Wednesday, 17 February 2016

eSkylark -Feb 2016 ISSN 2397-1878 (printed and digital)/ Issue 2/2016

                                                       


eSkylark

A Voice of the NRI - Diasporic Poets


Editor: Yogesh Patel
Consulting Editor: Dr Debjani Chatterjee, MBE 

गुणाः पूजास्थानं 
Good qualities are appreciated in whomsoever they are found.

Uttararaamacharitam (Bhavabhuti)
Director: Yogesh Patel
Suite 6, Riverside House, 196 Wandle Road, Morden, Surrey SM4 6AU, EnglandPatrons: Lord Parekh and Lord Dholakia Please note, where possible, we recommend our Award-Winning poets for various awards
ISSN 2397-1878
 (printed and digital)/ Issue 2/2016
 

Please support us by buying the following book
Word Masala Winners of 2015
The ISBN is 978095560840033
Please order it at http://www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/shop.html
or buy at Amazon (albeit, you make them richer)

BIG THANK YOU to those who bought it and have donated extra.

At the invitation of Lord Parekh and Yogesh Patel

A major award celebration of our winners is organized on

22nd June 2016
at

The House of Lords

6.30 pm - 830 pm

This extra-ordinary event is by invitation only

A special guest speaker: Zata Banks of PoetryFilm

Internationally renowned, Zata Banks is the director of PoetryFilm, the research art project and screening series founded in 2002. She will inspire us with a talk on
'The creative opportunities at the intersections of poetry and film.'

Book Launch: Collections by Saleem Peeradina and Bobby Nayyar

Poetry reading by our winners

Networking: This event will be a meeting of minds from among selected major players in the publishing industry, editors, librarians, poets, event organizers, and others. Many have already confirmed the attendance.

IF YOU ARE A DECISION MAKER IN ANY OF THE ABOVE FIELDS
AND ARE SERIOUS ABOUT SUPPORTING BAME LITERARY TALENT,                 please contact the editor NOW.
BE COUNTED.



We have added a new partner to help us raise funds
Please support by joining them and doing all your online shopping through them. It costs you nothing extra while you would shop normally at eBay, Amazon, and many more places. By going via our partner, the retailer contributes to help the project, but at no extra cost or loss of any of your discounts.
Please help by registering at
http://www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/fundraising.html
or go to
https://www.easyfundraising.org.uk/causes/wordmasalaproject/



Advertise your related services and products to fund this project 
and more poetry collections like the one below

When visiting our website, do not forget to explore our advertisers there.
Each click adds to a fund in support of our cause.


Support is growing for 
THE WORD MASALA CROWDFUNDING INITIATIVE

The first poet to receive this AWARD is
MONA DASH



An  emerging voice to watch with one collection already under her belt
Find out more about Mona from her interview with Jaydeep Sarangi
http://www.museindia.com/regularcontent.asp?issid=65&id=6336

If our friends like Ajit Panda and Jagdish Mahapatra in India, Suman Giri in Scotland and Reginald Massey in Wales can subscribe to this initiative,
then surely all others can too. Please do so now.

The collection is as yet unnamed, but we invite you to suggest a possible title. Please check details at our website.
Are you a reputed artist? Please suggest a design and send your painting so that we can promote your work too.




Please, purchase this book at the prepublication price of £9.99 plus postage.  You will be supporting future publications by our diaspora poets. Your support is vital.
Please buy it yourself, and we will also appreciate your recommending it to your followers in any relevant social media and blog to help this initiative.
Please order DIRECTLY FROM Yogesh@skylarkpublications.co.uk for a special postage free order as a subscriber to this e-zine.

Alternately, buy at our website with postage added, which allows you to enter our competition. Please order at www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/crowdfunding.html


A volunteer professional sub-editor or an intern
with in-house 
editing experience is required.
Please contact us now.


Printed copies of our winner's anthology and of this magazine are available at 
The Poetry Library

Level 5, Royal Festival Hall, London SE1 8XX
T: 02079210896
The library is a hub of activities engaging in readings and workshops. Join it free to support it.
Remember they have an e-catalogue too! So borrow books from your armchair.

Attention, All Libraries!

If you wish to receive a printed copy of each issue of this magazine, please send us £10 for  2016
to contribute to the postage.
Please also look at our website for books we are recommending.
Ask for our 2015 catalogue of the year's chosen ten books.



