You are currently viewing Poetry based on Best Selling Books

Poetry based on Best Selling Books

New Poetry Collection - UnConscious Words - Best Seller Edition

cover of a poetry book UnConscious Words Best Seller EditionFor Unconscious Words – Bestselling Edition, I created ekphrastic poems based on the top ten bestselling books between 2011 to 2021.  It sounded simple, pluck the best sellers from the shelves.  But determining what books were “bestsellers” let alone the number one best seller per year proved more difficult than anticipated.  Look on Amazon and immediately encounter top selling books like The Hungry Caterpillar and Giraffes Can’t Dance.  I eliminated the children’s books as well as non-fiction best sellers to simplify the process, that still not only resisted simplification, but clear winners.  To that end, I cobbled together the mostly ten best selling books based on the book’s appearance on multiple lists and from number of copies sold. 
 
Armed with my list of ten, I sought out copies sold through used book outlets. 
 
Books don’t always stay with their original owners.  I was interested in the life of the book. Like old film stars, where do these celebrated and envied objects end up after their first rush of fame?  They land in Goodwill re-sale stores just past women’s wear; shelved alphabetically in used books stores; randomly displayed on the street, shoved in boxes at yard sales, or stuffed into Free Little Libraries. I found my bestsellers in used book outlets in Grass Valley and Nevada City, California. (which are designated Book Towns). The hunt was part of the immersive project. Who stacks the books?  Who unpacks the donated boxes? Are the books all jumbled together under fiction?  Are they alphabetical?  Are they organized by seller?  Are there multiple copies of My Brilliant Friend because the book club members acquired the book, but didn’t feel compelled to keep it?
 
Used book outlets serve as an author’s memento mori. Sure, the book was once number one, displayed face out on an industry approved new book store.  But now the book is wedged into a shelf adjacent to a copy of Once Upon a Marigold hoping for a second chance, a second or third or fourth reading.  Secondhand books are not tracked by any lists, bestselling or not.  Like persistent ghosts, they continue on, well past numbers, much like ideas.
To create the poems, I used the same technique as I did with  Unconscious Words, the Poet as Scribe. I searched through the book recording the words that “jump out”.  I recorded about a page of words, then, using just those words, with a few helping words like a, the, an – I created about five to seven poems from each book.
 
Some of the best sellers I had read, some I had not and one I knew about because my husband watched the show (yes, Game of Thrones). The question is, do single words convey and illuminate an author’s intention, even after uncoupled from the novel itself?  You can judge, I’m just the scribe.
 
Words by Kathryn Stockett – The Help 13
 
Mouth whispers cares
An unattractive idea:
Anything inside is sweet
 
A typewriter job
Women on deadline finished rocking
Because to yell  anything good
Is to Know the damned, a burning look
Shows up, grateful for the car
 
In the Cadillac
Everything is easy 
 
 

CatharineBramkamp

Catharine Bramkamp is a successful writing coach and author. She has published over 300 newspaper and magazine articles in publications like Modern Maturity (AARP), SF Chronicle and Santa Rosa Magazine. She was a contributor to two Chicken Soup Books and has published anthologies of her work, non-fiction works and novels. Her work has also appeared in a number of poetry and fiction anthologies. She has experimented with the self-publishing world since 2001. She has published and self-published seven books through companies like Author House, author assist companies like 3L Publishing and through traditional publishers like Write Life. Her poetry collection, Ammonia Sunrise, will be released in August 2011 by Finishing Line Press and her mystery novel, In Good Faith will be released by Write Life in 2011. Catharine holds a BA in English from UCSB and a MA in English from Sonoma State University. She is a 25 year member of California Writer’s Club. She is an adjunct professor for the University of Phoenix. She works with authors of both fiction and non-fiction to make their dream of producing a book come true. For more information on that, visit her at www.YourBookStartsHere.com Catharine has lived in Sonoma County for 25 years and considers wine a food group. She is married to an adorable and very patient man who complains he’s never featured in any of her books. Her grown children who are featured in a few of her books have fled the county.

Leave a Reply