Showing posts with label above/ground press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label above/ground press. Show all posts

Sunday, December 1, 2024

J-T Kelly : A Conversation with Poet Kyla Houbolt

 

 

 

 

Houbolt and Kelly met on the old bird app and keep up their acquaintance on bluesky. Sometimes they send each other poems. And sometimes they send each other their opinions. Kelly in italics.

 

Hi, Kyla! Thanks for being willing to do this email interview with me.  I want to start with one of my favorite poems of yours.

Lead Pipe Cinch

inch by inch
the calendar absorbs

that ectoplasmic gloss

of old photos

but also that old timey

time when everyone

was a flower

There's a lot going on in this short poem, but I want to focus for a second on the vocabulary. Cinch, calendar, ectoplasmic, old timey — This is not the sort of text prediction that AI does. How do you think about where your mind goes next? Word to word. How do you think about where your eyes go next?

I don't recall how I did this, but I must have started with the title phrase (which is a weird one in itself, what the heck IS a lead pipe cinch? Probably a plumbing tool, not a foregone conclusion but never mind that). Then went to the easy rhyme of "inch" and then from spatial measure to time measure... and then the thought of the calendar absorbing time as it passes; ectoplasmic is a lovely old fashioned idea about what exists of living things just "outside" the physical apparent. Gloss goes first, in the erosion of time, like the top layer of emulsion on something as ephemeral as a photograph. Ectoplasm already invoked for me "old timey" and when I asked Poet Self "old timey what?" the notion of each human being having a delicate tender part, a flower, that we used to acknowledge (in my romantic imagination anyway). What flower are you? Time passing absorbs memory, consumes it.

Poet Self, hmm... I know a bit of your biography but not much: in and around college where you got some suspect advice about not using big words out of solidarity with the working class; some time in Kentucky where you posted poems on the trunks of trees; more recently in the Pacific Northwest, moving frequently, tending goats and flowers; and in the last few years publishing poems in journals and a string of chapbooks. How did old Poet Self get her start? And what does she think of where the path has led to?

First off, it was North Carolina, not Kentucky, where I put poems on trees. But I understand; my wanderings are hard to track, even for me. Before there was old Poet Self, there was young Poet Self, who put in a decades long apprenticeship of a kind. I don't know where I got the idea, initially, to write poems, but in my early 20s I made a concerted effort to learn how, by reading a lot (great gulps of Emily Dickinson) and doing many revisions of what I wrote. The single workshop I took in those years (though there was one later, in San Francisco, run by Bob Gluck...) was a weekend offered by Judson Jerome, then poetry editor of Writer's Digest, on his land, in Maryland I think it was? -- a communal living situation called Downhill Farm. The Mason Dixon line ran through it unless I am remembering some other place. Anyway, that was fun. I did get one poem published in those early days, in a newsprint tabloid called Cedar Rock. You'd think that would have been exciting for me but in fact it put me off sending out work for many years, because when I received my four contributor's copies I realized no one I knew would ever read this poem in this publication and I had a deep "so what's the point?" feeling. Instead I managed to find a series of really low key situations where I could read and share poems. I dipped a toe in the slam movement when it first started but then veered off that pathway in order to do some environmental activism, which consumed most of my creative juice for a while. During that time I made collages and after for a while wrote a few fabulist short stories, which I did try to publish but was daunted by the whole process and set those aside. I did keep trickling out poems ("can't stop won't stop") and found my way much later onto an online writers forum where I put in some serious work but didn't write anything worth much. There was one poet there whose work I admired a lot. He left and went to Twitter, and I went there after a while also, because I wanted to read more of his work. He wasn't posting much at all by then, but you, J-T, surely remember what a rich field it was for a while, for poets. I found it liberating, and consumed poetry there, and my work became orders of magnitude better, just by means of my seeing what was possible. Still, given the really sort of unregulated process this poetry journey has been, it's rather amazing to me that I actually have five chapbooks in print. I continue to feel the movement of learning from what I read and seeing how I might grow what I write into -- here I lack the word -- improvement of a kind.

