"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

Posts tagged ‘writing’

Friday Call for Submissions Love! Kentucky Review: Good Words & Charity

Friday Call for Submissions Love!

Kentucky Review

About

All profits of Kentucky Review, including sales of magazine issues and personal donations, are given to charity: Action Against Hunger: http://www.actionagainsthunger.org.

We are proud to be part of FutureCycle Press’s Good Works Projects.

Kentucky Review publishes poetry and flash fiction online and in print. Works accepted for publication appear permanently on this website, and each year’s poems are assembled into a print edition.

You won’t find any lofty mission statements here. We simply want to publish work we consider worthy. We hope you will find an eclectic mix of writing in these pages. We are always open to submissions. No matter where you live in this world, you are welcome to send English-language poetry and flash fiction. See the Submit page for details on how to send your work to us.”

Guidelines

Kentucky Review reads submissions year round and considers poems and flash fiction of all styles and subjects, except pornography. Works accepted for publication appear permanently on this website, and each year’s poems are assembled into a print edition. For previously unpublished work, we acquire First North American rights. After publication in the printed issue, all rights revert to authors. We ask only for an acknowledgment if you reprint work that appeared first inKentucky Review.

Please send work you are proud of, carefully crafted and polished.

We consider simultaneous submissions provided that you notify us immediately if any poems from your submission are accepted elsewhere.

Previously published work is considered only if it has not appeared online and in print within the past 10 years. Please indicate where and when the work was published.

Submit no more than six poems or three works of flash fiction (max 1000 words per story). Please wait until we have responded before submitting again.

Submit all work (poems, stories, or videos) via our online system only. Please note that we do not consider email or snail-mail submissions. We use the Submittable online system (click the Submit button on this page). Files submitted must be in one of the following file formats: Word (DOC or DOCX), WordPerfect (WPD), Rich Text Format (RTF), Open Office (ODT), or Portable Document Format (PDF). Submittable accounts are free, and you can create an account during the submission process, or you can also log in to your current account.”

Kentucky Review’s full detailed guidelines here: http://www.kentuckyreview.org/index.php/itsubmit

 

Monday Must Read! Diane Lockward, The Crafty Poet, and Temptation by Water

diane_lockwardThis week, meet Diane Lockward, author of The Crafty Poet: A Portable Workshop (Wind Publications, 2013) and three poetry books, most recently Temptation by Water. Her previous books are What Feeds Us, which received the 2006 Quentin R. Howard Poetry Prize, and Eve’s Red Dress. A new poetry collection, The Uneaten Carrots of Atonement, is scheduled for publication in 2015. She is also the author of two chapbooks, Against Perfection and Greatest Hits: 1997-2010. Her poems have been included in such anthologies as Poetry Daily: 360 Poems from the World’s Most Popular Poetry Website and Garrison Keillor’s Good Poems for Hard Times, and in such journals as Harvard Review, Southern Poetry Review, and Prairie Schooner. Her work has also been featured on Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, Gwarlingo, and The Writer’s Almanac. She is the Poet Laureate of West Caldwell, New Jersey, where she runs two annual poetry events: The West Caldwell Poetry Festival and Girl Talk. She publishes a free monthly e-mail Poetry Newsletter and is happy to have new subscribers.

She blogs at Blogalicious, http://www.dianelockward.blogspot, and keeps a website at www.dianelockward.com.

Crafty Link to Amazon:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Crafty-Poet-Portable-Workshop/dp/193613862X%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJBDF5XQBATGDX4VQ%26tag%3Dspea06-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3D193613862X

For information about The Crafty Poet: A Portable Workshop

http://www.dianelockward.blogspot.com/p/the-crafty-poet-portable-workshop.html

Description: The Crafty Poet: A Portable Workshop is a poetry tutorial to inform and inspire poets. It contains model poems with prompts, writing tips, and interviews contributed by fifty-six poets, including thirteen former and current state Poets Laureate. An additional forty-five poets contributed sample poems. Geared for experienced poets and aspiring poets, this book is ideal for individual use at home or group use in the classroom or workshop.

