30 November 2009

Poéfrika interview with January O'Neil


1. What’s your relation to poetry? How do you interact with it?

Poetry is my vocation. There’s nothing I enjoy more than finding the right words, or finding a series of “wrong” words and making them right.
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2. Do you work on just one poem at a time, or do you work on several at the same time?

Usually, I work on one poem at a time. But I’ve been writing a long poem for a few months, so I’ve written other poems while continuing to work on it. And on a recent flight, I wrote and revised three new poems at once!
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3. Poets labour a lot over their work (as do other artists). A lot of time and dedication goes into writing good poetry. Where’s the money?

HA! There is no real money in poetry, which is too bad because writing is one of the few fields of work where the content provider (the artist) oftentimes is not paid for his/her product. Poetry just doesn’t have the reach that fiction has with the book-buying public. That being said, I think there are more poets writing and publishing their poetry than ever before.

The Internet has made it easier for a poet to reach a wide audience. The money and opportunities comes from grants, fellowships, and reading and speaking engagements—but not from publishing a book.
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4. Do you ever write ‘political poems’? Why, or why not?

Occasionally. I wrote a political poem as one of the three I worked on simultaneously. I also believe that all poetry is political. So whether I write a poem about cleaning the house or some injustice the world, there are politics at work between the words.
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5. Is there a particular goal you seek when you write? Why do you write? Awaken us? Entertain us? Tell us the truth? What?

I want say something that hasn’t been said, or say something that has been said but say it well. I want to leave a poem thinking that I’ve contributed to the larger conversation in a meaningful way. My motivations are internal—I write for myself and hope that people enjoy what I say. I am the audience that I have to please.
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6. How do you know a poem is 'finished'? Do you ever 'give up' on a poem?

When I have that “yes” or “aha” moment at the end of a draft, I know I’m onto something. I rarely give up on a poem. Not all of my poems see the light of day, but I try to make them work. Sometimes my failed attempts are reborn into new drafts. In general, by the end of a poem, if I end up in a different place than when I started, then this is a poem I will keep.
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7. You are to encourage poetry students to write a poem. Please come up with a ‘writing prompt’, short and simple.

Write a 12-line poem using these six words: pillow, hammock, revel, twist, breeze, tight. (Could be any six random words.)

Or

Write a 12-line poem about food, using the food in the title but nowhere else in the poem.
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8. What two or three writers, living or not, have influenced you the most? Care to tell us why?

Sharon Olds: Through her poetry, she taught me it was okay to say the unsaid. And after studying with her at NYU, she was nothing short of kind and inspiring.

Phil Levine: He’s a tough customer. Phil was my thesis adviser At NYU and he encouraged me to always go deeper with my words and images. Never settle.
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9. How and where do you write? Drink coffee, wine? Listen to music? Type, scribble? At a café, in the sitting room?

When I can get out of the house, I write at Starbucks. But I can write almost anywhere. I enjoy working late at night on my laptop or in my journal after the kids go to sleep. Hot tea and music are a must.
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10. Here's an on-going poem. Please add to it:

They stood before me that night
With clenched fists and blown pupils,
Shadowed by leafless branches of a cotton tree,
The moon as bright as the moon and no metaphor

For which image can serve? What simile
Makes sense enough? The ghosts that guard
The tree nod yes, though I’ve not said a thing.
One shade uncurls and crooks a bony finger, calling me.

The voices rise up like beheaded trees
I stumble forward fear at my heels
How did this night arrive and where is wisdom’s heed
"Gone my child are your clothes -- face now this thing."

So strip off your nudity, and learn to be naked.
Release your fears as branches drop leaves
And let yourself see.
The man with an axe stands by
About to chop your ego,
Stand well away.

Oneself gone in the dark,
Everything else steps forward.
What black moonlight paints the scene;
The leaves whisper in the palms of the wind.

My name is the name of you
A name you have carried around like a stone

_______________
January Gill O’Neil’s poems and articles have appeared or are forthcoming in Crab Creek Review, Ouroboros Review, Drunken Boat, Crab Orchard Review, Callaloo, Babel Fruit, Edible Phoenix, Literary Mama, Field, Seattle Review, Stuff Magazine, Can We Have Our Ball Back, Read Write Poem, and Cave Canem anthologies II and IV. A Cave Canem fellow, her first poetry collection, titled Underlife, will be published by CavanKerry Press in November 2009. She is a senior writer/editor at Babson College, runs a popular blog called Poet Mom, and lives with her two children in Beverly, MA.

27 November 2009

Islamophobia

24 November 2009

Geoffrey Philp Wins Daily News Prize For Poetry

The Editorial Board of The Caribbean Writer has awarded Jamaica-born poet and short story writer, Geoffrey Philp, the Daily News Prize for his poem, “Erzulie’s Daughter.” A talented writer in many genres, Mr. Philp has also won the Canute Brodhurst Prize for his short story, “Uncle Obadiah and the Alien.” The prize winning poem is included in Philp’s upcoming collection of poems, Dub Wise, which will published in Spring 2010 by Peepal Tree Press.

