Of the three people credited as copywriters on the powerful Chrysler advertisement, the one featuring Clint Eastwood that aired for the first time during Sunday's Super Bowl, one is poet Matthew Dickman.
[Story]
Friday, February 10, 2012
Trying to catch up on some reading...
Perhaps you've missed one or more of these items:
Nobel winner left behind new poems ~ A new book of poems by Nobel Prize winner Wislawa Szymborska, who died at the age of 88, will be published in 2012.
Texting As Poetry? Rubbish, Says Oxford Professor ~ "Texting is like the old ticker tape: highly dramatic and intense if it's reporting the Wall Street Crash or the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour, not through any inherent virtue of the machine. Is the breaking news which runs at the foot of the screen on the BBC news channel condensed and consequently poetic? I fail to see how anyone could rationally claim that it is. Again texting is linear only. Poetry is lines in depth designed to be seen in relation or in deliberate disrelation to lines above and below."
Nobel winner left behind new poems ~ A new book of poems by Nobel Prize winner Wislawa Szymborska, who died at the age of 88, will be published in 2012.
Texting As Poetry? Rubbish, Says Oxford Professor ~ "Texting is like the old ticker tape: highly dramatic and intense if it's reporting the Wall Street Crash or the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour, not through any inherent virtue of the machine. Is the breaking news which runs at the foot of the screen on the BBC news channel condensed and consequently poetic? I fail to see how anyone could rationally claim that it is. Again texting is linear only. Poetry is lines in depth designed to be seen in relation or in deliberate disrelation to lines above and below."
Taking A Second Look At Gertrude Stein - And Finding A Lot To Like ~ "Not every 'genius' is equally suffocated by the label. Readers know the extraordinary reputations of Shakespeare and Virginia Woolf, but some prefer 'Richard III' to 'Richard II,' or 'Mrs. Dalloway' to 'Orlando.' They feel at liberty to discriminate. Fewer readers imagine they can create their own Stein; many feel she is beyond their capacity to understand." The
Thursday, February 09, 2012
Thursday Confession
Yes, I missed Confession Tuesday.
I will also confess that I have blown off writing in general this week for the following reasons:
a. tired
b. feeling under the weather
c. my stressors like rubber bands have been stressed to the point they no longer retract to their normal size.
d. my creativity has left he building
e. when what I write today sounds like yesterday and he day before that, something is amiss and needs a break.
f. I'm not sure, but I may not even care.
I will also confess that I have blown off writing in general this week for the following reasons:
a. tired
b. feeling under the weather
c. my stressors like rubber bands have been stressed to the point they no longer retract to their normal size.
d. my creativity has left he building
e. when what I write today sounds like yesterday and he day before that, something is amiss and needs a break.
f. I'm not sure, but I may not even care.
Sunday, February 05, 2012
Nothing New
"Most of my life was spent not understanding, and I can assure you it was not easy." ~ Rilke
Superbowl Sunday and I have no desire to watch this years game. The puppy bowl is no alternative because once you've seen it - you've see all there is - ad nauseum. What I could go for is simply a special feed of the Super Bowl commercials back-to back.
Yes, I sound a little cranky. I'm cranky for a number of reasons of which one is the fact that for the third time since Thanksgiving, I'm sick. Three times in three months! Who is responsable for inflicting these germs upon me? I'm ready to turn my body over the Dr. House knowing full well he'll make me sincker before I get better... but then I will have the answer. Calling Dr. House! Calling Dr. House!
"Patients sometimes get better. You have no idea why, but unless you give a reason they won't pay you. Anybody notice if there's a full moon? ... let's rule out the lunar god and go from there." [citation]
I'm not a person who does sick well (in case you haven't noticed) and my family knows that once I get down, it means really not feeling well because I'm the kind of person who fights it. All the time the body signs are screaming "your sick," my matra is the repeat, "you are not sick, you are not getting sick, you will not be sick..." I suppose you could argue that there is a degree of deleriam associated with my view of the surrounding facts.
So here I am, tired of lying around this weekend - caughing till my chest and head are sore. Feeling closed in. Knowing that what I want to do is throw the windows open and let some air (albeit cold) throughout the house. I want to do something besides look at the ceiling from the bed and I certainly don't waqnt to watch the Super Bowl OR the pupy bowl tape loop - both of which make my stomach turn. Yes, I know the puppies can be cute. but it isn't long before it's like reading principally the same poem written by six different people. There is nothing new.
Superbowl Sunday and I have no desire to watch this years game. The puppy bowl is no alternative because once you've seen it - you've see all there is - ad nauseum. What I could go for is simply a special feed of the Super Bowl commercials back-to back.
