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.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Thought for the Week from Sexton
I saw where Cecilia Woloch celebrated the launch of her new collection of poetry titled Carpathia on Sunday. I’ve read Woloch’s book Late which was outstanding and will be interested to read Carpathia at some point and see how it compares. If anyone gets an opportunity to read it soon, I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Robert Pinsky is in town Thursday for the Mid-West Poet’s series at Rockhurst University. I’ve got his reading on my calendar and looking forward to it.
Thought for the week from Annie Sexton - “Put your ear down close to your soul and listen hard.”
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Calling it a night – or whatever
Is the weekend coming to an end? Where did it go. I’m not rejuvenated yet. As my wife would say, if I go to sleep morning will come and another day (workday)… sigh!
I did get a new rough draft of a poem together today. Read some Sexton… it (she) was speaking to me.
Submission - yes I forced myself to get one out tonight.
Squeezed in an Open Mic. I didn’t read tonight, just wanted to be a listener. A critical ear.
My daughter texted me yesterday to tell me she saw Where the Wild Things Are. I was so jealous. Loved this book! The movie looks really good.
Friday, October 16, 2009
The winner is...
Kelli’s winning manuscript Letters from the Emily Dickinson Room will be published in fall 2010. Her book Small Knots, published 2004 is already among my favorite poetry books. I can't wait to read Letters. Congratulations Kelli!
Tides
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Just Wondering
Do you ever wonder what the worst writing of the best writers looks like? Those poems and scratching that never make it. Aborted poems.
A year ago or so there was a book published with some of Elizabeth Bishops unpublished work. "Edgar Allan Poe & the Juke-Box: Uncollected Poems, Drafts and Fragments," by Elizabeth Bishop a collection of her material which drew a lot of criticism because it is presumed she would not have wanted to see it in print. Anyway, when I’m having a bad day or string of them with writing, I wonder what a string of bad day writing might look like to a W.S. Merwin or Sharon Olds or maybe Mary Oliver.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Thought for the day
The word "happiness" would lose its meaning if it were not balanced by sadness. ~ Carl Jung