Strange Horizons Shoutout and Seattle’s First Thursday Art Walk with Mutated Megafauna
- At January 08, 2016
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Back to normal life and the new year. First of all, thanks to Lesley Wheeler and Strange Horizons for this shoutout for The Robot Scientist’s Daughter in a roundup of 2015 books! A nice way to start the year!
Another good way to start the year – the Seattle Art Walk! We met my little brother and sister-in-law downtown on this frosty January evening for Capital Hill/Pioneer Square’s First Thursday Art Walk. We enjoyed a lot of the art – and got to introduce them to the Method Gallery, which they’d never been to before – but our favorite was Roq La Rue’s Charismatic Megafauna show. There were some amazing pieces there – here’s me photographed with a bejeweled panther by Justin Beckman (and a better shot of it), an “Arctic Fox with Problems,” by Laurie Hogin, and my very favorite – with nuclear stacks and a meerkat family in the distance, robot and lop-eared bunny among the tigers in the foreground – “The Machine in the Garden” by Jean Pierre Arboleda. Also, a very cool and better in person- miniature golden animals with LED lights in a mirror by Peter Gronquist. Most images courtesy of Roq La Rue (as my digital pics of these pieces failed to do them justice…) This is a show I definitely wanted to walk away with at least one of these fantastical pieces. Go if you get a chance – it’s all better in person!
- Jeannine with panther
- The Machine in the Garden
- Arctic Fox Tropical
- full panther image
- Animals in a mirror
Also, speaking of getting in touch with our visual arts sides – I messed around and came up with a vision board for 2016. I’m still perfecting it, but you get the gist. This is a little ritual I’ve been doing the last few years, and it gives me an excuse to mess with scissors and glue sticks and collaging while thinking about my goals for the coming year. Despite this week’s news including North Korea’s nuclear testing, a stock market nosedive, and other less cheerful things, I hope we will have plenty of health, success and happiness in 2016!
Happy New Year! Major Awards, Things I am Thankful For, Wishes for 2016!
- At December 31, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
3
Happy New Year’s Eve to all of you! 2015 was a tough year for many of us, so I am wishing us all a more joyous and peaceful 2016! Solar flares mean northern lights may be visible tonight, so keep an eye out after the ball drops!
It was dry and cold last night so we finally got the chance for one of my favorite Christmas traditions – albeit post-Christmas – going to see the Bellevue Botanical Gardens holiday lights. We met my little brother and his wife there and enjoyed the festive glow even though I couldn’t feel my hands after about fifteen minutes outside, despite wearing gloves (I’ve become very bad about the cold – it was around 30 degrees – since moving to the West Coast. My midwestern former self would not be impressed!) It did remind me why I hold on to some traditions – being outside with the lights, even in the cold, made me feel appropriately holiday-esque instead of grumpy and house-bound (We had some unending gloomy freezing rain – and about ten seconds of snow – the week before and of Christmas, so there was not much getting out and about.)
- Undersea lights scene at the Bellevue Botanical Gardens
- Me and Glenn with light peacock and flower garden at Bellevue Botanical Gardens
- Dragon lights at Bellevue Botanical Gardens
Some good news to share – thanks to the SFPA who finally sent me the certificate for winning second prize for the Elgin Award 2014 for my book Unexplained Fevers. It was a nice surprise to get it in the mail!
Other book news to be grateful for: thanks to Donna Miscolta for including The Robot Scientist’s Daughter in her list of favorite reads of the year and to Karen J. Weyant who included it on her Best Poetry Collections of the Year list – it’s so hard for small press poetry books to make any kind of list, so I’m very thankful to be on these two!
So what are your wishes for 2016? I’m hoping for more days of good health, more ability to spend times with friends, a new one-story home for us (we’re still on the search for a ranch that’s affordable out here on the East side), and of course, thankful for the Moon City Press people for putting out my apocalypse-themed Field Guide to the End of the World next year! I’ve planned a little travel – presenting at AWP LA to begin with in the spring, then some readings across the country later in the year – so maybe 2016 will be a better year for being out and about! What are you hopeful for?
Black Friday Weekend Poetry Special!
