22 July 2011

Poetry Day Post

Today is New Zealand Poetry Day. As a Tuesday Poet, I should have put up a post on this theme on Tuesday, but I, er, didn't. (Never explain, never apologise - or wait, isn't that Rupert Murdoch's credo?)

Anyway, I thought I'd use the occasion to direct your attention to the excellent work of those who did. Renee Liang did double duty by both posting a wonderfully phrased poem about Christchurch on her blog, and editing the week's post on the hub Tuesday Poem blog, with poems from the three finalists for the 2011 NZ Post National Book Awards. If if you look in the sidebar to the right, you'll find Poetry Day posts from lots of the Tuesday Poets, with poems and news of poetry events.

I'm embarrassed to say that it's a long time since I have written a poem - what writing time I have had lately has been going into writing short stories - but I've had quite a bit to do with poetry nevertheless.

First, I've selected the poems by Australian and New Zealand poets for inclusion in Eye To The Telescope 2, and should be able to deliver the introduction, poems, and bios for this to the Science Fiction Poetry Association by my self-imposed deadline of 25 July.

Second, planning is proceeding apace for the book tour at the end of October which will launch my collection Men Briefly Explained and Keith Westwater's collection Tongues of Ash, both published by Interactive Press. Once we have all the details settled, we'll start to spread the word about the details of the tour - but, right now, we have venues confirmed in four centres.

In the meantime, enjoy Poetry Day!

2 comments:

Rachel Fenton said...

Book launch sounds very exciting - hope all the prep goes well for you. Poetry day always passes me by - I was actually writing a poem during it though!

Tim Jones said...

Thanks, Rachel! I could have gone to a small Poetry Day event, but I gave my apologies because I was so far behind ... on editing poetry! I'm meeting up with a bunch of poets on Monday, though, so that will be my delayed Poetry Day celebration.