Thursday, April 30, 2026

Land of hope and glory, : Victoria, part one,

Is that too obscure a reference? The Kinks, after all, their song “Victoria.” Okay, so maybe that is too obscure. Or this Billy Bragg classic, as well (but my point was The Kinks, here), although both pulling from a British patriotic song from the turn of the prior century. I recently had some adventures in Victoria, British Columbia, doing two readings and a podcast in three days, which was a bit of a whirlwind. When was the last time I'd travelled for a reading? Dublin, last July with Christine. Or Vancouver, last year with Christine as well. Or Calgary, also with Christine. I am very fond of reading and/or travelling with Christine, as you might imagine. Do you remember when I read in London, Ontario, some two-plus years ago?

The blossoms [reminiscent, slightly, of our trip to Washington] were everywhere! Thanks to Planet Earth Poetry, The League of Canadian Poets and The Writers Union of Canada, all to help promote my University of Calgary Press poetry title from the last fall, the book of sentences. Thanks predominantly to current Victoria Poet Laureate Kyeren Regehr for bringing me out! I mean, it has been twenty years or possibly more since I've read in (or even been to) Victoria, despite the annual or semi-annual I did for a stretch beginning in 1997 or so. Maybe 2003 was the last time I was through? I can't even recall.

Thursday, April 23, 2026:
Had a 3:45am alarm for 4am cab and 6am flight, landed in Victoria by 11am or so, local time. The Ottawa-Toronto part of the flight I think I slept, but the second flight I spent most of such reading through Phoebe Wang's Relative to Wind (Assembly Press, 2024), a really interesting memoir by the Ottawa-born Toronto poet [see my review of her second poetry title here] on being part of a sailing crew across Lake Ontario. The memoir begins with language in a really interesting way, and expands across a whole slew of details on the minutae of working such a craft, and how she's learned to navigate other elements through the lessons approached here. 

I landed, and my pal (from high school, even) Jennifer collected me from the airport, and we had breakfast (I had to eat something, even though I was exhausted) at Spoons, the coolest little diner. It had posters all over of classic (up to early 70s) Marvel and DC comic book covers, some of which I even have, kicking around. Then I had to crash, where I quickly discovered I'd managed to leave my computer cord at home, so my machine (and subsequent phone) were soon to die. I slept for an hour, before I caught up with my host, poet Rhona McAdam, who was kind enough to drive me out to Staples, where they sold me the incorrect cord (I was at least smart enough to also pick up a way to recharge my phone). From there, a short walk to downtown, to eventually meet up for a pub night, organized by the delightful (and Ottawa-born) Victoria writer and journalist Sara Cassidy. I figured, maybe hit a bookstore if possible, sit with notebook and read for a bit, hang about until I met up with them, all good.

The short walk, with my huge bag of books and envelopes (for that pub night, handouts, etcetera) was ninety minutes, so I completely miscalculated on that. Walked by a gallery show (gallery closed) that looked interesting, You Do Not Have to Be Good (apparently a line from this Mary Oliver poem, which is interesting), "a multi-media debut solo exhibition by Mila Rio," but more on that later. I caught C A V I T Y, a curiosity shop, which was pretty cool. Comics, records, books (I did pick up some stuff, including a back issue of The Paris Review, but was gratified to see some Barry McKinnon poetry titles in there; I nearly picked up an extra copy or two, just to carry around). Blasting punk music. Very nice. You should go to there.


From there, I finally made it downtown, wandering by this sign that led into an alley of Victoria's Chinatown Museum and little slips of history, making me aware just how unaware I am of Victoria history generally. I mean, I have a general sense of Vancouver history, but know absolutely nothing of Victoria. The little corners of history was reminiscent of the Hogan's Alley Society over in Vancouver, attempting to salvage a period and geography of Black history specific to Vancouver, most of which had long been lost (and which every city should attempt to do, acknowledging lost histories and spaces).

