Showing posts with label Sidebrow Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sidebrow Books. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

12 or 20 (second series) questions with Miranda Mellis

Miranda Mellis is the author of Demystifications (Solid Objects); The Instead, a book-length dialogue with Emily Abendroth (Carville Annex); The Quarry (Trafficker Press); The Spokes (Solid Objects); None of This Is Real (Sidebrow Press); Materialisms (Portable Press at Yo-Yo Labs); and The Revisionist (Calamari Press). She teaches writing, literature, and ecological humanities at The Evergreen State College.

How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?

Beginnings can go on for years. Sometimes a beginning gets worked over so much, so hard, that’s all there is. Beginning can feel precarious, so uncertain. A beginning is a kernel, an idea, a resonance of some kind, an attraction, an arrival, a rumor, an invitation. The middle space is more grounded, like when you know love is reciprocal and you can start to count on someone – when, in the story, you’ve got enough material to shape it, to work with. It’s also still indeterminate – how long might this be, or take?

Like starting to ask, in middle age, how long will I live?

Having been so preoccupied with just getting off the ground in the beginning of a story (or a life) one is still working out: what is this? Over time you begin to understand it (which is another beginning, as if every insight is a beginning), to know its shape, to be able to tack more knowingly, more intimately between chance and intentionality.

An edge may start to flicker into view – “the sense of an ending” – a horizon; a cliff; a place beyond which you’ll no longer write (or live); a closure that also opens out. Ending shapes everything that comes before and usually leads to more revisions, as the ending casts its light back; writing an ending is beginning all over again; seeing things anew (re/vision) is playful, rather than goal-oriented. Writing is more like an organism than a machine or tool in that sense. You don’t make it, plug it in, set it going, use it until it breaks. Instead you are created, you create, you change something, it changes you, in a symbiotic enacting, auto-poietic and transformational, of spiraling co-creative cyclicality.

How did you come to fiction first, as opposed to, say, poetry or non-fiction?

I started out writing poetry and couldn’t understand why anyone would write fiction. How would anyone every decide what story to tell, among an infinity of possible narratives? I had a word for this: infinitivity. Fiction-curious, I took a weekend workshop with Rikki Ducornet.

She spoke of seeing an enormous jackrabbit in France, an impossible rabbit the size of a deer, and how that image became emblematic, a point of departure for writing. I wrote a piece in her workshop, as a way of exploring my skepticism about fiction (infinitivity). It was called “Novellas by the Hour.” It took place over 24 hours at 24 different moments: “8:13AM – a squirrel sticks her head out of a gas pipe.” “9: 45PM – a veteran naps on a park bench; has a flying dream”, etc. I found pleasure pursuing these images, figments and fragments of diction, seeing where they might lead, what they might say. I wrote stories from that weekend onward.

Coming from poetry has shaped my approach to fiction. Love of and curiosity about language, about where it leads, interest in metonymy, sound, all that remains. I find writing about culture, writing essays, writing about what other people make and do a welcome respite from vicissitudes of fiction. Poetry is a constant, a way of thinking and being that we could describe, if we imagine it in relation to liberation movements, as a multilinguistic front line where opacity, difference, and multiplicity are at the fore. 

How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?

The Revisionist (2007) was my first book and it did change my life, or in writing it I was changed. I was writing this strange book in the early 2000s very much in the minor key, taking up the positionality of someone paid to lie about climate change. This narrator was in my head as I tried to imagine the psyche of those who understood the dynamics of global warming and nonetheless lied, Exxon et al. (See Merchants of Doubt by Oreskes and Conway for a precis of the actions of the corporate mafia of the fossil fuel industry and their paid minions, terrorist members of what McKenzie Wark calls the “carbon liberation front.”) Those executive facilitators of our current extinctions should be tried for war crimes. They have waged a war on all species, a war on animals, a war on futurity. My book was a response to the dissemination by the Bush administration of junk science about climate and the refusal of that administration to sign on to the Kyoto Protocol, an existentially disastrous mistake and a cause of despair. The Revisionist was very much a working through of environmental depression. I got revenge on my narrator by causing them to lose the capacity to perceive anything at all by the end, as a result of knowingly lying about climate change. That was almost 20 years ago. Think how different things might be now if the government had not been in bed with big oil, not only lying about climate change with propaganda campaigns, but invading Iraq on false pretenses to control the oil supply.