Yes, I sound a little cranky. I'm cranky for a number of reasons of which one is the fact that for the third time since Thanksgiving, I'm sick. Three times in three months! Who is responsable for inflicting these germs upon me? I'm ready to turn my body over the Dr. House knowing full well he'll make me sincker before I get better... but then I will have the answer. Calling Dr. House! Calling Dr. House!
"Patients sometimes get better. You have no idea why, but unless you give a reason they won't pay you. Anybody notice if there's a full moon? ... let's rule out the lunar god and go from there." [citation]
I'm not a person who does sick well (in case you haven't noticed) and my family knows that once I get down, it means really not feeling well because I'm the kind of person who fights it. All the time the body signs are screaming "your sick," my matra is the repeat, "you are not sick, you are not getting sick, you will not be sick..." I suppose you could argue that there is a degree of deleriam associated with my view of the surrounding facts.
So here I am, tired of lying around this weekend - caughing till my chest and head are sore. Feeling closed in. Knowing that what I want to do is throw the windows open and let some air (albeit cold) throughout the house. I want to do something besides look at the ceiling from the bed and I certainly don't waqnt to watch the Super Bowl OR the pupy bowl tape loop - both of which make my stomach turn. Yes, I know the puppies can be cute. but it isn't long before it's like reading principally the same poem written by six different people. There is nothing new.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Confession Tusday - The Blonde Edition
It’s been one week since my last confession and I’m in a rush so let’s get to the confessional.
Dear Reader,
Yesterday, during the morning drive, I stopped at Quick Trip for a Diet Coke. My daughter, Shannon was with me because her car was being serviced. She ran inside with me and was getting a coffee (I take not responsibility for her taste in coffee) and I confessed to her that, “I had a Starbucks’ Blonde over the weekend.” Shannon looked a little puzzled and said, “I’m not sure I’m following you.” Realizing the duality of meaning I quickly acknowledged that I had not tried the blonde barista but rather their new light roast coffee. I suddenly realized this could have been confusing to Shannon since I normally enjoy my coffee to be a rich dark roast variety. She has actually been so busy of late she knew nothing of the new Starbucks blend. Actually for a dark roast kind of guy I found the new blend very palatable. I think I would consider buying it in whole bean to make at home since I usually make everything espresso strength at home anyway.
As you can likely tell if you read my earlier Journal Bits post that I’m fighting with a bunch of creative dead weight. I confess this has me in a bit of a funk and it’s been going on for several weeks now. It has started to affect my mood on a much broader level then just as it relates to my writing. In fact it has me so upset that I have tended to write less the past few days then trying to push though it by writing on. I can’t seem to allow myself to write crap and yet I confess that I know I should just keep on working through it. I write for twenty minutes and look at it and throw my hands in the air and pitch my journal off to the side or if I’m on the laptop just stop and fold up in frustration.
Before I get any more frustrated I’m going to call it quits on this confession.
Journal Bits
Journal Entry for Tuesday, January 31, 2012: The ability to be receptive to some broader interpretations of even the most common events and things around me seems to have died and I’m lugging this dead body around inside of me. I don’t know if it succumbed to some disease, died from lack of nutrition or just plain apathy— all I know is it is like dragging around dead weight that has not an ounce of creative spark alive within it.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Saturday Morning Check-in
Here I am, Saturday morning a black coffie on the right and a Diet Coke chaser awaiting on the left. It's been a week and then some all crammed into the past six days.
I've not selpt well, especially the past two nights - but not really at all that well any of the rest of the week. Busy at work, and brought work home two nights. Burned 5 hours of vacation time on Friday simply because I was at my max and there was really nothing relaxing about those hours. As I watch two dogs curled up on my bed I think wow - this human stuff is exhausting. But alas, they are about to be disturbed as I need to strip the bed clothing and wash it. They are not gonna like this!
Made a quick run to the store earlier and while I was out grabbed a glass of Starbucks Blonde. It's the first I've tried it and considering I am really into dark roast it was risk trying it but I wanted to see what it was like. It was not bad and I could see myself trying it again, especially since I almost always make my coffee at home espresso strength.
I've been wanting to set down and do an arount the Internet look at some interesting things in the poetry and writing department that I've run across this week. Maybe you've alrady seen many of them but if not these are things worth reading.
- Grant Proposals - Some Random Thoughts - Hopefully Helpful by Susan Rich
- Finalist for T.S. Eliot Prize by Sarah M. Wells
- It's Like Facebook For The Art World by Read Write Web
- Poetry Fights Back Boston Review
- Not Wordless Wednesday – mission statement musings… Being Poetry
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Sunday Rumpus Fiction: Ten Reasons Not to Sleep with a Poet
If you want a good laugh check out - Sunday Rumpus Fiction: Ten Reasons Not to Sleep with a Poet by Stacy Berlein
I think my favorites are Numbers 4 and 8. What a crackup!
