Newsletter: C.M. Mayo’s Podcasts, Publications, and Workshops, Plus Cyberflanerie (Extra-Eclectic Edition!)

Welcome to this Monday’s post, dear writerly readers! As of this year, the fifth Monday of the month, when there is one, is for my newsletter, covering my publications, podcasts, selected posts from Madam Mayo, and upcoming workshops. Plus cyberflanerie.

Over the past few months, apart from waiting for the pears to ripen, I’ve mainly been working on my book on Far West Texas, and relatedly, the Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project.

My writing assistants, Uliberto Quetzalpugtl and Washingtoniana Quetzalpugalotl, wondering when the pears will start to drop. So far nobody’s gotten plunked on the noggin.

PODCASTS

The Marfa Mondays Podcast 21: “Great Power in One: Miss Charles Emily Wilson”

Check out the new website for the Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project, where you can listen to in to 21 of the projected 24 podcasts anytime, and find the transcripts as well.

Next up in the series: An interview with Bill Smith about the cactus capital of Sanderson, Texas.

SELECTED MADAM MAYO POSTS

Writing Workshop Posts
(every second Monday of the month):

Frederick Turner’s In the Land of the Temple Caves Recommended, Plus From the Archives: Cal Newport’s Deep WorkStudy Hacks Blog; and on Quitting Social Media

Conjecture: The Powerful, Upfront, Fair and Square Technique to Blend Fiction into Your Nonfiction

From the Archives: Five 2 Word Exercises for Practicing Seeing as a Literary Artist in the Airport (or the Mall or the Train Station or the University Campus or the Car Wash, etc.)

Q & A s with a Fellow Writer
(every fourth Monday of the month):

Q & A with Ginger Eager on Her Debut Novel The Nature of Remains

Q & A with Art Taylor on The Boy Detective & The Summer of 74 and Other Tales of Suspense

Q & A with Ellen Prentiss Campbell on Writing Fiction and Her Latest Collection, Known by Heart

Other Selected Posts

From the Archives: A Visit to Las Pozas, Xilitla, San Luis Potosí, Mexico

In Memorium: William C. Gruben and his “Animals in the Arts in Texas”

WRITING WORKSHOP

In order to concentrate on writing my book I’ve taken a break from teaching this year, but I will be offering a one-hour workshop on poetic techniques for writers of fiction and narrative nonfiction at the Women Writing the West annual conference in Colorado Springs, Colorado this fall. If you’re anywhere in the area, and if your work focuses on anywhere / anything/ anyone in the US west of the Mississippi River, this might be a conference for you to consider. In particular, if you take your writing seriously, and if you’re looking to meet other writers, improve your writing skills, and to learn to pitch your work to agents, editors, and above all, help your book find its readers, I can warmly recommend this conference. I’ve participated twice now (you can read my edited transcript of a talk for the conference held in 2016 in Santa Fe here) and found it well worthwhile.

Saturday, October 17, 2020 
9:10-10:10 Poetic Techniques to Power Up– C.M. Mayo

For writers of fiction and narrative nonfiction (whether biography, nature writing, or memoir), award-winning poet and writer C.M. Mayo’s workshop gives you a toolkit of specific poetic techniques you can apply immediately to make your writing more vivid and engaging for your readers. Using handouts, first we’ll cover specificity with reference to the senses, a technique, basic as it may be, that many writers tend to underutilize. Then, in supersonic fashion, we’ll zoom over alliteration; use of imagery; repetition; listing; diction drops and spikes; synesthesia; and crucially, how to work with rhythm and sound to reinforce meaning. The goal is for your writing to take an immediate step up.

Meanwhile, for my students, and anyone else interested in creative writing, I will continue to post on some aspect of craft and/or creative process here at Madam Mayo blog on the second Monday of the month.

> You can always access the archive of Madam Mayo blog workshop posts here.

# # #

CYBERFLANERIE
(INSPIRING, INTERESTING, AND/OR USEFUL GLEANINGS)

Robert Laughlin, Preserver of a Mayan Language, Dies at 85

Rudy Rucker High on Gnarl and Chaos

Richard Cytowic on reading to the rescue (short, important)

Adam Garfinkle on deep literacy (long, thought-provoking)

Paul Graham’s essay on useful essays

Artist Marilee Shapiro who survived five days in the hospital with the covid at age 107— and is still making art

The Zoom thing (oyy) and more on the Zoom thing

Some little-known yet fascinating US history: occultist and independent scholar John Michael Greer’s post from Ecosophia In the Footsteps of High John

An already-oldie but thought-provoking goodie: What was really going on with all that TP (!!)

