Meet the Entangled Poets

several heads photoshopped into one picture

Buy the book: Entangled: a collaboration across time and space

by debora Ewing

Entangled: a collaboration across time and space was released in 2023 by Igneus Press. Social media connected poets who loved to interrogate science with real-life observation. And then the worst science of all happened: global pandemic. An idea born of distance coalesced across the globe and came to life in this poetry anthology.

This collection is grouped loosely into themes: Mind, Matter, Space, Computation, Entanglement. The poets have responded with words reflecting their interest in science as a definition for being alive.

Who are these magical people? They are polymaths. They are scientists, researchers, musicians, artists, writers of science fiction, creative lit, & poetry. They are mothers, fathers, lovers, humans. Let us introduce you:

Melinda A. Smith is unstoppable. From sound collaborations with debora Ewing, Lisa Alletson, Vikki C, and the rest of the Entangled poets, she went on to write SUM, a novella which was longlisted for the BSFA in 2023. Between Tae Kwan Do lessons with her kids and family poetry workshops, she wrote a full-length novel, tentatively titled These Nameless Stars.

From Tony: I’m laboring under a lifelong hip problem that is restricting mobility and causing collateral discomfort so have been working on a volume of poems on resilience and rising from our falls. It’s almost done but I tinker with it occasionally. I’m also back-burning a book on how to be wrong, gracefully, and a novel about whether machines can have consciousness.

From the editor: Tony Cartledge is curator of Fantastical Fiction, an exploration and review of existential Sci-Fi, Metaphysical Spec-Fic and Magical Realism.

Vikki C. is a British-born poet, writer and musician from London whose literary works are informed by ecology, science, existentialism and the human condition.

Having written poetry from a young age, Vikki’s interest in the genre was deepened by the early modernist movement. She was drawn to T.S. Eliot’s work “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.” – imagistic qualities interwoven with a wondrous lyrical language. She believes such aesthetic is key to an immersive artistic experience and aims to emulate this through her own style of poetic prose.

When it comes to science and poetry, the two marry in the magic of everyday life. Vikki cannot contemplate the earliest stars without pondering the light years of loss since the inception of the universe.

Vikki C.’s second book of poetry Where Sands Run Finest (DarkWinter Press) was published in Spring 2024.

Find her on Twitter @VWC_Writes and listen to her piano musings on Soundcloud at Vikki C. Music

Bradley Nordell has a PhD in quantum physics, which he uses to take beautiful nature photos in the desert and write science-based literary fiction and poetry. You can see his TEDxLincoln talk on YouTube here: The Science of Tomorrow

Lisa Alletson is a writer & lake lover, possibly a water nymph trapped on the shore having lost her tail. Her award-winning chapbook Good Mother Lizard was published by Headlight Review.

Sonia Saner says: I’m currently drafting my first novel while continuing to write multi-genre poetry. Lately, I’ve taken on editing manuscripts from various writers. This collaborative process inspires me to explore writing longer works in different genres. When I need a break or some fresh inspiration, I love getting involved in tree-planting projects on deforested land. My love for writing and nature has always been deeply connected, and I’m lucky to have an extensive collection of notebooks and a nature reserve right outside my door.

Leslie Almberg is based in Australia. She spends her time emerging herself in the world of research data management and wrangling small beasties.

debora Ewing is stirring the pot. All the pots, any she can get her fingers into. She volunteers as a writer for FolkWorks, an online repository for cultural history, and as a general thorn in the side of FAR-West . Amongst the music community she’s known as an artist, poet, and lyricist, collaborating with Vikki C., Mike Berman and Gates & Goodell, among others. deb loves book design here at Igneus Press, and we love her for it. Look for a new release by debora Ewing from our press in 2025.

Jocelyn Bosley (she/they) is Research Impact Coordinator at University of Nebraska. She’s been busy organizing SciComm, a virtual and in-person conference dedicated to effective communication of science to diverse audiences across all venues.

Sionann is currently praying
in her greenhouse
in a forest
on top of a mountain.
Peace for Palestine.

Get your copy of Entangled: a collaboration across time and space HERE.

poetry as from a kitchen window – a review of Wheeler Lane by Julia Wendell

Wheeler Lane book cover

Julia Wendell, Wheeler Lane (1st Edition) English (buy this book)
Review by deb Ewing

And then ten years went by.