This is that first poem I published, an ekphrastic inspired by a photograph, though I didn't learn that term for years:

Apart

Sheets and shirts
are hung on the line with pins.

The one shirt on the hanger

walks into the house.

It's up there alone
in the dark under the porch roof.

The back is bent, elbows swing

invisible hands perfectly.

It's easy to see the legs follow

in the black space underneath.

Apart,
it has put back on its body.

Oh god for a face

before the back door opens

Originally published in Cedar Rock, sometime in the mid 1970’s, probably 1974. This is the first poem I ever published. Cedar Rock was a small newsprint tabloid edited by David Yates.

That poem's a real gift. Thank you.

What poems have changed you along the way? You mentioned Emily Dickinson. Are there others? From back then, from today? A poet or a poem that got under your skin and affected how you approach writing? Also, what places have similarly gotten to you and changed you? A city? A house? A highway?

Everything. Everything has gotten and gets under my skin and changes me. I can't think of anything that has not! This to me is the appeal of writing poetry (in part, always in part): to document, to express that relationship with the world and existence, which is a process of awakening.

However, I'll choose some specifics. First, Gary Snyder has been a major nourishment for my writing. It's like I got permission to write in ordinary speech from his poems, which all feel in a way intimately human, like someone sitting in the room with you talking about things -- the most mundane and the most sublime. Well, before that though, in high school I felt joy to discover the Beat poets for that permission to free up language. e. e. cummings experimental ways were similarly a source of permission. Then much more recently, the existence of the New York School of poets, especially Frank O'Hara, who for some reason claimed two birthdays and the fake one is also mine! Ha! I began my writing journey with the intention of aiming for poems that are easily accessible to anyone who can read English, which also upon closer reading contain depths that sort of go on forever. A goal I shall never reach of course, and lately that "accessibility" wish has become less important as I enjoy taking more risks and pushing the language. (For instance, at this time I consider John Ashbery to be the single greatest American poet.) Sometimes writing a poem feels like pushing the language away from its enclosing structure, pushing it out of shape so that there is more room inside. And here's something else: This question of yours came in just as I was unpacking my books, which had been stored for me by a kind poet friend, and I was reminded about Spencer Holst! whose book The Zebra Storyteller came into my hands in a magical way. It was in a wonderful bookstore in Santa Cruz CA, Logos, which had a huge selection of everything, used and new books both. I was browsing the section of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and The Zebra Storyteller had been mis-shelved there. It didn't literally fall on my head but it might as well have. I read a little in it and immediately thought "I can do that too!" which was a delightful boost to my writing.

"A city? A house? A highway?" What a delicious prompt that is! But at this moment I have to leave my answer as it stands: everything has changed me. 9/11 which finally spurred me to get on the internet was most definitely a watershed event. Via the internet I learned about Dean Young when he died! I immediately bought a copy of Shock by Shock, and it fed me. And how can I not mention Han Shan, otherwise known as Cold Mountain? The old Chinese poets....

I am always aware that my list of poets I love is heavily male. Re: the New York School, I intentionally sought out Bernadette Meyer and Alice Notely -- Meyer I have not warmed to so much; Notely I have been really inspired by, mostly by seeing her online reading her work, which I believe she still does. And this is a terribly almost painfully incomplete answer! I have to end here though; day has come.

[I woke to the news that Trump had taken Pennsylvania overnight and then Wisconsin at 5:34 AM, giving him the electoral votes to become the next president. I closed my news app and opened my email thread with Kyla.]

Well. Let's talk about poetry.

I wonder how you approach revision, Kyla. And has your approach changed over time? I know that you've been in the habit of writing short pieces and sharing them online. Do you go back to those poems? Are the poems in your chapbooks from a different process? How do you think about a poem being finished?

