Monday, May 10, 2010

REVIEWS: Vleeskens' Sandals in a Camel (Earthdance, 2010)

Well, he said he was retired but PressPress insisted on publishing a mini-retrospective called CV and now Vleeskens is doing it for himself  - a self-mashed collection which clearly says at the beginning:
all the words
and many of the phrases
used in these poems
have previously appeared in print
Sandals in a Camel has fluid black and white images that probably were done in pen and ink - accompanying a fluid style of writing - the sort that Vleeskens does best. Some poems are very clear and direct in diction (and in terms of their referents) eg

Wetlands

a corroboree frog
croaks on the submerged
engine block

others are obscure and difficult to place. Images poke through and you think you should know what the whole poems mean - but you don't. They all reflect Vleeskens' deep engagement with the word over a long period of time and have a confidence which comes of this. Even when you don't get it, there's an assured tone which convinces the reader that its their fault.

It's a confident persona, though he's self-deprecating and self-aware - as in POEM.

lavish decoration
and scribbled prints
are as decadents as it gets
...
... a life
travelling in underwear.

It's good to see Vleeskens back doing what he's been doing for decades. Welcome home.
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Get your Book off the Ground
by Anthony Santoro and Suzanne Male

Writers Resource Centre (PO Box 397 Williamstown Vic 3016) 2009 127pp RRP $27.95 ISBN  9780980615807

This is a short How To book for very new writers of prose fiction (primarily) which incorporates some technical hints on plotting and point of view etc along with some behavioural advice designed to encourage new writers to persevere and to resist discouragement.

Sub-titled ‘What you need to know to write and publish your book’, it overpromises and underdelivers: an unpublished writer with even a little experience would find this book unsatisfying if they believed the title, though a first time writer would probably be cheered by its advice.

Anthony Santoro has published a crime fiction novel, The Deception, and has worked as an editor. Suzanne Male is a journalist and editor and is probably best known for her A year of Writing inspiration: A prompt a day for the Creative Writer.


Spinifex by Beverley George

Pardalote Press (44 Bayside Drive, Lauderdale 7021) 2006 62pp; RRP $AU18.50;
ISBN 0 957843609 0

Reviewed by Lorin Ford

'Spinifex ', as John Bird writes in his introduction to the book, 'comes to us after Beverley George has achieved national and international success with haiku, tanka, haibun, free verse and children's literature'. Its publication 'comes to us at the end of her editorship of Yellow Moon Literary Magazine, which made her a household name and friend of most haiku writers and many other poets. Spinifex assumes the status, although unsought, of a benchmark in Australian haiku.'

I looked forward to the release of Spinifex and was not disappointed. The book is presented in Pardalote Press's classic haiku book style - portable, aesthetically pleasing, with a good amount of white space around easy to read print and with subtle illustrations to complement the poems. There are 59 pages of Beverley George's prize-winning haiku, some of which are formed into sequences but each of which can stand alone and a three page haibun.

Interestingly, the title, doesn't originate from any of the poems in the book, nor does it designate any theme. The cover image and the delicate illustrations make it clear that the title names the tough, flexible, grey-green 'dune grass' which binds the sand along our coastal regions - the true spinifex, not the inland tussock grass often referred to by the same name. The spinifex illustrations haunt the pages, functioning, with the title, like a symbol to remind us that haiku, can take the reader beyond the obvious, the observed, to connections and correlations that surprise and delight.

Such implied connections also inform the editorial sequencing of the book. The opening haiku:
train tunnel
the sudden intimacy
of mirrored faces

and the second last (within 'Gathering Coke')
waterfall
our faces ripple closer
in the pond

both focus on images of reflected faces, though what a difference there is between the mutual discomfort experienced by train travellers shocked from private daydream into unexpected, fluorescent-lit intimacy and the gentler, hesitant of growing intimacy with those we know.

Those who are new to haiku and consider it a form of 'nature reporting' will be illuminated by Spinifex. Beverley George is not deceived by over literal interpretations of the notion that haiku should be about 'things as they are', aware that human beings perceive the world through the human senses and construe pattern and meaning with minds shaped by personal and cultural history.
clanking billy
the mist draws
eucalypts together

'Things as they are', when we observe them, become things observed by a human being whatever they may be without our presence: acknowledging this brings us into relationship to their mystery and to our own.

