Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Dani Spinosa : CRWR3011 Creative Writing: Poetry II : Where Does a Poem Begin?

How does a poem begin?

 

 

 

 

I (Dani) have not been writing much these days. I’ve been working too much and stressing too much and hiding behind too many other things. When rob asked “Where does a poem begin?” My brain went scholarly and then it went teacherly. So, of course, I turned the question onto my bright and thoughtful students in our upper-year poetry seminar. What’s included here are the responses from four of my students (and a sneaky one from myself and my computer) and while they are varied, they have those trademarks of the emerging poet that invigorate me as a reader:  the stress, the desire, the reaching out for connection. I could use, I think, a little more of it in my life (the writing stress and not the house stress job stress money stress world stress). I think there might be something in there for you, too? – Dani Spinosa

 

 

 

Celia Fournier

Where does a poem begin? When faced with the menacing blank page, the empty notebook paper, the mocking, blinking cursor, I often ask myself the same thing. Hunched at the desk, straining to pull the figurative language from my brain, it seems that a poem can’t possibly begin with me. But they certainly don’t come from the heavens – no divine inspiration. There have been no bolts of lightning or glowing lightbulbs when I grip the pen, waiting for inspiration to strike. No amount of wishing can will poetry into existence, no matter how many times I may try.

Where does a poem begin? One can never be sure. They appear on only their terms, and only in the moments where writing is furthest from my mind. A poem begins with the story my grandmother tells; the birds on my back deck each morning, greeting each other and meeting the day; and the flush of our cheeks as we wander down sidewalks, hands waving in heated debate. A poem begins with the snowman I notice appear in my neighbours’ front lawn and the soft crunch of the bun from the bakery down the street – sweet, and still warm; the ringing laughter of my friends, too late to dare check the time; the hug that lingers, the wave from the window, the drawn out goodbye and the glorious welcome home. A poem begins with living. And the writing, well, that comes later, when I finally make it back to my desk.

 

Sam Hovey

A poem begins wherever your thoughts are interrupted, even if for a millisecond. Interrupted by anything that deserves more than a glance or a pass-over of the eyes—you stop for one millisecond. It was the pattern of salt on the sides of your shoes like mountainscapes. Or it was the stubborn texture of a stubby hangnail on your thumb, the kind that emits little pricks of pain every time it’s nudged. Maybe it was spoken; did she say groovy? Who says groovy? A poem begins unsolicited, where so many things are already on your mind and something new lights up in the background. With a shadow cast over everything you should be thinking about, even for a millisecond, all you see is what you would be thinking about if you had time.

 

Annika Setterington

A poem begins with an attempt to internalize an external experience. Seeing the texture of a painting at a museum, hearing the lyrics of a new song, feeling the familiarity of a conversation with a friend. Then, a sprint to turn the moment into a memory vivid enough to recall every minute detail later. It begins with an attempt to bring a memory back to the present and make it real. Solidify it. Enough to reach out and grab it, so that the original internalization becomes someone else's external experience. The cycle repeats. A poem begins with an attempt.

 

Dawn Web

 

In the streetlights

Blaring while glaring between them

On drunken nights, single and lonely

 

On stage, singing into the microphone

Playing guitar in the dodgy dive bars

Decorated in 

Blood, spit, and beers

Languishing over ash or maple Brighter hardwood

To lighten the dim.

Suits of plaid shirts and denim blue Where their wood—ha.r.d.ens

 

At the after party because

The bar has closed, and

We will go all night—till Dawn 

[6 AM]

Banging out drums

Belting our lungs

Wagging our guitars whilst

Dripping piano keys

Cuddling next to Kevin, stirring loins At Jimmy’s, the host begs to kiss me

  downing more beers

     as someone orders takeout

I respectfully decline

Refusing to be caught in his love triangle

He slaps himself

                      across the face

 

Sleeping on strangers' sofas

  between jobs

  between homes

 

Entering the depths of confines

Holding down children from jumping off bridges. Scraping pennies.

To get tossed—assaulted—

Stone to back

Ass falling on the wood, beneath

Neck rebounding upon the bricks

Wrist burning from a breaking bleed of teeth piercing skin—eating

Carpals crunching.

 

On the flights, 

Plane across

To deepen connections

With friends. With lovers.

To recover and heal the bruising blazed upon knees

 

In the forest, camping, eating

Steak and mushrooms

Until the sky turns pink and the trees dress to impress

While we undress and put up our tents

 

In the Bush, on rocks

Overlooking the firepit

And a view of lakewater surrounding

Mystical couples

 

Making new friends, a relation with

The sun grazes us finally with grace

Once again.

On the beach

 

Listening deep within as your body

Syncopates, regulates to match pitch

With the ocean tides

Your heart, your mind

Your breath

G L I D E

Skinny dipping at midnight

 

On the toilet

Reading magazines

Poop material to aid your release

 

On the side of the highway Sticking up—one thumb. H

itching rides for a 

Risky endeavour, and an unknown adventure.