- At November 27, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
- Sugared cranberries and cranberry meringue pies
- Happy Thanksgiving! From me and Glenn trying out my new iphone’s camera
Hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving! We had a peaceful Thanksgiving with roasted duck and chicken (duck was much more popular!), gluten-free cornbread stuffing with duck and fennel, maple-roasted root veggies, cheesy mashed potatoes with a hidden moat of green peas, veggies with honey-mustard dip, sugared cranberries, and for dessert, delicata squash cheesecakes and cranberry meringue pies, celebrated with Glenn, my little brother, and his wife. It was nice to have family to celebrate with – and given how sick we’ve been recently, that both Glenn and I actually felt pretty healthy on the big day! We watched a little MST3K Turkey Day marathon and a little football while we decorated the tree.
It’s Black Friday! Have you considered poetry gift shopping? Just for Black Friday weekend, get your poetry fix!
[POOF!]
Also, consider supporting and checking out your local small presses for more literary gifts! I recommend Two Sylvias Press, Mayapple Press, Steel Toe Books, and New Binary Press, as well as Moon City Press!
November – Goodreads, Acceptances, and NaNoWriMo for poets?
- At November 04, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
3
Hope you all had a happy Halloween! I’ve been sick (cough, sneeze, cough) and the time change – yes, now it gets dark at about 4:20 – always throws me off a few days.
But the good news is, after a whole month of many rejections, I had two acceptances of a total of five poems right at the beginning of November, which cheered me up and also encouraged me to try my own poet version of NaNoWriMo – where I write something for twenty minutes every day of November. So far I’ve got a couple of poems out of it and some various essaylike stuff.
It has been mostly cold and dark, but I’ve been looking for signs of beauty even in our dark November days – here’s a rainbow from a rainy Sunday and some Anna’s hummingbirds, who have been haunting our feeders with some fervor!
- Anna’s hummingbird on Japanese maple
- hummingbird at feeder
- Rainbow over our street
I rented some movies from Redbox to watch tonight and hope to get some poetic inspiration from – Pixar’s Inside Out and the David Foster Wallace movie The End of the Tour. A nice night – the high today was in the forties, the sunset was at around 4 PM, so we’ve got to start planning cheerful activities to the nights don’t seem soooo long. But having a little bit more nighttime does seem to lend itself to more reading and writing – I’ve been reading Laura Hall’s Speak (linked short stories about AI, among other things) and Dani Shapiro’s Still Writing for inspiration. All this will take our minds off the somewhat depressing househunting, as well.
And I hate to ask, but if you guys are on Goodreads and you could go here (https://www.goodreads.com/choiceawards/best-poetry-books-2015) and type in The Robot Scientist’s Daughter at the bottom of the page as a write-in vote, I would really appreciate it!
Anyway, happy November! And let me know your own anti-gloom writing and reading tricks and tips!
Fukushima Mutant Flowers and a few poems from The Robot Scientist’s Daughter
- At July 24, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Yesterday these images of mutant daises from around the area of the Fukushima disaster made the rounds on the internet. Almost instantly, sites popped up to say the mutation, called “fasciation” is “totally normal” and “happens all the time.” Sure. Maybe it happens all the time. Or maybe these mutations are signs of the damage we’ve caused through radioactive pollution. Because as soon as I saw that picture, I thought of a poem I’d written about a story my father had told me twenty years ago – about a janitor who grew a garden on the grounds of the Fernald Superfund site in Ohio, a garden with flowers mysteriously displaying this same kind of mutation. The janitor died of radiation poisoning soon after telling my father this story.
Chaos Theory
Elbow-deep in the guts of tomatoes,
I hunted genes, pulling strand from strand.
DNA patterns bloomed like frost.
Ordering chaos was my father’s talisman;
he hated imprecision, how in language
the word is never exactly the thing itself.
He told us about the garden of the janitor
at the Fernald Superfund site, where mutations
burgeoned in the soil like fractal branchings.
The dahlias and tomatoes he showed to my father,
doubling and tripling in size and variety,
magentas, pinks and reds so bright they blinded,
churning offspring gigantic and marvelous
from that ground sick with uranium.
The janitor smiled proudly. My father nodded,
unable to translate for him the meaning
of all this unnatural beauty.
