Unstressed

  • Poetry
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A weblog from the editors of Linebreak

The regulars

Ash Bowen's poetry has appeared in Crab Orchard Review, Blackbird, and Black Warrior Review, among other publications. He lives and works in Texarkana, AR.

Jennifer Jabaily's poetry has appeared in Mannequin Envy and Fickle Muses. She's a second-year MFA student at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.

Ashley Anna McHugh is a third-year MFA student at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Measure, DIAGRAM and Memorious as well as other publications.

Johnathon Williams's poetry has appeared in Best New Poets 2009, the Pebble Lake Review, and Unsplendid. He lives in Fayetteville, AR, with his wife and daughters.

I Love This Poem

For the past two years or so, I’ve fallen out of love with free verse.  Or rather, I’ve found–in my opinion–more and more poets writing in free verse to be doing nothing more than writing prose and inserting breaks.  (Of course, I’m excluding the truly great free verse we publish.)  But today’s featured poem on Verse Daily is a free verse poem by George David  Clark that I admire so very much.  Almost every line dazzles or amazes, which is what every poem should aspire to, but this poem just gets it so right for me that I had to post something about here on Unstressed.

Please to enjoy:

http://www.versedaily.org/2009/jellyfish.shtml

Whither handwriting

Handwriting is dying because its laggardly pace impedes thinking, according to an essay by professor Anne Trubek, who includes a brief history of handwriting and the teaching of penmanship alongside her argument.

When a new writing technology develops, we tend to romanticize the older one. The supplanted technology is vaunted as more authentic because it is no longer ubiquitous or official. Thus for monks, print was capricious and script reliable.

[...]

Whatever we use to write, there will be a shortfall between conception and execution, between the ideas in our heads and the words we produce. We often insert nostalgia into this gap.

Events as the future of media

Robin Sloan says the future of media — media that successfully captures both attention and money — may be in events, especially events that act as generative occasions for original creative work.

A specter is haunting the internet, and I think it’s even scarier than the chal­lenge of getting people to pay money. It’s the challenge of get ting them to pay attention. I think it’s only going to get worse—which is to say, better, because we as internet users and blog readers and tweet slingers will have more cool, weird, interesting stuff to look at all the time, and it will just keep coming faster and getting cooler and fragments and—ack!

Elizabeth Gilbert’s classical approach to creativity

Elizabeth Gilbert’s TED talk on changing our approach to creativity is just exquisite. She argues that it may be healthier and more practical to adopt a Greco-Roman view of creativity, where inspiration comes from capricious external forces, than to continue with the humanist idea of the suffering artist who’s solely responsible for the success or failure of his creations. There’s a section on poet Ruth Stone’s writing process around 10:15.

What’s wrong with the magazine business

John C. Abell, bureau chief for Wired.com, runs down the scammy subscription practices of print magazines.

I made the mistake of picking up a magazine in Barnes & Noble over the weekend, showering both my feet and the floor in subscription cards. Do people actually mail those silly things in?

Excellent and obscure

At The Guardian, David Parkinson recommends the best 10 foreign, non-Hollywood films of 2009.

I promise to take it easy with the best-of lists over the holiday. The last thing the Internet needs is another set of bullet points.

The next step for magazines

Laura Miner muses on the evolution of the magazine and the development of Pictory, her excellent new site for multi-author photo essays.

It’s interesting to think about Pictory in the context of a magazine, because, while some people will call it an online magazine, in reality it is something else entirely — something new that we don’t have a word for yet. Innovative sites that bill themselves as online lit journals have the same problem. They’re not journals at all — and the use of old labels muddies our thinking.

If copyright was absolute

Marco Arment, maker of Instapaper, asks and answers what would happen if copyright were perfectly enforceable 100 percent of the time:

Today’s demand for permissively licensed content is nearly zero because most people can get away with small-scale infringement. If that were no longer possible, all of these infringements would be replaced by much more demand for permissively licensed content. Any publishers unwilling to satisfy the demand would be left in the dust by those who would.

Sweet Charity

Lately I’ve been looking for poems of charity and gratitude — maybe because I feel so little of either this time of year. This recording of “Sweet Charity” by John Clellon Holmes is my favorite so far. (Holmes’s books of poetry are sadly out of print, though a few of his novels remain.) The poem was read by Donald S. Hays last year at the anniversary celebration for the Arkansas MFA Program in Creative Writing.

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Will the best American President please step forward? Not so fast, Buchanan.

In case you missed it, there was a fantastic piece about poetry on American Presidents in the New York Times this past Sunday.  I rather liked the few lines on Rutherford B. Hayes written by James Haug–  the following is from “A Day Like Any Other,” published in the Gettysburg Review in 2006:

When Rutherford B. Hayes comes to town,
Squirrels are charmed out of the eaves.
The editor breaks down and sobs.

