Many literary magazines are now charging small administrative fees for submissions.
Here are some links to articles discussing this somewhat controversial issue:
Literary Journals, Reading Fees, and You
The Truth Behind Literary Journal Online Submission Fees
Why literary journals charge online submission fees
Friday, July 24, 2015
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Interview of Mary Barnet in Still Crazy
The interview below appears in the July 2015 issue of STILL CRAZY.
INTERVIEW
OF MARY BARNET
Carol Smallwood
Mary Barnet was nominated a second time for a
Pushcart Prize for her recently published
86 Sonnets for the 21st Century (Casa de Snapdragon, 2015). Her books are accompanied by the artwork of Richard E. Schiff, a Life Member of the Art Students League of New York.
86 Sonnets for the 21st Century (Casa de Snapdragon, 2015). Her books are accompanied by the artwork of Richard E. Schiff, a Life Member of the Art Students League of New York.
Mary is Senior Editor of PoetryMagazine.com, http://www.poetrymagazine.com/index_real.html the longest continuously publishing poetry journal
on the internet, founded in 1996.
1. Please describe
your website and your duties as editor/writer:
I founded PoetryMagazine.com back in the web primitive days of the 20th
Century, 1996, to be precise. That was when few webzines existed, and our
advertising was primarily guerilla style; bumper stickers on walls all over New
York City, ads in small periodicals as well as Poets & Writers. Early on, we introduced streaming video, and
in 1997, we won a Webby Award for our streaming video. That got us a write up
in USA Today by Sam Meddis, and we
have grown steadily by the year. Our difference has always been the strict
criteria we use to publish poets. We are not snobs, but we want to bring the
best to our readership who have now come to expect that from us.
Over the years I have added to the
mix of unsolicited submissions from which I choose, and then present. There are
also Features by invitation by Andrena Zawinski; live poet interviews by Grace
Cavalieri; reviews by Grace, Joan Gelfand, and others; and PoetryFilms by our
own Richard E. Schiff.
2. Tell us about your
career:
I began writing poetry as a small
child, seriously at 16 years of age. I had reason, early on, to travel into
South America at a time in the volatile days of the mid ‘60s. By 1968, I was
living on my own in London, and there I put together the earlier writings and
moved my work on. Nineteen sixty-eight was a pretty hip time to be in Britain,
and I was in the middle of all that Piccadilly circus stuff in my man’s
stovepipe hat and high boots and a wild Victorian embroidered cape I had picked
up for a song.
I returned to New York City in
the early ‘70s and have written and published, since then, in many
publications, including Crossroads, Gusto, New Worlds Unlimited, The New
Jersey Poetry Society Anthology, Funky Dog Publishing, Recursive Angel, The
Greenwich Village Gazette, The Poem Factory, Numbat, The Pittsburgh Review,
and elsewhere .
Also, I was the Featured Writer
in a special edition of Poet magazine. This was followed by my own
chapbooks including Orchidia, Proud to be
a New American, Landscape and Dad’s Shoes.
These lead to my books, The New
American/Selected Poems (Gilford Press, 2006), Arrival (Casa de Snapdragon, 2010) and now, 86 Sonnets for the 21st Century (Casa de Snapdragon, 2015). Both of
the latter were nominated for Pushcart Prizes.
3. Which
recognitions/achievements have encouraged you the most?
My public readings that began
when I was sixteen. I read at The Grace Church, Cage Figaro, and The Baggot Inn,
all in Greenwich Village. Later, in 1970, I read at one of my now husband’s
openings at the Avanti Galleries on east 72nd street. I have also read recently at Princeton for
the New Jersey Poetry Association.
In 86 Sonnets
for the 21st Century (Casa de Snapdragon, 2015) www.marybarnet.com, my sonnets are written for the modern English language.
Sonnets are poems, used by, among others, Plutarch, Michael Angelo and William
Shakespeare with a specified rhyme scheme and meter. Grace Cavalieri (host of
“The Poet and The Poem,” interviews presented by The Library of Congress) and
Joan Gelfand (National Book Critics Circle) both admired their originality and
readers found their modern presentation of an iconoclastic poetry form
refreshing as well.
For a sample, here is one of my
recent sonnets:
My
Sum
When
I find myself in some reality of pain
I know old age can cripple us;
still there is no need to make a fuss.
I won’t be able to travel to Spain;
many are the places I’ll never visit by boat or plane.
I can’t climb the steps of a bus;
I go so slow some folk just cuss.
Oh ! How I wish I could dance in the rain!
But nothing is lost in my craft;
I write with more facility than in times past.
I’m so happy with this some might think me daft.
All are friends to whom I serve up my words’ repast;
glad will I be if my life is no more than my writing’s sum!
I know old age can cripple us;
still there is no need to make a fuss.
I won’t be able to travel to Spain;
many are the places I’ll never visit by boat or plane.
I can’t climb the steps of a bus;
I go so slow some folk just cuss.
Oh ! How I wish I could dance in the rain!
But nothing is lost in my craft;
I write with more facility than in times past.
I’m so happy with this some might think me daft.
All are friends to whom I serve up my words’ repast;
glad will I be if my life is no more than my writing’s sum!
March
2015
4. What writers have
influenced you the most?
I have never allowed myself to be
overly influenced, as I began writing before my mind was full of poets and
poems. Chinese and Japanese poetry had an effect on me; brevity is the hallmark
of the Haiku, after all. Economy of words goes along with our ideals of wisdom.
Doesn’t everyone want to be the person of the “least words”?
5. How has the
Internet benefited you?
Well, it gave me the idea that
with a www you can reach all the way around the world with your circulation,
automatically! And not a single tree paid for the thousands of pages of poetry
we have generated in the past 19 years!
6. What classes have
helped you the most?
The writing workshops I took part
in at what was then The New School, I think it was in the ‘80s, or early ‘90s
when Robert Pinsky was there, were invaluable to me.
The Master Class I took with
Gerald Stern when I attended a Writers’ Conference at Williams College was also
very enlightening to me.
7. What advice would
you give others?
Be your own muse and inspiration
and remember poetry is an art and a serious craft, requiring you read poetry and
write poetry, every day if possible. I say possible, and really as a poet I can
barely keep myself from poetry. I am very lucky my husband fancies himself a
chef. That gives me a little time to work, and I eat well every night.
8. What is your
favorite quotation?
This says everything:
“Any
man's death diminishes me,
Because I am involved in mankind,
And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls;
It tolls for thee.” – John Donne∎
Because I am involved in mankind,
And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls;
It tolls for thee.” – John Donne∎
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
JULY 2015 ISSUE OF STILL CRAZY
Does your life have a soundtrack? Have you ever chafed when a store clerk
assumed you were a “senior” or when a young whippersnapper called you ma’am?
These topics and more are explored
in the July 2015 issue of Still Crazy.
This issue also contains the
first interview published by the magazine. It features poet Mary Barnet,
interviewed by Carol Smallwood.
Go
to www.crazylitmag.com for ordering
information. Selected poems and excerpts
from essays/stories are available for viewing on the site for both this issue
and previous issues. You must register
to read them.
Still
Crazy is an independent magazine that receives no funding from
organizations or institutions. We appreciate your support, whether from
subscriptions, single-issue purchases, or donations.
Yours
truly,
Barbara
Kussow
Editor
Still Crazy
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