Tuesday, April 01, 2014

Today is Tuesday Poem's fourth birthday. Yay, happy birthday Tuesday Poem


Today is Tuesday Poem's fourth birthday. 
A trio of editors - Mary McCallum, Michelle Elvy and Claire Beynon - flashed emails around the globe in the early hours of this morning, tweaking the last few details of this week's collaborative birthday poem. (Michelle, a boat-based writer and editor, is currently moored off the coast of Indonesia, five hours West of New Zealand.)   

As a collective we celebrate poetry every week but birthdays are special as each year during March/April we come together to build a collaborative poem in one giant poetry celebration. This year, we asked contributing poets to send a line that included something about either food or birthdays or both, and to send the line 'blind' - that is, without seeing any other contributions. How to fit blue cake with a clarinetist's curls, or fairy bread with the explosion of candles? Four vignettes fired together to form one whole that includes a birth and a light, a cake and a secret, a moment and a memory, anticipation and celebration. 


TORCH 
I was born the day my mother stopped being pregnant
           a full-baked warm wetness taking its first breath
flame flickering, a miniature torch; a moth fluttering
against the pane, the porch. She held: a curved moon-nail,
thistle-like lock, darkened milk; and the clarinetist curled
slow circles around the moon


Visit the Tuesday Poem hub to see how things unfold. Three plus one: four poems for a birthday will surprise and delight you! 


Extra cause for celebration -- Tuesday Poem has had 335,130 page views since its inception (on Mary McCallum's blog, O Audacious Book) in April 2010 with 16, 280 page views on the hub this past month. Contributing poets hail from New Zealand, the US, UK, Australia, Italy and Lesotho with visitors to the blog from places as far flung as the United States, Germany, Australia, New Zealand, India, Indonesia and Russia. 


Happy Birthday Tuesday Poem! And our heartfelt 'yes' and 'thank you' to poets and readers of poetry everywhere.  

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