappointed because I loved The Secret History so much, but I remembered I don’t always love everything by every author I like – I’m crazy about some AS Byatt books, for instance, but only “meh” about others. (And while Margaret Atwood continues to be one of my favorite writers, her latest sci-fi dystopian trilogy didn’t thrill me, either.) Perhaps I’ve become a tougher reader as I get older? One book I’m thrilled with so far is “A Poet’s Prose” – the prose writings of Louise Bogan, which makes a wonderful read along with the correspondence of Flannery O’Connor, because they discuss some of the same problems and write to some of the same people (although Louise was born first, she outlived Flannery by decades.) Even if you don’t love her poetry, you will probably love her letters – she’s sharp, gossipy, intelligent, passionate, someone you would have wanted to be friends with. It’s the kind of book I love to “happen upon” when I go to Open Books.