Cyndi Macmillan
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Cyndi MacMillan lives in a small town in Ontario that is home to North America’s largest working waterwheel. Her writing has appeared in notable Canadian literary journals and local newspapers. 

A Cruel Light is her debut gothic mystery (4/4/2023). She has been a Jill-of-all-trades, but for as long as she can remember, she has dreamt of being a novelist.  Hard work and the wonderful team at Crooked Lane Books have made that dream a reality.  Please note that her husband and daughter kindly keep her coffee mug filled when she is wrestling with a suspenseful chapter.   During a pandemic lockdown, the family adopted a rescue cat who chirps. 

When not writing, Cyndi enjoys reading Gothics, scrapbooking, and losing horribly at board games.  Works-in-progress include the second (and third) Annora Garde Mystery, a Canadian noir series, and a standalone horror mystery, so more often than not, Cyndi is writing.  She is a member of Crime Writers of Canada.

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THE POETRY PUB: CONTEMPORARY RHYME & THE NEW FORMALISM

Blog Posted by Cyndi Macmillan: 5/5/2017 12:19:00 PM

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Date: 5/8/2017 3:49:00 AM
Cyndi,Originally I understand capitalization in poetry was to distinguish it from prose(then naturally it became a tradition) The earliest one to break that tradition that I have found was in the 1920's in early works of e e cummings.He then made lower case his usp
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Date: 5/7/2017 1:07:00 AM
I just came to read the one called Rooftops as you suggested to me. Yes, I love this kind of writing. It's descriptive with imagery that is not incomprehensible to me. I get turned off seeing poems longer than a sonnet form. I guess I just like the really short poems best. But indeed, this man's writing is quite wonderful (and he punctuates!!)
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/7/2017 8:24:00 AM
:D Glad you liked it and even journals prefer that poems remain on one page (to allow for more poems in the journal) though sometimes if the poem is superb, they publish pieces even four pages long. To each their own and there are many short poems that really shine!
Date: 5/6/2017 5:06:00 PM
This topic has been discussed many times, including by the poets you quote (e.g. A.E. Stallings). See https://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/11/why-no-one-wants-to-be-a-new-formalist/
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/7/2017 8:25:00 AM
Dem is fightin' words! LOL!
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/6/2017 9:03:00 PM
Good article and FUNNY. Apparently, since I've had a sonnet published, "I'M" considered a new formalist? Uhhh (she backs away from the label, too!) Noooooo! (its like having a 'Scarlet' N.F. sewn to your clothing a la Hawthorne! LOL!
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/6/2017 6:01:00 PM
Thanks, John! family time. I read that later tonight. (my guess before reading this is that being labeled a formalist may be seen as a bit of snub from the academics? Just guessing before I read the article. Thanks for sharing it here!
Date: 5/6/2017 7:52:00 AM
Ooooh. "Though Steele has often been grouped as one of the major practitioners of New Formalism, he is wary of the term, alleging it “suggests, among other things, an interest in style rather than substance, whereas I believe that the two are mutually vital in any successful poem. I employ the traditional instruments of verse simply because I love the symmetries and surprises that they produce and because meter especially allows me to render feelings and ideas more flexibly and precisely than I otherwise could.” www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poets/detail/timothy-steele (It delves into the 'revolution' against free verse. )
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/6/2017 5:59:00 PM
Chris. I wrote a poem and posted it here on Soup. Has that rain... and the African famine. The world is so freaking messed up. They are saying locally there's too much water for the farmers to start planting! Then, across the world there is a drought and so the plants are all dead. WACKED!
Date: 5/6/2017 2:40:00 AM
the only one i'm really keen on is the last one by timothy steele - very vivid and descriptive, lovely use of language...that first stanza could easily be a stand-alone 'snapshot' poem, and in fact i thought it WAS! because i hadn't scrolled down far enough on my computer i initially read it as a short six-line poem! lol
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/6/2017 7:21:00 AM
Imagery, for one, must be there. "The needle's eye weeping its black thread', for example, is an image of the mourning, weeping and black... needle is a sharp thing. And TO needle is to pester, to bother, to provoke. So wordplay...
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/6/2017 7:17:00 AM
I like these pieces, but I do not love them. I've never posted rhyme in the pub. I wanted to show that rhyme poems can be published, but they must have a lot more to them then JUST the rhyme or even meter.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/6/2017 7:14:00 AM
The only thing which I don't truly enjoy about the last one is that there is no enjambment whatsoever between the stanzas... it effectively slows down the read, but it causes each 5 lines to become these little islands onto themselves.
Date: 5/5/2017 8:04:00 PM