I think my favorites are Numbers 4 and 8. What a crackup!
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Creativity is...
"Creativity is not the finding of a thing but the making something out of it after it is found." – James Russell Lowell
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Confesson Tuesday
Another week has passed. How does this happen? Who authorizes it? Do I get any say in the matter? Evidently not **sigh** but I guess it’s happening to everyone else so— Oh well **another sigh**
If you were hoping for some juicy admissions I’m probably going to let you down, but I’ve let people down before. But I suppose you came to eavesdrop on my confession so let’s get started.
Dear Reader:
It’s been a week of highs and lows for a 49er fan. Somewhere in all of that I’m reminded why I like baseball better then football. Like life itself the baseball season has its highs and lows but all he while the curve moves slower. The season, even he post-season is about endurance and unfolds with a bit more grace. If things go well it’s more like building to a crescendo but that can be just as exciting. So yes, I confess that I was disappointed by the outcome of Sunday’s 49ers playoff game.
Last night I installed a new door lock and what the box said was a 5 minute job was something more like 35 minutes. I confess I was no pleased with myself. Of course anything that involves building or rebuilding, installing or fixing is not my forte. If you could make a cottage industry out of gambling on my fix-it qualities (which is an oxymoron itself) you could make a killing off betting it will take me a long time to finish.
So Paula Deen has diabetes. I confess I am not surprised that the Queen of Butter has the big D. Did no one else see his coming? I lunched with some people last week that were outraged that she has known for some 3 plus years and still pushed her unhealthy recipes on us all. What was she thinking they asked? Un… the big M!
My creativity seems to have been stifled of late. I confess that last night I work up feeling I had to write though I didn’t’ know what to write. So I turned on a light and simply did a journal entry. Hey, it’s writing!
That’s it for this week…. be safe and be happy!
Taking a moment to pay tribute to a courageous woman
Gabrielle Giffords this week announced she was stepping down from her Congressional seat. Her final day as a Congresswoman was spent the day with Tuscon, Arizona constituents including many survivors of the horrific day in which she and many others were gunned down. Giffords is taking time to devote to her ongoing recovery. Read story
Monday, January 23, 2012
12 Books You NEED On Your Bookshelf
My wife sends me this link over the weekend to a Huffington Post article about 12 books (classics) you need on your bookshelf. I'd be interested to know what others think of this list. Agree? Disagree? Any you would swap out for another book? Let me hear some chatter...
The mystery of poetry editing:
The mystery of poetry editing: from TS Eliot to John Burnside
If one poet edits another, whose work is it? In the week that John Burnside won the T S Eliot Prize, Sameer Rahim investigates the unseen hands behind that most personal and mysterious of literary forms. Read story
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Wednesday Poetry Quote
"Only poetry recognises and maintains the centrality of absolutely everywhere." Les Murray, Krino no. 18, 1995
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Tuesday Poetry Quote
"A writer who keeps a personal diary uses it to record what he knows. In his poems or stories he sets down what he doesn't know." ~ Adam Zagajewski
Confession Tuesday
Since I was off yesterday for MLK day today dosen't seem like Tuesday but I know it to be so because I made a lot of note on my planner page for today. An since it's Tuesday I must head to the confessional and you're welcome to come along.
Dear Friends:
It's been countless Diet Cokes, one Chiropractic adjustment, one Scrabble victory over my wife, one $2 movie and a week since my last confession.
This week it seems like my wife and I have had more time together than normal. This has been really nice. We played Scrabble one night, went to the movies and of course watched some of the normal TV that we often do. But Cathy has also had time do work on her beading. Something that she has not had time to do for quite some time. I confess that I've enjoyed writing and working on various things and being able to look up and there she is beading. She finds it so relaxing and I love it when she is able to utilize her creativity, I love it when anyone does.. but especially knowing someone else in the family is into an art form.
While my birthday was last Tuesday - it's been kind of strung out. Tomorrow our office is going out to lunch for my birthday. One night after work I got to go spend some money on books that I wanted. On Sunday I had a piece of German Chocolate cake... one of my favorites. Tonight I had a card in the mail from an aunt. I confess this has seemed like a birthweek. Isn't that a cool idea? Celebrating someone's birthweek?
My youngest daughterhas been in Arizona between 3 and 4 years. She received a jury duty summons in the mail today. I confess that I have tried my best that she must come back to serve or explain what she should be excused. She laughed but isn't buying it. Not that she would not want to...I think she is so ready to move - somewhere if not here. I confess I'm praying daily for here.
I confess that I finally got some work submitted over the weekend. More planned for this week. It's cool, I'm not stressing. At least not about about submissions anyway.
I confess my Klout score went up 2.96 points in the past 7 days. I confess not long ago I had no idea what Klout was and yet I had some.