To download the PDF version of this issue please click this link

or write to editor(at)skylarkpublications.co.uk



Previous award winners can be found at

http://www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/awards.html
  Word Masala Award winners:
Dr Debjani Chatterjee, MBE
Dr Shanta Acharya
Usha Akella
Reginald Massey
Daljit Nagra
Saleem Peeradina
Usha Kishore
Meena Alexander

Pramila Venkateswaran

*
WM Award winners:

Sweta Vikram

This Month's Word Masala Award winner is

Siddhartha Bose

                                                                                               







I met Sid Bose first at a poetry reading that our award-winning poet Shanta Acharya had organized at Lauderdale House. I was wowed by this very quiet, withdrawn man who could fool you into thinking him a cold individual, observing and dissecting you into shreds with his observant intent glance. Actually, he is quite the opposite. The moment he starts reading his work, the room fills with his commanding and authoritative poet's voice. One realizes that his observations of  everything around him translate into vivid and lively subjects. Just beware, for you may end up one day in his poems! The language and imagery he employs are nothing less than a celebration of the best poetry that one occasionally encounters; it has vigour and pure energy. Sid employs all the authority and technical skills of a playwright and theatre maker as he calls himself. His is not just 'performance poetry' - he doesn't want to dissociate his poetry from its existence on the page too. His ubiquitous poems are equally engaging in print. Sid’s poems are usually long, so as an editor I have failed to draw out a short poem from him. I assume that he also sees poems as theatre, a unique perspective from which one can enter poetry. This leaves me with a question: Can brief excerpts truly represent the poet's best work? To quote lines of verse is one thing, but to have excerpts represent a poet's long poem is something else. So it leaves me defeated. In the digital world, everything is sharp and short like a coffee on the run. But with Sid, you have to give yourself to the world of his poems and run with the images jumping out to you as at a shooting range. Let us hope I have not entirely failed you, the readers, and Sid.
I stand in awe when I look at his intriguing poetry in action. The insightful perceptions and visual imagery with lights and colour at play is pure theatre. I invite you to join me in applauding a poet of exceptional calibre in the South-Asian diaspora.

-YP

Poet-of-the-Month
      
                                
 
   Siddhartha Bose 

Sex and the City
From Kalagora (Penned in the Margins, UK, 2010), also published in The HarperCollins Book of English Poetry (HarperCollins, 2013, India)


She brings me striped shirts coz her father wore them, my love in the afternoon. Blue and white stripe Calcutta—enter her parlour shocked with revolving wooden chandelier darting spots of light, dust in light.

She maps me in her web, spinning limbs.

Give give, I’ll do, she groans in that salt tone, as she grips me in skin that bubbles in sores. Some like galaxies sweat pus, not stars. Room is wet with rain that never comes. The floor heaves under us, instinctive as nitrate.

A Tom Waits razor growl chops me up.

I lie on her single bed the clay of hash in my hair. Black and wet like Kali, she plays the piston.

I am stung on a rack, flayed.

We go to a play by a temple, and as the blackyellow cab turns to Ballygunge by the kebab shop with men wrapped in loincloth, passing the day watching smoke gather on tram tracks, we see two stray dogs doing what is natural with an insistence that frightens, as we hike up our reserve in a giddy laughter.

Not in London— dogs fucking, fleas on backs, stone as my pocket of alley in the east end, which is home more or less than home. Sometimes, on a late Saturday when the gods crawl outta their holes, I see a man taking the piss by a bin, and the smell, not the trickle—a branch of veins—reminds me of where I’m from, and I glow like a lantern, holy.


Poem published with poet's permission ©Siddhartha Bose


Siddhartha Bose
Siddhartha Bose is a writer, theatre-maker, and performer based in London.

Siddhartha’s books include the acclaimed Kalagora and Digital Monsoon (Penned in the Margins, 2010/13). His poetry has appeared internationally in various publications including Fulcrum (USA), The Literary Review (USA), Voice Recognition: 21 Poets for the 21st Century (Bloodaxe, 2009) Dear World and Everyone in It: New Poetry in the UK(Bloodaxe, 2012), The HarperCollins Book of English Poetry (HarperCollins, India, 2012). Siddhartha has been featured on BBC 4 (TV), BBC Radio 3 and was dubbed one of the ‘ten rising stars of British poetry’ by The Times. He has read and performed at festivals and venues like Latitude, Alchemy, the British Council Showcase (2012), Berlin Poetry Hearings, Turku Poetry Week (Finland), New York University, Oxford University, Royal Festival Hall, and Ronnie Scott’s. A selected readings and performance history is available here.

Siddhartha’s theatre work includes a one-man play, also called Kalagora, which had an acclaimed run at Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2011, London’s Perverted Children, long-listed for an Oxford Samuel Beckett Theatre Trust Award, and The Shroud.

Siddhartha has written a book on the grotesque, Back and Forth (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015), which is based on his PhD. He has co-edited a special issue of the literary journal Wasafiri (Routledge, UK/ USA) on international urban writing. He was a Leverhulme Fellow in Drama at Queen Mary, University of London (2011-13). A selected awards and grants history is available here.

Siddhartha’s ethnographic film on Bombay, Animal City, is an official selection in the competition category at short film festivals in Goa and Pune, India. He also plays with street photography in his spare time.