The alley threaded between buildings with slips of site-specific history of Chinese immigrants in Victoria, amid a sequence of quaint little shops and curious other spaces. It really is a remarkable (and very cool) array of small spaces, intersliced with histories that deserve not to be forgotten.
Given Ottawa has a Royal Arch (in that we are capital), I've been curious to see Chinatown arches in other Canadian cities, having caught Vancouver (years ago), Montreal (once, while completely lost) and in Winnipeg [during this trip, but I appear not to have taken a picture].

I eventually found my exhausted way to The Drake Eatery and Craft Beer Parlour, where I figured I could decompress with notebook and some reading before heading over to where Sara Cassidy had organized a pub night with a few local writers for me to meet. She'd originally picked one spot, and then relocated to another, neither of which I could remember properly, so when I presumed the Drake was the original spot, so I landed there (thinking this would allow me to see two different Victoria venues), asking Sara where we were ending up, and she said I was already there? So that's on me. A delightful spot, and even, at one point, Sara's teenaged son slipping through to deliver me a computer cord, so my machine wouldn't die. This is from Sara, he said, handing me a cord and disappearing. Relief for the save (but he was like a ghost, albeit far more polite).


I first met Sara [waving, in the pic on the left] back in 1998, after Rhonda Batchelor had told me if I could get myself to Victoria, she'd give me a chapbook and a reading, so, thanks to the ottawa international writers festival's 1998 Via Rail Tour (I participated all the way to Vancouver), it was a quick hop and jump to Victoria, as Sara and I both read from our newly-published Reference West chapbooks (the press ran from 1990 to 2000, co-founded by Batchelor and her husband, the late Charles Lillard). I hadn't seen Sara in more than twenty years, and then the extra delight of being able to meet poets such as Julie Paul [see her '12 or 20 questions' here], Melanie Siebert (both photos, on the left) [see my review of her latest] and Maleea Acker (above, right) [see her 2009 '12 or 20 questions' here], as well as an appearance by Kyeren Regehr and her partner. A lovely evening! Maleea landed early, followed close behind by Melanie, so it was very good to hang out with them, especially given the years we've been interacting over email (and through writing). And honestly, not only are Melanie and Sara extremely cool, but Maleea is an absolute delight (and completing a new manuscript, by the way, shhhhhh). I was worn out by the end of the night, naturally, as I'd probably been up for some uncountable array of hours. Next up? Two readings [part two to follow].


Wednesday, April 29, 2026

12 or 20 (second series) questions with Robin Durnford

Robin Durnford was born in St. John's Newfoundland and grew up on the west coast of the island. She is the author of five books of poetry, including A Lovely Gutting (2012), Fog of the Outport (2013), Half Rock (2016), Gaptoothed (2020), and most recently, At Beckett's Grave (2025). She currently lives in Montreal (Tiohtià:ke) where she teaches poetry and memoir at John Abbott College. She is currently working on a poetry collection called Aspirations for my Enemy and a novel called Thaw.

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

A Lovely Gutting (McGill-Queen’s 2012) changed my life in a myriad of ways. It came out six months after my son was born (there’s a photo of him somewhere in his baby swing with a copy placed somewhat inappropriately in his lap for PR purposes). This was a couple of months after I had taken up my first academic post at Grenfell Campus, Memorial University and a year after I had eloped to Savannah, Georgia with my husband. In that very small part of the world—western Newfoundland—it made a bit of a splash. We had a fancy launch with so many people we had to change venues at the last minute. I went on tour. We sent the book to Seamus Heaney on the Strand in Dublin (this was just a year before he died) and he immediately wrote back to me with some encouraging and now very precious words. I felt like I had the world by the tail and in a way I did. I had finally published a book—a book of poetry no less.

