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Monday, September 2, 2013

Welcome Robert Lee Brewer of "Poetic Asides"

Today I am very happy to welcome Robert Brewer to my blog!! We have never met in person, but Robert has been a big influence on my writing for years. I joined "Poetic Asides" for the April Poem a Day challenge so many years ago I can't remember. However, when I joined and became part of what we now call "the Street" my true poetic essence emerged. At first I was shy and didn't comment much or participate with the more experienced poets there. I was in awe of the talent I saw every day on that blog. The poets there seemed to have a touch of the magical in their words and I was even more intimidated. However, one day someone commented on my poem and it was then I realized that we were all poets here and that I had truly found the place where I belonged.

Each of us poets wrote to the prompt we found each day from Robert Brewer and the variety of poems was endless! Each of us had a different take on each prompt and soon my April was filled with poetry every day. After April was over I wanted to keep writing poetry, because all this poetry writing had ignited my love for poetry all over again! So I began to contribute to the Wednesday challenges and soon I became very friendly with many of the poets there. Now our core group of poets has formed Poeming Friends on Facebook and from this group we splintered off to the Anthologists. The Anthologists has written two poetry books which were the result of each poet who participated giving an equal number of poems for each one. The first book is called Prompted: An International Collection of Poems. The second book is called Beyond the Dark Room. All of the proceeds from each book goes to a charity. The first book, Prompted: An International Collection of Poems has a Forward by Robert Brewer my guest author. All of the prompts we used were created by him for various poetry challenges.

Robert has been the heart of all of our poetic attainments and that April when I began to write poetry again gave me another way to express myself. Now several of my poems have been published in online magazines. 

Now you know a little more about why I am so excited to have Robert Brewer on my blog. I was very fortunate to interview him. I hope you enjoy learning more about him.


 Where were you born and where do you live now?

I was born in Dayton, Ohio, and I now live in Duluth, Georgia, which is about 30 minutes from downtown Atlanta on the weekends and about an hour during rush hour.

What made you decide to become a poet?

It’s funny. I didn’t start writing poems to become a poet; I started writing poems to impress a girl in high school. I was too shy to talk to her, so I wrote a poem. She liked it and thought I wrote others—so I started writing more. Eventually, I was hooked on writing them.

As I was reading your profile, I noticed you had disc golfing. Please explain what disc golfing is.

It’s kind of like playing golf with a Frisbee. The discs used are a little heavier, and they’re thrown at metal baskets. It’s a fun, low impact sport.

Thank you so much for explaining that! Sounds like a lot of fun:)

What was your reason for starting “Poetic Asides”?

The Writer’s Digest staff had an editorial meeting for the WritersDigest.com site years ago, and they wondered if anyone had an idea for a blog. At the time, I was a closet poet, but I wanted more exposure for poetry—so I raised my hand and suggested a poetry blog.

I wanted to do it, but I didn’t have any poetry cred at all—just a love of writing poems. So they let me do it, but only with Nancy Breen, who was the editor of Poet’s Market at the time. It was a wonderful pairing, because I was friends with Nancy, and she taught me a great deal about poetry and the poetry universe.

What would you say has been your most rewarding experience with “Poetic Asides”?

There are so many moments, and the ones that are the most rewarding to me are when poets tell me they wrote their first poem ever because of the blog. As someone who loves writing poetry, I understand how important that can be to a person—to find a way to capture your own voice.

Please describe for my readers a typical day of writing for you.

There’s no typical day. That’s the first thing. Second, I write as I’m inspired. I always keep paper and pen on me, so it doesn’t matter if I’m at my desk or the park or earlier today at a book festival.

I have five kids spread across two states—so I’m not afforded the luxury of a “normal” schedule. I have to scratch and claw for writing time in the spaces between breaking up fights and changing diapers.

How did you get involved with Writers Digest? 

One of my creative writing professors (Erin McGraw) at the University of Cincinnati passed around a notebook for anyone interested in an internship on the first day of her class. She didn’t promise anything, and I totally forgot about it.

