There is a fascinating article in the Sept/Oct issue of Poets and Writers about Natasha Tretheway by Kevin Nance. I read this article while riding in the care yesterday - something I generally find distracting and often ultimately will quit in frustration and pick up again later. Not this time.
I think what I find so inciting about Tretheway and in simultaneously this article was the depth of authenticity. As a writer Tretheway peels back the onion skin layer after layer until the stark truth resides in her own words. I am quite anxious to read her latest book of poems titled Thrall and described as ambitious.
Tretheway acknowledges it as ambitious but with as price. How many of us as writers are ready and willing to bare discomfort that such honesty exposes? I see it as the hallmark of exceptional writing; and the hurdle that every write struggles to get over. Some never, Tretheway certainly has.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Around the Internet - On Writing, Etc.
Several things I've seen here and there that should be of interest to writers and I thought I share the in a post since I've been lazy and have posted much lately. Actually that is not exactly true... I've been pretty busy and when I've had a night that I wasn't it has usually followed a day in which I have been really tired and crashed. (actually I'd like to do that now)
If you are a writer looking for a presence on the Internet then check out List of the Top Nine Word Press Themes for Writers.
Speaking of presence in the digital age for writers... Kelli Agodon has an outstanding blog post I recommend reading that sorts out some things you might want to consider doing and some you might want to avoid in here post Social Butterfly - How To Deal With Social Media As A Writer.
Looking for a new place to submit your work - Subscribe of a routine e-mail listing of Literary Magazines. You may find some totally new to you.
Read an Interview with Michael Nye - Managing Editor of the Missouri Review.
Check out current issue of POETSArtists.
Writers.... Don't Forget to Read!
What Successful People Do With The First Hour of Their Work Day.
There you go.... Hopefully there is something for everyone!
If you are a writer looking for a presence on the Internet then check out List of the Top Nine Word Press Themes for Writers.
Speaking of presence in the digital age for writers... Kelli Agodon has an outstanding blog post I recommend reading that sorts out some things you might want to consider doing and some you might want to avoid in here post Social Butterfly - How To Deal With Social Media As A Writer.
Looking for a new place to submit your work - Subscribe of a routine e-mail listing of Literary Magazines. You may find some totally new to you.
Read an Interview with Michael Nye - Managing Editor of the Missouri Review.
Check out current issue of POETSArtists.
Writers.... Don't Forget to Read!
What Successful People Do With The First Hour of Their Work Day.
There you go.... Hopefully there is something for everyone!
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Confession Tuesday on the Cheep
Dear Reader:
It's been one week, three rejections, 40+ Kindle downloads and an aching back since my last confession.
Since my last confession I admit that I've come to like my Kindle. So I've counted and I have 44 eBook downloads in the past week. Of all my eBooks I've acquired, I confess that I may have only one or two I've purchased. Call me cheep, old fashion, traditionalist, or whatever you will but in have no problem paying for a real book but eBooks feel like virtual books or something. It's just hard for me to spend money for them. If it were a perfect world (admittedly my own view) you would purchase a book and receive a "real" book and an eBook file. Then when you go out into the world you could take your library with you while the real thing was still in tack ring in your own home.
For the past four weeks I've been visiting the Mobil Vegetable Market that comes every Tuesday morning into the city and parks right behind my office. I confess this has been really cool because they have had some really good stuff. Among my favorites would be the cantaloupe, blackberries and really sweet tasting Delicious apples. My wife has some things she especially likes that I pick up - avocados (yuck) and blueberries.
I love blackberries and Bing cherries. I've enjoyed this past week snacking on both of these. I confess I could be really happy if I could just carry a container of these around everywhere to snack on as I wish. I confess that I'm out of Bing cherries presently and I'm wishing I could pluck one into my mouth right now.
I confess that I downloaded a new book today [Four Days With Hemingway by Tom Winston] that I'd like to start reading right away but I'm in the middle of another and am trying to force myself to finish it before starting another one. I'll let you know what I think of it when I get into it.
That's it for tonight - I must confess that I'm tired and since I worked on some office work which I brought home I'm wrapping this up and going to try and unwind a bit.
It's been one week, three rejections, 40+ Kindle downloads and an aching back since my last confession.
Since my last confession I admit that I've come to like my Kindle. So I've counted and I have 44 eBook downloads in the past week. Of all my eBooks I've acquired, I confess that I may have only one or two I've purchased. Call me cheep, old fashion, traditionalist, or whatever you will but in have no problem paying for a real book but eBooks feel like virtual books or something. It's just hard for me to spend money for them. If it were a perfect world (admittedly my own view) you would purchase a book and receive a "real" book and an eBook file. Then when you go out into the world you could take your library with you while the real thing was still in tack ring in your own home.
