tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post7434620340278226418..comments2024-01-30T13:39:46.484+00:00Comments on The Bibliophilic Blogger: Poets of the BlogosphereNicholas Murrayhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07189263209323471368noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post-60635182604031513682007-12-03T17:27:00.000+00:002007-12-03T17:27:00.000+00:00A couple of blogs I know of do just this. Rob Mack...A couple of blogs I know of do just this. Rob Mackenzie's "Surroundings" is at www.robmack.blogspot.com<BR/><BR/>Jane Holland's "Raw Light" is at www.rawlight.blogspot.com<BR/><BR/>My blog is more diffuse than that, as I'm just not given to dissecting my own technique - indeed, I'm not sure this kind of solipsism would not <I>harm</I> my own technique. But I do write about poetry, poets, literary news, and just life - the kinds of things I also write poems about.<BR/><BR/>I'm not really sure a poet is the best person to talk about his or her own technique. Often, I'd say, if one is really writing at full throttle, things just happen and technical decisions are made at a level too deep to analyse. But a critic can analyse a poem's technical underpinnings; that is in fact the critic's job. <BR/><BR/>I definitely agree we could do with more good criticism. And Jim, I also think there are just as many bad, self-indulgent older poets as there are younger ones!<BR/><BR/>George Szirtes writes a good blog.<BR/><BR/>The young poetry promoter Tom Chivers has recently started blogging at www.thisisyogic.wordpress.com<BR/><BR/>Salt Publishing runs about three blogs, and Pen Pusher magazine - which publishes poetry as well as fiction, reviews etc - runs a blog.<BR/><BR/>Ian Patterson has a relatively infrequent blog, at www.ianpatterson.typepad.com<BR/><BR/>The poet, sometime editor and critic David Wheatley blogs at www.georgiasam.blogspot.com<BR/><BR/>I agree that the literary blogosphere has proportionately little poetry in it, but there is some good stuff out there...Ms Baroquehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01836227454899083962noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post-75568601413925551422007-11-12T11:06:00.000+00:002007-11-12T11:06:00.000+00:00Thank you, Jim, I will think about that. I have m...Thank you, Jim, I will think about that. I have myself quoted a few classic poems here in the past but without much comment (I liked the metaphor of the packed lunch!).Nicholas Murrayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07189263209323471368noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4490888218551680190.post-4804047235436672432007-11-12T10:56:00.000+00:002007-11-12T10:56:00.000+00:00I agree with you totally. And when poetry does app...I agree with you totally. And when poetry does appear in blogs their authors tend to drop them off without a packed lunch or anything and leave them to fend for themselves.<BR/><BR/>Back in the seventies, when I first started to see my poetry in print, there existed a magazine with the unimaginative title of <I>Poetry Information</I> which did what it said on the tin. It didn't publish poetry, it published reviews of poetry books and magazines, lists of small press magazines and - most importantly - articles about poetry, the kinds of dissections I hadn't seen since school only they were looking at modern verse not <I>My Last Duchess</I>.<BR/><BR/>The blogosphere needs more poets who are willing to open up and explain why their work is the way it is, what techniques they've used. Of course, for some this will show up a marked lack of technique but a poem should be a poem not simply because I say it's one. At least that's my opinion.<BR/><BR/>Younger poets who are used to dumping their feelings on paper and calling it poetry would benefit no end if there was more of this.Jim Murdochhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12786388638146471193noreply@blogger.com