Victoria
Vernell lives; loves; and waits for the Doctor in the suburbs of
Ottawa, Ontario. She is a decaffeinated mother of three teenagers and doesn’t
go downtown nearly often enough for a cup of Bridgehead. Two cats keep her
mindful of her position on the food chain, and two large dogs guarantee that a
house is not a home without small piles of randomly shed fur about the place.
A writer from an early age, Victoria has
published poetry in small press publications including Quills (2008), and Jones Av.
(1996). There’s a poetry manuscript or two that needs completion, but in the
meantime you can read her nonfiction work at her two blogs Taking The Mother Road and Whovian On A Budget.
Q: How did Hook
& Ladder first start? I know there were at least a couple of you that
had emerged from a creative writing workshop with Seymour Mayne at the
University of Ottawa (the same class, I believe, that prompted b stephen harding and Maria Scala to found graffito:the poetry poster). What was it that prompted the creation of a new journal?
A: Ah, yes. We
were young and full of gumption. Looking back, we were aware of Arc and
its ties to Carleton University, Ottawa U had Bywords, and your
above/ground press had just begun producing broadsheets, etc. For myself, since
I can’t speak for my co-editors at the time - Robin Hannah and Alexander
Monker, who were also part of Seymour Mayne’s poetry workshop that year - I
wanted something that transcended existing literary cliques and made local
poets of all levels of experience feel encouraged to submit their work for
publication.
Q: What were your models when starting out?
Were you basing the journal on anything specific, or working more intuitively?
A: I liked the
look of Arc. A mini book you could carry around with you and fit into a
purse or backpack.
I guess in its way we were of the “no school
like the Old School” mindset as far as design. I had a copy of Aldus (? – later
Adobe) PageMaker installed on my parents’ computer and I was a high-level font
collector, and taught myself how to do the layout.
As for the selection process, we all tended to
favour a similar style of writing. We weren’t looking to reinvent the wheel and
were always mindful that people were giving us their money to do this, either
through direct sales or subscriptions, so we wanted to give them a quality
product on every level, within our collective ability to provide it.
Q: What was the process of putting together
those first few issues? Did you have an open call for submissions, or were you
soliciting work?
A: When H&L
started, we intentionally kept our net cast within Ottawa and Eastern Ontario.
We didn’t have the budget or the distribution network to take it much further,
as it didn’t receive government arts funding until years later, from the City
of Ottawa; and we felt that between the two universities plus the literary reading
series (Tree, Sasquatch, BARD, Vanilla/Vogon, to name a few) we would have a
strong pool from which to solicit submissions. I was also a full-time
undergraduate student studying English Lit at Ottawa U, so I was able to get us
a mail slot in the English Department as an address, which may have helped with
cachet. That was the extent of the university’s concrete support of the
magazine.
I was adamant that my name would only appear in
H&L as a byline on book reviews.
I sent out letters to small presses across the country requesting review
copies. Most were pleased to oblige.
As for the selection process, whoever was on
the editorial board at the time would get together as a group and go through
the submissions one by one. Eventually we worked up the nerve to send poems
back to their originators with comments. Payment was two contributor copies.
A: Good
question. I was unable to see the value in my own work. I could not be
objective and impartial and make that distinction between myself and my poetry.
It was less demanding to find the merit in
others’ work because I had no personal investment in it.
Q: Did this
change at all over time? What effect, if any, had Hook & Ladder on the way you saw your own writing?
A: Yes, it did.
It bears mentioning that depression and anxiety and every dark corner those two
mental illnesses encase all but silenced me for approximately 12 years, during
which time I also got married and had three children with complex medical
issues; and I eventually got divorced. I didn’t start writing again until 2006,
and went to some workshops. The last time I read in public was in 2007.
I was lucky
also to meet someone who was very supportive of my writing and keeps poking at
me to do more. These days my output is mostly online with two non-literary
blogs, but I have never lost a love for books and printed zines and I want to
concentrate more on the literary form that ignited H&L’s creation 22
years ago.
Q: What kind of
reception did the journal have, whether in Ottawa or beyond?
A: I would say
the response was positive, overall. We had our critics of course but our
decision to stop publishing after a five year run had nothing to do with that.
My children became my focus and I built my life around them, as the song goes.
But when H&L was active we all strongly believed in what we were
doing and it was a great learning experience on many levels.
Q: What prompted the decision to finally
suspend publication? Was it simply a matter of shifting priorities?
