Pages Penned in Pandemic with Margaret Koger

Sometimes when minutes feel longer than they should, it's enough to take a breath and hold it as long as possible, to truly exist in the silence and stillness, if only for a short moment before taking that next breath. Margaret Koger's poem, "The Way," explores this notion, and will be available to read January 2021 in the print collective! Until then, I'm excited to chat about Margaret’s pages penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

Numbers are rocketing up.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

Nine Gates by Jane Hirshfield and Writing the Australian Crawl by William Stafford.

Have there been any movies, tv shows, podcasts, etc. that have helped keep you at ease the past few months?

PBS News.

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

I've increased my writing and connections with poetry friends.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

My chapbooks and keeping fresh submissions going.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

Loneliness leads to effort.

Have there been any fellow writers or people in your life who have helped you stay connected during the pandemic?

Oh yes. Live Poets group as well as Poetry in the City of Trees.

Is there anything that excites you about the changes being incited in the publishing world in light of recent events?

Fabulous opportunities to share feelings and thoughts.

Is there anything that worries you about the changes being incited in the publishing world in light of recent events?

Hoping writers will be recognized more by the general population.

Are you a plotter, pantser, or somewhere in between? Has this changed during the pandemic?

I write as a free person paying attention to what's happening in the world. I've been more active and had many poems published this last few months.

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

My office, which has not changed during the pandemic.

If you curated a playlist for writing life in the pandemic, what top 5 songs would be on your list?

Holst The Planets:

1.) “Mars The Bringer of War”

2.) “Venus the Bringer of Peace”

3.) “Mercury, the Winged Messenger”

4.) “Jupiter the Bringer of Jollity”

5.) “Uranus, The Magician”

Without too many spoilers, what is your favorite scene or poem you've written since the pandemic began?

Poem and Scene: Found in the Nature Center. It's been a life-saver to be able to walk there and observe the baby wildlife born in the spring, the fullness of summer, and now the beauty of fall. The center is next to the Boise River with so many birds.

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

Hoping to be able to hug my family members and to travel abroad. We're missing our trips to Europe where we usually spend weeks on the beach and sightseeing.

Is there any advice you would give to young writers during this time?

I would give William Stafford's guidance--a writer is someone who starts a process of trying to say something that is fulfilled by writing. Be not afraid. Be free in your thoughts, pay attention to things around you, and write them and your feelings about them down on the page.

Is there anything else you would like to share?

I'm hopeful that we'll achieve a better balance of wealth and power in America.

ABOUT Margaret koger

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Margaret Koger is a Lascaux Prize finalist. She's a school media specialist with a writing habit who lives near the river in Boise, Idaho and writes to add new connections to the wayward web of life. See poems on: Amsterdam Quarterly, Thimble, Trouvaille Review, Tiny Seed Literary Journal, Ponder Savant, Subjectiv, and Last Leaf.

To learn more, follow Margaret and her writing journey on Facebook.

Thanks for chatting, Margaret!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Helen Bowie

Often, tough times push us back to places of comfort that we don't always prioritize in day-to-day life. Helen Bowie discusses just this and more in today's chat about her pages penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

I'm in a South London suburb; at time of writing it's 2 days after the second National Lockdown was introduced and there are fireworks going off outside. On the day the Lockdown started, someone went out into the the street nearby and jovially shouted "LOCKDOWN TWO BABY." I don't know if we've all become more resilient or if we've just stopped caring, but it doesn't feel as bad as it probably ought to.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

I recently finished Breasts and Eggs by Meiko Kawakami, which I adored; as somebody who turned 30 just before the first lockdown came in, and have had several months to ruminate on whether I should just use this time at home to have a baby or something, it really spoke to where I am right now. I also loved Mary Gaitskill's Bad Behaviour; it's a tiny little book and at the start of this whole situation I was really struggling to focus on reading, but the combination of the beautiful writing, resonant subject matter and being 80 pages long really helped break that cycle for me.

Have there been any movies, tv shows, podcasts, etc. that have helped keep you at ease the past few months?

