- At December 14, 2006
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Note to anyone planning to come see me read at Ravenna Third Place Books tonight: the reading has been cancelled due to weather. The readings will be re-scheduled. Thanks!
We are having crazy, windy, stormy weather out here in the NW. I just got back from physical therapy where I watched tree branches blow by while I worked on my shoulder. Very exciting! I hope our power stays on tonight. It’s been off and on since yesterday.
Another MS rejection, this time from U of Wisconsin, who scribbled “Strong MS” on the note. That’s the second, note-scribbled rejection for my new MS. But it’s gotten lots better since September, which is when these versions of the MS were sent out. I think.
Thanks for all your well-wishes. I am feeling better. One of my good friends had a health scare this week. It made me realize how much worse it is when someone close goes through a health thing than when I do. It’s much less an exciting medical mystery, which is how I approach my own weird health problems – much more anxiety-provoking.
- At December 11, 2006
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
4
Sprained my shoulder, so have spent last two days in bed. Amazingly, all this down time – mostly spent flat on my back with no computer – has made me super productive in the time I can do computer stuff – I sent out two packets of poems, wrote a chapbook review, finished a writeup for Expedia, and read a bunch of magazines and books that had been sitting around. Oh, and finished up my Christmas shopping online. G’s parents bought me this cool book on Japanese consumerism, women, and culture. I read a fascinating chapter on the culture of cute and the backlash against it – which may be a backlash against working, independent women, and therefore, kawaii (or cute/vulnerable/childish)=feminist? No, I don’t think that’s right. But something.
First, check out Oliver’s interview with Kate. Good reading!
And check out this quote from a piece on Helen Vendler:
“Today Vendler seldom reviews poets under 50, since their “frames of reference,” she says, are alien to her. “They’re writing about the television cartoons they saw when they were growing up. And that’s fine. It’s as good a resource of imagery as orchards. Only I’ve seen orchards and I didn’t watch these cartoons,” she said. “So I don’t feel I’m the best reader for most of the young ones.”” (Full story at http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/10/books/review/Donadio.t.html?pagewanted=3&_r=2&ref=books)
Cartoons replacing orchards in poetry. Yup. That’s what I’m all about, baby!
Shanna Compton’s Down Spooky is what I’d call “approachable experimental.” In some ways, you feel as if you have sitting down having a conversation with Shanna – a folksy, Southern vernacular type of poetry, but a little weirder, a little heightened language thrown in. Kickboxers, oreos, lip gloss, stripmalls all make appearances. Check out this stanza from “Guided Tour of the South:”
“No adquate map exists. Everybody
has always arrived wearing blindfolds.
See the foxshined faces in the kudzu?
Most of the vegetation has been bitten off by winter.”
Anyway, head on out and check out this book, which recently was made available again from Winnow Press.
Ooh, and in other exciting news, Brandi from Switchback Books sent out the info for our AWP reading – and it’s full of cool chicks – Mary Biddinger and Kristy Bowen are both in the lineup too!
- At December 09, 2006
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
3
A lovely crowded reading at the Tacoma bookstore Blu Wolf last night, where the crowd seemed very involved (despite the skate punks from the movie Dogma skating loudly back and forth during my reading right outside the window.) And then afterwards got to go out with lovely friends Lana Ayers (who just won the Snake Nation first book contest – yay Lana!) , her husband Andy (not a poet, and bravo to a guy not related/married to me who has sat through at least three Villainess readings now!) and Villainess cover artist Michaela to chat.
I also had a nice, anonymous e-mail note from someone who liked my poems in 2 River View an issue or so back when I got home.
And, in the mail a somewhat bemusing rejection for my Japanese-pop-culture/fairy tale MS that I sent into Pittsburgh Press during their open submission period in October – the handwritten words from Ed Ochester “This manuscript more interesting than most.” Not sure if that is a backhanded compliment, a good sign, or a forward-handed insult. Anyone more experienced than me want to shed light on that comment? I do feel sort of optimistic about this manuscript for some reason.
And speaking of Open Submissions, here’s a good list of university presses and thier submissions policies: http://www.poetryresourcepage.com/publishers/upresses.html
I’m enjoying reading Shanna Compton’s Down Spooky. More about that later.
- At December 07, 2006
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Okay, check this out: The Superhero’s Guide to Small Press Publishing!! It’s mostly no-surprise advice, but customized for superheroes 🙂 I couldn’t resist. Thanks Holly Smith, whoever you are.
Come see me read tomorrow at 7 PM at the Blu Wolf in Tacoma, Washington. Open mike after!
(I hope to see my lovely Tacoma friends Jeff Walt and of course clever superheroine/book cover artist Michaela Eaves. )
- At December 06, 2006
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Update: Thanks to Ivy for finding this cool Villainess name-finder!
Got a copy of Black Warrior Review with Aimee Nez’ chapbook – experimental-looking poems, prose poems, more challenging work. The whole issue was a lot of fun, but of course Aimee’s work was my favorite. I’m going to have to add this journal to my list of faves.
The new Writer’s Chronicle has an absolutely delightful interview with Alicia Ostriker, including questions from other celebrity poets, like Gerald Stern’s “Who is your biggest Male influence?” and Eleanor Wilner asking about Language Poetry. Read it! I have another person on my list of favorite cranky feminist poet list!
OK, I don’t like those blog question taggy things, but I was tagged by Kelli, so this time I’ll do it 😉
1. The first poem I remember reading/hearing/reacting to was….When my mother read to me from her college poetry class book, XJ Kennedy’s Introduction to Poetry. I especially liked the ballads and the funny stuff (“Life, Friends, is Boring” and “Tomb to the Unknown Citizen.”
2. I was forced to memorize (name of poem) in school and… I went to a school that had poetry recitation contests in the 5th and 6th grade. And I won two years in a row! Boo-ya! Take that, 6th graders! LOL. The poems were e.e. cummings’ “Anyone Lives in a Pretty How Town” and Louis Simpson’s “My Father in the Night Commanding No.” I still love both poems.
3. I read poetry because…. I like to think. I like to be entertained. I like to consider other points of view. I like hearing voices.
4. A poem I’m likely to think about when asked about a favorite poem is …….Louise Gluck’s “Circe” and “Siren.” Eliot’s Prufrock. HD’s Fragment 68.
5. I write poetry, but… I love television, baby! That’s right. None of that, “I threw out my television so I could meditate on nature a la Walden Pond” crap for me!
6. My experience with reading poetry differs from my experience with reading other types of literature…..It’s condensed, exciting, exhilarating. The closest thing to junior high slow-dancing excitement you’ll find in book form.
7. I find poetry…… In Art and Artifacts. In People rather than Place. Not many poems about sunsets, but a lot of poems inspired by paintings, video installations, animé.
8. The last time I heard poetry…. Was on the radio. And the time before that was on a stage in Poulsbo, Washington.
9. I think poetry is like…A lot of things. Licking the candy wrapper. Kissing a stranger. Randomly walking into movies in a theater. Playing the “telephone” game.

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.


