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Poetry News For August 15, 2008

Poetry News:

  1. The ethereal world of radio poetry
  2. Beowulf Through the Eyes of Women
  3. The poetry of pain
  4. Byron, ghost and partisans enlisted to save Tuscan villa in ruins & Lord Byron’s fanmail uncovered
  5. 100 Near Perfect Books of Poetry
  6. Spillage from the Riptides of Desire: Poetry Blurbs
  7. Mr. Alexander fashions from modern English a vivid reincarnation of Anglo-Saxon poetry — its grim pathos studded with brilliant figurations, its morbid griefs sung in an armorial tone of resolve
  8. Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest 2008 Results

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“A researcher argues in Science that a basic tenet of economics — that people always behave selfishly — can be wrong, sometimes badly so. He points to new experimental evidence that people do often act against their own personal self-interest in favor of the common good, and they do so in predictable, understandable ways. Poorly-designed economic institutions fail to take advantage of intrinsic moral behavior and often undermine it.”

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Steel Toe Books has an open reading period in October for formal-type full-length poetry book manuscripts.

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I don’t have any poetry rules. So I was reading Mary Biddinger’s blog post with everyone’s comments & I was going “I ummmmmmmm … errrrrrr … well … gee.” :( I   tend to need to have  require some sort of constraint to write up against, though. That’s not a rule though, it’s more like a pathology. I do like to see what I can get away with — in fact, I’ll probably use everyone’s rules about “what not to do” as writing prompts hardee har har har har.

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This entry was posted on Friday, August 15th, 2008 at 9:25 AM by Jilly Dybka and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

3 Responses to “Poetry News For August 15, 2008”

  1. I found Mary Biddinger’s blog through a post of yours the other day and It was a delightful find! It is already one of my first go to reads. Thanks Jilly!

  2. “Pathology”—haha—that’s the best description I’ve heard yet!

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