 

Hiking the mountain to drink

~The freshest water ~ on earth ~

Seeping sap, a dripping tap Between the rocks and branches

Into my bottle. Clean!

 

Dipping into the three layers of gooey Nakusp Hotsprings

The hidden uncommercialized

                     exposed

                                         testicles, nipples, vulvas

Boiling our skin

Purifying our poors

Rejuvenating our insides

  I paint in the water bed

                                                   As Mo rests, lays blessed, resets in his hammock

              As Alex examines the world blended in the sand of mountains of ant hills.

 

In forests, so green

Turning red—

Escaping wildfires—smoky seems

  Paranoid with bear spray

The lighter is chasing us

 

In hostels, hunt for privacy

Give rise

On bathroom floors that

We dirty

Balmy skin, hard gust expelling our mouths Filling the mirror, the room sweltering.

 

At a rest stop,

Stranded and starved

Just you and me for miles

MacGyvering a stove

Out of an empty soup can, we cut holes and

Place the metal over the propane flame.

 

On the top bunk,

I climb down the ladder

A foreign body lays—

No shirt, side boob

Black thong on hot nights

Expose gorgeous booties from under the covers

We met for the first time and decided to get tattoos

 

In art galleries

Kachina follows me around

I bring her to dinner with my other lover

I bend my knee to her and I kiss her goodbye

 

I could go on and on

It never really begins, and it has no end.

There is a poem                           in every moment.

 

Dani Spinosa

 

A poem begins in the glitch, in the slip between thought and tongue, in the syntax that breaks before it makes sense. It begins where language malfunctions. It begins in that gap, that space where the body stutters against the page. A poem begins in the refusal to end. It just keeps beginning.

 

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We’re representatives for CRWR3011 Creative Writing: Poetry II at Dalhousie University (Winter 2025), with Dani Spinosa as the instructor. We’re just reading and writing as much as we can and weathering this winter. We’re a remote class, so we meet online, but this writing with each other is one way that we can connect despite (or with) the distance.

 

Lindsey Webb : on ThirdHand Books





Kylan Rice and I began talking seriously about Thirdhand Books in fall 2022, when Ross White of Bull City Press approached Kylan about starting a press for their incubator program. We’re now an imprint of BCP, and we quite literally wouldn’t exist without their mentorship, operational infrastructure, and financial support. Check out the other projects in their incubator program here: https://bullcitypress.com/projects/incubator/.

From the beginning, we knew we wanted to publish full-length books, and we wanted to create a space for experimental poetry that was also interested in literary history, perhaps self-consciously so. We wanted to know how contemporary writers were situating themselves in relation to their own canons, to the long sweep of books and language that have given them, for better or worse, the tools they have to work with. We published our first two books, Patty Nash’s Walden Pond and Jordan Dunn’s Notation, in 2024. These books are, among other things, two very different takes on works by Henry David Thoreau. (I’m still holding out hope someone will write a double review!) Our next book is You’re Called by the Same Sound by Alicia Wright, releasing in late summer 2025. It’s a collection of poetry written amid a flood of documents, pollution, maps, and photographs, and considers how poetry might begin to speak about the violence, dispossession, and ties of the past.

Kylan and I have been friends for over ten years now, and we first met while working on a literary journal together. As editors, our taste isn’t identical, and that’s led to (I hope) an interesting and varied list. Kylan favors carefully crafted poems with an intelligent immediacy; I gravitate toward fragments, humor, and the surreal. We both get excited about books that feel confident from the first page, driven by an urge to speak, attentive to language’s sound, texture, and memory.

Our personal lives and the dissolution of SPD slowed the publication of our first titles, but our eventual hope is to publish four books a year. Juggling busy lives–finishing degrees, starting careers, having kids–alongside the unpaid work of running a small press is by far the biggest challenge we’ve faced.

That said, while there are many financial challenges to publishing experimental poetry, I’ve long felt that small presses can do more to market their books. With mentorship from BCP and relying on our previous experiences as publishers and booksellers, we’ve tried hard to get our books into the hands of a wider group of readers than might otherwise seek us out on their own. A little naively, perhaps, I’m convinced there are more people interested in reading poetry than the small press ecosystem currently believes, but these readers need exposure to it, and access to it, and some tools to approach it with. Will my theory prove correct? To be honest, I’m not yet sure–but the future is long. I’m optimistic.

 

 

 

 

Lindsey Webb is the author of Plat (Archway Editions, 2024), which was named a best poetry book of 2024 by The New York Times Book Review, and the chapbooks House (Ghost Proposal, 2020) and Perfumer's Organ (above/ground press, 2023). Her writing has appeared in BOMB, Chicago Review, Denver Quarterly, and Lana Turner, among others. With Kylan Rice, she edits Thirdhand Books.

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