The Writing Path Blog

Uncategorized

Happy 2009 – May it be a year of inspiration

Though according to most working poets, it’s about as likely to have daily poetic inspiration as it is to have lightning strikes each morning in your living room. Or so says former Poet Laureate Ted Kooser in an interview that made me feel reassured about my lack of ideas. He says he sits in his living room every morning to write and “nine days out of ten nothing good comes of it.” Yet he does…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

Self Interviews

Martha Silano has an interview she did with herself up at Blue Positive. To me the most interesting question was what impact the economic crisis has had on her writing. Are you writing more or less? I’m going to try the self-interview later this week. My favorite question of the ones Martha answered, after the economic crisis one: at what age did you decide to be a writer? Martha decided at age 9. So did…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

Poets & Interviews

For those who like to read — and do — interviews with poets, take a look at Robert Lee Brewer’s Poetic Asides. Currently up is an interview with Tom Hunley, poet and publisher of Steel Toe Books. Robert has an eclectic mix of interviews on a variety of topics. Good reading. As I already mentioned, I thoroughly enjoyed a mostly email, but also phone exchange with poet Barbara Crooker for an interview now up at…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

Debuts

Bloghopping is becoming the new television, at least for me. Changing channels in the blogosphere is so much more rewarding than channel surfing the idiot box, despite the proliferation of PBS channels on my cable provider. Take for example the new zine I found, Ourobouros. Its mission and first issue are arresting, especially the reason editors Jo Hemmant and Christine Swint give for the choice of name: “The snake swallowing its tail symbolises infinity; to…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

Is the book finished?

Hello — is there an echo in here? Haven’t we been having this conversation for, oh, say the last 10 years or so? The New York Times has apparently never heard about this until now. I’m sure they said the printed book was finished when someone invented paper, and that wall-scratching thing was … just so-over. Of course the book isn’t finished! It’s morphing, a verb that didn’t even exist 10 years ago when this…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

Got lucky!

No, not that way. I just won a book at the Wompherence! On the last day, the daily drawing came up with my name and I won a book by Susan Rich. It’s her first collection, The Cartographer’s Tongue / Poems of the World; White Pine Press. 2000. Susan writes that it includes several poems written while she was a Peace Corps Volunteer in West Africa and an election official in Bosnia. Also has many…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

Wompo Authors Theatre

Watch a slideshow of gorgeous books by members of the Women in Poetry Listserv at the Wompherence. It’s fascinating — just reading all those titles and seeing the images poets select for book covers — inspiring and makes me want to spend a lot of money. That can’t be bad at the holidays! Other areas of note at the First Annual Festival of Women’s Poetry (aka Wompherence): Interviews and an amazingly large International Section. Hurry!…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

Poets interviewed

I discovered on Sherry Chandler’s blog that The Guardian has an article today about poets Derek Walcott and Seamus Heaney developing a new opera. The article interests me for the candor of the poets, rather than an interest in opera. Though it is fun to see a writer take on that overblown form. Here in San Francisco, we’ve had the splashy premiere of Amy Tan’s “The Bonesetter’s Daughter,” to deliriously enthusiastic review. I’ve been reading…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

Bloghopping + Wompherence

The First Annual Women’s Poetry Festival has launched its fabulous Website, and will open its online conference November 1. Take a stroll around — the venues are already up and filling with exhibits, conversations and news of upcoming events. Hosted by members of the Women’s Poetry Listserv, an 800+ member-strong online poetry discussion group, the Wompherence is shaping up to be full of activities and discussions. They offer a bookstore, a general discussion board, publishers…

Continue reading

Uncategorized

So ready now

For two and half months, I’ve been wearing the Clamshell Brace to protect my spinal fusion following surgery. I feel much better now, but this 4-1/2 pound hunk of plastic and metal and velcro feels rather heavy by evening. I am so ready to be free! Only, apparently, according to my doctor, Not. Have you ever had to wear a cast? When I broke my foot, they just put me in a surgical boot. Bad…

Continue reading