My approach has changed and I hope will keep changing. In the early days I really had no idea how to revise or polish or make it better, but I just chipped away. I picked up clues here and there. I read an article (forget by whom) about "getting off the subject", meaning that what you start addressing needs to go somewhere else, or else you don't really have a poem. Much later I learned that this is called a turn, or volta. (I do not believe this is an absolute; in fact the one absolute I believe in about poems is that there are no absolutes.) If I have a good metaphor I can't just let it be, oh, that's a good description of x. I have to take it somewhere, and I try to take it somewhere unexpected, something that's not signaled to the reader until, boom!, it happens. Another clue I picked up -- I think it was a YouTube video of a talk by, maybe, Jane Hirshfield? who said "don't embarrass yourself." What I have to guard against there is a kind of emotional over-sentimentality. Sometimes, years later, just reading my own poems can bring me to tears but I labor not to have that be obvious at all.

When I started out trying to be intentional about poetry, in my early 20s, I studied metrics and I knew all the feet and rhythmic patterns. I could not even identify them now, but some of that took root I guess, because a big thing for me is that the poem has to sound right when I read it out loud to myself and a lot of that has to do with rhythm. As for the short poems I post online, those posts sort of became my "trees" when I stopped posting poems on trees. I do go back to them but rarely change them. Sometimes. Many of the poems in my chapbooks first appeared as posts online. Longer poems usually take longer to write and more steps to the process. A few shorter poems sit around for a long time before they get finished. Ha! I am thinking of one poem I wrote many years ago that I still have not found an ending for. I keep hoping I'll come up with something! This has been known to happen in a few instances, after years go by.

Finished is a combination of 1, it sounds good to my ear; 2, I can't come up with any way to improve it; and 3, I'm no longer interested in working with it. It's really, in the end, a matter of intention. I have to feel that every element of the poem is there intentionally. If I discover I have repeated a word, I usually have to find a substitute for one instance of the word, but sometimes the repetition is useful. Line breaks are important. Often I will fiddle with where I place them until it feels right.

Boxes, huh? Maybe you're right. Come to think of it, I have a poem about living in a box. That's for another time. But, Kyla, I want to thank you for your candor and for sharing your poems and your mind with me. Would you wrap up this interview by telling us what you are reading now? I have the idea you read many books at once, and I'd love to have a peek at what you're in the middle of. Thanks!

Thank you, Hyphen, for inviting me to this conversation, it's been stimulating. As for multiple books at once, I used to do that much more than I do now. As you know, I just returned to NC after two years wandering and looking for a better place to be, which I did not find. And my books were being hosted by a kind poet friend and I have most of them unpacked now, so I'm greeting old friends. I am reading Kenneth Koch's Collected Poems for the book club currently underway, celebrating the 100th year since his birth. I am also dipping in to my old friend Cold Mountain (Han Shan) and a little book of poems called Understander by N.W. Lea, given to me by rob mclennan (thanks, rob!) Visiting again with The Water Engine by my friend Ankh Spice, and in the middle of a collection called The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations Millennium General Assembly, by Denis Johnson. I am awaiting delivery of I Remember by Joe Brainard, too, and will no doubt be reading that soon as it arrives. It's a joy to have my books around me again.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kyla Houbolt writes poems and occasional reviews, and makes gardens. Find her on her website at https://kylahoubolt.us/, on Bluesky https://bsky.app/profile/luaz.bsky.social, and on her Linktree, https://linktr.ee/luaz_poet

 

 

 

 

J-T Kelly is the author of the chapbook Like Now (CCCP/Subpress, 2023). His poetry appears in The Denver Quarterly (upcoming), Bad Lilies, and elsewhere. He is an innkeeper in Indianapolis.

