"I am trying to check my habits of seeing, to counter them for the sake of greater freshness. I am trying to be unfamiliar with what I'm doing." - John Cage


Friday, January 23, 2026

Let's fill 2026 with courageous creativity

 


Dear Creatives,

Thank you for being part of the Tangled Roots Writing community. I truly appreciate you and how you pay attention to your creative process. I feel joy in being a part of that creative work. I find a sense of fulfillment in the community we make together.



My newest venture as Poet Laureate of Nevada County is hosting the Tangled Roots Open Mic at Alibi in Truckee every second Thursday of the month from 6 - 7:30 pm. I'm so excited to be able to offer a venue that welcomes all ages for poets and writers to share their poetry and prose on stage with a supportive audience. Read your work out loud, perform your words for others, speak your voice, and make a difference. Join us Thursday, February 12th!

This year I facilitated five sessions of the Monday Night Creative Writing Workshop 6 week series. Every Monday night I create a new workshop for us to explore craft and generate new material. Because this workshop is all about you, the prompts lead to any genre and support whatever writing project you may be in the middle of developing. Now is the time to sign up for the next series in 2026 beginning February 2.

This Fall a group of dedicated writers completed a three-part workshop series on Submission Strategies for poetry, short story, fiction and creative non-fiction. It was a blast meeting every two weeks to talk through organizing systems and preparing manuscripts and researching just the right venues for submitting our work. The best part is that through this community, writers are sending work out for publication who have never sent their work out into the world before. Because this business side of being an artist is the kind of work artists prefer to avoid, I'll be offering this Submissions Strategies workshop series again this Spring to help you stay accountable and productive.

Some of you may not know that I also offer a free monthly Creative Writing Workshop at the Truckee Library called Moments for Memoirs on Friday mornings from 10:30-noon. This workshop is open to all ages and all levels of experience. And the group is so welcoming - join us! Our next workshop at the Library is February 6th.

As Poet Laureate of Nevada County, I've been busy reaching out to the community, and specifically Teens in Truckee. The Poetry and Prose Writing Club at Truckee High is representing at the Alibi open mic! We also meet once a month on a Sunday afternoon at the Lift for a writing workshop. This free workshop is open to all Teens in Truckee, so if you’re interested, reach out!

This winter I’m gathering a circle of writers that are ready for feedback in a guided monthly workshop. We’ll share and receive feedback in a small group on fiction and non-fiction, with the goal of revising the stories, essays or book-length projects for publication. Are you ready to take the next step in developing your book project or your collection of essays? Reach out and let’s talk.

As always I’m available for one-on-one editing and manuscript review projects. I hope to see you out and about in our literary community!

Happy writing,
Karen Terrey


Monday, December 15, 2025

Listen to Tracy K Smith talk about her newest poems at the Tucson Humanities Festival: A writing prompt for you

 

Have you missed an online reading that you really wanted to listen to lately? I discovered that the University of Arizona has an archive here of many more authors reading and discussing their work than I could ever catch up listening to: https://voca.arizona.edu/reading/tracy-k-smith-october-23-2025

So yesterday on a Sunday morning I chose Tracy K Smith (Tucson Humanities Festival, Oct. 23, 2025) talking about her most recent book Fear Less: Poetry in Perilous Times to listen to as I wrote in my journal. This is one way I find I can loosen up my mind into discovering surprising associations in language. When I go to reading in person, I love to bring my journal and write randomly as I listen. It's rare though that I can find a seat private enough where I feel safe in writing this way. So at home, I make the most of Youtube and other recordings, as well as Zoom readings at all times across the time zones.

I recommend listening with your journal to Tracy K Smith here, beginning at Hill County in the recording (I often skip the long introductions in these presentations). She intersperses her own new poems with excerpts from her prose craft book of essays. It's an interesting way to manage the attention of an audience.

Tracy begins by saying you already have the knowledge to have a fruitful experience with a poem, even if you don't understand it. Ask yourself, What does it call to mind? What does it activate in your body? What do you notice as you read and listen to the poem?

Her newest poems are from a collection she calls as a working title of The Forest. 

More takeaways from her talk: 

  • "A poem is a tool for careful listening"
  • "Let a poem nudge you. A poem is a blanket of sound covering everything. A poem lets you notice the difference in sound between raindrops hitting the roof and drops hitting the tree branches. Think of a poem as lyric imagination, as a response or a return to a largeness that is in us. A poem is something other than logic."
  • "Listen in earnest to another person's testimony when you listen to a poem."

