by Carolee Sherwood
Let’s begin this poll dance with a happy dance. Aren’t all poll dances happy? Around here, absolutely. But this one is especially celebratory since, for the first time, more than 100 votes were cast in the recent Read Write Poll! It’s wonderful. It’s happy dance-worthy. (Thank you!)
So, how much of your poetry writing do you post on your blog: all of it? most of it? half of it? less than half? a small percent? don’t blog at all?
You may be as surprised as I am to learn that more than one-third of you — 37 percent — say you don’t blog. If you are in this demographic, give us a yell in the comments section. We’d love to meet you! The main way we create a poetry community at Read Write Poem is to visit the blogs of our fellow poets at least weekly when we collectively “Get Our Poem On” and post links to our original poems. It’s so great that non-bloggers are visiting, and we’d love to hear how you’re using the site, what resources work for you, and how you’d like to participate in the future.
The rest of us reported blogging our poetry, and we scattered our votes among the choices. It’s tempting to say it means something that after non-bloggers, the second highest voting block (22 percent) was from poets who blog “most” of their poetry. However, the opposite choice — “I only post a small percentage of what I write” — earned 18 percent of the votes, a relatively similar section of our visitors. Ten percent post “half,” 10 percent post “all of it,” and four percent post “less than half of it.”
No matter where you find yourself within these statistics, use the comments section to tell us about your motivations. Why do you post poetry on your blog at all? How do you decide what to post and what to withhold? Have your poetry blogging habits changed over time?
Watch for our upcoming poll inspired by Read Write Poem a participant who left a suggestion at our last poll dance (What would you like to know?).
Here’s how the poll dance works: We post a poll and let it ride for a bit, and then I talk about the topic and the results. But don’t make me dance alone! Keep me company in the comments section where we share our thoughts on the poll and contribute our personal stories.
by Carolee Sherwood
This poll dance is a little different. Think “group hug,” if you can. Or if you’re like me and a little bit leery of such displays of affection, imagine a mosh pit instead. However you see it, gather ’round. Come in close.
What would you like to know about your fellow Read Write Poem-ers? It can be personal. (I hope some of it’s personal.) It can be strictly business (poetry business, of course). You can inquire about writing practice, private lives, the state of poetry in our communities, reading habits, aspirations. Anything.
This is your chance to propose future “Read Write Polls” and suggest what some of the multiple choice answers may be. Use the comments section of this post to tell us your ideas, and let’s try (try!) not to answer the questions of our poet pals here. Let’s try (I know it will be hard!) to save the answers for upcoming poll dance discussions.
Here’s how the poll dance (usually) works: We post a poll and let it ride for a week and a half or so, and then I’ll talk a little bit about the topic and the results. The poll will stand for a few days after that to allow additional participation. The rotation gives each poll two weeks — or so — in the white-hot spotlight.
by Carolee Sherwood
Of course poem size matters. It’s not everything, but it matters. And its function — focus, people, we’re talking poetry here — makes excellent fodder for a discussion about the writing process.
A recent Read Write Poll revealed that most of us have written poems of two or more pages, including several who have written poems of chapbook, book or epic length. Personally, I have never written a poem that exceeds two pages, although recently I did start a poem that will have multiple sections, likely surpassing the two-page barrier.
As a poet, I tend to fall on the side of short and sweet. As a reader, I enjoy concise language, and I like to be lead with great efficiency both into and out of a poem. In both instances, however, I am unclear if it’s a true literary preference, or if I force my poetry likes and dislikes to conform to my life. Do I have a true appreciation for brevity or is it just convenience? Do I lack the attention span as a writer and a reader to invest in longer pieces?
Certainly, I stand in awe at so many of the epics — written in section after section, act after act — and I am better for having read them. I am also grateful for bite-sized poems I can consume greedily, one after another. As a reader, what do you prefer? What do you read most often?
When I write poetry, I stop when I feel the poem has reached its natural ending. Typically when I revise, I am looking at opportunities to tighten language and remove unnecessary words. I rarely move in the opposite direction, toward exploring a concept with new scenes or adding another stanza. As a writer, how do you know when to stop? If you write longer pieces, how do you keep up your stamina and how do you maintain the momentum of the subject?
Here’s how the poll dance works: We post a poll and let it ride for a week and a half or so, and then I’ll talk a little bit about the topic and the results. The poll will stand for a few days after that to allow additional participation. The rotation gives each poll two weeks — or so — in the white-hot spotlight.
by Carolee Sherwood
Splash some water on my face. Pick me up off the floor. I am in shock over the last Read Write Poll! For the first time since I’ve been doing this dance on this very stage, the answers of my fellow Read Write Poem members have completely surprised me. For over a week, you’ve had a chance to describe your writing network by selecting some very clichéd metaphors equating “network” with “family.” And half of you identified as orphans, stating you work alone. Really? You do?
That was my initial response as I watched the poll results unfold, but I have been breathing into a paper bag for a few days, and I have calmed down. I can think more clearly now.
I remember that writing is considered by many to be a quiet, solitary activity. That is its reputation. I remember how many enjoyable hours I have spent writing alone in silence. I remember how many years that’s how I thought it would always be, and I was content.