In his mind he watched the man’s DNA
unraveling, patching itself together again
with wobbling sentry enzymes.
When my father brought this story home,
he never mentioned the janitor’s
slow death from radiation poisoning,
only those roses, those tomatoes.
I also thought of the role flowers have played in nuclear cleanup – for instance, sunflowers were grown in both the Chernobyl and Fukushima sites, as it is known that sunflowers can draw radioactive cesium from the ground. However, the flowers, of course, themselves become dangerously contaminated.
Two poems about the Fukushima sunflowers:
drink the cesium from the grounds
of the temple where they burn lanterns
made from the names of the dead.
This invisible snow, says the temple’s monk, brings us a long winter. A village woman mourns the loss of her blueberries.
In Chernobyl they grew amaranthus,
field mustard, sunflowers. But how to dispose of poisoned flowers in spring? We build lanterns. We plant seeds. We set things alight.
A field of sunflowers grow where rice
should stand, to draw cesium from the ground. The water lilies bloom after years of lying dormant. Something here about the resilience
of earth, about renewal; something hopeful
in the faces of those yellow sunflowers,
turning towards the last beams of light. Children hesitate before tasting plum jam, before sipping tea: how can they know
what is offered? And everyone says safe.
Metal faces of new radiation detection signs appear next to the crumpled worn idols of stone. Sunflowers planted in hope, in the names of the dead fail to purify the earth,
say scientists in September. Still, they are tended. They stand guard with origami cranes left on the beaches, to be carried away with the tide. As winter approaches, many roofs
carry the crushed bodies of cars as people
try to repair, rebuild. Children’s thyroids
tested and scanned. Strontium, cesium, iodine in the soil. In the fish, the fowl, the fruit –
in the flowers burning in the fields, aglow against the late setting sun.
Another mutant story out of Fukushima was about mutant butterflies. This story made it into the show “Vice” on HBO when they did a special on Fukushima. Some butterflies were fed exclusively plants from Fukushima, and their offspring showed significant negative mutative changes.
I try not to be an alarmist, but from studying ecology, environmental toxicology and environmental law while getting my biology degree at UC, plus helping my dad edit countless papers about radiological pollution and its harms, I would say with certainty 1. We don’t know the extent of the damage we cause with radioactive pollution and 2. we have no safe ways to contain radioactive waste. Concrete caps crack over time, and leak (as we’ve seen at Hanford and other sites, such as Fernald.) Don’t be too quick to discount the dangers, don’t brush them off, but don’t despair. We still can vote, we can make our voices known. We can maybe make a difference in the state of the world we hand over to future generations. But I know this; ignoring or brushing off this news will not make it better. Keeping secrets, like the ones I grew up with in “America’ Secret City,” is harmful.
“Fukushima Mutant Butterflies Spark Fear”
—Title taken from a news headline
Blue grass butterflies born eyeless
wings misshapen, legs hapless,
bring doubts, invite speculation.
They whisper: cancer, mutation, third generation—
like a butterfly wing’s path on the skin
each unraveling molecule
blossoms into its own miraculous monster.
Don’t wait for the poisonous wind
or the downstream effects. Under the ground
our monsters sleep and form poisons inside us,
curling our fingers, graying our hair,
forming tumors quietly in the night.
The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, which contains all these poems, is available from me, from Mayapple Press, and from Amazon.
Happy Fourth Weekend, heat-based insomnia, and a few appearances by The Robot Scientist’s Daughter
- At July 03, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
4
Happy 4th of July Weekend, everyone! Stay safe! I know here in Seattle, it has been in the searing nineties and dry as a bone, so hopefully people leave the fireworks to the professionals and prevent unnecessary fires!
After a lack of sleep last night – heat-based insomnia, is that a thing? full moon fever? – I didn’t get to sleep til 7 AM, and I was woken up by my alarm at 8:05. Yay! Things have been a little stressful with family health stuff, the house selling/buying stress, and work, so it may have to do with that. I guess I am in need of a summer break!
In good news though, I came home yesterday to some mail appearances of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter – get your own Americana-history-themed robot poems here now! – one in the Pacific University Magazine, and the other in the form of an ad in Poets & Writers.
Here’s Pacific’s little write-up – thanks, Alma mater!
