Reality Writes

Words from an aspiring young writer

What Book Would You Be? August 31, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — realitywrites @ 8:56 pm


You’re A People’s History of the United States!
by Howard Zinn
After years of listening to other peoples’ lies, you decided you’ve had enough. Now you’re out to tell it like it is, with all the gory details and nothing left out. Instead of respecting leaders, you want to know what the common people have to offer. But this revolution still has a long way to go, and you’re not against making a little profit while you wait. Honesty is your best policy.
 

I’ll accept that! What Book Would You Be? 

(Thanks to Frazer from Park Road Books for the meme)

 

Novels August 30, 2007

Filed under: Reading List — realitywrites @ 6:50 pm

 

While at the beach, I finished Audrey Niffenegger’s The Time Traveler’s Wife (I know, it took me forever to read, since my lunch breaks are shorter at my new job – 10 minutes at best - and I didn’t take the book home until our weekend vacation). But it was excellent (thank you, Casey, for recommending). If any of you have read my creative nonfiction, you know that I love a “braided” story, and this one was a wonderful example of how distorted chronology can create momentum and keep imagery strong. I definitely thought “I wish I had written this” throughout reading the whole book. Also, for those of you who have visited and/or lived in/loved Chicago, this is a must-read. Even though I’ve only been to the city twice, I found joy in recognizing where certain scenes took place in the book & city.

So, to keep up with my “novel & Internet reading at work, poetry & magazines at home” practice, I started reading Sara Gruen’s Water for Elephants, which I had picked up from Park Road Books’ “2006 Reader’s Choice” shelf back when I bought Time Traveler’s Wife. Coincidentally, Gruen is also a Chicago author. So far, I’m loving it, and it appears to be a fast read. The story is set in a present-day nursing home and in a flash-back to the Great Depression era, when the narrator had joined a carnival as a veterinarian. I might get this book for my sister, who just completed vet school, for her birthday or Christmas, depending on how it unfolds.

So yeah, it’s good to delve into some nice contemporary fiction. I think it takes the edge off everything else I stick my nose into :)

 

over the hump August 28, 2007

Filed under: MFA Prep, Writing and Life — realitywrites @ 3:14 am

August is coming to a close this week and I’m feeling very behind. I’ve been too busy with end-of-summer things, which were all good for the social health but have made me nonetheless feel unproductive with my writing/portfolio/applications.

That isn’t to say, however, that I haven’t had a good time. I got to visit my family, celebrate my birthday, and take a small vacation to Charleston – all things intended to relax, but maybe just made me a little more stressed than I needed to be. Too much in one month, perhaps.

I haven’t written any new poems this month – or at least not any that have made it to completion. I’ve dabbed here or there at my applications, but am yet to get serious-serious about them. Mostly, I’ve been freaking myself out and reading waaay too much on the Internet about the programs I’m interested in, who goes there/who went there, and how to put together the perfect application, etc. Oh, and I submitted some poems to two magazines back in July – I heard a rejection from one last week (or assumed rejection that is, I never got a formal one. I just saw that they published without me!) and the other one has been M.I.A. and even though I’ve written a query as to the journal’s status, I haven’t heard anything. I’m not so certain as to simultaneously submit yet, because it is a journal of some reputation, but I am generally peaved at the unprofessionalism of the matter and probably won’t consider sending my work there again. 

Oh, and I picked up another freelance project for the newspaper. It’s small – in theory at least – but it requires enough research to put together the few blurbs that I can and did spend a whole evening on it on the first try. I hope this isn’t the case in the future and that I can keep my freelance evenings down to 2 nights per week instead of 3 or more. I’d hate to quit the gigs just for the sake of completing my applications – plus, the money is good enough to keep my head above water at bill time at the end of the month.

And to top things off, I’m about to enter the busiest season of the year at the day job. I worked a little overtime last week, but that was mostly just so I could take Friday off to go to the beach, but in the following weeks I will probably be spending a lot more time at work until we push out the holiday catalogues. I’ve been told that things will die down around Thanksgiving, so I’m crossing my fingers on that one.

So, I plan to have a very uneventful Labor Day weekend – with the exception of a quick visit with my parents on Sunday evening at a nearby campground – and spend most of it studying for the GRE (only a little over a week away!) and working on applications. I feel a little guilty for this because even though I’ve had a busy August, most of it has been spent out of town and there are still several friends here who I’d like to hang out with more. Maybe weekday evenings will work better, but I’m still too exhausted to dedicate myself to anything this week. And after the GRE, I hope to sit down every weekend for several hours and knock out these applications one by one, so that I can have all materials to give to recommendation people before Thanksgiving, and mail the rest to the schools by Christmas. Ambitious, yes, but it’s my only saving grace.

Oh yeah, and I’m now officially 25 so I must be going crazy.

 

This is sad August 22, 2007

Filed under: Writing Resources, Writing and Life — realitywrites @ 2:23 pm

One In Four Read No Books Last Year

excerpts:

[One in four adults read no books at all in the past year, according to an Associated Press-Ipsos poll released Tuesday.  

... 

"I just get sleepy when I read," said Richard Bustos of Dallas, a habit with which millions of Americans can doubtless identify. Bustos, a 34-year-old project manager for a telecommunications company, said he had not read any books in the last year and would rather spend time in his backyard pool.

That choice by Bustos and others is reflected in book sales, which have been flat in recent years and are expected to stay that way indefinitely. Analysts attribute the listlessness to competition from the Internet and other media, the unsteady economy and a well-established industry with limited opportunities for expansion.]