This haiku:
leafless stem
I prune above
a green bud


from the 'Scorched Garden' sequence shows the gardener's careful husbandry focused on a living bud's promise of regeneration. It's what gardeners do. It is also what poets do with unpromising poems and what we all do to promote new beginnings in our lives. Haiku such as:
winter twilight
the shadowed hill
beyond the hill

resonate with perceptions and concerns beyond the observed image of nature. 'Winter twilight' is an example of how the right kigo, well juxtaposed with an accurate visual image, can work to define context and to suggest a metaphorical relationship between the seasons of the year and the seasons in human life.

I was delighted to find some of Beverley George's haiku that I was already familiar with, such as the many-layered, prize-winning 'lengthening shadow - /above her eggs the hen's heart / beats against my arm'. My new personal favourite from this inspiring collection, one I find myself going back to again and again, is from the 'Village Hall, April 25, 2006' sequence:
sprigs of rosemary
something about the tea urns
makes me cry

I don't fully comprehend why this haiku affects me so much, any more than the haiku seems to comprehend what it is about the tea urns - those homely, functional, two-gallon steel fixtures of ordinary community life in Australia - that make the 'me of the poem' cry. Rosemary, of course, is for remembrance, on Anzac Day, in a Shakespearean tragedy or on any occasion which requires reflection on or acknowledgment of the significance of the past. Perhaps the poem's effect might be that it subtly springs a recollection of the value of ordinary community life and the sometimes taken-for-granted service that holds a community together, as the roots of spinifex bind sand and prevent erosion.

Beverley George's haibun, 'Gathering Coke', winner of the World Haiku Club R.H.Blyth Award for 2004 and voted Best of Issue by readers of Presence #26 2004, concludes the book. This haibun's three pages of tight prose, incorporating two well-placed haiku, validates Beverley George's anti-Procrastean belief that the topic and its sufficient development are the best criteria for haibun length.

I wholeheartedly recommend Spinifex to new readers of haiku and to seasoned readers and haijin alike. The haiku are as long as each needs to be, no more, no less, and the language throughout has the flow of carefully honed spoken language - no outdated adherence to the 5-7-5 model nor the chopped English of haiku 'telegraphese' here. Enter Beverley George's beautifully written, deceptively small poems and you'll find the world widening and deepening.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

BLOGS, LITERARY SITES, WRITER'S SITES, MAGAZINES AND JOURNALS

Blogs take all forms - many very sophisticated (and many, not). Look to the blogrolls on the blogs you visit to find other interesting places to visit. Try some of the blogs on Famous Poets & Poems. There is also The Australian Index which attempts a comprehensive listing of Aussie blogs. Add yours if it's not there already.

And if you still don't know what a blog is, go to this blog entry at Scripting News and see what Dave Winer has to say about voice and ownership under the heading ‘The unedited voice of a person’ and his earlier article at Weblogs at Harvard Law. See also Eurozine's "Blogging, the nihilist impulse" article.

Also included is just a few of the very many writer’s sites and magazine/journal sites.

Australian Literature Resources has a listing of Australian authors which is well worth a look and there are other sites which have lots of links to information on Australian writers eg the Literature site.

A
About Poetry site - lots of excellent links to poetry sites (American).
Robert Adamson - personal site
American Life in Poetry put together by Ted Kooser (their poet laureate 2004-2006)
Alternative-Read - review site
American Poetry Review - paper journal, rarely publishes Australians. Poetry and articles about poetry, poems in translation.
ars poetica - poems about poetry. Look at this developing poetry project/anthology put together by Dan Waber
Artists without Frontiers - modelled on the medical version. A human rights site for artists (including writers).
Arts & Letters Daily - general literary and comment site
ArtsRush - Literary and arts site
Arts in Shoalhaven news site - news of the arts in the Shoalhaven
Australia Council - premier Australian funding body (and their journal OzArts)
The Australian Index - a listing of Australian blogs on all topics.
Australian Literature resources up-to-date list of poets
AustLit - a resource for Australian Literature. Unless your organisation subscribes, you'll have to pay to get into some of it, but there are some free bits which are worth investigating too.
Australian Book Review - edited by Peter Rose. A great source of literary reviews and essays.

