The Writing Path Blog

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My poem “War News” featured

I was happy that The Pedestal magazine is featuring poems from its archives on its Facebook page and selected my poem, “War News” from Issue 20. It’s now up for the week at: The Pedestal – my poem on Facebook I hate to think how many years ago it was written, and we’re still in Iraq — though we have the hope of our troops being withdrawn by August. A hope. Visit https://racheldacus.net for more…

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Back in orbit – 2

God help me, I’m being drawn back into my memoir of growing up with the bipolar rocket scientist. Prose, prose, prose is calling me. On top of trying to finish a novel I started five years ago. The thing that often gets me through the hard slogging is Anne Lamott’s wise and funny Bird by Bird. I found another humor piece on writing that cheered me along my prosey way: Lizzie Stark’s blog on Fringe…

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Revision – “re-seeing” a poem

Thanks to Julie Ewald’s blog, I found a great article on revising a poem:  Sonya Feher’s list of five strategies to take your writing from draft to poem. Revising is probably the most important factor in writing of any kind. I write for a living — grant proposals, mailings, brochures, and other things to raise funds and awareness — and write in my spare time too. I’m constantly up against my own word-blindness. It’s natural…

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Back in orbit

Perhaps because I am finishing a novel I started five years ago, I found myself jumping back into the opening chapters of a memoir I finished just before starting the novel. The memoir is the reason I started this blog, on the advice of my agent, who thought a blog would be a great platform for building an audience for Rocket Lessons, the story of growing up with the bipolar rocket scientist. After my father’s…

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Writing both prose & poetry

 I’ve been doing a lot of writing lately, and found an interesting pattern developing: I write poetry in the morning and prose at night, often late at night. Trying to reverse the pattern doesn’t work at all. It seems to me that poetry is so closely related to a dream state (Rilke would agree) that when you first wake up, the subconscious is more accessible — the area of the mind that understands symbolically rather…

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Discipline & Distractions in a Poet’s Life

I know a poet who locks herself in a room early every morning for three hours to do her creative work. I’m not sure exactly what she does in there. Is it always composition and revision, strictly working on specific poems, or does it include reading poetry, a little lollygagging at the window, watching the deer eat another crop of her roses while she fingers the dust from the leaves of pot of ivy? Does…

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New Non-Contest Poetry Book Publishers

New additions to the page I maintain on my website listing these publishers: Black Lawrence Press – also creative non-fiction: novels, memoirs, short story collections, biographies, cultural studies, and translations from the German and French. (no reading fee; electronic submission) Press 53 (poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction; query first per guidelines)� Please send me any additions or corrections to the page. I welcome updates and wish to keep the page as current (and growing!) as possible.…

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Interviews

Interesting interview up at Fugue with novelist Anthony Doerr, on the art of being a fiction “alchemist.” Another good interview by Brian Brodeur with poet Sherod Santos. Brodeur’s blog, How a Poem Happens focuses on interviews about the process of writing poems and often on the process of creating a specific poem (included in the interview). I’m thinking about interviews as I conduct several with poets for a couple of journals. An interview can be…

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Gazebo Emergency Move

Chris Potter, Head Moderator at the Alsop Review’s Gazebo asked that we spread the word to Gazebo followers that the site is moving to: http://www.thealsopreview.comPlease register for an account on the new board. We’ll be up and running as soon as we can. You have to register and then wait to be emailed a confirmation code before you can post. Please help spread the word. The reasons are various and administrative, and we were surprised…

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Bloghopping

Some new finds: Adam Deutsch’s blog is called, well, Adam Deutsch. He’s editor at Cooper Dillon Books and blogs news of poets and poetry books. Brian Brodeur has a delightful blog called How A Poem Happens (self-explanatory). Today’s is an interview with one of my favorite poets, Robert Hass, about his poem “The World As Will and Representation.” Blogger, are we done tweaking the program now? You’re almost as bad as Facebook. Every time I…

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