http://georgedanderson.blogspot.com/2010/11/book-review-peter-bakowski-beneath-our_3726.html
Friday, November 19, 2010
Review of Beneath Our Armour and interview
Below is the link to George Anderson's review of my latest poetry collection, " Beneath Our Armour" which was shortlisted for the 2010 Victorian Premier's Award for Poetry. Also my responses to interview questions.
http://georgedanderson.blogspot.com/2010/11/book-review-peter-bakowski-beneath-our_3726.html
http://georgedanderson.blogspot.com/2010/11/book-review-peter-bakowski-beneath-our_3726.html
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Nature does what nature does
Either tortoises live long lives because they don’t hurry
or they don’t hurry because they live long lives.
Labels:
aphoristic poem,
Chiastic poem,
ultra-short poem
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Don't join the inflexible
If you’re rigid in your thinking,
you’re not really thinking.
you’re not really thinking.
Labels:
aphoristic poem,
ultra-short poem,
wordplay poem
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Inertia
When all the things you need to do
remain
all the things you need to do.
remain
all the things you need to do.
Labels:
aphoristic poem,
Chiastic poem,
word play poem
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Thoughts from a writing desk. No.1
I think a poem should work first on the page. If it works on the page it should work read out loud.
I think it's not on to whinge or complain in a poem or write a easy target rant poem along the lines of:
war is bad,
politicians are bad etc.
As a poet I'm focused on writing clearly. A poem needs a beginning, a middle, and an end, with preamble and blathering digression cut out/sculpted out of drafts of the poem, but with an engine in the poem, moving the poem forward. In regards to writing poems, Charles Bukowski said, "Get in, get out, don't linger."
A cardinal self-imposed regime I have with reading live is not to over-read. If a poet or writer reads for too long they end up murdering the audience, the audience which was initially on their side, groans inwardly, sneak glances at their wristwatch, ends up resenting the over-reading poet.
I read five or six poems maximum when I'm a featured reader.
I've never gone for self-publishing. I've wanted to secure a publisher who'll give proper editorial scrutiny of the proposed book and also has national distribution.
I served a self-imposed eleven year apprenticeship in writing poems before I submitted a manuscript to a publisher. I always cull poems from a manuscript. I don't want any poems that are passengers in a manuscript, that let the team down. Be ruthless with your poems. Write more poems, write many poems and pick out the best. Better a thin, strong book of poems than a weaker, thicker one.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)