Tuesday, July 9, 2024

today is the thirty-first anniversary of above/ground press, (and we're having a big sale,

Happy birthday, above/ground press! In case you hadn’t heard, today is the THIRTY-FIRST ANNIVERSARY OF above/ground press (with more than 1,325 publications to date) and to celebrate such, I thought, why not offer a huge summer sale?

$35 (plus shipping) for any eight 2023/2024 titles! Or, if you are feeling particularly brave, $40 for any ten 2023/2024 titles! (until August 31, 2024)! braver still? $80 for any twenty-five 2023/2024 titles!

with options including plenty of 2024 titles so far: I wanted to say something, : an elegy, for Barry McKinnon (1944-2023), by rob mclennan ; Unsovereign, by Kacper Bartczak, translated from the Polish by Mark Tardi ; Broken River, by Ken Norris ; Un-Composed, Poetry by Saba Pakdel ; Family Chronicles from Muffin Land, by Hope Anderson ; Perverse Density, by Sacha Archer ; BRADE LANDS, by Peter Myers ; Process, by Julia Polyck-O’Neill ; DAWN’S FOOL, by Kyla Houbolt ; Gnomics, by Dale Tracy ; The Green Rose, in collaboration, Steven Ross Smith + Phil Hall ; The Peter F Yacht Club #33/2024 VERSeFest Special, lovingly hand-crafted, folded, stapled, edited and carried around in bags of envelopes by rob mclennan ; Touch the Donkey [a small poetry journal] #41 [TENTH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE] featuring new poems by Gil McElroy, ryan fitzpatrick, John Barlow, Amanda Earl, Renée Sarojini Saklikar, Conyer Clayton, rob mclennan, Julie Carr and Pattie McCarthy ; abject sutures, melissa eleftherion ; From Desire Without Expectation, Jacob Wren ; HYSTERICAL PREGNANCY, Katie Ebbitt ; new york ironweed, Amanda Deutch ; Alternate histories, Kyle Flemmer ; Some Failed Eternity, Pete Smith ; In The Margins. . . . . .of french translations found and remixed by russell carisse, russell carisse ; BUSY SECRET, Micah Ballard ; The Old Man: new stories, Clint Burnham ; Wars, by Angela Caporaso ; Fifty-Two Lines About Henry, by Cary Fagan ; The Pig’s Valise, by BLUNT RESEARCH GROUP ; Touch the Donkey [a small poetry journal] #40 featuring new poems by Ryan Eckes, Dennis Cooley, Michael Harman, Terri Witek and Laynie Browne ; MY STRUGGLE WITH NOUNS, by Gary Barwin ; These Steady Bulbs, by Lydia Unsworth ;

