O'Miami and
WLRN of South Florida are starting off their National Poetry Month celebrations with a fun tumblr poetry challenge: write an ode to your zip code consisting of as many words in each line as indicated by your zip code: mine is 33185. I wrote this:
http://zipodes.tumblr.com/post/114664222011/33185
published on their Ode to Your Zip Code tumblr on March 26th:
Ode to Your Zip Code archive
Miami Herald reporter Kathleene Devaney also interviewed me and discussed my poem in an article just published on the 29th:
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article16841207.html
And so it begins!
Another nice surprise today, I finally received my poetry chapbook from the publishers--
https://finishinglinepress.com/product_info.php?products_id=2243
Blurbs for my book, kindly provided by Andrea Hollander and Julie Marie Wade, FIU Creative Writing professor:
The poems in Beatriz Fernandez's Shining from a Different Firmament do
just that. They shine light on women history has slighted, mistreated,
or forgotten altogether. They give us "Hypatia's Revenge," "Nefertiti's
Secret," and "The Picture of Constance Wilde." They also consider
Dante's passion for Beatrice and examine Richard the Lionheart's
mummified heart. This collection is pithy and surprising, rich with
persona poems rendered as ghazals, epistles, and ekphrastic musings.
Julianna Baggott's Lizzie Borden in Love: Poems in Women’s Voices has
found a worthy companion in Beatriz Fernandez's stirring debut. Like the
women she embodies, Fernandez writes with the vision of one who
"chart[s] the oceans of the night."
--Julie Marie Wade, author of Without, Postage Due, and When I Was Straight. www.juliemariewade.com
Amid this era of poetry that runs the gamut from solipsism to
impenetrability, how refreshing to find a poet of intelligence who
writes with clarity about those whose lives, whether actual or
fictional, deserve more notice. Reminiscent of Robert Browning in his
ability to vividly inhabit voices other than his own, Beatriz Fitzgerald
Fernandez is a welcome master of both open and closed forms, as she
brings together history, compassion, and music to each poem in this fine
first collection.
—Andrea Hollander, author of Landscape with Female Figure: New & Selected Poems, 1982 – 2012