Thursday, August 27, 2020

Glenn Ingersoll reading for Ventura County Poetry Project tonight



Glenn Ingersoll

followed by an open mic

reading starts at 7:30, Thursday, August 27 

hosted by Phil Taggart

under the auspices of the EP Foster Library 


the zoom room opens at 7

join Zoom Meeting – new zoom number

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/9607501600

meeting ID: 960 750 1600


Ventura County Poetry Project, a weekly reading series in Southern California, has moved online during the covid-19 pandemic.


That makes it easier for me to join them! I will be reading from my Berkeley home. 

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Glenn Ingersoll listing at Poets & Writers

Check out my listing at Poets & Writers: Glenn Ingersoll

Currently it’s pretty bare. No bio yet. Maybe tomorrow …


I’ve thought about having a listing at Poets & Writers since I found out there was such a thing. Years and years ago. 


Once I even  put together an application packet. I think this was before the internet, when you were required to send pages photocopied from magazines. I never submitted it. I’m not sure why. 


Or, wait, was there a Poets & Writers directory pre-internet? I'm not sure. In the internet’s early days P&W could still have wanted the supporting documents hard copy. Literary culture hadn’t exploded online. Few literary magazines had a web presence, let alone posted poems or stories.  


I am self-conscious about this sort of thing. Self-promotion vs. letting the work speak for itself. Maybe I didn’t finish the application process because I didn’t feel worthy. Maybe I was afraid the editors would reject the application because the magazines in which my poems had been published were too obscure. Maybe I was afraid that I would expect a listing to have some meaning, some consequence. If I got a listing and nothing came of it, nobody wrote, nobody called — would that hurt my feelings? Or was following through just too much bother? Not worth the cost of postage? Might there have been a charge to be listed back then?


This spring, what with the covid shutdown and the things-to-do list getting a few line-throughs, I looked up the latest version of the directory application. Like I said, I’ve thought about getting listed for years. The application has been made easy. If your stuff is up online — and the venue is one P&W officially recognizes (not “too obscure” or too vanity-press) — you just upload a link. Six links are required. The P&W directory editors review the application, then add your name to their database (or, I guess, don’t). 


Once you’re in you can expand the listing with author photo and bio. I see there’s even an option to link to video. 


If you have any suggestions for improving the listing, leave me a note in comments below. Or send me an email.

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Autobiography of a Book — in a book for the first time!

Otoliths #58, which includes chapters from Autobiography of a Book, is now available in a three-part print version. 

Part one includes the Autobiography of a Book chapters.


lulu.com is offering a 15% discount through August 14 if you use the code PROSPER15. 

Sunday, August 02, 2020

Autobiography of a Book in Otoliths

Otoliths includes three chapters from Autobiography of a Book

in issue 58, southern winter 2020:


"in which the book snuffs a wonder bundle"

"in which the book in in" 

"in which the book is rescued by butterfly"


Otoliths is published out of Australia by editor Mark Young. Young describes his goals for Otoliths this way: The ezine should “contain a variety of what can be loosely described as e-things, that is, anything that can be translated (visually at this stage) to an electronic platform. If it moves, we won't shoot at it.”


update: Otoliths #58 is now available in a print version