Happy May, Poems in Jet Fuel Review, Springtime Blues
- At May 01, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
4
Happy May!
Goodbye to April, National Poetry Month, and my 45th birthday. The week of my birthday I was a little down, both physically and emotionally. The combo of dental work, the PR for Poets book launch, and my little adventure amid the tulips took their toll, and I had to try to rest and deal with the combo of dizziness and fatigue that I’ve learned is my signal that “You’ve done too much! MS is acting up!” I still managed to sprain something so I was literally on bedrest for my actual birthday, a huge bummer, but it was cold grey weather too, so at least we enjoyed the nice weather while it was here. I did manage to submit an AWP panel for Portland and write a few poems. And here’s a picture of last late April cherry blossoms with early moonrise.
Jet Fuel Review Poems
This morning seemed to start a little brighter. And I should say I was happy to have two poems up at Jet Fuel Review! That’s a link to the whole issue (which is fantastic) PDF; I’m putting a little graphic of one of the poems, “Post-Life,” because it’s one of my more close poems to my heart and used to be the title poem of my next book manuscript before I changed it:
Birdwatch!
I have to say that this first day of May almost feels like the first day of spring, especially with the birdwatching. I saw three different kinds of woodpecker and an eagle from my bedroom window, and when I walked out on the deck I saw a pair of quail! I think these birds are all some sign of good luck. At least I hope so!
- Quail
- Red-headed woodpecker?
- Bald eagle overhead
Plans for May
I hope your May will be bright, spring-like, and kind. I am going to get some poetry submissions out and I’m looking forward to the Skagit Poetry Festival coming up mid-month.
And a quick reminder – let me know if you enjoy PR for Poets (and please put up a few words of review on Amazon) and let me know if you have any questions I didn’t cover. I’ll do another “questions” post about subject related to poetry marketing soon!
And here’s a rainbow to remind you it won’t always be grey outdoors – spring is definitely arriving!
Tulip Festivals, Sci-Fi Legacies, and Upcoming Appearances, Plus Field Guide and PR for Poets Reviews!
- At April 25, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Happy National Poetry Month – I hope your April is treating you well. Just got back from La Conner, Washington, to visit the Skagit Poetry Festival. We had a rare combination of sunny weather and a day without appointments, so we made the most of it.
Thanks to Margaret Rhee for writing – and including me in her interviews and discussion of Sci-Fi Legacies, “The Feminist Legacy in Science Fiction Poetry,” up on Strange Horizons now! It makes me thankful for a great community of writers who enjoy poetry and science fiction equally.
Thanks to Brian for his review of Field Guide to the End of the World at his site, Damaged Skull Writer. And I was happy to see two reviews pop up on PR for Poets on Amazon’s site!
Are you sad about the end of poetry month and looking for something in May to get your spirits up? I’ll be returning to Skagit to do a workshop on PR for Poets at the Skagit Poetry Festival on Sunday, May 20, 1-4 PM. The roster of poets who will be up there that weekend looks fantastic. I’ve never had a bad time at that festival, so I encourage you to attend if you’re in the area!
And here are a few photos of the Skagit Tulip Festival in 2018. It was a beautiful couple of days. Lots of bald eagle and heron sightings. We even squeezed in a visit to the Northwest Art Museum! I am worn out but it was great to be reminded of how gorgeous the Northwest can be in springtime when the sun shines.
- Glenn and I pose in a windy field of tulips, Baker in background
- bald eagle before takeoff
- Glenn and I at Roozengaarde gardens
- Pink, Purple and orange tulips
- Glenn and I in purple tulips, evening light
- heron with fish
- Glenn and I at Roozengaarde
- Pink Tulips
- More Roosengaarde
- Trying to capture even more tulips
- Robert McCauley’s painted palette from the Northwest Art Museum in La Conner
Questions about PR for Poets and more
- At April 17, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Q &A for PR for Poets
Whew! Back from getting two (!!) crowns yesterday, and it’s been too rainy and cold for flower pics (but check out this local stream at flood stage) but I’ve done two events for PR for Poets so far and I noticed some repeated questions in the Q&A and thought I would address them. (And thank you to everyone who’s bought the book so far!)
(Also, Writer’s Digest has made my Podcast, “PR for Poets,” available as a fee-based tutorial – and you also get it free if you buy Poet’s Market 2018, which is a great resource for beginning and intermediate poets! Here’s the tutorial link: https://tutorials.writersdigest.com/courses/pr-for-poets)
At both the speaking event at Open Books and during my Twitter talk, there were lots of angsty questions about how to do travel and readings!
Q: Do I have to do a book tour? Is it cost-effective?
A: Good question! Most poetry publishers aren’t funding a big book tour, so yes, these are usually money-losing propositions for poets unless you’re staying with friends and family or a university or festival is paying your way. I have a fee that is my minimum for travel (because I have MS, travel’s a little harder for me these days) but I always offer to Skype in if they can’t afford the fee.
Q: Readings make me anxious – how many do I have to do?
A: I say in the book PR for Poets that many poets sell most of their books through readings, and though that’s true, there are plenty of other options that I outline in the book for you to sell books, including sending out an e-mail newsletter, book postcards, or talking to professors about teaching your book. Every book is unique, and every poet is unique. Some people are extroverted and confident public speakers – those people should do lots of readings as long as it makes them happy. But if they’re torture for you, do one or two readings in places you know you have lots of support and see how it goes from there.
Q: Should I pay a fee to a bookstore to book a reading?
A: This is a fairly new practice that I think is not good business for the author, so I would find a venue that won’t charge you. Even a coffee shop can work, or a friend’s house, for a great reading!
Q: I’m in a small town and can’t afford to travel. I’m stressed out!
