Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Editing care package!

So I've had a few pieces of good news, and, more importantly, a few kindly gestures in response to my good news.

After a suitably dramatic back-and-forth, which I won't get into here, I heard from
Palimpsest Press last week that they had accepted my manuscript of poetry.

I should have been thrilled. This moment was THE moment I've been waiting for for years.

But although I was glad that Hump (I know, I know...I'm also thinking Belly Up.) had found a home, the moment of acceptance wasn't a jump-up-and-down-thump-whoever's-nearest kind of experience.

It was more of an "Oh! Oh. Okay..." moment. Which is to say that I realized that the acceptance is only the first step in a long process whose ultimate goal is to share the work with people. Now THAT I'm excited about.

Though I have divested myself of most of my book lust (i.e. the idea that a book with MY name on it will solve all my problems) through association with much-published writers, most of whom have a laundry list of problems (heh.), the fact that I will soon have a book in the world means that I can relax a bit.

It also means that I have to work even harder, to earn this writing life.

Oh! I almost forgot the gestures of kindness. Once the news got out, I was congratulated via a variety of software/hardware combinations, I was lifted over someone's head, and several people lunged at me, ostensibly to hug me.

But the most thoughtful gift I got was from Sharon Caseburg, a poet/publisher of my acquaintance. She has a son just a bit older than Aa (i.e. she understands!) and has been very supportive over the last few months.

In any event, when she visited last week, she toted along two very important parcels: one ziploc full of freshly-baked blueberry muffins and a second filled with what I can't help but call 'school supplies.'

"It's an editing care package," she advised, her eyes doing that quiet twinkly thing Sharon's eyes do on occasion.

Of course, our children immediately started rampaging in the background, so I didn't really have the chance to investigate the contents of her package. (Plus, I just knew that if I opened it in front of her, Aa would claim nearly everything...)

But there were wooden pencils (my favourite...death to mechanical pencils!)! And erasers! And both plain paperclips and fancy ones! And smelly highlighters! And little packets of fruit gummies!

If I'd known the universe would rain down wooden pencils on my head once I got a book accepted, I would have done it sooner!

(Which is an elaborate way of saying Yay! and Thanks, Sharon!)

* * *

In other news, I heard a few weeks ago that I've been awarded three weeks at the Wallace Stegner House in Eastend, Saskatchewan.

I've had several writing friends spend chunks of time there over the years and have spent much time contemplating the picture on the Stegner House website that looks out the house's back door to the Cypress Hills and beyond.

So far, the stars have aligned. M has booked holidays for two of the three weeks and so will be coming with, as will Aa. I have it on good authority that there's a good day care in town, so we'll send her there three days a week.

Which will allow M the first uninterrupted stretch he's had since Aa was born. (It should go without saying that I'm looking forward to his photos...)

It should ALSO go without saying that I'm looking forward to framing my own view out that door...

* * *

Finally, there's an interview with me posted on Edmonton-based poet Marita Dachsel's blog today.

Marita, the mother of two boys whose first book was recently shortlisted for the ReLit Award, had been neglecting her blog (poor sad little blog!) until she devised a plan.

The plan was that she would post interviews every two weeks with writer/mothers. But Marita says it better than I can:
I'm craving a dialogue with other writing-mothers, an honest dialogue where I hear how they do it, where they reveal the dark moments as well as the triumphs.

And that, dear readers, is what I hope this project will do. Every second week in 2009 I will post an interview with a writing-mother. She will have a new born. She will have teenagers. She will have kids in middle school. She will have one child. She will have four. She is a poet. A novelist. A screenwriter. A playwright. She writes for children. She writes for magazines. She writes. She has no time to write. She is at the beginning of her career. She is award-winning. She is unknown. She is celebrated. She writes and she mothers and she will tell you how she does it and how rewarding and difficult and frustrating and loving and struggling it is.

I met Marita when Kerry Ryan and I took our Nightowls and Newborns Western Tour through Edmonton this past fall. She's lovely - smart and funny and even friendly - and so I was highly pleased to be asked to participate in her project.

