Friday, December 5, 2008

Catching up December Styles

Hope all is find you guys well. The web site still seems to have stalled, but it's become a great place for me to rant and ponder aloud in cyberspace. With the recent steelly snowfall here in south central Indiana, I decided it was time to change the look of the website. It looks more like the colours I see outside my office window. Heck, maybe we should all post pictures of what we see outside our office windows. Yes, lets do that. I'll try to have mine up later this weekend.

The semester here at IU is wrapping up, as I'm sure it is for all of you. It's good time to tie some loose ends, dream about reading lists we all wish could actually finish (let alone start), and the dream goal of getting published. I found this link on New Pages' blog about rejection letters. It's at least entertaining. I think I received about 3 of these bad boys in the last week. It's cold here, so I might go for number 4. Let us know what you're reading, what you've read, or what to read. This could be cool. Or cold, depending on the latitude that you now inhabit.

Link to Rejection Letters Funness.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Links and stuff

I've added a links to other blogs of note along the sidebar. If any of y'all have any recommendations let me know and I'll add them. I hope the Turkey Day is going well as is the writing.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Chapbook Publisher of Note

All of us here are poets and writers, so I figured it might be interest to pass on a link to cool small publisher of chapbooks. Their name is Tilt press and they have produced a couple pretty nice little books. For those of you feeling happy enough with your manuscript it might be a worthwhile place to send your stuff.

Tilt Away Here


Don't forget that we can still use this place to publish stuff for workshopping. Oh, and a big congrads to the Powers family and their own little piece of the American Plains.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Randomness as Winter Sets in.

I hope everyone is doing well still. No new postings so I can assume that everyone is quite busy. Thankfully Turkey Day will be upon us soon. I just wanted to quickly post a few worthwhile links for you guys.

Every Montana State English Alum should care that READ THIS has posted their most recent issue online. It features some pretty good stuff including a couple of pieces by our own mr. powers. Check it out at here.

Also, I spent the weekend giving a session at BGSU's Winter Wheat Festival and spent sometime chatting with a few of the table people there. Prairie Margins is one of BGSU's publications and is quite similiar to READ THIS. One of their editors said they would love more submissions, here's their website.

Additionally, if any own might be interested in a MFA and would be willing to move to Ohio, the NEOMFA looks like a pretty cool and relatively unknown program. I talked to several writers in Bloomington as well as some the students involved with it and sounds like its a solid up and comer. the link here.

The publication Whisky Island Review is out of the same system and had some pretty cool stuff in it. It was a well put together magazine and would be a great place to send your stuff. Click here. That is all for now.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Brautigan and Keeler


I just found this picture on-line after starting Brautigan's Revenge of the Lawn Collection. Look at Keeler looking all cowboy serious. Also, I've added Brautigan's epic murder-detective tale "The Scarlatti Tilt"

"The Scarlatti Tilt"
by Richard Brautigan

"It's very had to live in a studio apartment in San Jose with a man who's learning to play the violin." That's what she told the police when she handed them the empty revolver.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Ross Poem 2

Man, Ross should be doing a MFA. He's turning out more poetry than some of my fellow students. You're doing Bozeman and MSU proud buddy. Do a little workshopping in the comments. Thanks for the energy Ross. Again, sorry about the formatting. - D.L.

“Run Amidst the Raindrops in Autumn”

Well, here we stand now, a line of tile found down by the creek bed and nestled
Between the green glass bottles left strewn about by the pebble-beached sand.
And what could be found inside such beings there?
There, over and under the red picnic tables scraped of their paint and stripped
Down to mere woodgrain, sliced between two grand products labeled mine
And yours. The bins only laid their lids after the winds, the four winds blown
From North and South, where the two became only one or more, not the two.
The beach laps underneath a very blue moss-covered terrace found by someone
Other than us...before us...after us...I don't see.
Seeing includes leveling the towers of gutshots and resurrecting a landlocked
Insider only appropriate for the days of our lives, not the gems on television.
The eyes cannot hear where we should have gone, nor can they have the patience
To gob the lot of dead leaves sleeping over by the tables. Would you resemble
The South wind, harrowing and warm, with lights brought up from cheap bars
And sleazy gin buckets lost in the hallway down by the dark-skinned donkey?
Can we explore the recesses of the Byzantine Empire with which we had built, yet we
Topple? Worth the civility of beads traded for mush and bikes, and bowls filled
With realistic expletives only heard in Hemingway's bullfights? Would you resemble
The North wind, frightening and cold, off of the mountain ranges seen as scenery
Bluer than any pastel plaster of Paris, or the bust of one great man lost in his own
Mired calamus root buried under the grounded gifts? Growing in time without the
Philosophical rousing of a better man unfounded and forgotten under books, do
They drop by the artisan's house and ask him these questions? He has what they need,
Wouldn't they say, and violet-quickened note takers would ask the questions of each
To see and forget. One must forget that life once led, and remember the times found
Beside the benches bereft of varnish, right next to those lidless bins filled with
Hate and filth. But the moss will continue to grow, and you too shall find something
Inside of the partaking. North or South, you staff a full journey toward the middle of the
Creek, and bury yourself in the tears of God's eyes, resembling that which once was, and Becoming today's Lady of the Lake, swimming forward, if only for a moment, and
Leaving Promethean hate behind, that which worked you mentally and finitely,
That which faltered and fell beyond sight.
Now he stands, shored and without light, lost in his own sadness struck down by floods
You may cause, but also the cause of those four winds with which you became one.
Now the winds blow and towers level, and the landlocked man becomes the outsider
Only seen in books read and printed on the paper thrown between the red picnic tables.
--Ross K. Tangedal

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Writing Podcast

I came across this link to a podcast/radio show based out of Vermont. It's all about the process/craft of writing and where writers can and perhaps should go with it in terms of the bigger picture stuff. Things like getting a job after your MFA/MA, publishing, even cobbling together that first, second, or third book. It's just good to know that there are others out there trying to do the whole creative writing thing. If you got sometime, while you're pretending to clean your office, grade some papers, or stare at a blank screen hoping poetry or prose will simply roll out of you, then try listening to this.

http://writethebook.podbean.com/

Quick side note: I have a bunch of writing prompt/exercise stuff for both poetry and fiction. Would you all want me to put that sort of stuff up here? Just leave comments after this entry to let me know.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Poem Ho!