B
Bad Press - not what you think.
Baghdad Burning - a famous and revolutionary use of a blog
Blue Acres - 'poetry, process & sundry' - the blog of poet Jen Crawford
Blue Stalking Reader - a great blog for readers of prose. Get to it.
Bob's Byway Glossary of Poetic Terms
BookSlut - site and blog for rabid readers
Janice M. Bostok - personal site
Pam Brown - personal site

C
Children's Book Council useful site with helpful links among other helpful information for writer's for children, a peak body
Cordite - online literary magazine includes poetry and reviews. Poetry is often good, though the reviews are variable.
copyblogger - a blogger's blog. Full of useful information on copywriting, interestingly told and useful for non-copywriters too.
Alison Croggan - personal site

D
DC Green Yarns - Children's Author site
The Deletions Pam Brown's blog
Divan - online journal edited by Earl Livings out of Box Hill TAFE in Victoria.
DiVerse blog Australian Arts groups which transcribes visual art and special exhibitions into poetry
Martin Duwell - personal site

E
Edge - Fascinating. Their tag goes: 'To arrive at the edge of the world's knowledge, seek out the most complex and sophisticated minds, put them in a room together, and have them ask each other the questions they are asking themselves.'
The Empire of Larks - occasional blog of Chris Mansell
The Empty Page blog of the Queensland Writers Centre
Enterprising Words Di Bates & Bill Condon's site.

F
The Famous Reporter - the online version of the paper journal edited by Ralph Wessman. Coming out of Tasmania it has fiction, poems, gossip, reviews, interviews and articles on writing.
FICTIONS - short prose fiction by Chris Mansell
Fiera Lingue - interesting Italian site (which also has English)
foam:e - poetry site which grew out of the Espresso discussion list
40x365 40 words | 40 years 365 days | 365 people ...a very special blog.
Friendly St Poets - site of one of the longest running readings in the country (Adelaide).
A Fugitive Phenomenon An AustLit blog by Kerryn Goldsworthy
Fulcrum - an annual magazine of poetry & poetics. "From out of nowhere, FULCRUM has in only a few years established itself as a must-read journal, a unique annual of literary and intellectual substance positioned on the cutting edge of culture. - BILLY COLLINS"

G
The Ghazal Page - a page devoted poems in the form of the ghazal.

H
Haiku Review - excellent site, nothing to do with haiku, but has essays and discussions on literary and critical topics.
Kristin Hannaford - personal site
Dale Harcombe - personal site
Heat Magazine - poetry, fiction, criticism, visual arts.
Hi Spirits - blog of Andrew Burke
HOW2 - a women's innovative writing site edited by Kate Fagan.
hutt ezine from papertiger

I
Identity theory- is a web-based magazine of literature and culture edited by matt borondy
Internet Poetry Archive - great resources on some of the 'great names' of contemporary poetry
Island Magazine - site of the premier paper magazine of Tasmania, includes poetry, fiction, articles, reviews

J
Jacket. Also a good place to go for news is the Jacket Noticeboard
Jill Jones - personal site

K
Khalil Sakakini Cultural Centre Palestinian writers.

L
Law Like Blog - blog of Tim Hamilton
The Literature Page- a place to read classic books, plays, stories, poems, essays, and speeches
Literary Minded - blog of Angela Meyer
Literary Kicks 'where literature lives online' - since 1994.
M
McSweeney's - The famous site (prose fiction).
Masthead - literary arts magazine edited by Alison Croggon
Metro Magazine film and movies
Modern American Poetry - This link is a sampler of Hass's Poet's Choice. Well worth a visit.
Meanjin - 'Meanjin is a forum for reflection, speculation, opinion and fresh creativity in various literary and visual genres.'
Mudlark - online journal of poetry and poetics
N
narcissusworks - blog of Anny Ballardini
New England Review - out of Middlebury College in the US. Not to be confused with the Australian New England Review which comes out of Armidale, NSW.
The New Quarterly - Canadian. A mix of fiction, poetry, interviews, and talk about writing. Won Gold in the 2004 (Canadian) National Magazine Awards.
nthposition very good magazine with political and visual and written art, discussion etc.
nonlinear poetry - blog of Jukka-Pekka Kervinen (Finland). Has links to a variety of interesting blogs
North of the Latte Line - edited by Anne Kellas and Ivy Alvarez. Australian happenings and events, items of interest.

