It's strange how things come together at the same time, but that's life. After a long waiting time, Stoat Poetry was launched at the end of last month. This is a new journal, and if you would like to buy a copy just follow the link. This issue contains two of my poems. After a leaner period of submitting last year, it was good to end the year on a high when I heard my poems would appear this year. It was good to finally see them in print.
After writing a lot of fiction over the last year or so, the chance to read poetry at an open mic event, was one to grab. This meant searching through my poems to see what to take. Choosing three was difficult. How to pitch it? I began by searching through some loose poems I had read elsewhere or just happened to have printed off. One I came across I'd not seen in a long time and straightaway after reading through it again, I knew I was taking with me. That would be my opener. Another was a lighthearted poem entitled A Chance Encounter with Marmite, and finally one about clothes on a line.
Having chosen my poems, I had a longing to write poetry again, but writing poems uses a different muscle to writing fiction, and I had got out of the habit. What to do about that?
Anyway, the date for the open mic appeared. It was a daytime event - a Saturday afternoon at Whitehall House in Cheam Village. Whitehall House is a gorgeous old building with a lot of history. I had been there before some years back and is really worth looking around. The open mic was held on the first floor, and I knew a few other people from Sutton Writers who were reading.
Our host/organiser was the poet Sara Nesbitt Gibbons, and she read some poems from her book And They Are Clapping, and yes, I did buy the book! There were eleven readers in all (I was first in the second half). The poetry was really good, and this is the point where I wondered if my work was as good. My little demon, that negative voice, was sitting on my shoulder asking why I am here. However, that feeling changed. I was given a full introduction, the fact that I wrote fiction as well as poetry, and Sara mentioned some of the publications I could be found in. I've never had an intro like that. Once I began to read, I settled down and remembered my own advice to others about not rushing! People laughed in all the right places, and I got a cheer at the end. That's a good feeling. I am now on Sara's mailing list.
Having read at the open mic, my interest in poetry peaked again. Maybe it started when I went along to the Free Verse Poetry & Magazine Book Fair. Anyway, I was looking for a way back into poetry writing, yet I needed a push, something to give me that kick-start. Searching online, I found Sue Burge who runs courses via email and has taught at The Poetry School. The course that drew me was Tales of the City, all about London, the city I love. I signed up. The course runs for four weeks, and for a little extra, I will have feedback on four to six poems.
I began the course on Monday and I am hooked. This first week is all about the River Thames, my other passion. The resources are brilliant - articles, music, readings and printed poetry, plus freewrites and prompts. One prompt really was a challenge, but one I was keen to try. This is writing a poem using just one vowel! I got there in the end. The process was all consuming but fun.
Sometimes I can kick-start my own poetry back into life, yet this time I knew I needed something more, and after trolling through several courses, this was the one that spoke to me, and I'm thrilled with it. There is lots of potential for more writing using the resources supplied. I feel a theme coming on!
So, right now I am knee deep in poetry books and studying away on new ways to write.