Siddhartha is an Associate Artist at Penned in the Margins and teaches creative writing at London Metropolitan University.

Poet's corner:


I work across disciplines (poetry, theatre, film etc.) and I'm currently mostly writing prose. I don't believe in false divisions between 'page poetry' and 'performance poetry', for example. I do believe in the written word. Each word that one writes must be earned. Destroy cliche. Destroy all national, linguistic, class and caste borders. Read, travel, intoxicate yourself with life and all it has to offer, be lucky enough to pull yourself back from the brink. Then, write.

-Siddhartha Bose


If you are able to encourage fellow writers in any way, then  please do so.
For example, why not contact a featured poet above for an interview,
poetry reading, or a review? 
Contact Siddhartha Bose at http://www.kalagora.com/
If you do something to encourage our poets featured, at your library, radio or TV station, or an organization, or a magazine, please DO NOT FORGET to let us know, so that we can tell others how you helped our poets here. Add a brief note on yourself and your project or activity too.

Books by the Poet-of-the-Month




To order, please click on the name below:
Digital Monsoon

A Scottish Poetry Library Recommendation 2013
One of Sudeep Sen’s ‘11 books of poetry to read’ in 2015

‘Poems with the sprung dazzle of jazz. Siddhartha Bose makes it new.’
Jeet Thayil, author of Narcopolis (shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize)
**
‘This new poetry collection plunges into the scuzzy, frothy, beautiful underbelly of London. Forget odes upon Westminster Bridge, Siddhartha Bose is all about Hackney Wick, getting under its skin and the people who live there (including himself) It’s multi-ethnic, perfectly diverse London, with the second half upping the ante into the future with cyborgs and dystopia and general Bladerunner nightmares. But what we most love about this collection is how the imagery explodes dirtily in your mind. You may never look at cities the same way again.’
Londonist
**
‘Prophetic, brave and experimental [...] Monsoon seems to lift, quite literally, like water from the page’
Bare Fiction
 
To order please click on the name below:

Kalagora

Publishers: Penned in the Margins
96pp, RRP: £8.99
ISBN 978-0-9565467-4-6


Kalagora’ comprises of two independent works: a book of poetry developed over the course of eight years and a one-man play that was written and developed since autumn 2010.

“One of the most exciting first collections I’ve come across in a long time Kalagora bestrides continents and celebrates cities as engines of creativity where dogs talk in hieroglyphs and where a man can be a moth.”
Ian McMillan, The Verb on BBC Radio 3
 (Download MP3)



Poetry in Translation 

This feature is now open for submission.
  • Please note that poetry in translation may only be submitted by Indian diaspora poets.
  • We do not normally accept work from literary translators resident in india.
  • We prefer the work by expat poets from all languages.
  • If poems are in copyright, you must have permission.
  • Diaspora poets may translate their own poems and submit them.
  • All translated poetry must be accompanied by brief (50 words) biographical details of the poet and  the translator.

Please benefit from our review group

To be fair to all small presses struggling everywhere, I bluntly ask,
if you can't spare time for other poets, why should they for you?
Word Masala has set up a review group. Please join it
These poets are commendable and unselfish in helping this review group: Saleem Peeradina, Reginald Massey, Yogesh Patel,
Debjani Chatterjee, Usha Akella,  Reginald Massey, Usha KishorePramila VenkateswaranMona Dash.and Kavita Jindal

Please join them. 
Do not miss two reviews on Bobby Nayyar's Glass Scissors 

Published by Limehouse Books
(http://limehousebooks.co.uk/)
ISBN: 9781907536793
£8.99 / $13.99
Authors are requested to contact the editor to join this group. They and their publishers may also offer discounts on their books.
We welcome everyone to help us with reviews, NOT JUST diaspora poets and critics. You DO NOT HAVE TO BE from the diaspora.

The WM poetry audio archive at our website


If you are a published poet from the diaspora, and write in English, please send us the audio file of your best poemread by you. We are building an archive that will eventually be transferred to one of the UK's prestigious institutions. 
Visit us at http://www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/audio.html

Required reading this period


The New York Times released a reading list that was—remarkably—completely white.
3.
An Introduction to Screenwriting
http://societyofauthors.us8.list-manage.com/track/click?u=d738655f11c4bf2fc81f7808a&id=ed88940805&e=bc3a219b34
A free online Creative Skillset course for new and experienced writers built by the University of East Anglia’s School of Literature, Drama and Creative Writing.

Sign-up now, from 29 February
4.