As for how my recent writing compares or connects, the venality, stupidity, and the infuriating, fatal incompetence of the reactionary capitalist state continues to be a source of inspiration. Ha ha! As we flee fires, floods, and droughts.

My current manuscript is a piece of forest writing that centers on a house sliding down a ravine due to monsoon rains and clear cuts which destroy stabilizing root systems causing mudslides and soil erosion. But it’s different from The Revisionist and other books in offering a vision of a good enough future, and pointing, in homage to The Dispossessed, to an ambivalent utopia.

Where does a work of prose usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a “book” from the very beginning?

I’ll start to draft something and often I just abandon it after a few revisions. (What about an anthology of most successful failed beginnings? Call it False Starts.) Other times the whole gesture is there. It’s compressed. One dream; one idea; one move; one scene. Other times something takes hold that’s too complex and indeterminate to sense its duration. It’s not a gesture, it’s a problem, a cluster-fuck, an open-ended question, something you’re going to be wrestling with for a while, that won’t let go of you, maybe for the rest of your life, for example grief.

Those can end up being “books” –  I like that you’re putting quotation marks around that word. The quotation marks hold the telos of the “book” in suspense, in a state of potential. It’s fraught to have “book” in the mind, but it can also be generative, whether the imagined book comes to be or not.

Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?

Especially if sharing from a work in progress, public readings can become part of revision. Hearing the work out loud, anticipating real listeners, this can be clarifying, a tool for editing. You gain extra eyes, extra vision with that sense of address. If the work is complete – in a “book” – there are still questions about which parts you will read, in what order, and why, and you keep learning about how your writing registers in ways that might be surprising and that teaches you about the work itself, about the relationship between techniques and effects, especially comic effects, because you hear the laughter.

There are other things you can sense going on in the intersubjective space of a public reading, absorption, disinterest, identification, empathy, criticality, amusement, surprise, curiosity, judgment, care. You can also sense your own projections, what you imagine is going on; what you hope is going on; your own conflicts and intentions, your own befuddlement and absorption, curiosity and surprise, etc. Feeling into why you might feel drawn to reading one thing and not another at a given time develops sensitivity to what might be uncooked or overcooked in the work in progress.

Parts of your text can feel saturated for you, weighed down in a way that makes it difficult to read from. Conversely, it can be energizing (if also vulnerable and risky) to read something you’re unsure of, or haven’t read aloud before.

As for enjoyment, I’d say I have mixed feelings. You’re dealing with a whole range of things: how much sleep did you get the night before? How many other demands on your time, energy, and emotions were you dealing with that day? What shape are you in? People drink coffee, alcohol, take beta-blockers, find all kinds of ways to try to regulate themselves to be in the right frame of mind for appearing before a public. It can be terribly dysregulating. Readings can evoke a range of feelings, from enjoyment, excitement, curiosity and pleasure, to nerves, dread, shame and resistance. Over time one gets to know what the ride is like, as if a reading is a mind-altering substance: set and setting matter, but there is only so much you can control. After you’ve given a lot of readings over years, you’re not surprised by the feelings associated with the lead up, the range of things that can happen during a reading, and the roller coaster ride that it can sometimes be. You learn to phase shift, to discern, and not to get too caught up in any of it.

Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?

The disability and premature death of my mother, who was a communist, an activist, a teacher, an actress and a single mother (so a really complex interesting person who I didn’t get to know for as long as I wish I could have) is what started me writing seriously. Death is still my subject, but presently I am writing about it, in a manuscript called Two Problems in Three Parts, in different contexts: the context of sacrifice in a polarity with tyranny; and the context of ecologic in a polarity with industrialization.

Ecology and sacrifice are interrelated. Some people write (or live) towards an ending. Ending is a death, and deaths happen in a wide variety of ways. Some lives/stories have satisfying conclusions. They end with integration and closure. Others end abruptly, inconclusively, wrongly, unhappily, unfairly, tragically, suddenly, broken off, leaving wounds in their wake, so to speak.

