Showing posts with label Submissions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Submissions. Show all posts

Friday, April 29, 2011

Mission(s) Accomplished

Alright, so, none of the post-MFA fellowships came through for me. But, I GOT A JOB!!!!



I'll be the Visiting Assistant Professor of Poetry at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa.

The interview process was no joke, but I learned a lot about myself and my teaching philosophy and I'm more confident than ever that teaching is the career I want to pursue while I poet.

There was a phone interview and then two days of campus interviewing which consisted of giving a lecture and a reading to the English department faculty followed by an intense Q&A and then a breakfast interview with the faculty the following morning.

Interviewing like that felt so much like dating! I was falling in love with each faculty member as different sets of them took me to different meals or walked me from one meeting to the next and I had to really hold out on loving them until they were ready to make a commitment to me. And they did. Right now, we're in a long distance relationship, but I'm working on moving closer. :)

--

I defend my thesis tomorrow.

I graduate from my MFA program on May 22. I almost cry every time I read this blog's bio. In 2007 I didn't even know how I was going to get my Bachelor's degree. That was 4 years ago and in the fall I'll be Professor Gadson.

Dream BIG, whomever you are and from wherever you are reading this!

--
My goal when I entered an MFA program was to come out with a first book manuscript.

Yesterday, I sent my manuscript out to three first book contests!
  • Cave Canem Poetry Prize
  • Agnes Lynch Starret Poetry Prize (University of Pittsburgh)
  • Robert Dana Prize (Anhinga Press)
I Submit continues!

I am seriously leading a poem-led life. I thought it was possible, now I know.

Peace to your pieces in the piles, poets and other writers!





Tuesday, January 11, 2011

I'm Baaaaack...with (old) good news!

I didn't submit to any journals in Fall 2010. I needed to write new stuff. Plus I was teaching my first undergraduate poetry workshop so giving feedback on poems was taking up a majority of my time. I've been applying to post-MFA fellowships just like I said I would. Now I have a week left before school starts so I'm back to submitting again. I honestly miss anxiously checking my email. It sucks not to be hoping for good news when I check my email because I haven't been giving myself the opportunity to get any since I haven't been submitting.

Oh some exciting things happened when I did submit though. I got an acceptance from Muzzle and a nomination for the Dzanc Books Best of the Web 2011 Anthology.

New submissions out today to:
Callaloo
Indiana Review
Linebreak
jubilat
Mythium
Vinyl Poetry
Agni
Black Warrior Review
Crazyhorse
Pank
Blackbird
Cream City Review
The Journal
Poetry Quarterly
Anti-
The Louisville Review
The Minnesota Review
Pebble Lake Review
Phoebe
Solstice
The Southeast Review
Sycamore Review


Now when I get rejected, I won't have to be afraid to press send again because I've sent to (almost) everywhere I wanted to send.

Peace to your poems in the slush piles, poets!

Thursday, May 27, 2010

How I Submit

At vizionheiry's request...

Finding Listings

1. Allison Joseph's CRWROPPS Listings- All but one of my publications came from the calls for submissions that Allison Joseph so graciously sends out daily. A lot of newer publications seem to list with her and new mags seem to be more open to publishing less established poets. I get the emails sent to me but that's not a requirement, you can just go check the website daily. There usually ends up being about 5-6 emails daily which include calls for submissions, contest info, and jobs in academia. I can usually find something to submit to a few times a week. I just save the emails and then hit them all at once during a submission frenzy.

2. Duotrope- Duotrope is a database of lit mags and journals, both on and offline. I love to use the search feature. Say I've got a narrative poem, I can search the keyword "narrative" and journals that have the word "narrative" in their descriptions will come up. I also like to search by journals that accept electronic submissions.

3. Other poets- If I hear another poet got a poem accepted or rejected from somewhere, I'm going to check that place out and send there too.

Cover Letter
Allison Joseph and her husband actually gave a publishing workshop at FIU when I was there. I got the idea to keep the cover letter simple from them. Here's the cover letter I send:

Hello ,

I am pleased to submit my poems, "poem title 1," "poem title 2," "etc." for your review.

I am currently a 2nd year poet in the Creative Writing MFA program at the University of Virginia. My poetry has previously been published in Torch, Conte, Assisi, and Diverse Voices Quarterly.

(contact info or any other info the submissions guidelines say you should include).

Thank you for your consideration!


When I had no publication credits or anything, I just listed the poems I was sending, thanked them, and signed off. One of my professor's joked that an editor might be tricked into thinking you were a well-known poet who doesn't need to list publication credits if you did it this way.

