Most Popular, Poetry, The Writing Life

Poetry Survives Latest Death Threat

Poets, writers, teachers and parents are wringing their hands over the November 2022 release of ChatGPT, an AI program which can “answer followup questions, admit its mistakes, challenge incorrect premises, and reject inappropriate requests,” according to descriptions at its creator’s website, OpenAI. No doubt you’ve seen the ChatGPT-written “poetry” and “essays” people have gleefully shared… Continue reading Poetry Survives Latest Death Threat

Most Popular, Poetry, The Creative Process, The Writing Life

Bread Labor: Poetry and the Day Job

A woman sitting next to me at an editors’ lunch I attended BC (before Covid) asked if poetry was my day job. Without hesitating, I said yes. Later that day, however, I started to question my response. I define “day job” as work that pays the bills so a person can spend whatever remaining time… Continue reading Bread Labor: Poetry and the Day Job

Craft, Most Popular, The Creative Process, The Writing Life

The Danger of Notebooks

“A journal always conceals vastly more than it reveals.” – Verlyn Klinkenborg, The Rural Life In “Notes on the Danger of Notebooks,” an essay in Synthesizing Gravity, Kay Ryan writes, “Isn’t it odd to think that in order to listen we must be a little bit relieved of the intention to understand? This, of course, is the… Continue reading The Danger of Notebooks

Most Popular, Poetry, The Creative Process

The Emotional Stages of Writing a Poem

I just finished writing a poem, and I’m worn out.  For days I walked around in that weird stage I call “pre-poem anxiety,” which feels almost like a period of mourning: what the hell have I been doing with my time, not writing a poem? I’m plagued with morbid thoughts: what if I died tomorrow… Continue reading The Emotional Stages of Writing a Poem

Craft, Most Popular, Poetry

Generating New Poems from Freewrites

I’m a dedicated freewriter. I especially like that freewriting has roots in poet Jack Kerouac’s stream of consciousness, “spontaneous prose,” the Surrealist Movement’s “automatic writing,” and in Yeat’s “trance-writing.” (Check out this videopoem by Helena Postigo, “I Think of Dean Moriarity.”) My first introduction to freewriting was in a college English class in 1980. At first, I simply hated it. I… Continue reading Generating New Poems from Freewrites

Craft, Most Popular, Poetry, Poetry + Art

Words with Pictures: Ekphrasis

Ekphrasis: (meaning "description" in Greek; expanded to mean "the use of detailed description of a work of visual art as a literary device.") Merriam-Webster: a literary description of or commentary on a visual work of art I published my first ekphrastic poems in the Spring/Summer 2009 issue of Ekphrasis, edited by Laverne Frith and Carol Frith.… Continue reading Words with Pictures: Ekphrasis

Most Popular, Poetry, The Writing Life

My Worst Poetry Reading

I recently received an exquisite little treasure: What Could Possibly Go Wrong? Poets & Writers Spill Their Worst Reading Experiences, edited by Richard Peabody of Gargoyle Magazine and Paycock Press. This charming book of flops and failures gladdened my heart, from its laugh-out-loud moments—i.e., Dinty W. Moore’s very first reading in a bookstore filled with “gently used… Continue reading My Worst Poetry Reading

Most Popular, Poetry, The Creative Process

The Paradox of “Daisies” by Louise Glück

When I first encountered Louise Glück’s poetry, I was trying very hard to make a garden out of an overgrown and neglected patch of forest behind my house. Redwoods shaded the area for most of the year, and when the sun finally rose high enough to shine over the trees in summer, its heat dried… Continue reading The Paradox of “Daisies” by Louise Glück