Review by Lynn Domina

http://lynndomina.com/?p=162

Review by Christine Veladota

http://maybesopoetry.com/2014/12/20/the-crafty-poet-a-portable-workshop-by-diane-lockward/

Comments from readers:

I LOVE the poet interviews sprinkled in with the craft tips. These alone are worth the price of the book. I highly, highly recommend it to any poet writing today. It brings forth much fruit! Do go and secure a copy immediately. (C.A. LaRue)

Here is a must for teachers of poetry. . . a feast of poems and instructions. (Grace Cavalieri)

Sample Bonus Prompt

http://adelekenny.blogspot.com/2013/10/prompt-166-word-chain-poem-by-guest.html

Sample Prompt with model poem

http://adelekenny.blogspot.com/2014/11/prompt-210-loveliness-of-words-by-guest.html

Happy Reading—and Writing!

xo

Mary

 

Friday Call for Submissions Bonus :-) Jellyfish Highway: Postindustrial Bioluminescence

 

Bonus Call for Submissions 🙂

Because I love that they want “postindustrial bioluminescence” 🙂

Jellyfish Highway is postindustrial bioluminescence, we’re abyssal gigantism. We are a press for work that floats and undulates and lingers and stings, literature that shines from the deepest blue.

We are on Twitter at @JHighwayPress. We will be announcing our first title soon. We are everywhere. We want all of your mind.

We want full-length books of fiction (novels, collections), poetry, or nonfiction. Also, we are looking for chapbook-like works to publish on an indeterminate schedule as ebooks and such.

Website: http://www.jellyfishhighway.com/

Submissions: http://www.jellyfishhighway.com/submissions/

Friday Call for Submissions Love! Rhino: General Reading Period

Friday Call for Submissions Love!

Rhino

About

The Poetry Forum/RHINO Poetry is a non-profit literary organization, primarily devoted to the publication of RHINO Poetry, an annual high-quality print journal featuring well-crafted, diverse poetry, flash fiction, and translations. While remaining committed to our print journal, beginning with the 2014 issue, all poems will be placed online throughout the year. We also feature audio versions of our poems.

RHINO Poetry occupies a niche somewhere between academia and the emerging poetry scene – devoted to creative work that tells stories, provokes thought, and pushes the boundaries in form and feeling – while connecting with our readers and audience.

We invite traditional or experimental work reflecting passion, originality, artistic conviction, and a love affair with language.  We encourage emerging and established writers throughout the United States and around the world. Submissions are read by multiple editors with various tastes, all looking for quality work. Sometimes we call ourselves “eclectic” in the best sense of the word. We are proud of the content and variety of each issue we publish.

Guidelines

We are reading for general submissions: April 1 – August 31.

Founders’ Prize submissions are accepted September 1 – October 31. Reading Fee: $10

We accept one submission per each reading period.

We strongly prefer online submissions.

Our diverse group of editors looks for the very best in contemporary writing, and we have created a dynamic process of soliciting and reading new work by local, national, and international writers. We read for previously unpublished poems, translations, and flash-fiction.

We welcome all styles of poems, and look for work which is well-crafted, reflects passion, originality, engagement with contemporary culture, and a love affair with language. All entries considered for the Editors’ Prize.

Our basic editorial principle, however, is unwavering—we’re looking to publish the best work we can find.”

Rhino’s full detailed guidelines here: http://rhinopoetry.org/submit/guidelines/

Monday Must Read! Melissa Eleftherion, Pigtail Duty

melissa eletherionThis week, meet Melissa Eleftherion, the author of huminsect (dancing girl press, 2013), prism maps (dusie kollektiv, 2014), Pigtail Duty (dancing girl press, 2015), and several other chapbooks and fragments. Melissa grew up in Brooklyn.

Recent work appears or is forthcoming in Bone Bouquet, Bukowski Erasure Poetry Anthology, Delirious Hem, Dusie, Entropy, Finery, Manifesting the Female Epic, Mom Egg Review, Open Letters Monthly, Poet as Radio, So to Speak, & TRUCK.

She works as a librarian with Mendocino County Libraries, and created, developed, and currently manages the Poetry Center Chapbook Exchange.

Melissa’s website: www.apoetlibrarian.wordpress.com

Follow Melissa on Twitter! @apoetlibrarian

Where to find Melissa’s books:

Pigtail Duty

http://dulcetshop.myshopify.com/collections/frontpage/products/pigtail-duty-melissa-eleftherion

Huminsect

https://dulcetshop.myshopify.com/products/huminsect-melissa-eleftherion

 

Check out this very cool project!

Poetry Center Chapbook Exchange: http://poetrychapbooks.omeka.net/

 

Happy Reading!

xo

Mary

Friday Call for Submissions Love! Profane, A Print and Audio Journal

Friday Call for Submissions Love! 