Tyler Cowan interviews John McWhorter

Kevin Kelly offers a raft of advice, including: “Anything real begins with the fiction of what could be. Imagination is therefore the most potent force in the universe, and a skill you can get better at. It’s the one skill in life that benefits from ignoring what everyone else knows.”

From Robert Giron at Gival Press (back in April, which was Poetry Month):

Take a few minutes away from the trauma of the day and read some poetry. Visit & read the Poetry Month 2020 Special Bilingual (Spanish/English) Edition in ArLiJo Issue No. 135 edited by Luis Alberto Ambroggio. Featuring poets: Lucha Corpi, Raquel Salas Rivera, Naomi Ayala, Orlando Rossardi, Tina Escaja, Daisy Zamora, Isaac Goldemberg, and Luis Alberto Ambroggio. Visit: http://www.ArLiJo.com

#

Stay safe!

#

Primitive Skills guru on “never hurry, never worry”:

#

Just ‘cuz it is so cool:

(Though certainly in English we underutilize clicks, we do use them. Notice how when an American is about to inform you about something, she says, tsk? It’s so quick, it’s easy to miss.)

P.S. I also, very occasionally, send out my newsletter to subscribers via email. If you would like to receive only the emailed newsletter, just zap me an email, I’ll be delighted to add you to my list. If in addition, or instead, you’d like to sign up for the Madam Mayo blog post alerts every Monday via email, just hie on over to the sidebar (or, if you’re on an iPhone, scroll down to the end of this post) for the signup. Welcome!

#

Oscar Wilde in West Point, Honey & Wax in Brooklyn

Notes on Wolfgang Schivelbusch’s The Railway Journey

The StandStand: One Highly Recommended Way
to Keep on Writing While Standing

#

Find out more about
C.M. Mayo’s books, articles, podcasts, and more.

Marfa Mondays’ Shiny New Website

Endless cool stuff in Far West Texas!! This is my photo of the tank at Meyers Spring, an important rock art site in the Lower Pecos and the subject of Marfa Mondays Podcast #15.

The Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project–24 podcasts apropos of my book in-progress on Far West Texas –21 podcasts posted to date– has a shiny new website, right here within www.madam-mayo.com. (Up there on the menu, click PODCASTS, et voilà.)

If the Marfa Mondays Podcast is new to you, it covers a region of gobsmackingly gorgeous skies and landscape, and interviews with and profiles of people as varied as artists, rockhounds, scientists, pitmasters, poets, rodeo riders, and so many more. I invite you to listen in anytime on iTunes or Podomatic (see all links listed below).

Why the new website when I already had one? I’ll spare you the snore-worthy story about my PC’s website software, so antique that Tutanhkamen’s grandma’s grandpa would have used it, and which I still use for my now 21-year old (and giwiggynormous) www.cmmayo.com, whence “Marfa Mondays” was parked. Suffice to say, now that I am working on a MacBook Pro, there’s a hippopotamus on my “to do” list; meanwhile, I’ll be better able to keep “Marfa Mondays” updated here on www.madam-mayo.com, which uses WordPress.

My writing assistant, after hearing me yammer on about my condundrums with ye olde Adobe PageMill. (His snoring was rather loud.)

Here’s the line up of Marfa Mondays podcasts so far:

21
Great Power in One: Miss Charles Emily Wilson
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“There is great power in one. This is what I always want, that one more person should know our story.” 
Miss Charles Emily Wilson, quoted in Jeff Guinn’s Our Land Before We Die

20
Raymond Caballero on Mexican Revolutionary General Pascual Orozco 
and Far West Texas
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“There were a lot of Mexicans very upset over the killing of Pascual Orozco… it was a huge controversy… In El Paso, in San Antonio, in Mexico City even President Carranza was asking for explanations… they wanted an investigation. So what happened was, ‘whoa! We didn’t kill some ordinary horse thief, we killed General Pascual Orozco, the biggest military hero of the early part of the Revolution! And what happens if the Mexicans in El Paso are able to pressure officials and they start a grand jury investigation there?’ As a result of the concern that they had, the Sheriff of Culberson County did something very unusual…” 
Raymond Caballero