The Student Guide to Writing
http://societyofauthors.us8.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=d738655f11c4bf2fc81f7808a&id=c4523b0552&e=bc3a219b34
Free lesson plans from Fin Kennedy, John Yorke and others are now available online.
5.
Nine Tips to Get Your Submission Passed Up the Line
http://www.thereviewreview.net/publishing-tips/how-i-changed-my-submissions-after-editing-m

Events


Free poetry workshops at Barking Learning Centre
As part of Barking and Dagenham Library Services Pen to Print project this workshop is open to all levels of experience.
It is led by Anna Robinson (Into the Woods and Finders of London – Enitharmon Press).
The workshops are fortnightly.
Email Lena Smith for further details: Lena.Smith@lbbd.gov.uk
Please sign the online petition started by Anant Naik
"Brit Awards: Publish diversity figures #BritsSoWhite"

https://www.change.org/p/brit-awards-publish-diversity-figures-britssowhite?recruiter=484848254&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=copylink


Contests without fee


Guardian and 4th Estate launch prize for BAME writers
Speaking at The Bookseller's Author Day conference last year, Nikesh Shukla said publishing should be as “demographically representative as possible” in a bid to tackle diversity
He also said people in the industry needed to be “less defensive” about calls for more diversity. “We all have a collective responsibility to change things. It’s not your fault, it’s the industry’s fault, but we’re all responsible for that industry while we want to be a part of it.”

Poetry Together | Closing Date: 29-Apr-16

Details:
Cross-generational competition invites children and young people to pair up with a parent, grandparent, carer, older sibling or friend, to share their ideas and create brand new poetry. The aim is to bring people together creatively, whilst also raising awareness and fundraising for The Co-operative's Charity Partnership with the British Red Cross, to tackle loneliness in communities across the UK. Reconnecting generations and getting people talking; it's poetry in action! Judges: Carol Ann Duffy, with guest poets Gillian Clarke and Martin Kratz. Prizes: Each adult and child will receive 100 copies of their poem, professionally designed as postcards that they can share with friends. The overall winners will be announced at the event and both adult and child will receive the Poetry Together award and a £250 gift voucher.
Entry Fee: £0
POPAGANDA EPISODE: WRITING ABOUT RACE
Sapiens Plurum
http://www.sapiensplurum.org/fiction-contests.html
Sapiens Plurum is accepting stories for its second short fiction contest, culminating Earth Day, April 22, 2016. Stories should be 1500-3000 words, designed to inspire scientists and statespersons around the world to live up to the promise of the Paris Climate Change Agreement. First prize is $1000, second, $500 and third prize, $300. Deadline: 04/22/2016. Fees: $0.00.
Binghamton University
http://www.binghamton.edu/english/creative-writing/binghamton-center-for-writers/binghamton-book-awards/kessler-guidelines.html
The Milton Kessler Poetry Award offers a cash prize of $1,000 to a poet who has written the best book of poems, 48 pages or more in length. a publisher or author may submit. A publisher may submit more than one book for the prize. Deadline: 03/01/2016. Fees: $0.


 Submissions Requests - Without Representation by an Agent


SCRIBE
http://scribepublications.com.au/about-us/manuscript-policy/
Scribe accepts unsolicited and unagented manuscripts for review (with certain criteria). However, to help us cope with the volume of submissions we receive, we now only accept unsolicited submissions during seasonal three-month windows. Currently open with deadline of March 31, 2016. We are generally interested in literary fiction, serious non-fiction, and children's books.

Call for Creative Writing Submissions  for Journal Gitanjali and Beyond
Submission deadline: 17 March 2016
 The new open-access online journal Gitanjali and Beyond publishes peer-reviewed academic articles, creative writing and art.
We are looking for creative writing (poetry, essays, short stories, plays, travel writing, prose, creative non-fiction) relating to our upcoming issue on “Expression and relevance of Rabindranath Tagore’s spirituality in the arts, education and politics.” The submissions do not have to directly relate to Tagore but should relate to aspects of his thinking.
Rabindranath Tagore’s spiritual ideas are this-worldly and at the same time based on the belief in a deeper reality. His ideas were inspired by Hindu scriptures such as the Upanishads, Vaisnava, Baul, Buddhist and Persian traditions, the reformist involvement of his family in the Brahmo Samaj, and his encounters with ideas and people from around the world. At the same time, he creatively selected and reframed these ideas on the basis of his own revelations. Spirituality, for Tagore, touches every aspect of life and leads humanity to fullness and joy by connecting them with other people, with nature, and with God. This connection is established through love, action and knowledge. Tagore’s spirituality has many social and political facets, as it encourages active involvement to make the world a better place by developing internationalism/cosmopolitanism, tolerance, and social engagement. It is relevant for ecology as it embraces the connection and care for nature. He expressed all these ideas through his poetry and prose, through his educational and social endeavours, and through his art. Tagore’s ideas have been described as an artists’ religion, as they encourage creative interactions with the world.

Further inspiration can be found in his essays (e.g., Sadhana) and in his poetry (e.g., English Verses).

