Tag: submitting

  • too late

    Milestones Cover

    Another fine anthology from independent Australian publisher, Stephen Matthews of Ginninderra Press. Filled with poetry from some of the finest Australian poets. Including yours truly with the poem, too late.

    When I read my very first Ginninderra Press anthology, way back in 2018, I had a go at writing a poem to fit the theme. It was too late to be included in the anthology but I was interested in writing the poem as an exercise and a challenge. Reading the poems in the book had inspired me. The poets had such a diverse and broad reaction to the theme of wild. However, I really struggled to write something as original or as compelling.

    Fast forward to four years later and a poem of mine is in a Ginninderra Press anthology. I am becoming better at writing poems for themes. At looking at them from the corner of my eye and taking a journey to somewhere new. Or as was the case with this poem, realising that it would it the theme. I love it when I've already written something that would be perfect for a journal or anthology!

     

  • Intimacy in Solitude

    IP - More Than Melanin 4

    IP - More Than Melanin 5

    I am stoked to be part of the awesome zine, More Than Melanin, featuring a whole stack of incredible female BIPOC authors and artists from around the world.

    Edited by the wonderful Kanika Chopra, Issue 2: Intimacy in Solitude feature my poem, Shelter.

    The zine looks amazing and is on sale now. Get your copy before they’re sold out!

     

     

  • The Crow

    IP - The Crow 1

    IP - The Crow 2

    It flies in from South Australia and lands in my letterbox. This small, elegant journal of twenty pages. Lovingly edited and curated by Joan Fenney it is a delight to read. And I am delighted to say that my poem, Nana's Kitchen is one of the poems in the June 2021 issue.

    Joan writes the most fabulous editorials for each issue where she pulls the threads of the poems together and adds a quote about writing. I love dipping in and out of the pages, discovering new voices and places as I read the poems that have been included in this issue.

    You can subscribe to The Crow here.

     

  • Legacy

    Teesta Review

    I'm super excited to have not one, but two poems appearing in Legacy, Issue 32 of the Indian journal, Teetsa Review. It's the first time my poetry has left these shores (if you don't count the copy of my first book, Defenestration which is at my Uncle's house in Panadura, Sri Lanka) and I'm over the moon.

    When I was first writing poetry, it was to make sense of the intense emotions I was experiencing as a teen and then later, a twenty year old. My writing was very much focussed on the present moment. I still write largely about my own personal experience, however, these days I often find myself writing about the past and in particular my identity.

    It marks a shift in my work from being about creativity and motherhood to unpicking the legacy of my mixed race heritage. Writing about my background was something I resisted for a long time as there is an expectation that writers of colour write about their difference. I wasn't interested in doing that – I wanted to write poetry about universal themes that tie us all together, rather than write about all the ways I can be separated and pulled apart.

    And yet, Never Seen, the first poem I had accepted by a poetry journal was about race. The theme for that particular issue of Cordite was Brownface so I had to write about race if I wanted to submit. At the time there was a poem that was hovering around me, waiting to be written. It seemed to fit the theme so I wrote about race for the first time.

    When that particular poem was accepted by a journal I had conflicted feelings. Huge excitement for the recognition of my ability but great discomfort about having to write about race to be published. I'm still unpicking the implications of that poem and its publication. One of the poem's legacies, however, is that I am now writing about my heritage. And those poems are being published.

    I am wondering why these poems of mine are being accepted by journals. Is there an authenticity there that is lacking in my other poetry? Or is it their difference and unique voice that is appealing? It's hard for me to know the answers to these questions. And I don't know if those answers are important. Perhaps it's enough to hold those questions for a while and feel their weight.

    If you are interested you can read two of my poems about my heritage in the latest issue of Teesta Review. 

     

  • Getting Rejected

    IP - Lets Get Rejected 1

    As a writer the one sure thing about your work is that you'll get rejected, countless times, before you're accepted. The above picture is a list of the poems I submitted in 2020 via the Submittable platform which is used by many literary organisations. There were also a whole bunch of poems I sent off via email.

    The way I've dealt with the inevitable fear and doubt of submitting my work to journals, competitions and publishers is to embrace rejection – #letgetrejected. I got this idea from someone, I can't remember who, online. I send out each poem fully expecting it to be rejected so when it happens I don't fall in a heap because it's what I'm expecting. On the rare occasions my work is accepted, there is great rejoicing and jubilation. Often dancing and shouting too!

    Once I get rejected, I send the poem right back out again to someone else. Sometimes I edit it and sometimes I send it off as it is. I got this idea from Liz Gilbert, author of Eat Pray Love, in one of her TED talks on creativity. What one editor rejects, another may accept. It's all down to taste and timing. 

    If you write enough, you'll develop a back catalogue of poems you can draw upon to send out. And the process of submitting and resubmitting your work over a period of time will mean your style and voice are heard by editors. They may not initially warm to it but over time they will come to know it and hopefully, appreciate it.

     

  • Brushstrokes

    Brushstrokes Cover

    Earlier this year I entered the Ros Spencer Poetry contest with my poem, Recipe for a Poem. It didn't win any awards but it was selected to be published in the anthology for the competition featuring poems from 2016-2019.

    It's been a long time since I've had any poetry published (twenty-two years in fact *ahem*) and I'm so happy to have a poem published after such a long break. It feels like a sign from the muse that I am on the right track and that writing poetry is worthwhile.

    Of course writing for it's own sake is always worthwhile and I will keep writing no matter what. Like writing this blog which I do mainly to express my thoughts and record my adventures in living a creative life. Not because I have to but because I want to and it brings me joy to create something with words and pictures. That said, it's nice to receive some external validation every once in a while. Keeps you going, you know?

    WA Poets Inc have done a fabulous job with this anthology and I am super excited to have one of my very own poems featured in its pages.