At Beckett’s Grave (McGill-Queen’s 2025) came thirteen years and four books later. I now live in Montreal. People are still getting to know me here, to know my story, but I feel like in some ways the release of Beckett’s Grave is even more special. This time my teenage son could actually come to the intimate launch I had with friends, true believers, and poetry lovers at Librairie Pulp Books & Café in Verdun. I felt at home. I realized on that night that poetry has become my home.

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

The story I always tell is about doing poetry readings into a hairbrush like a pop star as I read out loud from the old Norton Anthology that had been lying around the house since I was a child or my mom finding bits of poetry on scraps of paper around my bedroom—or under the bed or under the pillow or in a shoe—after some boy broke up with me when I was a teenager. But the real story (although these other stories are also true) is a little more tragic. My dad died suddenly one day in 2004. I started working through the trauma rather poetically in a notebook I kept with me all that first summer on the island after he died. This became the basis for my first book, but I threw out the first 100 poems. It took that long for me to start writing anything good—poems that anyone else would want to read. My first ‘publication’ was some lines I wrote for my father’s grave:

Once again you dwell beneath the waves/
On the other side of surfaces we hear you laughing still…

(These words now form the inscription for a memoir I have written called Breach: A Story of Grief in Five Whales.)

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?

My process has changed a lot over the years, but then in some ways it hasn’t changed at all. I usually start with an idea for a book—a controlling metaphor or emotional current, if you will, and go from there. With A Lovely Gutting, the metaphor was—rather stereotypically—fish, specifically the gutted fish; Half Rock (Gaspereau 2016) was into ideas of cleavage, hybridity, and mixedness of identity as I played with the image of the sedimentary rock I grew up with and became fascinated by; the fog of grief in Fog of the Outport (Jackpine 2013); the gaps in time and identity as I worked through my relationship with my own gap tooth in Gaptoothed (Gaspereau 2020); and Beckett’s existentialism and my rather foolishly getting lost trying to find his grave at a cemetery in Paris for At Beckett’s Grave.

My one rule is that I never stick too tightly to the focus and even let myself wander off a bit because I never want the poetry to feel contrived or forced. For it to work, for me, the metaphor should emerge naturally from my life as helpful and poignant in some way—as a spine for the collection rather than a cudgel.

In general, I write discreet poetic drafts that I call little poetic slabs that I then carve and sculpt and refine into shape. I’ve gotten better and better at it over the years, and I find these days the poems sometimes come nearly fully formed, but I also think it feels that way because I trust myself more. I know what I am looking for, and I am better at recognizing a poem when it comes.

4 - Where does a poem or 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?

A poem usually begins with… honestly? I have no idea. An emotion. An image. A trace of memory. A voice. It can be anything. I just sit within my own quietness, if I can get it, and see what comes up. Sometimes a spark will come from reading. Certain poets and writers can be quite generative for me, others not so much. It feels a bit random.

The answer to the second part of this question is both: I start with short pieces that I stitch together into a book, but I usually end up throwing a bunch away in a reality TV show-like elimination game of poetry survivor.

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

I love doing readings. From the very beginning I loved reading poetry to an audience and can’t get enough of it really. I would read to one person or a room of thousands. I just love the sound of words and the way words make music on the tongue, and I think I am good at this very elemental thing—connecting humans to the vital sound of words rolling or roaring off the page. I also love hearing other poets read whether it be my friends in Montreal or recordings of Dylan Thomas, Sylvia Plath, Seamus Heaney. For some reason I think it’s very important that humans get up to this—especially now.

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 think the theoretical concern behind my poetry these days is to have no theoretical concerns—to let the poems feel and to help others feel what it means to be human and alive and complicated and lovely, to really speak to and connect to other humans in a way that lets them know it’s okay—it’s okay to be us and to not know and to just experience ourselves and the world as it is—not as you are told things ‘should’ be. (I have rather pretentiously thought of this recent stance of mine—this letting go—as a sort of New Humanism).

