distractions and the budding poet’s life

Uh-oh, no thanks to Lifehack, I have learnt about another interesting online book cataloging website called aNobii. Seeing as I’m going to hit my 200-book limit on LibraryThing, I thought I might sign up.

Not that I need distractions or any reasons to be using the internet more! I’ve been doing a lot of reading and writing lately, and just finished a five-week poetry writing workshop this week. We were allowed to give our tutor two poems for feedback and comments etc. and I got mine back, one of which had the comment that I should be sending it out for publication! That was quite nice news, especially as that was one that I wrote whilst I was in the fabled place of convalescence.

Sadly, I did receive two rejections today in my inbox on submissions I’d made…even though I had been told that if I do keep trying I shall eventually get published, it most certainly doesn’t seem like it at the moment. I’m waiting on hearing about a few more submissions which will probably come back to me as rejections…sigh. Oh well, just have to keep on trying I guess.

Image of Pavane

I was very naughty this week - I bought some books! I went to the fabled pop culture shop in Melbourne city called Minotaur and found myself a copy of Keith Roberts’ Pavane (speculative fiction on what England would be like if Queen Elizabeth I was assassinated right before the whole Spanish Armada episode), and spurred by the fact that a classmate had a copy of it in my writing poetry class just finished, bought Mary Oliver’s Rules for the Dance - about the mechanics of poetry and such. She is an American poet and I’ve heard excellent things about this title so am very excited to get stuck into that. I wonder, should it be part of the whole online Spring Reading Challenge?

Image of Rules for the Dance