I’d decided to review Julia Wendel‘s poetry collection next in my series of Igneus Press titles because I wanted to focus on the feminine as part of the human animal, not as an Other. I’d dog-eared a few pages because I am that monster (I also write in the margins, even in what should be a fancy coffee table book. I don’t have a coffee table.) And I’d thrown the book in my bag to read while travelling to Philadelphia for an art reception in which I was an honoree.

And, as I often do, I opened the book eyes closed like I’d thrown I Ching coins to see what wisdom popped out at me. It was that one line, top of the page: And then ten years went by.

This is a feeling I think we all know.

Julia Wendell is telling the story of a lifetime in these pages, almost more a reporter than participant. And there’s something edifying in that to me, because I like to do the same thing: I tell you what I see. It’s up to you to draw your own conclusions. Sometimes the conclusion drawn through someone else’s observation is more startling than we’d let ourselves notice in our own lives.

Because I don’t know the game Baccarat – paired with Passion in the title of Julia’s poem – I researched. I wanted to know why she chose this juxtaposition. Baccarat is a comparing of cards, in which either the “bank” or the player can win, or there can be a tie. This gamble is woven throughout Wheeler Lane – the narrator is complicit in choosing to gamble, and there’s a great deal of waiting for outcomes.

Julia tells the story of someone else’s dream deflating in the measured tone of someone who’s tired of arguing, tired of being wrong, as she watches a portable greenhouse fail. This is the story I know of being a woman, a mother, a spouse, in the United States. I don’t claim that the story is ubiquitous, but my Indian friend tells me how’s she’s doing: “Oh you know, this son, this husband.” Yeah, I know; I’ve been there, too.

And then ten years went by.

I can measure a few of those increments in my life – usually I ended up in another state, one way or another, by the end of it. Sometimes ten years was actually thirteen, or two and a half. But you wonder why you can’t remember exactly what happened then. Julia Wheeler implies that these decades are measured in things acquired, often for someone else.

Are we the ghosts of our own stories?

A couple of things stand out to me in this piece – one is near the end, Wendell’s repetition of the words ‘less sexual.’ Repetition is tricky in poetry and has to be used with precision; here, it is. I want to say, too, that I love the ampersand as a piece of punctuation, a stand-in for a word, and as an art form. At every point where Wendell chose to & instead of and, I am happy.

I’ve misplaced the copy of Wheeler Lane I took with me to Philadelphia. I hope I left it on that ledge on the pier where I recorded my reading. I hope one of those parents, herding their toddlers over the grass and down the boardwalk, picked it up and stuffed it in a bag for later. Maybe, even though we’re still in a pandemic, they took the gamble, took the book, and left it safely in the garage long enough for surface-transmitted germs to die. I hope they remember some things they’d socked away in cabinets, memories shaken loose by Julia Wheeler’s poetry. Buy Wheeler Lane here.

Further Stuff:

Julia Wendell Learn more about the author and poet here.

How to Play Baccarat and Win – Learn in Less Than Four Minutes This is not an endorsement of Caesars Entertainment, nor of gambling, but where I found myself in my research.
Baccarat (card game) Here’s the Wiki-splanation.

What is the I Ching? – Chinafile.com Humans love to divine; we just want something to tip the scales toward a decision we can’t make. The I Ching has supplied philosophy, ethics, and authority for the arts & sciences for thousands of years.

Mathematics + Art: A Cultural History, Lynn Gamwell I own this book, and I write in the margins. It’s an impressive book in both heft and scope. My book club is enjoying it greatly; we made 5-minute PowerPoint presentations on chapters at a time.

Beware the Ides of March – but Why? – history.com Because you need to know, man. “It’s not really surprising Caesar was stabbed 23 times. He was surrounded by a mob of senators. They probably weren’t really good at stabbing people to death; they were politicians.” – Shiya Ribowsky

#uncoffeed… Things Which Are Not Mine to Carry My blog is an oleo (I said it like that so you can feel good when you use that word in a crossword puzzle.) A few of my ten-yearses are referenced in this true story of my date with Satan.

Portable Greenhouse – Igneus Press does not endorse this product, and neither do I. I think I want one, though.