read more: http://www.theadroitjournal.org/issue-sixteen-megan-peak-the-adroit-journal

if i look back, i am lost
Claire Keane

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Peter Solarz
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@theadroitjournal
read more: http://www.theadroitjournal.org/issue-sixteen-megan-peak-the-adroit-journal
This year, Poetry Reader Deonte Osayande represented his hometown Detroit, MI in the National Poetry Slam! Read about his experience at the Adroit blog.
At the Adroit blog, we're debuting our new "Feminist Fridays" series, in which we examine the feminist merits of classic literature. First up is Blog Editor Amanda Silberling, who doesn't feel too keen on Jane Eyre.
The August Edition of "Dear Adroit" is here! Here's how it works: our teenage readers send us questions, and we answer them. This month, we talk about how to know if your writing is "good," and why there's a "new teen paranormal romance" section at the bookstore, among other things.
[Want to be featured in next month's edition of Dear Adroit? Send us questions at [email protected]]
When is the deadline for staff applications? I'd love to apply.
We accept applications for poetry and prose readers on a rolling basis-- click here for more information about how to apply!
-- Amanda Silberling // Director of Social Media Relations
What happens when an trip to New York City's iconic The Strand Bookstore goes wrong? Read it on the Adroit blog.
The August edition of Dear Adroit ft. Blog Editor Amanda Silberling is around the corner, which means that we need you!
Anything on your mind? Any writerly questions you may have? We want to hear them.
E-mail questions about all things literary to [email protected], and your question just might be featured in the August edition of Dear Adroit! (And even if we don't feature your question, you'll probably receive an e-mail back from me anyway-- I'm just a really nice person).
If you missed last month's Dear Adroit, check it out!
Trust yourself; read widely.
Stephen Burt | Interview with The Adroit Journal
Thank you so much to everyone who came out to the NYC Poetry Festival this weekend! Rain can never keep the Adroit gang down.
Come hang out with us this Saturday! 4:30, Governor's Island, NYC Poetry Festival, Chumley's Stage. Be there.
Check out out new Staff Spotlight with Poetry Reader/Cool Music Guy Miles Hewitt! We hope you love him as much as we do.
Do you pay for stories accepted for publication? I was just curious
We aren't able to pay contributors, unfortunately. However, we do give our published pieces very wide exposure (we've had our new website for about a month, and already have tens of thousands of hits!), and sometimes we'll even invite contributors to participate in interviews or read for us at big events. Most importantly, you get to join the lovely Adroit-affiliated family! We'd like to think we're pretty cool, but we might just be humoring ourselves.-- Amanda Silberling // Director of Social Media Relations
"I teach poetry as a means of survival to endangered species, my black students." -- Masks, Deonte Osayande (Adroit Poetry Reader)
"I don’t want poems to tell a story, but rather to sing to me of feelings I have no map for, whose dimension I can neither gauge nor sound."
Read Blog Editor Amanda Silberling's two-part interview with Sean Patrick Hill, Issue 9 Poet!
If the reader, any reader, one reader is moved by the poem so that their consciousness is expanded, however minutely, then something has happened... Something has changed on the earth, if only a bit or for a moment, in the right direction.
Sean Patrick Hill, interviewed by The Adroit Journal
The Not-So-Glamorous Writer, Failing the Stereotype
By Amanda Silberling
[Read this post on the official Adroit Journal Blog!]
I often feel guilty about my submission-reading habits. I imagine the stereotypical Fancy Writer, somewhere in Tel Aviv or Tokyo, stirring her gourmet chai latte as she carefully sends her poems to Adroit. She imagines the ideal Adroit reader: a college student lounging in the hippest Brooklyn café, stirring a gourmet chai latte of her own. In her spare time, this Adroit reader is an American Apparel model, and every time she opens a poetry submission on her iPad, she flips her silky, glamorous hair. Everyone in the café stares, awestruck—who knew Adroit had such sex appeal?
I don’t know about my fellow staff members, but I’m definitely not living up to those expectations. This is how it works: It’s about 1 AM, and I’m lying in bed, hair and glasses askew, reading poetry submissions over the idle buzz of That 70s Show re-runs. It’s not that I don’t read submissions carefully—I always evaluate poems to the best of my ability [winks conspicuously at poetry editors]—but when I read submissions from Paris-dwelling Pushcart winners while I clean smudges off my glasses, I can’t help but feel like I’m an insult to Fancy Writer stereotypes everywhere.
All of my non-writer friends romanticize my literary life. They picture me at summer workshops, lying under the stars as my friends recite Shakespearean sonnets. But at a workshop last summer, my friends and I had a High School Musical movie marathon. Almost two years ago, I received a beautifully-bound leather notebook with a shiny golden trim as a contest prize. I still haven’t used it.
I don’t think I’m alone, though. I’ve found famous editors’ Twitter accounts, expecting to unlock the secrets of their top-tier publications, only to read 140-character musings about their Pokémon games and whether or not Wal-Mart is open past midnight. I’ve never even encountered one of these Fancy Café Writers in the flesh—about a year ago, I befriended an elderly man at Starbucks with Kurt Vonnegut and Ready for Hillary stickers on his laptop, but he turned out to be a retired lawyer playing Candy Crush. My favorite barista has a very artsy aura, but the other day I heard him talking with a customer in great detail about World of Warcraft quests. I think I would have preferred to assume that I was in the presence of a famous Vonnegut scholar and a well-known photographer who uses the tip jar to buy Fancy camera lenses.
My submission-reading process is very similar to my writing process, except my writing process is even less glamorous. Call me naïve, but I’m pretty sure that writing a poem is basically the same thing as giving birth. I always feel like I’m pulling something out of my body and expelling it onto the page. I mean that in the least romantic way possible.
I’ve attended writing workshops where my classmates take out their favorite overpriced pens and write the titles of their poems in elegant cursive lettering. And then there’s me, chewing my pen from the dentist’s office, reminding myself that my dentist would not approve of this pen biting habit. I can’t help but think about my sixth grade journal—I decorated the covers with inspirational writing quotes that would motivate me to become a best-selling novelist at age eleven, and of course, I never actually ended up writing in the journal.
For a group of people who dedicate so much of our lives to thinking about the aesthetic of our imagery, the flow of our language, and that dream residency in Europe, most of us aren’t very glamorous—or at least the good ones, I try to tell myself. Here’s my new philosophy: the less picturesque your writing habits, the better your writing. That Fancy Writer from Tel Aviv or Tokyo? She ain’t got nothin’ on you, gurl.
If you ever meet a writer who tells you that they write every poem on a vintage typewriter and fill the pages of their leather moleskins at underground cafés, well—they’re probably not very good. You’re better. I never really liked chai lattes anyway.