as well as the plethora of 2023 chapbook titles: But Then I Thought, by Kyla Houbolt ; A PANDEMIC INVENTORY, SPRING-SUMMER 2020, BROOKLYN NY, by Zane Koss ; Between the Lakes, by Ben Robinson ; with the lakes, by Colin Dardis ; The Last Horse / Prologue, by Aaron Tucker ; Misremembered Proverbs, by Adriana Oniță ; river / estuaries, by Julie Carr and rob mclennan ; Gardens in Motion, by Stephen Collis ; STORY LINE, by Rae Armantrout ; glass / language / untitled / exaltation (second printing; bpNichol Chapbook Award Winner, by Jason Christie ; Dinosaurs of Glory, by Nikki Reimer ; Send $19.99 for Supplements and Freedom, Collages and Uncreative Writing, by Noah Berlatsky ; Unconsciousness Raising, by Miranda Mellis ; ESTRO FLUNKY: FIELD NOTES, by MLA Chernoff ; ashes, by Marita Dachsel ; Report from the [ryan] fitzpatrick Society, Vol 1. No. 1, edited by rob mclennan ; AGALMA, by Kevin Stebner ; THINGS TO BUY IN NEW BRUNSWICK, by Meghan Kemp-Gee ; Cartesian Wells, by Gil McElroy ; This Folded Path, by Robert van Vliet ; Mayday, by Stephen Cain ; LIVID REMAINDERS, by Geoffrey Olsen ; How to, by Heather Cadsby ; An Extremely Well-Funded Study of Doors, by Evan Williams ; Poetic Constructions: Poems written for the Enriched Bread Artists’ 2020 Open Studio, by Grant Wilkins ; missing matrilineal, by nina jane drystek ; Girl gives long-fingered self-portrait, by Sophia Magliocca ; The Baroness and her Ex Read Orgasmic Toast: To Whom It May Concern, by Grant Wilkins ; Groundling: On Apology, by Jennifer Baker ; SONGS FROM THE DEMENTIA SUITCASE, Karen Massey ; edgeless : letters, by rob mclennan ; Bridges under the Water, by Jérôme Melançon ; Where there's smoke, by Monty Reid ; {NANCY} [an essay on Nancy Shaw], by Jamie Hilder ; LALIQUE, by George Bowering and Artie Gold ; Bits and Bobs, two stories by Ryan Stearne ; Report from the (Pearl) Pirie Society, Vol. 1 No. 1 ; errand : towards, by Brad Vogler ; Touch the Donkey [a small poetry journal] #38 ; Simple Location, by Andrew Gorin ; “Almost Alive” by Julia Drescher ; ECHOES, by Ken Norris ; Toothache, by Joseph Donato ; What started / this mess, Samuel Ace ; BIRD SNOW ON HARD TRACKS, Stuart Ross ; Apogee/Perigee, Leesa Dean ; Report from the (Nikki) Reimer Society, Vol 1. No. 1, edited by rob mclennan ; When a Folk, When a Sprawl, Jessi MacEachern ; Touch the Donkey [a small poetry journal] #37, with new poems by Micah Ballard, Robert Hogg, Ben Meyerson, Leigh Chadwick, Junie Désil, Devon Rae, kevin mcpherson eckhoff and Kimberly Dyck, Benjamin Niespodziany and Barbara Tomash ; G U E S T [a journal of guest editors] #26, guest-edited by Adam Katz, with new work by alex benedict, Marc E. Christmas, Adam Katz and Ron Silliman ; NOISE, Jordan Davis ; Report from the (Jessica) Smith Society, Vol 1. No. 1, edited by rob mclennan ; LEARNING HOW TO TALK, Nick Chhoeun ; Night Protest, Ben Jahn ; Poor Rutebeuf, Translated by William Vallières ; tattered sails (after un coup de des), second printing, Derek Beaulieu ; WAVE 1.0, Isabel Sobral Campos ; P E S T / (Zion Offramp 65-70), Mark Scroggins ; The Alta Vista Improvements, rob mclennan ; Report from the (Brenda) Iijima Society, Vol 1. No. 1, edited by rob mclennan ; genesis, Laura Walker ; In Which Archibald Lampman / Translates Arthur Rimbaud, Grant Wilkins ; Report from the (Amish) Trivedi Society, Vol 1. No. 1, edited by rob mclennan ; DEAR NOSTALGIA, Nathanael O’Reilly ; Perfumer’s Organ, by Lindsey Webb ; Something or Other, by Jason Heroux ; TAKE IT DOWN, by Barbara Henning ; G U E S T #25, edited by Laurie Anne Fuhr ; Touch the Donkey #36 ; The Peter F Yacht Club #31 "The Factory Reading Series 30th anniversary" issue / edited by rob mclennan ; ONTARIO HYDRO, by Derek Beaulieu ;

That’s more than one hundred titles! This list obviously includes issues of the quarterly Touch the Donkey [a small poetry journal], the occasional and guest-edited G U E S T [a journal of guest editors], the Report from the Society festschrift titles, and chapbooks in the above/ground press prose/naut series; all titles available while supplies last (obviously), although everything listed above is (at this point of writing, at least) all still very much in print; and you know I’m also completely open to backdating a 2024 above/ground press subscription, yes? I mean, that's a pretty remarkable deal.