For the past four weeks I've been visiting the Mobil Vegetable Market that comes every Tuesday morning into the city and parks right behind my office. I confess this has been really cool because they have had some really good stuff. Among my favorites would be the cantaloupe, blackberries and really sweet tasting Delicious apples. My wife has some things she especially likes that I pick up - avocados (yuck) and blueberries.
I love blackberries and Bing cherries. I've enjoyed this past week snacking on both of these. I confess I could be really happy if I could just carry a container of these around everywhere to snack on as I wish. I confess that I'm out of Bing cherries presently and I'm wishing I could pluck one into my mouth right now.
I confess that I downloaded a new book today [Four Days With Hemingway by Tom Winston] that I'd like to start reading right away but I'm in the middle of another and am trying to force myself to finish it before starting another one. I'll let you know what I think of it when I get into it.
That's it for tonight - I must confess that I'm tired and since I worked on some office work which I brought home I'm wrapping this up and going to try and unwind a bit.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
The Mag 131: Detroit's Past Through The Fog
Under Windsor Bridge by Adolphe Valette
Entombed in the gritty fog
rolling under Windsor Bridge
the past hangs heavy;
smells of damp basement.
Thinking back in time I remember
how many young men crossed this bridge
north bound to Canada
placing themselves in a sort of purgatory
not knowing if or when they might make a return trip.
Those were dark times in America
even darker for Detroit;
smoldering nightly somewhere in the summer heat.
A big time city eating it's own young.
Cannibalizing it's inner soul.
The decay remains evident today
in areas blackened
that have not and never will come back.
That's what they say.
Funny thing this city,
where peace-nicks
flowed to Canada;
while in the heart of old Detroit
riots raged to burned out store fronts;
skeletons of Detroit made cars smoldered.
Motor city became the capital
of civil-disobedience & of civil-unrest.
Michael A. Wells
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Confession Tuesday - Kindle Edition
Tuesday has arrived... to the confessional, shall we?
Dear Reader~
I'm glad you came along. Misery loves company. Just kidding! I don't think I have any misery to unload today but then I don't often really know how these confessions are going to go till they are over.
I am glad you did come along because every once and a while I get the impression that I'm writing to no one here. I know that is not exactly true because I confess that I do look at the site stats. I'm not as bad as I used to be about it. Trust me, this is a good thing. You can become obsessed about such things, or so I've been told (I mean I wouldn't have any first hand knowledge of such things) by others who would know.
I am going to move for a moment from one medium (blog) to another - e-reader. I've written blog posts about them in the past and have not been especially kind to them. So, it would only be appropriate for me to confess that this weekend I got a Kindle. Now I've had the Kindle application on my laptop and on my Blackberry. While I have used them I've never found them to be especially easy to use. I don't mean from the standpoint of technical ease but rather the matter comfort in use. My laptop for example has one of the the larger screens available on a laptop. Sitting up in bed with it to read on in the evening is not really comfortable. Trying to read from from my Blackberry isn't comfortable either. It's size makes the screen area pretty small and you have to jack up the font size so the amount of copy per page is minuscule.
I confess that I still prefer holding a real book in my hands to an e-reader but I do like my Kindle. Yes, I confess I still have problems with the idea of paying for what seems like a file that is just born out of nowhere (cyberspace) and is there on the device. I don't get a cover with color? Where do I have the author sign this book/ file at?
Yes, I confess that I have discovered free books. There may be no free lunches but there are free digital books. Of course these are not really the books on my wish list. But hey it will force me to read some pf the classics again. Okay, some of them I haven't read for the first time. I confess I still consider myself a bit of a newbie or e-reader virgin.
So while you may be reading this and think - about time, I will acknowledge that almost anyone reading this has more experience with digital books then I do. I am also interested in the process of publishing to this format. I confess that I will defer to you, the experienced digital reader for any recommendations or suggestions on how I might enhance my Kindle experience. I mean I can't stay a virgin forever.
Dear Reader~
I'm glad you came along. Misery loves company. Just kidding! I don't think I have any misery to unload today but then I don't often really know how these confessions are going to go till they are over.
I am glad you did come along because every once and a while I get the impression that I'm writing to no one here. I know that is not exactly true because I confess that I do look at the site stats. I'm not as bad as I used to be about it. Trust me, this is a good thing. You can become obsessed about such things, or so I've been told (I mean I wouldn't have any first hand knowledge of such things) by others who would know.