His unrecorded remarks fill the air.

If we venture outside of the world of verse, my favorite celebration of a D-list President has long been They Might Be Giants’ James K. Polk– here’s a video of them performing this song in a Borders Books in my lovely (?) hometown of Braintree, MA for a bunch of fairly energetic and vaguely nerdy children, accompanied by their slightly less energetic and much nerdier parents.

(Note:  As a few friends from college and I once discovered, to “James K. Polk” is a lovely euphemism for hogging something a la Manifest Destiny, e.g. “Ricky, can you please stop James K. Polk-ing the sofa?  The rest of us need a place to sit down.”)

Optional homework:  Write a few lines about a solidly middle-of-the-road President.  Post ‘em in the comments, if you’re brave.  Make me laugh.  Make me cry.  Make me fall in love with William Howard Taft all over again.

Quick! Fling your shoes into the machines!

Nick Bilton responds to plans by major publishers to delay ebook releases in order to boost hard cover sales:

I can tell you one thing: When I’m looking for a new book on my Kindle and told I have to wait four months for the e-book version, I won’t be heading to the bookstore. Instead, I’ll click the back button and buy one of the 360,000 other e-books available now.

Didn’t anyone at these publishing companies watch what happened to the music and newspaper industries over the last 10 years?

Also, a best-selling business writer has taken ebook rights away from his print publisher in an exclusive arrangement with Amazon.

Stillwell

I’ve got a new poem up at 42opus this week. Thanks to Brian Leary et al for the beautiful presentation.

5,000 knots

Okay, so maybe my day hasn’t been so bad in the grand scheme of things. The story of a 43-hour surgery to remove a 15-pound tumor.

Eliminating the middlemen

John Oakes, founder of OR books, explains how his company eliminates the middlemen in publishing by combining print-on-demand with direct sales through the company’s web site.

Imagine taking the guesswork out of publishing. Imagine a publisher printing only to fulfill orders, and with a minimum of waste; imagine further a system that sidesteps warehouses, wholesalers, and even–at least at the outset of a book's life–bookstores and online retailers. This would be a process wherein the publisher focuses on developing ideas into workable manuscripts, carefully editing them–and, above all, devoting substantial resources to marketing the finished product.

Fake Steve at the top of his game

Now there was silence again. This time I was the one not talking. There was this weird lump in my throat, this tightness in my chest. I had this vision of the future — a ruined empire, run by number crunchers, squalid and stupid and puffed up with phony patriotism, settling for a long slow decline.

from The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs : A not-so-brief chat with Randall Stephenson of AT&T.

New word processor for the Mac

Ommwriter is a wonderfully fussy new full-screen word processor for the Mac. There are other full-screen editors, WriteRoom being my favorite, but Ommwriter is the first effort I’ve seen to create an entire environment for creative composition through the use of ambient music, customizable feedback sounds, and an attractive background image.

Ingenious really, and the kind of software the could only be written for the Mac. The free beta is well worth a download.

(via Daring Fireball).

How the sausage is made

I am interviewed at PANK by the lovely Roxane Gay, on subjects such as editing, innovation in online journals, and zombies. There’s a fair bit about our selection process here at Linebreak, for those of you interested in how the sausage is made.

On lineation

Sarah Moore’s poem from last week kicked off an interesting discussion on enjambments and end stops over at Snarkmarket.

On the E-Book

As usual, NPR has a point: In her article, Lynn Neary points out,  ”you can’t put a pretty bow on an e-book — and that’s where traditional booksellers still have an advantage.”

But that’s probably cold comfort given that the article fully acknowledges the growing popularity of e-book readers: Neary quotes Amazon’s Russ Grandinetti as saying that the Kindle is the company’s best-selling product overall  - ”in both units and revenue” – and Barnes & Noble’s e-book reader, Nook, has already sold out for the holidays. On top of that, of course, buying books online – particularly from Amazon - is still a major threat, too.

I’d be devastated to lose indie bookstores like The Grolier Poetry Book Shop in Cambridge, MA – or, my current haunts, Dickson Street Bookshop and Nightbird Books here in Fayetteville. No question about it. But I’m also broke enough that it’s hard – if not downright dumb – to say ‘No’ to Amazon, even if it does mean paying for postage.

But it’s even harder to justify buying a physical copies of some books at all – say, Shakespeare’s Collected Works. I could just as easily read it in its entirety online – or even download the iPhone app dedicated to Shakespeare’s work, or more easily still, I could just bring it up on an app I’ve already downloaded, like Stanza.