Some endings allow for mourning to change its tenor. Others leave us with interminable, persistent melancholia.

The eco/logical way to think about it is that what dies is recycled, becomes and feeds new life. When we begin a new story, it is as if it begins where something else was left unfinished, as if every beginning points to something left. Something left that is usable is something that, in dying, gives itself to new life. It breaks down, is used, and is changed, rather than breaking and becoming an immutable, problematic object that can’t be used or changed, like tyrants who refuse to step down. Of what use is a tyrant who won’t give up power, to a democracy? Not only are they useless, they are toxic. The difference between squirrel bones or a gun, for example. Or a fallen tree, which feeds millions of microbes and life forms, and a microwave. Or a plastic bag thrown into a river which feeds nothing and no one, and chokes out life. Of what use are guns, microwaves, and plastic bags to the living biosphere? None whatsoever.

For life forms, every ending is a new beginning. For non-regenerative manufactured things, they never begin again, because they can’t rot, so they don’t accommodate change, and that is the true meaning of garbage. Nothing that can rot is truly garbage. Anything that can become something else, that can change, partakes of the genius of the living world and is not garbage. Only things that refuse to rot, to be transformed, to be changed are garbage, and they are filling up the world such that we have two worlds: a living world that self-regenerates, transforms, and symbiotically evolves through reciprocity, and a garbage world of tyrants, objects and toxins that don’t have lifespans but instead death spans: they are forever dead, never coming back to life, never changing. This is reflected in the culture of productivism, supported by necro-political, capitalist formations that require factories, mines, and extractive industries and police violence to enforce exploitation.

The normalization of all this produces people who misconstrue existence. A friend once told me about a neighbor of his who wanted all the trees on their street cut down because she thought of the leaves that fell from the trees, and the soil in which they grew, as garbage. Imagine how she feels about her body, which produces waste every day. But this would be a great person to write a story about, to do a character study of.

What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Does s/he even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?

The writer is in a hard position. The culture doesn’t really support artists, so to be a committed artist is automatically to have to find a way to live against the grain. Artists are set up to compete, the way athletes are. In other professions, you learn your trade and hang a shingle, get a job. U.S. artists are precarious, have trouble getting a salary, getting work, and constantly have to scramble, unless they were born wealthy. That means that automatically privileged people have an advantage: they can make art, write, without worrying about how to make a living. Thus men of leisure with wives, servants, wealth have historically been very productive, and it’s no mystery why. It’s not because of any innate talent, it’s because they were free to do as they liked, supported by armies of working class people, including their wives: wives as servants.

Historically inequality resulted in men with tiny purview and very limited experience of life, having enormous platforms. Still to this day, some writers are rewarded over and over again in huge ways, while most struggle.

So my answer would depend upon the writer’s position. If you are someone who has already been highly rewarded, then stop hoarding awards, opportunities, social capital, prizes, grants, and start finding ways to redistribute the affordances that foster social ecologies in which working class and poor artists can make their work.

Don’t believe that those who are most rewarded are most talented and deserving, it’s simply not true. They are more likely the most well connected and the most economically advantaged. Juliana Spahr and Stephanie Young have done great research on the self-licking ice cream cone that is the literary prizes circuit. It’s shocking but not surprising. Coteries, schools and scenes are part of literary world-making. Social capital accrues as people reward each other and cliques build their reputations. It begins as community building rather than careerism. But when and as these scenes become reified, self-enriching, and self-involved, ethical contradictions must be addressed.

What is the best piece of advice you’ve heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?

Simone Weil: “All true good carries with it conditions which are contradictory and as a consequence is impossible. Who keeps attention really fixed on this impossibility and acts will do what is good.”

What fragrance reminds you of home?

As someone raised in San Francisco it would be fog, nasturtium, eucalyptus, wild fennel, gas fumes, pot smoke. I love this question. Thanks rob!

