Book Launch Reading Report and a New Review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter
- At April 18, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
Survived the Seattle book launch of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter in good cheer. Jack Straw played a wonderful host, my Dad, Glenn, and Kelli all brought flowers (so many flowers!), Evan and Kelli did a great job as emcee and opening readers, respectively, and lots of wonderful folks in the audience – even an old friend from high school! People seemed to enjoy the reception afterwards, especially the robot cupcakes, which were a big hit! Anyway, no disasters, sold some books, and here are some pics from the event! (and a link to YouTube if you want to watch the reading yourself from home.)
- Robot cupcakes (these became wearable robot rings!)
- Me with my folks before the reading
- Evan, Kelli Agodon, and I strike a pose before going in to perform!
- Kelli Agodon, me, and Donna Miscolta post-reading
A new review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter by Melanie Teabird (isn’t that a beautiful name?) went up yesterday too. I’m so thankful for the kind reviews!
I was so excited about having one of my apocalypse poems up on The Rumpus on the 16th, too. Isn’t it funny it went up on the same day as the reading? With poetry, it’s months of hearing nothing, then everything on the same day so you’re all “celebrate five things at a time!” Anyway, all the poems The Rumpus posts in April every year are really fun reading, so check them all out.
Yesterday we drove up to Skagit Valley to take the parents, with my little brother and his wife, to the tulip fields for the last hurrah (as they announced they were cutting down all the tulips after this weekend – for the record, that’s super early, and the Tulip Festival officially lasts through the end of April.) One of the things that struck me this year was not only were the daffodils and tulips early, but when we went this time, the cherry and apple trees were still blooming, dogwoods and the lilacs and azaleas were up as well. Really beautiful but confusing, seasonally! Here’s a weirdly overexposed shot of me and my mom in the tulip fields, a bald eagle we saw, and a tangle of apple branches and cherry blossoms from La Conner.
- My mom and me, overexposed in the tulips
- Bald Eagle, Skagit
- Apple and cherry branches
A New Review at Savvy Verse and Wit for The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, and the Top Five Ways to Replicate AWP in Your Own Hometown
- At April 07, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Thanks to Serena and Savvy Verse and Wit for this kind new review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter at Savvy Verse and Wit!
AWP starts Wednesday. I won’t be at this year’s AWP in Minnesota (though I plan to be at next year’s in LA) so I made a list for all of us who aren’t going to AWP to simulate the experiences!
Top Five Ways To Replicate AWP in Your Own Hometown
- Invite all your writer friends into a very small, smoky bar or coffee shop with no parking and stage a poetry reading and, for bonus points, either a spontaneous fistfight or dance party. Then, get them all into a hotel elevator, preferably slow, for awkward conversation.
- Arrange to hang out in a local crowded hotel lobby and see if you spot any writers you know. Ask at least two people who might vaguely resemble authors to sign books for you.
- Find your local university’s bookstore or the closest magazine stand that carries literary magazines, flipping through as many as possible in a very short amount of time. Carry home as many as you can, and then stack them by your computer where they will gather dust. At the bookstore, buy yourself a shot glass, magnet, or postcard with a witty literary saying, and you can call it swag! Even if you spend, say, a hundred dollars on literary magazines, that’s still way cheaper than AWP!
- Wear a name tag around your house, to the mall, or just to your daily errands all day but keep it turned around so no one knows who you really are. Carry a very heavy tote bag with you (bonus points if you carry one from a previous year’s AWP!)
- Go three days without any sleep, eating only handfuls of candy and drinking only the kind of alcohol you like the least, along with plenty of cheap coffee. Go to your local book store or library late at night (if possible) and ask everyone there about their thoughts on the state of publishing (if no local libraries or book stores, try closing time at the grocery store.) Maybe try to slip someone your latest manuscript.
Seriously though, if you’re going to AWP, have a great time, and stop by Mayapple Press’s table to get a copy of my new book! If you’re not, well, let’s cheer each other up by posting pretend gossip from AWP!
2015 Big Poetry Giveaway!
- At April 05, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
25
Both winners will also receive an assortment of literary journals from my collection!
