Monday, July 11, 2011

Amazonaholic: "Loose Sugar"

My most recent Amazon purchase, Loose Sugar by Brenda Hillman, was referred to me by Beckian Fritz Goldberg. Knowing I will be working with Brenda Hillman while going to Saint Mary's for my MFA, Beckian thought this would be a good way for me to get to know her, stating that Hillman wasn't afraid to experiment or go outside of "writing norms".

Loose Sugar, exactly as it sounds; fragments of things that create the overall whole of life, or in Hillman's case, the story of her life. Some fragments are loose and things fall apart; some are so tightly wound together, they mold the facets of happiness and love; other times, just simply letting go and leaving things in fragments makes it easier to forget things. These are fragments of memories, emotions, and expefrience.

Hillman's book is divided into five parts: space/time, time/alchemy, alchemy/problem, problem/time, and time/space. The first three parts are very cohesive with strong imagery and focus on surroundings, people, and their emotions or desires. As the book goes on, things literally become fragmented; let me rephrase that, Hillman begins writing completely in fragments. Some pages have anywhere from one fragment to an entire poem of fragments, and other pages have footnotes of fragments below each poem. There is obviously a method to this madness and I understand the overall picture to be what I stated in the previous paragraph, but I feel like I need to pick Hilman's brain for details on her partial narratives!

Loose Sugar has provided and interesting, unique, and entertaining read as Hillman is very experimental in form, narrative structure, and literary devices.

Here is a strong and detailed article about the book, provided by the Poetry Foundation: http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/brenda-hillman

Write it!: MOLESKINE books -CJ

MOLESKINE books are the best for writers! They are light weight, thin, and durable with plenty of pages, and they come in all different colors, sizes, and paper styles. I recently bought a three-pack of regular sized notebooks at Barnes & Noble, reasonably priced at $18.95 and they have been great for writing poems, notes on my readings, and for expelling random thoughts.

Every writer should carry a MOLESKINE around with them everywhere they go! There are books, small enough to fit in your back pocket; medium sized ones for the purse; and the full size notebooks for school or a large volume of writing. Composition books are great and all, but they tend to wear and tare more easily than the MOLESKINE books. Composition books are also not as thin and they both hold the same amount of pages.

The variety of paper styles is a large aspect of the MOLESKINE books that make them appealing. They have books with graph paper, lined paper, blank pages; some fold over like a detective's notebook, some open like normal books; others have Velcro latching the book, or an elastic band. There are also day planners for the busy writer!

You can find MOLESKINE books at http://www.moleskineus.com/moleskine-books.html, amazon.com, or any local Barnes & Noble!

Journal Making Project

You will need:
1 MOLESKINE book (whatever size you want)
Enough leather (or whatever fabric you want to use for the cover) to cover the entire MOLESKINE
Hot glue OR needle and thread
Thin ribbon

Directions:
Take your MOLESKINE and cover the entire thing in the leather sheet or whatever fabric you chose. Use either a hot glue gun to glue the fabric to the cover of the book, or you can sew the fabric onto the cover. Cut off the extra fabric or fold it over and glue it onto the inside of the cover, as well. You can also glue paper with designs to the inside of the cover to cover your folds. Glue or sew the thin ribbon onto the inside of the MOLESKINE's spine to use as book marks. You can add any embellishments with glue or needle/thread; or any buckles, ribbons, or locks to keep the journal closed.




Wednesday, June 8, 2011

*Daily Juice*

"A civilized society is one which tolerates eccentricity to the point of doubtful sanity."
-Robert Frost

Upcoming Readings at The UA Poetry Center

Our Summer Poetry Resident, Harmony Holiday, arrives this week to begin her three-week stay in the Poetry Center's guest cottage. She will read with local poet Matt Rotando on Monday, June 13th at 8 p.m.
Harmony Holiday spends most of her time in New York, by way of Berkeley, by way of L.A., by way of Iowa, by way of the Delta, by way of Jamestown, by way of the Middle Passage, by way of Sicily, by way of Ghana, by way of the planet Sirius, by glint of the gibbous moon, because of sunspots on the sun. Her first book Negro League Baseball, will be published by Fence this spring. Read an excerpt here.

Matt Rotando received an MFA in poetry from the City University of New York (Brooklyn College) and a Fulbright Foundation grant. Next fall he will complete his Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Arizona. Professor of English Literature and Creative Writing at SUNY Nassau Community College, he is the author of a collection of poems entitled The Comeback’s Exoskeleton (UpSet Press, 2008). Read a poem by Matt here. Matt is teaching his popular class, Surrealist Writing on Mondays from June 13th to June 30th. Previous students have called this class "a bright shining light in an otherwise dim and boring week of diurnal life" and say that Matt "somehow makes wild creativity come easy." There are still a few spots available in this class. You'll find registration details here.

from the Poetry Center email blast

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

*Daily Juice*

 
"A word is dead when it is said, some say. I say it just begins to live that day."
-Emily Dickinson

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

**Events at San Diego Writers, Ink**

  • An Evening with Tom Spanbauer
As one of our most popular instructors, Tom Spanbauer's Dangerous Writing class
filled up faster than we could say "Onomatopoeia!" No worries, you can still meet
Spanbauer and learn about Dangerous Writing with this intimate evening/mini-talk.
Mingle, listen, eat, enjoy.
Wednesday, May 11
7-9pm
$25 per person/Register
  • Laurel Corona reads from Finding Emilie
Laurel will read from her third historical fiction novel: Finding Emilie. She's
also the author of The Four Seasons and Penelope's Daughter, as well as numerous
YA  and nonfiction books. Laurel is a Professor of Humanities at San Diego City
College and was the prose editor for SDWI's A Year In Ink, Vol. 4.
Friday, May 13
7-9pm
  • BLAZING Laptops 2011Write-a-thon!
Have you signed up for Blazing Laptops yet? Don't delay, it's less than a month
away!
Sunday, June 5
9am - 6pm

San Diego Writers, Ink: www.sandiegowriters.org/

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

**Daily Juice**

 
"History, despite its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage, need not be lived again."
-Maya Angelou