Do you know what your Klout score is? Do you know what Klout is about?
Until next week... stay safe!
Monday, January 16, 2012
Poetry Quote for Monday
"After a certain age, a poet's main rival is the poet he used to be." - William Logan Paranus 27, nos. 1 & 2
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Poetry Quote of the Day
"A good erotic poem will express desire, incite desire" - Smita Agarwal, Poetry Review, Winter 2000-2001
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Poetry Quote of the Day
"Trying to write a good poem is like running off a cliff to see if you can fly. Most of the time you can't, but every once and a while something happens." ~Marvin Bell - The American Poetry Review, January-February 2003
Friday, January 13, 2012
Knife Edge...
"A poem that does its work must stand on the knife edge of yes and no. The last line of a poem should have both the yes and the no in it, that's what makes it complex." Dorianne Laux - The Kansas City Star - January 28, 2001
Reading these words from Dorianne Laux spoke to my partiality for poetry that encompasses dissonance; that grand internal conflict. To me, this is the richest poetry of all.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Poet's Mailbag
This week the mail man brought several writing related items... My recollection is a subscription advertisement for the Writer's Chronicle and a flyer with upcoming classes at the Writers Place. Seems there may have been something else.
Yesterday, I received the first rejection letter of the year. It was electronic but contained a personal note that read," Dear Michael, I just wanted you to know that your poems made it to the final round of consideration. Sorry to say no this time. Do try us again during our fall reading period..." If you are going to get a rejection letter there is a certain comfort in knowing your work stayed alive in the consideration for a while. Seriously - it helps to look at your submission and think what if anything you might have done different or consider perhaps a different journal as a better fit. In this particular case I did feel good about this particular submission. You know how sometimes you send something out and for days later you have regrets... this one never was that way.
Anyway, may the postman and e-mail bring good news in the week ahead!
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Confession Tuesday - Birthday Edition...
Dear Reader: If it's Tuesday, this muse be my confession.
Yes, my friends, I confess this is my birthday. I will not however confess my age. But for the record, I sometimes feel older then our nation. Sometimes when the knees get cranky I feel older then dirt! But today, not so. Today, I'm embracing the philosophy that I'm as young as I feel and I refuse to be my age.
I confess that I was pretty overwhelmed this morning that an attorney on our staff baked a birthday cake for me and brought it into the office. Our staff works damn hard during the day and the thought that one of them would go home after a long hard day and take the time to do this was incredible to me.
My wife and I stopped on the way home from work and had BBQ at Benny's. It was just the two of us and it was nice and relaxing. Then home and took in a couple of TV programs we like and peeked off and on at the NH primary returns.
I confess that by this time last year I had sent out something like 8 submission packets and this year I've not sent out a single one during the new year. I need to because the number of outstanding submissions has dwindled down to single digits. Still, in spite of the fact I hope to send out more this year then last, I am not stressing. No, I am perfectly calm. I've got some places in mind and in relative short order I intend to start kicking them out. If I haven't by next Tuesday, then I might start stressing.
So there you have it. A year older but staying cool! I'm feeling comfortable in my Capricorn digs!
Yes, my friends, I confess this is my birthday. I will not however confess my age. But for the record, I sometimes feel older then our nation. Sometimes when the knees get cranky I feel older then dirt! But today, not so. Today, I'm embracing the philosophy that I'm as young as I feel and I refuse to be my age.
I confess that I was pretty overwhelmed this morning that an attorney on our staff baked a birthday cake for me and brought it into the office. Our staff works damn hard during the day and the thought that one of them would go home after a long hard day and take the time to do this was incredible to me.
My wife and I stopped on the way home from work and had BBQ at Benny's. It was just the two of us and it was nice and relaxing. Then home and took in a couple of TV programs we like and peeked off and on at the NH primary returns.
I confess that by this time last year I had sent out something like 8 submission packets and this year I've not sent out a single one during the new year. I need to because the number of outstanding submissions has dwindled down to single digits. Still, in spite of the fact I hope to send out more this year then last, I am not stressing. No, I am perfectly calm. I've got some places in mind and in relative short order I intend to start kicking them out. If I haven't by next Tuesday, then I might start stressing.
So there you have it. A year older but staying cool! I'm feeling comfortable in my Capricorn digs!
Sunday, January 08, 2012
Magpie Tales - poem: Untitled
Utilitarian art
boxes in Duffy square.
Girders and panels rise
poking the Troposphere.
Windows offer a glimpse
of ground life—
crisscross traffic,
news barkers,
theater goers,
Father Duffy at attention;
Yul Brenner glares—
have you bought your tickets?
Michael A. Wells
Magpie99
Journal Bits From The Past Weerk
January 1, 2012 - a list of some words to draw from in writing later today:
What are the chances that I could crack into _a certain literary journal_ this year? ... I could move on to another goal - seek another level of success for my work.
