For five summers now, I’ve been gathering monarch butterfly eggs and caterpillars and raising them in our backyard, protected from predators by a mosquito net tent. Last winter, I finally—finally!—found a way to write about the process in a series of haiku. Sidebars include facts about monarchs and tips for readers who might want to raise them, too. I call the poems “butterflyku” and the collection Butterflyku and Monarch How-To.
Here’s an excerpt:
Searching milkweed leaves,
I find what I’m looking for:
tiny monarch egg!
Five rejections later, I’m facing the prospect that this subject, important as it is to me, might not be acceptable in this form. Although I know that many manuscripts are sold after more than five rejections, I also understand that poetry collections are notoriously tough to sell. So I’m taking a different approach, a narrative nonfiction one that I hope will be more appealing to both editors and readers.
As I organize my thoughts in this new direction, I’m still learning. I attended a symposium last week at the Chicago Botanic Garden with brilliant speakers who elaborated on the urgent issues affecting monarchs today. I soaked up every word, took pages and pages of notes, and collected handouts to study.
To prepare for this year’s monarch project, I started three varieties of milkweed from seeds we collected last fall.
top to bottom: common, whorled, and butterfly milkweed |
Wish me luck!
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JoAnn Early Macken
JA, I'm glad you're still working on this project. I definitely wish you luck with it! And thanks for sharing the great photos and your butterflyku. :-)
ReplyDeleteI talked to a local butterfly breeder who let me know that it's a bit too early in Ohio (and it's been way too cool this week) for the monarchs to return. Nonetheless, I'm going to be on the lookout for those little white dots on our milkweed!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting post. Good luck with your project. Thanks for the post.
ReplyDeleteIt interests me to read about what other writers are doing. I think it is important that the project be close to your heart. Whether or not it sells, you are doing a magical wonderful thing.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes in the telling of this important story. I enjoyed hearing about all the work you're doing for it.
ReplyDeleteWhat an important message on trying to find the marketability of our writing and that sometimes a re-start is a necessity to keep it going :) loved this post and what a wonderful project!
ReplyDeleteWhat an important message on trying to find the marketability of our writing and that sometimes a re-start is a necessity to keep it going :) loved this post and what a wonderful project!
ReplyDeleteGood for you, JoAnn! And good luck with the monarchs AND the manuscript. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the encouragement, everyone! I've added a monarch page to my web site at http://www.joannmacken.com/contact.htm. Watch for more photos, videos, and links to resources.
ReplyDeleteThe lucky monarchs - to have your midwifery JoAnn!
ReplyDeleteAnd how resilient, to take the Haiku that I know from reading your work, is jewel-like, but set it aside & look at a narrative voice for the butterfly birth book.
Wishing this project wings beyond your own backyard. thank you for sharing.
Joann I hope you are going to sprinkle your haiku throughout your non-fix book then. I rather liked them.
ReplyDeleteAh, JoAnn, I feel your poetry pain. I actually think this sounds very marketable in form--well, in the context of poetry, which is highly unmarketable in general--but I wonder if the issue might partially by that there are so many monarch picture books already, including at least one poetry one. I hate that once a topic is covered in poetry in ONE book, the market considers it totally covered. Sigh. I love that you're keeping up with current research/issues--that's one thing that could definitely help with your marketability. Here's to an eventual sale!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your honesty, JoAnn, in sharing this writing project.
ReplyDeleteSomething tells me this project has wings! :)
What I love about you, JoAnn, is the going-outside part of your life. It's so easy for me to get stuck inside, staring at this magic screen.
ReplyDeleteAnd what I love about our readers is that their comments are so often poetry.
Jan's comment surely is:
"The lucky monarchs - to have your midwifery JoAnn!...your work is jewel-like...the butterfly birth book...Wishing this project wings beyond your own backyard."
Lucky US!