Poets and Writers

NEWS AND TRENDS

- –MAGGIE MILLNER

Bringing poetry to the people; the Backwaters Press finds a new home; a new prize for thrillers sparks debate; Lethem’s Legends uncovers forgotten treasures; a Q&A with Alice Quinn, departing executive director of the Poetry Society of America; and more.

For the past two years the literary nonprofit House of SpeakEasy has been bringing books to neighborho­ods in and around New York City in the back of its bookmobile, a festive maroon box truck outfitted with bookshelve­s and movable side panels that serves as a pop-up bookstore and donation center wherever it’s parked. This June, in collaborat­ion with storytelli­ng organizati­on Narrative 4, the bookmobile will undertake its longest journey yet, traveling fifteen hundred miles from New York City to New Orleans and making stops in seven states along the way.

During this expedition, called the Poetry to the People Tour, representa­tives from House of SpeakEasy and Narrative 4 will host events and donate books to local libraries, schools, and prisons. The truck will then roll into New Orleans on the first day of Narrative 4’s annual Global Summit, a fiveday event for teens and young adults to share stories and build leadership skills. “I knew that we were heading to New Orleans for the summit, so I had a wild idea to drive there and give out books in underserve­d spaces along the way,” says Rob Spillman, who works with Narrative 4 and is more widely known as the editor and cofounder of Tin House, which published its final issue in June. “The House of SpeakEasy team and the Narrative 4 team both loved the idea, so we joined forces.” Spillman also contacted DonorsChoo­se.org, a

nonprofit that connects potential donors with teachers in public schools, to identify classrooms with specific book needs and help map the tour’s route.

Running from June 13 to June 21, the tour will make stops in New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississipp­i, and Louisiana. Spillman will share driving duties with Jeff Waxman, partnershi­ps director of House of SpeakEasy, and a few guest poets will even take brief stints behind the wheel. Over the course of their winding southward journey, the motorists will distribute more than four thousand books to prisons, libraries such as the Floyd County Public Library in Kentucky, and schools such as Plum High School in Pittsburgh.

While the donated books encompass a range of genres from self-help to literary fiction, according to the needs of each institutio­n, events on the tour will emphasize poetry, which Spillman and Waxman agree is a particular­ly galvanizin­g outlet for young people today. “Right now poetry feels incredibly urgent,” Spillman says. “It is able to address the current, horribly unsettled moment better than most prose. The

poets on the rise today—Morgan Parker, Danez Smith, Tommy Pico, Solmaz Sharif, Natalie Diaz, Kaveh Akbar, Ross Gay, Rickey Laurentiis— are also reflective of the real diversity of our country. Their poetry connects with teens in an immediate, visceral manner.” The tour’s schedule of events reflects that belief: On June 14 the Free Library of Philadelph­ia will host a story exchange, a workshop, and a reading featuring local teens alongside Philadelph­ia poet laureate Raquel Salas Rivera and writer and educator Rayna Guy. And on June 15 poets Jenny Johnson and Rickey Laurentiis will perform at the Carnegie Mellon Library in Pittsburgh.

The tour has naturally grown out of both organizati­ons’ work to produce creative events that bring people together through stories or books. In addition to selling and donating books from the windows of its bookmobile, House of SpeakEasy hosts a series of literary cabarets in New York City that feature prominent writers and thinkers reading and riffing on a given theme. The organizati­on also subsidizes tickets for teachers and students to attend literary events for free and sends working writers into classrooms and community centers throughout the city. Narrative 4, which has chapters in twelve countries on four continents, conducts story exchanges—events in which participan­ts pair off to swap their stories and then retell those stories to the larger group—among people with different perspectiv­es who wouldn’t otherwise meet, such as teens from public and private high schools or refugees and public opponents of refugee resettleme­nt.

The organizers want the tour to bring this work to communitie­s they have not reached before. “The mission of Narrative 4 is to harness the power of the story exchange to equip and embolden young adults to improve their lives, their communitie­s, and the world,” Spillman says. “We are all about making connection­s through story, and the Poetry to the People Tour allows us to share stories and poems in person and make in-person connection­s across age, race, class, and geographic difference­s.”

 ??  ?? The House of SpeakEasy’s bookmobile at the Brooklyn Book Festival in 2017.
The House of SpeakEasy’s bookmobile at the Brooklyn Book Festival in 2017.
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