I've really got into “Sawbone,” the medical history podcast by Dr Sydnee McElroy and Justin McElroy. There's been a great balance of history, relevant information about the current situation, and general interest. Like every other soul in the world I did the big “Mad Men” rewatch at the start of it all, when I wasn't having a great time with work or writing and Joan and Peggy are always and forever the inspiration I need.

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

Before the pandemic I focused more of my writing time on creating performance pieces. As these have necessarily stopped or moved online, I've really relished pivoting back towards poetry, something I have always loved writing but which I hadn't been prioritizing over the last couple of years.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

I'm working on a project about gratitude, I suppose it's part interactive experience and part dystopia, about a world where gratitude has become currency, and is being exploited by a shady cult-like pyramid scheme, taking the concept of 'paying it forward' somewhat literally.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

The past few months have taught me that getting words on the page is the hardest part, but the most rewarding, and to take time every day to write something, because a first draft is better than no draft at all.

Have there been any fellow writers or people in your life who have helped you stay connected during the pandemic?

I took a poetry course with Write Like a Grrrl and For Books Sake in the summer, which has been invaluable in keeping my writing on track and connecting with people. My partner has also been incredible in encouraging me to submit and believe in myself.

Are you a plotter, pantser, or somewhere in between? Has this changed during the pandemic?

Total pantser and even a global crisis ain't gonna change that!

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

We moved out of a decrepit flat where the windows didn't even open into a lovely new place mid pandemic, and having a home that isn't falling to pieces has been incredible for writing, but it's been particularly nice to have outside space to call our own, and sit out at our tiny little bistro table, wrapped in knitwear writing in the crisp evening air.

If you curated a playlist for writing life in the pandemic, what top 5 songs would be on your list?

I've honestly just been listening to Infra by Max Richter in its entirety on repeat. Is that cheating?

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

I've just found out that there's a place that delivers DIY Poutine kits, and it may sound flippant but these types of simple pleasures are so important and I can't wait to order and fill my face with gravy.

ABOUT helen bowie

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Helen Bowie is a poet and performer based in London, UK. Recent poems have been featured at Neuro Logical Literary Magazine and the Unpublishable Zine. Helen has one cat and several bafflingly strong opinions on extremely trivial matters; both of these things influence her writing.

To learn more, follow Helen and her writing journey at her website and on Twitter.

Thanks for chatting, Helen!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Elise Woods

Sometimes it takes a major shake up in life to push us outside of our comfort zones, and for many, 2020 was just this force of nature. Elise Woods discusses this and more in today's chat about her pages penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

Bleak.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

Emma, What Alice Forgot, and The Wife Between Us.

Have there been any movies, tv shows, podcasts, etc. that have helped keep you at ease the past few months?

“Homeland,” “Down To Earth,” and “FRIENDS.”

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

It's prompted me to write more.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

I'm excited to write a story that follows "Sunflower Seeds."

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

That when the universe gives you time to write, you should take action.

Have there been any fellow writers or people in your life who have helped you stay connected during the pandemic?

Soniah Kamal and Jane Austen.

Is there anything that excites you about the changes being incited in the publishing world in light of recent events?

More digital opportunities.

Is there anything that worries you about the changes being incited in the publishing world in light of recent events?

How it could affect us going forward.

Are you a plotter, pantser, or somewhere in between? Has this changed during the pandemic?

Somewhere in between.

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

Anywhere and everywhere; it's forced me to get out of my comfort zone.

If you curated a playlist for writing life in the pandemic, what top 5 songs would be on your list?

1.) “Slide”

2.) “Hard to Explain”

3.) “Torn”

4.) “Free Falling”

5.) “Return of the Mac”

Without too many spoilers, what is your favorite scene or poem you've written since the pandemic began?

A Match for Miss Woodhouse.

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

2021.

Is there any advice you would give to young writers during this time?

Keep writing.

ABOUT elise woods

Elise Woods is a writer and professor. Her work has appeared in Critical Read, The Avenue, The Learning Assistance Review, Red Wolf Journal, Plum Tree Tavern, and SpreeBeez Magazine. She is the recipient of the 2020 JCTC Outstanding Part-Time English faculty award. She lives in Louisville with her husband, Joe, and bubbly fish named Cossette.