On the other hand, I started out with a lot of theoretical ‘chips’ on my shoulder—class, marginalized linguistic identity (in terms of my Newfoundland accent/dialect), feminism, giving voice to grief and trauma at a time (twenty years ago) when Canadians seemed scared of being real about all that.

I still feel strongly about the Newfoundland accent. I want to be able to read and write in my own distinctive voice. I feel that my voice should not be flattened into Canadian conformity and blandness either (as I was pressured to do early in my career). I feel the vibrancy of the accent can sometimes make the poems come alive on and off the page, and this should be celebrated.

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?

At Banff in 2025 I was lucky enough to workshop a new prose manuscript (a memoir called Breach) with the incredible Omar El Akkad (American War; One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This). I admire him so much and the way he carries himself as a writer in the world. He tells the truth as he sees it. He responds passionately to the moment even at some risk to himself. I want to follow that model in my own small way. This is nothing new, of course, but I think writers should be truth-tellers. Anti-propagandists, if you will. I think they should be on the side of the human—the ordinary human against the powerful systems that oppress and harm them, the forces of violence, etc. I teach Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis every year and I have thought of that book every day since the Iran War started. Her little human story is the story of that whole country now—and I grieved for her on the first day when the girl’s school got bombed in Minab.

It’s our job to be human, to remind people what it means to be human, to express that humanity, to tell stories, turn emotions into words that can be articulated and responded to.

This is crucial work in the world. It is more crucial than ever right now.

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

I love editors. I wish there were more of them and they got paid better. I think writers NEED editors especially now. Yes, I love working with editors especially when they share your vision and believe in your work. I had only one bad experience with an editor, and I think it was because they didn’t share my vision. They wanted to make my work more ‘accessible’ which is a word I actually hate (when it comes to writing) and there aren’t many words I hate.

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

The best piece of advice I’ve ever heard as a writer comes from Seamus Heaney: Don’t listen to anybody who has not produced good work. The second piece of advice comes from Doris Lessing: The conditions for writing will always be impossible (so don’t let that stop you). And the third piece of advice comes from me (she says arrogantly): Even when it comes to our precious writing—and we can be precious about it!—actual humans come first but so does the truth, and that’s a delicate balance sometimes. Also, be nice. There’s really no need to be a dick in this life. (Another piece of advice was said to me directly from the former poet laureate of Wales: There are assholes everywhere.)

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

It is pretty easy for me although almost everything comes out first (or best) as poetry. Still, I started out as a journalist. I come from a storytelling culture. Sometimes you just have to tell the story.

That’s what happened to me a few years ago. I got a little tired of ‘telling my story’ in fragments or bits and pieces of poetry and just wanted the whole narrative laid out there plainly for everyone to see: death of my father, ‘scandalous’ marriage, birth of my son, becoming a poet and this became Breach (see above), a work of creative non-fiction. I’m working on a novel now (called Thaw) that goes over some of the same events but from a different angle.

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?

These days I can’t keep much of a routine as I work full-time at the college (John Abbott College in Montreal). I am one of those people, I’m afraid, who people make fun of for getting up a 5 am, but I have to. I live on the Plateau Mont Royal, so I feel the need to get up before the city does in order to get some quiet and even then! I try to get between one and four hours of writing time in during the mornings depending on my schedule and the day and who needs what and when. It doesn’t always work. I often work weekends to make up for lost time during the week. I barely ever work in the evenings because I am too tired and my brain generally stops functioning after supper. I got my work ethic from my late father who grew up in poverty, had three kids, and built a business from the ground up.

The typical day begins with coffee—exactly three cups—and going over my schedule and then a poem or two and some sort of lefty political podcast.

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

When my writing gets stalled, I return to my desk or notebook and keep going. I re-read, I remember, I try not to judge (oh, but I judge), I try to believe if a book is supposed to be it will be. I follow my intuition, annoying I know, but if a project is really stuck, I just move on to a new project at least for a while and hope for the best. I often have multiple projects going at once. Reading also helps.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?