Picking the Poems

I've consistently been in poetry workshops since 2007 so I tend to send the best poems that I've workshopped. I don't intend to send poems w/a similar theme but that seems to happen because I'm usually sending poems I've written in the same time frame. Most journals seem to want you to send between 3-5 poems but this varies so you have to read the submission guidelines. The guidelines are often very specific and even include instructions on how they want the subject line of your submission email to read.

In my Summer 2010 submission packet of 5 poems, I've actually got two poems that use a similar line. I couldn't decide which poem should own the line so I just sent them both. One starts the packet and one is at the end. I don't know how this will go over but I doubt any one place will want both so this could work out lol. I'll keep you posted!

I just try to send what I feel like is my best at the time.

Sending Them Off

Right now I'm really focusing on electronic submissions. I hate mailing things. I especially hate mailing things and getting rejected lol. If I have a 93% chance of being rejected, for now, I like the effortlessness of email submissions.

I think unless someone specifically says not to, always send that brief cover letter. That way it doesn't appear that you are just sending your poems out as quickly as possible to whomever will read them, even though you really are, but at least you took the time to include a letter!

That's all I have. If anyone has any other good submission tips...leave them in the comments please!

Beating June Deadlines

I got some more submissions out, trying to beat the June 1-15 deadlines. Submissions out to: Milk Money, MisFit, The Meadowland Review, Poemeleon, The Nashville Review, New Plains Review, storySouth.

There's a few print mag submits in there, so I'm happy about that.

Los Angeles Review gave me a quick no already lol.

Sending love to everyone's poems in the slush piles!

Monday, May 17, 2010

First Year MFA: Done. New Submissions/Rejections

I'll do a wrap-up post on The MFA Chronicles. I just wanted to mention a few submissions I just did after tweeting with a bunch of people who were so motivated and submitted to Best New Poets (which UVA students can't submit to).

Tonight I submitted to: Diagram, The Boxcar Poetry Review, The Los Angeles Review, Sugar House Review, Caketrain, The Collagist,
Indiana Review, Linebreak


I was recently rejected by: Rattle, Ninth Letter, New York Quarterly. All form-letter rejections.

I'll admit that I was a little shaken by the rejections. But that only spurred me into revision and I'm much happier with the new batch I just sent out.

Gotta keep my poems out in the world!

More later...

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Revision and Submission

Today, on a caffeine high, I revised some poems. Then I submitted them for the grad student poetry contest at UVA and also to a few journals: Mid-American Review, Gulf Coast, Rattle, New York Quarterly, The Minnesota Review, and Ninth Letter.

Feels good to submit again! I have about 9 other places to submit to. The ones I did today all had submission managers (love those!). I'll have the other submissions in the mail tomorrow.

I suck as a blogger. I realize this. I have nothing to say lol. School is going well. I'm trying not to obsess over post-mfa plans just yet. But I'll at least have some rejections to report on a regular basis in a few months lol.

I hope everyone is getting their work out there!

Sunday, January 31, 2010

New Semester + Cave Canem Submission

I hope the third time is the charm because I just submitted my poems for the Cave Canem retreat...again. Again, again that is. We'll see.

--
A new semester started. We workshop at Rita Dove's house every Monday. We also have the option of weekly one-on-one's with her. I love the one-on-one thing. I had one with her last week and it went really well. She gave me some reading recommendations and some good suggestions are overcoming some of the worries that stifle my writing at times. Good stuff.
--
I hate the snow. Every time it snows here we have to get like 10 inches. So I'm supposed to be shoveling my car out right now and I'm just not up for that right now lol. I'm not really feeling Charlottesville as far as cultural activities go either. So I'm really looking to move close to family when my program is over. Or if something with TV writing can work out, I'd love to be in Southern California. Can't believe I just said that out loud.

That's what's up with me.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Submission: Center for Book Arts Chapbook Competition

YAY! Shit. Sorry. This is a curse-worthy moment. Got it done. Before the deadline. 15 pages of poems, a table of contents, an acknowledgements page, two title pages, and an entry fee. In the mail. The things you can do every night after a child's bedtime....

The whole reason I even entered this chapbook competition was because I saw that Terrance Hayes is judging it this year and reading his stuff played such a pivotal role in my development as poet. I just want him to read my stuff! I hope it makes the cut that gets forwarded to him for review.