O
Overland Express- the online version of the paper journal Overland. Poetry, fiction, articles, reviews.

P
The Page - very good poetry page - includes news from all over
Paradise Lost? 'the blog of the blogger who got sick of blogging' - Dee Rimbaud
Poetry Bay - online poetry magazine out of the Bay area (US)
Poetry Daily - interesting. Picks up poems from newly published books and journals.
Poetry International Web - 160: Texting and Poetry
The Poetry Kit Based in the UK but all sorts of useful things here
Poetry magazine - comes out of Chigaco, USA
Poetica ABC Radio National (Australia). Mike Ladd's definitive radio poetry show.
PoetServ.com - home to The Salt River Review, RelativeLinks, reviews of poetry online and resources for poets and writers who frequent the web
PoetrySoutheast out of the University of Illinois
The Poet Watch - interesting site with some good links as well.
The Prairie Home Companion of Garrison Keilor fame. If you don't know his work the subtitle of the site - "Consider the em-dash." might give you an idea.
The Prairie Schooner - long-established magazine out of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and University of Nebraska Press

Q
Quadrant - paper journal, includes poetry, fiction, reviews and articles.

R
Rattle styles itself 'Poetry for the 21st Century'. They have a new emagazine available for download and its free. Worth a look.
Recommended Poets from Dee Rimbaud's site.
Reeling and Writhing "A place to chat about literature of the world, or Australian literature, writing and publishing, as we choose." Previously known as You Cried for Night.
Ruby Street - blog of Jill Jones

S
Screen Hub Screen news and comment
Silliman's Blog - Edited by Ron Silliman. Deals with poetry and poetics. Probably the most well known of the poetry blogs.
Silva Rhetoricae The forest of Rhetoric - a guide to the terms of classical and renaissance rhetoric
Small Press Exchange - good reviews of small press publications. Also has blogs, profiles, bookstore etc.
Southerly - out of University of Sydney
Stylus Poetry Journal - Online journal out of Queensland
Soul Sphincter blog of Jim Barrett, an Australian poet and PhD student in Sweden.
SoundEye - interesting stuff on a collaborative project
Synaptic Graffiti - for link to multimedia poetry

T
teaching poetry in the 21st century put together by Elizabethe Lhuede who writes: “If you're a lover of digital poetry, whatever the language, tradition or media, please enjoy this site.”
theatre notes an 'independent theatre reviewing and commentary' blog by Alison Croggon. Well-regarded.
3 Quarks Daily The editors say they hope to collect 'interesting items from around the web on a daily basis, in the areas of science, design, literature, current affairs, art, and anything else we deem inherently fascinating. We want to provide you with a one-stop intellectual surfing experience by culling good stuff from all over and putting it in one place. In other words, we are what has come to be known as a "filter blog".'
thinking about poetry blog of Warwick Wynne
Thunderburst has a useful link to the AA Independent Press Guide (UK based) which is a free online writers resource, listing over 2000 magazines and publishers and 700 internet magazines. Dee Rimbaud's site.
Thylazine Foundation site - arts, ethics, literature

U
UbuWeb - excellent literary site.

V
video blog of Chris Mansell

WXYZ
Dan Waber - this is a series of interlinked sites which are all well worth a visit. Not your usual ill-kempt site. It's address (www.logolalia.com) belies its contents.
Web del Sol - great site. From here you can get just about everywhere.
Wengu - Chinese Classic poetry site
Westerly - annual, out of the University of Western Australia
Wild Grape gives up to date news on the Australian poetry scene.
Write and Read with Dale - Dale Harcombe's blog
The Write Stuff - edited by Ann Kellas and Giles Hugo out of Tasmania.
Writing Macao - includes poems by Christopher Kelen, Zheng Danyi, Leith D. Morton, Madeleine Marie Slavick and Matthew Power.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

WORKSHOPS + COURSES

Choosing a workshop
There are also workshops of various kinds advertised by all sorts of people...some of whom (believe it or not) have not actually been published or even written much. This seems incredible, but I've come across it more than once. Usually they have done quite a lot of workshops as participants (one even used a writer's workshop exercises to put together a photocopied booklet which she then sold!). Sometimes they might have edited material in the past (which can be fine if they're running workshops on how to edit your work).

