Inside at AWP, warm smiles with my friend Danuta. |
Outside, nothing warm about Boston last week. |
Thanks to all of you who followed the 44 Postcard Project. You can read about the project's genesis here, Poetry Postcard 1. I was inspired to do a "pay it forward" style birthday project by my friend, California artist Sherry Belul.
And now, the wrap up!
First, I'll list the poems and give links to the posts in chronological order. Then, I'll group them by type: light verse, formal poems, poems of place, and so on.
Postcard 1: "Postcard 1908"
Postcard 2: "Speedway"
Postcard 3: "Aedes Vexans"
Postcard 4: "Thick Skinned"
Postcard 5: "Symmetry"
Postcard 6: "Resolution"
Postcard 7: "You Can't Get My Goat"
Postcard 8: "Pastoral with Hedgehog"
Postcard 9: "Victorian Soap Label"
Postcard 10: "Vera Ellen"
Postcard 11: "Nonchalant"
Postcard 12: "Swimming in the Nile, Age 21"
Postcard 13: "Thinking about Georgia"
Postcard 14: "Places on the Moon"
Postcard 15: "Bird Song"
Postcard 16: "January, Julia"
Postcard 17: "Cutting Gladiole on Our Anniversary"
Postcard 18: "Thrush Lane"
Postcard 19: "Belle Isle"
Postcard 20: "Angry Bird"
Postcard 21: "The Weather of Late is Gray"
Postcard 22: "Every Flavor"
Postcard 23: "Ghost Tour, Williamsburg"
Postcard 24: "Debra Paget"
Postcard 25: "Letter to a Pioneer, from Her Sister"
Postcard 26: "Walter Reed, 1944"
Postcard 27: "To Be Or Sarah Bernhardt"
Postcard 28: "1 Cent Stamp Upside Down"
Postcard 29: "The World's Most Unique Restaurant"
Postcard 30: "Cartoon Boy Meets Cartoon Girl"
Postcard 31: "Groundhog"
Postcard 32: "Airbus A320"
Postcard 33: "Headdress 1955"
Postcard 34: "Honeymoon and High Anxiety"
Postcard 35: "Rebellion"
Postcard 36: "The Day You Quit Me"
Postcard 37: "Nathaniel Hawthorne"
Postcard 38: "February 22"
Postcard 39: "Jug Handle"
Postcard 40: "Alligator Wrestling"
Postcard 41: "Greetings from Fort McClellan"
Postcard 42: "Postcard Cherokee, NC"
Postcard 43: "This Side for Correspondence"
Postcard 44: "The Task at Hand"
It's overwhelming to look at the poems listed that way. But -- to think -- I've already climbed that mountain!
Here are the poems grouped by topic:
Celebrities (10, 13, 24, 27, 37, 44)
Ekphrastic Poems (12, 13)
Family and Memory Poems (8, 12, 33, 38, 39)
Feminist Poems (7, 27, 35, 44)
Form Poems (11, 17, 32, 36, 37, 38, 41, 43)
Funny Poems (3, 19, 21, 29, 40, 43, 44)
K-3 Friendly (15, 20, 29)
Light Verse (15, 19, 21, 28)
Mythology (3, 9)
Nature, Bugs and Animals (5, 14, 15, 18, 20, 31, 40)
Occasional Poems (16, 31, 38, 43)
Persona Poems (7, 11, 25, 28, 30, 44)
Poems about History (4, 25, 26, 33, 41)
Poems of Place (2, 6, 8, 14, 18, 23, 25, 26, 34, 39, 40)
Poems about Postcards (1, 16, 28, 32, 42)
Poems in the Style of Other Poets (12, 22, 36)
Political Poems (6, 26, 28, 41, 42)
Relationships (1, 7, 14, 16, 17, 22, 30, 34, 35, 43)
I'm pleased to announce that a few of the poems have been or will be published. "Pastoral with Hedgehog" was accepted for the anthology Two Countries, which focuses on first general Americans and people who immigrated to the U.S. as children.
"Greetings from Fort McClellan" appeared on the current events poetry site New Verse News.
And a postcard poem written post-44 (#45) was accepted to Barely South Review. The title is "Eyes on the Back of My Head."
Where were the postcards sent? You can read a list at last week's Poetry Friday post, the project finale.
What's next? Participating in March Madness Poetry at Think Kid, Think! You can check out my first round poem (remember to vote) here. My assigned word was that very stand-up bon mot, "perpendicular."
WOW
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful and inspiring project! Indeed, that is one impressive list-- and why am I not surprised that you cross referenced the list by subject.
ReplyDeleteThank you for grouping them by topic -- very helpful (and a lot of work for you, I'm sure). Congrats on having several of them placed already! And good luck in the tournament :-)
ReplyDeleteGreat to have them grouped 'so', & wonderful that some are going to be published, Laura. Congratulations for all the work and accomplishment here, & I assume the joy you also received made it worthwhile.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Tabatha and Linda. I'm glad you like the groupings. I thought that would be helpful.
ReplyDeleteMost journals won't take poems that have appeared on a blog. We'll see what happens. I may have more luck with anthologies.
Linda -- this project was beyond joy. There were so many interesting connections, new things to learn, reports back that a postcard had arrived on a dreary day and cheered someone up. I loved everything about it!
Happy birthday, Jen! Just trying to stay organized in at least one aspect of my life.
ReplyDeleteHmm, good job! This is really something!
ReplyDeleteThis is cool!
ReplyDelete