Post by moira on Oct 25, 2012 14:40:12 GMT 2
Wompo Publishers Newspaper
News this week:
1. Southern Women's Review
2. Diane Kendig's blog, "Home Again"
3. Ellen Moody's blogs
4. “The Cave, The Hive,” Lesley Wheeler
5. B. Morrison, Monday Morning Book Blog
(back issues of the newspaper are archived at the Wompo festival of women's poetry here:
wompherence.proboards.com ).
1. Call for Submissions: Southern Women's Review is open for submissions. Please submit poetry, prose, cnf, fiction, and photography by November 30th to southernwomensreview@gmail.com.
Special Section: In addition to the regular issue, SWR will feature a special section on Southern Food.
Contact: southernwomensreview@gmail.com
Site: www.SouthernWomensReview.com
2. Diane Kendig's blog, "Home Again"
This week, in "Language, Memory, and Poem Acquisition," Diane reconsiders the first poem she ever composed, in light of new autobiographical information she gets while hanging out in the kitchen with an octogenarian.
dianekendig.blogspot.com/
3. Ellen Moody's blog
3.1 Tales of Upstairs/Downstairs: Carving out a usable space; a writing life, vivid realistic dreams
misssylviadrake.livejournal.com/105549.html
3.2 George McGovern -- may his spirit and ideals live on as an example to imitate (a tribute):
ellenandjim.wordpress.com/2012/10/22/george-mcgovern-died-yesterday-may-his-spirit-ideals-live-on/
3.3 Tom Murphy's Famine at Kennedy Center (& Trollope's Castle Richmond): a review
ellenandjim.wordpress.com/2012/10/20/tom-murphys-faminetrollopescastlerichmond/
3.4 Henry Thomas Austen, a 4th son, the person who published Austen's novels (a portrait)
reveriesunderthesignofausten.wordpress.com/2012/10/20/henry-thomas-austen-1771-1850-a-4th-son-the-man-who-published-jane-austens-6-famous-novels-2/
4. In “The Cave, The Hive,” Lesley Wheeler blogs about rejections, the ones she’s received and the ones she now has to send, as co-editor of a special issue of Shenandoah.
lesleywheeler.org/blog/
5. B. Morrison, Monday Morning Book Blog
www.bmorrison.com/blog/
- There Are Reasons Noah Packed No Clothes, by Robert Jacoby
News this week:
1. Southern Women's Review
2. Diane Kendig's blog, "Home Again"
3. Ellen Moody's blogs
4. “The Cave, The Hive,” Lesley Wheeler
5. B. Morrison, Monday Morning Book Blog
(back issues of the newspaper are archived at the Wompo festival of women's poetry here:
wompherence.proboards.com ).
1. Call for Submissions: Southern Women's Review is open for submissions. Please submit poetry, prose, cnf, fiction, and photography by November 30th to southernwomensreview@gmail.com.
Special Section: In addition to the regular issue, SWR will feature a special section on Southern Food.
Contact: southernwomensreview@gmail.com
Site: www.SouthernWomensReview.com
2. Diane Kendig's blog, "Home Again"
This week, in "Language, Memory, and Poem Acquisition," Diane reconsiders the first poem she ever composed, in light of new autobiographical information she gets while hanging out in the kitchen with an octogenarian.
dianekendig.blogspot.com/
3. Ellen Moody's blog
3.1 Tales of Upstairs/Downstairs: Carving out a usable space; a writing life, vivid realistic dreams
misssylviadrake.livejournal.com/105549.html
3.2 George McGovern -- may his spirit and ideals live on as an example to imitate (a tribute):
ellenandjim.wordpress.com/2012/10/22/george-mcgovern-died-yesterday-may-his-spirit-ideals-live-on/
3.3 Tom Murphy's Famine at Kennedy Center (& Trollope's Castle Richmond): a review
ellenandjim.wordpress.com/2012/10/20/tom-murphys-faminetrollopescastlerichmond/
3.4 Henry Thomas Austen, a 4th son, the person who published Austen's novels (a portrait)
reveriesunderthesignofausten.wordpress.com/2012/10/20/henry-thomas-austen-1771-1850-a-4th-son-the-man-who-published-jane-austens-6-famous-novels-2/
4. In “The Cave, The Hive,” Lesley Wheeler blogs about rejections, the ones she’s received and the ones she now has to send, as co-editor of a special issue of Shenandoah.
lesleywheeler.org/blog/
5. B. Morrison, Monday Morning Book Blog
www.bmorrison.com/blog/
- There Are Reasons Noah Packed No Clothes, by Robert Jacoby