January 4, 2012 - Last night I did not do my scheduled write so I need to make up for it tonight.
January 6, 2012 - the sky is a reflection of a coral reef / the soon setting sun offers / a peachy-pink take on them / it's Friday and work is left behind / ahead the lanes merge into a spinal / tension - if only I was headed home / but the sunset should be behind / and we drive into it...
January 7, 2012 - I almost sent a poem off today I've submitted elsewhere but I though about it just before I emailed it and decided against it becuse I would rather it find a home someplace I've already sent it and decided to be patient and allow for that possibility.
- envelope
- transparent
- drowning
- revenge
- realized
- absence
- pinnacle
- trolley
- echo
- ordinary
- daybreak
- humming
- pale
- crevice
What are the chances that I could crack into _a certain literary journal_ this year? ... I could move on to another goal - seek another level of success for my work.
January 4, 2012 - Last night I did not do my scheduled write so I need to make up for it tonight.
January 6, 2012 - the sky is a reflection of a coral reef / the soon setting sun offers / a peachy-pink take on them / it's Friday and work is left behind / ahead the lanes merge into a spinal / tension - if only I was headed home / but the sunset should be behind / and we drive into it...
January 7, 2012 - I almost sent a poem off today I've submitted elsewhere but I though about it just before I emailed it and decided against it becuse I would rather it find a home someplace I've already sent it and decided to be patient and allow for that possibility.
Friday, January 06, 2012
Thought for the Day
People who lean on logic and philosophy and rational exposition end by starving the best part of the mind. ~ William Butler Yeats
Wednesday, January 04, 2012
Confession Tuesday - the Late Edition
Dear Reader: I put the trash on the curb this morning and therefore I know I missed the first Confession Tuesday of the New Year. As a result, here I stand humbled by my lapse but ready to make amends.
I confess that I usually write the old year on things for weeks into the New Year but have not done so once yet. Do you think this is a sign I was so ready to be done with 2011? I may be off on my days (Monday seemed like Sunday since we had it off therefor today should be Tuesday but Thank God It’s Not!) but I do know this is a whole different year!
I confess that I have my sights on publication in a specific Journal this year. I won’t divulge which one… Actually I have several in mind, but one in particular that I’d like to see my work in and no; its initials are not N.Y. What I have my sights set on would be a big step for me but not that big! I am realistic if nothing else.
I confess my Iowa GOP predictions were slightly off last night. I anticipated Ron Paul winning by a squeaker when in fact he was 3rd by a squeaker. I also told one of my associates I didn’t expect the GOP turnout to be any higher then 4 years ago. Again, wrong. They were slightly ahead of 4 years ago in terms of participants. Still, it was no the massive turn out that many suggested. I confess that all my direct Iowa political experience is on the Democratic side and that as far as the Republicans are concerned it has only been as a keen observer.
I’m not real big on New Year Resolutions because I kind of feel they are doomed to failure from the start. I’ve got a few goals for the year and that is how I refer to them. I confess this makes them seem manageable. I do think the New Year affords us magnificent opportunity annually. It’s like opening day in baseball. The clock is reset and everyone (theoretically) is on par. For one day everyone is tied for first place regardless of advantages, payroll or handicaps and the race begins. It even smells fresh – like the cut grass on the field. I always have felt baseball, life and poetry are interchangeable metaphors. Hey, I’m a Capricorn and a romantic. What did you expect?
Monday, January 02, 2012
Mag 98 / Poem: A Reminder
The bent elbow
slows progression-
force builds
pushing the river
around
over and beyond
the banks like claws
snag what is delivered
from upstream
when the anger
has burnt itself out
the raging water fading
to original dignity-
scattered on banks
remain the wrath
Michael A. Wells
Magpie 98
Sunday, January 01, 2012
Overnight
A white knuckled fist
griping at the question
pale
momentary
bloodletting – leaches
revenge
cryogenic reality
brittle regions of home
and
lessons of melodious rambling
in hurtful octaves
breaches – unfurled platitudes
transparency at daybreak
Happy New Year!
I was so ready for 2011 to be over with. It s could not even limp onto the a list of my favorite years. Do I have expectation that next year will be better? I can hope, but expectation is a pretty definitive word.
I've Prepared a list of some things I want to do in 2012. They are specific, measurable in terms of success or failure. Here is my list so far to the kick the year (in no particular order):
- Read the book The War of Art.
- Send 112 poetry submissions out.
- Clean and reorganize my home office.
- Clean the garage.
- Finish draft of manuscript.
- Schedule weekly writing time at least on week in advance
From a writing standpoint I suppose I have to acknowledge I had more publication successes then 2010. That said, there is plenty of room for improvement in writing and everything else.