I am going to move for a moment from one medium (blog) to another - e-reader. I've written blog posts about them in the past and have not been especially kind to them. So, it would only be appropriate for me to confess that this weekend I got a Kindle. Now I've had the Kindle application on my laptop and on my Blackberry. While I have used them I've never found them to be especially easy to use. I don't mean from the standpoint of technical ease but rather the matter comfort in use. My laptop for example has one of the the larger screens available on a laptop. Sitting up in bed with it to read on in the evening is not really comfortable. Trying to read from from my Blackberry isn't comfortable either. It's size makes the screen area pretty small and you have to jack up the font size so the amount of copy per page is minuscule.
I confess that I still prefer holding a real book in my hands to an e-reader but I do like my Kindle. Yes, I confess I still have problems with the idea of paying for what seems like a file that is just born out of nowhere (cyberspace) and is there on the device. I don't get a cover with color? Where do I have the author sign this book/ file at?
Yes, I confess that I have discovered free books. There may be no free lunches but there are free digital books. Of course these are not really the books on my wish list. But hey it will force me to read some pf the classics again. Okay, some of them I haven't read for the first time. I confess I still consider myself a bit of a newbie or e-reader virgin.
So while you may be reading this and think - about time, I will acknowledge that almost anyone reading this has more experience with digital books then I do. I am also interested in the process of publishing to this format. I confess that I will defer to you, the experienced digital reader for any recommendations or suggestions on how I might enhance my Kindle experience. I mean I can't stay a virgin forever.
Monday, August 13, 2012
Unabashed
Divisions according to gender should apply only to changing-rooms and public toilets – because of natural bashfulness. In poetry, there is nothing to be ashamed of. ~ Aleksei Alekhin
Technorati Tags: quotes on poetry
Sunday, August 12, 2012
The Mag 130: No Shell Game
Image by Francesca Woodman
Don' t dare look past my flesh self
ignoring what discomfort troubles you.
I've come out so that I can be everything
I truly am- the co-worker, the mother, the friend
the wife and the lover.
I don't hide my intellect behind my body
anymore then I will shelter my flesh
with intellect or my personality.
I've shed my shell;
these breasts, the curves-
this flesh and bone
this is my architecture-
I embrace all that I am.
Michael A. Wells
Saturday, August 11, 2012
The Nightly News I Remember
There are times I remember the nightly news
framed in a seriousness and we all watched.
I would come home from school and the others
they came from work or household chores
but we watched in the same room
the same RCA Victor
that doubled as a piece of furniture;
topped with white lace doilies and blonde lamp-
and always a man with a voice of authority
and there would be body counts every single night.
And for the longest time this went on
and we all watched and when it was over went
our separate ways.
There was no liberal newscast or conservative choice
there was only news and it could be very brutal.
framed in a seriousness and we all watched.
I would come home from school and the others
they came from work or household chores
but we watched in the same room
the same RCA Victor
that doubled as a piece of furniture;
topped with white lace doilies and blonde lamp-
and always a man with a voice of authority
and there would be body counts every single night.
And for the longest time this went on
and we all watched and when it was over went
our separate ways.
There was no liberal newscast or conservative choice
there was only news and it could be very brutal.
Wednesday, August 08, 2012
Confession Tuesday Under Cotton Candy Skies on Thursday
A storm is threatening if that is possible in this drought inflicted Midwest. We are already a day late - let's hurry to the confessional.
Dear Reader: I confess I know I'm a day late. It's been 8 days since my last confession so lets get this over the cotton ball sky is moving quickly.
I confess that as I gassed the car this morning and realized that gas had shot up considerably since I last gassed the car I so wanted an all electric car. Of course wanting and having the ability to obtain something are two different things. Even a gas electric hybrid is out of the picture unless that lottery ticket in my pocket is a winner. I'm really pretty good normally about not wanting things I know are beyond reach. Occasionally some electronic gadget will creep into my wanting eyesight but I mostly try and contain myself. These are usually things that I could have, I have the means available to go get one, but don't because my better wisdom says don't.
I confess that I when I learned yesterday that my daughter was likely going to put down Scarlet - her pet rat today - I spent some time just watching Scarlet and taking pictures of her last night. She was actually pretty cute. So when I learned today that it actually occurred I admit I had some damp eyes for a rat. Okay, not just any rat but Scarlet. Earlier this summer she lost Mason but as far as rats go I am told that Mason was an old man.
That's about it for tonight... I just realized the San Francisco Giants are on ESPN so my attention is now divided. And I guess that's a confession too.
