Showing posts with label publishers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publishers. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 November 2012

Publication Pointer: The Next Big Thing

Some days ago, Juliet Wilson, known to most of us as Crafty Green Poet, invited me to take part in a blog meme called The Next Big Thing.

Juliet asked me if I would answer some set questions about an upcoming or recent publication. She also asked me to tag five more writers, the idea being that each of these would provide their answers to the same questions by the following week. They would also recommend five more writers themselves. Consequently The Next Big Thing would continue to grow and evolve.

Before I proceed to write about my chapbook, The Holy Place, I would like to add what a huge influence Juliet has been to me, as she has to so many others on the Blogosphere. Her poetry in Unthinkable Skies (Calder Wood Press) is both beautiful and challenging. Her blog posts on ethical and environmental issues continue to broaden my horizons on subjects as diverse as Scotland, light bulbs, recycling, and animals in captivity. I always enjoy reading about Juliet's bird-watching excursions and about her craft-making activities. Juliet's Haiku are plentiful and exquisite. And all this in addition to the part played by her long-eared friends, the rabbits, who will star in her forthcoming novel. Do take a moment to read Juliet's answers for The Next Big Thing: you will find them here.

And now for the questions Juliet has posed for me ...

* What is the title of your new book?
My new publication, co-authored with John Dotson from the USA, is called 'The Holy Place' after John's opening poem.



* Where did the idea for the book come from?
I was beginning to think about chapbook or pamphlet publication when Peter Thabit Jones, publisher of The Seventh Quarry Press in Swansea, invited me to share a chapbook with John in the Poet to Poet series. I had had about 100 poems published in small press magazines by that time. I had also won a few poetry prizes and had greatly enjoyed attending creative writing classes.
* What genre does your book fall under?
 The Holy Place is a poetry collection.
* What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition? 
Now, this is a tricky question on two counts ...
  • Firstly, because I am not a great movie person or film buff, and consequently I have very few favourite movie stars to call upon. 
  • Secondly, because the chapbook is made up of individual poems on different topics. 
However, I have often visualised the characters in my poems in the landscapes (real, conjectured or imagined) in which I have placed them. I remember my husband, David, going to see Lloyd Webber's 'Cats' on Broadway many years ago. He came back and told me all about the experience. I can just about imagine a short feline movie sequence relating to my poem, 'Monte Testaccio: Mound of Potsherds', in which my (imaginary) cats, Antony and Cleopatra, jump out of the page and on to a stage-set in Rome. I would certainly enjoy designing the pyramid backdrop. If it was to be a live show, I suppose I might consider creating an authentic aroma of Roman fish sauce. But then again, this might not be such a good idea! I wonder whether members of the feral cat colony around Monte Testaccio would come forward for audition ...

* Will your book be self published or published by an agency?
The Holy Place was published in 2012 by Peter Thabit Jones of The Seventh Quarry Press (Swansea), in conjunction with Stanley H. Barkan of Cross-Cultural Communications (New York). I had always hoped (or dreamed) that my first collection would not be a self-published volume. I felt that I needed the endorsement of a publisher as I took this initial step into the world of poetry collections. I should add, of course, that I knew Peter Thabit Jones from his excellent classes. I did not have the opportunity of meeting Stanley until Swansea's First International Poetry Festival in 2011.
* How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
My poems had already been written by the time Peter approached me after a reading by Tino Villenueva in 5 Cwmdonkin Drive, the Dylan Thomas Birth Place in Swansea. Most of these had been published either here in the UK or in Romania or in the USA. However, it took me a surprisingly long time to select the right poems for my half of the chapbook. Gradually a sequence began to emerge, and I became pretty sure that most of my choices seemed to fit and complement the whole of my half. John and I worked pretty independently, although we were in communication by email. I met John for the first time at the 2011 festival mentioned above.

* What other books would you compare The Holy Place to within the genre?   
There are two answers to this, and this is the first. The second is incorporated into my answer to the next question.
The Holy Place is the fifth in a series of commissioned poetry chapbooks. Consequently it fits with the others in the sequence. The third chapbook was by Maria Mazziotti Gillan and Aeronwy Thomas (1943-2009), daughter of Dylan. These Poet to Poet chapbooks pair a British poet with one from elsewhere. The aim of the series is 'to promote The Seventh Quarry beyond the magazine and to continue its international focus, supported by Cross-Cultural Communications, New York.'
 
