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Poetry News For June 24, 2008

Poetry News:

  1. Aleda Shirley (1955-2008): An Appreciation
  2. On the Gurlesque part 2
  3. Holy Shit
  4. Emerging writers are published with established writers around a loose theme
  5. The Beat Generation’s jazz sensibility still resonates in a new century
  6. Poetry with je ne sais quoi
  7. It’s all in Buffalo, and it’s all housed in the University at Buffalo’s Poetry Collection
  8. Sixteen poets, sixteen essays about mental illness and poetry
  9. The end of an odyssey - Homer’s epic is finally pinned down
  10. Could this be the way that literary magazines regain an audience

I don’t think I have one shred of that “Gurlesque” going on. I think it is because I started working when I was 7 & didn’t have a middle-class suburban environment LOL? I’m not very glittery, anyway. That might be it. That is not anything judgmental in any way - I’m just being factual haha. I have a lot of male energy. Mars in my astrology chart conjuncts my ascendant, trines my Jupiter, trines my nodes, sextiles my midheaven & sun, and squares Chiron, Saturn, Uranus, & Pluto. (T-square with Mars/Asc and Uranus/Chiron.) Luckily (29 degree Sag.) Mars is in the 12th or I’d probably be a violent criminal haha instead of a somewhat peaceful Buddhist who just enjoys stirring things up when something is an affront to her sense of truth & justice :) & can’t shut up about it.

So in my book I have poems about war, gambling, sports, tooth extraction, surgery/body getting cut open, cut off hands (mentioned in 2 poems haha), 1 frozen decapitated head, someone hammering nails up his nose, tattoos, boxing, blood and scars. I think just about the only color mentioned in there is red, too. I didn’t even include the poems with gunshot wounds, taxidermy or sword swallowing. And I’m not a guy hahaha….

All Mars stuff I’ve realized but I try to be beautiful about it at least. :) So I guess my poetry is quite the antithesis of Gurlesque, actually….hahahaha. I’ll have to think of a snappy label for it. Warplay. haha.

Sylvia Plath had some pronounced Mars action in her astrology chart too & her poetry is pretty bloody. That & her brilliant music is probably why she’s my favorite poet. But that was probably Pluto, too, in her case. (With her issues about death.) So I would have to suggest that “Tulips” (as mentioned in the Gurlesque pt 2 link, above) is not merely submissive but rather it is Plutonian/underworldian in its theme. Because illness has a heavy aspect of destructive overpowering transformation, right, & you’re abducted by it. What, you’re NOT going to hand over your name to the nurses & give over your body to Pluto after you arrive in Hades? :) You really have no choice. You’ve been kidnapped!

Coincidentally we both have Venus in Virgo. Plath used the word “pure” a lot — (”Pure? What does it mean?”) — she wrote those heavy-duty hospital / health poems, too. (Virgo.) Face Lift, Tulips, Surgeon at 3 a.m, Fever 103.

Contemporary poetry needs more blood and guts…. I’d write more but I have to take Darryl to the airport.

PS William Carlos Williams was a Virgo — check out how many times he uses the word “white” in his poems — if this is not a “pure” Virgo poem I don’t know what is:

Nanucket

Flowers through the window
lavender and yellow

changed by white curtains-
Smell of cleanliness-

Sunshine of late afternoon-
On the glass tray

a glass pitcher, the tumbler
turned down, by which

a key is lying- And the
immaculate white bed

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Poetry News For May 2, 2008

Poetry News:

  1. Her early writing is set in a structured style with familiar rhyming schemes, yet its tone foreshadows her charged works to come
  2. Consistencies Found In Synaesthesia: Letter ‘A’ Is Red For Many; ‘V’ Is Purple
  3. Poet Giovanni honored with historic marker
  4. Poems not only rhymed but the syllables of each line were exactly calculated; to make matters trickier, there were tonal patterns as well, dictated by the pitch accents of the language.
  5. Though he is best known for his medicine–related poems, Peter Pereira successfully exploits his devotion to anagrams and other word games in poems that celebrate the malleabality and surprises possible in language
  6. Twas the year 2008, when the world’s worst poet got his day - a little late
  7. The true legacy of the inventor of LSD, who died yesterday aged 102, is in the music, literature and visual arts that were produced as a result of acid
  8. The problem of describing trees

This country sure is going to hell in a handbasket. Maybe someone else will do an Idiocracy-type movie that won’t be as terrible.

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Poetry News for October 5, 2007

Poetry News:

  1. Thank you very much for inviting me to speak about Poetry and Power
  2. the latest wrangle in the US reflects a wider problem in deciding what’s good poetry and what’s not
  3. VA Tech professor writes poems about shooting
  4. Poets are good at discerning life within what otherwise might seem lifeless [congrats]—
  5. Business of Words with Collin Kelley, Month of October, Guest: Reb Livingston
  6. Sean O’Brien has become the first person to win the prestigious Forward Prize for Poetry three times.
  7. For years, Baltimore has laid claim to one of our greatest writers. Nevermore!
  8. Old and, though no-one knew it then, close to death, Auden’s behaviour in Ilkley can best be described as eccentric
  9. The court cited the lower court‘ findings of fact questioning the validity of the certificate‘ facts, such as … the publication of the poems without a copyright notice
  10. ACLU “˜Howls”™ Against FCC Destroying the Best Poems of a Generation
  11. Burma: Act Now!

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Congrats to Eclectica on its 54th issue. That’s quite an achievement, as online lit mags seem to come and go. In the latest issue, Scott Malby did a review of this site. Thanks, that is kind.

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3 most popular links for last month (as far as Feedburner is concerned):

“This country’‘ best-selling contemporary poetry book, according to the most recent list on poetryfoundation.com”

All about the latest Best American Poetry

The announcement that Paul Muldoon will be the next poetry editor of The New Yorker provoked Ted Genoways, editor of VQR, to to call out American poets

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Attn Nashville word nerds: this program (New PBS Series Probes the Origin, Technology and Art of Writing) begins tonight at 7pm on Nashville Public TV.

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Poetry News for August 1, 2007

Poetry News:

  1. Primary care physician and self-described Scrabble junkie Peter Pereira reads from his new collection of poetry, What’s Written on the Body [There is also a review of Peter's book (here).] —
  2. Books of poetry will fascinate kids of all ages
  3. Egypt poet refuses to pay court fine
  4. The Rhymes of the Ace Mariner
  5. T.S. Eliot In The Gas Station
  6. Give Poetics a Chance

These are the 3 most popular outgoing links for last month (as far as feedburner is concerned):

Copper Canyon is the leading U.S. independent publisher of poetry

The great poet William Carlos Williams called [her] ‘one of the major phenomena of history

We’re poets, so this was an amazingly stressful situation for us [Now you have to pay to read it at the NY Times]

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Poetry News For April 21, 2007

Poetry News:

  1. Students critique Pulitzer Prize winner
  2. Tulare County poet laureate kept writing until the end
  3. When words take wing
  4. That’s the trouble with now. Now we’ve got a horrible culture, horrible times and horrible music.
  5. From Haiku to the Blues
  6. Nelson Mandela read an extract from one of her poems, The child who was shot dead by soldiers at Nyanga, when he opened South Africa’s first democratic parliament in 1994
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