Following up my post on PART I How to create a chapbook: the genre, Jennifer Bosveld, of Pudding House Publication in her piece on chapbook marketing, writes about the ways in which poets pay for their chapbooks,
“You pay. One way or another. You either pay with your checkbook if you haven’t gotten good yet and go the non-respected vanity/subsidy route, or you pay with your checkbook the right way by taking classes, buying books on writing, taking workshops in order to improve your craft so that a decent publisher will want to risk her company resources on you. One way or another, you pay.”
This is a bit of what I was talking about in PART I, by studying the genre, buying chapbooks, and entering contests. Another way poets pay is by playing the publish or perish game. This then is PART II, the next step (or perhaps a concurrent step) is to publish your poems individually . A little reminder, readers, this is my own idiosyncratic process.
- Submit. Submit. Submit. How do you know if your poems are good? A bit further down the line in my revising and revision process, one way I go about deciding if my poems are good is by submitting. If that poem gets accepted, maybe it is a good poem, maybe you’re doing something right. And even better, now that poem has a home.
- Amendment to “submit. submit. submit.” Submitting can be expensive (paper, ink, printer, postage, or submission fees), time consuming, potentially time wasting, and rife with rejection letters. If you don’t like to be rejected, maybe consider another career or hobby? Or write and never show anyone your stuff but your mom or your partner in crime, who loves you no matter what. And too, it’s probably not a good idea to submit blindly. Read, for example, the Poets & Writers‘ interview of editors in “Survival of the Fittest.” It includes an interesting take on writers who do not have subscriptions.
- Second Amendment: you have the right to read yarns. Read journals. Read lots of them. Buy subscriptions. Enter contests. Visit your library, book store, or ask a friend to borrow their magazines. Know your journal before you submit.
- Retire poems. Let them perish. Sometimes you discover you’ve written poems that suck. Maybe your partner in crime says so. Maybe your 10th or 25th rejection says so. Maybe you’re going through your folder of new poems that have now sat inside a drawer for six months and you’re getting ready to revise them, but realize upon reading them, there’s a whole bunch that cannot be revised or saved. They too, alas, have major suckage. So what do you do? Retire them. Say goodbye. Let them perish. Consider them as stepping stones for the poem or poems you are going to write (or have already written) that will be amazing.
- Amendment to “retired poems.” To be honest, I am not entirely sure I am the best judge of my own poems. I’m pretty sure 99.78% of the poems I retire are indeed bad, bad poems. Naughty poem. Sit. Stay. However, every once in a while, after I’ve retired a poem, and though I may have sent it out to a couple of places, the poem is dead to me, but then…some literary journal…after six months or a year of holding onto that dead poem…contacts me to tell me “X” dead poem has been accepted. Can we say zombie poem? Of course I say “Yes, that poem is still available! I’m thrilled. Thank you for the acceptance.” Then, I scratch my head a few times, and add the zombie poem to the accepted folder.
- Create a folder of accepted poems. Once a poem is accepted, I place a hard copy of that poem in the accepted folder. Why the individual poem and not the chapbook, you ask? When I’m writing poems, I’m more concerned with the individual poems rather than seeing them as belonging together in a chapbook. Individually, I can polish a poem. Once I start thinking about writing a chapbook, I can’t hold that many pieces in my mind because I can’t think (yet) about the bigger picture. I need to focus on the poem. When you use a folder system, you can write and publish as many poems as you want. This can go on for years and years. Decades. True, you might be thinking of the individual poems as a series or ones that could be a series, but this way you’re really working on crafting each poem. When your folder is very, very thick, open the folder. See what’s inside.
Do you want to know what’s inside and what to do with all of it? Stayed tuned for Part III: of my How to Create a Chapbook blogs.