So, if I had a Kindle proper, I can imagine it might be hard to convince myself to spend significantly more for a paper copy. In some cases, I’m sure I would, but it wouldn’t be a matter-of-course anymore – maybe more like a mark of honor. Something like that.

But when it comes to e-book readers, Steven Johnson seems to think that the entirety of the way we experience books might be at stake. In his article “How the E-Book Will Change the Way We Read and Write”, which was published in The Wall Street Journal in April 2009, he explains that doesn’t just see e-books and physical books as competing for the same territory. He sees the potential for e-books to provide an entirely different – and entirely unprecedented – reading experience all together, sparking a new vision for the publishing industry as a whole.

For starters: Your library? Every word could be searchable. I think that’s beautiful – but Johnson sees that as just the beginning: What if every word in a book has the potential to be a hyperlink?

With books becoming part of this universe, “booklogs” will prosper, with readers taking inspiring or infuriating passages out of books and commenting on them in public. [...] You’ll read a puzzling passage from a novel and then instantly browse through dozens of comments from readers around the world, annotating, explaining or debating the passage’s true meaning.

Johnson points out that this could, in essence, become “a permanent, global book club,” and he also notes that it would mean that “nobody would read alone anymore.” But we’ve learned from Oprah that bookclubs aren’t all bad, and are exactly what some readers need to get started  - or to keep going.

However, Johnson sees these potential hyperlinks as being the catalyst for more dramatic changes to the way we read – and even write:

This great flowering of annotating and indexing will alter the way we discover books, too. Web publishers have long recognized that “front doors” matter much less in the Google age, as visitors come directly to individual articles through search. Increasingly, readers will stumble across books through a particularly well-linked quote on page 157, instead of an interesting cover on display at the bookstore, or a review in the local paper.

That’s where Google rankings come into play. Ultimately, Johnson foresees books themselves competing for Google rankings, and each one will need to generate links or citations to become the first or second hit:

In this world, citation will become as powerful a sales engine as promotion is today. An author will write an arresting description of Thomas Edison’s controversial invention of the light bulb, and thanks to hundreds of inbound links from bookloggers quoting the passage, those pages will rise to the top of Google’s results for anyone searching “invention of light bulb.”

In Johnson’s view, this leads to “every page of every book individually competing with every page of every other book that has ever been written, each of them commented on and indexed and ranked.”

He assumes this will entail serious changes for writing and publishing: Publishers will want high Google rankings, and that’s bound to affect the writing that gets published. For authors, would it only mean being sure to pack a solid punch in every paragraph – or, as Johnson suggests, would it result in “entire books written with search engines in mind”?

What does that even mean?

More: Because books won’t be unified any more, but seen in terms of successful chapters, great paragraphs, etc., it might not even make sense to sell books as a whole package. Johnson notes, “many books offered for the Kindle, for instance, allow readers to download the first chapter free of charge.”

Drawing on this, he imagines a la carte pricing – selling a chapter of a book the way the iTunes store sells a song from an album. Chapters would need to learn to stand on their own – or would, at least, be lauded in the marketplace for doing so – and a book would have to give its reader a clear incentive to buy the next chapter. What might that incentive be? Johnson says it plain: “Clearly, we are in store for the return of the cliffhanger.”

Now, Johnson doesn’t address the question of poetry, but I can’t help wondering. Will we be buying a poem or two online for 99 cents each? Will every erudite word or classical allusion be linked – and would that be limiting or freeing for poets? Would poets try to avoid those reader-distracting hyperlinks – and at what cost to, say, poetic diction? Question after question after question! It boggles the mind!

Bizarre!

But, even given these prospects, there is a certain joy to what Johnson describes as “the endangered species of linear, deep-focus reading.” There is a pleasure in reading as a solitary act. I don’t think that will be terribly easy to forget.

After all, as Johnson points out, even the Kindle currently tries to preserve this kind of reading experience, not even including a dedicated e-mail client.  So, maybe this hypertext vision won’t catch on?

Either way, I have a headache now, but, regardless: Buy your poetry collections from your local indie bookstore when you’re able, enjoy folding corners to mark a good poem while you can – and try not to imagine that every other word is bright blue and underlined. Good luck!

Slate Made A Funny

Because Slate explains the gist behind their “Write like Sarah Palin” contest way more gracefully than I ever could:

In honor of Sarah Palin’s best-selling new memoir, Going Rogue, we asked Slate readers to submit sentences that captured Palin’s unique style of writing. We received more than 700 entries, the best of which combined pastoral lyricism (“the soft periwinkle glow of the Alaskan morning”) with unlikely metaphors (“The snow machine pummeled through the white-dusted plain like a jubilant beaver”) and an adventurous approach to the English language.

My favorite result: “Unlike New York, Wasilla would always have my heart which not only pumps red, but also white and blue.”

What’s yours?

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