Thanks for chatting, Elise!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Oskar Leonard

To the outside world, writers appear to be one person, perhaps a shadowed version of a human hunched over a writing desk prepared to share their story the moment it meets the page. However, as writers, we often need to be storyteller, champion, editor, reader, marketer, designer, etc. for a story to reach its full purpose. Oskar Leonard discusses just this and more in today's chat about his pages penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

Confusing. We're in Tiers, then a national lockdown, but no one's listening to it. No idea what's going on.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

I read The Kitchen Maid by Valerie Wood, A Pony To School by Diana Pullein-Thompson, Follow The Feeling by D. David Croot, and The Stallion by Joyce Stranger. There's a few others, of course, but those were my favorites!

If you haven't been reading, what are some books you're most looking forward to reading?

I'm currently in the middle of The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy (the trilogy in four parts edition) and I'm looking forward to getting through some more of that!

Have there been any movies, tv shows, podcasts, etc. that have helped keep you at ease the past few months?

I've been rewatching “The Dirt” quite a bit—it really helps to destress me! “Rock And Roll High School” is also a favorite.

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

It has made me a lot more productive. I've been working on marketing my writing, creating lots of new poems, stories and even a new book written entirely in lockdown. It's also been helping me to look back and work on my older books.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

My LGBT+ short story/advice collection, Everything Under The Rainbow, is really exciting to work on. It's twenty short stories covering twenty different issues which affect LGBT+ youth in the UK, so it's a purposeful and entertaining piece to write.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

Writing is the easy part—editing and promoting your work are two entirely different stories. I've been doing a lot of both during lockdown.

Have there been any fellow writers or people in your life who have helped you stay connected during the pandemic?

The Young Writers Initiative helped me stay focused and busy with their summer camp and competitions. They're a great organization!

Are you a plotter, pantser, or somewhere in between? Has this changed during the pandemic?

I've actually become a plotter through lockdown. I have no idea how that happened, but I definitely noticed the change. I think it has positively affected my writing.

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

In bed. It's always been in bed. Comfy and warm are the best conditions for writing.

Without too many spoilers, what is your favorite poem you've written since the pandemic began?

“Fields”—it's a poem which features a lockdown walk me and my boyfriend went on. There's nature, thoughtful consideration for the past and acknowledgment of the present. It's one of my best!

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

Publishing more books. I have a couple releases planned, and I think my improved promotion plans are going to make the launches extra special.

Is there any advice you would give to young writers during this time?

Don't force yourself to write. If things are stressful (as they likely are) you're allowed to take breaks, breathe, and come back to your writing at a better time. It'll wait for you. Be kind to yourself.

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ABOUT oskar leonard

Oskar Leonard is a self-published author, poet and illustrator, as well as a senior editor at The Altruist, a staff editor at All Ears India and a creative writing intern at FOURALL Magazine. He has written six books: three novels, two poetry anthologies and a novella. His pieces have been featured in publications like Fever Dream Zine, Write To Unite, SOS: Hunted, Potted Purple Mag and The Young Writers Initiative Literary Journal: Juvenile.

To learn more, follow Oskar and his writing journey at his website and on Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Voyce.Me.

Thanks for chatting, Oskar!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Elizabeth Bates

Throughout 2020, escaping into stories and art was the way many found safety and shelter from the most difficult days. Elizabeth Bates discusses just this and more in today's chat about her pages penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

We have been pretty lucky where I live in northern Washington state in that our cases have been far lower than in many places around the country. That said, many businesses are closed, some having had to close permanently. Schools are closed besides some small cohorts in hybrid models. My job as a high school teacher is entirely remote.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

Gene Weingarten's One Day: The Extraordinary Story of an Ordinary 24 Hours in America, Caroline Fraser's Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder, and J.W. Ocker's Cursed Objects: Strange but True Stories of the World's Most Infamous Items have been some of my favorite reads during quarantine.

Have there been any movies, tv shows, podcasts, etc. that have helped keep you at ease the past few months?

I felt like I was able to get entirely absorbed in “The Haunting of Bly Manor” and any show that can draw me in like that is noteworthy, in my opinion.