19
Pitmaster Israel Campos in Pecos
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“Keep it simple. Cook with wood. Can’t beat it. No gas. Just wood. Keep it like the old days.”
Israel Campos

18
Lisa Fernandes at the Pecos Rodeo
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“Everybody wants to win Pecos. I mean, anybody who’s ever rodeoed in the world wants to win the Pecos Rodeo…You can ask anybody who knows anything about rodeo in the world, and they will tell you that Pecos, Texas is special.” 
Lisa Fernandes

17 
Under Sleeping Lion: Historian Lonn Taylor in Fort Davis
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“Everybody kind of has a stereotype of Marfa either as the cattle town where they filmed ‘Giant’ or a contemporary art center. I like discovering things that don’t fit into that stereotype.” 
Lonn Taylor

16
Tremendous Forms: 
Paul V. Chaplo on Finding Composition in the Landscape
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“On a list of the world’s largest super volcanoes, the Chinati caldera is near the top of the list, and when the Chinati erupted about 32 million years ago, the force of the eruption was greater than Vesuvius and greater than Krakatoa. To think that that happened just southwest of Marfa is mind-boggling” 
Paul V. Chaplo

15
Gifts of the Ancient Ones: 
Greg Williams on the Rock Art of the Lower Pecos Canyonlands
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“When I drive out here from San Antonio… I love rock and roll. I love old rock and roll music, it’s playing all the way. When I hit the Pecos River, I turn the music off and I usually roll the windows down. I don’t care how hot it is. I turn the air conditioner off and I usually drive way under the speed limit and then I become… at that point it’s not about me. At that point I become the smallest thing here and everything out there is bigger than me, everything out there has something to teach me or to show me” 
Greg Williams

14
Over Burro Mesa / The Kickapoo Ambassadors
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“No sign of burros on Burro Mesa. In two hours in this merciless landscape, we had seen no animal tracks, no scat; one lizard; one butterfly; two ravens”

13
Looking at Mexico in New Ways: 
An Interview with Historian John Tutino
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“I got to the point where I said, ‘The whole basic big picture of where we thought Mexico fit in the world is somewhere between wrong and mythical.” And you can’t change that by chipping away at the edges and saying, ‘look at this little piece.’” 
John Tutino

12
This Precious Place: An Interview with Dallas Baxter, 
Founding Editor of Cenizo Journal
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“I really love this place out here, and I love the way it looks. I like the way it smells. I like to go outside at night and just look at the sky and feel the wind, and I think it’s a really precious place, and I think it’s a precious place because of what has come before and because of what’s here now.”
Dallas Baxter

11 
Cowboy Songs by Cowboys 
and an Interview with Michael Stevens
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“They love the job they do. They love their animals. They appreciate the land. Have you driven around the country and seen cowboy churches? Have you ever seen a farmer church? I never saw anybody sing about their tractor! You know, the sailors sing about their ships, but the cowboys, they love that. 
Michael Stevens

10
A Visit to Swan House
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“When Simone Swan was living in New York, a house with two courtyards came to her in a dream. And it seemed like a dream to me that, less than a year after I’d first glimpsed Swan House from the road, I was sitting with its owner in the Nubian vault that was the living room, the shell high above us aglow with the orange light of morning…”

9
Mary Baxter, Painting the Big Bend
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“What is this human urge that you want to record what you see? It must go back to prehistoric times when people painted on the cave walls the animals that they saw. So I can’t explain why we do it. You know, nothing is as good as being there and seeing it, just being in the landscape. But there’s this urge to say, ‘I’d like to try to translate this. These colors, or these shapes, or these animals, and this moment, and at this place.” 
Mary Baxter

8
A Spell at Chinati Hot Springs
Podomatic iTunes | Transcript

“I walked down the arroyo through low canyons of limestone, watching out for Nelson, the famously cantankerous wild burro, who never did appear. It was not an easy hike because of the stones— all sizes, shapes, and many colors—and the puddles, and mud, and braids of water still flowing after the past weeks’ rains. In a leisurely, zigzag-y half an hour, I arrived at the Private Art Gallery…”

7
We Have Seen the Lights: 
The Marfa Ghost Lights Phenomenon
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“One time, very early in the morning, when he was driving a school bus from Marfa to Presidio, he saw in the rear view mirror that a big orb had appeared on the highway. It followed the bus, and then it came closer… And then it moved inside the bus.”

