Saturday, December 17, 2011
It's In the Mail This Week
In the mail this week I received my Jan-Feb issue of Poets and Writers magazine. Yeah!!! I also received a Holiday / New Years post card of sorts from a poet friend.
No rejection letters this week but then no acceptances either.
I've already alluded in an earlier post to the fact that the latest issue of Poets & Writers is awesome. If you don't subscribe to it, pick it up off the shelf. Barnes & Noble.
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Do Not Miss the Jan-Feb 2012 issue of Poets & Writers
There is a special section in this issue that is on inspiration. Several articles that deal with things like:
- Clearing some of the stumbling blocks to creative thinking
- Opening your writers mind
- Inspired reading
- Inspired revision
I was particularly interested in the author's citation of some of the material from Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. For example his 5 stages of creativity:
- preparation
- incubation
- insight
- evaluation
- elaboration
- Psychic exhaustion
- easy distraction
- inability to protect/channel creative energy
- not knowing what to do with energy
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Idle Hands...
How long can you sit with idle hands? Do you ever? Is this how you start to write?
In the most recent issue of Poets and Writers magazine there is an article about a writer who talks about stillness as he writes. “I’m very tolerant of stillness. I don’t mind sitting there for half an hour. I’d rather not move my hands just to move them; I’ll wait for the right thing.” Jonathan Lethem is a novelist not a poet, but his approach to initiating work on a page is maybe not a bad one even for poets. I sometimes will start with a line of something that comes to me. Maybe two or three different lines till something I feel something take hold. But when I think about my blog post on Monday and the Anne Sexton quote that I committed to thinking about all this week I’m thinking a lot more about the idle hands approach. The wisdom in the Sexton quote suggests listening hard. “Put your ear down close to your soul and listen hard,” Sexton says.
It’s easy when you have a routine that says your take thirty minutes and write that you want to start writing as you sit down. The clock is on. Go! Such routine can probably create bad habits just as well as it can create good ones. But just as silence can be useful on a page, maybe it’s not a bad place to start to center yourself / your writing. In “The Artists’ Way” I think the morning pages are meant to drain out of your system all the residual sludge that can otherwise stain your work if you can’t get your mind off it. So maybe to start with, we should pause. A nice pregnant pause of sorts and then begin to create on the page as something surfaces.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Sunday afternoon
The latest issue of Poets and Writers is out. I was slightly disappointed as I was expecting this to be the issue in which they feature the breakout poets for the year. I always enjoy seeing it and often am familiar with at least one of them. Instead it's a first fiction annual.
I did enjoy the article FLARF POETS, they can't be serious. Can They? I about to read How the NEA is spending that $50 MILLION.
Just for grins I'm thinking I'll put up a poll on flarf for a couple of weeks.
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Always My Favorite Issue
The Jan/Feb issue of Poets & Writers is out. One of my favorite issues - the 12 debut poets for the year. The past couple of years I have known someone on the list. Not so this year. Based however on past experience with this list I need to get busy looking for some of their material. Those selected in the past have generally been a great crop of poets and for the most part they are very good reads.
Also there is a delightful piece that was written by Kim Addonizio titled First Thought, Worst Thought. Kim provides poetry exercises to inspire writers.
I haven't read it cover to cover yet, so there may be more gems awaiting me.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Poets & Writers Site
Friday, December 29, 2006
I saw where congratulations are in order for Ivy Alvarez as she is already slated for inclusion in a 2008 Anthology of Younger Poets. And some of us haven't even started on 2007 yet. Actually, I think she get kudos for both being anthologized as well as still being able to be considered a young poet.