To order, send cheques (as well as your list of preferred titles; add $3 for postage; in US, add $5; outside North America, add $11) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com

and don't forget to order copies of groundwork: The best of the third decade of above/ground press: 2013–2023 (Invisible Publishing, 2023)! and tickets are already available for the 31st anniversary reading/launch/party at RedBird on August 10, 2024! a full list of readers will be announced soon!


with further forthcoming 2024 titles by Carter Mckenzie, Maxwell Gontarek, Carlos A. Pittella, Conal Smiley, Ian FitzGerald, Nate Logan, Peter Jaeger, Noah Berlatsky, ryan fitzpatrick, russell carisse, JoAnna Novak, Chris Banks, Julia Cohen, Carlos A. Pittella, Mahaila Smith, Andrew Brenza, Mckenzie Strath, John Levy, alex benedict, Helen Hajnoczky, Ryan Skrabalak, MAC Farrant, Terri Witek and David Phillips! Oh, and Touch the Donkey [a small poetry journal] #42 lands soon as well! Gadzooks! that is very exciting, yes?

Friday, March 15, 2024

rob mclennan : 2024 VERSeFest interviews: Jason Christie

 

 

 

 

Jason Christie lives and writes in Ottawa. He is the author of Canada Post (Invisible), i-ROBOT (Edge/Tesseract), Unknown Actor (Insomniac), and Cursed Objects (Coach House). His most recent chapbooks are: glass / language / untitled / exaltation (above/ground) which won the bpNichol Chapbook award and Heavy Metal Litany (Model press). He is looking for a home for a new manuscript of poetry he wrote with the unhelpful assistance of AI.

Jason Christie reads in Ottawa on Sunday, March 24, 2024 as part of VERSeFest 2024.

rob mclennan: You’ve been mentioning in author biographies for a while now that you’re working on a manuscript of poetry, some of which appears in your bpNichol Chapbook Award-winning glass / language / untitled / exaltation (above/ground press, 2022), with “the help of several Python scripts.” What prompted this process?

Jason Christie: When we had our first child I started a practice of writing every day. I placed no parameters on that writing. It wasn’t exactly poetry, nor was it exclusively prose. I listed things, I rambled, I talked a lot about having a young child, struggles with depression and unemployment, and family life. I’ve always been attracted to writing that opens a window into the writer’s experience in an unvarnished, matter-of-fact kind of way. Thinking here of Bernadette Mayer’s Midwinter Day, for example. That went on for a couple of years where I would drop things into the file semi-regularly and it grew to almost 100 pages. I had no plans at this point to ever do anything with it.

When we had our second child, even writing became difficult to do! In the fog of the sleep deprivation and decreased mental facility that accompanies life with young children, my short term memory was obliterated. I started adding things to the file again, and it occurred to me that the file was in essence an archive full of memories. I was learning Python at the time and started playing around with scripts to cut up the raw material, randomize it, and then feed me a line at a time from the output. As well as being a lot of fun, it was revelatory!

Whenever I wanted to make a poem I would run my scripts to generate some interesting output from the raw material, print out the result, and set to it with my pen. It was very difficult to be creative with two young children at home, but I could definitely whittle away at pages full of stuff while they napped or during some quiet time. I started to find my way to an idea about what I was creating. I called the whole neverending thing: glass language untitled exaltation. The resultant poems are some of the most emotional and raw writing I’ve ever done.

rm: How does this process, and this result, differ from the work you were doing prior to having children?

JC: Almost entirely time, I would say, is the biggest difference. If necessity is the mother of invention, then it became necessary for me to figure out a way to keep writing despite my short term memory and cognitive capabilities being degraded by sleep deprivation. Before having kids, I had the luxury of time. I could stare at a blank page, spend an afternoon writing away when I wanted, but that had to change when dirty diapers and the needs of parenthood appeared.

