"This work is unlike any other, in its range of rich, conjuring imagery and its dexterity, its smart voice. Carroll-Hackett doesn’t spare us—but doesn’t save us—she draws a blueprint of power and class with her unflinching pivot: matter-of-fact and tender." —Jan Beatty

Archive for the ‘poetry’ Category

100s of Writing and Creativity Prompts!

BeautifulWords

 

 

 

Don’t forget to check out the hundreds of writing and creativity prompts here on the Writing Prompts Page!

Pass it on! The more beauty we bring to this troubled world the better!

https://marycarrollhackett.com/writing-prompts/

Daily Prompt Catch-Up!

11/14/2015

Met up with sweet friends to commemorate the anniversary of my brother’s death. Make art about a difficult anniversary.

11/15/2015

House filled with family, and ghosts. Make art about what haunts you.

11/16/2015

“I once was a child am a child am someone’s child”~Victoria Chang

Make art about feeling like a child.

 

ghost child

Monday Must Read! Jenny Sadre-Orafai: Paper, Cotton, Leather

 

sadre-orafaiMonday Must Read! 

This week meet Jenny Sadre-Orafai, the author of Paper, Cotton, Leather (Press 53) and four chapbooks. Recent poetry has appeared in Tammy, Loose Change, Bear Review, Linebreak, Redivider, Eleven Eleven, Thrush Poetry Journal, PANK, and Rhino. Her prose has appeared in The Los Angeles Review, The Rumpus, The Toast, and South Loop Review. She is co-founding editor of Josephine Quarterly and an Associate Professor of English at Kennesaw State University.

Jenny’s Website!

http://www.jennysadre-orafai.com

Get Jenny’s Book

Paper, Cotton, Leather (Press 53)

http://www.press53.com/bioJennySadreOrafai.html

Read Jenny’s Work Online

Poetry

The Burn I Put” in Bear Review

http://issuu.com/bearreview/docs/bear_review_1.1/1

How Much Gospel” in Loose Change

http://loosechangemagazine.org/jenny-sadre-orafai52/

The Morning of Your 35th Birthday” in Linebreak

https://linebreak.org/poems/the-morning-of-your-35th-birthday/

Karaj” in Thrush

http://www.thrushpoetryjournal.com/may-2014-jenny-sadre-orafai.html

Creative Non-Fiction

Kamehameha The Great” in The Rumpus

http://therumpus.net/2012/05/kamehameha-the-great/

Live Bears “ in The Toast

http://the-toast.net/2014/02/05/live-bears-on-living-in-tourist-towns/

The Prettiest Girls in the World Are Born in Alabama in The Rumpus

http://therumpus.net/2014/01/the-prettiest-girls-in-the-world-are-born-in-alabama/

Hear Jenny read!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VCYioPwKz1I

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZScp7oxC9U

Friday Call for Submissions Love! Posit: A Journal of Literature & Art

Friday Call for Submissions Love! 

Posit: A Journal of Literature & Art 

Posit considers submissions between September 1st and May 31st, via Submittable.

Posit publishes four issues per year of finely crafted contemporary literary and visual art. Due to the large number of excellent submissions we receive, we are currently reading for publication in mid- and late- 2016. We are looking for innovation, aesthetic vision, and accomplished craftsmanship. Our tastes are non-sectarian, with an interest in the experimental. We accept simultaneous submissions, but please notify us immediately if your work is accepted elsewhere.

Posit considers only unpublished written work, and acquires first-time North American rights upon publication. Thereafter, all rights revert to the author, and the work may be reprinted as long as appropriate acknowledgement to Posit is made. No such restrictions apply to visual art submissions.

  • Poetry: 3-6 poems, no line limits, but no epics, please.
  • Fiction and hybrids: 1000 words or less.
  • Visual Art: Please submit six to twelve jpeg images, an inventory list, an artist’s statement and a one-paragraph bio.
  • Film and animation: no longer than 3 minutes, please.

See Posit’s website for complete details.

 

Got Book? Special Thursday Call for Submissions! Main Street Rag

Main Street Rag Poetry Book Award

Deadline: February 1, 2016
Award: $1,200, publication, and contributor copies
Fee: $25

Send between 48 and 84 pages of poetry. No restriction on content style or subject. We’re looking for the best manuscript.