It took me longer than I thought it would to answer Marita's questions and then she wanted clarification on some of my glib responses, but I'm pleased with how it turned out in the end.

Here's an excerpt from our dialogue:
MD: I wanted to do this project because I found so few satisfying examples of the writing-mother. It was either the mythology of Alice Munro writing while her children played at her feet, the writer who resented and neglected her children because she was so consumed with her art, or someone like Sylvia Plath who ended up with her head in the oven. Which writing-mothers do you admire and why?

AG: Until I had a child, it didn’t occur to me to admire writing mothers. I deeply appreciate some of the examples I’ve found in my reading since, like Robyn Sarah’s in Double Lives (MQUP, 2008) but I most admire the writing mothers I know a little bit. Like Gillian Wigmore. And Shawna Lemay. And you.

All of us struggling a bit. All of us writing when we’re able. All of us (again, I flatter myself), succeeding just enough to stay sane. To stay whole.

I tried to be honest and also a little funny. Hopefully the 'funny' doesn't come off as 'just-plain-inappropriate,' but if so, that IS who I am.

Fun!

Friday, February 20, 2009

Theirs is a relationship

Theirs is a relationship of elevators and back stairs
whose risers are just the right height
for a guilty ex-boyfriend as he walks away,
his eye moving from one lighted window to another.
A serial tom? Hard to know as exhaust billows from him,
from her mouth on his. He marvels that he only has to change
his approach, his retreat. And this second time
there’s the rush of several stories
taken all at once.

Theirs is a relationship of the drifted-in: my mother
from the pulp and paper mills in the valleys
between t-barred hills, my father from the peeled branches
and then the rest of the tree, mired in clay. Their house underwater
when he was five, siblings scattered to friends in the country.
But he barely remembers that. No, this is how it goes:
her apartment is on an anywhere block, its elevators groaning
but his mother’s house shifts sweetly on silty banks. And the break-up?
They basked in spring sun as all the windows
in all the world got bricked.

Theirs is a relationship of tinny canoes set into water
gummy with fish flies and making for fresh,
a practical bucket between her knees we’ll all drink from.
Theirs is a relationship of cannonballs and hot beery hours
easing into the lake. She fishes from the canoe with a borrowed rod
as he squints from shore. And when the pike strikes she reels it in,
riveted as it jerks, panicked heart, between the canoe’s ribs.
By the time she reaches the dock, wet fin along
her forearms, tail lashing her legs,
all she’s got is: kill it kill it. …

* * *

I've been working on a number of things lately: a review for the Winnipeg Free Press, a sonnet (bah! wretched thing!) for my poetry class with Catherine Hunter, curriculum for my upcoming Creative Retirement class.

In addition to working with my beloved Fall Back cohorts - Anna Swanson and Gilly Wigmore - again, I'm also trying to have something useful to say as the Buffalo Runs book edges ever closer to publication.

You'll recall that the point of this collection, which also includes Linda Besner and Michael Lithgow, is to put the three of us into critical conversation with each other.

I'm frequently critical, but usually in the nasty nitpickery kind of way as opposed to the analytical intelligent way, so hopefully I'll have something, anything to say.

Finally, I just joined a weekly writers' group. And got teary, again, when describing why and who I write for. I am often vehement (see above), but I am not often surprised - and then made teary - by my vehemence. But there was hot lemon loaf on offer and everyone there seems accomplished and also humble in the midst of all their striving, which I appreciate.

Anyways, this poem, from the new ms., seems far enough along to post, so here it is.

Enjoy!

(And come out to the Mondo!Purdy Video Dance Party on Saturday at Aqua if at all possible...)

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Mondo!Poetry

Hey all,

For most of you, next week is Reading Week or even just the week after Valentine's Day. But Aqua Books is trying to transform February 17-21 into Mondo!Poetry, an annual festival celebrating Canadian poetry.