(found courtesy of Poetry Hut)

 

Currently reading August 17, 2007

Filed under: Poetry, Reading List — realitywrites @ 6:35 pm

Wyslawa Szymborska, View With A Grain of Sand: Selected Poems. I like her sense of humor and rhetorical thinking. Recommended to me by a friend (thanks, Brian!)

&

The Poet’s Companion by Kim Addonizio and Dorianne Laux. I’m not far into this one but it is a great tool. Lots of prompts and exercizes to delve into when in writer’s block. I can see myself referring to this book for years to come.

 

finding a public workshop August 16, 2007

Filed under: Poetry, Writing Resources, Writing and Life — realitywrites @ 3:19 pm

last week, my friend Lindsey and I attended a “Poetry Sharing” event at the Arboretum Barnes & Noble. I heard about it through a local poetry e-newsletter I get every month.

I showed up early and ran into Jonathan Rice, editor of Iodine and manager of the B&N, and then killed time reading Ann Campanella’s new book of poems – a nice collection of not-sappy poems about her mother’s Alzheimer’s disease. I was probably 20 pages deep into it when I realized that it was 7:45 and the poetry thing started at 7:20, so I walked around and found a circle of folks over in the food section of all places. Beth Cagle Burt was reading some of her work and showing her photography as an opening to the poetry sharing. I knew her from the reading I did earlier in the year there. I saw Lindsey when I walked up so we got two chairs and sat in the back of the circle.

OK, here’s where I get more honest. At first glance, it looked like a senior citizens meeting. I think everyone but maybe 4 people, including Lindsey and me, were retired and probably had grandchildren. I almost felt embarrassed for inviting Lindsey and I was sure that she was going to bolt before it became time for her to read her poem. (Lindsey just graduated from Sarah Lawrence’s MFA program. Can you imagine how different this was compared to her two+ years in the New York poetry scene?!) She gave me a look and said she didn’t want to read because she was afraid what she brought was too risk-ay for this bunch. I promised her it wasn’t, and held my breath that we would make it through. I was so eager to get some good hard criticism on my work, and I was hoping the “older is wiser” saying would fit this group.

For the most part, though, the group’s poems were hugely basic and some were blatantly first drafts. I felt many were too sentimental, too narrative, too boring. But everyone was soo sweet, and I couldn’t help feel good just for being around poetic people. And there were some decent poems to note. One guy read a prose poem that he had just workshopped at a writing conference in Spartanburg. I couldn’t hear him well, and he didn’t bring enough copies, so it was hard to get a full feel for it but I was just thankful for him offering something different. And another younger fella (probably in his 30s) – who we later found out was a high school English teacher – read a beautiful poem about a boxer. He said he had just spent the last year in Panama working on a boxer’s biography.

When it came time for me to read, I wasn’t nervous at all. I think some people thought I had never read in public – one old man asked me how it felt to read in front of a group – and I just said how happy I was to do that, because it had been 3 years since my last workshop. And that’s the truth – I wanted criticism so badly. I wanted to bounce off ideas about what works or doesn’t work, get down to the nerdy details of each line with people. But everyone there was too nice. Most of the comments were “such fine imagery” or if it was a narrative, people would fly off on their own tangents about a similar life experience they had had. In some ways, I thought the poetry sharing was more of a memory sharing.  Poetry was serving its purpose here as a medium that connected the personal with another – which is good, but the same could have been acheived at an open mic. But who knows, maybe they’re more open when there are not any newcomers in the group.

However, a couple people did give me feedback that helped. Richard Allen Taylor, who I greatly admire for his community involvement in the Charlotte poetry scene (I see him at just about every event I’ve attended), made some comments about the sound of the words in my poem. And the guy who read the prose poem (I wish I could remember his name!) gave me a very good tip about taking out one word – a word I had taken out in an earlier draft but put back in later. Both of these comments happened outside of the circle, though. I felt like we were the rebels of the group, giving criticism on the side.

Lindsey did end up reading her poem – which was not overt in the least and was well received by everyone. Her poem showed very fine craft, and was one of the few I heard that night that actually said something, rather than just documenting an event with pretty words. And to me, those are the poems that matter most.

Afterward, we stood outside and recapped everything much like I’m doing here. I was surprised to hear that Lindsey was thankful that I brought her. Since she’s moved back to Charlotte, she hadn’t found anything like that. Even though it was a little ammateur, it was good for her.

As we were talking, I just kind of said in passing “We should start a young poets group.” And her eyes lit up, “YEAH WE SHOULD!” and so we discussed it briefly and…I think we’re going to do it. Or at least do something small and see if it gets bigger. We’re going to meet sometime in the next week or so to set out more firm details and then I’ll start publicizing it. So, maybe I’ll get my Charlotte workshop afterall!

 

Going home August 9, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — realitywrites @ 7:49 pm

I leave tomorrow for my hometown to stay with my sister in Chattanooga and visit my family on Signal Mountain.

I’ll have deer meat when I return!

(back on Monday)

 

map it out! August 7, 2007

Filed under: MFA Prep — realitywrites @ 6:59 pm

Here’s what my list of schools looks like on a map.

It’s kinda scary!

I had no idea Montana was that far away.

I always think everything is just east of the Mississippi. haha.

 

I did it! August 4, 2007

Filed under: MFA Prep — realitywrites @ 9:10 pm

I scheduled to take the GRE!

Sept. 15 – 1 p.m.!

(yeah, there was still no way I was going to get up at 9 a.m. on a Saturday.)

 

Cookout August 4, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — realitywrites @ 8:24 pm

grille

What would summer be without a cookout?

Everyone who’s anyone (a.k.a. my wonderful friends) come out to my place on Saturday, Aug. 18 at 4 p.m. for some grillin’ goodness! BYOB

Need directions, comment.