Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Blog Hopping

My latest muse-avoidance technique is blog-hopping. You know, skipping from one blog to another on those seductive little links, each one a small step over the edge into the unknown, a present begging to be unwrapped. I've become fascinated by a blog's blogroll, that side-ladder of possibilities, each rung a leap into a separate distinct entire universe, all coexisting, many of them linked to each other in necklaces of connection. String Theory in action.

So I've been bagging a few writerly blogs of my own. (Well-written ones, of course). Rather than merely run the list, I'll try to introduce some of them as I go along, kinda like the notes scientists use to describe their captured quarry.

One of the best spots to start, kind of a 6-degrees-from-anyone spot, is Paul Lisicky's blog. First of all, he posts about his own travels and writing life, puts up poems, photos, fabulous quotes from what he's reading (he reads a lot), etc. The usual what-have-you of blogs, perhaps, but done well. He's also the author of two books, "Lawn Boy" and "Famous Builders" and teaches and reads, like, all over. I first met him when he taught at Antioch LA a few years ago (5?) and then again at Napa Valley Writers Conference last summer. I've always enjoyed his poetic prose and hands-on workshops. Anyway, you can get his full Monty (figuratively speaking) from his blog and also visit his eclectic blogroll, rife with fascinating blogs, which are, in turn, linked to other fascinating blogs, linked to...etc. It's a serially opening flower, a lotus blossom, a quagmire. The web-thing. And as great a way to meet other writers as I know.

And from there, I went to Avoiding the Muse, written by C.Dale Young, a poet, teacher, editor and doctor in San Francisco (I think this means you can do it all), a treasure-trove of riches, which led me to Luna which isn't a blog so much as a Journal of Poetry and Translation, with widely spaced postings, but! it hosts a tidy collection of links to other journals. For those who are submitting, it's a compact resource of journals. As opposed to those monstrous, every-journal-known-to-humankind sorts of lists that are just too overwhelming to comprehend or wade through. And so you don't.

I lost track of how I got to bookeywookey, but does it matter what steps I take? I put the shortcut up. Perhaps from Mark Doty's excellent blog. And there I will leave you, friends, in the hands of a poet. Where else would one want to be?

8 comments:

  1. i love blog-hopping. i think the blogs you mention are terrific jumping off points.
    and yes...i do lose track of how i got somewhere.
    i would recommend Brent Goodman's blog, The Brother Swimming Beneath Me
    http://brent-goodman.blogspot.com/

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  2. Hi Aunt Lakin! I just happened upon your blog through the bookmark my dad has on his web browser. I will definitely be checking in often now. You've even made me ponder my own blog in order to keep in touch, I just have to think of a catchy title :) Say hi to everyone for me!

    With love,
    Kerryellen

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  3. Good suggestion, Nancy, thanks! I will definitely drop by.

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  4. Hi, Kerryellen, how nice to hear from you! I will pass on your greetings. Meanwhile Happy New Year to you and everyone....and I'd love to read your blog when you get it up and running, so let us know. Now, if your brother's name was Kash, then you two could have a blog: Kash and Kerry. baddah-bing! yeah, probably wasn't that funny....
    love always, Aunt Lakin

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  5. Nancy... thanks for the recommendation for Brent's Blog; I've put a link up to it. He's got a quite a list of PoBloggers, doesn't he?

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  6. Thank you, Lakin, for your wonderful words--and for your wonderful blog. It's an honor to be mentioned in this post!

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  7. and thank you, Paul, for your kinds words. It's my pleasure to write of you and your work; I'm sure I will again! And it's an honor to be linked from your blog, muchos gracias.

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Noise makers!