Please enter your name and contact information in the comments section below. If you are new to my web page, please click my About link above. You have until April 30 to leave a comment. I will announce the winners sometime at the start of May.
Thanks for taking part in The 2015 Big Poetry Giveaway! If you want to learn more about it, click here!
Tulips, Bookfairs, and Things to Boost Your Immune System/Confidence
- At March 30, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Sometimes you have to purposefully do things to inject your life with joy, hope, and confidence.
- Me at Tulip Garden
- Red Tulips, Clouds
- Snow Geese in migration
- Glenn and I in pink tulips
- Bookfair with Powerhouse Writers, Editors and Publishers
Since last week was a meeting with the head of rheumatology/immunology at UW, and this week is the (much feared, long awaited) replacement of my scary root-touching temporary filling with a real filling by my new dentist (sans novocaine but with lasers this time), plus I received a record number of sometimes kind, sometimes blank and bland rejections, I thought to myself: this might be a good time to grab ahold of some joyful and confidence-building moments.
So I took myself on Sunday to The Richard Hugo House where they were having the APRIL Small Press Bookfair. It was wonderful to see and talk to so many people accomplishing things in our little community – people who have started their own presses and literary journals, like Kelly Davio, Kelli Russell Agodon, and Annette-Spaulding Convy in the picture at the Two Sylvias table above. I mean, you can complain and lament about the literary world, or you can do something positive, and it is such a confidence booster for me to be around women who choose to really go for it in the literary world. Did I mention Kelly Davio’s new venture, The Tahoma Literary Review, will be at AWP next week? And that Kelli and Annette’s Two Sylvias Press just got a mention in Oprah Magazine’s April issue? I mean, I feel so humbled and yet I feel like I can do more when I’m around them. And Seattle’s literary community is pretty great, full of genuinely sweet people I like to hang out with – it’s good to remind myself of that. I came home with new books, literary magazines, and other inspiring items.
On Monday, Glenn and I decided to take off from work, taxes, real estate worries, doctors, and dentist appointments to go to the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival – sometimes we try to take the whole weekend and stay overnight, we love it so much up there (and this visit I was thinking – what about buying a house in La Conner or Mt. Vernon? So much cheaper than Seattle, beautiful surroundings, and genuinely small-town friendly people…) but this time we just snuck in a day trip. We found to our delight, besides blooming tulips, cherry blossoms, rhododendrons and lilacs (!!) that there were hundreds of loudly honking migrating snow geese, a few dozen trumpeter swans, and several bald eagles and herons during our trip. Pictures do not convey the way this place fills up your eyes, nose, ears with such splendid stuff. When I lived in California, land of year-round flowers, I missed Skagit’s Tulip Festival. Quaint shops and galleries, little restaurants, and wonderful parks surround this area, and I feel we’re always discovering something new when we visit.
Anyway, after a frank talk with the UW guy about my autoimmune stuff, he said something that stuck with me about doing the things we can to boost our immune system – not just negative advice, like “avoiding stress,” (which is impossible anyway, right?) but positive things to do, like taking probiotics or actively seeking out things that light up our joy, awe, and gratefulness sensors, which apparently can help our systems out (I mean, and along with also taking helpful things like steroids when symptoms act up, but still, this holistic stuff really hit home.)
Spending time with friends that inspire you, reading books that move you, spending time in nature, and lighting up your brain with beauty and awe – I’m realizing at 41 that our lives are not eternal, and these are the things I should prioritize. Instead of worrying over a rejection, listen to a friend tell you their new idea; instead of (as in my case) worrying about some health problems that are probably never going to go away, go out and do what you can with the stuff you have that still works.
An update: this morning, I woke up to this kind review/feature of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter on Tweetspeak Poetry. “The Robot Scientist’s Daughter is a remarkable, cohesive collection, built upon the same theme. It is a story of a unique childhood, and an American childhood. It is also the story of nature and technology, and the bargain we make between the two, often without fully understanding what we’re doing.” An unexpected gift! Thank you, Tweetspeak Poetry!
