Picture taken from a Sûreté du Québec helicopter of Lac-Mégantic, the day of the derailment. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0 Generic

My poem Lac-Mégantic is a good example of revision and also trying different angles at the same poetic impulse until you find the poem. I’ll take you through my Lac-Mégantic poem revision story. I went to the Community of Writers Workshop in California in the summer of 2015 where you write a new poem a day and read it the next morning to a dozen or so excellent poets and a faculty member.  In the workshop only what is working is discussed, the idea being you will try new things in your work, take real chances. 

I made three runs that week at the topic of the tragedy at Lac-Mégantic after doing a lot of online research of in-depth articles written about the place, the people and what happened. I had a high level of emotion as well because of my work at Imperial Oil. But I wasn’t sure how to approach it as a poem. I was very aware of the problems around writing about tragedy, topics of high emotion and big issues like our fossil fuel addiction and its impacts. 

The first poetic attempt being a kind of experimental form that I read to Brenda Hillman’s workshop. Brenda seemed appreciative but nobody else in that group seemed to really understand what I was doing. Also it turned out this horrific tragedy was not well known in the US so it failed to resonate without more explanation. A poetic failure.

Continue reading “Lac-Mégantic – The Art of Revision (Poem #6)”

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Canada Council for the Arts

I heard yesterday about my grant application for Canada Council for the Arts’ Digital Originals program.  I applied for this a while ago, the program is “to help artists, groups and arts organizations pivot their work for online audiences during the COVID-19“. It’s $5000, what they a call a micro innovation grant and they are giving out something like 200 of them, so a million dollars over all. 

I saw a Facebook post a few months ago by another poet talking about missing a Canada Council grant deadline for something else.  And I thought, “hey, I should think about that”.  So I looked up what you have to do, the first step is being approved to be able to apply in terms of published work etc.  You submit the required material and then wait.  I was approved for literary writing so then started looking and saw that at the moment the only thing I could apply for was the Digital Originals program. 

 

Continue reading “I Got Picked (please excuse the visual pun)”