Showing posts with label Earth Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earth Day. Show all posts

Friday, March 29, 2013

Sublime Planet Begins Celebration of Earth Day 2013 - Free Kindle Book


For the next 4 days, March 29 through April 2, Sublime Planet is free to download at Amazon!  The book features exquisite photography by Ann Howley, and award-winning ecological poetry by me and my co-author Carolyn Howard-Johnson.  You can hear me read the title poem here: http://magdalenaball.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/SublimePlanet.mp3

Kristin Johnson has just published the following wonderful review: "Delving into this collection of poetry feels like starting from the famous ... image of Earth from space, and then jumping headfirst into a Google Earth armchair voyage to distant corners and familiar spaces, a verse trip into scientific and emotional depths. No security checkpoints needed here, no airline tickets, no cruise ships. Your passport is imagination, issued by the mind and the world. The passport stamps read "...the crocodile icefish/has an oyster-white heart--not red" (Howard-Johnson's "Transparent Love Song"), or "Ten metres high/cracking the bleached dunes of memories" ("These Heavy Sands"), or other free verse exotic ports of call. This poetry has the 'Wow' factor, and it's clear that these two inspire each other, their quiet but penetrating observations on our fragile yet vibrant planet meshing and complementing each other. This book of poems does more than a hundred shrill eco-screeds to awaken us to concern for the world, for water scarcity, for the Pacific Garbage Patch and trashtrees, for endangered species and tree victims of forest fires, the changing of the weather. Our planet is poetry, as this collection so adroitly proves."  But don't take her word for it.  Go grab yourself a copy here:  http://bitly.com/EarthDayKind
It's absolutely free (but not for long!).

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Sublime Planet! Meet Ann Howley, the illustrator


As some of you may already know, I've got a new book scheduled for release on Earth Day (April 22nd).  There are a few aspects of this book that particularly excite me.  One is that it's another poetry collaboration with talented poet Carolyn Howard-Johnson.  Another is that it's a full-length poetry collection which is all environmentally themed, and we're partnering with a sustainability charity, using the profits to support a wonderful cause (more on that soon!).  I'm also very excited about the amazing photographer we've partnered with: Ann Howley.  Ann's work is so exquisite, inspired by her travels, her love of the natural world, and by what is clearly a very well-honed eye for the visual.  Ann's work appears on the cover and inside the book and I've invited her to drop by the blog for a little chat.  

Your images are so evocative - what inspires you?

I think I’m inspired by the moment.  Since each moment is different and I am different in each moment, I am attracted to different things all the time. That makes it fun to look back at images from previous photo outings to relive what I was seeing at the time.

There's obviously a relationship between the looking, and the moment when you decide that what you're seeing has to be captured on camera - frozen in time or turned from perception into art.  Talk to me about that and how you know when to take a photo.  

My full dive into photography came just as digital cameras were coming popular.  At the time, I was learning photography basics as well as dark room printing. The shift to digital allowed me to pursue photography in a big way because of the cost reduction.  It used to cost me over $1,000 to get film processed after a trip. With digital, after the large cost investment in cameras, the cost is minimal. I don’t have fear of “wasting pixels.”

All that is to say that I don’t really think about when is the “right” moment any more. If I see something that intrigues me, I shoot. Sometimes it’s one shot and sometimes that starts me digging further into what I am seeing.


In 2009, you went on a pilgrimage.  Tell me about the impact of that on your work.

Yes, I walked 500 miles on the Camino de Santiago across northern Spain. I think the pilgrimage expanded my ability to see, but also allowed me to not rely so much on my camera.  About a third of the way into my pilgrimage, I damaged the borrowed camera I had brought (because my camera with accessories weighed seven pounds and was not conducive to backpacking!).  While the camera sounded like it was capturing images, I had no way to be sure.  I had to decide if the trip was about “the journey” or “capturing the journey”.  I decided on the former and didn’t stop to get the camera repaired.  With that, I packed the camera and only took it out for shots I really wanted.  On shots I considered “must haves,” I set the camera on automatic, thinking it might compensate for the damage. Ironically, the camera was set up for very small files, so the images I wanted most, I didn’t get.

I will be going on my second pilgrimage this May to Portugal and Spain. It will be interesting to see how my answer to the question changes.


Much of your work is nature oriented.  Has this always been the case for you? Why - what draws you to your subjects?

I think of my work as originally travel oriented, but I guess my travel choices are often nature oriented. I wanted to go to Africa ever since seeing the movie “Born Free” as a child.  Once I visited Kenya and Tanzania in 1995, everything connected. What I love about shooting nature and wildlife is the peace of being in a beautiful setting, far away from everyday life. I love the quiet. I could sit watching a sunset or waiting for the perfect pose of a lion, bird or even butterfly for as long as the opportunity presents itself. It’s a meditation.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Poetry Monday: Earth Day Poem



It's Earth Day today. I'm not usually a 'tree hugger' as such (though the bark on some of the eucalypts around my house is so smooth, it's tempting), but our Goldilocks planet is a pretty incredible place, and I've been doing some intense reading (and a little writing) on the current state of play, and thought that, for today, I'd provide an environmental poem from an upcoming collection I'm working on with my poetry partner Carolyn Howard-Johnson.  We were actually hoping to have the book ready to launch this year on Earth Day, but we since attracted the attention of an agent for our foodie poetry book (Persephone's Juicy Jewels - more on that soon), and have been focusing our poetic attention.  Nevertheless, Earth Day it is and environmental poetry you shall have. 

Tipping Point

From a stable equilibrium
hands outstretched
sunshine lights your hair
molten gold
melts to horizon
calmly
changing light to dark
day to night.

Your young eyes flash
warming the room
the house
the planet

with growth comes hunger
rumbling guts
gnaw your insides
you eat and eat through
four billion years of evolution
now held loosely
by one thread.

When our fingers touch
electricity crackles
static charge connection
in a moment's pause
between past and present
the highway
and the road
fork held high
paused, undetermined
delicate 
a crossroad.

The future
waits impatiently
your decision.