You have to assess whether you prefer a practitioner or someone who has it second hand. The rule of thumb: look at the person's experience/qualifications carefully. If you're writing as a hobby, it might not matter much if the person has just borrowed a lot of workshop exercises from someone else, but if you're very serious about your work, you might want to look for someone with more experience.


PressPress Workshops
Residential workshops and tours can be arranged within Australia and at selected overseas locations (eg Italy, Egypt, Morocco) to work on your projects and to get inspiration with targeted exercises and one on one consultations.

Join a workshop at beautiful Bamarang Bush Retreat in the Shoalhaven with expert tutors and visiting writers.









Script
Free templates on the Coherent Visual site. This is what the site says:

   The BBC offers for free some excellent script templates called Script Smart for screenwriters. Templates are included for a screenplay, a TV studio sketch, and a radio sketch (in both United States and U.K. formatting standards). The package with all the templates runs about 400K. Available in both Windows and Macintosh format.

QuickMuse + Poetry generator
QuickMuse is a great idea. Totally fascinating to the practising poet. See Pinsky, Muldoon and others write a poem to a set topic in a limited time in real time...that is with hesitations, corrections, backtracks, additions, as it happens, unfolding before your eyes. I love this.

If QuickMuse doesn't do it for you, this one literally does: Poem Generator.

Other courses or resources
Remember: you must make up your own mind about what is good value and what isn't. Ask questions.

A
About Poetry - a vast repository of information, links and articles about poetry (obviously)
Australian Poetry Centre Based in Melbourne.

B
Bookdoctor Commercial site offering courses, advice, manuscript assessments etc
Buzz Words Di Bates' newsletter about children's books and writing available through Enterprising Words.

CD
Culture & Recreation Portal - an Australian Government site which is a portal, as it says, to all manner of cultural material- grants, government organisations, cross media arts etc etc.

E
Enterprising Words Australian children's book authors and freelance writers Di Bates and Bill Condon offer a range of writing, editing and manuscript assessment services as well as book products for the general public, including writers of all ages, teachers and librarians.

FGHIJKLM
Famous Poets and Poems - self-explanatory really. A good site though what is considered 'famous' might be open to debate.

N
NIDA Playwright's Studio. Playwriting workshop course at the National Institute of Dramatic Art in Sydney.

O
Oz Poetic Society - poets' resource site. Not a site about poetics as the name suggests. Does have some useful links.

P
Poetry About - a vast repository of information, links and articles about poetry (obviously)
Poetry Daily news Interesting news, links.
Poetry Magic - Don't be put off by this title. Actually a good, basic introduction to prosody at beginner and more advanced levels, arranged under categories.
Poetry Resource - an good site for links to poetry-related topics. It is intended for students but not limited by this. I liked this site.
Poewar - writers' resource centre

QRS
QuickMuse live poems unfold

TUVWXYZ
Teenwriting: Advice for young writers - addressed to teenage writers, but very clear and useful for all ages.


And look at:
These are things that I've found that might be interesting to you:

Chris Hamilton-Emery, 101 Ways to Make Poems Sell: The Salt Guide to Getting and Staying Published (Salt Publishing)

or Gary Mex Glazner's How To Make a Living as a Poet (Soft Skull, 2005). (For more on this, go to the poetry.about.com site. While you're there, have a browse around at all the good work that Margery Snyder and Bob Holman are doing.)


Writing on writing: some books to search out
The Art of the novel Milan Kundera.
Making Stories Kate Grenville & Sue Woolfe.

REFERENCE LEADS

Some libraries
Here are some library links where you can search the catalogues (as you can with most public libraries these days) but so much more - put aside a little time to familiarise yourself with the sites if you are an infomaniac.
  1. National Library of Australia, Canberra [a copyright deposit library for NSW]
  2. Mitchell Library within the State Library of NSW [a copyright deposit library for NSW]
  3. Shoalhaven City Libraries
  4. University of Wollongong Library
  5. University of Sydney Library, Sydney [a copyright deposit library for NSW]
  6. The NSW Parliamentary Library is also a copyright deposit library for NSW.
If these aren't enough, go the the National Library of Australia's Library Gateway which will guide you to the catalogues of other Australian libraries. If you can't find what you're looking for after all of this, write the book yourself.

Libraries on line

‘a digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, we provide free access to researchers, historians, scholars, and the general public.’ from there you can get to Project Gutenberg.