Profane

About 

Profane is an annual print and audio journal featuring an eclectic mix of poetry, creative non-fiction, and fiction where they also record every poem and piece of prose they publish in the author’s own voice. We publish in the winter.

“We’re keen on celebrating writers who present us with challenging material. Writing that’s surprising or difficult, emotionally and/or intellectually, in even small, subtle ways, has the potential to leave readers different as a result. To possess that potential is our definition of “good writing.” And ultimately, good writing, whatever form it takes, is what we publish.”

Guidelines

Profane reads submissions year round through our submissions manager, and we read for free from March to August. Now open for submissions.

We don’t accept work that has been printed elsewhere. We do accept simultaneous submissions, but ask that you alert us promptly should your work be accepted in another journal.

One of the things that makes our journal unique is the focus we place on audio. All submissions should be text only. However, if we accept your work, we’ll record you reading your work aloud, and briefly interview you about it and your writing at large (5 to 10 minutes). This will be conducted in our studio over the phone, at your convenience.

Despite the audio feature, we only accept work that stands up to scrutiny on the page. We feel the audio adds texture to our journal, and that it makes for an even more exciting product for our contributors and readers to share. It also makes it easier to ingest and digest an entire issue in the midst of hectic schedules.

It may be helpful to you, before submitting, to check out our previous issues (back digital issues are free).

We acquire only first North American printing rights, and all other rights stay with the author.

We strive to have a quick turnaround time, responding inside a month, often much quicker.

While we cannot offer monetary payment at this time, all contributors will receive a contributor’s copy of the print edition, the audio edition, and the digital edition.

Website

http://www.profanejournal.com/

Monday Must Read! Jessica Goodfellow, Mendeleev’s Mandala

Monday Must Read!

16757_10152358444066238_732481883340469962_nThis week, meet Jessica Goodfellow, author of Mendeleev’s Mandala (Mayapple Press, 2015) and The Insomniac’s Weather Report (Isobar Press, 2014).

Her chapbook, A Pilgrim’s Guide to Chaos in the Heartland, won the 2006 Concrete Wolf Chapbook Competition.

Her work has appeared in Best New Poets, Verse Daily, and NPR’s The Writer’s Almanac. Jessica received the Chad Walsh Poetry Prize from the Beloit Poetry Journal, as well as the Linda Julian Essay Award and the Sue Lile Inman Fiction Prize, both from the Emrys Foundation. Her work was made into a short film by Motionpoems (May 2015) and screened at the Minneapolis/St Paul International Film Festival and AWP 2015. Jessica has graduate degrees from Caltech and the University of New England. She lives and works in Japan.

Praise for Jessica Goodfellow “Here is a poet who has boldly refused to abide to the expectations of genre—but instead, pushes language and form as a means of asking the most urgent questions. The result is a courageous and kaleidoscopic, at times tender and vulnerable, exploration of motherhood and family—set against the backdrops of science, history, religion, myths, and mathematics. When a poet embarks on a book as myriad and borderless as this one, we are gifted the rare chance to stand at the threshold of a formidable human storm. And from here, it is clear that Goodfellow’s Mendeleev’s Mandala is an electric book. But its lines are not limited to lightning. They move more like thunder, startling, resonant, and suddenly everywhere in the mind at once. –Ocean Vuong, author of Night Sky With Exit Wounds

Jessica Goodfellow has a joyous intelligence and electric tongue. Reading this book a first time, my only regret was that I couldn’t read it a second first time. But then I read it a first second time and a first third. You see what I’m doing? I’m reading this book over and over, without ever completely taking it in. I think you will too. And like me, want only one thing from Jessica Goodfellow – more. – Bob Hicok

Jessica’s website: http://www.jessicagoodfellow.com/

Links to some poems from Mendeleev’s Mandala: http://www.diodepoetry.com/v6n2/content/goodfellow_j.html http://www.versedaily.org/2007/roadtrip.shtml http://www.thrushpoetryjournal.com/march-2012-jessica-goodfellow.html

Happy Reading!

xo

Mary

Friday Call for Submissions Love! Qu: A Contemporary Literary Magazine

If Monday’s about Must Reads 🙂 then Friday needs some Love too!

So I’ll be posting a new Call for Submissions each week! Send that beautiful work out!

