- 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.
- At December 03, 2006
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Sorry about the lack of blog entries. Been sick again. Trying hard to get well in time for Christmas and the last residency.
On the plus side, being inside and sick helped me catch up on my Heroes episode re-watching. (Can’t wait for Monday’s new episode! The dialogue isn’t that well written, but the plot twists are clever and the overall pacing has been rewarding. Plus, the character Hiro has a blog where he mentioned Miyazaki. Geek out!) And I’ve been enjoying everyone else’s blogs – especially Miss Cornshake and her descriptions of Macdowell-land. Sounds dreamy.
Tempted to start decorating for Christmas tonight. I know it’s early…
- At November 28, 2006
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
7
Snowtruckless in Seattle
It’s the rainiest November on record here in Seattle. Last night around 4:45 I heard a weird sound against the window – it was ice and sleet hitting the glass. I called husband G to leave work early. An hour later we had two inches of snow, and then three…we decided to try to go to the grocery store, which was a huge mistake, because all the streets were like parking lots. On the news when we got home, we saw that the neighborhood we lived in when we first moved here, Issaquah, was unavailable – literally, you could not get there from here – people spent seven hours on the highway in unmoving traffic, cars and trucks littered the sides of the rode. Downtown was just as bad. Today, for the first time in the seven years I’ve lived here, Microsoft closed its campus. The roads are nothing but ice. Luckily G and I grew up in the Midwest, surrounded by ice and snow. But here, there aren’t enough salt trucks, no one knows how to drive in this weather, since it never does this, so G is staying home (Snow day!) and I will have to cancel my errands (Christmas shopping!) around town. Thank goodness for the internet!
In the Mail
Yesterday I received the Winter 2006 issue of Rattle, which has a lovely one-page review of Becoming the Villainess. Thanks, Rattle and N.K. Moni! Also, Tom from Steel Toe Books wrote to let me know that yet another teacher has adopted my book for a class! Thanks, again!
I watch TV like a boy?
I just realized recently that all of the marketing/commercials/ads I consume are for males 18-30. I am so strongly in their demographic in the shows that I watch, the music I listen to, and movies I go to, even the web sites I visit, that when I rented an art-house flick the other day I was shocked to see advertisements beyong “Girls Gone Wild,” the latest shoot-em-up XBox Game, and “National Lampoon’s Van Wilder: The Wrath of Taj” etc. I don’t know what this says about me, or about advertisers. Do they just not care about women 18-30, or think we all spend out days watching “Desperate Housewives” and reading Redbook and don’t actually buy or do anything ourselves? Or am I so outside my demographic in my reading, television, radio and motion picture activities? Have any of you girls out there noticed this too?
Musical Zeitgeist
I’ve been working on my second book about Japanese fairy tales and popular culture, including a poem called “Crane Wife” about a crane who transforms into a human and marries the man who saves it, and recently I read about a band who did a vaguely-folkish-alterna-rock(TM) album called “Crane Wife” about the very same Japanese folk tale. The band is called The Decembrists. If only I was a vaguely-folkish-alterna-rock band, I would have beat them to this! It’s a decent album, but the first track is the best. Isn’t that always the way?
Dustup at Foetry: Tupelo Press and form letters
The recent trouble a-brewing over at Foetry over the fact that the entrants to Tupelo’s Open Submission period received form letters about their manuscripts instead of personalized critiuqes makes me realize how thankful I am for the few editors who, when I was first sending out the MS of Becoming the Villainess, really responded to my manuscript, when I was a finalist or semifinalist or whatever, with specific comments about the work, about whatever poems they liked or what they thought worked. Even a one-page letter makes a huge difference, even a scribbled note in colored pencil at the bottom of a form letter, it took work on the part of the editor, and yes, proves that someone out there actually read your work.
- At November 23, 2006
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!
This year I’m thankful. I was much less sick than the year before. I finished up graduate school (though officially, I won’t be graduated til January 15, I still feel that wee-hoo! feelign of being DONE!) My first book of poetry was published. (Some people didn’t hate it, and some nice folks even reviewed it! Joy.) I wrote another book of poetry, that now I have to start thinking about publishing. Thanks for my husband, who still loves to hear me read poetry after 405+ readings over twelve years. I have a wonderful set of poet friends locally, a great group of poet friends online (thanks interweb, you grand series of tubes 😉 and a loving family. Thankful for my new kitten, who kept waking me up last night by chasing his own tail in frantic circles at 1 AM, 6 AM. Thanks for the stack of books waiting for me to review, not one of which I’m not excited to read. I’m thankful today I will stay home and be quiet, making a little food for just the two of us and the cats. Thankful to everyone who reads this, everyone who encouraged me this year with kind notes and reminders. So it’s the rainest month in Seattle on record. So my student loans are coming due at the beginning of January. So? I have a lot to be thankful for.
I hope you do too! Happy day of Turkey and cranberries, damp leaves, football, loved ones, pumpkin pie with gingersnap crust. All right, I’ll stop before I sound like a holiday special…
Note: For those of you shopping for poetry lovers (or those you’d like to introduce to poetry) – here’s a customized list, prepared by Kelli A. and posted by Ivy A:
http://ivyai.blogspot.com/2006/11/i-thought-this-was-neat-idea-elegantly.html

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.


