So, the second winner, Ron, never sent me his contact information, so I had to pick another winner for my poetry book giveaway: It’s Candace at elisamaza@gmail.com. You can leave me a comment or I’ll e-mail you for your snail mail address. Congrats on being a winner! (All winners selected with random number generators. Much quicker than pulling a literal number out of a literal hat!)
Adjuncting: Neither as glamorous nor as lucrative as you might think. That is all.
Poetry and money: Once again, as the summer comes around and the economy creakingly seems to be getting a little better, I’m thinking about how to make a little more money. Freelance writing has been slow. Poetry costs more money than it makes, typically. Contest fees, conferences, travelling for readings, not to mention books and lit mags – all of these take money. See above re: adjuncting paychecks. Worry worry worry.
Speaking of money, how will lit mags stay afloat? Here’s an interesting tidbit: I bought a used book called “The Art of Literary Publishing: Editors on their Craft.” Apparently, back in 1980, the average subscription base of a lit mag was between 200-800. Today, the average subscription base of a lit mag? You guessed it. About the same. Besides the odd rant against how the NEA and feminists were ruining poetry – many of the editors, whose publications are now defunct, sound like today’s editors – problems with increasing readership, staying solvent despite tough times, etc. The literary magazine today, with the decrease in major book publishers doing anything with unknown poets, is probably the only way for a talented writer to have his or her work seen. But who cares about them? Who is reading them? Is there an audience for them outside of writers? It seems very hard to get my own MFA students to purchase a lit mag, and those are the folks that should be motivated to do so.
Someone was complaining about how poets don’t engage politically. I would say, perhaps the publishers of poetry don’t like poetry that engages politically, which is why you don’t see more of it. It’s not that people aren’t writing it – it’s that it’s not getting published. Also I would say, what is “political?” Is it merely talking about military issues or party lines? Or does it include discussions of class, the environment, gender?
The winners of my poetry giveaway contest are Teresa Dowell and Ron Lewis! (Ron, you didn’t leave your e-mail address, so leave a comment with your e-mail address when you get a chance so I can contact you. If Ron doesn’t contact me by Monday, I’ll do another random generated number and pick another winner!) Thanks to everyone who left a comment – I wish I could afford to give away books to all of you!
Yes, blowing out thirty-seven candles makes one philosophical – and wishing this month I had written thirty-seven poems. This morning, the blue sky over Napa had reappeared, the birds chirping happily at my window. My stomach’s been acting up again (mysterious autoimmune tummy problems, boo!) so I couldn’t have the usual birthday-related food celebration but I have so many other things to be thankful for: wonderful friends, a really cool family, nice weather returning, and my husband waking me up with presents! My mother bought me a beautiful reading notebook from Mayapple – but she went above and beyond by having it custom-done in hot pink leather with my initials on it. And, by chance, my husband bought me a beautiful pair of sandals in hot pink to match (by the way, these are the first sandals I will have worn since the foot-breaking incident, so, yay for increased shoe-wearing options!) I got a boatload of books – on poetry, the Manhattan Project, Supergirls…and a couple of nifty kitchen things that I wanted. We had also recently hit a library book sale and therefore have way more books than I can possibly read in reasonable amount of time, plus all my bookshelves are already overflowing.
Over the last two years, teaching at National University’s MFA program officially and doing poetry consulting unofficially, I’ve thought about how difficult it is to really share anything about poetry. Some things – specifics versus the vague, surprises versus cliche, and form – those are the easy basics. But other things – the exact way a manuscript should come together, for instance, is full of nuance, or the key to finding a way to each poet’s unique way of looking at the world and getting that into their poetry – are trickier. They’re more empathetic, intuitive. And how to steer around your own poetry prejudices, which you might not even be aware of? It’s an art, not a science – I just can’t have people go off and memorize facts, though I can (and do) encourage them to read, read, read, to get poetry into their brains. Maybe that’s the most important thing you can do as a mentor – get people excited about the poems you’re excited about, and help them see why they are exciting.
Tomorrow is the drawing for the poetry book giveaway, so if you haven’t already entered, today is your last day.
PS I believe it is also a Pink Moon. So the pink presents are doubly appropriate!
This last weekend I was lucky enough to go to a really fun poetry party, which featured, among other things, some pretty interesting alternative-folk-cello music, and where I got to meet Rachel Dacus in person! Rachel and I had been “online” friends for some time, but it was great to actually see her and get to say hi. That’s one of the best things about blogging, finding these cool people you might never have met otherwise. Anyway, it definitely was a good weekend for poetry socializing, although on Monday I just shut myself away and graded all day to make up for it. I have two thesis advisee students as well as a class called Advanced Poetry Workshop on my hands this quarter, so I’m still not all the way finished. I’ve sent out some queries for book reviews and now must force myself to send out some poetry subs before the dreaded May cutoff time. Also send in to some open submissions and maybe apply for some fellowships…Have you every noticed how much more poetry-related work we do compared to actual poetry writing? I’d also like to write another poem or two before the end of the month happens. We were supposed to go up to Seattle this last week of April, but instead we’ve had to postpone it for another month or so. So I look forward to celebrating with my Seattle friends soon, just not as soon as I hoped. I guess May/June is a less rainy time to visit the Northwest, anyway, so it probably works out. If you haven’t yet updated your link to my new blog, please do it! And if you haven’t yet entered the poetry giveaway, do it! After all, it’s almost my birthday. Maybe I’ll win someone else’s poetry giveaway! Or a nice big book contest. That would be a great present! Come on Universe, what do you say?
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.