I love it when I get mail that relates in some way to poetry. It always beats the electric bill or any other for that matter.
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.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Do Not Miss the Jan-Feb 2012 issue of Poets & Writers
I've had a peek a the Jan-Feb issue of Poets & Writers magazine and it looks like a wonderful issue. First of all it has the 7th Annual look at Debut Poets. I always love his feature and have sometimes in he past known one o two of the poets. Even so, it's always fun to see things like their age, experience, time spent both writing and then finding a home for their book, advice, etc.
There is a special section in this issue that is on inspiration. Several articles that deal with things like:
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:
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
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Confession Tuesday - one click mistake edition
It’s Tuesday but feels to me like it should be Friday. Come
with me to the confessional.
Dear reader:
When it’s Tuesday night and you feel like you’ve already
endured a whole work week this is not a good thing, but I digress. It’s been a week since my last confession. A
week of coughing each morning and thinking that tomorrow I’ll be better. I
confess that I thought I would be more on the mend by now.
I recently bought a poetry eBook by accident. I was on my
Blackberry and from my Kindle app I was trying to download the preview. If I
liked the preview I would likely buy the title as a real book. By accident I clicked the wrong link (they were next to
each other and on the phone app it’s hard to tell which is highlighted). I realized it immediately and contacted
Amazon. I never opened the download and it remained in my archive until they
did a refund. I decided with my Amazon account set on one click purchase I
needed to change this. You ask, “Why are you telling me this?” Ah yes, that would be my confession. I cannot
see me buying poetry in eBook format.
Maybe a novel, maybe non-fiction, but poetry, no!
I like my poetry in print on a page. If I look at a poetry
book and I like it, I’m probably going to read it over and over. Many of my
copies are ultimately autographed by the author. Do that on your eBook reader! So am I just a crazy old guy that refuses to
change? Don’t feel obligated to answer
that.
In spite of the week feeling like it should be over I
confess I have no idea how we got to the 13th of December already. I
think I’ve missed a lot of opportunity this year. I started out like gangbusters submitting
work but cooled off late summer to a crawl.
A lot of my writing plans went by the wayside this fall but I don’t
really want to lament – I’d prefer to think about next year since it will be
here lickity split. Besides, 2010 was a dry year for publication and this year
I did have successes. There is that to be thankful for.
What are you thankful for this year?
Monday, December 12, 2011
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Little Butt Crack Showing...
I couldn't resist this. A picture I shot a while back with cell phone mid-day as I stretched my legs over lunch hour. Some days I actually have a humorous streak.
Thursday, December 08, 2011
Foxtrot - appearing in WestWard Quarterly Fall 2011
Earlier this fall my poem Foxtrot appeared in WestWard Quarterly. Since this is a print publication there is not link to it but now that a little time has passed since the publication I have included now on the published poems page - see tab above or click here.
Magpie 94 / Poem: LUNCH
Lunch
Clock ticking
1800 seconds and ticking
rows of busy heads
bobbing and chewing
throats likes snakes
swallowing a rabbit
whole-
chatter
to a minimum-
like they each have some place
to go-
they do
half an hour for lunch
the the rest of their eight hour day
it's robotic-
circuitous each day
the same each day
the same
Michael A. Wells
Magpie 94
* photo credit - Lunch, George Tooker, 1964, Columbus Museum of Art
Wednesday, December 07, 2011
Knock My Socks Off Wednesday
Just one poem today... but one awesome poem that knocked my socks off!
Enjoy Fire and Ice by Lucy Biederman - appeared in No Tell Motel
Tuesday, December 06, 2011
Confession Tuesday - Dance edition
It’s that time again – Mind if I eat my lunch in the confessional?
Dear reader- I’m eating Turkey Chili with beans for lunch all he while I confess that my mind is centered on the nachos with jalapeños I had a the hockey game Friday night. I’d much rather be enjoying those again rather them Turkey Chili form a can.
Speaking of Friday and the game, I went with my daughter Shannon and two of her friends. We had just gotten out of the car in the parking lot, traversed a few steps when this van pulls in with music blaring. I don’t exactly know what possessed me (and possessed is the story I’m sticking with) but I confess that I broke out dancing as did Shannon though I don’t believe either was aware of the other until people started cheering, applauding and I’m pretty sure there was some laughter mixed in there too. We both looked at each other and realized what was happening and of course in our moment of supreme embarrassment both stopped at once.
I confess that the first thought that entered my mind was finding out the next morning that the dance routine had been taped and went viral on you tube. In my defense, this culminated a period of lots of bed rest and I can only surmise I was overly anxious to hit the streets.
