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  Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« on: July 06, 2010, 07:17:31 PM » by Rick Stansberger
Friends here keep assuring me that my Uncle John poems have wide audience potential.  Does anybody here know of an agent or publisher who won't "run screaming out of the room"* at the sight of a poem on the page?

Rick

*words from an agent in an email exchange about one of my collections.
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Rick's fifth book is out:  Gizmo--love, loss and the passion to know--in the first part of the last century.

  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #1 on: July 06, 2010, 07:47:31 PM » by Tom Riordan
Sorry to say, I know of no one. I assume you mean some kind of commercial publisher as opposed to the small poetry houses. If so, the only good news is they run so far away, at least you can't hear the screaming anymore, Rick.
How about titling the collection Mary Oliver's Uncle John Poems? Then, maybe. Tom
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  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #2 on: July 07, 2010, 02:24:09 PM » by Rick Stansberger
Don't tempt me, Tom.

Rick
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Rick's fifth book is out:  Gizmo--love, loss and the passion to know--in the first part of the last century.

  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #3 on: July 07, 2010, 02:39:18 PM » by Tom Riordan
In my "Poems of Tennyson," the first 141 pages are the essays of the desperate "editor."
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  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #4 on: July 07, 2010, 03:39:10 PM » by Casey Quinn
Hey Rick, I found this link with a good catalog of poetry publishers -

http://www.pw.org/small_presses?apage=%2A&perpage=
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Casey Quinn
My second poetry chapbook Prepare To Crash is now available from Big Table Publishing. Pick up a copy today !

Read some good short prose and poetry - Short Story Library

  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #5 on: July 07, 2010, 03:40:34 PM » by Casey Quinn
You can find an agent by going:

http://www.agentquery.com/search.aspx

search on "poetry" as the criteria without selecting a genre dropdown -
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Casey Quinn
My second poetry chapbook Prepare To Crash is now available from Big Table Publishing. Pick up a copy today !

Read some good short prose and poetry - Short Story Library

  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #6 on: July 16, 2010, 11:30:08 PM » by silent lotus


Breaking up is hard: Poems a tough fit in e-form
By HILLEL ITALIE (AP) – 2 days ago


NEW YORK — Billy Collins, one of the country's most popular poets, had never seen his work in e-book form until he recently downloaded his latest collection on his Kindle.
He was unpleasantly surprised.
"I found that even in a very small font that if the original line is beyond a certain length, they will take the extra word and have it flush left on the screen, so that instead of a three-line stanza you actually have a four-line stanza. And that screws everything up," says Collins, a former U.S. poet laureate whose "Ballistics" came out in February.
When he adjusted the size to large print, his work was changed beyond recognition, a single line turning into three, "which is quite distressing," he adds.
Poetry, the most precise and precious of literary forms, is also so far the least adaptable to the growing e-book market. A three-line stanza might be expanded to four if a line is too long or a four-line stanza compressed into three if the second and fourth lines have sharp indentations, as with Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's "Hymn to the Night."
Royalty disputes, philosophical objections and suspicions of technology are keeping countless books from appearing in electronic form, from "The Catcher in the Rye" to "Gravity's Rainbow." But for poetry, the gap is especially large because publishers and e-book makers have not figured out how the integrity of a poem can be guaranteed. And a displaced word, even a comma, can alter a poem's meaning as surely as skipping a note changes a song.
"The critical difference between prose and poetry is that prose is kind of like water and will become the shape of any vessel you pour it into to. Poetry is like a piece of sculpture and can easily break," Collins says.
Major poets not yet in e-form include Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Sylvia Plath, W.H. Auden and Robert Lowell, Langston Hughes and C.K. Williams. No e-editions of poetry are available from this year's Pulitzer Prize winner, Rae Armantrout; from Pulitzer winner and incoming U.S. poet laureate W.S. Merwin; or from such recent laureates as Charles Simic, Robert Pinsky and Louise Glueck.
"I have mixed feelings about poetry and e-books," says award-winning poet Edward Hirsch, whose "The Living Fire" came out in March in hardcover, but not as an electronic text. "I don't think it's the best way to read poetry myself and I wouldn't want to read it on the e-book, but it also seems important to have poetry available wherever possible."
Poetry is highly accessible on the Internet, sometimes unauthorized, such as on the Web site http://www.poemhunter.com, where you can find works by Plath, Hughes and other poets whose books have not been officially released in electronic form. Authorized verse can be found on Slate.com, which in a weekly podcast features a poem read aloud by the poet.
"On the whole, poetry is well suited for electronic media," says Pinsky, a frequent Slate contributor. He is confident the technical problems can be fixed, but that adds that besides the problems with portable e-readers, "most word processors treat verse as though each line were a paragraph.
"So, for example, typing a Wallace Stevens poem with capital letters at the beginning of the lines can be mildly annoying," Pinsky says.
Publishing houses differ over whether to wait for the technology to improve or to make the books available now. Farrar, Straus & Giroux, which publishes Nobel laureate Derek Walcott and Pulitzer winner Paul Muldoon among others, is not planning any e-poetry releases. Another leading poetry publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, intends some releases, but with an advisory note about changing font sizes.
Amazon.com spokeswoman Sarah Gelman, asked whether future editions of the Kindle would correct the problem, said the online retailer was "constantly working to innovate on behalf of our customers, and this applies to the experience of reading poetry on Kindle."
A leading developer of e-reading technology, eBook Technologies, is working on improving the formatting for poetry, although no major breakthroughs are expected before 2011. Company president Garth Conboy said that for now the most realistic options are either to keep a long line intact by scrolling horizontally across the screen — "A really bad experience," he says — or to find a way to "better communicate" to readers that a line broken in two was meant to be a single line.
"Neither are perfect solutions," he said. "I'm not sure what the perfect solution is."
Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #7 on: July 17, 2010, 08:14:39 AM » by Tom Riordan
Interesting, Silent, yes. Big Pub grappling with same problems as us in the little eworld. It is poets who will adapt, as we have to here, either using set images as you do, or writing long lines that don't break when bent, or using caps to signal line beginnings, etc., as I have found my self doing sometimes here. Tom
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  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #8 on: July 17, 2010, 08:39:11 AM » by milner place
I've had the long line problem, even in traditional book form. Publishers dropped the ends of some lines down, which was confusing because in other poems I used long line alternating with short line as a technique. How would the reader know that in one poem it was deliberate, in another a publisher's edit?

milner
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'Caminante, no hay camino,
se hace camino al andar'
- Antonio Machado

Latest book 'naked invitation' $15 or £10, p&p inc milnerplace@msn.com

  Re: Looking for an Agent/Publisher
« Reply #9 on: July 17, 2010, 11:28:59 AM » by Rick Stansberger
Interesting discussion, folks!  Thanks.  Tom, I like your deviousness, and Casey, I'm grateful for your research.  You too, Silent.  Interesting discussion.  Milner, you're in good company.  Walt Whitman's long line stuff gets chopped that way.  So does Dylan Thomas'.  It's a hazard of the style.
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Rick's fifth book is out:  Gizmo--love, loss and the passion to know--in the first part of the last century.

 (Read 547 times) [1]
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