Jan. 16 |2 PM

Newport Visual
Arts Center

777 NW Beach Drive
Newport OR 97365

open mic follows

Admission $8.00

Free to Students

Brittney Corrigan -
Writers' on the Edge Q&A;

  1. Why did you become a writer? How did you get started?
    A writer was not something I became &endash; it's something I always was. I've been writing since I was a kid. I started with short stories and poetry, and over the years my focus turned to poetry almost entirely. But it was my high school English teacher who most encouraged me and made me believe that it was who I really was at my core.
  2. What is your writing routine? How do you discipline yourself to keep at it?
    I don't have a specific routine. I have two children and a full time job, so I write in bits and pieces whenever I can make the time. I carry poems around in my head for a long time before they make it to the page. Being part of a writing group that meets regularly also helps to keep me motivated and generating new work.
  3. How many drafts before you feel a poem is finished?
    Since my poems gestate in my head for quite some time, they usually only go through 1-2 drafts.
  4. What was the best thing that happened with regard to your writing career? The worst?
    The best thing was seeing the publication of my first book and first chapbook both in the same year. I wouldn't say that I have a worst thing, but the most challenging part is finding large stretches of time to focus on writing, especially now that I'm working on a new manuscript.
  5. What part of writing do you love the most? Hate or dislike the most?
    I love the excitement that comes when a new poem is pouring out of me onto the page after turning it over and over in my mind for so long. If I have to pick a dislike, it would be how difficult it is for new poets to get books published and find an audience.
  6. What do you like to read? Do you read while working on poetry? Favorite authors?
    I read plenty of poetry (which is very inspirational for my own work), but I also love fiction, particularly novels written in the magical realism style. My favorite poets are Sharon Olds, Joy Harjo, Naomi Shihab Nye, Natalie Diaz, and Deborah Digges. My favorite novelists are Tom Spanbauer, Barbara Kingsolver, Erin Morgenstern, and Ann Patchett.
  7. What was the best advice you received as a writer? The worst?
    The best advice I've had over the years is to just keep at it when it comes to both writing and publishing. The world of a poets is stacked high with rejection letters, but it's important to keep sending the work out there into the world. I don't have any specific memories of bad advice.
  8. Who has influenced you the most in terms of developing your personal writing style?
    I would say the poet Maxine Scates, who I have worked with off and on since college in classes, workshops, and on my senior thesis at Reed College. She is a gifted poet and teacher, and her guidance has been invaluable to my own writing process.
  9. Do you have a good luck charm or superstition?
    Not specifically, but I'm riddled with OCD tendencies, so superstition runs strong in my veins! ?
  10. If you weren't a writer, what would you be?
    Well, my day job is an event planner at Reed College, where I work with faculty members on the public lecture series on campus. And I absolutely love it.
  11. What quote or personal saying do you live by?
    From Henry James, "Try to be one of the people on whom nothing is lost!"
  12. What's next up for you, writing-wise?
    I'm working on a new manuscript titled Daughters, a series of persona poems that reimagine characters from mythology, folklore, fairy tales, and pop culture from the perspective of their daughters&endash;characters such as Bigfoot, the Mad Hatter, Medusa, and Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz. Taking on such topics as aging, rebellion, loss, abuse, and judgment, the voices of Daughters aim to turn the reader's conceptions of the characters on their ends and throw light upon what it means for a girl to come out from under her parents as a woman of her own making.
  13. If you could do anything over again, would you and what would it be?
    I would travel before having children. I would love to see Ireland in particular.
  14. What advice would you give beginning writers?
    Find a writing group or partner, develop your writing discipline, and read, read, read!
  15. Something we don't know about you?
    I have a soft spot for rescuing feral cats.
  16. And: what'd you like us to know about your latest release:
    Both of my books were released in 2012.
    Info recent books.
    A sample poem from Daughters.
    Published poems available online and forthcoming.