I hope everyone else has a spectacular year.
Peace!
Michael
thought for the day on writers
And a little humor to kick off the new year...
There is no way that writers can be tamed and rendered civilized or even cured. The only solution known to science is to provide the patient with an isolation room, where he can endure the acute stages in private and where food can be poked in to him with a stick. ~ Robert A. Heinlein
There is no way that writers can be tamed and rendered civilized or even cured. The only solution known to science is to provide the patient with an isolation room, where he can endure the acute stages in private and where food can be poked in to him with a stick. ~ Robert A. Heinlein
Thursday, December 29, 2011
The Irony in GOP Election Hypocrisy
For some time the Republican party has systematically sought to enact stringent Voter ID requirements state by state. They have argued this is to stem voter fraud in spite of the fact that independent studies around the nation have uncovered no evidence that this has in fact been a problem. These changes have in fact been sanctioned by the Republican party for one purpose only: to suppress the votes of voters such as the elderly, minorities and students, all of whom traditionally have been Democratic constituencies.
Okay, if voter fraud were a real concern for Republicans you would think they would have adopted more stringent safeguards for next week's Iowa Presidential Caucuses, but not so. Since this has never been about voter fraud the GOP will again not bother to make Iowa Republicans show such ID before voting in their caucuses.
Both the Republican and Democratic Parties control their own nomination process rules and this is not left to the whims of legislative bodies so in Iowa this hypocrisy is directly within the Republican Party control. Seem strange to you?
Oh, and before you say oh, such requirement isn't really a deterrent to anyone casting votes, check here and here and here. These are real people, real voters.
Okay, if voter fraud were a real concern for Republicans you would think they would have adopted more stringent safeguards for next week's Iowa Presidential Caucuses, but not so. Since this has never been about voter fraud the GOP will again not bother to make Iowa Republicans show such ID before voting in their caucuses.
Both the Republican and Democratic Parties control their own nomination process rules and this is not left to the whims of legislative bodies so in Iowa this hypocrisy is directly within the Republican Party control. Seem strange to you?
Oh, and before you say oh, such requirement isn't really a deterrent to anyone casting votes, check here and here and here. These are real people, real voters.
natural energy resource
Poetry is a natural energy resource of our country. It has no energy crisis, possessing a potential that will last as long as the country. Its power is equal to that of any country in the world. ~ Richard Eberhart
A Blog post worth reading! Reasons to be thankful!
Kelli Agodon on Thankful Thusday - some real food for thought! If you don't think you have cause to be thankful read this and think again. Thanks Kelli for the eye opening post!
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
2 for 1 on Creativiy
A hunch is creativity trying to tell you something. ~ Frank Capra
~0~
A wonderful emotion to get things moving when one is stuck is anger. It was anger more than anything else that had set me off, roused me into productivity and creativity. ~ Mary Garden
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Confession Tuesday
Dear Reader:
It's been one week since my last confession. Christmas has come and gone. So has Festivus and Boxing Day. Of course the last two aren't on my radar for celebrating but I really feel like Christmas passed me by this year. Thanksgiving too. Illness visited me for not just one but both holidays. I did get out to a couple of holiday events but really overdid it at both. I was back at work today but I confess I'm still not 100%. Do I dare hold out hope of feeling well for New Years?
I confess that today I started thinking about a Subway meatball sandwich as early as 1 p.m. (my lunch salad just settling in my stomach) By 4 p.m. I called my wife at work and asked her if she'd like to stop at Subway on the way home for dinner. I'm not a big Subway fan so this probably came as a shock to her. She was up for it so we did. It was ummmm - good!
The Iowa caucuses are one week away and while I've been following closely I admit it seems so totally foreign because it is all about the GOP. Iowa is a neighboring state and there are many times I've joined others who have migrated to the state to campaign for candidates in advance of the caucuses. Each of these have been for democratic candidates and so I confess that thinking of Iowa void of early Democratic battles is surreal.
I confess that after paying 2.85 recently for gas my stomach did not make it's traditional growling sound. I have no delusions of it lasting.
Yes, it's Resolutions time again. Will I have some? I confess I'm split over it even as the year is ticking away. I will settle on an answer by New Years and let you know.
May the rest of your 2011 keep you safe and see you into the New Year!
Sunday, December 25, 2011
In the Spirit of Giving and Taking....
I have only the faintest delineation of Thanksgiving 2011 and Christmas 2011. This emanates largely because I've been ill during both. Not quite the same illness but I'm sure one is related to the other so like everything else presently the lines seem a bit blurred.
One thing that has seemed permanent during this period is my writing has been best described as ill as well. And there I go... the better or stronger adjective surly is sick! See what I mean?
Over and over I've tried kick starting stuff with free-writes, prompts you name it. I pretty certain the the Grinch stole my creativity. He sucked it right out of me!
