Monday, December 5, 2011

Some Good Poetry News


1. Verse Wisconsin has accepted two of my poems, "Ghosts" and "Downsizing", for a future issue, probably next fall because of their seasonal subjects. I met the editor, Sarah Busse, at the West Chester Poetry Conference last summer and she's a fine person who runs a fine journal, which exists both in print and online. I'm happy to be part of it.

2. I just found out today that I have been accepted into a week-long intensive workshop run by poet and author Marge Piercy, next June on Cape Cod. I'm excited because she is one of my favorite contemporary poets. We may make a family vacation out of it, and she's one of my wife's favorite poets too, so maybe she'll get to meet her as well. I'm honored because only twelve people will be selected for the workshop.

3. My friend Anna Evans, who has worn several editor's hats, had to suspend her excellent online formal poetry journal The Barefoot Muse, but she just finished compiling a print anthology of the best of the journal, and my poem "Your Missing Piece" (a sonnet about my wife's breast cancer surgery) will appear in it. It promises to be a really good collection of poetry - here's the link if you are interested: http://www.barefootmuse.com/

4. My poem "Six-word Spoilers" appears in the January 2012 issue of Writer's Digest, in Robert Brewer's column "Poetic Asides". The poem is a series of short three-line poems called "hay(na)ku": the first line has one word, the second line two words, the third line three words. That's it. For space reasons, they printed only the first four stanzas of the eight in my poem, which was okay, since it's really a series of ha(nay)ku, but for the record, here's the whole thing:

Six-word Spoilers

Rosebud’s
Kane’s sled -
who’d have thought?

Vader
tells Luke:
“I’m your father.”

Norman
slashes folks
dressed as Mom.

Heston
finds ruined
Statue of Liberty.

Shrink,
Dr. Malcolm,
is a ghost.

Date-
night shocker -
Dil’s a man!

Devious
suspect – Verbal
is Keyser Soze.

What’s
Soylent Green?
Yuck! It’s people!

And here's a bonus poem. I just discovered a blog called The Sunday Whirl, where they do a weekly writing prompt based on "Wordle", a writing exercise where you're given a word bank and instructed to use as many of those words as you can in a poem. I love doing these kinds of prompts, and several of my friends from the Poetic Asides blog participate, so I thought I'd give it a shot. Here's my first attempt (the underlined words are from the word bank). Pardon the double-spacing - my settings suddenly got a little goofy and I didn't know how to fix them:

December

December, you subtle beast,

you corner us on the precipice

of winter before we have an inkling

of what's happening, then surprise us

one morning with vanilla-crusted ground

and trees laden with frosting.

You may wish us to tremble in awe,

but we won't genuflect to your power.

We're made of thicker bark than that.

We'll hunker down when real winter comes.

it's our mission to make the most of it -

a hot pot of tea on a trivet,

an amorous evening before the fire.

5 comments:

Marianne said...

Loved your wordle! You have used those tricky words skillfully and created a grand poem! I especially like: "December, you subtle beast, you corner us on the precipice of winter before we have an inkling of what's happening."

S.E.Ingraham said...

cool wordle Bruce! and wonderful news about your conference win; I won a similar experience last Spring in Colrain, Mass - it was a poetry manuscript publishing conf and also had very few people accepted;it is by far the most informative thing I've ever attended. I'm still revising and re-revising the manuscript from there but I fully expect to publish it eventually ... I loved Colrain but really envy you Cape Cod, one of my most favourite places on the planet!

Amy Barlow Liberatore/Sharp Little Pencil said...

First, Bruce, you are WORKING as a poet to get noticed, published. This is where many of us fall short: The simple act of submitting and going to places that get one noticed. So good for your for your hard work bearing fruit!

SO glad you found Brenda Warren's site, The Sunday Whirl. Your take is excellent, especially the "vanilla-encrusted ground," which I have not seen on any other take. Great work by a great poet! Peace, Amy, and here's my Whirl take (been there awhile):
https://sharplittlepencil.wordpress.com/2011/12/05/christmas-tree-with-a-schmear/

Madeleine Begun Kane said...

Congratulations on all of your great poetry news. And I enjoyed your wordle-poem. They can be so challenging!

Madeleine Begun Kane

Anonymous said...

My friend Angela De Groot emailed me to tell me she'd seen your poem in WD - KUDOS! on all your good news! And that Wordle-based poem was fabulous. Well done!