In the Middle of the First Month of “Book Launch” and Ready for a Nap: The thyroid files
- At March 24, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
So what have I been up to in the middle of the first month of the launch of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter? Well, I’ve sent out all my postcards by now, I did my first reading in the middle of a torrential storm on Bainbridge Island. Now I’m prepping for my Seattle book launch reading and party on Thursday, April 16 at Jack Straw Cultural Center – I helped Glenn put together a flyer which we still need to put up in a few places, wrote and sent out a PR release for it, and created a Facebook event for it. I also edited (along with partner Kelly Davio) a really fun manuscript for the Gailey and Davio Writers’ Services, went back and edited and reorganized my own fifth manuscript, did some tax work and…Whew! Now I need a nap!
Speaking of…Achy, tired, brain-foggy, fatigued, need to nap in the middle of the day? In my experience, it’s possible that it’s not all in your head. My thyroid meds were doubled a few months ago, but after some blood tests a couple of days ago, my TSH is still higher than it has been in years, which means more tweaking is needed, and possibly another ultrasound of my pesky thyroid nodule. On the plus side, my b12 is almost completely low-normal now, not just low, and the number is higher than it’s been in ten years, so that’s good news!
Anyway, whenever I’m having trouble sleeping – sleeping too much, or not enough enough, feel grumpy and brain-foggy all the time, it’s usually either my thyroid acting up or my lack of b12 that’s to blame. Which is good, because I’ve been exercising and eating less and otherwise attempting a healthy lifestyle, and it’s so frustrating when you’re still tired and heavier than you want to be after all that work. At least now I know why! Hopefully the little tweak in my thyroid medication will result in a more energetic me in time for the Seattle book launch!
Becoming the Villainess on the radio, and How to Pick Poetry Book Cover Art
- At March 19, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
Thanks to Jim McKeown at KWBU in Texas for this feature on Becoming the Villainess, my first book of poetry.
And a new blog post up at the Gailey and Davio Writers’ Services blog on Poetry Book Cover Art. well, if you’ve ever struggled with what makes for good and interesting cover art for a poetry book, I hope it’ll be helpful!
Thanks to all of you who have bought The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, reviewed it on Amazon and Goodreads, or talked about it on your blog. I can’t tell you how much it perks up my day when I see something related to the new book! The first month of releasing a book feels so fraught with peril, to borrow the cliche – you worry no one will like it, or no one will talk about it, or no one will buy it or come to your readings…so any little lift kind of acts as a calming agent to that time of fraughtness.
New blog review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter by Lesley Wheeler and Sundress Publications Best Dressed!
- At March 09, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Lesley Wheeler writes a bit about my newest book, The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, as well as its journey to publication, and the concept of poetic difficulty, at her blog here.
Thank you to Sundress Publications for choosing a poem from my third book, Unexplained Fevers, for this week’s “Best Dressed Feature” “I Like the Quiet: Snow White”.
Yesterday we spent a beautiful afternoon over at my little brother and his wife’s rented house (where they kindly allowed us to do laundry, since our washing machine remains broken) and we took a gorgeous walk at downtown Seattle’s Seward Park, which was lovely. This was the view of Mt. Rainier from the lake there:
It’s easy to love Seattle in the sunshine, with the mountain out, and all the water shining and blue. Hyacinths, cherry blossoms, daffodils, and I even spied some early magnolia trees blossoming downtown. Seattle’s usually a moody, grey, difficult-to-love city in March, so this is quite extraordinary. I also spied two bald eagles this week.
