Welcome to the August 2009 Postcard Poetry List!
Here's what's involved:
Get yourself at least 31 postcards. These can be found at book stores, thrift shops, online,
drug stores, antique shops, museums, gift shops. (You'll be amazed at how
quickly you become a postcard addict.)
On or about July 27th, write an original poem right on a postcard and mail it
to the person on the list below your name. (If you are at the very
bottom, send a card to the name at the top.) And please WRITE LEGIBLY!
Starting on August 1st, ideally in response to a card YOU receive, keep
writing a poem a day on a postcard and mailing it to successive folks on
the list until you've sent out 31 postcards. Of course you can keep going
and send as many as you like but we ask you to commit to at least 31 (a month's worth).
What to write? Something that relates to your sense of "place" however
you interpret that, something about how you relate to the postcard image, what
you see out the window, what you're reading, using a phrase/topic/or image from a
card that you got, a dream you had that morning, or an image from it, etc.
Like "real" postcards, get to something of the "here and now" when you write.
Do write original poems for the project. Taking old poems and using them is
not what we have in mind. These cards are going to an eager audience of one,
so there's no need to agonize. That's what's unique about this experience.
Rather than submitting poems for possible rejection, you are sending your words
to a ready-made and excited audience awaiting your poems in their mailboxes.
Everyone loves getting postcards. And postcards with poems, all the better.
Once you start receiving postcard poems in the mail, you'll be able to respond
to the poems and imagery with postcard poems or your own. That will keep your
poems fresh and flowing. Be sure to check postage for
cards going abroad. The Postcard Graveyard is a very sad place.
That's all there it to it. It's that fun and that easy.
To check out what we've done before, visit the
blog [where you'll also see we also have
Perennial Poetry Postcard List of folks who try to write a postcard poem at least
once a week regardless of receiving in order to keep connections flowing.],
Paul Nelson's website or our Facebook group.
To get started, click to register. Once you've registered,
you just need to login to see the list of participants.