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

Saturday, October 09, 2021

12 or 20 (second series) questions with Teresa K. Miller

Teresa K. Miller’s second full-length poetry collection, Borderline Fortune (Penguin, Oct. 5, 2021), was selected as a winner of the 2020 National Poetry Series by former California poet laureate Carol Muske-Dukes. A graduate of Barnard College and the Mills College MFA program, Miller is the author of sped (Sidebrow) and Forever No Lo (Tarpaulin Sky) as well as co-editor of Food First: Selected Writings from 40 Years of Movement Building (Food First Books). Her poems and essays have appeared in ZYZZYVA, AlterNet, Entropy, DIAGRAM, and elsewhere. Originally from Seattle, she tends a mini orchard near Portland, Oregon. A list of readings and events for Borderline Fortune is available at teresakmiller.net/events.

1 - How did your first book or chapbook change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?

My first published collection, the chapbook Forever No Lo (Tarpaulin Sky, 2008), came out two years after I graduated from the Mills College MFA program. It marked a big milestone and felt like affirmation that I was on the right track creatively and personally. My first full-length book, sped (Sidebrow, 2013), came out five years later, after being a National Poetry Series finalist and getting “almost not quites” from a few other places. That seemed like a long time, but I still felt like my work was on a good trajectory and had incorporated memorializing my father. By June 2020, though, I was having a conversation with my partner about whether I should keep writing at all, because it felt too painful and like it wasn’t going anywhere. Six days later, I received an email that my latest submission was a National Poetry Series finalist, the third of my manuscripts to get that nod over a period of fourteen years. Then the day after my birthday in August, I got a call from former California poet laureate Carol Muske-Dukes saying Borderline Fortune had won and would be published by Penguin.

So this experience has been life-changing on a variety of levels, from receiving much-needed encouragement after a long slog to having a wider potential audience. Paradoxically, the external validation has reinforced the necessity of my own internal validation or sense of having created what I needed to create. It has also shifted my perspective on “what kind of poet” I am. Before Carol’s call, I would have said I was an experimental small-press poet, but now this book is coming out with the biggest publisher in the U.S. It shows the categories are much more porous than many of us realize or admit. My work was my work all along. I’m extremely grateful to and inspired by all the small-press editors I’ve worked with and hope to continue publishing in that landscape as well as this new one—while also feeling less inclined to categorize myself.

2 - How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?

My mom started reading me Shakespeare before I was born, my dad gave me an illustrated copy of “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” when I was little, and I wrote my first poem in crayon at daycare when I was 4 or 5. So it’s hard to say what was taught and what was innate, but I’ve felt called toward poetry for as long as I can remember. When my consciousness came online, poems were already in the air. There was never any question about whether I would write poetry—sometimes about how to integrate creativity with subsistence, but never about what I wanted to be and do.

3 – How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?

All of the above. It really depends. I spend a lot of time marinating, and I question that part of the process every time, because it can feel disorienting, like I’m adrift and might never find the shore again, even though I always have before. I often say I wish I could perpetually be three-quarters of the way through a manuscript, because at that point I know what it’s going to be, and I’m in flow, and it’s just pure enjoyment letting the little world I’ve mostly figured out unfold and become fully itself. After a manuscript is done, before the next one starts, I’m bereft. Sometimes I collect notes and ideas; more often I collect lines and parts of poems that I make talk to each other for a while until they set some new machine in motion. Once upon a time, I sat down and wrote about one page of Forever No Lo a day, from start to finish, until it was done, and the published version was extremely similar to that original draft. That kind of magical experience might only be possible before the self-consciousness of publication, though. In any case, I have yet to experience it again.

4 – Where does a poem usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a “book” from the very beginning?

I’m usually working on a larger project from the beginning, even though it comes out in shorter pieces. I’m not great at titling individual poems (so I generally don’t, though I sometimes give them fake titles to try out in journals) or even necessarily knowing where one poem stops and another starts. I tend to write in series, and then the series combine into a book. sped and the as-yet-unpublished California Building each have three titled series; Borderline Fortune started with two but ended up breaking into four.

5 - Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?