Decisions on publication will be made by the Creative Writing Editorial Board of Gitanjali and Beyond, based on the quality of the text. 

Please send your submissions to c.kupfer@napier.ac.uk until 17 March 2016.



Marketing your book




Want genuine royalty free photos for your books & projects?
Be EXTREMELY careful in using any web photos. What may look on the surface to be royalty-free, quite often has restrictions.
SO WORD MASALA will help poets in avoiding possible legal problems.
Want a genuine royalty free photo for your book cover? 
No problem.
http://www.saypaneer.com/Contact.htm will help
if arranged through us.
Contact Yogesh at Skylark & WM
and be safe in using photos.


Can you help this project? WHY not?


Start by supporting us
by ordering a mug or a t-shirt with a poem:
We also have backpacks available with a poem by Yogesh Patel, Dr Debjani Chatterjee and Saleem Peeradina. If you too can donate one of your poems for this fund raising venture (your rights reserved), please contact us. They have to be for an occasion.

Do you want merchandise featuring work by other poets or your own poems? Even in 
Gujarati, Hindi, Punjabi, Tamil, or any other world languages? No problem.
To order contact me direct with your PDF of a poem in the language that you want. We can also help if you need help with the artwork.

As this project is for all of us, and is a non-profit venture in nature, and constantly evolving, Word Masala welcomes local poets and authors to join hands in making it a meaningful stop for all our creative talents worldwide. We are especially keen to see the poetry film genre taking on a new and exciting poetic direction. Please email Yogesh if you can spare some help. Remote help or suggestions are welcome too.
Good luck!

Yogesh Patel

   

Thank you once again to those who wrote back, appreciating this thankless non-revenue initiative. Please add us to your contacts and address book.
Should you think this is not a worthy endeavour, then please unsubscribe by sending a polite email indicating which email address we have used. Please note Word Masala and Skylark have no monetary interests in any suggestions here, and do not take liability for any action taken by you. You must research any suggestions contained herein, and assure yourself accordingly.
(c) Word Masala & Skylark Publications UK
This e-mail and any attachments are intended for the recipient only. The content of any attachment to this e-mail may contain software viruses, which could damage your own computer system. While Word Masala, IAFS, Skylark Publications UK, ClearanceOptics, and consultants4VAT have taken every reasonable precaution to minimise this risk, we cannot accept liability for any damage which you sustain as a result of software viruses. You should carry out your own virus checks before opening the attachment.

Friday, 29 January 2016

Eskylark January 2016


                                                         

eSkylark

A Voice of the NRI - Diasporic Poets


Editor: Yogesh Patel

Consulting Editor: Dr Debjani Chatterjee, MBE


गुणाः पूजास्थानं 
Good qualities are appreciated in whomsoever they are found.
 
Uttararaamacharitam (Bhavabhuti)

Director: Yogesh Patel
Suite 6, Riverside House, 196 Wandle Road, Morden, Surrey SM4 6AU, England
Patrons: Lord Parekh and Lord Dholakia Please note, where possible, we recommend our Award-Winning poets for various awards

ISSN 2397-1878
 (printed and digital)/ Issue 1/2016
 

We are starting a fresh volume for 2016 with our new ISSN 2397-1878

For November and December 2015 we published an anthology presenting 
the Word Masala Winners of 2015 


The ISBN is 978095560840033

Please order it at http://www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/shop.html

If you cannot afford to buy this book to support us 
                      please let the editor know f you wish to receive a review copy free in a PDF format.
BIG THANK YOU to those who bought it and have donated extra.

A major award celebration of our winners is planned on
22nd June 2016
at 

The House of Lords

6.30 pm - 830 pm

BY INVITATION ONLY

This event will be a meeting of minds from among the selected major players in the publishing industry, editors, librarians, poets, event organizers, and many others. Many have already confirmed the attendance already.

IF YOU THINK YOU ARE A DECISION MAKER IN ANY OF THE ABOVE FIELDS
AND ARE SERIOUS ABOUT SUPPORTING BAME LITERARY TALENT,
                        please contact the editor NOW.
BE COUNTED.


 We have added a new partner to help us raise funds
Please support by joining them and doing all your online shopping through them. It costs you nothing extra while you would shop normally at eBay, Amazon, and many more places. By going via our partner, the retailer contributes to help the project, but at no extra cost or loss of any of your discounts.


Please help by registering at
http://www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/fundraising.html
or go to
https://www.easyfundraising.org.uk/causes/wordmasalaproject/

 

Advertise your related services and products to fund this project and more poetry collections like the one below

While visiting our website, do not forget to explore our advertisers there.
Each click adds to a fund in support of our cause.