This is the list to date of Poet to Poet chapbooks to date ...

SERIES EDITORS: PETER THABIT JONES AND STANLEY H. BARKAN


Poet to Poet #1: Bridging the Waters: Swansea to Sag Harbor
by Vince Clemente and Peter Thabit Jones. Price: £3.50/$10. Published 2008. 

Poet to Poet #2: First and Last Things
by J.C. Evans and Annabelle Moseley. Price: £3.50/$10. Published 2009. 

Poet to Poet #3: Nightwatch
by Aeronwy Thomas and Maria Mazziotti Gillan. Price: £3.50/$10. Published 2010.
 
Poet to Poet #4: Poems East Coast/West Coast
by Stanley H. Barkan and Carolyn Mary Kleefeld. Price: £3.50/$10. Published 2010.

Poet to Poet #5: The Holy Place
by John Dotson and Caroline Gill. Price: 3.50/$10. Published 2012. Please email me (click here and find email on left) or leave a note in the Comments section below if you would like to buy a copy. £3.50 incl. p&p for UK orders.

Poet to Poet #6
by Sultan Catto and Jean Salkilld - forthcoming

* Who or what inspired you to write this book?
I am really only speaking for my half of the chapbook here, although it is important to point out that John and I share a love for the natural world in all its form, fluidity and diversity.

Perhaps I can address the 'who' first of all, and the first answer here has to be 'my parents'. My father, Timothy Dudley-Smith, inherited a love of poetry from his father, and took delight in sharing that love with his family. My father is well known for his hymn texts, and I feel we share something of a passion for form in its rich tapestry of guises. My mother was an advocate of our local library when we were growing up. Very early on, she took out a child's version of Homer's Odyssey. I was entranced by the story, the imagery, the characters and the adventures. Little could my mother have guessed at that point that I would go on to study and teach Classical Civilisation and Archaeology - or that I would marry an archaeologist, David, who writes the occasional poem!

David at Burgh Castle, Saxon Shore Fort
I have been privileged to have studied under inspiring Creative Writing tutors over the years. It was lovely to meet up with one of these, Peter Read, over a cup of tea at the Aldeburgh Poetry Festival this November.

Rona and Peter with Caroline at Snape during the Aldeburgh Poetry Festival
I will turn now to the question of 'what'. I spent much of my pre-teenage childhood in Sevenoaks, where we enjoyed the annual Three Arts Festival, with its poetry competition. Given themes were 'water', 'spring' and 'animals' - and you could say that my work continues, all these years later, to revolve around these themes that relate to aspects of the natural world. I write from the perspective of my Christian faith, and am interested in the interface of landscape and human activity. I lived in Wales for nearly 20 years, where I realised, thanks to Byron Beynon and others, just how integral the soil was to the psyche of the poets I encountered. Poems and sessions by Susan Richardson (my tutor on the Disability Arts Cymru project that resulted in 'Hidden Dragons') and Emily Hinshelwood made me realise how little I knew in terms of specifics about the fragility of the earth. I could not call myself a fully-fledged eco-poet, but perhaps I have leanings in that direction.

* What else about the book might pique a reader’s interest?  
  • Form ... I love to find out about poetry forms. The collection includes my winning Sestina. It also includes Sonnets, a Tercet Ghazal, an Ottava Rima ... 'The Book of Forms' by Lewis Turco was a favourite companion, and you can imagine how delighted I am to have three sample poems included in 'The Book of Forms including Odd and Invented Forms' (Lewis Putnam Turco, University Press of New England, 2012)
  • Perspective ... I write as a person whose perspective is influenced by the challenges of chronic pain and limited mobility. 
  • Launch ... the chapbook was launched in 5 Cwmdonkin Drive, the Dylan Thomas Birth Place, along with John Dotson's full length book, 'Love for Ever Meridian: Finding Dylan Thomas in the 21st Century' (Cross-Cultural Communications and The Seventh Quarry Press, 2012). A second launch of 'The Holy Place' was held here in Ipswich during the monthly Poetry Cafe at Arlington's ...

5 Cwmdonkin Drive, Peter Thabit Jones (centre) with John Dotson and me
 and finally ...
  • On the subject of the Swallowtail Butterfly (in my poem 'Elusive Friend'), I can now claim to have seen eleven Swallowtail caterpillars in Norfolk. I have also seen Swallowtail adults at Messine in the Peloponnese.
Rare Swallowtail caterpillar, Norfolk Broads, 2012
* * *

And it is now time for me to pass on the baton and introduce you to the following writer friends, in alphabetical order of surnames ...
Sadly illness and unexpected circumstances have now prevented my other writers from being able to respond in this time frame ... but I much look forward to the Next Big Thing, on Wednesday 28 November, on the blogs mentioned above.