Then, a few weeks after the quarter was over, I received a call from the F+W Media (then, F&W Publishing) HR department asking if I wanted to come in for an interview. I did. They liked me enough to keep me around, and it’s been more than 13 years now.

How did you decide which poems to include in your book, Solving the World’s Problems?

The first draft—the draft that was accepted by Press 53—included what I considered my best poems. They were organized according to a loose structure that I understood, but that I would’ve been hard-pressed to explain. As I mentioned, that draft was good enough for an acceptance.

After my editor read through it a couple times, he said it was fine “as is,” but then he said he saw the potential to make it something special. He let me decide whether to accept that challenge. Of course, I had to go for it.

So we cut out several poems—even some of my best publication credits—and added in others that fit what we were trying to do. My editor had a vision, and I could see it too. That made it a much easier process than it could’ve been, because the final draft is very different from what was accepted.

Do you have any WIP’s and are any of them ready to be published?

I’m always writing poems, and now that my 2013 books are finished (the ones I edit and the poetry collection), I’ve had some time to submit them around to publications.

It took me nearly 20 years of poeming to get that first collection together, so I’m not in a super rush to get the next one published. That said, I do have a couple projects in the works.

What do you see yourself doing in five years? Will you continue to do “Poetic Asides”?

In five years, I could be doing anything—or the same thing. I try not to “over” plan, because I’ve found that things rarely go to plan. Maybe that’s the parent in me.

I hope "Poetic Asides" will still be relevant in five years. In fact, I hope I can find ways to make it more relevant. But I’ll take it one day at a time and see what happens.

Give us the criteria you feel a poem needs to be truly great. 

Each poem has its own purpose and rules (whether it’s a traditional form or spoken word free verse piece), so I don’t think there’s a set of general criteria that can be used universally. Like people, I admire poems for the unique attractiveness.

That said, I like poems that use sound, are accessible, and offer themselves up to further exploration. But I’ve found poems in nearly every school of poetry that I love.

Do you have a favorite poet?

Of course, my wife is my favorite poet. But I’ll assume you want me to identify someone else.

It’s impossible to pick just one poet, so I’ll name a few in no particular order (and even that list will be too short): William Carlos Williams, Anne Sexton, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Louise Gluck, Sandra Beasley, Barton Smock, Donald Hall, T.S. Eliot, Denise Duhamel, Nin Andrews, Aaron Belz, William Stafford, Jean Valentine, Gwendolyn Brooks, Patricia Fargnoli, Christian Bok, and a long list of fellow Roberts: Robert Bly, Robert Frost, Robert Kelly, Robert Fitzgerald, and Bob Hicok.

Plus, growing up in the Dayton area, I have to include Paul Laurence Dunbar.

Finally, which is your favorite poetic form?

My first thought was sestina, but I don’t think I have a real favorite. I love learning new forms and wearing them out. I love making my own forms and figuring out what’s best for the poem I’m writing.


Now, I have a question from one of the poets in Poeming Friends, Laurie Kolp:

Do you and Tammie plan on publishing a collection of poetry together? (hint, hint)

Tammy and I have talked about collaborating on a collection for years now. We've actually collaborated on poems previously, and heck, that's how we found each other—through poetry. So we don't have anything specific planned, but I'm sure it's more a question of "when" than a question of "if."

I know that would make a lot of us very happy.:)




Looking at the cover of your book, I am wondering what kinds of poems are inside. Here is one poem you will find here:

dream, by Robert Lee Brewer

the house is empty
instead a barn
filled with junk

and open spaces
he waits for his wife
and a madman or ghost

who wants him to become
a madman or ghost
who wants him to make

this barn his home
but then there is a car
outside that may be 100

miles down the road
nearly parked out front
or just passing by

while honking
and he's not sureif he's in the barn

or the car or his house
even as he reaches
for his wife


What I love about this poem is how you are actually transported into the dream and you find yourself groping too. The repetition of certain words creates this dreamlike experience for me:
"he waits for his wife
and a madman or ghost

who wants him to become
a madman or ghost
who wants him to make

this barn his home"

