poetry

Getting Poetry Published

Get Your Poetry Collection Published
I’ve just been looking at online thoughts about the pay to be considered idea for poetry, and wonder how you feel about it? There is no charge to submit to a full length collection to Ginninderra Press, nor to Pure Slush/Truth Serum Press (two important South Australian Publishers), but there are certainly reading fees if you wish to submit to many other publishers.
How do you feel about the idea of paying a fee to submit your poetry? I don’t feel that is something I wish to take part in. My finances don’t run to paying money to have a poetry collection considered for publication, not at the moment anyway.
I am willing to pay a competition fee, for entering a poetry competition, and I am the Competition Secretary for Adelaide Plains Poets, a writing group that also runs a national poetry competition every year. This competition has a fee for entering, for the Open (Adult) section, but not for the two student sections, it is free for them to enter, but the students can only submit one poem.
This competition has cash prizes for the top three entries in each of the sections, quite good prizes, and the fee is only $10 for the first entry, and $5 for subsequent entries, from each adult entrant. I haven’t taken a big look at such things, but I think our fee per possible prize ration is fair.
So, What Do You Think?

I hope to get responses from other poets about this issue. Both from poets who submit manuscripts for possible publication, and those who submit individual poems or groups of up to five or so for publication in a journal or other literary publication.

This website has the article with some interesting information. I think the idea of paying big dollars for a little result is something that has been going on for many years. Poets or wannabees, are often ripped off by unruly types.

There are many ‘publishers’ who are more than willing to assist people who want to self-publish their work, and charge exorbitant fees too, with little in the way of producing a quality book one to be proud of, nor much  money put into the marketing of the books.

Please leave a message, this is an important thing. Poets tend to not be rich people with lots of money to spare.

 

Story Ideas, Writing

Writer and Stoic, Thinking …

I’m enjoying a new philosophical journey these days, now for me anyway. The Stoic movement has been around for over two thousand years, but it’s only this year, that I’ve begun looking further into it. And in looking into it, I was inspired to begin a new blog about it. Thus My Stoic Life.

Some of ideas and ideals of Stoicism definitely appeal to me, and my way of being, and I wonder whether I had somehow become a Stoic accidentally, and am just now realising it. Stoics have been mislabelled in the past, and written off as being people who merely humourless and uncaring.

I mentioned my interest in Stoicism, and was thrilled to receive this book “How to be a Stoic” by Massimo Pigliucci for my birthday, earlier this year. It is an eminently readable and interesting look at being a Stoic in the modern age.

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Stoics can certainly enjoy life, they are not uncaring people, or party poopers. The opposite is true, to some extent. Stoics do care, and they like to enjoy life. But the Stoic way to enjoy life, is to do so in moderation, not going over the top, and suffering in the morning. The Stoic would partake in all in moderation, and so be capable of doing the same thing the next day, instead of suffering from the previous day’s over indulgence!

The Stoic will care about their family, fellow citizens, and friends. They will humane, caring and be sociable. If there were to be a Stoic society, it would be a kind and caring place, with no-one striving for more than anyone else had. People would freely give anything they had in abundance, knowing others wold share their excess freely too.

Stoics value reasonable and rational behaviour, and all things in moderation. Thinking on these things led to creating a new blog, feel free to visit and explore what I have discovered,and what I think about this whole Stoic thing.

I’d love to know what you feel about my Stoical ideas!

poetry, writing exercise

A Small Workshop

I’m a writer, and like many other writers, I find a variety of ways to go, as a writer, beyond just writing books. I write poems, I write articles and blog posts, such as this one, and I also do writing workshops, sometimes paid ones, other times just for a community group perhaps.

This workshop is one I am going to be presenting at a group that meets regularly in Gawler, a town I spend a lot of time in, even though I don’t live there. Many of my friends live in Gawler, and my writing group meets every week, in a lovely, historic hotel in Gawler.

This workshop is happening at a community centre, not a hotel, but that’s still a good thing. Anyway, this is the Workshop, take a look and give it a go. Feel free to ask any questions you have about it, in the comments section.

 

Workshop – Loved Little Things

Writing simple little poems can be easy, if you scale back what you want to write, and just stick to closely watching one small aspect of something you love, or love doing. It may be a hobby, for instance knitting, and you could write about a favourite item of clothing you’ve knitted in your past.

Or it could be cooking, and you choose cake making as your topic, and perhaps write a poem about a kind of cake you like to make. I used to enjoy making muffins, and I’ve written about vegetable muffins in the past, I think. I was very ‘into’ vegetables, in a former line of volunteer work – I was a Community Foodie, teaching people about healthy eating, and cooking.

Nature is one of my favourite things to write poems about, and the poem I’ve got on my notes here today is about a little part of Nature, the ant. I used rhythm and rhyme in my poem, but that isn’t necessary, it’s up to you to choose your poetic style. Or if you’re not in a poetic mood today, any form of writing will be fine,

You might write a small note about your small thing, or perhaps write a letter to it, or about it. Any kind of writing will be fine. So take that small part of the thing you love, and insert yourself, and your thoughts and wondering into the piece of writing. Think about how you relate to, or gain joy from, your loved thing, and write about that.

This little poem was one I wrote last year, think it was, after seeing a line of ants on our front veranda, and then over the course of a few days, realising there was always a line of ants in exactly the same spot. I thought it was an interesting little thing. I am a poet, and as a poet, I find myself looking, seeing, and finding many little bits of not much, that can broaden out, and become something – a poem.

Make your small piece your own, make it quirky, make it cute, make it something you’re proud of, or something that makes you small to yourself. Just write it!