And here’s the Mayapple Press ad in this month’s Poets & Writers:
A Poem up at Verse Daily today, a Reading Tonight, and How To Up Your Writer’s Game This Summer
- At June 10, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Woke up to a nice surprise – a poem from The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, “Advice from The Robot Scientist’s Daughter” up on Verse Daily today. Thanks, Verse Daily!
Also, if you’re out and about today, consider stopping by Parkplace Books in Kirkland tonight about 7 PM, because I’ll be reading from the new book there, along with Keith Moul. There’s also an open mike. It’s usually a pretty small reading series, and the bookstore is very cute, so I’d love to see you there!
And, if you’re wondering how to up your writer’s game over the summer, I’ve got a post over at the Gailey and Davio Writers’ Services blog on five ways to do just that!
Upcoming Kirkland Reading, Waterfalls, and More
- At June 08, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Wednesday night in Kirkland, Washington, I’ll be reading with Keith Moul at the charming Parkplace Books at 7 PM. There’s an open mike as well. I’d love to see some of my eastside friends there since it’s my first East side reading for The Robot Scientist’s Daughter!
Yesterday it was nearly 90 degrees – crazy hot – so we decided to head north to see the waterfalls at Snoqualmie Falls and Ollalie State Park, and drive around Sammamish Lake and Issaquah, as it has really built up since we lived there in 2000. It was lovely to be outside after a long-enforced rest with a lung infection. This is Glenn and I in the forest at Ollalie State Park:
Then me with the little waterfall there at Ollalie, and then the big Snoqualmie Falls with a bit of the Salish Lodge in the background.
Anyway, a little time in the woods with waterfalls on a hot day is always a good idea. Hard to be down around giant trees and rainbow-misted falls, right?
Next soul-helping outing, Seattle’s Asian Art Museum for the Chiho Aoshima exhibit – maybe Thursday? Remember to do something good for your soul this week! It helps you write, it helps you be thankful, and it’s probably good for your immune system, too, right?
New Reviews of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter and a Little Letdown
- At April 24, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
First of all, thanks to Darlene at Peeking Between the Pages for this new review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter! This blog book tour has been really fun to be part of; I have to say I really love hearing what non-poet-types have to say about my book!
Update: Here’s another review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, just posted up at Patricia’s Wisdom. Thanks again! As you may be able to tell from the rest of the post, today I definitely needed the pick-me-up!
I got sick the night before my parents left, a couple of days after the launch, and since then have been a little down. Also, the beautiful sunny spring weather turned cold, windy, and bitter. One of my friends yesterday reminded me of the very real phenomenon of “letdown” after a book launch, so I thought I’d write a little about that today.
This is my fourth poetry book (and fifth book), yet every time a book comes out, I can’t help but think, “This might be the one that takes off, that changes my life.” And then, well, it doesn’t. You go back to your laptop, and if you’re anything like me, you get out the notebook of your rejection slips from the last five years, look at the nice notes from great publishers and places that haven’t ever taken your work, and rejections from places that did eventually take your work, and it makes you take stock of what you’re doing, where you’re going, which frankly, can sometimes feel like “I am crazy for doing this.” And I think, though I do not know for sure, that this happens to everyone. You think: “Why am I writing?” and “Why in God’s name am I writing poetry?”
And the weird thing is, The Robot Scientist’s Daughter is probably doing pretty well, for a poetry book – maybe better than most of my other books. It’s got a bunch of reviews already, it sold pretty well in its first month, and I got a lot of pre-orders for it. But it still sort of feels like failure. I mean, I’ll think to myself: Look at my Amazon rankings. Look at the fact I only have three Amazon reviews so far. I haven’t gotten a review in The New York Times, or a mention on national radio or television. No one has put me on any lists of “poets you have to read” or “best books of 2015 so far.” So why did I even bother writing this book? (For an essay about why I bothered writing this book, see here.)
So if you get this feeling after your book comes out, remember, it’s normal. I probably just need a lot of sleep, a little chocolate, maybe a few therapeutic episodes of Mystery Science Theater 3000. By the time my next reading for the book comes up on May 13, I’ll probably be full of optimism and hope again. I’ll be another year older. I hope I will have written a new poem.