Ted Hughes Honored Today
Ted Hughes (left) is honored today by his inclusion at the Poet's Corner in the South Transept of Westminster Abbey. The practice of honoring the greatest poets with a tomb or stove is a 600 year tradition in Britain. (pictured on the right is photo of some of the markers)
The list of those honored before him include the likes of Dryden, Browning, Tennyson, Shelly, Keats, Blake, Hopkins and Eliot.
Hughes' inclusion came after some heavy duty lobby by a number of poets including Seamus Heaney and Simon Armitage. Britain's Poet Laureate from 1984 till his death in 1998 on might have though Hughes o be an early lock for the honor.
I've read a number of Ted Hughes' published works. While his first book, Hawk in the Rain is outstanding and won critical acclaim when published in the late 1950's it is Birthday Letters, published the year he died that I most remember him for. This work forever links him and his response to the final work of his first wife Sylvia Plath.
I have to say that while Hughes is a masterful poet, I have often wondered how long i would have been before his talents were truly recognized without Sylvia. I was her belief in Ted and her dogged work typing manuscripts and sending them off that netted his recognition for Hawk in the Rain. I have always seen Ted as the more laid back Brit and Sylvia with that American ambition driving him forward.
Sunday, December 04, 2011
From the Hard to Believe Department
It's hard to believe Catch 21 is 50 years old. I tried to recall my age at first reading it and it threw me me. I read it in the very late 1960's Probably '68 or '69 and did not realize that it was not not fresh off the presses then. Or maybe I knew but have forgotten. It just seems that in my mind it was so relevant to the time. Realizing that Joseph Heller actually began writing it in 1953 makes the story line even more remarkable to me.
also, a couple of notable local events...
Coming up: Sunday, December 11 - 2 p.m.
Central Library, 14 W. 10th St.
also, a couple of notable local events...
Coming up: Sunday, December 11 - 2 p.m.
Central Library, 14 W. 10th St.
Guy Masterson: Dylan Thomas' A Child's
Christmas in Wales
Welsh-born actor Guy Masterson reads A Child's Christmas in Wales,
one of the most popular works by Welsh writer and poet Dylan Thomas.
And at The Writers Place: Friday, December 16, 2011 7:00 pm
Holiday Holiday Reading and Party with the Music of Jim Abel and Kevin Hiatt
Readers will include Shawn Pavey, David Hughes, Michelle Pond, Martha Gershun, Tim Pettit, John Hastings, Lindsey Martin-Bowen, Carl Rhoden, Tina Hacker, Eve Ott, Susan Peters, and Phyllis Becker.
All donations will go to the Phil Miller scholarship.
And at The Writers Place: Friday, December 16, 2011 7:00 pm
Holiday Holiday Reading and Party with the Music of Jim Abel and Kevin Hiatt
Readers will include Shawn Pavey, David Hughes, Michelle Pond, Martha Gershun, Tim Pettit, John Hastings, Lindsey Martin-Bowen, Carl Rhoden, Tina Hacker, Eve Ott, Susan Peters, and Phyllis Becker.
All donations will go to the Phil Miller scholarship.
Company Policy or Simply Hate?
U. S. Crane, LLC is a company with it's Corporate Headquarters in Waco, Georgia. It's principal business is Overhead Crane and Hoist Sales as well as replacement parts and Structural and Electrical Engineering for such products. They recently made the news because the have promoted their stated company policy on bumper stickers which they have placed on the fleet of vehicles which the company operates in for their business.
As seen at the right, the bumper stickers read: NEW COMPANY POLICY - WE ARE NOT HIRING UNTIL OBAMA IS GONE. I don't know about you but I've never worked for a business in my entire life who put company policy on bumper stickers. In Human Resource memos, in Company Handbooks, but never as bumper stickers on vehicles. Of course the use of bumper stickers for political discourse is widespread and time honored. That is what really is the heart of the matter here with U.S. Crane.
Bill Looman, the owner of U. S. Crane would have you believe that he is just an American Patriot trying his best to save our economy from the President. He has indicated that he wants to hire everybody but just can't afford to because of Obama's policies. But Looman's motives actually go beyond the scope of any policies.
In a Facebook post- Monday, August 8, 2011 at 5:30am, Bill Lomman, III says of President Obama, "HE HAS BEEN TRAINED FOR THIS AND HE IS A MARXIST/ISLAMIC TOOL TO TEAR APART OUR ONCE GREAT NATION."