Cedar. I grew up in a cedar house. Plaster and glue. My father was a prosthetist and built legs for people. The sea.

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?

All of the above really, with perhaps some particular affection for visual art. I’ve collaborated with visual artists, dancers, and musicians and I love it. I would also add fashion and gossip. Yellow journalism. Tabloids. Scandal.

Also: the ocean and its rhythms + moods—mainly the North Atlantic but also the Pacific; whales, fish, lately cats. Glenn Gould.

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

Some poems come to mind: Sylvia Plath’s “Point Shirley”; Seamus Heaney’s “Mossbawn: Sunlight” and “Casualty”; Elizabeth Bishop’s “At the Fishhouses,” Frank O’Hara’s “Having aCoke with You” (the most romantic poem ever written); and Dylan Thomas’s, “In my craft or sullen art.” Louise Glück’s collected works. e.e. cummings’s “my father moved through dooms of love.” Eden Robinson’s Monkey Beach (this is a novel) and Traplines (short stories). Louise Erdrich’s short story “The Shawl” (this one is actually magic). Marilyn Dumont’s “The Devil’s Language.” The Picture of Dorian Gray because it still feels dangerous. Anything by Louise Bernice Halfe. Mahmoud Darwish. The careers of Michael Crummey and Lisa Moore and Mary Dalton (bless them). Omar El Akkad. Danez Smith. Octavia Butler. Salman Rushdie. James Baldwin. Elizabeth Strout’s Olive Kitteridge. Ursula K LeGuin. Haruki Murakami. Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Kafka. Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Joyce. Freud. Lacan. The psychoanalyst Jamieson Webster (On Breathing: Care in a Time of Catastrophe). Now looking into Bachelard (The Psychoanalysis of Fire).

And well, my last collection of poetry was an homage to Samuel Beckett, so definitely that wonderful anti-fascist Samuel Beckett.

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

Travel to the middle east (as we say in the west). One day, hopefully soon (I’m a little too chicken right now), when the dust settles and the world is different, I would like to go to Egypt and do the tourist thing. I want to take my son to the pyramids as I promised him when he was little, but I would also like to travel beyond that. Anywhere it’s safe. Oman. I would definitely like to see Oman. I would like to go to Japan and sing karaoke with my brother-in-law who has lived there for decades. I would like to attend a fancy ball (maybe a fancy writer’s prize!) in a designer dress. I would like to go to the islands of St. Pierre et Miquelon (and maybe the Îles de la Madeleine and Anticosti Island) and visit the Torngat Mountains in Labrador. I would like to do a poetry reading in the cathedral at the very top of Mont-Saint-Michel in Normandy. I would like to own a corgi, a dachshund, or an Irish setter. I would like to go to Jean Talon market and buy flowers with a toy dog in my purse.

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?

It says in my high school yearbook that I wanted to be a war correspondent, so I’ll go with that.

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

Boring answer: I had to. There was no something else for me. I am obsessed and have been obsessed with the written word my entire life except for a brief moment when I was a teenager and became obsessed with boys.

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

Books: Omar El Akkad, One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This; Lucy Grealy’s amazing Autobiography of a Face

Film: No Other Land

20 - What are you currently working on?

As mentioned, a novel called Thaw: The Unfreezing of a Family in which three siblings look back on the traumatic death of their father—and the image of their living father—with different eyes. The story starts with a family crisis that brings them together rather reluctantly. In this horrible moment, they finally realize that healing will only come when they melt the freeze that has come between them in order to put a coherent story together that will help them make their peace with each other, with the family, with their father.