Support is growing for 
THE WORD MASALA CROWDFUNDING INITIATIVE
The first poet to receive this AWARD is
MONA DASH

An  emerging voice to watch with one collection already under her belt
Find out more about Mona from her interview with Jaydeep Sarangi
http://www.museindia.com/regularcontent.asp?issid=65&id=6336
If our friends from India, like Ajit Panda and Jagdish Mahapatra, from Scotland, like  Suman Giri and from Wales, like Reginald Massey in Wales can subscribe to this initiative,
then surely all others can too. Please do so now.
The collection is yet unnamed, but we invite you to suggest the title. Please check details at our website.
Are you a reputed artist? Please suggest a design and send your painting so that we can promote your work too.
 
Please, purchase this book at the prepublication price of £9.99 plus postage.  You will be supporting future publications by our diaspora poets. Your support is vital. 
Please buy it yourself, and we will also appreciate your recommending it to your followers in any relevant social media and blog to help this initiative.
Please order DIRECTLY FROM Yogesh@skylarkpublications.co.uk for a special postage free order as subscriber to this e-zine.

Alternately, buy at our website postage added, which allows you to enter our competition. Please order atwww.skylarkpublications.co.uk/crowdfunding.html

A volunteer professional sub-editor or an intern
with in-house 
editing experience is required.
Please let us know.


A printed copy of the anthology and this magazine is available at 
The Poetry Library
Level 5, Royal Festival Hall, London SE1 8XX
T: 02079210896
The library is a hub of activities engaging in readings and workshops. Join it free to support it.
Remember they have an e-catalogue too! So borrow books from your armchair.
Attention, All Libraries!

If you wish to receive a printed copy of each issue of this magazine, please send us £10 for  2016
to contribute to the postage. 
Please also look at our website for books we are recommending.
Ask for our 2015 catalogue of the year's chosen ten books.

To download the PDF version of this issue please click this link
or write to editor(at)skylarkpublications.co.uk


Previous award winners can be found at
http://www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/poetofthemonth.html
They are:
Dr Debjani Chatterjee, MBE
Dr Shanta Acharya
Usha Akella
Reginald Massey
Daljit Nagra
Saleem Peeradina
Usha Kishore
Meena Alexander
Sweta Vikram

This Month's Award winner is
Pramila Venkateswaran

www.pramilav.com
Features

1.   Editorial 
2.   Poetry in Translation: Raghuveer Chaudhary, Winner of the 2015 Gyanpeeth Award 
3.   A Crowdfunding Initiative
4.   A Review Group:
     The Word Masala Award for the Best Poetry Reviewer of the year 2015 
5.   Audio Archive
6.   Word Masala Winners of 2015
7.   Poet-of-the-Month: Pramila Venkateswaran
8.   Books by the Poet-of-the-Month
9.   Contact the Poet-of-the-Month for readings, interviews, etc.
10. Required Reading in this Period
11  Events Listing
12. Contests without fee
13. Unsolicited Submission Requests 
14. Marketing your Book
15. Help this NON-PROFIT project?
Editorial 
 

                                                                                     

I have always admired Pramilla’s work. Hence, when Saleem Peeradina, a past winner of the Word Masala Award, proposed her name, I was thrilled to explore more of her recent poems. Her statement may tell us of her feminist approach, but this can be misleading. Her subject matters are a far-flung net in a sea of possibilities. The concrete poem selected for this issue shows that she is indeed a poet embracing a wider rumination.

What an original title! 
Is There a Fish in Your Tomato?
 Great poetry always transcends the desiccated husk that can be a poem of description. It teases us with metaphors and similes; It playfully engages us in making fresh discoveries and finding new meanings and poetic joys. Here a poet creates a comic connection with identical genes enjoyed by a tomato and a fish as a result of a scientific experiment. Pramilla leads us from the creative games of science to the games of illusions with a poetic muse tossing our taste buds to the tang of fish within a bite of a tomato and at the same time suggesting a sexual connotation with one word - ‘cleavage’. A genius is at work! The word ‘Each’ plugged in at the top can be a straw to draw the essence from a pot that is tomato or just something from which a tomato hangs happily ever after. Each one with its own destiny, a fish in nectar. Yet this concrete poem also evokes an image of a hand grenade, a warning for the times we live in when men’s political or religious adventures end up in war. Perhaps, the poem's ending hints at waiting to blow up as a grenade. But not quite so; the poet throws in the word ‘cultivate’, which suggests optimism. Pramilla truly lives up to her promise in her statement ‘I use humour, myth, dialogue to get to the heart of a poem, play with words to make them sing.’ Please, don’t forget to write to tell me at what level you have enjoyed this poem.   
-YP



 

Poet-of-the-Month
                                        
Pramila Venkateswaran  

Is There a Fish in Your Tomato?




This is a concrete poem and is presented as an image. If your email doesn't download it, you definitely will be missing something in ignoring this poem. Please download the PDF format or go to our website.


