In October of this year, my almost-brand-new Instagram account was hacked, starting a long chain of unpleasant events that included stolen passwords, barrages of phishing emails, my inadvertent deleting of my entire hard drive (I got it back, thanks to the Cloud) and weeks of stress and paranoia. At the end of this awful experience,… Continue reading Haiku Book Leads to Hack
Category: The Writing Life
Reflections on the day-to-day experiences of a working writer.
Politics, Theme and Poetry
In October, I was happily writing a poem about gardening, when it took a sudden turn and revealed its true topic: the calamity of immigrant children held in cages at the US/Mexico Border. That day, I posted “For some reason my nature poems keep turning into political poems” to my Facebook page. In her essay… Continue reading Politics, Theme and Poetry
Storyboards for Creative Writing
I recently picked up a copy of Pages, the Creative Guide for Art Journaling & Bookmaking. Illustrated journaling is one of my hobbies, and I was drawn to the project on the magazine’s cover (“mini ZINES create your own!”) At the end of the magazine, I found the article “Gathering Your Story Elements,” by Jeanne… Continue reading Storyboards for Creative Writing
STONE, empty chair: Erica’s new haiku collection
I just received the proof from Lulu of my first self-published book, titled STONE empty chair. It's a collection of my best haiku, starting about ten years ago and ending in August, 2018. It's a little book full of little poems - just 6.5 x 4.5, with 50-odd haiku, in four chapters: Winter, Spring, Summer… Continue reading STONE, empty chair: Erica’s new haiku collection
Saving the Most-Rejected Poems
A couple of times a year, I search my submission spreadsheets for poems with the dubious distinction of having collected the most rejections so far. If these poems are not currently under consideration for publication, they go into a special category: Most Rejected Poems.Then I print them out and spread them on the floor of… Continue reading Saving the Most-Rejected Poems
How to Create a Poetry Database
I’m an inveterate recycler. I have a compost pile and six chickens so I can turn food scraps into soil and eggs. I love repurposed items: quilts sewn from old clothes, wind chimes made of bent spoons, collages of torn magazine pages. Therefore, I was delighted to discover that poet Eileen R. Tabios has created a… Continue reading How to Create a Poetry Database
Organizing the Field
I’ve been so excited about my new poetry project, Field Notes, that I forgot how difficult it is to organize a poetry collection. So far, the 40-odd poems I've assembled fall into the following themes: Tree, Plant, Weather, Flowers, Seed, Insects, Earth, Grass, Compost, Bird, Stone, Ocean, Animal, Desert My first thought was to put the poems into seasonal categories, i.e., Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall.… Continue reading Organizing the Field
Flowers of Rhetoric: A List of Obscure Literary Terms
I found this list in a 2003 letter from my father. At the time, I was beginning my MFA degree in Creative Writing at San Jose State University. My father was worried that I would succumb to the "tricks of rhetoric, which are the opposite of poetry." In the same letter, he went on to… Continue reading Flowers of Rhetoric: A List of Obscure Literary Terms
An Appreciation: Terrance Hayes’s “The Blue Terrance”
My first encounter with Terrance Hayes’s poem “The Blue Terrance” occurred in my car. It was the spring of 2009 and I’d been listening to a CD of an episode of “The Playlist,” the Poetry Foundation’s podcast, on my way from one teaching job to another. The drive from Saratoga to Cupertino took about ten… Continue reading An Appreciation: Terrance Hayes’s “The Blue Terrance”
What About X? Writing the Abecedarian
Definition: An abecedarian poem is one in which verses or words begin with the successive letters of the alphabet. I recently wrote my first abecedarian poem, and while I enjoyed the process, I nearly stalled out when I got to the letter X. Hardly any useful words begin with X. My crumbling, 1965 edition of… Continue reading What About X? Writing the Abecedarian