I do enjoy readings and have done quite a few over the years, but I’m about to put that enjoyment to the test with a full-fledged tour for this latest book, public health situation allowing. I have in-person readings scheduled in nine cities plus multiple virtual events, including with above/ground authors Andrea Rexilius and Melissa Eleftherion Carr, a former Mills College classmate who is now poet laureate of Ukiah.

I write, in part, to join a conversation, and I think reading with other poets for an audience is part of that conversation. At the same time, I’m intensely introverted, so sometimes there’s a social hangover. That tension is just part of the process for me. And booking a tour has been surprisingly rewarding—there is terror in reaching out to strangers, but it’s also an excuse to connect with people I admire but don’t know, and they’ve almost exclusively been gracious, kind, and helpful. Readings aren’t just about the material being read but also the community being built, which I value a great deal.

6 – Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?

I tend to come from an intuitive rather than academic place when I write, but there are some recurring themes. I’m interested in trauma as a snag in the space-time continuum, a time capsule of particular horrifying experiences we couldn’t face in the moment—and how to tap into grief and healing to move through it, rather than simply finding more and more elaborate ways to avoid it. This concerns me on an individual level—my father, for instance, was killed when I was 23, and that remains the major before/after moment of my life—as well as on a societal and planetary level. I think the collective pursuit of distraction and the denial of the pain we’re causing ourselves, each other, and the ecosystem have led us here, and I seek through my work to wake up. How can I align with truth as an individual? What does that alignment feel like in my body? How can I individually contribute to disrupting family, social, and political systems that try to recruit me and others into unreality? What would aligning with truth look like as a collective? What might solutions look like, and how can I be part of them? Since not everything is solvable or exists on a problem/solution plane, what does it mean to live fully in the face of profound pain and loss, some of it manufactured and some of it inevitable?

7 – What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Do they even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?

There are so many different kinds of writers doing so many different kinds of work that I don’t think there’s one specific role, but we do have roles in the larger culture, both reflecting the current reality back to the collective and demonstrating what is possible that hasn’t happened yet, positive and negative. In that way, we help shape the future. I want practical as well as theoretical engagement, so I’m also engaged in more concrete, tactile projects, such as regenerative horticulture. But even people who “only” weave ideas still shape our individual and collective course. It’s also no exaggeration to say poetry has saved my life; I have been in moments of debilitating despair and read a poem that made me feel understood or sparked enough curiosity that I felt life was worth living at least long enough to see what happened next. Poems have completely altered my mental state. We mostly don’t get to know whether our work lands or whom or it touches, but it’s certainly more than just window dressing.

8 - Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?

Sometimes difficult, but only insofar as my ego gets in the way. No matter how much you receive it, feedback can have an initial sting. It’s absolutely essential, though. I make a manuscript as much itself as I can, then workshop it with my writing group and my partner, then send it out. Sometimes an editor’s most subtle question or suggestion has helped me see a piece with sudden clarity, and I feel grateful the original draft didn’t get published without revision. My editors at Penguin, Paul Slovak and Allie Merola, were indispensable in making Borderline Fortune ready for the world.

9 - What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?

My voice teacher, Linda Brice, advises giving away each note as a gift of love—because trying to hold on to and control the notes ruins the flow of the breath and is more likely to lead to hoarseness, tension, and an unpleasing sound. If you don’t hit the note perfectly in a particular performance, she suggests saying, “Oh, well—fuck it.” You can continually improve without berating yourself. I think the same applies to any endeavor in life, including writing. We are imperfect beings trying our best, and when we cling to what we have to offer in an attempt to make it perfect, garner praise, or avoid criticism, we deprive ourselves of the connection that comes through creating and often strangle the idea. Some of my favorite songs are by bands early in their careers, when they didn’t have full mastery of their instruments, but they went for it anyway and moved people. As someone who tends toward perfectionism, it’s a continual practice to follow this advice.

10 - How easy has it been for you to move between genres (poetry to essays)? What do you see as the appeal?

