Categories: Uncategorized

27 May 2010, Comments Off

poetry project part A

Author: gertrude

Writer’s Craft: Poetry Project Part A

Submit your work to an external publication.
There are two ways a writer gets published. One is through “blind” submissions to publications. That’s where you, as an unknown writer, submit your work to various publications, editors, or agents. Once you establish a reputation in the writing community, you might find yourself invited to submit work to a publication.

Publications that receive work get a LOT of submissions. Preparing your work for submission is a bit like preparing for a job interview. It involves research so that you know that your work and the publication are the right fit for each other. It involves careful grooming of your work. You wouldn’t want to show up to an interview with spinach in your teeth right? Typos are the spinach in the teeth of a literary submission.

Steps:
1) research

Choose three publications andor projects to which you would like to submit work.
sources: class website, your own initiative

For each one, find their submission guidelines and print them or copy them if the publication only exists in print.

2) Choose one of the poems you have written.
Give it a polish and bring THREE copies to class on Tuesday.

You will receive feedback from both your writer’s workshop groups and from me.
You will also be marked on the quality of feedback you give the work.

3) Revision
Revise the work based on the suggestions.

4) Within a week following the writer’s workshops, choose ONE of the publications and prepare a submission for it. Include a cover letter. Your cover letter should be addressed to whoever is in charge of the publication’s submissions.

Your cover letter must include:

- an indication that you understand the nature of their publication
- a description of the kind of work you do, using words from the poetry profiler, and mentioning names of poets who have influenced your work
- your publishing history (your blog, if nothing else)
- a request to be included in their publication or project

22 Mar 2010, Comments (1)

true ease

Author: gertrude

True ease in writing comes from art, not chance,
As those move easiest who have learned to dance.

‘Tis not enough no harshness gives offense,
The sound must seem an echo to the sense:

Soft is the strain when Zephyr gently blows,
And the smooth stream in smoother numbers flows;
But when loud surges lash the sounding shore,
The hoarse, rough verse should like the torrent roar;

When Ajax strives some rock’s vast weight to throw,
The line too labors, and the words move slow;

Not so, when swift Camilla scours the plain,
Flies o’er the unbending corn, and skims along the main.

Hear how Timotheus’ varied lays surprise,
And bid alternate passions fall and rise!

Alexander Pope, from the Essay on Criticism

Listen and take notes on this discussion of What the President will Say and Do

the hours
84 charing cross road
mrs parker
fear and loathing in las vegas
henry & june
capote
Finding Neverland.
Sylvia.
Wilde
Basketballl Diaries
Becoming jane
Miss Potter
My Brilliant Career
Barfly
Kafka
Il Postino
Empire of the sun
Gothic/ Haunted Summer
An Angel at my table
Mishima
Tom and Viv

9 Feb 2010, Comments Off

chewsdee

Author: gertrude

1) breathing

2) hot writing under the influence of breathing

3) love in prepositional phrases

4) further investigation

here are the links to metafilter for your invesitigations:

love

romance

5 Feb 2010, Comments Off

Friiiiday

Author: gertrude

1) The Writer’s Journal- handout

2) a writing exercise

3) finish da book

homework:
do another writing experiment in your journal

Assignment #2: record 1000 words
Due Wednesday February 10.

3 Feb 2010, Comments Off

The first Day

Author: gertrude

Intro: Craig Ferguson on Youtube, It’s a Wonderful Night

1) handouts: student info, course outline

2) Welcome & Intro, from
Sayonara, Gangsters

3) Name plates

4) 25 Random Things – doo Tomorrow

5) Writing about writing