Saturday, 8 May 2010

Poetic Forms (2): Kyrielle and Virelai - for Indian publication

I was delighted to hear last week that two of my poems have been selected for Dr Tulsi's new book, 'Muse & Metre'.

The volume will be a handbook for those who wish to write in poetic forms. My poems will demonstrate the Kyrielle and the Virelai. The volume is due to be published in July/August 2010 in Visakhapatnam in India. It will be produced by Dr Tulsi and 'authored by Bernard Jackson', whose name may be familiar to those who submit work to the UK/international small press poetry scene. Dr H. Tulsi is the editor of the poetry journal, 'Metverse Muse'.


Friday, 5 March 2010

Poetic People (32): Alex Pryce

Alex Pryce, director of PoetCasting, is Writer in Residence for the month of March at Incwriters. Do take a look at the link, and be sure to think about adding a favourite small poetry press as part of the Save Our Presses Campaign.

Photo: Wired for Sound - Alex Pryce (left) with me in the Dylan Thomas Centre, Swansea, last autumn.

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

Poetic People (28): Dr Marc Latham of GreenyGrey and Folding Mirror Poetry

'Tangerine beaks'
Swan Summer Serenade

Those of you who read my blog from time to time will need little introduction to the creator of the Folding Mirror poetry form, Dr Marc Latham of the GreenyGrey website. Marc's eBook is now available for purchase as a download from Chipmunka. You can read my shortened review on the Chipmunka site here, or the full review here on my blog:-

Bipolarity and ADHD to Folding Mirrors: Poems reflecting on the Mind, Life, Nature and Space
Author: Dr Marc Latham

ISBN: 978-1-84991-023-1
Published: 2009
eBook: 112 pages

Publisher: chipmunkapublishing, the mental health publisher
Website: http://chipmunkapublishing.co.uk
Price: £5 (pdf download)


‘Let me take you on a journey, to the centre of my mind.’ Marc Latham

Have you heard of the GreenyGrey? This reviewer first became acquainted with Dr Marc Latham through his GreenyGrey website, in which he explains how his concept of the GreenyGrey ‘encapsulates the dominant natural colours of the British landscape, with the land predominantly green, and the mountains, rivers, sea and sky usually grey.’

Marc’s writing arises out of the wellspring of his medical conditions. His early poems in the eBook were inspired by rock lyrics on the subject of bipolarity, schizophrenia, paranoia, alienation and depressive illness.

‘I ... felt different and knew that my future would not run as smoothly as that of most people,’ Marc explains. He knew that writing was a definite ambition, but it was his creation of Folding Mirror poems that led to his increasing activity as a practising and published poet.

Marc’s Folding Mirror pieces are formed around a folding middle line. They reflect aspects of the bipolar moods swings that compass both sides of what Marc describes as ‘the fine
line of normality somewhere in the mind’. Football matches (with two sides and two halves), reflections, horizons and equinoxes have all been given the Folding Mirror treatment, along with a host of other subjects, such as science and art.

Early poems, prior to the Folding Mirror ones, demonstrate Marc’s understanding of traditional poetry techniques. The World Beyond Reality, for example, employs rhyming couplets and is structured in quatrains. Other pieces make use of poetic repetition and alliteration: the phrase ‘cirrus castellanus clouds’ occurs in Cloudy Sunset.

Pain is a recurring Leitmotif, but Marc is not afraid to explore positive aspects alongside the sometimes stark realities:

From the pain I want to develop
From the pain I seek to grow

Using pain to create...
(From: Me Driven by Pain)

Some poems demonstrate the poet’s anger and frustration: others highlight moments of great beauty. This reviewer’s personal favourite, Swan Summer Serenade, evokes a magical scene:

Tangerine beaks
are raised and lowered
like snakes charmed
unharmed
in a solar haze
to wondrous praise.

