Reading Report:
Well, I think Tim Green and I survived last night’s Barnes and Nobles reading, and even sold a few books. Despite the “shoplifting alarm” going off three times during my reading, and several toddlers screaming their heads off during Tim’s, I think the audience was friendly and welcoming and seemed fairly poetry-savvy. So that was nice. And it was good to hear poems from Tim’s book, “American Fractal,” out loud. I noticed we both read some “science-y” stuff, I believe both with combusting elements, which, you know, I’m for. More science in poetry – that’s what the kids today are into, right? LOL. I’m still not at the peak of my physical game, so standing for the reading was kind of painful (see: random foot/ankle injuries over the past few months,) but other than that, I thought it went pretty well.
Multi-Talented Reviewer
The lovely and talented Serena M. Agusto-Cox has posted a review of Becoming the Villainess at her site, Savvy Verse & Wit, here.
She also posted an interview with me here.
And she reviewed my book on Amazon!
So, really, a very hard-working reviewer and interviewer! Thanks Serena!
My focus now: send some poems out, send some book manuscripts out, get healthy, stay healthy.
Right now: Off to physical therapy for a look at my ankle. Then: More grading. I know, you’re saying, that’s too sexy and glamorous a lifestyle, Jeannine. Slow it down! What can I say? The poetry life is a thrill-a-minute.
Reading Tomorrow at Barnes and Nobles in La Mesa, San Diego with Jeannine Hall Gailey and Tim Green
Here’s the reading info:
Jeannine Hall Gailey and Tim Green are the featured readers at the Barnes and Nobles at the Grossmont Center in La Mesa. If you’re in the San Deigo area, please come out! Tim will be reading from his new book, American Fractal, and I’ll be reading from my “old” book, Becoming the Villainess, as well as a few from my new “Robot Scientist’s Daughter” series.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Cost: free
Phone: (619) 667-2870
Location: Barnes & Noble–La Mesa (map)
Address:Grossmont Center
5500 Grossmont Ctr Dr, Suite 331
La Mesa, CA
This is only my second real featured San Diego reading, so if you missed the first one, I hope you’ll come out! I get nervous before readings, and even had a reading-oriented anxiety dream (the one where I lose my reading notebook, can’t remember any of my poems, and the audience acts bored. Oh, it’s worse than getting chased by monsters, I tell you!)
Also, both readers might be on crutches (we both sprained our ankles a week or so ago), so there’s more excitement than usual!
Positive Things
Well, since some of my posts lately have been sort of depressing I thought today I would concentrate on positive things.
One of them was my fifteenth anniversary with my lovely husband, G. I am lucky to have such a great partner in life (who also cooks – hey, it never hurts!) He made us a beautiful dinner yesterday because we couldn’t go out and we watched “Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day.” I was so happy to be with him.
Also, I posted this over at Victoria Chang’s blog, who was discussing this depressing Newsweek article, but in the midst of so much talk about the death of poetry and the dearth of poetry audiences, I want to focus on what we can do as individuals to make a difference. Here’s what I wrote:
“It’s hard to understand in some ways why people don’t read poetry the way they used to. But we do deliver poetry in more ways to more people than we could ten years ago – that’s one of the great things about the internet. And every time someone teaches a class, and has their students read new books by poets they’ve never heard of, and has an assignment where the students have to go out and buy and read a print journal they’ve never heard of, well, that’s growing the possible audience of poetry. Every time someone drags a friend or family member to a poetry reading, and that someone loves it – that’s adding to the possible audience of poetry. It is up to all of us, so don’t feel powerless. There are things we can do. Sometimes I joke and call myself a “poetry evangelist.” But I’m serious about helping other people realize how much poetry can mean to their lives. This isn’t just about buying and reading books – it’s about changing lives.”
I could be mistaken, but I do believe that when I introduce someone to poetry, it really can change their lives for the better. This is especially true when working with younger people, who haven’t already decided that poetry is useless/no good/too hard. Would I prefer it if the average American read (and more importantly, enjoyed) more poetry? You bet. But I also see that each of us can work to make that a reality.
I would also like to say that I am grateful to know so many terrific poets who are also terrific friends, even some I have met only briefly in person but had a great effect on me. People have these stereotypes of poets being affected, difficult loners but many poets are terrific, giving people who don’t fit that stereotype at all. And most writers I have met, I am grateful that I met. If I could have a big party and give them all homemade peach tarts (because in my imagination I could make them, they would be just like the ones in Paris tea shops) I would.
The poetry world can be hard. There’s a lot of rejection involved in trying to publish. There’s a lot of politics in the poetry world, but no more than any other society of people who specialize in something – search engine coders to astrophysicists. (If you’ve never seen “And the Band Played On” you’ll never know how cutthroat virologists can be towards each other.) There is the threat of envy (that person made it and I didn’t – why?) and cynicism (the system is corrupt – why even try?) But really, all we have to do is write, and then hope we can find readers for what we write, work as hard as we can, do what we’re able. That’s not so bad, right? And along the way, we might make some friends with fellow writers and get the opportunity to introduce someone to poetry who might not ever otherwise have had a good experience with it.
- At July 08, 2009
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In distractions, health, Readings
4
Hey guys! Sorry I haven’t been posting much – been struggling through some health setbacks (including some secondary infections from the pneumonia and a sprained ankle I acquired on July 4 – bad luck lately, I guess, or I was really naughty in a past life) and have generally been a little slower with work and so with blogging, too. I apologize.
I am glad to have distractions. I starting re-reading Possession by AS Byatt, I’ve got some more classwork to do, and I probably should start sending some poems out again since I have only a couple of subs out there right now. I’m really behind on my reviewing too. I need to get organized and motivated! I’m not normally all that organized, actually, but I am usually pretty motivated – but not lately -I’ve just been too worn out. I’ve been diving into one-hundred-and-one ways to boost immune system function – from a no-sugar diet to probiotics and elderberry to bromelain and cherry juice. Bring on the miracle cures 🙂
The hummingbirds are chirping and diving around my windows, the sunshine is streaming through. I’ve got a reading next week with Tim Green from Rattle, so I better put a poetry “set” together. These days, I’m never sure whether I should read from the book or read new stuff. I’m hoping to get a nibble on a book manuscript soon…that would certainly cheer me up!
Well, I haven’t been blogging because I’ve been following a weird sleeping pattern with the pneumonia recuperation: I sleep five or six hours at night, waking up a couple of times in coughing fits, wake up and do a little work on my class, then sleep another five or six hours during the day. It’s really not very productive.
In fact, I missed a very nice cell phone call yesterday because I was asleep from a very kind editor of a magazine to tell me they liked a poem of mine and wanted to publish it. I was sorry to miss it, but happy to get the news. I got another acceptence via e-mail today. I had just been complaining with a friend about how rejections come in strange batches – two and three at a time – so maybe acceptances work the same way? Anyway, it was nice to have the good news – I have to say I still send out mostly blind to editors I don’t know at magazines I like, so four acceptances in two weeks feels like a banner month. Except for the pneumonia.
Been thinking about the desert lately, Sedona, Palm Springs. Gila monsters, red rocks, dry air, sunsets. Am I crazy? Is it just the liquid in my lungs talking here, or does the desert sound really attractive?

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.