So I'm excited about this because I feel like I really made something of my first semester. I still ended up with some stuff to submit and I wasn't expecting myself to. I don't really have a submission schedule other than once I have 3-5 new poems I'm feeling confident about I start submitting them like crazy lol. Having been in workshops consistently over the past 3 years keeps me stocked with poems. My next submission storm is gonna happen in January. Also, I get Allison Joseph's emails with daily calls for submissions and weekly emails from UVA's Creative Writing dept. with places to submit so it's always on my mind. Hopefully, I can start getting myself into some more established publications this next go around. We shall see.

Vizionheiry also brought up some good points in previous comments about ordering the poems and themes. I just so happened to have developed an obsession with thematically similar things for the last 6 months so I used the best of that stuff for this chapbook. It's kind of an examination of relationships with a mother, as a parent, and with a father. I ended up calling it "The Temperature of Blood." I hope it works well together.

Beer time. I'm talking to Tony Hoagland about my poems tomorrow and then taking him to lunch. I'm more nervous about going to lunch than I am about him talking about my poetry. I'm never worried about the right thing. lol

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Submission: Torch

I forgot to add this submission here. I don't typically submit to places that don't allow simultaneous submissions but I really like Torch and would love for my stuff to appear there. So we shall see!

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Submission: Rougarou

I just submitted 4 pieces here. They rejected my stuff last year but I'm sending new stuff that I like better this time so I hope that makes a difference. I read the poetry submissions that made it last year and....whoa! Imagery and lyricism is key here. Beautiful stuff.

I think I'm ready to do some more revising now. When I read and see that someone got the perfect combination of imagery and lyricism in a piece, it just makes me want to go back and make my poems flow better. Submitting makes me really look at what I'm sending out. I get so self-conscious that I let go of the idea that my pieces are "done". I think that's good. So this is my last submission for awhile.

We shall see!

Submission: Diverse Voices Quarterly

This is a new online journal that comes out this Spring/Summer. We shall see...

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Submission: Assisi

Looks like St. Francis College in Brooklyn is putting out this new journal. Their first issue will come out in Spring 2009. I have no idea what they are looking for (as if I ever do anyway) but I submitted.

We shall see!

Submission: Cave Canem Retreat

I submitted here last year and was not selected. It's a week long retreat geared toward black poets. I sent some new stuff this time. I hadn't written my sonnet crown yet so I sent that this time. I looked at what I sent last year and it's a little embarrassing. Eh, we shall see.... It's a long shot, like everything else. I'd love to go though.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Submission: Waccamaw

The good thing about submitting to journals online is that I can read previous issues instead of just using a mission statement or submission guidelines to try to guess how I'd fit. So WOW. The writing in Waccamaw is so image rich! I really like this journal. So I sent 4 poems. We shall see.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Submission: RATTLE

They are having a special African-American edition in June 2009. So we'll see.

It's funny. I haven't had any acceptances to anything soliciting African-Americans. That's not the funny part lol. That's fine...there is stiff competition. But the 2 pieces that I have had accepted dealt with race (among other things) but the publications weren't focused on that subject. So that's nice (and possibly the funny part I was mentioning). I used to be afraid to talk about race, thinking that I would be declared a stereotypical black poet. My poetry professor (who is not black) must have sensed that and she started just lending me books out of the blue. The one that woke me up the most was Hip Logic by Terrance Hayes. The skill with which he dealt with race and all his politically oriented subjects amazed me. I knew I was only hurting myself by not allowing my poetry to represent me in my truest form. I'll be forever grateful to that professor because my poetry changed for the better and those pieces, my truest pieces, are the ones that are being accepted.

So yeah, I said all of that to say, odds are I won't get accepted for this one lol.

Submission: Naugatuck River Review

They're looking for narrative poetry. I had good luck with a narrative submission in the past so we'll see if this one works out for me!

Submission: Spillway 14

Sent 3 poems just now.

We shall see...

Friday, May 23, 2008

Submission: Conte

I just submitted two poems to a nice online journal, Conte. They seem to like narrative stuff, I seem to like narrative stuff, hopefully they'll like my narrative stuff lol.

We shall see.

Feels good to be submitting again!

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Updates!

Mailed in my submission for Crab Orchard Review.

Rejected by Missouri Review.

Waiting to hear back about Cave Canem.

All is well...I need to write more and send out more so that's what I'll be doing.

We shall see!

Friday, March 14, 2008

Submission: Cave Canem Fellowship

So yesterday I mailed off my application for Cave Canem's summer retreat. This one is special because it's specifically for African-Americans/minorities. It would be GREAT to be in an environment like that. I don't often get to be immersed in that way and I'd love it. BUT...of course it is highly competitive and I don't expect to get it. I'm just saying though...at least I submitted. Once again.

We shall see!