Qu: A Contemporary Literary Magazine

Queens University of Charlotte

Now open for submissions, until August 31st 2015!

Payment Upon Publication: $100 per prose piece, $50 per poem

Prose submissions (fiction, essays, script excerpts) should be a maximum of 8000 words. Poetry submissions may include up to 3 poems.

Authors retain all rights and copyright to their works. Qu requests one-time, non-exclusive rights to publish your work.

http://www.qulitmag.com/

Monday Must Read! Karen Paul-Holmes, Untying the Knot

Another poetry house concert to tell you about from this fabulous weekend, but in the spirit of this whole adventure of getting more poetry out into the world, I’m going to start a lil sumpin-sumpin here weekly, promoting other contemporary poets out there making the world beautiful with their words!

I’m gonna post links etc for fabulous poets out there in the world right now, a post I’m calling

Monday Must Read!

Karen Headshot May1 9 08 033This week, meet Karen Paul-Holmes, author of Untying the Knot, from Aldrich Press, a memoir in poetry, telling the story of the end of long marriage and the healing that follows.

Tom Lux says this lovely book is written with “grace, humor and self-awareness and without a dollop of self-pity,” and William Wright says the book “possesses the potential to teach us ways to navigate and ultimately transcend the difficulties of divorce and the feelings of loss and grief such division engenders.”

Karen, in support of other writers, also hosts a critique group in Atlanta and a Writers’ Night Out in the Blue Ridge Mountains. You can see more about Karen and Untying the Knot at the following links

Untying the Knot on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/untying

Karen Paul-Holmes at P&W: http://www.pw.org/content/karen_holmes

Four Poems from Karen at The Dead Mule: http://www.deadmule.com/poetry/karen-paul-holmes-four-poems/

Untying the Knot on Extract(s): http://dailydoseoflit.com/2015/02/27/excerpt-karen-paul-holmes/

Happy Reading!

xo

Mary

 

 

First Interstellar Poetry House Concert Rocks! (Or Hey—You See That $20 Bill Over There On The Ground?)

Yesterday we had the first house concert reading in Williamsburg, Virginia. It was a blast! 🙂 My wonderful hosts, MeLaina and Frank (and Maddie and LeiLani and Lorenzo 🙂 ) had prepped everything, and I’m so grateful to them for opening their home and their hearts to me and this new adventure.

DSCN4454

the beautiful poet and my host MeLaina Ramos

I was sooo nervous. Excited. But nervous. In a way that’s different than before other experiences. I’ve given readings. Not tons and tons, but a respectable number, and I’m always a little pace-y, a little twitchy. But this was different. More.

1

Maybe because it was so unknown. Maybe it’s because I’ve been blabbing and blogging this idea, this new-again salon, this house concert reading model, and so if it fell apart around me, it was gonna be in a big ol’ public way. 🙂 But yeah, I’ve had that happen before, time and again over my life—set off on some crazy idea I have only to have the timing or the powers that be or the universe slam a big old brick wall down in front of me to run face-first into in the same grand tradition from my childhood of that coyote chasing that roadrunner.

Wile E Coyote hits rock bottom

 

cj124

But I really think a large part of the nervousness was how badly I want this to work, not just for me, but for poetry and poets in general. I don’t want to feel at the mercy of someone or something else when it comes to controlling my creative life or defining my success. And in ways that matter to me more than I can express, I don’t want my students to feel that kind of helplessness. I want them to stay excited about the work and the business of being an artist. I want them feel empowered and hopeful about sharing their work with the world.

But to do that, I have to be honest, with myself, and with them, about the state of being a poet these days. And we have to be honest about why we’re doing this in the first place:

I want to be read.

Reading8_0

I’ve heard all kinds of reasons artists give for making their art, for living the writer’s life. And I’m not trying in any way to diminish what any writer says he or she wants from the creative life they’re living or making. But I would challenge any writer to deny that at the heart of what we do burns the desire to be read.

And if we want to be read, we have to make art, but we also have to sell art. We have to be business savvy.

business-needs-more-art1We have to learn to be as creative and fearless in the getting-art-out-there part as we are in getting the words on the page.

