Marie Marshall

Author. Poet. Editor.

Category: news

The Phoenix Rising from its Ashes

The Phoenix Rising from its Ashes is the title of the international anthology of sonnets for which I am one of the editorial team. The project has grown since its inception, to the extent that it will now be published in two volumes. The first will be the poems in English and French, the official non-Native languages of Canada, and is scheduled to be out by the end of 2012. The second volume will be of poems in other languages. That volume is expected to be on sale in spring 2013.

Working on this anthology has been a rewarding experience – a real labour of love. I have read hundreds of sonnets and have had to reject many which are remarkably strongly written. However, most of the kudos for this work should go and will go to Editor-in-Chief Richard Vallance and Co-Editor Jim Dunlap, whose continuing workloads far exceed those of the rest of the team.

I will post occasional news of The Phoenix here, along with news of other publications in which I might be involved either as author or editor. A propos that , I am now collecting work for the next online issue of the zen space. I am looking for original haiku and haiga, so please do feel free to get in touch. I recommend reading all the pages on the site before submitting.

Winter 2012 showcase at ‘the zen space’

Happy New Year!

The Winter 2012 showcase at the zen space has now been published. It was hard but rewarding work sifting through the haiku and short-burst poetry, but I think the result is pleasing. Please do feel free to visit.

image (c) Marie Taylor

The Bruce Dawe Prize…

Dr Bruce Dawe AO

I begin by defining my terms. I’m not talking about the Australia-wide prize for poetry, because I’m not an Australian, but I am talking about a ‘Bruce Dawe Prize’. Bower Bird Press is a small publishing concern, the brainchild of Australian poet Ronald Wiseman. It’s main publishing project is the series of international anthologies under the umbrella title On Viewless Wings. The patron of this project is Dr Bruce Dawe AO, arguably Australia’s best loved and most influential living poet. He gives his time freely to judging a ‘long list’ of several hundred poems from each anthology and awarding a virtual laurel wreath to the best. The results are published in each following anthology under the heading ‘The Bruce Dawe Prizes’. My personal news is that the Champion’s laurel for 2011 has gone to my Sequence of Six Love Sonnets. Dr Dawe had this to say about them:

These sonnets range across the experience of love: the place of first meeting; the sense of kissing as a veritable feast; the artistry of love’s web-spinning; the ebb and flow of emotions; its life-giving alchemy; and the sense of love (at times) being a merry dance. [Marie] has dealt with each of these aspects with sophisticated, experiential skill.

Vera Rich

Dr Dawe is the second fellow-poet with an international reputation to appreciate my poetry. The other was the late Vera Rich, who was the world’s foremost translator of poetry from Slavic languages into English. She was never uncritical – in fact she was often highly critical – but she honoured me with a request to proof-read her most recent works prior to publication. This collaboration between us was, sadly, cut short by her sudden death.

Moving on, I recommend the latest issue of Decanto magazine, and not solely because it features one of my own poems, Le Baute (‘The Masks’). Decanto is always full of wonderful poems.

Publication news

I have received two complimentary copies of magazines today, each of which features poetry of mine. The first is issue 60 of Smoke, a magazine produced in Liverpool by the Windows Project, Liver House, 96 Bold Street, Liverpool L1 4HY. They have published my poem I hate all flowers, which is a lithopoema I wrote in 2010. [By the way, for those of you who are not familiar with the city of Liverpool, although the city’s prefix is pronounced as in the bodily organ, such places as ‘Liver House’ are pronounced ‘lie-vur’ – just saying.]

The second magazine is issue 37 of THE SHOp, a magazine published in Ireland, which features a 2011 poem of mine simply entitled End. Editorial address of THE SHOp is Skeagh, Schull, Co. Cork, Ireland. [Another ‘by the way’: I believe the word ‘skeagh’ is Irish for a thorn bush, and ‘Schull’ derives from the word ‘scoil’ meaning a school, the latter being very similar in Scottish Gaelic. Correct me if I’m wrong…]

Dundee Literary Festival 2011


Last week saw Dundee Literary Festival up here in Scotland. The opening session consisted of an hour or so of ‘open mic’ readings and discussions. Thanks to my agent, the readings included two of my more recent poems and a passage from my novel Lupa. I managed to get to some of the other events during the festival myself, and was glad to see one of my favourite writers of ‘many a true word spoken in jest’ poetry, Eddie Gibbons, give a recital.

Readers of this blog might be wondering why there has been no news of my having published anything for quite some time. Well, I suppose the reason is that I haven’t actually submitted anything for publication for quite some time – it’s as simple as that. I am working on several things, but I have to admit that often when I announce or decide on a project that doesn’t necessarily mean it’s going to amount to anything. Basically I never know until I try. Some projects are destined to lead nowhere and to sit in abeyance. Other projects may be finished or nearly finished but are waiting for… hmm… let’s say factors beyond my control. Rest assured, as soon as I have news, you’ll have news.

M.