They serve completely different purposes in my life. It depends on what needs to be said and what the best medium is for that saying. I find my poetry fruitfully informs my essays as far as economy of space, leaps in time, evocative imagery and metaphor, and so on. On the other hand, essay writing doesn’t help my poetry as much and sometimes hinders it, because if I come to a poem or poetic project with a linear narrator brain, I don’t achieve the result I want. It feels forced, fake, didactic. There are good narrative poems out there, and there are threads of stories in my poems, but I’m not a narrative poet in any recognizable sense. So I usually have to tell the essay brain to go find something else to do while I write poetry, whereas the poetry brain is most welcome while I write essays.

11 - What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?

I do my best work if I get in a groove of not looking at my phone or checking email when I wake up and waiting to do so until after I write—something, anything, even just for twenty minutes. (I work for myself, so I largely have this freedom.) The more I allow screens to dictate my life and flash various commands to think about what they’re telling me, the more scattered and depleted I feel and the less productive I am creatively. It’s a hard addiction to break, though, and I go in cycles. Do I know in my bones I should stay offline and off-phone in the morning? Yes. Have I looked at screens first thing in the morning multiple days this week? Yes. Sometimes I think that’s another reason why I was able to write Forever No Lo so quickly, easily, and completely: It was before iPhones were released, and social media was simmering, but I hadn’t joined yet.

12 - When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?

I go back and read the poetry books I’ve essentially already memorized and let the best lines evoke that lurching feeling in my stomach, like the first drop on a roller coaster. I let them make me think I wish I wrote that. I try to figure out what forces they’ve harnessed to have such a profound effect on me. I also draw a ton of inspiration any time I go to a live event, whether a music performance, a gallery show, or a reading. I almost always leave needing to jot something down or at least feeling like I’ll be able to again.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?

The wet floor of a cedar forest.

14 - David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art?

I’m hugely inspired by nature and epic treks through nature in particular. My most recent journey was thru-hiking The Enchantments in Washington state in one day. It’s 19.25 miles with 5,000 feet of elevation gain and 7,000 feet of loss, with a core corridor filled with swimmable lakes, all manner of striking granite formations, and plenty of mountain goats. I’ve also ascended and descended Cerro Chirripó in Costa Rica in one day; hiked the full Wonderland Loop around Mt. Rainier, including a 20.5-mile section in one day; and trekked through the world’s largest cave, Sơn Đoòng in Vietnam. I feel the calmest and most myself outdoors, out of cell reception, particularly if there’s a water view involved.

15 - What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?

My early influences have stuck with me. I discovered Lawrence Ferlinghetti and e.e. cummings in middle school, Lucille Clifton and Joy Harjo in high school, and Lucie Brock-Broido and C.D. Wright in college. I don’t think I write like any of them, but I feel them echoing through the work I do. They remain touchstones. Of course I encountered all manner of other writers and mentors in grad school, too, and my instructors Stephen Ratcliffe, Juliana Spahr, Elmaz Abinader, and Sarah Pollock had a huge influence on me personally and creatively. In the last ten years or so, I’ve read more nonfiction than anything and find its content influences my poetry to a great degree, even if readers couldn’t draw a direct line.

16 - What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?

Complete and publish a collection of essays, visit Chile, learn to let go of objects that I only keep out of guilt or fear of regret.


17 - If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?

I’m always wishing I could get more momentum behind my musical pursuits. There was a point earlier in my life when I decided to lean into writing rather than music, so that’s a path I might have chosen and would still like to travel.

I almost went to law school concurrent with the end of my undergraduate degree, and for a while I was a special education program specialist charged with representing a large public school district in legally contentious meetings. I have the skills but not the temperament; those situations deplete rather than feed me. So I’m grateful I didn’t saddle myself with law school debt and also had the courage/naïveté to quit a tenured education job with a pension so I could work for myself—but it was a near miss.


18 - What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?

Even though I’ve danced with a maybe inordinate amount of despair around my writing and occasionally considered abandoning it altogether, I can’t not write. When I’ve worked in jobs that weren’t focused on writing or teaching writing, I’ve always ended up being asked to incorporate my writing skills into my role, and I’ve continued to do my own creative work through all manner of career switches and cross-country moves. It helped that I went to a hippie alternative elementary school run by my best friend’s mother, and we wrote creatively every day—early on, I developed the sense that writing was an essential, ongoing practice, and I’ve never found something more compelling.

