Tuesday, 3 June 2014
Data Dump Award
Hello old friend. Have you been for a dump? I have. A data dump, of course. A ho ho ho. And a poo.
Data Dump is a regular newsletter about science fiction music, poetry and more, lovingly produced by Steve Sneyd. This is the ninth year that he's run a Data Dump Award for sci-fi poetry published in the UK and I'm happy to report that my poem, "After the Moons" won a gold star and took 1st place.
But here is also the information for those fine sci-fi poets who came in 2nd and 3rd. In some cases you can click their names to visit their blogs, sales pages and so on. Enjoy
1st
Russell Jones
"After the Moons"
from "Spaces of Their Own" (Stewed Rhubarb Press)
Joint 2nd
Andrew Darlington / JS MacLean
"Saturn Sigma Trojan Virus" / "Poetry is True Science Fiction"
Handshake 87 / Awen 82
Joint 3rd
Bryn Fortey / JC Hartley / Neil Wilgus
"Chaser and Chased" / "The Enigma Invasion" / "Yellow Dreams"
Bard 129 / Tiger Shark / Yellow Dreams
Russell Jones
Wednesday, 30 April 2014
Reviews reviews reviews
Writers are egotistical beasts, always on about me me me. Well I'm the worst of them all. Just look at this blog, it's entirely posts ranting on about moi. Disgusting.
So, here are some reviews (which I wrote, yes me, Russell Jones) of OTHER PEOPLE'S POETRY. You can even check out the poets' blogs or sales pages (in most cases), if you're that kind of person. Follow the links, comment, fornicate -
Click the poet's name to see their blog.
Click the book title to see my review.
“Separating
the Pieces: The
Cento, A Collection of Collage Poems
edited by Theresa Malphrus Welford”, The Istanbul Review, Issue 1
(2012)
“Evenlode:
Charles Bennett”, Elsewhere, (September 2013)
“This is Yarrow: Tara Bergin”, Elsewhere (October 2013)
“Muscovy:
Matthew Francis”, Elsewhere (December 2013)
“LeafGraffiti: Lucy Burnett”, Elsewhere (March 2014)
“Locustand Marlin: JL Williams” (March 2014)
“ProfessorHeger's Daughter: Chrissie Gittins”, Elsewhere (April 2014)
Russell Jones
Saturday, 26 April 2014
"Our Terraced Hum"
Much good news on the poetry front lately (now to sort out the rest of my meager existence!). Prole Books have decided to publish my sonnet sequence, "Our Terraced Hum".
It's part of an anthology called "Caboodle", which includes work from 5 other superstars of poetry:
Karina Vidler, Kate Garrett, Angela Croft, Gill McEvoy and Rafael Miguel Montes.
Due out in December, no doubt I'll update you again so your life can be filled with the joys of the publication process. I know you love it, you filthy thing you.
Russell Jones
Friday, 11 April 2014
Best Scottish Poems 2013
If, like me, you are suspicious of good fortune, then you may wish to throw a black cat under a ladder. My poem "The Ant Swap" from my sci-fi poetry pamphlet, "Spaces of Their Own" (Stewed Rhubarb Press) has been chosen as one of the twenty Best Scottish Poems of 2013!
The list was chosen by David Robinson, the books editor for The Scotsman, who had this to say about my poem:
"I love the mind-bending imagination of this poem, which zooms down to an ant-level view of the world before racing up into ‘the heat of stars, the prized melting flesh of my cosmos’, all somehow seen through a transfer of consciousness between the ant and the poet. I love, too, the image of ‘a tongue’s first flirt with noise’ employed as part of that wished-for transfer, and the signs that it has somehow been achieved, as the poet feels, instead of thought, a sense of the ‘heat of sugar’ that has lured the ant towards the ‘prized melting flesh of roadkill’, and the ant is able to imagine some sort of blissful human nirvana. And all in ten lines, too!"
Read the poem (or listen to my mad face reading it) on the Scottish Poetry Library Website.
Also included is work from:
Patricia Ace, Jean Atkin, John Burnside, Niall Campbell, Angela Cleland, Anna Crowe, Andrew Greig, Diane Hendry, Bill Herbert, Kathleen Jamie, Rob MacKenzie, Kona Macphee, Jim Mainland, J.O. Morgan, Thereza Munoz, Donald S. Murray, Robin Robertson, Ian Stephens and Jennifer Lynn Williams
READ THEM ALL HERE!
Russell Jones
Auld Reekie Readers
Far from stinking, Auld Reekie Readers is a group of readers and writers who meet up to share their work and listen to authors read.
As such I'll be talking about Edwin Morgan, sci-fi poetry, writing and editing, on Monday 14th April.
It's at the City Cafe in Edinburgh (EH1 1QR) and starts at 18:30.
Be there or be...somewhere else!
https://www.facebook.com/events/284725768357737/
Russell Jones
Monday, 31 March 2014
Writing...and monkeys
Writing...and monkeys
This is a post about writing, and that
mystical art of “process”. Essentially it's a bunch of blog posts
from various writers – known and unknown – about why they do what
they do, and how it is they go about doing it. It's not a book of
hints on “how to be a writer” or a set of tricks to get you
motivated, so far as I can tell, but a glimpse inside the private
lives of the freaks and geeks amongst us, those people who sit on
their lonesome and scribble down what the voices in their heads tell
them to say...
I received this calling to write a post
on “the writing process” from Pippa Goldschmidt, and as the
tradition dictates I shall now tell you a little about her:
Pippa is a professional astronomer,
which to me makes her incredibly cool before she's even opened her
mouth or put pen to paper. She is also the author of The Falling Sky, a novel which has received
great acclaim and which I ignorantly still need to read. But I do
know this: it's about a female astronomer whose discovery could
unravel current understandings of The Big Bang. She is also a fine
poet and I included her work in Where Rockets Burn Through:Contemporary Science Fiction Poems from the UK.
