Monday, November 15, 2021

The Writing We Share Comes Back to Us

Notes:

My horror poem "Inertia of the Noon Wraith" recently appeared on the Jersey Devil Press website.

An autumn poem "Shaking Leaves" was published in Sylvia Magazine two weeks ago.
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Please note: The autumn painting is mine on this image. I inserted it to cover a haiku from another contributor as I don't have their permission to share.
A few years back, I entered a Halloween Haiku contest on a website (entry was by leaving the poem in a comment). I wrote it specifically for the contest, so I never sent it anywhere else. The site shut down before a winner was announced but started up again either this year or last.

I didn't think much of it one way or another (and barely remembered the piece). I've lost a lot of poetry and other writing to the voids of crashed computers and sunken publishers. One night last week, while Googling my name, I found a hit linked to a publication the site puts out. My haiku was in the newest edition of their magazine. 

It was a complete surprise to see. If I didn't check for my name online, I wouldn't know anything about it. The website, as far as I recall, didn't have the email addresses of the contestants to notify us our work was being used.
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This got me thinking about all the times I post work online and where it can end up. How many comments have I left over the years, and do the companies own my words? I read comment policies, but they can be interpreted and amended in different ways. While finding my haiku was more of a pleasant experience, I wonder where my name and words will wind up next and the context they will be used in.

Have you ever found your writing in a place you didn't expect (not counting plagiarism)?

2 comments:

  1. I once found out my short story had been published in an anthology by a random google alert--the publisher hadn't ever announced a release date, so I learned it had been published a month after it happened. Publishing is a weird business.

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    Replies
    1. I recommend every writer I know search for themselves online just for this reason! Some publishers aren't great at giving updates.

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