We’ve been house-hunting as well, and I’ve observed even a lousy neighborhood can appear beautiful with shafts of sunlight hitting the puffy white and pink cherry tree branches. I’m a bit behind of all my writing obligations, but in my defense, it’s hard to concentrate with all this getting ready to buy and sell a house/appliance breakdowns/allergy testing/sunshine going on. It’s supposed to be 63 outside today…
Review of Robot Scientist’s Daughter up at Escape Into Life and Mythic Delirium featured poet, Plus Being a Human Pincushion
- At March 04, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Thanks to Kathleen Kirk and Escape Into Life for this new review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, up today here: http://www.escapeintolife.com/blog/the-robot-scientists-daughter/
Thanks also to Mythic Delirium, as one of my poems, “Introduction to Your Own Personal Genome Project,” http://mythicdelirium.com/?page_id=2832, shows up as their March featured content: http://mythicdelirium.com/?p=3275
I needed this good news this morning. Yesterday I practiced being a human pincushion for science as my allergist’s ungentle nurse pushed a total of 48 needles progressively deeper into each quadrant of both arms, resulting in bruising, swelling, and difficulty typing or lifting things this morning (Note: Bleeding disorders, autoimmune problems, and needles do not go together well.) On the plus side, spending a couple of hours that way gave me a chance to read someone’s poetry MS AND watch the X-Files Season 5 episode, “Bad Blood,” about vampires (I was bleeding a lot yesterday, all up and down my arm, so I thought it was appropriate) and that episode made me remember all that was good about the X-Files. Seriously, if you haven’t seen it, even if you’re not an X-Files fan, you should rent it right now. Luke Wilson does an amazing cameo as a southern sheriff. (Dear Amazon Kindle Fire – this was not the first time I’ve watched distracting videos in an unpleasant medical setting thanks to you!) On the upside, they gave me my own room this time instead of making me wait out the two hours of tests in the public waiting room next to screaming children. And now I can go back on my allergy medicine, thankfully.
Today outside is sunshine and blue skies, our pink hyacinths have started to bloom, and Friday I go in to record some poems from the new book for the radio! The time change comes this weekend, which affords us Washingtonians a bit more time to take a walk after work and enjoy this nice weather! I have heard that the rest of the country is due to be blanketed by more snow – including relatives in Cincinnati, Tennessee, and even Georgia – so pull up a cup of hot chocolate, read a good book, and watch a classic episode of X-Files.
The Robot Scientist’s Daughter Book Launch and another review at Poetry International
- At March 02, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
The Robot Scientist’s Daughter is now officially out, the book that critics are calling “her most haunting and masterful book yet!” (OK, it was Mary McMyne at The Rumpus, but I can’t stop quoting it!)
Get your copy now from me, from Mayapple Press, from SPD, from Amazon, or, if you’re local to Seattle, from Open Books! I’m excited and still feel like I haven’t done half the things I was supposed to, but happy that it’s out in the world! (PS If any of you would like to leave Amazon reviews, I’d be extremely grateful! And thanks to the folks who have already left Goodreads reviews!)
Thanks for this, my second “official” review, up at Poetry International by Donna Vorreyer :
https://pionline.wordpress.com/2015/03/02/book-review-the-robot-scientists-daughter-by-jeannine-hall-gailey/
And, here’s an endorsement from my cat, Shakespeare, or as he is affectionately known, “Scrummy” (he looks relaxed, but he assures me he found the book riveting:)
The Rumpus reviews The Robot Scientist’s Daughter and a Redmond reading with friends
- At February 28, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
I am so excited to announce my first “official” review for The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, up at The Rumpus, written by Mary McMyne:
http://therumpus.net/2015/02/the-robot-scientists-daughter-by-jeannine-hall-gailey/
It’s a really well-written review (can I admit it even brought tears to my eyes? it did!), so I am thankful to The Rumpus and to Mary for writing and publishing it! Here’s a little quote:
“She reminds the reader “that your atoms right now are smashing against/ the atoms of your chair. What is keeping you together?” In the end, these are the central concerns of Gailey’s newest collection, her most haunting and masterful book yet.”
(Did I mention you can buy a signed copy now of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter from me on my page by just clicking “Signed Copy?” It’s available now!)
I also want to do a quick writeup of a reading I went to last night by Kelli Agodon and Martha Silano at the RASP Old Schoolhouse. (See pic below of me hanging out with the girls after their reading…) I got there a little late, and was happy to see the place packed, and what was even more surprising to me, it was mostly people I knew. I felt more like a part of Redmond’s poetry community than I had even when I was Redmond’s Poet Laureate. Kelli and Martha did a great job with the reading, and it was fun catching up with a bunch of folks I hadn’t seen in a while.
As one of those weird lucky things that happens after readings, we stopped by the library to drop off a book, and I was amazed by the beautiful sight of the cherry trees in bloom in the parking lot, lit up by streetlights. So I snapped a picture. It was pretty magical. Magic poetry readings are the best poetry readings.