 

macro photo of five orange ants
Photo by Poranimm Athithawatthee on Pexels.com

Ant March

 

Ants are marching, tramp, tramp, tramp

Ants are busy, gathering food

Ants are climbing, up that ramp

Ants in an adventurous mood

 

Ants on the veranda, ants on the lawn

Ants are spreading all around

Ants near that sheep that’s just been shorn

Ants up a tree, ants on the ground

 

What are they up to, those little ants

Will they bite if they get the chance?

I’m going to keep myself well away,

We’ll meet up again, on another day!

 

My poem is a rhyming poem, with the first two verses using this rhyming scheme: abab, cdcd, with final verse eeff
Can you see what I mean there with the term ‘rhyming scheme’? The letters refer to the rhyming final word in each line, ‘a’ is the words tram and ramp, ‘b’ is the words food and mood. and so on. I hope that makes sense for you. And I hope you get some nice small poems about ‘Loved Little Things’!

 

 

Carolyn

 

Carolyn Cordon, writer, poet, blogger, newsletter editor

poetry

Working On My Next Big Thing

I know I’m actually supposed to be writing a novel, but I have to admit to myself that I’m not a novelist, not really, at heart, and in my mind, I’m a poet. So that said, even though I have a partly written novel in need of further words written, and some kind of sense made of the various written sections, I am not feeling committed to seeing that novel in print, even though I’m still thinking about the characters.

I’m a poet, so these past few days, I’ve been working on putting together my next possible poetry collection. I’m still conscious of my undue haste in trying to get a different poetry collection published, and had it rejected by the chosen publisher (deservedly so, I agree). But this collection, I hope, won’t be rejected, I like this collection of poems.

Many of the poems in this new collection are very new poems, there are no poems dragged out from years ago, and I’m enjoying the idea of getting some things I’ve written in draft form, in the past year or so, ‘scrubbed up and polished’ to be fine poems, living up to my hopes when I first came up with them.

This new collection is contemporary, dealing with people, for the most part, with a few animal/nature related poems, that may or may not make it to the final collection. I’ll wait and see how I feel about that much later on. My previous poetry collection was all about the animals I’ve known in my life, from pets, to wild animals to the creepy crawlies around where I live. I enjoyed putting together that collection, titled “Tense and Still”, It would be great if this current work in progress could be as good as, or better than that one.

One thing I’m definitely going to do this time, is to have other poet friends read this new collection, to give me feedback, before I send it to a potential publisher. That’s one of the reasons the previous ‘collection’ met such an ignoble end, it was a mish-mash, a jumbled mess, that looked exactly like that, it indicated a confused person, who didn’t pay enough attention to, or care about her work and words on that occasion.

This time will be very different. I have a title I’m fond of, that others have agreed is an arresting title for a collection. I have quite a few poems I feel are exceptionally good, I have a bit of a strand of meaning running through the ideas in the poems, and I feel I will be able to hook the poems to the strand, so it flows along in good and poetic ways.

At the moment, even though I have the poem titles in a particular order, I am not set on that. My next step, after looking for and typing up another few poems I have around my papers/notebooks, is to print out all of the poems, and have a good read of them all, and make piles of related poems.

Then I’ll leave it for a day or so, then take another look, think about it all, and see if I feel I’ve got a collection that ‘works’. Then I hand it over to those few poet friends, for feedback. I’m hoping that within a year, this will be a poetry collection, written, submitted, and published, then launched.

Keep an idea here, for further news. And please feel free to ask me about this process, if there’s anything you’d like to know.

Writing

Wasting Words, or Just Wasting Time?

I am a poet, a blogger, a Facebook User, I use Twitter, I’m writing a novel, I write short stories (sometimes), and I put out a monthly newsletter for my local town. I enjoy doing all of those things, and some of them I do every single day – the Social Media pieces of writing, commenting on Facebook, and tweeting on Twitter. I blog at least every coupe of days, and often post a new blog post once a day or more. I am a writer.

I’m a member of a writing group that meets once a week, and another group that meets once a month, and I will always write something new either at, or for those groups. The thing I most want to be though, I think, is a published novelist. So why don’t I write a novel?

I sort of am, writing a novel. The writing I do at the weekly writing group, is often a short piece that will go into my novel, eventually. I think on the writing prompt for the session, and think on my main characters from my novel, and about what I’ve written so far for my novel, and I write, and there is another fragment of writing for that novel I’m working on.

But is this a way to actually write a novel, I wonder? I have short pieces, perhaps 150 to 300 words, and that’s it. a week or so ago I actually managed to write a new piece for my novel that followed directly from the piece I wrote the week before. I happened to have the same notebook with me, and so it was simple to look at the previous week’s work before starting on the writing exercise for that day.

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I’ve used various notebooks for the writing exercises, and I’ve written other parts of my current work in a file on my laptop. I’ve written other pieces on my phone, other parts on our PC. If I gathered up all of those pieces of writing of that novel, I’m not really sure how many words I’d have. It may be 50 to 60 thousand words. But am I putting all of those bits of writing together? No, I’m not, I’m happily doing other kinds of writing, the blogging, the comments on Facebook, the tweets on Twitter, and the poems at other times.

I’m writing words, but as the title of this blog suggests, I’m wasting my time, if that is what my writing aim is … Or am I? Living my life, thinking about things, being a part of my various communities, these all add to my knowledge of life, and five me ideas about things. And surely writers have to have interesting things to write about, ideas, thoughts.

So perhaps I’m not wasting my words, perhaps I am writing that novel, and perhaps this novel, these characters, will finally make it out into the real world. What do you think? Will Meredith and Travis, my main characters, beat the bad guy, and then finally commit to a relationship together? What do you think?