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  • Reading Poetry
    Reading Poetry

    When you first start writing, it can be tempting to not read other poets’ work for fear of being influenced and losing your own style. When you’re not sure of yourself it can feel like you’re going to lose yourself in someone else’s work or world and become something that you’re not or don’t want to be.

    But here’s the thing — all the great poets build on the poetry that has come before them. They read it and write in response to it. They comment on it and improve it. They are in conversation with it. To join in on the conversation, you need to start reading work by other poets. 

    The great painters of the past started out by copying the work of the great masters. It was how they learnt the techniques of their craft and once they had mastered the basics, they went on to create their own style. Copying the poetry of poets you love is a way to learn those techniques. As long as you cite your reference by putting ‘after Judith Wright’ below the title of your poem, it’s okay to be a fan and copy your heroes. We are all standing on the shoulders of giants after all!

    So when you read poetry by other people, be critical. Note your response to a poem. Write down what you like about it. Think about its style and if it’s something that resonates with you. If you are consciously responding to the poem, you won’t get so lost or overwhelmed by someone else’s work.

    On this page you will find a list of famous and not so famous poets from around the world, a list of books Pocketry recommends as well as some videos for you to watch. These lists are by no means exhaustive or definitive — once you start reading poetry, you’ll find yourself going off in all sorts of strange directions and tangents — but they will provide you with a starting point on your poetry reading journey.

    Rest assured, over time you will develop your own unique style based on all the bits and pieces you have learnt from your poetry heroes.

  • Introducing Imagick by Lakshmi R Kanchi!

    Winner of Pocketry’s Prize for Unpublished Poets, Imagick is a tender exploration of the nature of love. Lakshmi’s evocative and lyrical poetry contains vivid images and the poetic techniques of synecdoche, simile and personification. Her writing is relatable and contains moments of great insight. Heartfelt and moving, it’s a gem of a collection!

     

    Lakshmi R. Kanchi (pen name SoulReserve) is an emerging Indian-Australian poet on a mission to make poetry accessible. Lakshmi’s poetry explores love and its tumultuous, fantastic and zesty nature through allegories that provoke thought and evoke tender feelings. Her writing anatomises the complex links between language, culture, history and perception.

    She won the Ros Spencer Poetry Prize and Pocketry’s Prize for Unpublished Poets. Her work has been shortlisted for the Heroine’s Prize, Grieve Project, and the SCWC Poetry Prize. Her poetry has appeared in the Australian Poetry AnthologySocial AlternativesPortside ReviewBurrow Journal and The Saltbush Review.

    Lakshmi serves as the Chair of WA Poets Inc and is a Centre for Stories Fellow. She was the inaugural Poet-in-Residence at The Wetlands Centre and Writer-in-Residence at the Midland Courthouse. She is also the facilitator of Ink & Echo Poetry Meetup at Centre for Stories and Swan & Scribble Poetry Scribbleshop at the Ballajura Library.

    Get your copy of imagick by Lakshmi R Kanchi.

  • The Year of the Double Autumn

    Pocketry is over the moon to announce that The Year of the Double Autumn is now available to purchase from Pocketry’s online shop!

    This stunning debut poetry collection was written by English/Australian poet, Sophia Riozzi, during a time in which she experienced two autumns within twelve months—one in each hemisphere.

    Sophia Riozzi is an English Australian writer, actor and ponderer of things. Infused with a curiosity for what it is to exist, Sophia’s original pieces are stirred by her travels spanning live volcanoes in Iceland to snow-capped mountains of the Himalayas. Sophia is currently completing postgraduate studies in psychology, and enjoying a new, pink, fountain pen.

    Sophia is a promising poet and her debut collection is just a hint of the fine things to come from this young writer.

    Get your own copy of The Year of the Double Autumn and see what all the fuss is about!

  • Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets 2021 Winner
    Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets 2021 Winner
    A huge thank you all the poets who submitted their work to this year’s competition. It’s no mean feat to go through your poems and agonise over which ones to include in a collection. It’s always hard to know what a judge may or may not like. So I’d like to thank all you poets for trusting Pocketry with your work. It’s always a pleasure and a delight to read work from fresh voices! Themes and subjects of the collections included childhood, parenting, relationships, love, grief, hospitals and illness, homelessness, nature and writing. It was wonderful to see poets try different forms including sonnets, free verse, haikus, tercets and couplets as well as a using a range of poetic devices such as rhyme, metaphor, personification and simile. And now, without further ado, Pocketry is pleased to announce Lakshmi R. Kanchi as the 2021 Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets winner with their collection, imagick.

