Tricia McCallum is a Toronto freelance writer and also publishes fiction and poetry.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
Monday, August 19, 2013
Rejection, the sting of same.
Just had a (gracious) rejection of my new poetry MS
entitled “The Music of Leaving,” from the Brooklyn Arts Press, and (as I sob) I
am still on the fence re the following:
Is an outright generic rejection easier to swallow than
one that laments the decision and prompts you to continue writing? Not sure… I
am leaning toward the former but the nettles of this one are still deeply
imbedded.
So wanted a home there.
Onwards, of course.
But not quite yet...
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Things Not to Do at a Poetry Reading.
At the hands of the latter, I have learned, tortuously, the things that should never happen at poetry readings.
1. Do not mention journalism schools, alma maters, your writing mentors or who taught you English in Grade Two. No one cares. In fact, do not even let the word mentor pass your lips in any context for the duration of the event.
2. Do not approach the podium clutching a six-inch thick duo-tang folder housing a single spaced document that it seems you are quite intent on reading. Unless you have a coterie of muscular men blocking the exits.
4. Do not quote the ancients. They aren't there and cannot defend themselves.
Are any of our dreams the same?
My maternal grandmother was dead long before I was born.
Rose Ann Bradley was her name, born in County Cavan, Ireland, one of 11 children.
My mother spoke of her infrequently, and never unkindly. But the impression of her remains as that of an indomitable woman, withholding and glacial.
The story that reverberated the most for me was this one: she and my mother were sitting in front of the fire grate in their tenement flat in Glasgow. My grandmother had suffered a stroke and was in a wheelchair. My mom was nursing my eldest sister Kathryn.
She steeled herself to ask her mother a question: I say steeled because they shared no closeness, no confidences.
“Mother, can I get pregnant while I am nursing?” This was in the days when reproductive knowledge and education was almost non-existent.
A long pause, and then came her gruff reply: “Lassie, you know what you’ve been doin.’”
Rose Ann married her husband Thomas Smith, a Glaswegian, without loving him. He was educated and she knew he would teach her what he knew. She could neither read nor write. She signed her marriage certificate with an X. She had 12 children and lost twins at birth, a 19 year old daughter to TB and a 22 year old son to the war.