Saturday, August 04, 2012
Speculation
In bony avoidance I hide
from the possible. Still
my mind is well aware
of what it prefers not
to accept. Would be surrender,
disappointment to the indifference
that might be expected of me.
There is always the possibility
just as there is the what if I had
done differently. What ifs
are lame excuses for the afterlife.
They add nothing to the internal
discussion we have with our self.
Such speculations is cowardice
behind closed eyes. If I must,
speculate by poking out my eyes.
The Risk To Write
We have a natural right to make use of our pens as of our tongue, at our peril, risk and hazard. ~ Voltare
Thursday, August 02, 2012
Playing in what rain they could find
This morning the ground was wet with fresh rain, I caught sight of geese across the street on the ball diamond. The rain would soon disappear into oven baked ground. I would depart for work, and the geese I suppose they lollygagged about for a while and left.
Wednesday, August 01, 2012
Journal Bits
The following are representative bits, notes, quotes, writings from my journal July 16 to present.
- 7/16 - fey - pronounced (fay). Adjective meaning 1. strange or unconventional or otherworldly. 2. doomed 3. able to see the future.
- 7/18 - art is not always in the details, sometimes it's the big picture
- 7/20 - Am I cursed? My poet home page dis down this morning. New hosting site and I'm dealing with this issue again.
- 7/20 - never have I laid eyes upon her / that the cortex was not held hostage. / Never have we touched that my heart / did not ache for more
- 7/22 - it will be known as the summer / of toasted coconut lawns / we began to lower our standards / of comfort
- 7/23 - At 9:00 PM the temperature was 102, unbelievable...
- 7/30 - I read Diane Ackerman's poem Between the Creases, probably not for the first time, but it really resonated with me today.
- 7/31 - "The problem with the world is that the intelligent people are full of doubts while the stupid ones are full of confidence." ~ Charles Bukowski
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Confession Tuesday - Olympic Bitchfest
It's Tuesday and them means time to head to the confessional. Won't you join me?
Dear Reader,
It's been another week since my last confession. One more week of mostly ghastly heat. One more week of week of almost not stop a/c compressor running outside our back bedroom window, and week and two days since my last poetry submissions.
I confess that last night when I realized it was national cheese cake day I wanted so badly to go out for a piece of cheese cake. When I realized designation of the day it was getting late and I did not want it bad enough to put one real clothes that I could actually be seen in public in. However, our office has a birthday party to celebrate at the Cheese Cake Factory this Friday. It all works out in the end.
I did not see the opening of the Olympics. How big is this? Well, I confess that I do not recall the last time I missed an opening ceremony. I caught some of the Olympics last night and I have to be honest, I'm just not that taken in by it this year. I've never quite felt about the Summer games the way I do about the Winter games. I love almost all of the winter stuff but I confess that less of the summer events strike my fancy. Sure I'll watch some of the gymnastics. I like the volleyball. The cycling and fencing is cool. The Boxing too. I quit caring about basketball years ago when Team USA had pro athletes compete. I confess that was a big turn off and they have never won me back. I was really int the baseball, but with that gone <sigh> so is a lot of my interest. I've never cared for soccer Olympics or otherwise. The canoe event that looks like white water rafting is pretty cool.
Talking about all this Olympic stuff makes me long for the next winter games. The Hockey, skiing, giant slalom, ski jumping (love it - I think I'd like to be a ski jumper at least till I got up on the run and was looking down) and toboggan, bobsled, luge, cross-country skiing and figure skating. Love the figure skating. So you see I'm pretty much a winter games kind of guy.
But there is another problem with the Olympics. The best covered games I ever saw were the Sarajevo Olympics in 1984 and Lake Placid in 1980. They have gone down hill since and what I've seen of coverage this year is an all time low. I loved it when the coverage included cultural tid-bits about the host country and biographical sketches on the athletics and there home countries. Things about their families and what they went through to get there. I despise the tape delays. I Miss Jim McKay. No one knew the Olympics better.
I confess I did not intend this to be an Olympic bitch fest but is is what it has become. ;)
I confess that I will try to do better next Tuesday and cut this off here for tonight.
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Poetry Games: Cast Your Vote!
The ancient Greeks felt poetry and sport went hand in hand at athletic festivals like the Olympics. Poets sang the praises of athletic champions and, at some festivals, even competed in official events, reciting or playing the lyre. NPR is reviving that tradition with it's own
Check out and vote for your favorite. Poetry Games.
Check out and vote for your favorite. Poetry Games.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Summer of Discontent?