Complete Guidelines here! 

http://03c9c48.netsolhost.com/WordPress/contests/the-main-street-rag-poetry-book-award/

Monday Must Read! Christine Stoddard: The Children of Jackson Ward

christine stoddardThis week meet Christine Stoddard, a Salvadoran-Scottish-American writer and artist. In 2014, Folio Magazine named her one of the media industry’s top 20 visionaries in their 20s for starting Quail Bell Magazine. She also is a Puffin Foundation national emerging artist. She has edited two anthologies for Quail Bell Magazine, in addition to co-authoring Images of America: Richmond Cemeteries and directing a documentary on Edgar Allan Poe.

Currently, she is completing her book, Hispanic and Latino Heritage in Virginia, for The History Press. Christine’s work has appeared in Cosmopolitan, The Huffington Post, The Feminist Wire, So to Speak, The New York Transit Museum, Bustle, Yellow Chair Review, the Poe Museum, local PBS stations, and beyond.

In early 2016, Christine will be participating in Tupelo Press’ 30/30 Project and completing a writing residency at Sundress Academy for the Arts.

Learn more about her at www.wordsmithchristine.com

More from Christine online!

The Children of Jackson Ward, an art project with a social justice perspective. http://www.quailbellmagazine.com/about/the-children-of-jackson-ward-manuscript

YesPoetry

http://yespoetry.com/post/108735306281/photo-poetry-christine-stoddard

Brooklyn Quarterly

http://brooklynquarterly.org/tbq-artist-series-christine-stoddard/

The Poet Time

http://thepoettime.com/

Fourth and Sycamore

http://fourthandsycamore.com/2015/09/14/my-nightingale-a-poem-by-christine-stoddard/

 

Video

The Persistence of Poe

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_eKwn5D8Vg

Everyday Seeing (from The Children of Jackson Ward)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRRWdDriov4

Nine Flights

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SWVgBHla2Bk

Chalk Poetry

https://vimeo.com/21420381

Before Morning Sobers

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OtFJu_XHvhI

Monday Must Read! Jennifer K. Sweeney: Little Spells

Monday Must Read! 

jennifer sweeneyThis week, meet Jennifer K. Sweeney, the author of three poetry collections: Little Spells, newly released from New Issues Press, How to Live on Bread and Music, which received the James Laughlin Award, the Perugia Press Prize and a nomination for the Poets’ Prize, and Salt Memory. She is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize, a grant from the San Francisco Arts Commission, a Hedgebrook residency, the Elinor Benedict Poetry Award from Passages North and two Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg awards. Recent poems have appeared in Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day series, American Poetry Review, Cimarron Review, Linebreak, Mid-American Review, New American Writing, Pleiades, and Verse Daily.

Jennifer’s Website:

http://www.jenniferksweeney.com/

Get Jennifer’s Beautiful Books!

Little Spells

http://www.wmich.edu/newissues/titles/sweeney-littlespells.html


How to Live on Bread and Music

http://www.perugiapress.com/books/how-to-live-on-bread-and-music/

 

Read more of Jennifer’s work online!

Academy of American Poets

https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/jennifer-k-sweeney

The Noe Valley Voice

http://www.noevalleyvoice.com/2010/July-August/OVJS.htm

Connotation Press

http://www.connotationpress.com/featured-guest-editor/may-2010/427-jennifer-k-sweeney-poetry

Linebreak

https://linebreak.org/poems/the-somnambulist/

Hear Jennifer read!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=csxTf4xmK8k

Interviews

http://www.mlive.com/entertainment/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2011/01/poet_jennifer_k_sweeney_discus.html

At Donna Vorreyer’s Fill in the Blanks

https://djvorreyer.wordpress.com/2015/08/10/fill-in-the-blanks-with-jennifer-k-sweeney/

http://tinderboxeditions.blogspot.com/2015/07/book-interview-little-spells-by.html

 

Happy Reading!

xo

Mary

Special Sunday Call for Submissions! SubTerrain

 

SubTerrain

Issue #73 (Spring) – Theme: “SECRETS”

Deadline: February 15, 2016 (postmarked—can also submit online via Submittable. See their website for more info).