She talks about what a poem's silences and redactions can mean, and how they can expand on the  understanding of a poem. In connection, she talks about how to use erasure and gives an example of an erasure poem she created from the Constitution she titled The Declaration.

A writing prompt for you:

  1. A prompt I took away from this talk, and one I give you to try, is to find a document you want to find a new understanding of. Try her approach to the piece, thinking about who do you mean by "we" and what testimony do you want to give voice to?
  2. Another prompt I took away built off of her poem about the forest people in one of her new poems. What if we imagine a breakdown of boundary between land and plant with human and society. What could happen?

Write a new poem this week after and maybe while you listen to her reading. Find another recording on this website that you enjoy, and listen closely to that, with your journal open in front of you. Share your thoughts with a friend. 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Looking forward to 2026: Tangled Roots Open Mic, new workshops, and opportunities for Teens in Truckee

 

Thank you for being a part of the Tangled Roots Writing community. I truly appreciate you and how you pay attention to your creative process. I feel joy in being a part of that creative work. I find a sense of fulfillment in the community we make together.

My newest venture as Poet Laureate of Nevada County is hosting the Tangled Roots Open Mic at Alibi in Truckee every second Thursday of the month from 6 - 7:30 pm. I'm so excited to be able to offer a venue that welcomes all ages for poets and writers to share their poetry and prose on stage with a supportive audience. Read your work out loud, perform your words for others, speak your voice, and make a difference. Join us Thursday, December 11th!

This year I facilitated five sessions of the Monday Night Creative Writing Workshop 6 week series. Every Monday night I create a new workshop for us to explore craft and generate new material. Because this workshop is all about you, the prompts lead to any genre and support whatever writing project you may be in the middle of developing. Now is the time to sign up for the next series in 2026 beginning Feb 2.

This Fall a group of dedicated writers completed a three-part workshop series on Submission Strategies for poetry, short story, fiction and creative non-fiction. It was a blast meeting every two weeks to talk through organizing systems and preparing manuscripts and researching just the right venues for submitting our work. The best part is that through this community, writers are sending work out for publication who have never sent their work out into the world before. Because this business side of being an artist is the kind of work artists prefer to avoid, I'll be offering this Submissions Strategies workshop series again this Spring to help you stay accountable and productive.

Some of you may not know that I also offer a free monthly Creative Writing Workshop at the Truckee Library called Moments for Memoirs on Friday mornings from 10:30-noon. This workshop is open to all ages and all levels of experience. And the group is so welcoming - join us! Our next workshop at the Library is December 12th.

As Poet Laureate of Nevada County, I've been busy reaching out to the community, and specifically Teens in Truckee. The Poetry and Prose Writing Club at Truckee High is representing at the Alibi open mic! We also meet once a month on a Sunday afternoon at the Lift for a writing workshop. This free workshop is open to all Teens in Truckee, so if you’re interested, reach out!

This winter I’m gathering a circle of writers that are ready for feedback in a guided monthly workshop. We’ll share and receive feedback in a small group on fiction and non-fiction, with the goal of revising the stories, essays or book-length projects for publication. Are you ready to take the next step in developing your book project or your collection of essays? Reach out and let’s talk.

As always I’m available for one-on-one editing and manuscript review projects.

I hope to see you out and about in our literary community!

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

New Creative Writing Workshops for High School Teens and Alibi Truckee Open Mic beginning Nov 13, 2025

I've loved getting to meet local teens and write with them at the Tahoe Literary Festival workshop. As Poet Laureate of Nevada County, I've started a new writing workshop series for High School teens and we've already held our first two workshop gatherings. We are creating momentum for teen writing and amplifying teen voices!

Here's an update on what we've got scheduled for November and December. These writing workshops for High Schoolers are welcoming, generative and focused on poetry as well as prose, since the line between these genres is exciting to blur. We study a theme or technique in writing at each session and then follow progressive prompts to write and develop our craft. We will also talk about calls for submissions, other opportunities for teen writers, how to submit your work, and open mic / performance.

Our upcoming dates for the writing workshop are: Nov 9, Dec 7 & Dec 14. Sunday afternoons from 4-5 pm at The Lift in the sunny Cessna conference room.
 

