Critique of the Week (w/ Bonus Poe) | October 27, 2023
For this Critique of the Week, we'll move quickly through the oldest submissions in the queue, with a special lesson at the top. Tune in, share your thoughts, and learn a little in the process!
Also, to get notifications when we go live with these, go to our Facebook page, click on "Follow" and then turn on notifications, or click the notification bell on YouTube.
For this Critique of the Week, we'll look at a pair of poems each from Pamela Kaplan and Barry Casey. Tune in, learn a little, and share your thoughts on others' poems in the chat window.
Participants are drawn from those who submitted poems for critique. If you'd like to have your own poems critiqued on live video, find the Critique of the Week category on our Submittable page: https://rattle.submittable.com/submit/177206/critique-of-the-week
As always, do click "full screen" or turn your phone sideways, so that the text is large enough that you can read along.
Also, to get notifications when we go live with these, go to our Facebook page, click on "Follow" and then turn on notifications, or click the notification bell on YouTube.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=toG0pZGr2xw
For this Critique of the Week, we'll look at two poems by Lisa Alletson and Kayla Pellegrini. Tune in, learn a little, and share your thoughts on others' poems in the chat window.
Participants are drawn at random from those who submitted poems for critique. If you'd like to have your own poems critiqued on live video, find the Critique of the Week category on our Submittable page: https://rattle.submittable.com/submit/177206/critique-of-the-week
As always, do click "full screen" or turn your phone sideways, so that the text is large enough that you can read along.
Also, to get notifications when we go live with these, go to our Facebook page, click on "Follow" and then turn on notifications, or click the notification bell on YouTube.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=on7A1Q6xbEE
For this Critique of the Week, we'll be looking at poems by Cathryn Shea and Paul Corbeil. Listen in, maybe learn a little, and give the authors some feedback in the comments!
At the end of every month, we do a live drawing to select the next round of participants. If you'd like to have your own poems critiqued on live video, find the Critique of the Week category on our Submittable page: https://rattle.submittable.com/submit/177206/critique-of-the-week
As always, do click "full screen" or turn your phone sideways, so that the text is large enough that you can read along.
Also, to get notifications when we go live with these, go to our Facebook page, click on "Follow" and then turn on notifications, or click the notification bell on YouTube.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dV9yi_laRNA
In this clip from Rattlecast #40, Danusha Laméris reads a poem from her new book, BONFIRE OPERA, and discusses the magic of "what we know in our marrow but not in our minds."
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5oNrZs-Ozc
For this Critique of the Week, we'll be looking at poems by Kannon McAfee and Caitlin Buxbaum. Listen in, maybe learn a little, and give the authors some feedback in the comments!
At the end of every month, we do a live drawing to select the next round of participants. If you'd like to have your own poems critiqued on live video, enter the drawing here: https://rattle.submittable.com/submit/177206/critique-of-the-week
As always, do click "full screen" or turn your phone sideways, so that the text is large enough that you can read along.
Also, to get notifications when we go live with these, go to our Facebook page, click on "Follow" and then turn on notifications, or click the notification bell on YouTube.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qnnq668i64
Rattlecast #94 features frequent contributor Kerrin McCadden and her new book, American Wake.
Kerrin McCadden is the author of American Wake, coming in March, 2021, from Black Sparrow Press. Her debut collection, Landscape with Plywood Silhouettes, won the Vermont Book Award and the New Issues Poetry Prize. Her chapbook, Keep This to Yourself, was awarded the Button Poetry Prize. McCadden has received a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and the Sustainable Arts Foundation Writing Award. Her poems have appeared in Best American Poetry and the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day series, and in such journals as American Poetry Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, New England Review, Ploughshares, and Prairie Schooner. She is associate director of the Conference on Poetry and Teaching at The Frost Place and associate poetry editor at Persea Books. She teaches English and Creative Writing at Montpelier High School in Vermont and lives in South Burlington.
For more on the author, visit:
https://www.kerrinmccadden.com
As always, we'll also include live open lines for responses to our weekly prompt or any other poems you'd like to share. For details on how to participate, either via Skype or by phone, go to: https://www.rattle.com/rattlecast/
This Week's Prompt:
Use the random article option on Wikipedia (go to Wikipedia.com and click on the “random article” link on the left-hand side of the page) and write a poem based on your results.
Next Week's Prompt:
Write a poem about a parasite—be as literal or figurative as you wish.
The Rattlecast livestreams on YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter, then becomes an audio podcast. Find it on iTunes, Spotify, or anywhere else you get your podcasts.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmKlfTHoq94
For this Critique of the Week, we'll be poems by Michael Olson and kimberly mcneil. Tune in to learn a little and give the authors some feedback in the comments!
Participants are drawn at random from those who submitted poems for critique. If you'd like to have your own poems critiqued on live video, find the Critique of the Week category on our Submittable page: https://rattle.submittable.com/submit/177206/critique-of-the-week
As always, do click "full screen" or turn your phone sideways, so that the text is large enough that you can read along.
Also, to get notifications when we go live with these, go to our Facebook page, click on "Follow" and then turn on notifications, or click the notification bell on YouTube.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1NsZxq12U90
Rattlecast #55 features novelist, poet, translator, and diagnostic nuclear radiologist Amit Majmudar. Amit has appeared in Poets Respond twice, and has another poem in the soon-to-arrive fall issue of Rattle.
Amit Majmudar’s books include Godsong: A Verse Translation of the Bhagavad-Gita, with Commentary (Knopf/Penguin Random House India, 2018) and the mythological novel Sitayana (Penguin Random House India, 2019). His fourth poetry collection, What He Did in Solitary (Knopf, 2020), was just published. His novel Partitions (Holt/Metropolitan, 2011) was shortlisted for the HWA/Goldsboro Crown Prize for Historical Fiction and was named Best Debut Fiction of 2011 by Kirkus Reviews, and his second novel, The Abundance (Holt/Metropolitan, 2013), was selected for the Choose to Read Ohio Program. His poetry has appeared in The Best of the Best American Poetry 25th Anniversary Edition, numerous Best American Poetry anthologies, as well as the Norton Introduction to Literature, The New Yorker, and Poetry; his prose has appeared in The O. Henry Prize Stories 2017, The Best American Essays 2018, and the New York Times. Winner of the Anne Halley Prize and the Pushcart Prize, he served as Ohio's first Poet Laureate. He practices diagnostic and nuclear radiology full-time in Westerville, Ohio, where he lives with his wife, twin sons, and daughter.
For more information, visit:
http://www.amitmajmudar.com/
As always, we'll also include live open mic for responses to our weekly prompt. For details on how to participate, either pre-recorded, via Skype, or by phone, go to: https://www.rattle.com/rattlecast/
This Week's Prompt:
Write a poem that is entirely dialogue.
Next Week's Prompt:
Write a poem based on one of the top 100 most famous paintings.
The Rattlecast livestreams on YouTube, Facebook, and Periscope.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExaTa3CDsD4