Thursday, May 25, 2006

In praise of...anti-praise

Hey all,

My poem, Seven months: the navel-gaze, has been selected for The Guardian Review's Poetry Workshop's April Shortlist.

The way the Poetry Workshop works is this: "Every month, our poetry workshop is hosted by a different poet who sets an exercise, chooses the most interesting responses and offers an appraisal of them. That's the hard part taken care of - all you need to do is start writing ..."

For April, the poet was Scottish writer Jen Hadfield and the exercize anti-praise poems.

Hadfield had this to say about my poem:

"This is the most visceral set of images, and yes, it really works. I almost can't believe someone could pull off the image of 'My belly button is a muddy worm run/ just before it rains and the whole thing sinks in on itself,' but you sure did. I wondered whether you might be able to organise these individual images in a way that would give the reader sort of gastric departments to get the whole lot digested. I'm getting tangled sometimes in your syntax; the lines in the second verse from 'my belly button intact is the last gasp ... ' are all a bit of a blur for me! I wouldn't want you to lose any of the momentum you've got rolling here, so I'd say, if you edit this, do it delicately?"

Interestingly, in her treatise on how to write anti-praise, Hadfield cites Canadian poet Wendy Morton...

Anyways, if you haven't seen this website/exercize yet, it's well worth checking out...I also quite enjoy Posy Simmonds' Tamara Drewe comic and, of course, The Guardian Review itself.

(Yay!)

12 comments:

Brenda Schmidt said...

Cool!

GM said...

Fantastic! (re: the Morton citation -- I plug my ears and sing LALALA-I-can't-hear-you because I really really just want to be happy for your success.)

Ariel Gordon said...

Thanks, B...

G, far be it from me to cast aspersions, but I suspect you LIKE assuming the plug-your-ears pose...but I'll take ANY glimmering of happiness at my success.

Anita Daher said...

To echo Brenda, Cool!

Thanks for the site link, Ariel! I'll be leading a week long workshop for teens this summer I'm calling "Risky Business: Truth in Fiction" and looking for exercise ideas. Looks like there are some fabulous ones on this website.

Ariel Gordon said...

Look at you with all your teaching gigs - someday, when you're not mid-project, I'd love to pick your brain about how one goes about leading a class.

lindseyw said...

Congratulations! I love the poetry workshop.

Anita Daher said...

Of course, Ariel! I'd love to talk about it.

I love teaching classes. This has all come about (This, being what seems like a bunch of interest all of a sudden) over several years, but I've always loved doing this, and hope for it many years ahead.

Jonathan Ball said...

that's super cool! way to go! i really appreciate how you manage to get the work out there, which is something not enough writers do.

Anonymous said...

Marvellous — congratulations Ariel. (I almost added an exclamation mark) ;^D

Ariel Gordon said...

Thanks, all!

Anonymous said...

Hi Ariel!

Congrats on the Guardian short list -- and I hope you're picked for the finale!

BTW, will be in The Peg as of June 20. Looking forward to hangin' ... hope all's well!

Ed

Ariel Gordon said...

Hey Gned,

Thanks, but the Guardian shortlist is all there is...they don't choose a winner.

But right back atcha, regarding the looking forward to seeing you/doing well thing...