Exciting news - the first Alibi Truckee Open Mic happens November 13th from 6-7:30 pm. I hope all of you can make it and read a piece on stage! Save the date now on your calendar. Maybe a piece prompted from a workshop you've taken will become something you want to share at this open mic. Tell your friends and let's get the word out. The open mic is for poetry and prose, as well as a singersongwriter who wants to go up with their guitar and sing a song they wrote.
 

If you are a teen who wants to be writing creatively, reach out to me about joining us on Nov. 9 at The Lift. At this workshop I've asked teens to bring a poem or piece of writing to share by a published author that they admire. We will also work on some revision techniques for developing a piece for the open mic at Alibi.

Saturday, October 18, 2025

Thoughts on how writers can inspire action for the environment, wild spaces and rivers, and for communities

I'm preparing to speak at the Become the River Literary Festival in Coloma this afternoon. One of the questions we'll be addressing is: How can writers use their connection to wild spaces and rivers to utilize the power of the pen to activate and inspire action? 

Here are my notes to organize my thoughts: 

 Protest & Witness

“Poems are visible right now, which is terribly ironic, because you rather wish it weren’t so necessary,” she said. “When poetry is a backwater it means times are O.K. When times are dire, that’s exactly when poetry is needed.” – Jane Hirshfield

 

Poems, for me, are written because there is some fracture thatneeds addressing,” Hirshfield says. “You write because something is off-kilter, bewildering, devastating. If you’re built the way poets are, one way to remit the fabric of the world is to find language that will let in the grief and the beauty of these things.”- Jane Hirshfield

 

On January 24, President Trump’s fifth day in office his first time, media outlets reported that the White House had banned Environmental Protection Agency scientists from posting about their research on social media, instructing them to relay their research to the public only after obtaining prior approval. By the end of that day, Hirshfield had channeled her outrage into a poem called “On the Fifth Day.” She sent it to a few scientist friends. They sent it to a few more, and soon the poem went viral.

 

When organizers announced the March for Science a few days later, Hirshfield contacted the volunteer committee and offered a few ideas.

 

The recent resurgence of protest poems reflects a new strain of contemporary American poetry, one that is deeply engaged with public policy and the latest executive orders coming from the White House.

 

On the fifth day by Jane Hirshfield

 

the scientists who studied the rivers

were forbidden to speak

or to study the rivers.

The scientists who studied the air

were told not to speak of the air,

and the ones who worked for the farmers

were silenced,

and the ones who worked for the bees.

Someone, from deep in the Badlands,

began posting facts.

The facts were told not to speak

and were taken away.

The facts, surprised to be taken, were silent.

Now it was only the rivers

that spoke of the rivers,

and only the wind that spoke of its bees,

while the unpausing factual buds of the fruit trees

continued to move toward their fruit.

The silence spoke loudly of silence,

and the rivers kept speaking,

of rivers, of boulders and air.

Bound to gravity, earless and tongueless,

the untested rivers kept speaking.

Bus drivers, shelf stockers,

code writers, machinists, accountants,

lab techs, cellists kept speaking.

They spoke, the fifth day,

of silence.


2.     Education and Healing

Hirshfield had begun Poets for Science to grapple with her own emotions over the state of politics and science policy. Partnering with Poets for Science founder, poet and environmental spokesperson Jane Hirshfield, the Wick Poetry Center joined the marchers at the Teach-In on the National Mall in Washington D.C. Today, Poets for Science is both an exhibit and a movement exploring the connections between poetry and science.

 

“Poetry and science are allies, not opposites. Both are instruments of discovery, and together they make the two feet of one walking. We can only weigh the full meaning of facts by how we feel about them. Feelings are meaningful and useful to us because they emerge from the truths of this shifting, astonishing world. Observation and imagination, the microscope and the metaphor, the sense of amazement—you need all of them to take the measure of a moment, of a life. Poetry and science each seek to ground our lives in both what exists and the sense of the large, of mystery and awe. Every scientist I know is grounded in curiosity, wonder, the spirit of exploration, the spirit of service. As is every poet.” - Jane Hirshfield, 2017

 

The Hope River project in Davis, California, shows just how powerful expression through poetry can be for young people. In 2021, Julia B. Levine, a retired clinical psychologist and now the Poet Laureate of Davis, began developing a pilot program introducing middle schoolers to poetry to cope with climate-related fears.