Poetry, fiction, nonfiction exploring the idea of secrecy. Personal, corporate, governmental, military—secrecy is used to cement personal relationships, to guarantee state security, to harbour knowledge. Some consider secrecy one of the main sources of human conflict. “We intend to open the doors on the subTerrain confessional.”

For submission instructions, see Writer’s Guidelines: www.subterrain.ca

 

Sometimes the Prompt Reaches Out and…Touches You ;-) When You Least Expect It

Daily Prompt 

“The dead have stories to tell the living. about relinquishing control, about the sweet sweet letting go….”–from a poem I just drafted. 🙂

Make art about the thinning of the veil, communing with the dead.

Thinning Veil-300

How Poetry and Peter Makuck Saved My Life

When I was fourteen, my mama drove us in her old battered Pontiac station wagon the dozen miles from where we lived out in the trailer park into town to East Carolina’s campus on a crisp fall Tuesday night. We parked behind the student union, and Mama looked over to where I sat with a sheaf of wrinkled paper clenched in my hands, poems, typewritten on my daddy’s manual typewriter, my teenage angst and effort click-clacking late into the night, transcribed from the bits and pieces in my journals, or scratched on to napkins, or whatever paper I had stuffed in the pockets of my Levis that day.

I was a difficult child, and an even more difficult teenager, mouthy and hungry for things I had no clue about or could even name, obstinate and wild, and angry and defiant, and too easily bored, a particular trait that more often than not led me into self-destructive, even dangerous attempts to a keep myself entertained, and to do something–anything–with the wild demanding thirst–for something–anything–that boiled up and through me all the time.

The only times I felt still, or filled, or not terrified I was gonna miss something, was in the woods, or when I was writing.

Mama got that. So she took me to campus so I could go to a gathering called the Poetry Forum, an open to the public workshop hosted and facilitated for years by the tender, funny, wise, and wise-cracking poet Peter Makuck. I stared down at the papers in my hands, words blurring, and then Mama patted my hand–Mama was a patter of the highest order!–and said, “I’ll be right here.”

So I got out and climbed the steps behind the student union, and walked into my very first workshop. Peter welcomed me like any of the “grown-ups” and 🙂 the readers gathered round that table handed me my fourteen-year-old behind on a platter with the specificity and directness and detail of the critiques they made of my poems that night. I was stunned. But no way was I gonna let them see me cry 🙂 So when the meeting broke up, I said, “Thank y’all,” and headed down the hall, out to where Mama sat in the car (now for two hours), reading one of the thousands of books she read by the weak yellow overhead light in the car. I sniffled back tears, nearing the door, when I heard a voice behind me. “Wait!”

I turned to see Peter trotting down the hall toward me, smiling gently, as he asked, “You okay?”

I nodded. He reached out and patted my arm, saying. “Well, I just wanted to tell you that I think you’re very brave, to come in here so young. And I wanted to say, Don’t quit writing. Never quit writing. You have talent. So yeah, just that. Don’t quit.”

I couldn’t say anything, too afraid I’d cry, so I just nodded. He headed back down the hall, and I walked out into the dark toward my waiting patient Mama.

Seventeen years later, after a decade of believing the story the world told me–that I needed a “real” job, that writing was a childish dream I needed to give up–I was terrified, but still filled with that hunger for things I couldn’t name–desperately so–I pulled up the website for the English Department at ECU, just beginning to harbor hopes of going back to school. What was I thinking? I had three kids, poverty-level income, two failed marriages rife with alcoholism and now single-parenthood defining my twenties. Maybe the naysayers were right; maybe I needed to just grow up.

But then, on the faculty page, I saw Peter’s face. “Don’t quit. Never quit.”

And I saw my mama’s face in that car that night, waiting patiently in that watery parking lot light, while her troubled teenage daughter chased after poetry in the long uncertain dark.

Gratitude. Even after a life now for more than twenty years where words are my work, they fail me here. Can’t even begin to articulate the gratitude.

Never ever ever underestimate the power your kindness can have in a person’s life, nor how far-reaching and long-lasting that kindness can be ❤

_______________________________________________

Peter’s website: http://www.makuck.com/site/

Peter Makuck

Peter Makuck

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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