Pearl Pirie’s lists, reviews, interviews, etc. since 2005

The Work

There are two types of goals: process goals and outcome goals.

Outcome goals, for an example, not my goal, to lead writers on a cruise retreat so that you travel is free. To have 10,000 followers. To sell 5000 copies of your book. To have one of the big companies publish your book.

Process goals come from practice, exploration, learning outside this particular poem how effects are created. It is about the habit of writing, the muscle memory of sitting down and bum-in-chair-time. It’s literary culture, community, history. It’s showing up, revising, submitting, participating, developing a critical eye, developing a loving eye, developing a curious mind. The process is to stay engaged. As Max Ehrmann put it, “Keep interested in your own career, however humble; it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.”

The main distinction is process goals and outcome goals is that the former are within your agency. Outcome goals out of your control. They rely on magazines, publishers, audiences, zeitgeist beyond the elbow grease of your process.

Poetry in part is a way to impose order, or find and highlight order or patterns. It is skill of finding significance and meaning, but if you try too hard, are too attached, remember that meaning isn’t hard to confer randomly. Try “he’s such a ___” and add a random noun. {cucumber, cummerbund, paper cut}. Meaning isn’t hard. It’s near unavoidable with our meaning-addled brains.

The danger in poetry is to hard-close, to soothe too soon, to give a satisfying shape before the work. It is to speak like a bland or witty horoscope containing no actual thought, but flattering appearance of it, thereby manufacturing a patronizing poet voice of authority.

A risk is to make the work the packaging words and poetic devices, the hook and the resolution, instead of the deeper work of changing self, disturbing system defaults, growth, depth, letting chaos turn to genuine insight into systems or witness the discomfiting. 

As hard as it can be to be published, with 1% to 3% acceptance rates, the hard part of writing, the most active time is the making, the improving, the shaking up your own practice, the expanding or leaning into the weirdness of your brain. The sporadic hurry-scurry of pitching poems is work but is not The Work.

Top reads for 2026

So far, my fav reads of all genres are these with 6/14 being rereads. I realize the names alone are not giving much detail. I’ve only done reviews of a couple. Be that as it may,


The Last Song of the World by Joseph Fasano (Copper Canyon, 2024) [reread]
My Red, The Selected Haiku of John Stevenson (Brooks Books, 2021) [reread]
The Black Wolf by Louise Penny (Minotaur Books, 2025)
Screaming Obscenities at the Sky by Christian McPherson (At Bay Press, 2025)
Red Moon by Kim Stanley Robinson (Hachette Book Group, 2018)
Becoming Altar: New and Selected Poems by Kyla Houbolt (Suppress, 2025)
The Thirteenth Apocalypse by MissUnderstoodLyrics (AO3, 2025)
Cinema of the Present by Lisa Robertson (Coach House, 2014) [reread]
Weather by Rob Taylor (Gaspereau Press, 2024) [reread]
Do It Wrong: How to be a Poet in the Twenty-first Century by Derek Beaulieu (Assembly Press, 2026)
Lycanthropy and Other Chronic Illnesses by Kristen O’Neal (Quirk Books, 2022)
The New Road (is an Old Friend) by MisunderstoodLyrics (AO3, 2024) [reread]
Turtle Dreams: The Red Moon Anthology of English Language Poetry 2025, ed. by Jim Kacian (Red Moon Press, 2026)
No End in Strangeness by Bruce Taylor (Cormorant Books, 2011) [reread]

Ineffable

(It’s not exactly poetics, but it is fun, therefore poetry. )

Parallel play doesn’t have to be in-person so Bri and I, and the Hellhound—we seem to be pet-sitting for Adam— and a few hundred dozen ants, did a cosplay of our own local. (Ants were playing the role of a legion of demons.)

There are too many photos to dump on social media so I’ll have to link.

I must say I like the meeting place, across the road from Centre de L’Amour. (I’m sure that’s accidental.)

My favourite handsome devil was waiting for me with the Hellhound on the park bench.

They’ve spotted me.

We’ll wait until we’re sure no one has spotted us. Hard not to sit a little too close to be plausible hereditary enemies.

My favourite demon knows how to strike a pose.

Still time. We have the frozen peas, but no ducks. There was briefly a loon but she was uninterested.

To the world. I sense love.

Banana, fish, gorilla, shoelace with a dash of nutmeg, I may have overdone the miracling up of a picnic. That is a lot of food for two person-shaped beings.

The ants seem to have started before us. Hellhound appreciated his burger.

There was an unseemly loud vocalizations but I swear it wasn’t me. It seems it was a man down the shoreline who dunked into the water(?!) It is 13 degrees in the air(?!) Far too cold for swimming but he seemed to enjoy it. There’s no accounting for tastes.

Can I tempt you to some cheese? No that’s your job isn’t it? Ah, temptation accomplished.

Hellhound is getting restless for a walk. And the demon offers me a banana. *blush, blush*

btw, The Ineffable Con (next one Aug 21-23, 2026 in Cookham, UK and Online) raises money for alzheimersresearchuk.org in memory of Sir Terry Pratchett.

#RoadToGO3.

3 days left until #GoodOmens season 3!

Will we have sushi, crepes, or pizza to watch?

Spring Poem

the first sugar ant surveys the counter


lifting the silver brittleness of last years herbs, 
fresh oregano is clamped to the ground, more 
leaf than stem, more green than anything

except pincushion moss among its fellows 
and lichens crowding a planetscape on a boulder.
a housefly makes wobbly lobs of test flights.

clusters of junco flocks sweep tips of treetops.
a wooly bear sashays the road, determination in 
his direction and pace, while a mourning cloak rests 
nearby as if in the next comic frame, and in the third frame, 
blank gravel. the gr-unk gr-unk of geese heading north.
a garter snake with a lump of lunch in belly suns mid-lane.

spring peepers are massing and warming up their pitches.
a grouse at his lek booms, vibrates through my sternum 
from hundreds of feet away. on leaves, gelatinous 
egg masses glob here and there. a mole erodes into 
a squish of mould, wet pelt looking like a stone among stones.
his tunnels in hard snow remain, in their sporty convertible phase.

the gr-unk gr-unk of geese. the gr-unk gr-unk of geese.
a cluster of coltsfoot are in vibrant bloom outshining 
the sunniest spot while in shady waterfall ditches 

only its pink shocks of juicy rhizomes are exposed.
a turkey triples his size, fanning and pushing out 
his chest on a knoll like a politician campaigning 
while nine hens spread around him, their backs to him, 
pecking, but for all their insouciance, they have gathered 
and they linger. and soon enough the brood of chicks.