Ok, so here's my entry into the blog. A shorty based upon a modified William Carlos Williams style and playing with all that Basho I've been reading - d.l.

Autumn’s Slanting Light

backyard fox yawns.
poet reborn sits.

tail mange like.
face, chest full.

bristling sere grass.
Kawabata’s ears flick.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

We Should Be Rockin'

I've managed to steal admin priveledges from Scottish, so most of you should have started to receive you publisher invites. Let's breath some life back into this group. The arrive of jdp has clearly shown that we have hope for success. If you haven't yet, post some comments on Mr.Powers' piece and Ross'. Scott will hopefully be posting soon (Yeah buddy, I'm calling you out. You don't get no pass for just coming down to B-Town), I'll look through my notes and put something up here shortly.

I thought this may be interesting to some of you out there. Below is a link to an arguement between poet Campbell McGrath and a critic regarding a review of his recent collection Seven Notebooks. The collection is quite solid and definitely worth reading. This is more or less just a sick sort of entertainment. Read Away!

http://www.digitalemunction.com/wordpress/2008/05/24/advertisements-for-myself-bookforum/#comments

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Poem for Workshop number 2. Ross up too.

I moved this one for the comments section. Add you workshop cents to the comments section. We'll have to yell at Scottish so that he'll hopefully start adding other authors. This one is by Ross. Again sorry for any formatting inconsistencies. Let fly - d.l.

"There are Usually Understood Chord Progressions"

Vapid resonance I see.
Ah the day glow rays underneath every curve, or
helicopters in strato-silence filming docudramas for mamas.
My purse kills your purse girl, no way.
Why don’t we find ourselves someone stacked with guidelines and cooking lessons?
I hear that’ll give us something to eat in between vomit sessions behind open doors,
Mostly so we can be pretty by the pool before July.
Tiles burst; they do, during white coat festivals in Memphis hotels, where the cigar chompers lace their catgut boots with plantation cotton, softer than cotton swabs at the doctor’s office, and each of us can swallow. Barely legal we cavort about puffed like cockatoos, dusk-light centering on the outside heat. Clouds cover my view from the top of the penthouse garden where the ducks sleep for supper. Dark clouds, I see, flexing morals inherent only to men with wedding bands, and wives that give head.
Aeroplanes now fly encumbered, slightly covered in balming gloss which makes your face shine.
May as well slap some butter on there and heave a hammer in your direction.
Attention is the cornflake-caked casserole flushed between two servings of eggplant seared with custard. Locking doors skirting around like some garden dancer drenched in clay paint.
We will find you, even if the discovery baffles you, everything gets around you.
Even if you were a scaler of hilltops, or a kisser of Blarney stones, your sun dresses love that shine, and your times of troublesome getting-to-know-you’s eventually stop, I hear.
Not enough for the real people here, do I hear.
Parting with great guitar solos and even quieter I do’s, I hear you getting off the bus below.
Walk, walk to the organ donor office and ask for a cheese sandwich.
He might be able to take time off for soccer practice, maybe even screw the bolts down on the new deck you just bought for the backyard, equipped along the neighbor’s garden spot, but I hear there are problems here, unforeseen early birds caught eating those silk purses your friends had at festivals last July,
But you were too busy eating sandwiches by gardens, helping little Lucy into her first sundress.

- Ross Tagendal

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Let Virtual Workshopping Begin!

Anyone remember MST3K? I'm kind of feeling like yelling we've got movie sign, if only because I'm so damned excited to get this bad boy on the go. First up is mr.powers. We should all try to leave comments for him by Saturday night. This should be great and thanks johnny thundernuts.

Autumn Is a Close Friend (Poem 1)

(sorry about the formatting problems) - d.l.

Autumn Is A Close Friend


This is the time of year
In which coffee tastes best;
A season of reversion and of harvest,
A season in which coffee is cathartic.

5. The tall native grasses of this hillside

Have begun to droop, to wither.
Their tired yellowing stems letting go
Their loaded heads,
A necessary seasonal return.

10. I gladly wave goodbye to Summer.

A sticky season of oppression
So lacking in dignity, lacking nobility.
A season for drunken sons,
14. Lazing away the days.

15. Autumn owns a liminality no other season knows.

Whereas Spring is fertility and potential,
summer is folly and attempted escapes
And Winter, after its third month, is death,

19. Autumn is life.
Autumn is a close friend.
Autumn is a perfect cup of coffee.

- john d. powers

Sunday, September 14, 2008

The Brass Tacks

Gentlemen (and maybe one lady), shall we begin this? Let's start with poetry. Doesn't all great writing start there? Anyways, do we have a volunteer to put up some stuff? Don't act like the kids in my workshop. I don't want to have pick out the shy kid in the corner.

P.S. I feel this black box needs some colour. Scott, please fix this.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Sup All!

So, i wanted to start this so that we could all 1. stay in touch and 2. give comments to each other on our writing. So, basically, i wanna see if anyone else is in on this. Let me know.

scottobernesser@gmail.com

Scott