 

She developed a 5-week course for middle schoolers at a public charter school, Da Vinci Junior High, in which students would read poetry about the environment and then write their own poems. At the end of the 5 weeks, the teens would walk down a path behind the school while listening to recordings of their poems on a smartphone app, the flow of cyclists and pedestrians on Davis’ bike trails reminiscent of the flow of a river.

 

Sixteen Rivers Press, a poetry collective based in Northern California, is publishing a selection of 22 of the Hope River poems, along with all of Levine’s instructional materials from the class. The book is called Dear Earth: Hope River Poems from Young Teens.

“One thing poetry helps you do is speak to your higher self,” Levine says. Writing makes young poets “feel as if they matter, as if their voice counts,” she adds. “It’s an antidote to what’s happening all around them.”

3.     Equity for people and environment

Listen to Camille Dungy in her article "Is All Writing Environmental Writing?":

 

"We are in the midst of the planet’s sixth great extinction, in a time where we are seeing the direct effects of radical global climate change via more frequent and ferocious storms, hotter drier years accompanied by more devastating wildfires, snow where there didn’t used to be snow, and less snow where permafrost used to be a given. Yet some people prefer to maintain categories for what counts as environmental writing and what is historical writing or social criticism or biography and so on. I can’t compartmentalize my attentions. If an author chooses not to engage with what we often call the natural world, that very disengagement makes a statement about the author’s relationship with her environment; even indifference to the environment directly affects the world about which a writer might purport to be indifferent. We live in a time when making decisions about how we construct the products and actions of our daily lives—whether or not to buy plastic water bottles and drinking straws, or cosmetics with microbeads that make our skin glow—means making decisions about being complicit in compromising the Earth’s ecosystems. 

 

"What we decide matters in literature is connected to what we decide will matter for our history, for our pedagogy, for our culture. What we do and do not value in our art reveals what we do and do not value in our times. What we leave off the page often speaks as loudly as what we include. 

 Writers exploring ecopoetics ask themselves questions such as these: How does climate change affect our poetics? How do we write about resource extraction, agribusiness, endangered bird species, the removals of indigenous peoples, suburban sprawl, the lynching of blacks, or the precarious condition of gray wolves and the ecosystems dependent upon them? Our contemporary understanding of ecopoetics takes into account the ways human-centered thinking reflects on, and is reflected in, what we write. And, contemporary ecopoetics questions the efficacy of valuing one physical presentation of animated matter over another, because narratives about place and about life contribute to our orientation in, and our interpretation of, that place and that life. 

 

"All of our positions on the planet are precarious at this moment in history, and attentive writers work to articulate why this is the case—including many writers of color who were already engaging in this mode of writing long before the ecopoetics movement took off. (Works by Alice Dunbar Nelson, Lucille Clifton, Claude McKay, Anne Spencer, Sterling Brown, June Jordan, Evie Shockley, Sean Hill, and Ed Roberson spring immediately to mind.) But only as the ecopoetics movement gained traction has such de-pristined writing finally been identified as environmental writing and, therefore, begun to be seen in a new light.

 

"The history of human divisions is often constituted of stories about one set of people being hostile toward the presence of others. An ideology that would demand the exclusion or subjugation of whole populations of human beings is an ideology quick to assume positions of superiority over all that is perceived to be different. If you can construct a narrative that turns a human into a beast in order to justify the degradation of that human, how much easier must it be to dismiss the needs of a black bear, a crayfish, a banyan? The values we place on lives that are not our own are reflected in the stories we tell ourselves—and in which aspects of these stories resonate with us. To separate the concerns of the human world (politics, history, commerce) from those of the many life forms with which humans share this planet strikes me as disastrous hubris and folly. We live in community with all the other lives on Earth, whether we acknowledge this or not. When we write about our lives, we ought to do so with an awareness of the other lives we encounter as we move through the world. I choose to honor these lives with attention and compassion." - Camille Dungy

 

______
*From What to Eat, What to Drink, What to Leave for Poison (Red Hen Press, 2006).

 

 

Sources

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/21/books/review/american-poets-refusing-to-go-gentle-rage-against-the-right.html

 

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2319793120

 

https://poetsforscience.org/about/

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2017/04/14/on-the-fifth-day/

 

https://www.thegeorgiareview.com/posts/is-all-writing-environmental-writing/