Support poets and small presses!
The reasons, I think, should be obvious. If you enjoy reading poetry you should be willing to part with at least a small portion of your hard earned money to buy and read a journal or chapbook. Also, if you are a poet trying to get published you should invest in at least one subscription to a journal or small press publication of some kind. Times may be tough but the editors and presses are working harder now than ever because grants are disappearing, donations are slowing down, and new subscribers are probably growing scarce. I’m a huge advocate for poets getting paid for their work and there are presses out there who pay their poets. There are presses who have low prices and great quality combined so that even if they can’t pay their poets, the readers are sure to be proud that they spent their money on such a fine chapbook or journal while the poets are proud to be part of the press or journal.
Any of the presses on the sidebar are worth your money, and there are countless more out there not included. For those of you who would like to add a press to the sidebar, by all means, post a link or two in the comments section so I can add it for other potential readers to find it.
On a personal note, money is so tight right now that I can’t remember the last time I went to the movie theater, let alone a “nice restaurant” in comparison to fast food, but I am still willing to subscribe to a journal and buy a poetry book because I have personally connected to the press and the poets. I suggest you do the same for the ones you feel connected to. We’re all in this together, and together we’ll pull through.
Thanks for dropping in, please stop by Monday for another featured site…
Friday, May 1, 2009
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Lilliput Review Open Submissions
Don’t you think this ties nicely with the review? Don Wentworth is always seeking more poems of ten lines or less to publish at the Lilliput Review so please submit up to 3 poems (all which can be typed on one page if they fit) along with a Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope to:
Lilliput Review
Don Wentworth, Editor
282 Main Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15201
lilliputreviewATgmailDOTcom
Good luck to all of you who submit, please stop by tomorrow for more Poetry Tips…
Lilliput Review
Don Wentworth, Editor
282 Main Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15201
lilliputreviewATgmailDOTcom
Good luck to all of you who submit, please stop by tomorrow for more Poetry Tips…
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Poems Found by Poet Hound
http://www.coconutpoetry.org/nelsona2.html
Amber Nelson’s “Swarm”
http://www.leftfacingbird.com/LEFT%20FACING%20BIRD/LEFT%20FACING%20BIRD_files/Lily%20Brown.pdf
Lily Brown’s “Morning. The Poem Is Dead.”
Thanks for clicking in, please click in tomorrow for more Open Submissions…
Amber Nelson’s “Swarm”
http://www.leftfacingbird.com/LEFT%20FACING%20BIRD/LEFT%20FACING%20BIRD_files/Lily%20Brown.pdf
Lily Brown’s “Morning. The Poem Is Dead.”
Thanks for clicking in, please click in tomorrow for more Open Submissions…
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Lilliput Review Issue #167
Lilliput Reviews Issue #167 speaks often of pines and the flights of various birds such as sparrows and egrets. I am always intrigued how Don Wentworth is able to put subtle themes in each issue and I am happy to share some precious gems with you:
February
The dark elms are cloaked
in bloodless vines, thin men
pulling out their hearts
on long, raveling string.
O, to be like them.
To be like them.
Hannah Craig, Pittsburgh, PA
All I can say is: Isn’t that a beautiful description?
The Nick of Time
I was lost
and this poem
found me.
Now we’re
lost together.
What a relief.
Jim Tolan, Brooklyn, NY
This is another poem that says it all—about poetry!
flowing through a chain link fence a flock of sparrows
Robbie Gamble, Jamaica Plain, MA
--Another beautiful description.
This is just a small sample of the wonderful poems in this issue and I hope you enjoyed them. As some of you may know, I am partial to poems that say what they mean to say in a clever, funny, and/or beautiful way. Issue #167 includes these kinds of poems and I hope you’ll spring at the chance to nab Issue #167 at the Lilliput Review for yourself, after all, it’s merely $1.00. Also, don’t forget to visit Issa's Untidy Hut, the Lilliput Review Blog, for all things poetic and excerpts from past issues.
Thanks always for reading! Please click in tomorrow for more Poems Found by Poet Hound…
February
The dark elms are cloaked
in bloodless vines, thin men
pulling out their hearts
on long, raveling string.
O, to be like them.
To be like them.
Hannah Craig, Pittsburgh, PA
All I can say is: Isn’t that a beautiful description?
The Nick of Time
I was lost
and this poem
found me.
Now we’re
lost together.
What a relief.
Jim Tolan, Brooklyn, NY
This is another poem that says it all—about poetry!
flowing through a chain link fence a flock of sparrows
Robbie Gamble, Jamaica Plain, MA
--Another beautiful description.
This is just a small sample of the wonderful poems in this issue and I hope you enjoyed them. As some of you may know, I am partial to poems that say what they mean to say in a clever, funny, and/or beautiful way. Issue #167 includes these kinds of poems and I hope you’ll spring at the chance to nab Issue #167 at the Lilliput Review for yourself, after all, it’s merely $1.00. Also, don’t forget to visit Issa's Untidy Hut, the Lilliput Review Blog, for all things poetic and excerpts from past issues.
Thanks always for reading! Please click in tomorrow for more Poems Found by Poet Hound…
Monday, April 27, 2009
Blue Hour Press
Blue Hour Press embraced technology and offers up digital chapbooks—you get to see the pages turn with every click and the experience is fantastic! Find out for yourself by clicking below:
Blue Hour Press
Thanks for dropping in, please stop by tomorrow for a featured journal…
Blue Hour Press
Thanks for dropping in, please stop by tomorrow for a featured journal…