Another change might be that while I’ve always been drawn to the everyday, ordinary subject matter of life, it took on a vitality and urgency as I realized my children were growing up. It is a relief to leave behind the interrupted sleep and bleary-eyed, survival mode of the early years but at the same time it is heartbreaking to think you might not know the last time you lift your children up and hold them close. Capturing the experience of life as a new parent, of my kids when they were young, having those memories out of my head, provides some comfort.

In some ways the use of Python scripts and cut-up methods is not different from what I was doing prior to becoming a parent. I’ve always had an interest in process-based writing and conceptualism, but I don’t feel a strong need to rigidly adhere to a process or show my hand with a wink. In that regard, this process aligns with my general approach to writing and thinking. I’ve also relished the messiness of everything in the past with dirty concrete or unpolished sections of poems/books.

rm: Where and how did your interest in process-based writing and conceptualism develop? How do you see what you are doing relating to other works within such an expansive field?

JC: My openness to many forms of poetry began with the crowd of poets I met at York University. We were part of a loose collective called The Writers at York. Thanks to professors like Margo Swiss, Christopher Dewdney, Bruce Powe, Stephen Cain, and Steve  McCaffery, I was very fortunate to discover the possibilities of all kinds of poetry. Steve McCaffery introduced an incredible range and depth of poetry in his workshops, during my independent study that I got to do with him, and in conversation outside of the classroom. He was a very kind and enthusiastic teacher when I studied with him at York.

I studied with Nicole Markotić, Fred Wah, and several other great teachers at the University of Calgary where I continued to learn more about various poetic forms and schools. Nicole Markotić was my thesis supervisor and her no bullshit approach, incredible insight, and deep knowledge about poetry keeps me honest to this day about what I’m doing. I hear her voice in the back of my head whenever I try to do anything too clever or that isn’t supported by the infrastructure of the poem. Fred Wah was a huge inspiration too with his thoughtful, challenging mindset to what a poem can be or do.

The group of writers I got to hang out with in Calgary really built upon the foundation I set in university. They challenged me to think beyond the page, to explore various ways to publish, to write, to read poetry. I’m grateful for the years I spent in Calgary and the people I got to spend those years with! I’d extend this to my time in Vancouver with the KSW and the people I got to know there. It was where I found a way to bring politics into my poetry. This is a long, long path to get to the point, but it was somewhere between my time in Toronto and my time in Calgary that I discovered my interest in process poetics and my time in Vancouver that connected the personal to the political.

The range of poetry that is more open or experimental is incredibly broad. In terms of process-related poetry, I love Ted Berrigan’s poems. I was introduced to Ted Berrigan by Christopher Dewdney while studying at York. I love how Berrigan folds the act of writing into the poem, the details of the moment of composition, even bodily processes get mentioned. Then there are Berrigan’s Sonnets which to me represent a very playful kind of process writing. His work with Ron Padgett and Joe Brainard comes to mind too. Highly experimental without being rigorous. That’s my jam.

rm: With those influences you cite as examples, what did those first experiments with your own forays into writing look like? How were you looking at your own way through such a heft of influence?

JC: Heft is right! It took me a long time to find myself in the mix of my influences. I found protection and solace in such strong role models and in the communities in which I found myself. A curious thing happened though, perhaps because I moved around a bunch, but over time I began to filter out the bits from each inspiration source to apply to my own voice – for example politics from Fred Wah and my time in Vancouver, formal innovation from being in Calgary, the quotidian from Berrigan and Mayer, serious playfulness from Markotić and McCaffery.

Nowadays I am a lot less anxious about where I fit or where my writing fits. Once I was beyond the comfort and security of the communities that sheltered and nurtured me, including the academy, I felt free to express myself as I wished. I am grateful for the guidance and education I received from my peers and mentors, but it took no small amount of courage to step away into the unknown.

rm: Because you’ve published a number of chapbooks now, I’m wondering: how do you see the process of chapbook-making? Are your chapbook manuscripts built as in-progress longer manuscripts, appearing as stops along the way towards something larger, or do you see them as self-contained projects that evolve into something larger?