After the birth of my third son via emergency C-section, I questioned everything. I cut my really, really long hair off. Completely. I turned myself from couch potato to runner nearly overnight. I returned to the creative endeavors I had neglected.
Among the dramatic changes were new writing habits.
I found a women’s writing group that spent some Monday evenings writing from prompts, sharing previously written pieces and networking. I met my writing buddy and uber-cool real-life pal Jill there, actually. We were both mothers of very young children trying to hold onto our identities as writers. A couple years later, I started blogging. I found Poetry Thursday and, later, Read Write Poem. I began to write collaboratively with fellow blogging poets on a project that would become The Poetry Collaborative.
My writing family role evolved from that of an orphan to that of someone torn between laying claim as one of a dozen cousins crowded in Grandma’s feather bed (being a member of a writing group) and celebrating my luck as one half of a sibling pair (having a tight writing buddy). It feels like a great spot to be. I still enjoy the peace and quiet of writing alone, but I do it as a member of a larger community, and that has become very important to me.
For those of you who say you’re orphans, use the comments section to tell me about your circumstances or your choices or to mind my own damn business. Tell me why, even though you like communities like Read Write Poem, you maintain some distance.
And the rest of you, I don’t recommend we try to convert the writing loners. (There’s nothing wrong with the approach.) Instead, talk about how community and collaboration work for you and how you came to it. If you are fortunate enough to have some experience with mentors (“parents”), I’d love for you to share with us how it has worked for you and what recommendations you have if we decide to put ourselves up for adoption.
Here’s how the Poll Dance works: We post a poll every week. Every other week, I talk a little bit about whatever aspect or aspects of those polls is most striking.
Since you can’t see this particular poll anymore, here are the poll questions and results:
Describe your writing “family” (network)
22 votes (out of 44) for: I’m an orphan. I work alone.
8 votes (out of 44) for: *I have a dozen cousins crowded in Grandma’s featherbed (a group of writer pals).
6 votes (out of 44) for: We are the world (my writing networks are too vast to measure via the family metaphor).
5 votes (out of 44) for: I have a sibling who’s like my best friend (a tight writing buddy).
3 votes (out of 44) for: I have great parents (mentors).
by Carolee Sherwood
Wouldn’t it be cool if we were super heroes with super secret identities? The man of steel disguises himself as Clark Kent, lowly reporter for The Daily Planet. Shy photographer Peter Parker is the regular guy shtick that belongs to Spiderman.
We could do the same thing! Slick back our hair, button up our shirts, keep our heads down and tell no one about the extent of our powers. Every time a poetry crisis develops in our otherwise peaceful cities we could disappear, change into our tights and lunge straight into danger.
By the looks of the current Read Write Poll, we may, in fact, be doing a bit of hiding where our poetry powers are concerned. And if we’re not hiding them, we may be downplaying them a bit. For the most part, people know we write but they may know little else about our writing personae.
Undoubtedly this is as much a function of contemporary culture (no time for details, no value placed on artistic endeavors, inability to make a living as poets) as it is any desire to avoid unwelcome attention. It may also have something to do with it being difficult to articulate our affection for writing poetry. Although a few of us report having people in our lives who seem to understand what writing poetry means to us, most of us struggle to “talk poetry” with non-writers.
Well, here’s your chance. (Sort of. Suspend reality for a moment. Pretend Read Write Poem has been invaded by non-writers, who, for all intents and purposes, are like aliens from other planets to many of us.) Use the comments section to explain your poet identity. What is at the core of your deep affection for writing poetry? And why is it just easier to be Clark Kent than Superman?
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read write poem news- read write poem napowrimo anthology
June 20, 2010 | 1:36 pmThe Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Anthology is still in production. Selection, placement, layout and copyediting are taking longer than anticipated. Thank you for your patience. I hope to have the piece completed in July. For those who have emailed asking if they can be included, the May 7 deadline for submission of work stands. Those who met that deadline will be included. Please check the post on this site listing who I received submissions from by that date. If you submitted your work by the May 7 deadline in accordance with our guidelines and your name is not listed, send an email to info (at) readwritepoem (dot) org.
- read write poem napowrimo anthology
May 5, 2010 | 3:09 pmRemember that Friday* is the deadline for submitting work to the Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Anthology. Check out the guidelines for submission in the main column (to the left). On May 8, we’ll post a news item listing everyone we’ve received work from. If you submitted work and your name is not on that list, please let us know. Thanks!
*I initially said “tomorrow,” but I meant to say “Friday.”
- napowrimo congratulations, and a reminder
April 24, 2010 | 12:05 pmIt’s the final week of the Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Challenge! Just 7 days left. With that, a reminder that Read Write Poem will culminate with the anthology featuring work from those who complete the challenge. A post with details for submitting to the anthology will be published May 1. Be sure you remove any information from the site that you want preserved — such as group content and personal messages. Those elements of the site will be removed May 1 as well. The main site will remain up as an archive.
- ‘underlife’ tour at january gill o’neil’s blog
April 20, 2010 | 8:11 pmJanuary Gill O’Neil’s virtual book tour has moved to her site and is underway now. Check out the lineup at Poet Mom.
Archive for read write poem news »
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thank you and farewell As of May 1, 2010, Read Write Poem is no longer active.
In late May, an anthology featuring work from those who completed the Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Challenge will be published here and on issuu.com.
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