Pramila Venkateswaran
Pramila Venkateswaran, poet laureate of Suffolk County, Long Island (2013-15), and author of Thirtha(Yuganta Press, 2002) Behind Dark Waters (Plain View Press, 2008), Draw Me Inmost (Stockport Flats, 2009),Trace (Finishing Line Press, 2011), and Thirteen Days to Let Go (Aldrich Press, 2015) is an award winning poet who teaches English and Women’s Studies at Nassau Community College, New York. Recently, she won the Local Gems Chapbook contest for her volume, Slow Ripening. Author of numerous essays on poetics as well as creative non-fiction, she is also the 2011 Walt Whitman Birthplace Association Long Island Poet of the Year. For more information, visit www.pramilav.com.

Books by the Poet-of-the-Month

 
To order please click on the name below:

Thirteen Days to Let Go

Sharp yet soft with resonance, poignant, and weighty with personal and social layers. Each poem was a snapshot of grief and the pain of human relationships- imperfect as they are-- its all we have. Simply beautiful! The book could have been just a litany of thirteen days.-Usha Akella, Poet & Cultural Ambassador, City of Austin & Founder, The Poetry Caravan
**
Excerpts from South Asian Review (http://www.southasianliteraryassociation.org/south-asian-review/)
-In Thirteen Days to Let Go, Venkateswaran conducts us through the prescribed Hindu rituals following the death of her father, that seek to satisfy the spirit of the dead person.

-Other poems in this slim volume include “Swimming in Walden Pond,” in which Venkateswaran describes her dip thus:
I am upto my neck in philosophy,
My toes touching its shifting floor.
In “Sighting Hawks,” she goes “hawk-tipsy” reeling down Kansas roads. It is a pure lyric, the best in the tradition of Hawk poems. In “Field Trip to the Cochin Synagogue,” she muses on the irony of seeing Muslim girls in a Jewish temple. In “Above Kerala,” she captures the lush landscape in all its fecundity.  This is her fifth book, and it shows Venkateswaran at her best – a sure-footed, even-handed poet who has grown steadily over the years. A remarkable achievement, thoughtful and delightful at the same time
Saleem Peeradina
*
To order, please click on the name below:

Behind Dark Waters

This impressive volume of poetry is framed on a cosmopolitan, global scale and fleshed with intelligent and compassionate observation. Although, there is the odd, once-in-a-while ode to nothing in particular, most poems in this second anthology of Venkateswaran's are anchored firmly in mythologies that may be traditional or contemporary, ranging from the Ramayana to the saga of Aung San Suu Kyi. Furthermore, each poem is powerful with fluent lyricism and I found myself reacting to the tonal reverberations of seemingly simple lines long after the physical act of reading. Consider for instance, "...loss weighed like a gold coin/in the bottom of your chest" with its pithy coupling of emotion (chest = heart) to economics (chest of treasure).
-From a review by Prathim Maya Dora-Laskey (from SAWNET bookshelf)

Poetry in Translation 
2015 Gyanpeeth Award Winner Raghuveer ChaudharyI wish to congratulate my dear friend, 
Raghuveer Chaudhary, 
on receiving the 2015 Gyanpeeth Award 
for Literature,
one of the 
most prestigious literary honours for a writer in India. It is an award that encompasses all Indian languages. 
Although not of a diaspora poet, Raghuveer has been at the heart of encouraging diaspora writers and poets on his many international visits. He wrote a preface to my very experimental and acclaimed short story collection in Gujarati. The collection was made possible only with his ‘continuously goading' me, as he wrote, especially, because my writing is very sparse. 
My short story collection in Gujarati published originally by R R Sheth & Co, Mumbai, is out of print now, but I can make it available in PDF to our Gujarati readers who sould donate £5 to Gujarati Literary Academy through its current president Vipool Kalyani by writing to him atvipoolkalyani.opinion@btinternet.com. In any case, as a founder, I encourage them to join the Academy if they haven’t already done so. Thanks.-YP
Here is a very short poem by Raghuveer 
The Outcome
I planted my volition
In the tillage
But, regrets,
A city sprang up from it!
(One of the Seven Muktak from Tamasaa by Raghuveer Chaudhary, translated by Yogesh Patel)

Please benefit from our review group

To be fair to all small presses struggling everywhere, I bluntly ask,
if you can't spare time for other poets, why should they over you?
Word Masala has set up a review group. Please join it 
 Congratulations to

Saleem Peeradina

for winning
The Word Masala Award 

for

the Best Poetry Reviewer of the Year 2015
 
 

Like Reginald Massey Saleem has been most helpful in reviewing books by our poets. He hassuccessfully placed reviews in many different publicationsHis reviews are always in-depth and written with his readers in mind. Above all they exhibit quality writing. Saleem stands above others because unlike some successful poets who expect others to review their books but fail to reciprocate, he spares time for this important contribution out of the goodness of his heart. The award is well deserved.
These poets are commendable and unselfish in helping this review group:Debjani Chatterjee, Usha Akella,  Reginald Massey, Usha KishorePramila Venkateswaran and Mona Dash. Please join them.
Authors are requested to contact the editor to join this group and offer discounts on their books.

