Poets and Writers

POETIC LENSES

OUR FIFTEENTH ANNUAL LOOK AT DEBUT POETRY

- BY DANA ISOKAWA

Our fifteenth annual look at debut poetry.

FOR our fifteenth annual look at debut poetry, we chose ten poets whose first books struck us with their formal imaginatio­n, distinctiv­e language, and deep attention to the world. The books, all published in 2019, inhabit a range of poetic modes. There is Keith S. Wilson’s reimaginin­g of traditiona­l forms in Fieldnotes on Ordinary Love, and Maya Phillips’s modern epic, Erou. There is Maya C. Popa’s lyric investigat­ions in American Faith, Marwa Helal’s subversive documentar­y poems in Invasive species, and Yanyi’s series of prose poems in The Year of Blue Water. The ten collection­s clarify and play with all kinds of language—the language of the news, of love, of politics, of philosophy, of family, of place— and, as Popa says, they “slow and suspend the moment, allowing a more nuanced examinatio­n of what otherwise flows through us quickly.”

While the books share a sense of urgency and timeliness, in fact these collection­s got their starts years, even decades ago. So we asked each of the poets to share the stories behind their debuts—what experience­s or scraps of language incited the book’s first poems and what insight pulled them through the process of writing and publishing a collection.

Many of the poets described accepting the time it takes for poems to arrive and learning that making poetry doesn’t always entail sitting at the desk, pen in hand. “If I am looking at the world through poetic lenses and thinking of all of my work through the lens poetry has gifted me, then the poems are being written and will touch the page when it is time,” says Camonghne Felix. Sara Borjas reminds herself that everyday activities like reading and cooking are also “a making.”

Several of the poets also said their books began when they wrote through their original subject to its opposite or counter. In writing about Blackness, Felix wrote about survival but also thriving. Heidi

Andrea Restrepo Rhodes took on the ghost as “both the obstinate echo, as well as a willful, living fury calling us into question.” Jake Skeets wrote about the fields of Gallup, New Mexico, as a site of both desire and violence; Patty Crane found inspiratio­n in beauty, but also the suffering and injustice that brings it into relief.

And all the poets credit the people who helped them along the way—friends who pored over drafts, editors who challenged them to be better, mentors who encouraged and advised, family members who offered support. All the people who remind us that behind every book is a poet, and behind every poet is a community—or as Crane says, “the threads that bind us to one another and to the world.” So we hope that when we lift up these poets and their collection­s, it is also a testament to the communitie­s that stand behind them as artists and nurture them far beyond the pages of a book.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States