The
amazingly diverse poet (and Great Permission Giver) Edward Smallfield tagged us
in a blog hop project called “The Next Big Thing.” Writers around the world are
tagged by other writers and asked to respond to 10 questions in a
self-interview about their latest big project. Our response, about our interactive
poetry project The Poetry Machine, is more a living machine than a publication
–though we have published an anthology of machine generated poems.
1. What is the working title of the book?
The website is www.thepoetrymachine.net
2. Where did the idea come from for the book?
The
Poetry Machine was a brainchild of over 4 years ago. Frank and myself wanted to
create an interactive poetry experience for a DADA event in Barcelona called the Navidada and we came up
with the idea of building an analogue machine which would extract a poem from a
person.
3. What genre does your book fall under?
Poetry.
But when The Poetry Machine is working at full capacity, you never quite know
what it will extract.
4. If applicable, whom would you choose to play
your characters in a movie rendition?
Bert
and Frank the poetry technicians would be played by Steve Buscemi and Gene
Wilder.
5. What is a one-sentence synopsis of your book?
The
Poetry Machine turns people into poems.
6. Will your work be self published or represented
by an agency?
The Poetry Machine publishes on the spot. See for
yourselves.
7. How long did it take you to write the first
draft of the manuscript?
The
Poetry Machine has been evolving for 4 years. It has become more and less
sophisticated at various points in its history. The first machine was built in
a couple of months and the online poetry machine was under construction,for
about 6 months. It was made reality by our inspired designer, Sebastien Vidal.
8. Who or what inspired you to write this book?
The
Poetry Machine was inspired by one of those electrical partnerships in which
two technicians’ minds met over a blueprint. The rest is history.
9. What other books would you compare this story to
in your genre?
The
Steampunk Bible, The Automatic Grammatizator by Roald Dahl, about a story
writing machine. Nothing really compares to The Poetry Machine.
10. What else about your book might pique the
reader’s interest?
We find everything about The Poetry Machine
fascinating. Most importantly, it is the people who go through the machine and
leave their words stuck in its piping and engines. Wiping the machine clean and
finding the debris of poems is the highlight of this dirty work. What surprises
people most about the machine is how reliably it works on “non-poets”. When
people recognize their own words and phrases in a poem, they have the strange
sense that a dream has been stolen or that everything they ever meant to say
has been magically put before them.
Check out Ed Smallfield's post at http://adaywithouttheever.blogspot.com.es
On 1 May Jessica Rainey will continue the project by answering the questions about her digital project.
Check out Ed Smallfield's post at http://adaywithouttheever.blogspot.com.es
On 1 May Jessica Rainey will continue the project by answering the questions about her digital project.