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

I have written more during the pandemic than I ever have before. I wrote an entire 80,000 word novel. I am now almost 10,000 words into a second novel. Not to mention countless short stories and poems that I have drafted during these months of the pandemic. The pandemic has been very good for my writing life.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

I am excited to continue the drafting and revision process of my #NaNoWriMo novel.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

When the distractions of "usual" life are removed, sometimes the writing comes easier.

Have there been any fellow writers or people in your life who have helped you stay connected during the pandemic?

Everyone in the #WritingCommunity on Twitter is so supportive and it is a great way to socialize with people who have the same mindset and interests. I would like to make a special shout-out to Shawn Berman, editor of The Daily Drunk, as he is such a great Twitter friend and his publication brings joy to so many people.

Are you a plotter, pantser, or somewhere in between? Has this changed during the pandemic?

I'm a plotter. If I don't outline, I can't write when it comes to a novel. I guess I'm a bit more of a pantser when it comes to poems and short stories. I just let those sort of flow out of me and see where the words take me.

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

My favorite place to write is whatever place I happen to be when my baby decides to take a nap. :)

If you curated a playlist for writing life in the pandemic, what top 5 songs would be on your list?

Just the entire Taylor Swift folklore album, honestly!

Without too many spoilers, what is your favorite scene you've written since the pandemic began?

My favorite scene I have written since the pandemic began is a scene in my first novel, Lapse, that is written to function as music on the page. It's sort of hard to explain without giving a spoiler, but I had so much fun writing that scene because music means a lot to me.

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

I have started a literary e-zine with my sister, Dwelling Literary, and I am very much looking forward to publishing our inaugural pieces in December 2020!

Is there any advice you would give to young writers during this time?

Keep writing because the more practice you get the better you will become. The only way to become a good writer is to write...a lot!

ABOUT elizabeth bates

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Elizabeth Bates is a writer from Washington state where she lives with her husband, son, and two Siberian Huskies. Bates is the editor of Dwelling Literary. Her column, “Full Send,” has been featured at The Daily Drunk. Bates’ writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Versification, Seaborne Magazine, Your Dream Journal, GLITCHWORDS, Second Chance Lit, Poetically Magazine, and elsewhere.

To learn more, follow Elizabeth and her writing journey at her website and on Twitter.

Thanks for chatting, Elizabeth!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Lucia Larsen

The way fairytales and myths have taken real narratives and twisted them into something fanciful, something more palatable for every age, exists to ensure no story is forgotten. Lucia Larsen's poems, "Spell" and "Heart," explore this lush language, and will be available to read January 2021 in the print collective! Until then, I'm excited to chat about Lucia’s pages penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

I live in Stirling, Scotland and we are currently at Level 4 restrictions. There is some outdoor seating in the city center, and most places are open for take-away, so the city still feels alive and busy, even though the indoor spaces are mostly empty or closed. We are also surrounded by nature at Stirling, and the weather is still nice (when it isn't raining!), so you can walk by the river, hike Dumyat Hill, or go up to Stirling Castle if you need to get out of your apartment for awhile.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

I recently read Piranesi by Susanna Clarke and The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante, which were both phenomenal. I also enjoyed The Pull of the Stars by Emma Donoghue which takes place during the 1918 flu pandemic.

If you haven't been reading, what are some books you're most looking forward to reading?

I just ordered Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon from Category Is Books. They are a "Fiercely Independent Queer Bookshop" in Glasgow, and they love giving book recommendations!

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

I would say, more than my writing itself, the pandemic has affected my involvement in the writing community. Through social media, while stuck at home, I have started connecting with so many writers and lit mags, and they are incredibly welcoming and supportive. They are so earnest about boosting other people's work, offering feedback, and drowning out the inner voice that says 'but am I really a writer?' I am so grateful to them.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

The love of writing and reading creates community. Even if you only write for yourself, and never share your words, you are never alone, and you are still a writer.

Are you a plotter, pantser, or somewhere in between? Has this changed during the pandemic?

I am a plotter, but rarely does the finished product look anything like I originally intended! As Jericho Brown said "you begin your poem in language rather than in idea."

