The Eno River Poetry Festival was one of the highlights of my poetic life.
I don’t often get asked to read my poetry to strangers for twenty minutes. Most open mics have a five minute time limit, which I appreciate because not all poets are good readers. So I put a lot of work into my twenty minute set.
I did at least four complete rehearsals, with a stopwatch, over the course of the Friday evening and Saturday morning before the festival. Fortunately, smartphones have built in stopwatches but I could have also used the one on my computer. I should’ve started my preparations much earlier but I had other meetings and a workshop that week. Poetry is a harsh mistress.
After each rehearsal I would rearrange the order in which I read my poems so they flowed together better and I had to make cuts as well. I think my first rehearsal timed out at over thirty minutes. That meant I had to kill several of my darlings but it resulted in a tighter set.
My idea was to have themed subsets. I did three political poems together. I read three poems from Milkshakes and Chilidogs together. I did death poems together and astronomy poems together.
I also rehearsed the between-poem patter. For poetry, I think it’s important to give the audience a chance to breathe between poems. My goal is to make what I say between poems seem like it’s ad-libbed when it is anything but and I included it in the rehearsals so I knew exactly how long it would take.
And at the festival I got to read to a wonderful audience of strangers. Only a handful of them knew me before I started my set. I estimate I read to between forty and fifty people which exceeded my expectations greatly. I will admit to some nerves as I approached the podium but those jitters dissipated as I got going, thanks the rehearsals. The audience maintained eye contact, laughed in all the right places and I sold three books!
All the preparation paid off.



Congratulations. Interesting to read about your prep.
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Thanks! Reading poetry is like writing poetry is like any other skill. You get better with practice. Lots of practice.
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Good Job!!!
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Thanks, Mom!
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It is amazing how many people, poets included think it is easy to read your poetry out loud to lots of strangers but as you have proved by your meticulous preparation it is anything but. You have to time yourself so you don’t over or under run. I used to be able to learn my poems off by heart but find that impossible these days. I always carried a collapsible metal music stand with me in case there was no lecturn ( so many places didn’t have one.) I also learned to project my voice for when microphones didn’t work. That happened a lot in libraries! I used to be quite theatrical in my performances. Nowadays my health isn’t up to the traipsing around, but I loved performing my poetry rather than just reading it.
I am really pleased it all went well and to sell 3 books is marvelous. ❌❤️❌
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Thank you, Carolyn! I’m impressed that you memorized your poems. I’ve done it a couple of times but didn’t feel like it added significantly to my performance. Of course, by running through my set repeatedly in the 24 hours before the show, I could just glance at the page while reading and thus keep eye contact with the audience.
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Always a good idea, Bart. ❌❤️❌
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I am always impressed by poets who have their work memorized. I used to as well but gave it up. Love a good poetry Performance!
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Congratulations to a successful poetry reading! That’s awesome. 🤗
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Thank you, Kirsten! You have no idea how much more relaxed I am this Monday as compared to last Monday.
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I bet! :)) You’re very welcome.
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It’s interesting to read the preparation and thoughts you put into it. And no surprises it rendered great response. 👏👍💚
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Thank you, CB! I’m glad this was of interest. I was a little worried about that.
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It’s interesting to me, good outcome takes preparation and practice..no short cuts. 🤓
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Good for you! Planning and execution. 👏🏻
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Thank you, Michele! Planning and execution are a big part of life, not just poetry.
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You are welcome, Bart. No doubt about that!
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Congratulations! This looks great.
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Thank you, Birdie!
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My pleasure :)
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I love this!!! Wonderful to hear what a poet goes through before a reading. The audience often has no idea the prep that goes before a reading or booksigning. And it’s a LOT. Lol!! Congratulations on your success and book sales!! Well deserved!! 💗
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Thank you, Laura! Sometimes it’s a lot of work for not much of a payoff but not this time!
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I can only echo what others have said here. The prep you did is illuminating. You are right. Not all poets are good readers. I also like the way you crafted your set. I’ll have to keep that in mind in case I ever get to be a big shot poet. Well done B.
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You should definitely keep it mind, JM! You’ll probably be a big shot poet before me.
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You already ARE a big shot poet.
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I should type LOL but it was really more of a snort.
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What great advice for poets emerging into the performance space. Your set was fantastic and audience feedback was very positive! It was a highlight for me seeing you perform!
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Thank you, Morrow, for the compliments and the Eno River Poetry Festival itself. Let’s do it again next year!
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Bravo to your successful poetry recital! I’m sure the audience were immensely charmed!🥂
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Thank you, Annabel! I charmed at least three of them.
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Haha, great sense of humour!😁
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I feel nervous just reading and seeing you at the podium but I believe that’s just excitement as you’ve inspired me to read my writing at an open mic as well…
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Excellent. I’m proud to have inspired a fellow poet!
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Great tips.
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Thank you, Danielle! I hope you put them to good use.
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I like going to readings. We have a bookstore that regularly invites authors to read from their books. These are sometimes novels, sometimes travelogues, sometimes lyric. I think this is a wonderful opportunity for the listener to meet new authors. I congratulate you on your great success!!
Greetings from the beautiful Rhine-Highlands / Germany….
Rosie
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Danke, Rosie! It is fun to go to readings though a lot of fiction writers aren’t very good at performing. It’s much more difficult than poetry!
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Bartholomew, I agree with you. I think that in many novels I miss the special atmosphere, a mood that draws me in and that runs through all the scenes. But that is also the case with some poems. I would like to be taken by the poet into his world.
Greetings….Rosie from Germany
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