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Nathan Hoks, Moony Days of Being

 

Dead Julia Syndrome

If it is possible to lick your own elbow
Why did Julia kill herself?
I thought the man with the radish
Would warm her ribcage
But the bleeding finger became a distraction
And the flogged horse sent us all spinning
Down the village well of internal turmoil—
So I went into the mustard field
To sweet myself away with the dusk
And I went onto the sunny patio
To sear memory out of my scalp
But I merely scared away the robins 

If it is possible to inspect the back of your neck
If it is possible to feel a protein
Enter the slog and ooze of the bloodstream
Why kill anything at all?
My coffee’s cold, my heart runneth dry
Another day another coffin makes
Yellow chicks fluff up beneath warm lab lights
I take my bloody finger to the other room
Where the radio won’t reach us
Where the shades blackout the light
Where a forest may spring from Julia


The fourth full-length poetry title by Chicago poet Nathan Hoks, but the first I’ve seen, is Moony Days of Being (Boston MA/Chicago IL: Black Ocean, 2026), a collection that follows The Narrow Circle (Penguin, 2013), Reveilles (Salt Publishing, 2010) and Nests in Air (Black Ocean, 2021). Moony Days of Being is a collection of sharp, first-person lyric narratives that punch, and parry; are occasionally odd, with surreal, absurdist twists. “I turned up my headphones and stroked my ermine collar.” he writes, as part of “Self-Portrait on the Go,” “I could sense no texture / Only numb gray nerves as the ultra-light car doors / Opened and closed continuously for several hours.” Offering an absurdist lyric with, at times, dark undertones, there are echoes reminiscent in Hoks’ work of American poets such as that of fellow Chicagoan, Benjamin Niespodziany [see my review of his latest] and fellow Black Ocean press-mate, Zachary Schomburg [see my review of his latest]. “Once you accept the basic pointlessness / Of life,” begins the poem “Self-Portrait as Ancient Mariner,” “the vomiting phantasmagoria / Crashes down to its earth-smudged abundance / I will insert line breaks later—for now / The thing is to listen to the heart murmur / The tale of the broken mermaid / I discovered while kayaking the city’s river, / She was delightfully moored [.]”

Monday, April 27, 2026

12 or 20 (second series) questions with Emma McKenna

Emma McKenna is a feminist, bi, disabled poet living in the Waterloo Region with her husband and two Shih Tzus. She is the author of Gold Star (2026) and Chenille or Silk (2019). 

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

My first book, Chenille or Silk, gave me confidence and it also calmed me down and humbled me. The fact that nothing really happened afterwards helped me understand that publication doesn’t magically change your life. By the time I wrote my second book, Gold Star, I had gained a stronger sense of my authorial voice. I was more practiced at making decisions on form, content, and tone, and possessed a better sense of control over the verse.

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

I wrote my first poem when I was thirteen, in a very self-aware way that I was writing a poem to express something private in a way that could also be shared. I liked the use of metaphor, of obscuring some things while revealing others. I have also written non-fiction and fiction, (mainly unpublished), but poetry does feel like my truest voice. I like the dance between offering something while also holding back. I wrote a novel between 2023-2025 and it was a great exercise in structure, plot, and character development. It taught me a lot about word economy and stakes, and the need to believe in your writing.

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?

My writing usually appears with a sense of urgency, a problem or an image, that I want to work through and imbue with other meaning. I will think about a poem before I start writing, playing with different beginnings in my mind. I have come to revise more intensely, and I think that has strengthened my poetry. With prose, revision feels so clearly necessary, and much less emotional. It’s more obvious when something isn’t working or feels jarring. Poetry is trickier, because there is less language to hide behind. The final form really needs to stand on its own.

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?

Poems usually begin from a feeling of something that I need to expel or a story I want to tell. My books have taken the form of collected poems, tied together thematically. Gold Star began as a very different book, with a different overarching theme, but through many rounds of revisions the core pieces came through, and I rewrote in alignment with them. I do think I am a “book” poet in that I like the feeling of a collection, of putting things together over a longer narrative. I would like to write a chapbook on a single theme, that sounds like something fun to do next year.