The WM poetry audio archive at our website

If you are a published poet from the diaspora, and write in English, please send us the audio file of your best poemread by you. We are building an archive that will eventually be transferred to one of the UK's prestigious institutions. 
Visit us at

http://www.skylarkpublications.co.uk/audio.html

Required reading this period

Here is a list from Independent for some of 2015's finest poetry, though no South-Asian poet makes the list!
3
4
Authors Ali Smith, Neil Gaiman and Joanna Trollope have led a wave of “tremendous support” for CILIP’s legal fight for libraries as its campaign petition tops 7,000 signatures
http://www.thebookseller.com/news/authors-lead-support-cilips-library-campaign-319953
&
http://www.thebookseller.com/news/local-authorities-risk-breaking-law-on-libraries-318725

Events


Poetry Please BBC Radio 4
May I insist that you help with this?
Please ask the poet to send a copy to the unit to help your choice. Need help? tell us.

Poets, please organize this with your friends, relations and readers.
Tell your social media friends.
Be proactive.
 BBC Radio 4 welcomes your suggestions for poems for possible inclusion in the programme. "Don't forget to tell us why you'd like to hear the poem... is there a special reason or memory associated with your request? Email us using the form  and also tell us whereabouts you're from. Alternatively you can write to us at Poetry Please, BBC Bristol, BS8 2LR or call 03700 100 400."
https://ssl.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qp7q/contact  


Contests without fee

Christopher Tower Poetry Competition 2016 | Closing Date: 19-Feb-16

Details:
All UK students, between 16-18, are encouraged to enter the 2016 Christopher Tower poetry competition. This year's theme is 'WONDER' and the judges are Alan Gillis, Katherine Rundell and Peter McDonald. First prize £3,000; second prize £1,000 and third prize £500. In addition to individual prizes, the students' schools and colleges also receive cash prizes of £150 and the three prize-winners are eligible for a place on the Tower Poetry Summer School. Three or four commended entries will receive £250 each. The names and schools of those longlisted will also be published on the newly redesigned Tower Poetry website. The entries will be judged this year by poets Alan Gillis, Katherine Rundell and Peter McDonald.
Entry Fee: £0
Contact: For entry and further information see: www.towerpoetry.org.uk/prize

 Submissions Requests - Without Representation by an Agent

KY PONY PRESS
http://www.skyponypress.com/guidelines/
We will consider picture books, early readers, middle grade novels, novelties, and informational books for all ages. Although we are not searching for YA fiction in particular, we would consider projects that tied in with the subject areas in which we are publishing. We are mainly publishing single titles but are open to series ideas.
TILBURY HOUSE
https://tilburyhouse.com/about-us/
Tilbury House publishes picture books that nourish and cultivate a child’s imagination.


Marketing your book


Want genuine royalty free photos for your books & projects?
Be EXTREMELY careful in using any web photos. What may look on the surface to be royalty-free, quite often has restrictions.
SO WORD MASALA will help poets in avoiding possible legal problems.
Want a genuine royalty free photo for your book cover? 
No problem.
http://www.saypaneer.com/Contact.htm will help
if arranged through us.
Contact Yogesh at Skylark & WM
and be safe in using photos.


Can you help this project? WHY not?


Start by supporting us
by ordering a mug or a t-shirt with a poem:
We also have backpacks available with a poem by Yogesh Patel, Dr Debjani Chatterjee and Saleem Peeradina. If you can donate one of your poems for this fund raising venture (your rights reserved), please contact us. They have to be for an occasion.

Do you want merchandise featuring work by other poets or your own poems? Even in 
Gujarati, Hindi, Punjabi, Tamil, or any other world languages? No problem.
To order contact me direct with your PDF of a poem in the language you want. We can also help if you need help with the artwork.

As this project is for all us, is a non-profit venture in nature, and constantly evolving, Word Masala welcomes local poets and authors to join hands in making it a meaningful stop for all our creative talents worldwide. We are especially keen to see the poetry film genre taking on a new and exciting poetic direction. Please email Yogesh if you can spare some help. Remote help or suggestions are welcome too.
Good luck!

Yogesh Patel

   
Thank you once again to those who wrote back, appreciating this thankless non-revenue initiative. Please add us to your contacts and address book.
Should you think this is not a worthy endeavour, then please unsubscribe by sending a polite email indicating which email address we have used. Please note Word Masala and Skylark have no monetary interests in any suggestions here, and do not take liability for any action taken by you. You must research any suggestions contained herein, and assure yourself accordingly.
(c) Word Masala & Skylark Publications UK
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