“Erzulie’s Daughter” was one of those poems that came almost like a gift,” said Philp. “Once I imagined this girl-woman, who while her parents are forcing her to conform, she is figuring out her identity, I just knew she would have to emerge victorious because she is the archetypal daughter of one of the most compelling figures of Haitian/Caribbean mythology—an area in our literature that has been neglected for a long time”
[continue there...]

23 November 2009

False Tooth
(by Julius Chingono)

A false tooth
got lost
during a tongue dance
that was misty
and full of froth.
It was found holding
on to a rotting gum.

A false tooth
also smiles
when real teeth smile
do they have any feelings?

Are you aware
all those people died
to make certain
you lost the election?
[source...]

Interview with Mr Chingono

21 November 2009

The Day Jesus Christ Came to Mount Airy

19 November 2009

Ben Okri discusses writing



__________

16 November 2009

The October Garden

If you were zinnia, still bright
in the October garden and I the last
orange cosmos. If you were catmint blue
draping yourself over the cinder block wall
and I the weed coming up through gravel.
If you were the bamboo pole, listing
under the weight of late green tomatoes
that will never ripen now, and I
the frayed string that binds them. If
you were heavy purple grapes dangling
over the canted railing and I the feasting
thrush. If you were summer's echo
in yellow coreopsis and I the tall sedum,
autumn-flushed. If you were the sun
breaking slant over that little grove of aspens
across the street, if you were hummingbird's
quick wing, if you were winter coming on
or the studious worm and I the turned
earth, the patch of moss beneath an oak,
the oak's sharp-edged leaf ready to crackle
underfoot, the white-throated sparrow's
familiar three descending notes in a minor
key, oh, if only I were sometimes
you and you were me.

Molly Fisk
Michigan Quarterly Review
Fall 2008

Copyright ©2008 by The University of Michigan
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.

13 November 2009

Amiri Baraka on Barack Obama

"The Right hates [Obama] because he proved that this is no longer "White America." It is a multinational nation."
~Amiri Baraka

[source...]

12 November 2009

untitled


11 November 2009

New Year, 2009
(by Gillian Clarke)

A poem by the National Poet of Wales to honour the Inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States of America on 20th January 2009

Venus in the arc of the young moon
is a boat the arms of a bay,
the sky clear to infinity
but for the trailing gossamer
of a transatlantic plane.

The old year and the old era dead,
pushed burning out to sea
bearing the bones of heroes, tyrants,
ideologues, thieves and deceivers
in a smoke of burning money.

The dream is over. Glaciers will melt.
Seas will rise to swallow golden islands.
Somewhere a volcano may whelm a city,
earth shake its skin like an old horse,
a hurricane topple a town to rubble.

Yet tonight, under the cold beauty
of the moon and Venus, something like hope begins,
as if times can turn, the world change course,
as if truth can speak, good men come to power,
and words have meaning again.

Maybe black-hearted boys in love with death
won’t blow themselves and us to smithereens.
Maybe guns will fall silent, the powerful
cease slaughtering the weak, the rich
will not gorge as the poor starve.


Hope spoke the word ‘Yes’, the word ‘we’, the word ’can’,
and a thousand British teenagers at Poetry Live
rose to their feet in a single yell of joy –
black, white, Christian, Muslim, Jew,
faithful and faithless. We are all in this together.
Ie. gallwn ni.2

-----
2Yes, we can in Welsh.

10 November 2009

The discipline of the rhyme

...to think about line breaks in a fresh way, and by working toward end rhymes, we must modify some of the habits we all naturally fall into. The discipline of the rhyme makes us speak in new ways.
[source...]

How so very true!

9 November 2009

High Horses

Way up there, so high and well fed
they seem to be gods
or at least ridden by gods,
the high horses walk—so well bred

little disturbs them. Sedately,
they show off their steps,
canter right, canter left ... perhaps
a brief trot, the perfect lifting of one knee

after another, and then
that exquisite gallop, that arrogance
of the totally convinced,
that disdain.... Then down

off the high horses
come their riders at last,
little men of the past,
clad in bright silken colors.

Dick Allen
Present Vanishing
Sarabande Books

Copyright ©2008 by Dick Allen
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.

6 November 2009

Quote: "Komunyakaa"

Word for word,
we beat the love
out of each other.
~Yusef Komunyakaa

[from Once the Dream Begins...]

3 November 2009

Winter Trees Cough Like Old Men

Winter trees cough like old men
about death's white nightmares
while the rain talks in Latin.
They cough about the sobbing tragic
ash, they bind valises for leaving,
they darken—and in the chill
of frost from the sun, the lungs
bristle to see coffins hidden
in the dry capes of kings.

Eugenio Montejo
translated from the Spanish by Kirk Nesset
The Paris Review
Fall 2008

Copyright © 2008 by The Paris Review Foundation, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.