6
Marfa’s Moonlight Gemstones: 
An Interview with Paul Graybeal
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“What got me into a rock shop is collecting agate as a hobby when I first moved out here in the ’80s. Of course, I grew up in the Black Hills and that’s real rich in minerals and of course, fossils in Badlands and all that sort of stuff, so at a very young age I’m sure I was exposed to looking at the ground and looking for treasures on the ground…”
Paul Graybeal

5
Cynthia McAlister with the Buzz on the Bees
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“There are thousands kinds of bees out there… And the one I always like to tell people about first is the bright green iridescent sweat bees… Of course, bumblebees, the big black and yellow fuzzy, black and yellow bees. And then around here, a lot of people, I’m sure, are familiar with the big shiny black carpenter bee that digs a hole out here in agave stalks and yucca stalks and dry sotol stalks… “ 
Cynthia McAlister

4
Avram Dumitrescu, an Artist in Alpine
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“When we moved to Alpine, our landlords had about 30 chickens. Patty and Cindy, they’re on the west edge of town…that’s where I had my first experience being around chickens, because until then it was just stuff I’d eat. They’re basically mini-dinosaurs. Every time I go in, I’m always worried if I fall, and they start pecking me to death like in some horror movie… because they see red, they run to it and attack it. They’re very interesting characters, and I think what really made me laugh was Patty and Cindy had named them after characters from ‘The Sopranos.’” 
Avram Dumitrescu

3
Mary Bones on the Lost Art Colony
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“Julius Woeltz is my favorite… He was really known as a fine muralist. I think he painted well over 30 murals in his lifetime. He was very much was influenced by Rivera and Orozco. He and his very good friend, Xavier González, spent many summers down in Mexico and Mexico City looking at the muralists…” 
Mary Bones

2
Charles Angell in the Big Bend
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

“I just love to be in the river. It’s like the best seat in the house for the Big Bend, I think. You can see canyon walls. You see desert. You see riparian zones. There’s more wildlife there than anywhere else, and even if it’s a really, really hot summer day, you can stay cool.”  
Charles Angell

1
Introduction and Welcome
Podomatic | iTunes | Transcript

(Want to be alerted when the next podcast is available? 
I invite you to sign up for my newsletter.)

Meteor, Influences, Ambiance

Waaaay Out to the Big Bend of Far West Texas, 
and a Note on El Paso’s Elroy Bode

A Review of Patrick Dearen’s 
Bitter Waters: The Struggles of the Pecos River

Find out more about
C.M. Mayo’s books, articles, podcasts, and more.

The Marfa Mondays Podcast is Back! No. 21: “Great Power in One: Miss Charles Emily Wilson”

At long last the Marfa Mondays podcast #21 has been uploaded. It’s my reading of my longform essay, Great Power in One: Miss Charles Emily Wilson. Listen in anytime here, and read the longform essay here. It’s a true and important story about a Texas schoolteacher who was also an oral historian. I think her story will profoundly change how you think about US history and the borderlands. Certainly it did for me.

UPDATE: The transcript of this podcast is now available here.

(For those interested in my sources, I’ll posting the version of essay with the footnotes and bibliography shortly.)

UPDATE: The PDF of the complete paper with footnotes, bibliography and acknowledgements is now available for download:

My warmest thanks to SISCA President Augusta (Gigi) Pines and Secretary Windy Goodloe for so generously receiving me in Brackettville, taking the time to show me around, and all through the museum, and to so patiently answer my many questions. They urged me to carefully read Jeff Guinn’s Our Land Before We Die: The Proud Story of the Seminole Negro, which I found to be most excellent advice, for it is not only deeply-researched but splendidly well-written, a genuine pleasure to read. My thanks to Rocío Gil for her welcome in Brackettville and copy of her paper. And thanks to Doug Sivad, who provided a copy of his book, with its wealth of personal recollections and photographs. I found J.B. Bird’s www.johnhorse.com an invaluable resource. Chris Hale generously went through my first draft of this essay with his eagle legal eye, catching many errors and making numerous suggestions for which I am especially grateful. (I am of course responsible for any errors that may remain.) Thanks to my readers Cecilia Autrique and Sara Mansfield Taber for their critique and encouragement, as well. And finally, my thanks to Bruce A. Glasrud, for the prompt I needed to find my way into telling this multi-faceted, transnational story that covers thousands of miles and no less than five wars.