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

I have been going on lots of walks and writing in my head or on my phone as I get inspired, and then I edit on my computer in my bedroom. I will also get up in the middle of the night to jot down lines in my journal, which I then have to decipher in the morning!

Without too many spoilers, what is your favorite poem you've written since the pandemic began?

This poem has not been published yet, but I am taking an Environmental Economics class, and it is very frustrating to reduce ecological services to a monetary value in order to promote sustainable practices, so I wrote an anti-capitalist ecocentric speculative poem in response. I'm really proud of it, and I hope it finds a home soon.

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

At the time of this interview, Thanksgiving is coming up (I am from the States), and so I have a Zooms-giving planned with some of my friends. Since the pandemic started, we have been celebrating all the holidays virtually together, which I have really appreciated.

Is there any advice you would give to young writers during this time?

Connect with lit mags and other writers on social media! Read the new work they are publishing, even in genres you don't write, since reading different styles will only add to your writer's tool belt.

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ABOUT lucia larsen

Lucia Larsen is currently studying for her MSc in Environmental Management at the University of Stirling. Her recent work has appeared in Tealight Press, Neuro Logical, Tipping the Scales, and Fever Dream.

To learn more, follow Lucia and her writing journey at her Link Tree and on Twitter and Instagram.

Thanks for chatting, Lucia!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Pam R. Johnson Davis

Throughout tough times, it is often the sense of caring for another that helps keep us going. Pam R. Johnson Davis's poem, "5 a.m. Conversations With a Friend," explores this poignant moment of simple interaction, and will be available to read January 2021 in the print collective! Until then, I'm excited to chat about Pam’s pages penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

Many things in Chicago are shutting back down. Mayor Lightfoot recently just ordered that all indoor dining and bars close. It has been hard on our restaurant families as the weather gets colder.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

I have been binge-reading contemporary Black romance novels. Any work by Christina C. Jones is my absolute favorite. I also re-read a few classics, including most recently The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.

Have there been any movies, tv shows, podcasts, etc. that have helped keep you at ease the past few months?

I'm not a big podcast person, but I recently started listening to “The Happiness Lab” while I go for walks and it has been such a wonderful addition to my daily routine.

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

The pandemic has impacted my writing in a positive way. I write more now. My poems vary in topic because I have time to think, to try prompts, to do a few virtual open mics. It truly has been a gift in that way.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

Yes! I'm excited to be working on my next book—a chapbook! It has been fun editing, cutting, re-adding, and re-adjusting to fit a smaller format.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

I would tell whoever asked that I learned that your best work is still yet to come ♥

Have there been any fellow writers or people in your life who have helped you stay connected during the pandemic?

YES! My BFF L'Oreal Thompson Payton (@LTintheCity)

Is there anything that excites you about the changes being incited in the publishing world in light of recent events?

I love that there is a more inclusive focus, especially for Black writers. My writing often reflects my lived experience—in Blackness, womanhood, grieving, healing, and hope. I employ accessible language and often dabble in AAVE in my writing. That hasn't always been accepted in publications, but I'm seeing that change more and more and I love it.

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

My favorite place to write is in my bed. I often have things come to me in dreams or while streaming a show. With the pandemic, I get to be home and in bed more, so it has truly been a delight to write.

Without too many spoilers, what is your favorite poem you've written since the pandemic began?

This morning I wrote a poem about trying a writing prompt and failing. That was super fun!

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

Being home with my partner for the holidays. No pressure from family to visit, so we get complete peace at home.

Is there any advice you would give to young writers during this time?

Write when it's hard. Write when it's light. Write when you feel joy. Write when you feel pain. No one can take your pen. Your thoughts and ideas are yours. So, don't stop writing.

Is there anything else you would like to share?

This was such a fun interview! Thank you so much for making space for this, it truly is a highlight in my evening.

ABOUT pam r. johnson davis

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Pam R. Johnson Davis is a writer, poet, singer, and educator residing in Chicago, IL. She loves writing poetry, especially as she navigates life, loss, and love. Her first book, Seasons (I'll Be Seeing You): A collection of poems about heartbreak, healing, and redemption debuted at the #1 spot for New Releases in African-American Poetry and Women's Poetry on Amazon and won the "Best Urban Poetry" Book Award at American Book Fest in August 2020.

