Poems on Pillows at the Sydney Writers' Festival

2:30: Poems on Pillows
Australian Poetry Ltd, the new 'peak industry body for poetry' (I didn't make that up!) ran a competition in the lead-up to the Festival. People were asked to submit 10-line poems on the theme of Sweet Dreams. Seven poems were selected, printed on postcards and placed on the pillow of every bed in the hotel where Festival guests were staying. At this session the seven winning poems were read to us, six of them by the poets.

My guess is that the audience was mostly friends and relatives of the winners, and losers who had come to see what they'd been beaten by. It turned out I belonged in both categories. My submission, which I'm too embarrassed to reproduce here, played around with  Daisy Bates's phrase 'smooth the pillow of the dying race' and amounted to a little squib about genocide. I'd failed to notice the Sweet Dreams theme and wasn't surprised when I didn't make the cut.

I would have been delighted to find any one of winning poems on my pillow, and it wasn't surprising to hear that at least one distinguished writer was seen addressing his postcard poem to his mother.

Five of the winners are connected in some way with writing for children or young adults: Tricia Dearborn, Bill Condon, Libby Hathorn, Laura Jan Shore and Richard Tipping. I don't know about the others, Scott Chambers and Josh McMahon. When I pointed this preponderance out during the brief question time, one of the panellists recognised me and replied by drawing attention to me as a benefactor of children's poets in my past life as editor of the School Magazine, which was good squirmy fun.

 

Reposted from Me Fail? I Fly!

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