A: Babies and
bills. And back then due to undiagnosed depression and anxiety I was a lousy
juggler, worse still at asking for help, and expert in pushing people away –
usually people I cared about. After I came to terms with those things, I was of
the mindset that I had to give 100% of everything to motherhood, so I did what
I thought was best for the sake of my domestic life at the time. It isn’t
coincidence that I began writing again and pursuing publication after my
divorce.
Q: You mention Alexander Monker and Robin Hannah as co-founders/co-editors. Was the collaboration between the three of
you an equal partnership, and were they both there during the entire run of the
journal? How were either of them involved in the decision to suspend
publication?
A: Robin,
Alexander, and I were the team behind most of the first issue of H&L.
Alexander was dropped from the masthead prior to the launch of the first issue,
to paraphrase the late Irving Layton, because Robin and I jointly decided that
Alexander’s devotion to the project wasn’t perfect. Difficult to pin down for
meetings, etc. I remember Robin’s partner at the time, Sean O’Neil, came on
board and helped with content selection.
It was Robin and I who put out the second
issue. My university classmate Kim McNeill joined us for the third issue, and I
believe it was around that time that Robin and I severed ties and she
eventually moved back to Toronto.
If we are going to talk about personal or
professional regrets, my biggest was losing her. She was (is) an amazing writer
and knew her stuff. To the best of my awareness she published her chapbook with
above/ground press and a collection with Broken Jaw Press and nothing since.
At the time H&L
ceased publication, I was also building a reading series and a chapbook press
under the name Electric Garden. Kim had moved on, and my ex-husband briefly
joined creative forces with me, which was not without its negative
consequences.
As I said previously, it was a valuable
learning experience on many levels. The fallout is not something I wish to
revisit.
Q: Looking back on the journal now, how
successful do you feel you were in your original goals? What do you feel were
the biggest accomplishments of Hook &
Ladder?
A: At its peak, it was great fun. I still get a
great chuckle from the memory of you, Warren Dean Fulton, and I, sandwiched in
the back of my parents’ minivan with our boxes of publications, heading down to
Toronto at some ungodly early hour to attend CanZine at the Spadina Hotel. Do
you still have that coffee cup from the Denny’s in Kingston?
I think H&L
achieved what it set out to do. I tip my hat to the people who are still in the
game. For me there will always be something about the printed zine that is timeless
and needs to continue.
Volume one, issue one. Spring/Summer 1993. Editors:
Robin Hannah, Sean O’Neil, Victoria Vernell. Managing Editor: Victoria Vernell.
Poems by Matthew Barlow, Andrew Milne, Sylvia Adams, Kimberly J. McNeill,
Barbara Fras, Robin Hannah, Seymour Mayne, J.D. Boyes, rob mclennan and Robert
Craig. Review by Victoria Vernell.
Volume one, issue two. Fall/Winter 1993-1994.
Editors: Robin Hannah, Victoria Vernell. Managing Editor: Victoria Vernell. Poems
by Tony Cosier, B. Stephen Harding, Michael Abraham, Kimberly J. McNeill, E.
Russell Smith, Dan Doyle, Colin Morton and Juan O’Neill. Review by Victoria
Vernell.
Volume one, issue three. Summer Solstice 1994. Editors:
Robin Hannah, Kimberly McNeill, Victoria Vernell. Managing Editor: Victoria
Vernell. Poems by Seymour Mayne, Allison O’Shaughnessy, Warren Layberry, Cindy
Upton, Juan O’Neill, Rob McLennan, David W. Henderson, Shel Krakofsky, Ciaran
O’Driscoll, Joy Hewitt Mann, E. Russell Smith, Brick G. Billing, Yvonne Dionne
and Kimberly J. McNeill. Review by Rob McLennan.
Volume one, issue four. Spring Equinox 1995. Editors:
Kimberly McNeill, Victoria Martin. Managing Editor: Victoria Martin. Poems
by Diana Brebner, Joanne Epp, Maggie
Helwig, Michael Abraham, Linda Jeays, John Barton, Gregory McGillis, Wayne K.
Spear, Warren Layberry, Catherine Jenkins and Rob McLennan. Reviews by Tamara
Fairchild, Gregory McGillis and Colin Morton.
Volume two, issue one. Autumn Equinox 1995. Editor:
Victoria Martin. Managing Editor: Victoria Martin. