Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

15 October 2019

New Poetry Book Release - Piccola Poesie



My new poetry book, Piccola Poesie, A Nibble of 100 Short Form Poems, is now available! 


Piccola Poesie contains a variety of Haiku, Senryu, Tanka, and American Sentences that explore human relationships, our relationship with nature, and with everyday objects around us. The poems wheel through the seasons and incorporate observations and commentary in appreciation of everyday life. These short, easily digestible poems permit the reader to find answers to important questions like, 'What's up with cats, anyhow?' and why winter causes poets to rush outdoors to witness the season. Like macaroons, the reader can enjoy these poems as daily treats, or they can be gobbled down by the handful. 100 small-bite poems for a fast-moving world. 


You can find it in print form on Amazon at or as an ebook on Amazon on Oct 16th. For a limited time buy the hard copy and get the ebook for .99¢

(If you purchase, please consider leaving a review. The karma squirrels will smile on you.)

Happy Reading!

02 September 2019

Poetry Submissions for the Rest of Us



So, I've been reading submission guidelines while I search for places to home my poetry. A lot of them leave me scratching my head. 
"We want poetry that makes our heart go POW and our head pop off the stem of our neck spouting blood like a geyser. We want work that zings our strings and causes a rabid dog to bay at the moon. Send us work that has the diversity of fungal infected wildflowers and the factory installed parts of a slightly used car. Come whiffling through the tulgey wood, and burble as you come, with thematic intent."
WTF?
All I really want to know is whether the magazine wants free verse, forms, more traditional, prose poems, experimental, or political. Do they consider rhyming poetry? Non-traditional? Edgy? Short? Long? Tattooed on your left hand? How can you tailor your work to the magazine when you can't decipher the code? Back issues don't always help.
I'll take utterly clueless for $500, Alex.
Maybe my poetry magazine to poet translator is busted. 
Maybe I'm getting old. 
Maybe I should stick to writing fantasy. 
Maybe I just throw my poetry at the submissions wall and see what sticks. Yep, I like this option. 
(And when I do find a place for my work)—
“And hast thou slain the Jabberwock?
      Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!”
      She chortled in her joy.


01 April 2018

Welcome to National Poetry Month


It's April, time for Poetry everywhere! To kick off your poetry month, we have a brand new issue of Gyroscope Review. This is our Third Anniversary, so naturally this is the Annoversary Issue - with a special theme of Threes.

Our Spring 2018 issue is the largest single issue we’ve ever produced. We are pretty proud of this big fat issue. You can purchase a print copy HERE, a Kindle version HERE, or find a free PDF version HERE. Three places to read us.

All funds from the purchase of print or Kindle editions helps fund Gyroscope Review‘s website and Submittable submissions system.

As an extra special bonus to National Poetry Month, Gyroscope Review is publishing an interview a day with 30 different poets. 30 chances to see what makes poets tick. Or twitch. Stop on by Gyroscope Review every day to read a fresh, new interview.

What will you be doing for National Poetry Month? A poem a day? Following poetry prompts? (Gyroscope Review offers a new poetry prompt every Sunday, on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.) Writing when the inspiration strikes? Reading your favorite, or a new poet? Let me know in the comments. We hope to see some creative well crafted poems from April in our slush. Go forth and create!

23 April 2017

Find my Poetry 2017 - Harpur Palate

Find my poetry in the latest issue of Harpur Palate.

I'm in fine company. So pleased to be here.

Find Harpur Palate submission info on their website and read excerpts from past issues on their blog.

12 March 2017

Japanese Short Forms

Undercover gnome ponders Haibun.

Whenever I feel my poetry getting scattered or disjointed I delve back into some Japanese poetical forms – namely haiku, tanka and haibun. 

I like haiku for the rigid requirements it makes me place on myself – how can I say something relevant or profound in such a short space? The idea is to create an image and a response to that image in very little space. Just because the poems are short doesn’t mean they are easy to write. Same with tanka. Haibun is a new form for me, sort of a “what would happen if a haiku and a prose poem got together and had a child” kind of format. I've only written a few, and I'm not happy with them yet. It may be my discomfort with prose poems holding me back, or my liking of haiku standing alone. We will see if I can push past all that. In the mean time, I use haiku and tanka to reconnect myself with the essence of poetry. When poems come as small, quiet thoughts rather than big missives, haiku is the way to go. 

A refresher: 
Haiku – Japanese short form poetry of around 17 syllables that typically has a seasonal reference (kigo) and a ‘cutting’ word (kireji) or phrase.  The syllable count is a guideline since Japanese sounds are generally shorter than their English counterparts, and 12 syllables seems to be closer to the Japanese intent than the 17.  The seasonal word is a requirement for traditional haiku poets, not so much for more modern and English poems.  The kigo can use events, weather patterns, seasonal conditions and seasonal markers to clue the reader in to what season is being referenced. It’s also used as a shorthand way of cueing the reader in to an emotion connected with the season word. The cutting word or kireji is often used as a bridge to enhance the images used by the poet. It’s another one of those things that is distinctly Japanese and hard to translate to the English language.

The most famous haiku is from Bashō—

furuike ya kawazu tobikomu mizu no oto

old pond . . .
a frog leaps in
water sound

my favorite:
                Though I'm in Kyoto
                when the cuckoo sings
                I long for Kyoto


Another haiku poet is Kobayashi Issa

A tethered horse,
snow
      in both stirrups.


In the cherry blossom's shade
    there is no such thing
          as a stranger

 
Tanka – The bad thing about trying to find a tanka (or even haiku) definition, is that in English, we seem to be hell bent on describing the poem form by how many syllables and lines it has, rather than on the spirit or intent. If you know anything about poets, you know rules were made to be bent, twisted, broken, and reformed, syllable count be damned.

Here is a definition from Wikipedia:
“Tanka consists of five units (often treated as separate lines when Romanized or translated) usually with the following pattern of onji:

5-7-5-7-7.
The 5-7-5 is called the kami-no-ku ("upper phrase"), and the 7-7 is called the shimo-no-ku ("lower phrase"). Tanka is a much older form of Japanese poetry than haiku.”
From AmericanTanka.com: “A tanka is a five-line poem that evokes a single moment with vivid precision and emotional veracity.”

Tanka by Yosano Akiko

Goodbye my love
For a night at Fuzan spring
I was your wife.
Now until the end of the world
I demand that you forget me.


It was only
the thin thread of a cloud,
almost transparent,
leading me along the way
like an ancient sacred song.

Haibun definition from Wikipedia:
"Haibun  is a literary composition that combines prose and haiku. The range of haibun is broad and includes, but is not limited to, the following forms of prose: autobiography, biography, diary, essay, historiography, prose poem, short story and travel literature.

A haibun may record a scene, or a special moment, in a highly descriptive and objective manner or may occupy a wholly fictional or dream-like space. The accompanying haiku may have a direct or subtle relationship with the prose and encompass or hint at the gist of what is recorded in the prose sections."
A haibun example from Simply Haiku: A Quarterly Journal of Japanese Short Form Poetry

Parenthood

It's so dry the dirt along the bike path has changed color. Last year the kids and I searched for crawdads in the adjacent stream. Now pebbles and stones rest without reflection, leaving only a few dark puddles closely guarded by trees. Our family walk interrupted — a couple of boys with sharpened spears jabbing at fish. They look up, throw down their sticks and run. I send my son to the trash can, my daughter and I taking off our shoes to wait.

He returns with 2 cups, super-sized. We spend the next half hour shuttling fish, a pond not far away. I make up a song, Fish Rescue. By the last trip, both children have memorized the refrain.

Sometimes I still wonder if I'm doing it right.

    slam of a car door
    our dog runs
    as fast as he can


Is anyone out there writing haibun? Or even prose poetry? Tell me that haibun is not as complicated as I'm making it out to be - or that my haiku sometimes could use a companion to pal around with. .  .

04 November 2016

Must Have Book for Poets

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0996987177/dianelockward-20


A little bit of self-promotion for the day. See that book up there, The Crafty Poet II? It's a self-contained little poetry tutorial, chock full of tips on crafting poetry, poetry prompts, and poems that model the prompt.

It just so happens one of my poems is used as an example of a poem modeled on a prompt. My poem is "Synthesis" (Page 108) and is a model for the prompt by Barbara Hamby entitled "Vex Me".

My first line is
"Oh Rock in my Path, how considerate of you to descend 
early in the morning to avoid squashing my flesh-bag 
beneath your magnificence." 

Of course it goes downhill from there.

There are lots of other wild and wonderful poems in this book, and prompts to keep your brain engaged and new work flowing. Pick up a copy on Amazon, or Barnes & Noble, you won't regret it.

While you're at it, stop by and give Diane Lockward some love for putting together this awesome collection.

Now, it's November - NaNo this and NaNo that - back to writing!

23 September 2016

Autumn Poetry

 
 
 
Autumn 
by Amy Lowell

All day I have watched the purple vine leaves
Fall into the water.
And now in the moonlight they still fall,
But each leaf is fringed with silver.

Source: Poetry


Autumn Sky 
by Charles Simic

In my great grandmother's time, 
All one needed was a broom 
To get to see places 
And give the geese a chase in the sky. 

               • 

The stars know everything, 
So we try to read their minds. 
As distant as they are, 
We choose to whisper in their presence. 

               • 

Oh Cynthia, 
Take a clock that has lost its hands 
For a ride. 
Get me a room at Hotel Eternity 
Where Time likes to stop now and then. 

               • 

Come, lovers of dark corners, 
The sky says, 
And sit in one of my dark corners. 
There are tasty little zeroes 
In the peanut dish tonight.

Source: Poetry


Day in Autumn
by Ranier Maria Rilke
Translated by Mary Kinzie

After the summer's yield, Lord, it is time 
to let your shadow lengthen on the sundials 
and in the pastures let the rough winds fly. 

As for the final fruits, coax them to roundness. 
Direct on them two days of warmer light 
to hale them golden toward their term, and harry 
the last few drops of sweetness through the wine. 

Whoever's homeless now, will build no shelter; 
who lives alone will live indefinitely so, 
waking up to read a little, draft long letters,   
and, along the city's avenues, 
fitfully wander, when the wild leaves loosen.

Source: Poetry



The Heat of Autumn
by Jane Hirshfield
 
The heat of autumn 
is different from the heat of summer.   
One ripens apples, the other turns them to cider.   
One is a dock you walk out on,   
the other the spine of a thin swimming horse 
and the river each day a full measure colder.   
A man with cancer leaves his wife for his lover. 
Before he goes she straightens his belts in the closet,   
rearranges the socks and sweaters inside the dresser 
by color. That’s autumn heat: 
her hand placing silver buckles with silver,   
gold buckles with gold, setting each   
on the hook it belongs on in a closet soon to be empty,   
and calling it pleasure.

Jane Hirshfield, "The Heat of Autumn" from After. Copyright © 2006 by Jane Hirshfield.  
Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers Inc.


Stars 
by Marjorie Pickthall

Now in the West the slender moon lies low, 
And now Orion glimmers through the trees, 
Clearing the earth with even pace and slow, 
And now the stately-moving Pleiades, 
In that soft infinite darkness overhead 
Hang jewel-wise upon a silver thread. 

And all the lonelier stars that have their place, 
Calm lamps within the distant southern sky, 
And planet-dust upon the edge of space, 
Look down upon the fretful world, and I 
Look up to outer vastness unafraid 
And see the stars which sang when earth was made. 


Buffalo Dusk 
by Carl Sandburg

The buffaloes are gone.
And those who saw the buffaloes are gone.
Those who saw the buffaloes by thousands and how they pawed the prairie sod into dust with their hoofs, their great heads down pawing on in a great pageant of dusk,
Those who saw the buffaloes are gone.
And the buffaloes are gone.

Source: The Complete Poems of Carl Sandburg (Harcourt Brace Iovanovich Inc., 1970)

16 September 2016

Poetrypalooza

"Without great solitude no serious work is possible."   Pablo Picasso

This week's blog is all about me. Of course you say, why shouldn't it be?? Things going on in my writing world of late—

The Summer 2016 issue of the Tipton Poetry Journal is now published and available online at:  https://issuu.com/tiptonpoetryjournal/docs/tpj31
I have three poems in that issue - Lunation, Trajectory, and A Pearl of Strings in Distant Waters. Go take a look.

A poem will also be forthcoming in The Crafty Poet II: A Portable Workshop by Diane Lockward due out in the next few weeks. My poem is called Synthesis. All poems in the book are examples of writing to a prompt.

I have a poem (Lithic) in the upcoming anthology Blood, Water, Wind and Stone by Sastrugi Press. It is due out this fall.

Bearlodge Writers of Sundance WY (which I belong to) is hosting a Writer's Workshop. Morgan Callan Rogers, author of two internationally-acclaimed novels and several short stories, will present an all-day workshop for writers on Saturday, September 24, in Sundance, Wyoming. The workshop will be held from 9a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Crook County Courthouse. The author will also be available to the public to sign her books Friday, September 23, at Wild West Espresso in Sundance from 4 to 6:30p.m  There's still time to sign up if you hurry! 
$50 per person. Lunch is included.
For more information or to preregister for the event contact Ayme Ahrens at (307) 399-2000 or aymeahrens@yahoo.com.

The next issue of our poetry magazine, Gyroscope Review, will be out very shortly - October 1st. Want to see what we have done in the past, and the type of poems we are interested in publishing? Read our back issues, available for free at http://www.gyroscopereview.com  Follow us on Twitter
@GyroscopeReview or on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/GyroscopeReview. 

09 April 2016

5 Places to Get Your Poetry Fix Online

Crab apple blossoms on the Periphery


Home of Poetry Magazine, Harriet Blog, and all kinds of poems. Browse poems and poets by poetic style, generation, or type of work. Nature poetry, political poetry, Beat poetry, they've got you covered. Articles and resources for improving your poetry. First place I turn for what's interesting in the poetry world.

Subtitled "A Poem a Day for American High Schools, Hosted by Billy Collins, U.S. Poet Laureate, 2001-2003".  180 contemporary poems you can work your way through, ranging from whimsical to pointed. If you're ambitious, do a Google search for Billy Collins Poems on YouTube, just to hear how he reads them.

I love reading the back issues of this magazine. They generously make a lot of poems available to read online. The Conversations with poets are an interesting insight into the craft. A year's subscription is well worth it.

You know those poems you hear read on NPR by a sonorous voice? That would be Garrison Keillor. Whenever I want to see if my poem is working, I imagine it being read in Garrison Keillor's voice. Find the daily Writer's Almanac and an archive of poems here.
Home of Classic Poetry Aloud, where you go when you need a taste of the old school poems. Dickinson, Kipling, Longfellow, Shakespeare. It's where I go when I want to reconnect to my childhood and poems that rhyme. Some days I just need to see if I remember all the lines to The Charge of the Light Brigade.
Or Dickinson -- All together now:  "Hope is the thing with feathers -- That perches in the soul -- And sings the tune without the words...

25 March 2016

Poetry Month Primer

Looking forward to April flowers and more snow showers.

Coming up fast is April, National Poetry Month. I don't do the poem a day thing any more, but I do still try and output a lot of poems. Sometimes I get caught up in editing what I've written, sometimes I get on a roll and produce a large body of interrelated work. One way I like to prime the pump for writing is by revisiting poetry how-to books I have.

I like books. I like collecting books. I really like collecting how-to books, mining for that one nugget of information that makes my brain tumblers click into place. Over the years I've ammassed a largish collection. Some I use religiously, some go in and out of style depending on my fickle needs. If you're going to write for poetry month, you need some inspiration to keep you going.

Listed below are an assortment of books on writing poetry, writing forms, exercises, essays and poetic dictionaries. I'm sure there's many I missed that I don't have in my collection. Leave a note in comments if you have a favorite book you use for inspiration. I didn't bother to link to a bookseller, we all have our favorites anyhow. Get reading. April is only a week away.

The Poetry Month Inspiration Collection

The Crafty Poet: A Portable Workshop
by Diane Lockward

Ordinary Genius: A Guide for the Poet Within
by Kim Addonizio

The Poet's Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing Poetry
by Kim Addonizio and Dorianne Laux

The Discovery of Poetry: A Field Guide to Reading and Writing Poems
by Frances Mayes

A Poet's Guide to Poetry
by Mary Kinzie

The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms Paperback
by Eavan Boland (Editor), Mark Strand (Editor)

Rules for the Dance: A Handbook for Writing and Reading Metrical Verse
by Mary Oliver

The Sounds of Poetry: A Brief Guide
by Robert Pinsky

A Poet's Glossary Hardcover
by Edward Hirsch

The Art of the Poetic Line
by James Longenbach

The Triggering Town: Lectures and Essays on Poetry and Writing
by Richard Hugo

In the Palm of Your Hand: The Poet's Portable Workshop
by Steve Kowit

Wingbeats: Exercises and Practice in Poetry
by Scott Wiggerman and David Meischen

Real Sofistikashun: Essays on Poetry and Craft
by Tony Hoagland

03 April 2015

Fragment Friday - The Poetry Edition

Welcome to National Poetry Month!
Our very first issue of Gyroscope Review is now available on the Joomag Newstand.
You can find it here: Issue 15-1.

Gyroscope Review.

Need a different version? PDF 15-1 for mobile devices.

 and now on to the rest of the fragments...

2.  Confession time - I don't write poetry every day. And you know what? I'm okay with that. I figured out I run in spurts. I can write 8 poems over the course of a week, and spend the next four weeks polishing and refining them. That's what works for me. YMMV. 

3.  Not to say I don't think about poetry every day. And I tend to read a lot of poetry, especially when I'm not writing. I look at it as a reloading time. Once my brain is all stocked up, I'm back to writing. Some weeks take more stocking than others. Some weeks the poetry barrel is so empty I can see the mud at the bottom. 

4.  So what do I read to refill my poetry bucket?  An array for me. Louise Glück, Shakespeare, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Margaret Atwood, Nick Lantz, Rainer Maria Rilke, Carolyn Kizer, Sharon Olds, Dorianne Laux, the poems on http://www.poetryfoundation.org/, Literary journals, poetry magazines and randomly purchased books of poems waiting on my shelf. New poets waiting to be discovered at every turn. 

5.  So what do I write ON? The computer, Google Docs, yellow legal pads, composition notebooks, little slips of paper I stuff into my pockets to be found later. It's all fodder I try to feed into a master file for the month. Sometimes my smorgasbord reveals neat juxtapositions. Other times a line or stanza float for months, waiting to be born into something bigger.

How about you? What gets your poetry motor going?