His Facebook post is titled DARE TO PREPARE AND WHY? In it he goes one to list a series of steps he feel necessary for him to take. The list is as follows:
focused on his business operations and development of company policy? It appears that so much more going on here some business' Human Resources policies on hiring. Sadly there are people who continue to drape themselves in the flag and religion to mainstream their ideological hate - and attempt perpetuate it and grow that hate.
As seen at the right, the bumper stickers read: NEW COMPANY POLICY - WE ARE NOT HIRING UNTIL OBAMA IS GONE. I don't know about you but I've never worked for a business in my entire life who put company policy on bumper stickers. In Human Resource memos, in Company Handbooks, but never as bumper stickers on vehicles. Of course the use of bumper stickers for political discourse is widespread and time honored. That is what really is the heart of the matter here with U.S. Crane.
Bill Looman, the owner of U. S. Crane would have you believe that he is just an American Patriot trying his best to save our economy from the President. He has indicated that he wants to hire everybody but just can't afford to because of Obama's policies. But Looman's motives actually go beyond the scope of any policies.
In a Facebook post- Monday, August 8, 2011 at 5:30am, Bill Lomman, III says of President Obama, "HE HAS BEEN TRAINED FOR THIS AND HE IS A MARXIST/ISLAMIC TOOL TO TEAR APART OUR ONCE GREAT NATION."
His Facebook post is titled DARE TO PREPARE AND WHY? In it he goes one to list a series of steps he feel necessary for him to take. The list is as follows:
- START SEEKING AND NETWORKING WITH PATRIOTS OF LIKE MIND.
- SEEK OUT AND FORGE FRIENDSHIPS WITH SURVIVAL SKILLS. THIS INCLUDED GROUPS SUCH AS OATH KEEPERS, MILITIAS, AND POLITICAL GROUPS THAT APPEARED TO HAVE OUR FOUNDING FATHERS CORE MESSAGE AND CONSTITUTION IN THEIR BASIC PHILOSOPHY.
- BUILT AND STOCKED A FISH POND.
- STARTED STORING FOOD.
- SELLING WEAPONS THAT WERE COOL BUT WERE ODD CALIBERS AND WOULD BE HARD TO GET AMMUNITION FOR.
- BOUGHT NEW WEAPONS TO REPLACE THE ONES I SOLD AND STOCK PILED AMMUNITION.
- HONED MY HUNTING SKILLS AND LEARNED HOW TO COMPLETELY PROCESS ALL MY CATCH.
- PERFORMED NEEDED MAINTENANCE ON MY HOME.
- BECAME POLITICALLY ACTIVE IN MY COMMUNITY AND STARTED TO FORGE FRIENDSHIPS WITH OLD AND NEW FRIENDS THAT HAD SKILLS THAT MAY BE NEEDED IN THE FUTURE.
- STARTED FURTHER TRAINING OTHERS AS THEY APPEARED WAKE UP TO PRESIDENTS PERCEIVED INTENTIONS WITH MARKSMANSHIP TRAINING, POLITICAL DISCUSSIONS, AND YES, EVEN RELIGIOUS DISCUSSIONS.
- DIVESTED IN STOCKS AND PURCHASED MORE PROPERTY.
- DIVESTED IN RETIREMENT FUNDS AND MOVED THE MONEY TO SAVINGS TO PROTECT AGAINST WALL STREET VOLATILITY.
- PURCHASED AN EMERGENCY POWER SOURCE AND AND FUEL TO SUPPLY THAT SOURCE. THIS POWER SOURCE WILL BE USED TO DRAW WATER FROM OUR WELL AND KEEP OUR COLD STORAGE RUNNING FOR AS LONG AS FEASIBLE.
focused on his business operations and development of company policy? It appears that so much more going on here some business' Human Resources policies on hiring. Sadly there are people who continue to drape themselves in the flag and religion to mainstream their ideological hate - and attempt perpetuate it and grow that hate.
Saturday, December 03, 2011
Denise Duhamel - No Home Wrecker
Denise Duhamel is a poet whose wit and craftiness caught my attention a long time ago. Ooops, mayby it was not that long ago. Or heck maybe she was in grade school when I first read her poems. (How's that for a save?) Anyway, she is the featured poet on How a Poem Happens for today.
In the interview questions by Brian Brodeur I especially enjoyed the question about inspiration and her comment about meting the muse halfway. Great post!!
In the interview questions by Brian Brodeur I especially enjoyed the question about inspiration and her comment about meting the muse halfway. Great post!!
Do you believe in inspiration? How much of this poem was "received" and how much was the result of sweat and tears?Catch the whole poem and interview here!