You've got to love Project Gutenberg. A US based but worldwide project to preserve books out of copyright. This means that there are people getting them into digital form and available as free ebooks. You can volunteer to do this and other things and/or read the books. Good. Free and a great resource. Or go to this page for links to other free bookshops: iCommons

Have a look at this one: University of Adelaide Free eBooks Online.

Media and publishing outlets
For a list of media outlets, go to MediaBay. For a comprehensive listing of publishing outlets use the Queensland Writers Centre’s Writers’ Marketplace. And for another list of international writers’ organisations go to: Writers' Federation of Nova Scotia .

   LibraryThing enables you to catalogue your OWN library by drawing on the resources of big libraries out there. For all of the soon-to-be-organised persons out there. Go To www.librarything.com


Swapping
BookCrossing. A book liberation site. This is how it works: read a book, label it with a unique book number, then leave it somewhere. Someone picks it up, (possibly) logs it, reads it, puts it in a public place for someone (anyone) else to pick up. You can even book hunt.

Other swapping/trading sites can be found on Zen Habits - 20 ways to get Free or Cheap books.

Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Studies
AIATSIS is the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies - 'the world's premier institution for information and research about the cultures and lifestyles of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.' Includes their press, audiovisual archive, library and research areas.

Writing tools

Poetry Tools on the extensive Poetry About site with lots of links to other sites which are useful though a bit biased towards rhyming dictionaries.

The Free Dictionary which has pronunciation audio, derivations, multiple languages. Lovely.
Strunk's Elements of Style - a classic for basic dots, spots and composition principles.

Style Manual for Authors, Editors and Printers 4th edition, 1994 in pdf form (newest edition is the 6th). Useful for all sorts of style & technical matters etc

Writing Question of the Week Purdue Owl News mostly questions of grammar etc but interesting.

Writer's Guide University of Victoria, Canada. Useful links to literary terms, how-tos on logic, grammar, sources, paragraphs - ie the nuts and bolts.


Web research
Do you want to find authoritative sources on Google? Go to Google, go to More, go to Google Scholar. Use Advanced (or use Advanced in a normal Google search). And while you're at More, have a look about. It will all change in a minute so come back again soon.

If you want to find a definition of a term, use the normal Google search field and write define, colon and then the term you want defined (eg prosody) like this - define:prosody - and you'll get a list of definitions of prosody on the web. You don't know what 'prosody' is? Well then...

Shameful cut and paste plagiarism on the net is particularly easy to detect so take care when researching to observe good bibliographic hygiene - ie reference everything. A good guide to what plagiarism is and how not to do it can be found on Avoiding Plagiarism section of the UNSW's Learning Centre: Academic Skills Resources. Lots of other good things there too.

Poetic terms etc

Poet's Graves In the UK. Yes, I know. Humour me. There are many people alive today who think the only good writer is a dead writer (because dead writers don't borrow money from you). This site also has a glossary of poetic terms and links to poems, poets (dead) etc. Useful.





Here's a picture of Cavafy's death mask. The mask is at his place, now a museum, in Alexandria, Egypt.

 
World Wide Words
World Wide Words is addictive. You can sign up for regular emails as well.

Ebooks
The Literature Page is a place to read classic books, plays, stories, poems, essays, and speeches online.
PoemHunter's Free Poetry Ebooks
Shearsman Ebooks - contemporary poetry books online.

Bookshops
There are many many bookshops that are easy to find online. If you can't find the book by googling, try specialist bookshops such as Dark Horsey Bookshop at the Experimental Art Foundation which specialises in books on art, architecture & design, cultural studies,feminism, philosophy, film & media, as well as small press literature, artist's books & catalogues, and local & international art magazines. Managed by the poet, Ken Bolton. PO Box 8091, Station Arcade, South Australia 5000. Phone: +618 8211-7505

Recordings
CD Baby - for recordings of spoken word and almost anywhere these days that has music.



Thursday, May 6, 2010

PUBLISHING AND REJECTIONS

Publishing

There are many more presses - of course. These are some which might otherwise escape your notice. They are mainly specialist presses: some of them publish poetry exclusively. If you are interested in commercial publishers or large educational publishers their contact details can easily be found on the net and you don't need me to point them out to you. Look at the Scams and Ripoffs post.

