Reading a Poem for “Poetry Moment”

Spokane Public Radio has a wonderful program for local poets to read their own and other’s poems each weekday morning. During the Get Lit Festival, they invited poets to read a single poem at the Central Library sound studio. Here is a link to the poem I read: “Mac pipes in the Storm”. Enjoy!

https://www.spokanepublicradio.org/show/poetry-moment/2025-05-07/michelle-eames-reads-mac-pipes-in-the-storm

[Photo credit Pexels Free Photos]

Writing for My Audience

Know your audience, they say, in all of the “How to Write” essays and websites; then you can successfully market your books to that audience.  But my audience keeps changing as I write.  I tend to hop from humor, to poetry, to essays.  My styles and subjects vary widely.

There is the horse-people audience; where I can reach out to our commonalities and our love of horses.  My humorous memoir about living with horses sells best in a local tack shop.  

There is my home-town audience.  When I had a reading in my hometown of Blaine, Washington, I shared about what the town used to be like when I kept my horse in our back yard.  I pointed out that the current grocery store location used to be a big hay field where one of my stories occurred. 

When I had a reading in a Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, bookstore, I shared some of the humor from my book, and focused on the broader audience’s common love of animals, and what animals teach us.

Another time, when I joined a panel with more literary-style poets and writers, I read a short prose piece from my book, to better illustrate the many ways of writing about animals, and how our relationships with animals can be used as metaphors for other things.  I also reached out to a more literary audience when I shared information on my short collection of fire poems in Triple 23.  Poetry readers are yet another audience that can be different than humor or memoir readers.    

I can’t decide if my eclectic writing style is a blessing or a curse.  If I only wrote humor, I could market that humor and immediately jump into writing another similar book.  Yet the poems and essays in my brain want to be written and heard, too.  Recently I saw writing described as “an expensive hobby” where only a relatively few writers make a lot of money.  I’ve decided to embrace that idea.  My hobby of writing is a second expensive hobby after my hobby of horseback riding. 

Like jumping my horse over fallen logs in the woods, I jump from audience to audience as my writing proceeds.  Just as I explore different riding disciplines with my all-around horse, I explore different writing disciplines.  I will be the all-around writer and rider.  When mixing Western and English styles of riding, I use the term “Wenglish”.  When I’m writing humor, essays, and poetry, I need a new term.  Maybe “Hum-ess-try”?  How about “Po-ess-um”?   Oh, that last word can be condensed to “possum”!  I think I need to write a poem about opossums. 

[photo credit pexels.com]

Happy New Year and Happy New Book Year!

My fire poems are finally published! Ravenna Press has published Triple No. 23, with poetry chapbooks (short collections) by three poets (including me!). I was so happy to receive a box with my copies on the Winter Solstice.  It definitely brightened the longest night of the year.  Read on for details, and how to get copies.

My section of the book is titled Fire Triangle (Heat, Fuel, Oxygen) and includes 16 poems related to fire and wildland fire fighters, with several accompanying illustrations titled Arbitrary Borders by John Burgess, a graphic artist.

The second section of the book is titled Context for an Afterthought with prose poems by Heikki Huotari.

The third section of the book is titled Desire’s Authority with poems by J.I. Kleinberg.  This poet from Bellingham, Washington, writes collage poems, created with fragments of magazine text.  (They’re pretty cool; I might have to try some.)

How to get copies:

Option 1: If you would like a signed copy of the book, you can message, comment, or email me, and we’ll figure out the best purchase process.  The book is $12.95, and shipping within the U.S. is $5.00.  But if you’re close, I can deliver or meet you somewhere. I’m happy to provide copies until I run out.  Note that this option is the only way I get a bit of money, because, well, poetry.

Option 2: You can order the book from the publisher, here:   https://ravennapress.com/books/series/triple-series/

Option 3: You can ask your local bookstore to get you a copy.  And maybe they’ll order extras.  And maybe lots of people will buy them, and maybe we poets will be famous!!  But not rich.  Because, well, poetry.

Option 4: It should be available on Amazon, too. 

Again, Happy New Year and I hope you read lots of good books this year, including some poetry.