I do believe in inspiration and the muse. But I also believe you have to meet her halfway, show up everyday whether she shows up or not. As a writer, you (I mean, I suppose, I) have to be there to receive her whims. I write a lot of pages that never wind up in poems. When I reread my free writing, often a draft of a poem is there proceeded and followed by gibberish or cliché or nonsense. Then I excavate the draft and begin revising. I don’t believe in sweat and tears associated with writing because I love writing so much. I think of it as high-octane play and fun.
Magpie Tales 93 / Poem: How Size Matters
How Size Matters
a time
a place to stop
a sofa
against a rock solid platitude
on the main street of a life
of obligatory divestiture
of inflexible options
of throwaway propositions
of too big to fail
of too small to matter
Michael A. Wells
Friday, December 02, 2011
spiraling words
Words can have no single fixed meaning. Like wayward electrons, they can spin away from their initial orbit and enter a wider magnetic field. No one owns them or has a proprietary right to dictate how they will be used. ~ David Lehman
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Knock My Socks off Poetry Wednesday
A couple of poems that I've read recently that I especially enjoyed and I feel are worth a read...
Ben Parkers' Sharing the Task that appeared in Rose & Thorn Journal.
David Oestreich's In Praise of Coffee that appeared in Autumn Sky Poetry.
Ben Parkers' Sharing the Task that appeared in Rose & Thorn Journal.
David Oestreich's In Praise of Coffee that appeared in Autumn Sky Poetry.
Getting it Right
A fist— White knuckled
gripping something
anything
bloodletting and leaches
a vacation to cryogenic reality
brittle regions of home
splintered and fractured
lessons of melodious ramblings
in hurtful octaves
breaches – spankings – platitudes
tomorrow we rehearse
The Moment
"But I don't think of the future, or the past, I feast on the moment. This is the secret of happiness, but only reached now in middle age." — Virginia Woolf
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Confession Tuesday - coughing up the week
Dear Reader:
It is with a deep breath I come to the confessional. A deep breath because I'm trying to breath big today. It's been actually two weeks since my last confession and it was on the day that I should have been making my last one that I was feeling really crummy. By Wednesday morning I would be well on my way to feeling much worse. Today I went back to work. Only for a half day and I confess that when I left the office at 1 pm, I was pretty worn down. Pneumonia is a pretty nasty thing; of that I’m a believer.
I took a nap after getting home and feel a little recharged but I kid you not once I put my head on the pillow, I crashed and burned.
I confess that I have no exciting holiday stories to share. Just the one about the guy who did not travel across town with family to have dinner with other family members and that story is full of coughing up stuff you don’t want to hear about, or while surrounded in bed by dogs who are looking at you like “why must you keep up that annoying cough and by the way, what’s with the piles of Kleenex wads?”
Oddly it seems there were moments this past week when in my general state of physical decline I had some flashes of brilliance (unless I was being delusional) about several aspects of a manuscript I’m working on. It seems some clarity paid me a visit. And if they were only delusions I’m willing to except that/them anyway. I vaguely recall someone in the past saying you don’t have to be crazy to be a poet but it never hurts.
So really, with the kind of week I’ve had I confess that you just have to find the silver lining by getting a hold of the frayed ends and pulling on a strand just to see what unravels.
Oh, least I forget… I confess that I lost weight over Thanksgiving. There is that to be thankful for.
Monday, November 28, 2011
Yes, I am among the Living
Rumours of my demise are understandable but incorrect. While I have no idea where the expression sick as a dog came from, that would be me on the right. By the time I left work last Tuesday I was dragging and feeling a little under the weather. I attributed it mostly to sinus stuff. I had scheduled a vacation day for Wednesday. Add that to the Thursday & Friday holidays + another two days for the weekend and Walla! You have five days off! Wrong... Ok, they were days off but hardly qualify as vacation, holiday, I don't even think you can call it a momentary pause in life. No, Wednesday it became pretty evident things more just under the weather.
Basically the 5 days were spent in bed. No journey to Thanksgiving with the family. I only left the house for trip to Doctors and then another trip to the ER. Results pneumonia. Checked back in with the doctor today. I plan to go back to work tomorrow - at least for a half day and see how I do. I get worn down pretty easy. I'd like to say that I read a book or two over that time, or wrote a reams of poetry. I did try some writing but maybe have one worthwhile draft from it. I wasn't in the best mood for writing.
That would also be my excuse for not doing Confession Tuesday or Knock My Socks off Wednesday.
Now I'm going to call it a night.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)