To learn more, follow Pam and her writing journey at her website and on Twitter and Instagram.

Thanks for chatting, Pam!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Kevin Lankes

Perhaps if 2020 brought us anything, it was the ever growing cacophony of voices and thoughts, growing louder until all sense of meaning was lost. Kevin Lankes' essay, "The Era of Meaningless Noises," explores this idea, and will be available to read January 2021 in the print collective! Until then, I'm excited to chat about Kevin’s pages penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

New York is trending upward at the moment, as rules are relaxed and quarantine fatigue has taken over. Numbers are rising, and I fear that many people are no longer paying attention.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

Among the Missing by Dan Chaon, The Enlightenment of the Greengage Tree by Shookefeh Azar, The Memory Police by Yoko Ogawa, Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann, and The Known World by Edward P. Jones.

Have there been any movies, tv shows, podcasts, etc. that have helped keep you at ease the past few months?

“The Halloween Baking Championship” on Food Network.

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

It's honestly made me more motivated. I'm writing and submitting a ton. I have a new novel in progress, and the short story ideas just keep coming.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

Yes. There are two novels that I've had in the works for a while: one is a story about a post-apocalyptic future where the world is covered entirely in ash, and the other is about a space mission that aims to study reproduction in zero gravity.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

Sitting down to do the work is not optional. No one is going to do it if I don't.

Have there been any fellow writers or people in your life who have helped you stay connected during the pandemic?

I have a writing group from grad school and we're all very close. We share tips and progress reports and anything helpful we come across.

Are you a plotter, pantser, or somewhere in between? Has this changed during the pandemic?

Somewhere in between. I plan major plot points and try to connect them to each other.

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

I currently write anywhere I can focus.

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

I'm currently attempting to buy an apartment. It's looking like it might work out.

Is there any advice you would give to young writers during this time?

There's no shortcut. If you can sit down and do the work, do that. If you can't, then find the time to do it anyway.

ABOUT kevin lankes

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Kevin Lankes holds an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College. His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Here Comes Everyone, Pigeon Pages, Owl Hollow Press, The Huffington Post, The Riverdale Press, and countless blogs, webpages, and other media. His short story “She Turns the Final Page” was nominated for Best Small Fictions 2019. In his lifetime, he has survived cancer, toured the U.S. in a minivan, and played lead trumpet in a professional polka band.

To learn more, follow Kevin and his writing journey at his website and on Twitter.

Thanks for chatting, Kevin!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Paula Brown

Through 2020, it became most clear that much of our world exists on its own schedule. Creativity and the act of writing are no different; they don't wait for convenient times to present themselves. Paula Brown discusses just this and more in today's chat about her pages penned penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

Cases in Tucson are rising again. Masks are worn in all public places. Restaurants, gyms, and bars are open with reduced capacity. Several known and loved restaurants have permanently closed.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

I have been binge reading books about Mount Everest: Alison Levine's On the Edge, Ellis Stewart's Everest: It's Not About the Summit, Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air, and I am currently reading Nick Heil's Dark Summit. I guess reading about the extreme hardships endured by mountain climbers has made me feel better about having to stay secluded in my home.

Have there been any movies, tv shows, podcasts, etc. that have helped keep you at ease the past few months?

Like for so many people, Netflix has come to my rescue. Recently I have finished watching “Away,” and am currently following “Schitt's Creek.”

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

I purposely enrolled in several online classes through the Writers Studio throughout the spring and summer and into the fall to keep my mind occupied. I have written more than ever during this time.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

I have been turning more to poetry to express myself, and hope to continue this trend. So much can be said in so few words and I find it very satisfying.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

Writing is like using a muscle. The more you write, the easier it is to get satisfying work on the page. Consistency is optimal!

Have there been any fellow writers or people in your life who have helped you stay connected during the pandemic?

I belong to two writing groups in Tucson that have continued to meet via Zoom. One group meets weekly and we read our work to each other for feedback. The other group Zooms for fifteen to thirty minutes, with each writer stating their writing intention to the group, and then we are off on our own to write for two hours.