Marc has a great affinity with the natural world in all its wild and wonderful manifestations. He longs for others to share what this reviewer might venture to call his ‘GreenyGrey’ manifesto, and is prepared to communicate his eco-warrior message in unique and arresting ways:

So goodbye Mr. and Mrs. Manatee
it was nice eating you.
(From: Nice to Eat You Mr. And Mrs. Manatee)

A number of Marc’s Folding Mirror poems are laid out like horizontal triptychs (take for instance Motorway Manic Mind Metaphor and Foundations of Independence). Other poems run vertically down the page, with the pivotal line at the halfway point. The collection includes some fascinating ekphrastic Folding Mirror poems, written by Marc in response to his encounters with paintings by artists such as Blake and Constable.

This reviewer’s favourite poem is Hiking Hadrian’s Wall at Summer’s End. The Roman wall runs through the centre of this piece, stretching from coast to coast, between swathes of poppies and thistles. ‘Poetry’, Marc declares, ‘inspires one to learn a little about many things’, and this collection certainly challenges the reader’s perception of what is black and white - and green and grey.

CG, 2010

Caroline is a member of Disability Arts Cymru, and has six poems in 'Hidden Dragons/Gwir a Grymus: New Writing by Disabled People in Wales', ed. Allan Sutherland and Elin ap Hywel (Parthian 2004).

Dr Marc Latham’s websites:

Monday, 24 August 2009

Meme Moment (2): A Favourite Book


The Weaver of Grass is inviting us to post on a favourite book. I am treating this a bit like Desert Island Discs in the sense that on this occasion I am assuming that I may also squeeze the Bible and the Complete Works of Shakespeare on to my raft.

I have blogged recently about the poem, Cadgwith, by Lionel Johnson; and since I can recite this by heart, I do not need to take a copy of this poem with me.

This whittles my choice down to:
... but on this occasion I shall opt for The Collected Poems of Edward Thomas.

Of course there are many other books that spring to mind. I might have to exchange my raft for a cruise ship.

Why Edward Thomas? The book is weighty and has a satisfying feel to it. I knew little of Edward Thomas, possibly just his wonderful poem, Adlestrop (and here) before I moved to Wales seventeen years ago, but I have since grown to love his writing. I attended an excellent course under the aegis of the Swansea University Department of Adult Education, entitled 'Three Thomases: Dylan, RS and Edward'.

Edward Thomas was a deep thinker who engaged with the natural world. He went on long walks and noticed the birds, the nettles and the country ways of life.

I am not a great supporter of wars, but I admire the fact that Thomas chose to enlist for the Great War, despite being of an age at which subscription did not apply. He was killed by a stray shell when he had only been writing poems (as opposed to prose) for a very few years. I have probably mentioned it before, but his poem The Owl encapsulates for me so much of what Thomas was about. It was written when the poet was at home in Steep in Hampshire on 24 February 1915. He appears to have been troubled by the fact that young men had no choice but to join the war effort. Perhaps Thomas was wrestling with his own conscience. By 8 April 1917 he was dead.

My chosen volume shows the text of the poem on one side with notes on the facing page. I find this fascinating and very helpful. Thomas made few alterations to this poignant poem. There is certainly a wistful note in many of the poems (one is called Melancholy), but there are poems that are less pensive.

David and I became fascinated by the colourful poem Swedes (number 26 in my volume) a few years ago. We wrote a short article (link to first page) about the ancient Egyptian background to it, which was published in OUP's Notes & Queries.

So for a number of reasons, Edward Thomas wins out, and - providing I can find a waterproof cover - his Collected Poems edited by Professor R. George Thomas will join me on my raft.

Saturday, 31 January 2009

Blog poll ... last chance!


Tick, tock ...

At the time of writing there are only 40 minutes left in which to cast your vote in my 'for interest only' poll (right). Thank you to those of you who have already clicked an option.

Tuesday, 27 January 2009

Still time to vote!

Please cast your vote in my poll (right) if you have not done so already. The days are slipping by!

Friday, 19 December 2008

Who's dreaming of a white [stoat] Christmas?

Right: Mount Grace Priory, Yorkshire
(in the care of English Heritage)

Top: through the arch
Lower left: even the pheasants are looking for stoat holes ... or rabbits! (click on photo to enlarge)
Lower right: are there any stoat prints in the mud?

'Slowly the moon takes her brush, and drips
midnight tips on two stoat-like tails.'

Last couplet of 'Mount Grace Priory: heads and tails'
© Caroline Gill 2008
Poem published in 'Tips' (ed. Wendy Webb)
Issue 68 (September/October 2008).