I like "Lenten Songs" depth. I get so much of what it is saying..."That the living are more real when they are dead, terrifies..." We put up all these walls around our relationships, masks and costumes, you- play the hero and you-the villain. But when someone dies all that is left is what is REAL. And what remains is regret, too often.
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Date: 5/5/2017 7:54:00 PM
Okay, Sine Qua Non has that same quality, to me,as Plath's "Daddy" poem. There's a kind of "get it out!" quality. "The crickets pause to let the winter pass" is a powerful way to show a season has gone by. I enjoyed. There is so much hurt to the "void stars hang in" the nothingness of it all. The dark has too much to fit into this tiny box. The loop of cruelty, all those family "ties," the opportunity to forgive and heal and instead the endless circle game, the "possible" is not just the surgery, is it? It's about letting go of that dark.The use of the word "our" not "her." The line cuts are sliced just so. The realization of how much it takes out of a person to live a long life.
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Date: 5/5/2017 4:59:00 PM
So captivated by Steele's poem that I did not notice the line caps until I read the other comments below.I suppose it shows how much I am into content as opposed to form(I'll add this point to my own )blog .On many lines the line cap merely emphasised the roving camera style and I did not notice them.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/6/2017 7:27:00 AM
A great deal of his lines end with either a comma or period. So perhaps our eye was trained to expect the capitalization. The first stanza has no enjambment between lines, and I think we grew accustomed to the patterning to the point we just moved between the lines... interesting approach, I'd say.
Date: 5/5/2017 4:22:00 PM
From a roof top,rings my bell Cyndi.Steele 's images last long after you close down the kindle.A poem to savour and re read .Meat and drink to an imagist like myself.You have a flare for bringing quality poetry to our pub nights.Thanks
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Brian Strand
Date: 5/5/2017 4:27:00 PM
I will check him out to see whether he has written more Any hints Cyndi?
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Brian Strand
Date: 5/5/2017 4:26:00 PM
To analyse Steele's poem would be to spoil the 'as is' moment of that first impression left indelible within
Date: 5/5/2017 4:11:00 PM
the zero that holds the sum in place to me meant.. even nothing is something
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Doug Vinson
Date: 5/5/2017 5:44:00 PM
"Sine Qua Non" - without which not, or, without which, nothing - something that is absolutely necessary, essential, indispensable, as parents are. The author is more aware of things without her father.
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Doug Vinson
Date: 5/5/2017 5:41:00 PM
"The zero that still holds the sum in place." Yes, we cannot remove the zero and have the sum be the same. The silence impacts us when the fridge goes silent - I think this is the daughter appreciating her father more now that he's gone.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/5/2017 5:08:00 PM
(thinking) A necessary absence, the emptiness a requirement... hmm.... STILL... remaining!... still holds the sum in place. I think...the relationship was distant, but she recognizes that it did, after all, have a value... as empty as it was?
Date: 5/5/2017 2:51:00 PM
The first poem Sine Qua Non hit me like shattered glass that gives no reflection above a painted brick wall written by those in pain as I was raised by an abusive father and saw nothing in him... like the window that has no reflection this poem expresses a sense of nothing, It's what I felt when hearing of my father's death..which means I saw this poem from a different perspective than Doug did
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Doug Vinson
Date: 5/5/2017 5:32:00 PM
Frederic, I am sorry - I have nothing in experience to compare. It's a good poem to talk about. I think the "nothing" is definitely there, in the poem, leaving us to wonder about how, exactly, it is affecting the author.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/5/2017 4:04:00 PM
If I could, I'd hug you hard, by the way. I think you've been through much, but I think we may share this: we've found family in friends, in spouses and in kinder adults along the way and each person was a gift, a way to see the world as less hurtful. (((YOU))))
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/5/2017 3:58:00 PM
So, I brought that to the read... and the zero that holds the sum in place.. I'm still struggling with that line. The sum... the answer... the entirety... a summary... a summary is a brief outline that encapsulates a larger body of work.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/5/2017 3:51:00 PM
I understand, Frederic. A good poem has a way of meaning different things to different people as each reader brings their own experiences into the work. My father was a good man but spent little time with me after my mother suicided. It was an extremely lonely period from me.
Date: 5/5/2017 1:00:00 PM
A feeling of wealth at the opening of this page. Sine Qua Non - good use of title in relation to the poem. The emptiness a sad child feels when a parent has died. 14 lines - hmm, where have we seen that before? "Your absence, father, is nothing" - stated twice; the profundity of the loss apparent. There is a weightful gravitas to this poem, and I like it a lot, with all its imagery and associations.
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Cyndi Macmillan
Date: 5/5/2017 1:31:00 PM
:D Lots here...

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