So the past couple of days I've stepped back and taken a look at creativity and writing in general through the eyes of others. This is the "taking" part and sharing it here with you is the "giving."
According to psychologist Dr. Robert Epstein, "External factors such as stress play a much heavier role in determining innovation than anything intrinsic." Have I been stressed out lately? Do bears shit in the woods?
I ran across three quotes that all hit home with me. Only one do I actually know the author of and I hate to post something without attributing it to it's author (so if anyone knows the source of these please speak up):
"It's not what you look at that matters it's what you see." - unknown
"When you are stuck walk away from the computer. It will teach you how to see." - Gerard Huerta
And lastly - "Art Is what you can get away with." - unknown
After all this I get the feeling that successful writing is really pretty simple. That is not to say it is easy, but simply. Perhaps the hardest part is to not overthink. To simply be quiet and listen to yourself, be observent and open it new and different views. Actually write and do so often but be willing to step back as needed and allow yourself to see the view through an different portal.
One thing that has seemed permanent during this period is my writing has been best described as ill as well. And there I go... the better or stronger adjective surly is sick! See what I mean?
Over and over I've tried kick starting stuff with free-writes, prompts you name it. I pretty certain the the Grinch stole my creativity. He sucked it right out of me!
So the past couple of days I've stepped back and taken a look at creativity and writing in general through the eyes of others. This is the "taking" part and sharing it here with you is the "giving."
Robert McCrum writing for the Guardian in his Fifty things I've learned about the literary life had a few interesting point to ponder. Some of the ones that struck me as the most interesting are:
- Less is more. Or, "the only art is to omit" (Robert Louis Stevenson). This is probably even more relevant to poetry. *Note to self: stop over writing.
- A great novel can cost as much as a pencil and a pad of paper – or a whole life. *I think the same can be said about poetry books.
- In writers, vanity is the cardinal sin.
- Keep a diary. It might keep you.
- The "overnight success" is usually anything but.
- Literature is theft. *This has to be true... I've heard so many variations of it.
- Ebooks are not the end of the world. Ebooks are not the end of the world. Ebooks are not the end of the world. *Okay, if you say so. (heavy sigh)
- A secret is something that is only repeated to one person at a time.
- Everything is fiction. *Even confessional poetry. By the same token, all poetry is true (in some contest)!
- Amazon is not "evil" (J Daunt).
- Poets are either the lions or the termites of the literary jungle. * While I have no idea what he's suggesting here, I liked the way it sounded so it makes my list.
According to psychologist Dr. Robert Epstein, "External factors such as stress play a much heavier role in determining innovation than anything intrinsic." Have I been stressed out lately? Do bears shit in the woods?
I ran across three quotes that all hit home with me. Only one do I actually know the author of and I hate to post something without attributing it to it's author (so if anyone knows the source of these please speak up):
"It's not what you look at that matters it's what you see." - unknown
"When you are stuck walk away from the computer. It will teach you how to see." - Gerard Huerta
And lastly - "Art Is what you can get away with." - unknown
After all this I get the feeling that successful writing is really pretty simple. That is not to say it is easy, but simply. Perhaps the hardest part is to not overthink. To simply be quiet and listen to yourself, be observent and open it new and different views. Actually write and do so often but be willing to step back as needed and allow yourself to see the view through an different portal.
Thursday, December 22, 2011
deja vu all over
Sick through Thanksgiving and a resurgence hitting me ahead of Christmas. I went to the doctor this morning and returned home for bed rest. I'm feeling the Grinch has stolen my health for the holidays.
It's difficult to focus on anything - head hurts from all the coughing. I go from chills to hot. I want to sleep but I'm tired of sleeping.
Writing and reading are easy with my headache and my eyes feel strained without even trying to read. It's not a pretty picture.
If you were looking for an uplifting post, you came to the wrong place. But there is hope... maybe tomorrow or even Saturday things will turn around.I may not be flat on my beck for Christmas as I was on Thanksgiving, My fingers are crossed. I'd cross my eyes too but it hurts too much!
It's difficult to focus on anything - head hurts from all the coughing. I go from chills to hot. I want to sleep but I'm tired of sleeping.
Writing and reading are easy with my headache and my eyes feel strained without even trying to read. It's not a pretty picture.
If you were looking for an uplifting post, you came to the wrong place. But there is hope... maybe tomorrow or even Saturday things will turn around.I may not be flat on my beck for Christmas as I was on Thanksgiving, My fingers are crossed. I'd cross my eyes too but it hurts too much!