Here is more about Robert Brewer:

Robert Lee Brewer is Senior Content Editor for the Writer's Digest Writing Community, which means he gets paid to edit books, create blog posts, write a column for Writer's Digest magazine, edit a free weekly newsletter, and more fun stuff related to writing. Voted Poet Laureate of the Blogosphere in 2010, Brewer recently released his debut collection of poetry, Solving the World's Problems (Press 53). He also curates the insta-poetry series for Virginia Quarterly Review. He's married to the poet Tammy Foster Brewer, who helps him keep track of their five little poets (four boys and one princess). Learn more at www.robertleebrewer.com.

It has been so much fun to learn more about you, Robert and I hope you have enjoyed being here too.:) I know that I want to read more of your poems and you have decided to give away a free book to the lucky winner of the comment drawing. All you need to do is leave a comment and you are in the drawing. This post will be up for the whole week until next Thursday so you will have plenty of time to comment.

Until the next time, my next guest author will be Antje Hergt who had to be bumped due to various reasons. However, she will definitely be here next Thursday, September 12. 

Hope you enjoy Labor Day and Happy Rosh Hashanah to all my readers who celebrate it.:) We will be having a dinner on the very last night of the holiday. Happy New Year to all!!!

12 comments:

  1. Wonderful interview... and so well put about your favourite poetry - "that use sound, are accessible, and offer themselves up to further exploration" - which could very well describe your own poems as well.

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  2. It's always fun to learn more about a poet that you thought you knew. Great post, and great poet! Thanks to BOTH of you! Super success on your collection, RLB! (not Bob.)

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  3. It's always nice to see good things happen for good people. Robert, your website definitely was an integral part of my growth as a poet and a writer. I hope you keep it going.

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  4. Wonderful interview, Babrbara and Robert... and I'm so flattered you asked my question.

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    Replies
    1. Great question and will be a lovely volume when its time comes to appear :)

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  5. Hi to Barbara and to RLB ... Lovely interview... I am delighted and looking forward to Robert's collection. Poetic Asides as it became for so many - became "The Street" for me where I looked forward to visiting and again, as so many, found comraderie and a true desire to continue to write and publish poetry. Wanted to thank RLB here for writing the foreward for Prompted and for his support in anthologies that have been published. There was a sense of community, and sharing that shone like a bright light from the beginning of Poetic Asides .... In the "old days" in order to comment we needed to read through all of the poems top to bottom which lead to some wonderful interaction. As Barbara I would give a great deal of credit to the influence of our precious "Street" and therefore to RLB for the many poems I now have published in print journals. Thanks personally and again thanks to you both for a delightful interview.

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  6. "I have to scratch and claw for writing time in the spaces between breaking up fights and changing diapers."

    My favorite response in probably any interview I've recently seen. ;)

    I'm glad Laurie got her question in. Would love to see a Mr. and Mrs. RLB collection!

    Thanks for this interview, Barbara!

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    Replies
    1. Awww Marie ... you know you are so special to me - as one of the first to comment on a poem that I posted on-line. thank you for this comment on the comment ... Go enjoy the diapers <3
      (I have a feeling that I may have missed a very important "poetic" life event?)

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  7. Lovely interview! So nice to hear more about RLB - a mentor to so many of us even though we've never met. Congratulations on your new collection! Loved seeing an example of what's inside.

    Thanks for the interview Barbara!

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  8. Nice interview.
    I, too, think a collaborative poetry project between Robert and Tammy would be very interesting.

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  9. I loved all of your comments and I appreciate them. Thank you all for visiting and I wanted to remind you this post will be here for a week. Tell everyone from "the street" about this and the free book!!

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  10. Okay, this is a bit late, but comments are now closed and the lucky winner of the drawing will be announced soon!! Thank you all for visiting and leaving such great comments. I am sure Robert was very happy to read them all.:)

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