The Crunch discussion

1 view
Issue Discussions > Issue 3 – Alan Kellermann

Comments Showing 1-1 of 1 (1 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Rhys (last edited May 24, 2018 03:54AM) (new)

Rhys Owain Williams (rhysowain) | 24 comments Mod
The Crunch Issue 3, June 2016
w/ Alan Kellermann



Editorial
Last December, there was a fire at Crunch HQ. Thankfully nobody was hurt, but the damage to our equipment was devastating. Maybe our use of the Thomas Gray quote “poetry is thoughts that breathe, and words that burn” on our homepage had riled the fates. It’s taken us the best part of 6 months, but we are now back on our feet and raring to go.

As you may know (perhaps all too well), very few poets make a living from simply writing poetry. Those who aren’t also prolific novelists or essayists might be editors, lecturers, librarians – or even television personalities. Whatever work a poet can get to bump up the pay packet, whilst keeping a grip on that precious writing time. But how does the teaching and editing of poetry affect the writing of poetry?

Shortly before the fire, we sat down with a man who could answer this question. Alan Kellermann is a poet first and foremost, but he is also a poetry editor and lecturer. Conversation topics on the podcast we recorded were varied, though always centred around poetry and thoroughly interesting. We touched upon the writing, editing, teaching and performance of poetry, and also the curiously appealing idea of returning to the pamphlet form following the publication of a first collection.

We think Alan's insights on the podcast – in addition to the three poems he has recorded for us – have made this a fascinating issue of The Crunch, and so we're glad to be able to bring it to you as intended.

Click here to see the full issue on crunchpoetry.com


back to top