I tell my students a story I heard years ago, not even sure where I heard it now, about a study done by a psychology department on luck. I would cite the source if I could remember it, but it went something like this: A large group of test subjects were asked if they believed in luck, if they thought they were lucky or not. The group was split between those who did believe in luck, and a smaller break out between whose who didn’t believe they personally were lucky, and those who didn’t believe in luck at all. Belief parameters established, they walked the test subjects through an area in which they had planted ten, twenty, and fifty dollar bills. At a rate of more than eight to one (those are the numbers I remember from my first hearing anyway….), the people who believed they were lucky spotted the planted money.

photo-2

Where this study actually took place, or when, or whether the numbers are right or not (I can’t even recall the teacher who told it to me), the point, I believe, is how much our perception feeds and manifests our passions into reality. What we call luck, I believe, is something we have way more control over than we generally believe, particularly if we’re willing to take risks and get creative, in both how we define our success and how we pursue it—and more importantly, I think, in how we perceive ourselves.

Yes, I’m an artist. But I also have to be a business person, in the business of promoting my art, both my own individually, and that of others in my field. In my case, that means writers. For me personally, it especially means promoting poetry. Or what many call the Po-Biz.

What is the Po-Biz? It is networking, submitting, editing; revising, getting rejected, submitting again, doing anything you need to do to get your poems out into the hands of the readers.

You know, in journals, online, at conferences. Out there. In the world. In the poetry world.

poet

Which we’ve been told repeatedly is dead.

So maybe it’s time to rethink what this Po-Biz is.

“In a crisis, creativity is more important than ever,” says Jerry Wind, a marketing expert and professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. “Companies fail when they stagnate and become complacent.”

And if we’re gauging on book sales, poetry is arguably in crisis. Maybe it’s time to pay a little more attention to Biz part of all this.

Poetry publishers do the best they can on their end, most of them taking on the whole task as a labor of love, putting their own resources and energy into the creation of the very books we as writers covet having with our names on the front. So how are we,  as individual artists, doing our part?

matisse

I love what Michael La Ronn says about this in his blog The Business of Poetry,“In the digital age, each of us is responsible for our own destiny. A successful career means approaching the industry like an entrepreneur—or a poetrypreneur, if you will. The poetrypreneur lives at the intersection between art and commerce.”

Commerce—that’s the part we don’t want to think, or talk about. But we have to, don’t we?

We live in a culture of commodification, and as much as we sooooo don’t want to think of or talk about our beloved poetry as a commodity, we do, in the face of this crisis, have to think and talk about value.

Not just the intrinsic value we know poetry to have, both for the individual and the culture as a whole, the beauty and solace it can bring to our lives, but value in the commerce-based culture in which we’re creating it.

How are we, as the makers, defining that value? Or are we letting others define it for us, while we stand by and mourn their (whoever they are—publishers, critics…) decisions?

And how do we bring what we do back into a place where it’s valued in our culture?

No one’s writing a never-ending eulogy for indie music; so why poetry? I think it has to do, at least partly, with the message we ourselves are sending.

Musicians don’t play only for other musicians. Nor do painters or photographers or illustrators only promote their work to other visual artists.

terryetherton_galleryshow cdconcert3

Our brothers and sisters in the other areas of the arts are out in the world, not just the arts world, but the world at large. They’re out there getting their hustle on, chasing down commissions and gigs, and more, for the most part—at least way more often than we are–they’re negotiating payment. They expect to be paid. Sure, everyone starts out paying some dues and rolling some freebies for exposure, but as the hard work and the training and the artistic maturity progresses, artists in other disciplines do something that I don’t think we, as poets, always do:

They send a clear message that the work they do has value.

Even buskers throw open the guitar case for monetary donations, sending that same message: If you like what I do, here’s how you express your appreciation for its value.

http://www.ashevillestreetmusic.com/  Carolina Catskins with Washboard Sadie busking Asheville Street Music  Asheville, NC Check out their video here! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0mxherHpxo

http://www.ashevillestreetmusic.com/
Carolina Catskins with Washboard Sadie busking Asheville Street Music
Asheville, NC
Check out their video here! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0mxherHpxo

One of the best discussions I’ve seen about artists taking responsibility and control of defining the value of what we do is Molly Priesmeyer’s article for the StarTribune from October 2014, its straight-forward title exactly embodying one of the central challenges I think we face: “Artists: Quit Givng Your Work Away For Free.”

She writes, and I agree, that “artists have a real role in how they define the value of their own work. Years ago, there was a magazine here in town that claimed the main “payment” for its writers was prestige and exposure. Meanwhile, the magazine sold the other side of those written “prestige” pages for big ad dollars. Someone was making money, and it certainly wasn’t the writers. The new writers may have longed for the exposure, but by donating work to a for-profit magazine, they only served to devalue the work of all writers everywhere.”