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
The Star’s Top 100 Books of 2011 - KansasCity.com
The Star’s Top 100 Books of 2011 - KansasCity.com
Among the Top 100 the Star select the following Poetry Books:
Among the Top 100 the Star select the following Poetry Books:
- “Bone Fires: New and Selected Poems,” by Mark Jarman (Sarabande Books). Following the development of Jarman’s poetry and his uncompromising vision of poetry-making as sacred work, our contributor, Michelle Boisseau, found herself amazed again and again at how the unaffected discipline of Jarman’s craft helps him plumb the reaches of human experience. One of the most moving and exhilarating experiences she had this year reading poetry.
- “Anthony Hecht: Selected Poems,” edited by J. D. McClatchy (Knopf). Hecht, who died in 2004, was a poet of technical brilliance and terrifying depths who made unforgettable poems that have achieved permanence in the American canon.
- “Space, in Chains,” by Laura Kasischke (Copper Canyon). It takes a poet of Kasischke’s extraordinary gifts to render fragmentation and loss with the intense clarity of dream in her eighth collection. • “The FSG Book of Twentieth-Century Latin American Poetry,” edited by Ilan Stavans (Farrar Straus). Work by 84 poets from 16 countries, translated (by the likes of Elizabeth Bishop, Samuel Beckett and W.S. Merwin) from Portuguese and Spanish as well as from languages like Mapuche and Zapotec. This thrilling, dynamic multilingual anthology includes monumental figures like Borges and Neruda and introduces to wider audiences indigenous poets like Elicura Chihuailaf and younger poets remapping the New World.
- “The City, Our City,” by Wayne Miller (Milkweed Editions). The muse of this exquisite collection is an imagined contemporary metropolis (with flashes of Kansas City, Miller’s current city) that thrives simultaneously with the lost cities it has risen from and falls toward, allowing the poet’s urbanites to grasp the continuity of human tragedy and joy.
- “Taller When Prone,” by Les Murray (Farrar, Straus and Giroux). In the newest of his 14 poetry collections, the brilliant Murray crosses the globe and his beloved and infuriating Australia, leveling his muscular wit at our foibles in poems that are inventive, tender and water-tight.
- “The Wrecking Light,” by Robin Robertson (Picador). Coming from a place along the icy fathoms of the North Sea, the currency of this major Scots poet is spare, heart-rending lyrics and haunting narratives that suggest the salt glinting from the granite.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Confession Tuesday - One of those moments
Tuesday again... how does this happen?
Come with me to the confessional...
Dear Reader:
It's been one week since my last confession. One circular week I fear. Between yesterday and today I fear the pneumonia is trying to make a comeback for the Christmas holiday. Tried to get in to see my doctor and can't be seen till Thursday morning (sigh) I confess that this is disheartening because it takes a lot for me to reach the point of wanting to go to the Doctor. Damn! Psyched up for nothing and I'll have to do it all over again tomorrow night in order to be ready Thursday morning. Assuming I'm still alive!
Now there is a much bigger confession coming. One that has had my family laughing. During this past week my daughter called one afternoon and asked me to take Gabe out for her. Gabe is a dog temporarily in residence with us. I went down to the family room and retrieved him from his kennel and escorted him up the stairs and out back. After doing his business I lead him back downstairs on his leash. We walked right past his kennel and I opened a door to the utility room. Inside I turned the light on with the pull chain. Then stooped to open the door to the front load washer wider. Looking back a Gabe I saw a dog with the most contorted quizzical look on his face looking at the opening and them back to me. It took me a moment to realize what I'm sure Gabe already knew... And now you know too!
May you know the dog from the laundry in the week ahead!
Come with me to the confessional...
Dear Reader:
It's been one week since my last confession. One circular week I fear. Between yesterday and today I fear the pneumonia is trying to make a comeback for the Christmas holiday. Tried to get in to see my doctor and can't be seen till Thursday morning (sigh) I confess that this is disheartening because it takes a lot for me to reach the point of wanting to go to the Doctor. Damn! Psyched up for nothing and I'll have to do it all over again tomorrow night in order to be ready Thursday morning. Assuming I'm still alive!
Now there is a much bigger confession coming. One that has had my family laughing. During this past week my daughter called one afternoon and asked me to take Gabe out for her. Gabe is a dog temporarily in residence with us. I went down to the family room and retrieved him from his kennel and escorted him up the stairs and out back. After doing his business I lead him back downstairs on his leash. We walked right past his kennel and I opened a door to the utility room. Inside I turned the light on with the pull chain. Then stooped to open the door to the front load washer wider. Looking back a Gabe I saw a dog with the most contorted quizzical look on his face looking at the opening and them back to me. It took me a moment to realize what I'm sure Gabe already knew... And now you know too!
May you know the dog from the laundry in the week ahead!
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Thought for the Day
"A man's life is nothing but an extended trek through the detours of art to recapture those one or two moments when his heart first opened." ~ Albert Camus
It's In the Mail This Week
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.
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
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.
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