This first incarnation of Mondo!Poetry will feature Al Purdy and includes a fundraiser called the Mondo!Purdy Video Dance Party to support The A-Frame Trust. This group is working to preserve the fifty year-old cottage where Purdy wrote his best work and similar fundraisers have been planned for other cities across the country.

I'm including information below on all the programming we have slated for Mondo!Purdy. If you have any questions, please email me at ariel@aquabooks.ca.

If you have any problems deciding what to attend, my advice is to pick the Mondo!Purdy Video Dance Party February 21. (Dancing! Silent auction! Readings by stellar MB poets! All in support of a good cause!)

Thank you and please make me happy by sending this info on to anyone else who might be interested...

Thanks!

* * *

Speak, Writer!
Dancing Monkeys, Microphones, and Other Mysteries of Performance
A workshop with Tim Higgins and Chandra Mayor


Date: Tuesday, February 17
Time: 7:00 - 9:00 pm
Cost: $10

Aqua Books Writer-in-Residence Tim Higgins and author Chandra Mayor join forces for a practical workshop, specifically for writers, full of tips, tools, and advice on how to give memorable readings and performances - from the mysteries of mics to choosing your material, body language to voice and breath.

* * *

Open Road, Open Mic
Hosted by Colin Smith and Chandra Mayor


Date: Wednesday, February 18
Time: 7:00 - 9:00 pm
Cost: FREE!

Bring your poetry and fiction, your non-fiction and your props, to this night of open mic readings in celebration of poet and performer Al Purdy.

* * *

The Landscapes in Your Voice: Riffing off Purdy
A workshop with Armin Wiebe and Kate Bitney


Date: Thursday, February 19
Time: 6:00 - 9:00 pm
Cost: $30

A writers' workshop in which Armin Wiebe and Katherine Bitney will conduct a dialogue on voice and landscape and lead participants through a series of "riffing exercises" designed to stimulate exploration of individual writing voices. Bring a notebook and a pen and a willingness to surrender to your imagination.

* * *

The Boxcar Chat
Poets David Arnason and Dennis Cooley with critic Neil Besner and moderator Ron Robinson


Date: Friday, February 20
Time: 7:00 - 9:00 pm
Cost: FREE!

Our version of the fireside chat, which includes a screening of Al Purdy: A Sensitive Man (NFB, 1988), as well as a panel discussion with contemporaries of Purdy's.

* * *

Mondo!Purdy Video Dance Party
Poets Catherine Hunter, Deborah Schnitzer, Rosanna Deerchild, Charlene Diehl


Date: Saturday, February 21
Time: 8:00 pm - 1:00 am
Cost: $10/$5 for students

Food, music, readings, remembrances, a sweet silent auction, and more. Catered by EAT! Bistro, the final night of Mondo!Purdy, this fundraiser in support of the Purdy A-frame Trust will be the literary event of the season.

Thursday, February 05, 2009

that beautiful haze

Lately, I've had two full days a week, bought and paid for, for writing.

Around the same time I gave myself permission to 'work' four days a week and spend the remaining three with Aa (as opposed to the converse), I also started a creative writing course focused on poetry.

And I have never done so much joyful reading and writing, discovering new poets, discovering new poems.

To the outside world, things look much the same. I neglect everything but the essentials. Which means sort-of-kind-of cleaning the house and not calling friends and family.

The level of neglect is the same, but the reason is completely different.

Instead of racing from deadline to deadline, from obligation to obligation, from meeting to meeting, I'm writing what I want, mostly when I want.

And while I know this period of beautiful haze - where I am joyful about my work and the work of others, about the neglected but undeniable power of poetry - will not last, that the conditions that made it possible will not last, I am enjoying the space I carved out of my life.

I know now that this space exists, now, and that I can return to it.

And even though what I am writing about is difficult and awkward, there is still (immense) pleasure in the practice.

So if you've been neglected (as per usual), I'm sorry. But I'm also not sorry at all.

Heh.