    Lakshmi’s collection will be published by Pocketry and will be available to purchase in Pocketry’s online shop.

    ~

    There were three highly commended entries:

    earthlings by Kristina Deminick,

    Beyond the eucalypts by Steph Amir and

    Clear Answers by Zoe Simmons.

    ~

    For poets looking to improve their submissions, I recommend reading the submission guidelines carefully. Make sure your poems meet the required line lengths and widths and do not exceed the maximum number of poems if you want your entry to be considered. All entries are judged blind without knowing who the author is so do not put your name anywhere on your document or in the file name. If you do, your entry is immediately disqualified.

    In judging the prize, I was looking for poems that were relatable, universal and spoke to the experience of being human. The poems that stood out used evocative language, vivid images and had a strong sense time / place or personality. They also had a solid grasp of form and demonstrated various poetic devices including enjambment, metaphor, repetition and rhyme.

    ~

    Thank you once again to all the poets who submitted their entries to the Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets. It was wonderful to see so many emerging poets writing to such a high standard.

  • Award Ceremony for the Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets
    Award Ceremony for the Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets

    After all the disruptions of the past few months, Pocketry is excited to announce the awards ceremony for the Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets!

    You are cordially invited to attend the online awards ceremony on Zoom. Come along to find out just who will win three hours of online mentorship and publication of their poetry in an instant book.

    Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets Awards Ceremony

    6.30pm AEDT

    Wednesday 23rd March 2022

    https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85692324574

  • Pocketry Prize Winners
    Pocketry Prize Winners

    Lakshmi R Kanchi won the 2021 Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets with her collection, imagick.

    Lakshmi’s collection will be published as an A6 sized instant book by Pocketry. It will be available to purchase in Pocketry’s online shop.

     

    There were three highly commended entries:

    earthlings by Kristina Deminick,

    Beyond the eucalypts by Steph Amir and

    Clear Answers by Zoe Simmons.

     

    Melbourne poet and actor, Sophia Riozzi won the inaugural Pocketry Prize for Unpublished Poets with her collection, Year of the Double Autumn.

     

    There were three highly commended entries:

    Lorikeets by Steph Amir,

    Stray Perceptions by Melissa Favasuli and

    Pandemic 575: A Collection of Haiku for the Year 2020 by Megan Riedl.

     

  • Pocketry’s Guide to Getting Published
    Pocketry’s Guide to Getting Published

    Pocketry knows how hard it is to get your work published by a literary journal which is why we have created this handy mini book. It’s filled with everything you ever wanted to know about getting your poetry into a literary journal and more!

    Buy now in our new online shop!

  • The Poet’s Toolkit
    The Poet’s Toolkit

    You love to write and you want to improve your poetry but where do you start? Like most writers, you’ve got limited funds and probably not a lot of spare time. There’s so much information out there, how do you know what’s useful?

    Pocketry is pleased to present a list of free online resources and recommended reading for aspiring and emerging poets. We know how tough it can be to find the resources and information you need which is why we have put these lists together. We are passionate about helping emerging and aspiring poets get their work heard and seen!

    If you have any great tools or free resources or recommended books to add to this list, please send an e-mail to hello @ indraniperera dot com with ‘Poet’s Toolkit’ in the subject line.

  • Pocketry Presents A Poetry Podcast
    Pocketry Presents A Poetry Podcast

    We’re celebrating the third issue of the Pocketry Almanack as well as Pocketry’s 18 month anniversary with our very first podcast episode!

    We’ve gathered together all the poets appearing in issue three of the Pocketry Almanack as well as the artist who drew the back cover. They’ve sent in little gems which I’ve strung together to make a shiny necklace.

    In the first episode of the podcast you’ll hear readings from our featured poets Andrew Brion, Amanada Collins, Anne Collopy, Kelle Cunningham and Rowan White. Our back cover artist, Shirley Kanyon, shares her life, inspirations and creative process with us. You’ll also hear a story from Melbourne poet, Josh Cake, that was exchanged for a copy of the Almanack. As well as some intriguing words that have been bartered for the Almanack.

    So pop in your ear buds or put on your head phones and prepare your ears for an auditory treat to warm your mind.

    You can download an episode here, on Apple Music or Spotify.

    Happy listening!