Windy Goodloe, Augusta Pines, and Rocío Gil in Brackettville, Texas.

The Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project is a projected 24 podcasts apropos of my book in-process on Far West Texas. Most are interviews; a few are readings of my essays. Some of this material will appear in my book, some of it will not. We’ll see.

P.S. If you’d like to be alerted when the next Marfa Mondays podcast is live, just send me an email and I’ll add you to my mailing list.

John Bigelow, Jr. in the Journal of Big Bend Studies

A Review of Patrick Dearen’s 
Bitter Waters: The Struggles of the Pecos River

Translating Across the Border

Podcasting for Writers: To Commit or Not (or Vaguely?)

(A repost of my guest-blog for Women Writing the West.)

Now that I’m working on my 54th podcast, I’ll admit, I love podcasting almost as much as writing. Starting back in 2009 I’ve podcasted many of my lectures, readings, and other events for my books, plus I created and continue to host two podcast series, “Marfa Mondays” and “Conversations with Other Writers.” It remains just as awesome to me now as it was with my first podcast that, whether rich or struggling, famous or new, we writers can project our voices instantly all over the world, while making them available to listeners at any time.

But first, what is a podcast? I often say it’s an online radio show. But the truth is, it’s a much wilder bouquet of possibilities.

A “podcast” is just an online audio (and, less commonly, video) file. It could be of a deeply probing interview; of a bunch of kids singing “Kumbaya”; or of say, you reading your epic poem about belly dancing in the grocery store. It could be a single file—your reading at your local bookstore on March 17, 2015, or, say, a radio show-style series of interviews with fellow horror novelists, one posted each Saturday upon the toll of midnight. 

There may be an eye-crossing number of ways to categorize these things, but if you’re writer thinking about getting started with podcasting, I would suggest that you first clearly identify the level of commitment you are willing to make to your listeners who— lets hope—are going to be eager for your next podcast.

My podcasting assistant checks out the PORTA-BOOTH

1. No Commitment 

This would be a single, stand-alone podcast. Such is my first, which is simply a recording of my lecture at the Library of Congress back in 2009 about the research behind my novel, The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire.

> Listen in to my lecture for the Library of Congress here.


2. Intentionally Vague Commitment

I call my podcast series “Conversations with Other Writers” an “occasional series” because, as I state on the webpage, I post these “whenever the literary spirits move me and the planets align.” Right now, that’s about once a year… maybe. By the way, I just posted the eighth podcast in this series, a conversation with historian M.M. McAllen about a mind-bogglingly transnational period in Mexican history.

>Listen in to this Conversation with M.M. McAllen here.

3. Meaningful but Capped Commitment

This would be my “Marfa Mondays Podcasting Project,” 24 podcasts to run from January 2012 – December 2013, apropos of my book in-progress on Far West Texas. Not all but most of these are of interviews, and although I have posted 20 so far, my self-imposed deadline of December 2013 did not hold, alas. For reasons too complex to go into here, in the middle of this project, I went and wrote a biography. And that’s OK. I may be slow, but with only four more podcasts to go, I’ll get there soon enough! 

> Listen in to all 20—so far— of the “Marfa Mondays” podcasts here.

4. High Commitment

This would involve high production values, a regular, strictly respected, and ongoing schedule, and would surely necessitate and perhaps even command fees from listeners by way of “memberships.” Into this last straight jacket of a category I quake to venture, for I really do love writing more than I love podcasting.

Why I Am a Mega-Fan of the FiloFax

Translating Across the Border

The Strangely Beautiful Sierra Madera Astrobleme

Find out more about C.M. Mayo’s books, shorter works, podcasts, and more at www.cmmayo.com.