She goes on  to conclude that “by continuing to give it away for virtually free, we only serve to give more value to the things that don’t matter. And we help reinforce the wrongheaded idea that art and creativity are hobbies, not something that has real value to our communities.”

Yes, not everything can be commodified. And yes, we don’t go into poetry for the money. But we do, as writers, complain a lot about the fact that it isn’t valued in the larger market, without, I believe, thinking through and getting really honest about what that word value really means in all its permutations.

The word 'Worth' highlighted in green, under the heading 'Value'

Yesterday’s first poetry house concert embodied all my own personal beliefs of the value of poetry as a whole.

Shared emotional communication of the kind only poetry can do.

Community. Celebration. Conversation. And real-by-gawd-book-buying Readers.

In a perfect Mother’s Day weekend atmosphere of celebration, complete with my host’s beautiful babies scampering through the flowers and snitching peanut butter cookies from the refreshment table, around twenty people came together among the brilliant blaze of azalea and rhododendron to get this crazy tour started.

Some of the guests I knew, former students. Several brought their own moms, an added delight to an already beautiful day. Others were friends of my host, and neighbors, and coworkers, new friends to me now, and new or back-again readers of contemporary poetry.

Each attendee made a donation as they entered MeLaina’s gorgeous Birdhouse back yard, willing and happy they told me over the day, to support a local artist, to have the experience of sharing that time and space together.

photo12

We shared food, time, such good talk, and poetry, not just the work I read, but in the one on one conversations after, as I inscribed twenty copies of The Night I Heard Everything, I heard stories of the poetry and poets they remembered from childhood, the memories of middle school teachers who read poetry to their classes.  One beautiful elder told me in the softest voice about the reading of Sonnets From the Portuguese 43 at her wedding sixty years ago.

sonnetsfromtheportuguese

Leah, a bubbly middle school teacher, told me how she had gone to readings while she was in college, and how much she missed gatherings like the laughter-filled crowd we stood in at that moment. She made me promise that if I had another book come out, I’d come back and do it all again.

Ain’t gonna lie 🙂 If you know what a moosh I am, I couldn’t anyway. I got a little weepy signing some of those books, so grateful for their generosity, so grateful for the moment, so grateful for poetry being in my life.

Fifteen copies of the book accompanied the day’s donations. Another five or so people who came had already bought copies of the book online and brought those copies with them for me to sign.

Twenty new readers 🙂

And I made a couple hundred dollars. Um, on poetry 🙂

And given the questions I was asked about what other poets I love and would suggest, perhaps one of the benefits of this was also a new group of people who before might not have checked out the poetry shelves at a bookstore, but who now just might.

poetry shelves

The readers are out there. But we have to change how we find them and put poetry directly into their hands.

One of the moments that reassured me that this crazy idea just might fly, happened when one of the people there at the reading, a beautiful young woman, one of my alums with a growing body of publications herself, talked to me about maybe beginning to put her own first book together. I told her I’d help her any way I can. She glanced around where we sat at the people laughing and talking, each of them holding a copy of my new book in their hands, and she said, “If I get a book, maybe I could do this kind of reading too?”

I grinned, feeling my heart fill up, and patted her hand, saying, “Yep, sure could, couldn’t you?”

So…how’d the first poetry house concert work out?

After all these years of elbowing my students about that proverbial $20 on the ground they might be missing, of telling them not to be afraid to create their own opportunities, to promote their passions, to dare to trust their art and their hearts, I’d say it all turned out just as wonderful as I had hoped 🙂

Can’t wait for the next one! May 23rd, Raleigh, NC 🙂 Have poetry! Will travel!

BookTour-2-web (1)

Love and good words, y’all ❤

Mary

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Links to Cool People and Reads Mentioned Here ❤

MeLaina Ramos rockin over at PostPartum Poet: https://postpartumpoet.wordpress.com/2015/05/01/staying-afloat/?fb_action_ids=10100624553890867&fb_action_types=news.publishes&fb_ref=pub-standard

http://www.michaellaronn.com/business-poet-future-poetry-part

http://blog.startribune.com/artists-quit-giving-away-your-work-for-free/279832462/

http://gapingvoid.com/what-is-the-roi-of-art-in-business/

 

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