Aug. 24th, 2007

keilexandra: Adorable panda with various Chinese overlays. (Default)
The Art and Craft of Poetry
by Michael J. Bugeja
339 pages (hardcover)
Genre: Nonfiction/Writing

For me at least, this was a phenomenally useful book. I managed to write new poems from it--a half-decent villanelle and a free-verse on Newfoundland that I actually like--which is a rarity in itself. The process Bugeja teaches doesn't fit entirely with my own--for one, I have no wish to focus strongly on poetry--but for others, strictly completing the exercises will prove worthwhile. The first third of the book covers ideas, the second section covers genres, and the last details various forms. I found his explanations of form poetry especially useful, as he outlines exactly how to write a [villanelle/sestina/pantoum/etc.] instead of just giving the pattern and rules. I had some issues with the chapter on "extranatural" poetry--what speculative poems would fall under, I suppose--which focuses narrowly on Christianity, though Bugeja does include a disclaimer.

Poetry is a great side craft for prose writers to study, to strengthen their grasp of style and the sound, not just the meaning of words. And of course, style being my only personal strength, I love poetry. But regardless, recommended to aspiring poets (obviously) and writers.
keilexandra: Adorable panda with various Chinese overlays. (Default)
I know Cicada is currently not accepting submissions, but is it still taboo to note/allude to one's age on the cover letter to there? Since it's a YA magazine targeted toward teens, etc.

School starts next week, so of course my writing muse has decided to speak up, loudly. Will mail out Test of Faith soon probably, and I'm itching to start on the non-survivors story.

Lastly, a question for everyone: what is freedom? (I've decided to change the responsibility lecture in ToF to one on freedom, but I have no idea what Elena should say.)

And I still have a headache. I went to bed at 10pm last night because it hurt to keep my eyes open. Am hoping that this is not a side effect of the new antibiotics, but not hoping very optimistically.
keilexandra: Adorable panda with various Chinese overlays. (Default)
Via [personal profile] fairfeather: A parody of rejection letters. It made me giggle rather strangely, deep in my throat and low. Go figure.
keilexandra: Adorable panda with various Chinese overlays. (Default)
Since I rewrote this neatly by hand in my notebook and everything, I might as well post it here, even though it's been almost a month since the con. But be forewarned: my notes are terribly incomplete, particularly regarding modern-day fencing. In bullet form.

Swords )

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Keix

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