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Interview with Kim Addonizio at Fringe Magazine

I was fortunate to be able to do an interview with National Book Award nominated poet Kim Addonizio. It’s up now at Fringe Magazine. Kim’s answers are fascinating, often pithy, and sometimes wry to general questions and questions about her own writing practice. As a member of one of her current workshops, I can say that she’s a terrific teacher, giving feedback on poems and guidance on the poetic process from a depth of experience…

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Poetry workshop with Kim Addonizio

I’m in the middle of an eight-week poetry workshop with Kim Addonizio and wondering why I haven’t done this more often, maybe once a year. I’ve found few things more stimulating of my creativity than participating in this fun, low-key (we meet in her living room and share snacks and wine), fascinating, and informative workshop. Among the exercises we’ve considered are anaphora, odes, and syntax. Copying the syntax of another poem’s line was an exercise…

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My interview with Cheryl Dumesnil at Fringe

Cheryl Dumesnil: Falling Into Place Poet Cheryl Dumesnil talks about why her children are her gurus, San Francisco as a font of poetry, and how she knows when a poem is ready to publish. It was a lot of fun to talk and email with Cheryl about poetry, her new book, winning a major award, the writing life, and some of the poems in her collection. Visit https://racheldacus.net for more information and writing by Rachel…

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Blog- and zine-hopping

New quarterly zine that looks interesting: Corium Magazine. They publish short and very short fiction and poetry. Mary Biddinger’s Word Cage is always entertaining, and so is Barn Owl Review’s blog (Mary is an editor of BOR). Amy King’s Alias asks “Who are the most innovative poets today?” Head over and cast your vote (or list). I would have done more bloghopping, but have been riveted by the Olympics. Yes, it’s the curling. Visit https://racheldacus.net…

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Interviewing Poets

I have a new job: interviewing poets for Fringe magazine. I have already done some interviews for Umbrella, and found it a fascinating job. You get to ask all the poets you admire how they do what they do! And what poetry means to them, what poetry can do, who their favorite poets are. It’s a license to be nosy. It’s like taking a workshop. It’s like speed dating. It’s a chance to make new…

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Facebook and poetry

I just posted a status update on Facebook about how it has widened my horizons, both in terms of poetry and friendship, and in making new friends among poets. A lot of people complain about social networking sites (mostly about Facebook) and how distracting it is for poets and writers. I have found it the contrary. It’s so easy for me to switch between screens when I’m working on something and want to take a…

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Olympic mania

I told myself I wouldn’t, I couldn’t spare the time this year away from writing, no, not turning on the Olympics … and OMG, did you see the Russian skating pair? The American woman who got the Gold for freestyle skiing? Hear about the young man who died practicing for the luge? I can’t stay away from this stuff, not after so many years of studying ballet, trudging to class mornings and nights when I…

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Fear of failure in writing

I’m reading Kim Addonizio’s new book on craft and the writing life, Ordinary Genius. In it, she makes a statement that really caught me. To paraphrase her, most writers allow fear of failure to block their creativity and keep them from finishing a poem, a book, or persevering in the writing life. I know I have abandoned promising drafts because I became stuck on the tide-lashed rock of that fear, the feeling that I’ll never…

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Swapping books

On Facebook, someone started a chapbook swap page, and so far I’ve sent and received seven books. Seven poets whose work I can really get to know, and seven new readers of my chapbook and work. I think the idea of swapping poetry books, especially chapbooks, is a wonderful way to broaden your reading and acquaintance in the world of working poets. I have at time swapped full-length books too, though those cost more to…

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