JC: I think all of the above! I love the chapbook format a lot. I’m looking at Anne Carson’s Float on my shelf right now and the many chapbooks from friends and writers I admire.

For me, there are chapbooks which I built to be self-contained, which is not to say that they will never appear as a part of something larger, but I love the constraint of the format because I tend to overwrite. With the ongoing, ever-expanding glass language untitled exaltation poem, in the way it always exists as the potential output of several scripts, I used chapbooks as a way to excerpt from that bounty of material. Perhaps one day I'll have a site or app or something where poems from the raw material can appear automatically or that anyone could use to generate their own bespoke poem.

Creating limited expressions in chapbooks also allowed me to zoom in on particular aspects of it. With random_lines = random.choice, which you published in 2017, I was mainly interested in the strangeness and familiarity of the output. I was trying to sift through what I was doing to figure out what the bits of poetry might look like from the process of accreting and editing the raw material generated by the process. The following year (2018) you published glass language (excerpt), in which I started to see more clearly what I wanted to express through the project. In 2022, we worked on glass / language / untitled / exaltation (an excerpt), which was the most realized expression of how I think about the whole thing. And it won the bpNichol Chapbook award in 2023 for us!

That was pretty surreal. I don’t know if I adequately thanked the Meet the Presses crew at the time because I was super emotional, nervous, and overwhelmed, but they are incredible to a person and they do such vital, important work spreading the love of chapbooks and small presses. For that matter, I don't know that I thanked you nearly enough for your support over the years! Thank you rob, and thank you to the Meet the Presses team.

Um, I got distracted by my children and tendency to ramble, but to return to the point here, I love chapbooks. I think they take a lot of the pressure and preciousness out of trade published books. You can put yourself out there with a chapbook in a way that often gets sanitized by book publishing. Chapbooks are a fantastic place to try something raw, new, exposed, and to fail so you can figure out what you are trying to do and do it better.

rm: Do you see the chapbook as a place to see how work fits and feels, and potential responses to such? And if so, how does this compare to potentially sending work out to literary journals? How do these experiences help shape, if at all, the way you think through a project?

JC: Sometimes a chapbook is a place to try things and sometimes it is a perfectly encapsulated thing into itself. The chapbook feels like a wide open format to do things that might not work in a trade book or journal. Chapbooks help me sort through ideas, but sometimes they arrive fully formed.

Like with Heavy Metal Litany which ryan fitzpatrick graciously published through MODEL PRESS, I had a lot of fun trying to understand the lyrics to some of my favourite songs. I was doing that anyway, and then it occurred to me to turn it into a poem. I don’t know if it’ll go anywhere, or if that long poem is exactly what it needs to be. Similarly, with Bridge & Burn that you published through above/ground, I was sitting at a Stumptown coffee shop in Portland looking at a clothing store with the same name and figured that’d be a great title for something. I was obsessively thinking about the tree in our yard that was going to be cut down and it all just came together.

In terms of journals, I haven’t sent anything in for years. I find the whole process of organizing submissions exhausting. That said, there are some journals, like filling Station and Arc, that make me wish I could get my shit together to submit something. Maybe I will!

 

 

 

 

 

The author of more than thirty trade books of poetry, fiction and non-fiction, rob mclennan’s most recent titles include the poetry collection World’s End, (ARP Books, 2023), a suite of pandemic essays, essays in the face of uncertainties (Mansfield Press, 2022) and the anthology groundworks: the best of the third decade of above/ground press 2013-2023 (Invisible Publishing, 2023). His collection of short stories, On Beauty (University of Alberta Press) will appear in fall 2024. He is the current Artistic Director of VERSeFest: Ottawa’s annual international poetry festival.

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