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

It is quite special to get to read publicly. I value that element of the craft, and I am grateful to have opportunities to do so. I am so moved by having an audience willing to engage with my voice, and my writing, and being able to perform hits at a different register than writing. I also love reading aloud; it is a delight to get pronounce the carefully chosen words and to say them with intention. 

I want to add that I don’t think reading publicly should be a requirement for anyone, as people have varying levels of comfort and access needs. It is important to meet writers where they are at and provide opportunities for them to engage with community that aren’t only performing in a public space. I am grateful there are virtual options, both as a writer, to be able to connect with folks who can’t be there in person, and as a reader, as it allows for a different set of possibilities to take place. Mentorship and other group or one-on-one writerly relations are also amazing ways that writers can connect with readers without having to perform.

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?

My work is always engaging with power. My writing grapples with things like choice, consent, domination, and coercion, on micro and macro levels. I write about gender, sexuality, class, trauma, violence, and disability.

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 kinds of writers, I can’t ascribe a role to anyone else. Some people fit well into the role of public intellectual, others are fierce social critics, forest recluses, bog queens, etc. My hope is that the industry can allow writers to be the kinds of writer that fits them best.

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

I love to work with editors. I also love to edit for other people and moonlight at this. Having the opportunity to work with an editor is incredible. But you need to have a sense of who you are, and your voice, unless you are just looking for a ghostwriter. A good relationship with an editor will involve mutual respect; don’t work with someone you don’t admire and respect. I was incredibly fortunate to work with Sandra Ridley on Gold Star, and she brought a perspective to my work I couldn’t see myself. What a gift that was, and I will forever be grateful for that time spent together on this collection.

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

Don’t chase fads.

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

I like to write in all forms. I trained in academia for many years so I have written a lot of academic, critical writing. I was a songwriter for over a decade as well. My favorite thing about poetry is having a limited space to carve out the meaning—I like that restriction. Fiction is a delight because there are no citations required, it’s so fun to just make stuff up. And I am an aspiring memoirist—one day—but the difficulty I have with non-fiction is how much to share, where to begin the story, and where to end it. I admire non-fiction writers who can so cleanly develop a narrative arc out of their life and not divulge everything at once. I’m working on that, slowly.

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?

As a white-collar worker, I’m at my desk five days a week. I think this helps make writing kind of second nature as I do some kind of writing every day at work. I do not “write everyday” but rather I write in random pockets of time.

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

Reading, of course! I also like to look back at my journals and see what I was intending to write, and that can help. And of course, I take two walks a day with my pups, and walking is always meditative and good for thinking through writing.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?

Lavender, or my dogs’ paws.

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 would say I’m most influenced by people and relationships.

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

I read a lot and am always hungry for women’s stories and narratives. I love memoir, poetry, fiction, whatever, especially if the writer has some struggle to work through.

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

In terms of writing—write more poetry books, write a memoir, write novels. Many things!

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 have wanted to be a writer since I was young. So, I feel proud that I’ve stuck to that plan. I have a job in research administration, which is square within my skill set. If I were to do something else that followed a passion, it would have been something to do with fashion.

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

My great grandmother Hilda wrote poetry, and my grandmother Joan did as well. I like to think that is part of why I became a writer. Writing has always been intuitive to me, as essential as speaking. Writing is a life practice, and it’s something I have prioritized. From very early on I was aware I needed language to make sense of my experiences and the world around me.

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

The last great book I read was the memoir Mother Mary Comes to Me, by Arundhati Roy. The last great artistic film was The Zone of Interest. But I also love mainstream media, and I really enjoyed The Housemaid.

20 - What are you currently working on?

I’m completely focused on promoting Gold Star and touring for the next few months. When I have spare energy, I’m working on poetry. I have a new book project—a literary novel—that is in its drafting stages, and I hope to write more of it this summer.

12 or 20 (second series) questions;