AB
Ahadada Books - 'finely crafted limited editions'

CDEFG
Cornford Press - Comes out of Tasmania. No longer publishes, but still has a backlist.

H
eHarlequin - Romance

IJ
IP (Interactive Publications). Publishes in book and digital forms. Based in Brisbane, Qld

KLMNO
Kardoorair Press Poetry and education publisher based in Armidale, NSW. Has the excellent good sense to publish me, as does Interactive, and PressPress. What a coincidence that they are all listed here.

PQ
Paper Bark Press - Robert Adamson's press.
papertiger media has expanded from its original role as a publishing vehicle for their annual poetry CDROM, to publishing poetry and art on the web and in print.
Pardalote Press Poetry press with good production values, out of Tasmania.
PressPress Possibly the smallest publisher in the known universe. Publishes small poetry chapbooks only. Based in Australia.
Paroxysm Press says about itself: “Paroxysm Press rose from the gutter of the Australian music scene in 98’. It’s been fighting tooth and nail ever since to publish the type of hard edge, honest and high impact writing we all love and live for ourselves.”

R
Rubicon Press is a small Canadian poetry chapbook publisher. Go to their site for subscription and purchase details. Do not send ms by email. Snail mail to: Rubicon Press, Suite 304, 10750-78 Avenue Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6E 1P.

S
Small Change Press run by Graham Nunn. Based in Brisbane, it publishes poetry chapbooks.

TUVWXYZ
Transita - contemporary women's fiction based in the UK.



Agents

For a list of agents, go to the Australian Literary Agents Association site. It has useful material on finding an agent, various literary contacts (including manuscript assessment services) and a list of members. A useful and informative site for very new writers to those who have been around for a while. This American site has some useful information on it as well: Agent Query.

And you've got to go and visit this blog: Miss Snark, the literary agent - all manner of useful advice, with humour and grace. She no longer adds to this blog, alas, but there are many useful items there: in summary, read the instructions, try not to be an idiot. Fair enough.

Go to the Australian Society of Authors page also lists another half dozen Australian agents.


Rejections

The general rule is: people who publish stuff, don't have to like your stuff and don't have to publish it if they don't want to.

Mostly they'll be kind, but the various words of rejection ('not enough space on our list', 'unable to offer at this time' etc) add up to the same thing: 'Nope'. Be angry, get drunk, get over it; then have a look at this blog: Slushkiller on Making Light or if you want to indulge go to the Rejection Collection. Once you've got over that, see what can happen to you if you get too many rejections.

I've got to say, though, that the best rejection (of a poem) I ever had consisted of a carefully typed (yes) form where the boxes reading 'Wrong shoe size' and 'Wrong type of fish' had been carefully xed in. I laughed for days.

Self-publishing

Anyone can self-publish. It's easy to do, although not necessarily a good thing to do.

'Publishing' is changing big time. Not everybody likes it; not everyone embraces it. We are in the middle of a revolution and it will be some time before the dust settles and the new form/s of publishing are accepted, commonplace or used at all.

My prediction, for what it is worth, is that some sectors of publishing will remain hardcopy because some sectors want a beautiful artefact, but most will go digital and that we will probably be walking around with an all-purpose electronic device (somewhere between a computer and an iPhone but more interactive than a Kindle) and we'll store our lovely books there. Remember how we used to store music?

It is possible to publish and ebook, or some version of an ebook, very very quickly. This is fine if you want to give a publication away - for example you might be very happy to do this is you have just written a family history.

If you're publishing through a blog or site (or even through something like googledocs) the process is instant - though you might have an audience of one. There are many creative geniuses out there, not just you. Some have taken this route though and succeeded. Have a look at this article Books Gone Wild: The Digital Age Reshapes Literature.

If you have enough money you can self-publish in hardcopy (ie produce traditional books) - selling and distribution are the difficult areas however. You might consider the many small publishers listed above. You might also want to see if your manuscript is a total dog before you inflict in on the public or publishers. PressPress has a manuscript assessment service if you want to go that route. You could think of getting a mentor and or editor to help you.

Here are two sites relate to science fiction/science fantasy although there are many more sites out there - including companies which will ease the process of publication such (as Lulu) for you: The Hal Spacejock Series, 'How to self-publish a book ...and who should be doing it' and Ian Irvine: The truth about publishing