If you've an interest in science and fiction then she's a definite
go-to contemporary writer. Go, go check out her work and ramblings,
go now! You can check out her site here, which includes her own post about the way she goes about getting the good words down and chucking
the bad ones out.
And so
the nebula has been passed on to me. The task is to answer four
questions, so here we go...
Question
1: What am I working on?
Back
in January I was rowing in Ha Long Bay, in northern Vietnam. A guide
told me that on occasion, if you were lucky, monkeys could be seen climbing and chatting among the rocks. Now, I love monkeys. I love them a degree further
than is probably sane. I've visited a monkey temple in India, fed a
baby monkey in Thailand, I even have a t-shirt proclaiming my monkey
love. And yet no monkeys appeared on those rocks. Imagine, if you
can, my despair. I longed for those monkeys to voyage down, if only I
could call to them in a voice they could understand, they would
surely not deny me the pleasure of their company...
That's
the long route to saying this: I'm writing a novel about families who
can communicate with animals.
I'm
also still writing poetry and will shortly be editing my upcoming
collection The Green Dress Whose Girl is Sleeping
(due for publication with Freight Books in 2015) with editor Andrew Philip.
Question
2: How does my work differ from others of its genre?
I'm
perhaps most well known for my work in the sub-genre of Science
Fiction Poetry, having published two pamphlets of my own (“The Last Refuge” from Forest Publications in 2009, and “Spaces of Their Own” from Stewed Rhubarb Press in 2013) and edited a book of
contemporary sci-fi poems from the UK (“Where Rockets Burn Through”
from Penned in the Margins, 2013). The science fictional element
seems to have the ability to draw in new audiences, primarily fans of
SF, which I am very happy about because it gets non-poetry-readers a
bit more interested in poetry, as well as breaking apart some of the
snobbishness of poetry and genre.
So far
as the novel goes, it's a young adult book (of which there be many)
but aside from the story line I've been trying to challenge notions of
gender, race and class by inverting them. It's also a book about
politics and power, which are subjects I think we tend to –
incorrectly – shy away from when giving books to young people. It
will include lots of monkeys.
Question
3: Why do I write what I do?
This
is a question my mum would ask me. In terms of poetry, I write to
distill my thoughts and to see what language can do, how it can change
my perception. I think there's something almost scientific about
poetry, it's a process of discovery, of experimentation, of refining
and refracting, and re-examining the results. What comes out isn't
necessarily what went in, the conclusion isn't necessarily the aim.
And that's good because it bends the box and slaps you around the
face a bit.
My
novel feels more like an escape, a world I'd like to visit (although
probably not live in). It's a chance to explore my characters and see
who they become, as arsey and artsy as that sounds. Perhaps they're
imaginary friends; I want to help them out, to lead them down
uncertain paths and see what's on the other side.
In all
honesty there's a financial element to novel writing too. Poetry is a
labour of love, I know I'll never make my fortune from it. More
people are willing to pick up a novel and to pay for it.
Question
4: How does your writing process work?
I have
two rules when writing: don't do it when drunk, and don't do it when
overly emotional. I break them both.
A poem
starts as a line in my head, I hear it first like a piece of music from a broken
record that wants me to place the needle back on the groove. The poem
grows from that line, I don't know what it is when I start it and it's not always clear by the end. Sometimes I am interested in the poem as
an experiment. Hey what would happen if I wrote a bunch of
one word poems, or a sequence of sonnets about sexbots?
Sometimes it feels like more of an expulsion, to sweat something out
and jar it. A nice jar of sweat. I try not to force out or overwork a
poem, rather I just let them come as they will, sometimes a dozen in
a day, other times nothing for months. I almost always work on a
laptop: the appearance of the poem is very important to me and if I
need to scratch things out with pen and paper its messiness would
disturb me and throw me off the scent. Editing can take anywhere from
minutes to months. In 2008 I started a poem that is just 25 words
long, and I'm still not happy with it. That said, once I feel a poem
is finished I don't like to touch it after about 5 years. That feels
like I'm editing my old self, trying to pretend they didn't exist or
that somehow the person I am now is a “better” poet, with more
worthwhile things to say. And that seems very rude to Old-Me.
Writing
a novel feels more planned out. Probably because I use a
somewhat extensive plan. I know where things start, their potential
endings, but not necessarily the finer details in between. The
characters react and change, they think things over and respond. I
can't plan that part of things because I don't know the characters
well enough until they're faced with the dilemma, the romance, the
massive murderous bear with platinum claws that chases after them.
Redrafting prose is currently an enigma to me, although I imagine it
will be copious.
If
you've managed to get this far then well done! All that's left is to
introduce the next writer, Colin McGuire. Colin has published a pamphlet of poems about sleep, "Everybody Lie Down and No One Gets Hurt" with Red Squirrel Press, and is well known around the Scottish spoken word scene. He has reached the finals of the BBC Poetry Slam and runs a regular poetry night in Edinburgh, called Talking Heids. He can be followed on his blog, here! A full length collection of Colin's work is due out this year.
Peace
and monkeys be with you.
Tuesday, 25 March 2014
"The Last Refuge" e-book
Hear ye, hear ye, "The Last Refuge" (my 2009 pamphlet of sci-fi poems from Forest Publications) is now available on e-book.
It includes poems about A.I in supermarket barcode scanners, Android birthday parties, a poem from the perspective of a nuclear warhead and more...
It's only £0.77 and is a nice little taster to get you in the mood for "Spaces of Their Own" if you don't already own it.
Buy it here.
Russell Jones
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