Is there anything that excites you about the changes being incited in the publishing world in light of recent events?

I think that when hard times happen writers are inspired to record our experiences and emotions. Several journals have asked for this pandemic-inspired writing.

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

My dining room table faces the back yard and I write there while observing the birds and the animals that come by. I love the natural world and much of what I see in my back yard has become a subject in my writing.

If you curated a playlist for writing life in the pandemic, what top 5 songs would be on your list?

I'm not sure I have a playlist, but if I did, Gloria Gaynor's "I Will Survive" would be at the top.

Without too many spoilers, what is your favorite scene you've written since the pandemic began?

I wrote a short nonfiction piece about walking one of our dachshunds. It was joyous because we had been unable to go for walks for well over a month due to the relentless, record breaking heat Tucson and the southwest endured this summer. I also feel very connected to the poems which I submitted here, which resulted from an exercise based on Yannis Ritsos’ Diaries of Exile from a Writers Studio class I took. These poems really embodied the sadness I felt in living through the pandemic.

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

My husband and I just bought a little Winnebago camping trailer so that we can get away for a few days each month with our dogs and feel relatively safe from the virus.

Is there any advice you would give to young writers during this time?

Whatever you are seeing, feeling, and experiencing is all unlimited material for your writing. Get it down on paper when it comes to you because the creativity won't wait. If you are not in a place to write, take notes with your phone so that you can come back to the words that want to be said.

Is there anything else you would like to share?

I am so grateful for my writing life, which has contributed more than anything else toward keeping me sane during this tumultuous time. Writers and artists are so blessed to have this creative outlet to express ourselves when times are tough.

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ABOUT Paula Brown

Paula Brown retired from the medical field and is a master student of the Writers Studio in Tucson, Arizona. Her work has been published in the Adirondack Review, North Dakota Quarterly, Whitefish Review, South Dakota Magazine, War, Literature, and the Arts, and the Phoenix Soul. She lives in Tucson with her husband and six dachshunds.

Thanks for chatting, Paula!

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Pages Penned in Pandemic with Lisa McKenzie

As difficult as it may be to go with the flow when the world still feels uncertain, there can be much to discover once we allow ourselves to let go. Lisa McKenzie discusses just this and more in today's chat about her pages penned penned in pandemic.

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What does the pandemic currently look like in your city?

Living in Montreal, in a red zone means very limited outings, lots of Zoom calls and plenty of time for reflection.

What are some favorite books you've read during quarantine?

Untamed, Rules for a Knight, The Book of Longings, and Just Listen.

If you haven't been reading, what are some books you're most looking forward to reading?

Looking forward to reading Living in Flow and New Self, New World.

How has the pandemic affected your writing?

I have more time to reflect.

Are there any projects you are excited to keep working on? If so, can you give us any details (no spoilers please!) about your project?

Writing a memoir, prescriptive maybe.

If asked ten years from now what the past few months have taught you about being a writer, what would come to mind?

My best work comes through when I can turn the world off and turn my intuition and flow on.

Are you a plotter, pantser, or somewhere in between? Has this changed during the pandemic?

A plantsers, little bit of both I guess. I really have no idea what I'm going to write about until it starts to form in flow. I do however like to edit and plan the release strategically.

Where is your favorite place to write? Has this changed during the pandemic?

In bed, on my iPhone, in the middle of the night when most of my poems come through.

Without too many spoilers, what is your favorite scene or poem you've written since the pandemic began?

Probably my latest, it made me cry, We Matter Because We ARE.

While the future is just as unknowable as ever, what is something you are most looking forward to this year?

Writing more, accessing deeper more intuitive messages to share.

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ABOUT Lisa McKenzie

Lisa McKenzie is an author, intuitive branding and marketing strategist, embodied leadership coach, and life-long learner with an insatiable curiosity. Grounded in the mystic, she also hosts intimate co-working gatherings where women come together to create in flow and to ground themselves in inspired action. She calls Montreal, Quebec, Canada home.

To learn more, follow Lisa and her writing journey at her website and on Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Thanks for chatting, Lisa!

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