Early birds listening to the 'Today Programme' on the BBC before 7am this morning will have heard the report about the resident stoat population at Mount Grace. The stoats are predicting a cold winter: they have turned white for Christmas!

Read the full story in the Darlington and Stockton Times.



Tuesday, 16 December 2008

Congratulations, Wendy!


Wendy (left) and Caroline outside the Dylan Thomas Centre, Swansea
Summer 2008


Well done, Wendy!

Wendy Webb, editor of 'Tips', the magazine of Norfolk Poets and Writers, has won a 2008 '1st in Class' Writers' Grand Circle Rosette award from the Writers' Grand Circle (WGC) for her small press magazine. The WGC is an organization that 'developed from a successful writers' group formed in 1971.'

Thursday, 7 August 2008

Norfolk Poets & Writers: Anthology 2008

Left: Poet and Publisher, Wendy Webb
Right: Caroline Gill, 'summer' 2008


Wendy Webb's latest anthology has a colour photograph of the Suffolk village of Lavenham on the cover. The first poem inside is an ekphrastic one, 'Old Sailor's Tale' by Pamela Trudie Hodge, who drew her inspiration from 'The Depths of the Sea' (1886) by Edward Burne-Jones.

The anthology contains more well known names from the small press scene: Bernard Jackson, Norman Bissett, Joan Sheridan Smith, Claire Knight and Brigid Simpson, to name but a few.

There are also a number of poems from invited guests, including Alison Chisholm, Sophie Hannah and Geoff Stevens.

Wendy (and members of her family) met me for coffee at the Dylan Thomas Centre some days ago. In view of our chosen rendez-vous, it seems appropriate to mention the poem, 'Fadeless Light', chosen by Wendy for the anthology as a tribute to Margaret Munro Gibson. This poem (by MMG) was originally published in an earlier edition of Wendy's TIPS: it pays homage to Dylan's villanelle, 'Do not go gentle into that good night'.

I have subscribed to TIPS for some years now. The venture began as a writers' group for those who found it easier, for whatever reason, to belong to a postal group. Wendy still offers the chance to belong to a community of writers. She runs competitions and has devised several successful poetry forms including Magi poems, Echotains and Davidians.

Monday, 14 July 2008

Top TIPS

Wendy Webb, founder of Norfolk Poets and Writers (NPW) and editor of TIPS for WRITERS, has brought out issue 67 in memory of a wonderful writer and faithful supporter of the small press poetry scene, Margaret Munro Gibson. I will always associate Margaret with the colour blue (which happens to be my favourite colour). In my opinion, she was a true maestro when it came to the art of writing Haiku in the English language.

The current edition of TIPS includes poems by Alison Chisholm, Norman Bissett and Bernard M. Jackson, to name but three familiar names. It advertises the Margaret Munro Gibson Memorial Poetry Competition 2009 for a 'quality poem not exceeding 20 lines'. It also lists details of the current Norfolk Poets and Writers' Open Summer Poetry Competition 2008.

You can find details of Wendy Webb Books on Dee Rimbaud's AA Independent Press Guide site.

Tuesday, 1 July 2008

The Majestic Red Kite

We were out visiting an archaeological dig in Carmarthenshire last weekend, when I spotted this fine red kite. It was late in the afternoon on an indifferent day, but there were evidently enough thermals up above to keep the kite soaring gracefully overhead.

Only last week I spotted a red kite much closer to home. We see kites quite frequently; and it is easy to forget that until a few years ago, the future of this beautiful bird was truly in the balance.

I have attempted two red kite poems to date. Gwyneth Lewis, the first National Poet of Wales, has written a particularly striking piece, 'Red Kites at Tregaron' in the seren anthology, Birdsong, compiled by Dewi Roberts. The volume also includes the poem, 'Red Kite over Heol Nanteos' by Mike Jenkins.

Two questions:
1.) If you were given one word to sum up the red kite, what would it be? My choice, of course, is 'majestic'.
2.) Leslie Norris wrote a powerful poem about the buzzard (see Birdsong). For myself, I find it hard to get excited about buzzards: does anyone reading this feel a fascination for these birds; and if so, why?



Thursday, 26 June 2008

WIithin Reach ...

Thank you, Ronnie: Reach Poetry has arrived! Why not take a look at issue 121 for a whistle-stop tour: there are poems about Australia, England, Egypt, Scotland, Spain, Wales ... and even Arcadia!

The Poets who blog site has just been added to my favourites.

I have just come across the Contemporary Sonnet website. It looks good.