19 - What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?

Sarah M. Broom’s The Yellow House is one of the best books I’ve read since the start of the pandemic. She’s written herself and her family into history in this subtle, ingenious, moving way that begs for rereading once you reach the end, just so you can go back and fully appreciate how the structure builds on itself. A book so good that I reread it in the not-too-distant past is Mathias Svalina’s The Wine-Dark Sea. What I’ve watched in the last year and a half feels like a blur, and I’m going to dodge choosing a winner. But an intriguing documentary was Bisbee ’17, on the “Bisbee Deportation” of miners associated with the I.W.W. in 1917 as well as preparation for a reenactment of that event on its centennial. Both the subject and the approach to filming have stuck with me.

20 - What are you currently working on?

A lot of publicity/logistics stuff of late. I saw Stephen King on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, and he said when you publish a book, you have to go shake your ass a little bit. That’s more important for mere mortals like me than for institutions like him, so I’m just looking at all the positives of the process, especially talking to thoughtful people who love and care about literature. But there are also some essay ideas in the mix that I’m chipping away at. The next poetry project is a mystery. I’m in that bereft phase between finishing and starting, but I’m keeping the faith that one day, I’ll be 75% of the way through a new manuscript and high on the process again.

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

 

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Julia Bloch, The Sacramento of Desire



GLOSSARY: OVULEPT

Ovulept: the anthropogenic restructuring of ovulatory time by lungful emissions, endocrine disruptions, hazy particulates. Also: the reshuffling of markers of ovulatory time by thwarting, mediating, stalling, or occluding via market-based postures toward temporality as a condition for subjectivity or livedness or duration. Ovulation split into commodities: egg as service, mucus as surplus, odd cells and tissues, liquid channels of reproductive labor. Occluded from view by a small round word; no safe passage; it doesn’t last or stick; it sinks. A letter written in thick dark ink. Time measured by the slippage of a tiny physical object, by time congealed, by a bleeding sunset. A desirous incantation is repeated; so is an argument meant to persuade time to bend like a sentence. As feathers are not flowers and a toxic Sacramento sunset repeats and repeats until it doesn’t.

I was very pleased to hear about the latest by Philadelphia poet, editor and critic Julia Bloch, The Sacramento of Desire (Portland/San Francisco: Sidebrow Books, 2020), a follow-up to her Letters to Kelly Clarkson (Sidebrow, 2012) [see my review of such here] and Valley Fever (Sidebrow, 2015) [see my review of such here]. For some time now, I’ve been envious and appreciative of Bloch’s book-length lyric suites, her pace and cycling, moving the prose poem around and through vast distances. As she described The Sacramento of Desire last fall as part of an interview posted at poetry mini interviews: “The book is about fertility, desire, and the queer experience of assisted reproduction; Allison Cobb calls it an ‘horological epic quest poem’ and Sawako Nakayasu calls it ‘an urgent call.’” The Sacramento of Desire is set in four prose-sections—“GLOSSARY: OVULEPT,” “THE SACRAMENTO OF DESIRE,” “INTRAMURAL” and “GOODBYE ASPEN”—The Sacramento of Desire is an exhaustive exploration of the language, details and complications around, again, “fertility, desire, and the queer experience of assisted reproduction,” wrapping a complexity of language and emotions into a single, sustained tone. The poems in this extended prose-lyric write of the bleed and the rupture, the possibility of what might not be possible, and the often sterile descriptions that medical science utilize to describe what exists and occurs naturally within the body. “A ritual breaks into steps.” she writes. “Each step produces a result. Each result wins or loses.”

the page, eyeglass is a form of medicine From late menstrual to early ovulation, it’s easier to say the thing unless it isn’t, one and one and two and seven and seven and the face empties. Timing is participatory. Timing is actual, whereas other actions are diaphanous. To time is to wait, to see is to make virtual, and to make virtual is to align body with signal to count moons counterclockwise. Either you get the book or you get the concept, you get the chart or the seam ripper; both are forms of policing a feeling that’s right (“THE SACRAMENTO OF DESIRE”)