It's a summer when I've lowered my comfort standards by increasing what I consider to be a palatable temperature. As for the disappointing circus in Washington, D.C., I refuse to lower my standards.
I've tried to find the good in things this summer and that's not always been easy. In people too. I try giving grouchy people a bit of a break because given the heat I figure we've all had some days in which our own irritability seemed to take over. Actually, I've found in many instances it's not quite so easy to find reason to get upset with others and this is a good thing. I'm not professing to be perfect at it but I'm vastly improved in this area and that makes me a happier person.
I've also been in search of the art in life. I keep telling myself there is art everywhere if we look hard enough. It means finding a different view of things so that you see some other meaningful aspect what might otherwise seem normal. I like to find art in the randomness of things. If I can find art in the everyday then how much easier to find poetry in the split open bagel or the uneven seem of a concrete walkway.
This summer is not over and maybe I'm being too judgmental trying to chalk it all up to the negatives. Like the water over the rock slabs above there is movement. Things are happening and the year is in motion as well. I'm ready for some surprising good news, good things and feeling good.
I hope others are looking for art in their own day to day world. After all, art is for everyone. Art is for the masses and for all time.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Confession Tuesday - I don't give a Klout Edition
It's Tuesday... Tuesday, got that? (this is for my own benefit)
Dear Reader: It's been a week since my last confession. Another hot week. How many is that now? I honestly can't remember.
I confess that all day I've tried to convince myself that it's Wednesday. This was complicated by the fact that I had a Chiropractor appointment tonight and I normally have those every-other Wednesday but I had to shift to Tuesday this week.
Last night it was 102 at 9PM. Sun is down and it's still 100+ and I confess that I am losing faith in the possibility of again enjoying the weather.
I noted my Klout has been falling. It's dropped to 40 and I confess I don't care. I've been far too obsessed with it this past month. watching it inch up and then retreat. I confess that I also believe that it fails to adequately reflect certain social media that it supposedly is plugged into. For example nothing has changed like forever with my Google + even when I do public posts on it. So I remain convinced that whatever their algorithm settings are, they fail (assuming they really use algorithms)Anyway, I'm through being obsessed with it, thank you very much. If I check in with it, it will be rare.
I confess that I did get a cool Klout perk that I will mention in another post. Still, this doesn't change my previous confession.
I suppose I should be grateful as I just checked and it's only 96 tonight but I confess I am Cranky Michael because at 10PM we could do better.
Several times the past three or four days I've heard bird chatter at home. Lots of it. You know how in the wee hours of the morning you sometimes awake to it? Well this has been like that except at various time of the day. Tonight I cam home from work and was cooking dinner and I hear them and it was like after 6:30PM. Now I confess that I find birds fascinating. I hope that the next time I hear them I can slip out and find exactly where they are and what kind of birds have been serenading me.
Dear Reader: It's been a week since my last confession. Another hot week. How many is that now? I honestly can't remember.
I confess that all day I've tried to convince myself that it's Wednesday. This was complicated by the fact that I had a Chiropractor appointment tonight and I normally have those every-other Wednesday but I had to shift to Tuesday this week.
Last night it was 102 at 9PM. Sun is down and it's still 100+ and I confess that I am losing faith in the possibility of again enjoying the weather.
I noted my Klout has been falling. It's dropped to 40 and I confess I don't care. I've been far too obsessed with it this past month. watching it inch up and then retreat. I confess that I also believe that it fails to adequately reflect certain social media that it supposedly is plugged into. For example nothing has changed like forever with my Google + even when I do public posts on it. So I remain convinced that whatever their algorithm settings are, they fail (assuming they really use algorithms)Anyway, I'm through being obsessed with it, thank you very much. If I check in with it, it will be rare.
I confess that I did get a cool Klout perk that I will mention in another post. Still, this doesn't change my previous confession.
I suppose I should be grateful as I just checked and it's only 96 tonight but I confess I am Cranky Michael because at 10PM we could do better.
Several times the past three or four days I've heard bird chatter at home. Lots of it. You know how in the wee hours of the morning you sometimes awake to it? Well this has been like that except at various time of the day. Tonight I cam home from work and was cooking dinner and I hear them and it was like after 6:30PM. Now I confess that I find birds fascinating. I hope that the next time I hear them I can slip out and find exactly where they are and what kind of birds have been serenading me.
Sunday, July 22, 2012
The Mag 127 Shavings
Figure Eight, 1952 by Franz Kline
The center of balance shifts.
An axis that wobbles.
A toe scuff here,
there; a bit of flair
finished with a jump-
a Salchow, the sit-spin
and kowtow to the judges.
Michael A. Wells
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