About Poety Matters

Poetry Matters is a home-grown print poetry journal that began in Spring 2006.

Censorship can take many forms. The inability to find a place of publication can be social censorship.


Poetry is freedom. Anyone can write poetry.


Nevertheless, it takes a lot of work to create the poetry that reaches the places only poetry knows.


Whoever you are, wherever you are,
Poetry Matters welcomes you as readers and writers.

Contact me about submissions and subscriptions: poetry.clh@gmail.com

24 October 2012

Poets Steve Evans and Mike Ladd on editing poetry

"Offer a positive comment first, then ask questions.

Why did you use this word here? Why is this line broken at this point? It’s going to provoke some thought, and it’s more tactful than delivering a report card. In the end, it is not whether the poem is deeply meaningful to the poet but whether it will work with a new reader who does not have that attachment. An editor has to respect the origins but steer comments back to the poem as a poem, not as a sentimental marker.

However, I have had too many students simply refuse to tamper with their divine words once uttered.
Usually, their feedback to others in a writing workshop shows a lack of depth and understanding, so there is some symmetry there. Lots of exposure to workshopping tends to cure that approach, but some people never get over it.
Maybe they don’t look for editors later in their writing life either, preferring to stick to their own counsel.

Part of me says that I will be shown up for the simple tradesman I really am - nothing inspired here, folks. Why would I want to show anyone the raw and clunky prototype stuff I have been bolting together in the shed at the bottom of the yard? Why draw attention to the clatter and the sparks of some crude and unfinished arc-welding, when eventually I could, instead, slide the sheet off a polished poem as if it were always such a complete design? On the other hand, some of that strange preliminary word work does seem magical to me too. Behind all the considerations and refinement of line breaks, sounds and the rest, is a part of the brain that works faster than I can follow. Yes, it may just be the body’s weird electricity, but I am often astounded at the beauty it can produce.
Magic? Sometimes it seems like it, and that’s a good feeling."


From
http://iped-editors.org/site/DefaultSite/filesystem/documents/EVANS%20LADD.pdf