Monday, September 5, 2011

Labor Day

Hey all! Thought I'd share a video that features footage of Andre Dubus III (speaking about his father), Lawrence Block, John Lutz, Don Winslow, Mary Glickman, M. William Phelps, and Kevin O'Brien discussing the odd jobs they held before making it big.

Thank you, Justin and Laura (of Open Road Media), for sharing this with me.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

...and here's an easier way to vote.

Poll
53620
GOODREADS SEPTEMBER NEWSLETTER TOP FINALISTS' POEMS -- PLEASE SELECT ONE!



CLICK HERE TO READ THIS MONTH'S FINALISTS



* Voting is anonymous and choices are listed randomly.



Thanks, as always, to our judges, Wendy Babiak, Andrew Haley and Ruth Bavetta, for selecting six finalists from this month's group!


Finalist for Goodreads Poetry Contest

Hey y'all...

I'm thrilled to tell you all that I'm a finalist in the Goodreads September Newsletter Contest. I entered one of my poems and received notice it had been picked. So, I'm crazy nuts happy because really--I am embarrassed of my poetry. I feel compelled to write it, but I have a hard time editing those little buggers. Anyhow, if you would be kind enough, I would really appreciate if you could head on over to Goodreads and vote for Fictive Losses HERE.

Fictive Losses


Aunt Jennifer and
her tigers
had nothing over me
and you.

Orchestrating lives
out of sheaves of paper--
talk of Fitzgerald,
what we meant
to do
in the never to come days.

Golden Boy,
eye to the future--
you put Jay to shame
in your search for
a place.


And I
lived through
page 271
a cracked plate,
though i would
not know
for years to come.

what manners of life
fool us to the exigencies
of words
unreliable
ready for the taking

But still
i'll wait with Li Po
by the river
watching the flowers
floating down

Murmuring lines
of hearts like fists
shriveled prunes
air crackling
and other lies
of the poet.



(For some reason, when the poem was copy/pasted, the second chunk of the poem went missing, so in the poll, the poem ends on "cracked plate." Please disregard, as this is poem in its entirety.