A: The good news is, the internet has made the world much smaller, and you CAN get the word out about your book even if you’re in a small town. In this case, just like with those who can’t travel due to budget or health concerns, make sure you have a solid author web site, a social media presence (on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram…wherever you feel most comfortable.)
There’s way more info in the book, but I hope this will be helpful for those of you curious about the process of promoting a book! I’ll try to post some more Q&A as I field more questions about the book and the process of marketing a book of poetry.
And a special thanks to Rita Maria Martinez, who wrote the very first Amazon (and Goodreads) review! She’s also a fantastic example of someone who did a great job marketing to the special audience (esp. Jane Eyre fans) for her book of poetry, The Jane and Bertha In Me!
“I have long admired Jeannine Hall Gailey’s poetry, but I have also admired her media savvy and online presence. I have followed her blog closely over the last couple of years, and I was very excited to receive this book in the mail. PR for Poets does not disappoint. Gailey guides the reader by the hand through what can be a sometimes daunting and stressful process: promoting one’s poetry. As poets, we often focus so much on craft and fail to take the necessary steps to properly promote the fruits of our labor— poetry collections which have required precious time, sweat, and dedication. These are some of the topics Gailey covers: PR kits and sell sheets, pitch letters, social media, book prizes, reviews, readings, launch parties, and book tours. I also like that she interviews editors, poets, and industry experts throughout the book. They don’t necessarily teach all this stuff in graduate school. Much of it is learned through trial and error. Gailey’s mission is to help writers avoid some of those errors and pitfalls. I wish this book had been around when my first full-length poetry collection was accepted for publication. PR for Poets is a must-read for every poet who wants to reach as many readers as possible.”
Springtime and Aging, PR for Poets and Thinking about a Poet’s Choices
- At April 10, 2018
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
A little April tour of Seattle’s Japanese Gardens to start us off…I hope you’re not bored with my flowers yet!
- Glenn and I at Seattle’s Japanese Gardens
- Camellias in bloom
- Magnolia blossoms
- Posing with magnolia
- White cherry blossoms
PR for Poets and a Poet’s Choice
Well, the PR for Poets talk at Open Books went well, and there were so many interesting questions during the Q&A session…”How do I become a book reviewer?” “If I’ve been sick for six months after my book launch is it too late to promote the book?” “How does a chapbook compare to a book?” “What if I do all the things you’re supposed to do but your book still doesn’t sell?” All good questions that got me thinking about the life of a poet.
- Me with the new book and my beautiful friends Roz Ray and Natasha Moni
- Natasha snapped this while I was doing the PR for Poets talk
I thought about my own life…how did I start reviewing, and why? It was almost fifteen years ago now that I started reviewing, believe it or not. Why did I decide to do a chapbook in the beginning? I just was so excited to have my work out in the world – I think chapbooks are a beautiful art form (and great practice for what to do when your full-length book comes out.) What did I do when one of my books didn’t sell as much as I’d hoped? I did almost exactly the same things for all my books, with varying results. What happens when say, you have your book release date and you think you’re dying of cancer because at least three doctors have told you so and then you catch pneumonia the week before the book party? Yes, that happened with my last book, and looking back, it was a wonderful book party, so many friends and family there, on a beautiful day at a winery, and I barely had a voice, but I was glad I was there. I guess because I’m turning 45 this month and last year I thought I might not make it past 44 -I’m going to be personal for a second and say why I ended up finishing the PR for Poets book even when I had a bunch of bad health stuff going on in the background – why I wanted other poets to benefit from my experiences, to tell others how to make their lives as poets a little easier, though the life of a poet is sort of by definition never easy. I hope the book does that – gives the readers a little bit about what I’ve learned, what my friends have taught me, what generous advice experts have offered.
What Makes You Happy, and a Poet’s Choices at Midlife
Anyway, today I was thinking about Mrs. Dalloway, The Hours, and Virginia Woolf’s health problems and life trajectory, and the sadness and isolation that often being a woman writer involves, being outside the mainstream. Social media can somehow both relieve the isolation and make everyone more lonely at the same time. I don’t have any kids, so I don’t have a legacy except that which I leave behind in books. I’m not miserable in exactly the way of the women of the Hours were – I appreciate my life, and I love (as you can tell) on the days I’m healthy enough to get out in the sunshine, among the flowers and deer and rabbits. I love sitting and reading in a quiet room on rainy days. My husband is a great support and makes a lot of my lately-difficult life easier than it could be. I am thankful for my friends and family, my support system, the artists and writers that have inspired me.
Sometimes my health problems can seem overwhelming – the time scheduling and attending all the medical appointments alone take up can be overwhelming – but I am happy this April to be seeing another spring, to see the little cherry tree I planted last year bloom, the tulips and daffodils show up in a garden that was pretty barren when we moved in. I got an award for my last book of poetry, Field Guide to the End of the World, which came in the mail yesterday (see below.) I’m happy to release this weird non-fiction PR for Poets book that hopefully helps some poets have an easier time than I did. I’m happy right now to be alive and able to go out a bit in the sun, to walk a little bit and watch the wildlife. I don’t know what my expectations of my life were when I was little, but I don’t know that I could have predicted how things turned out – but I know I don’t feel disappointed. I look forward to writing another book of poetry, even to sending out another book, and bringing that next book of poetry into the world. I feel scared of some aspects of my life – mortality and the scariness of the MS diagnosis and my liver tumors and etc – but I think writing has made my life better and happier, and I hope that poetry makes your life happier too, but if not, be sure to get outside and smell the..tulips. (Last pictures this post I promise!)
- Me in the tulips, Willows Lodge
- My closeup of some early tulips
- My Elgin Award from the SFPA finally came in the mail yesterday. I put it up with the book, a dragon, and a unicorn (it was National Unicorn Day yesterday!) Ah, the little things…





























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.


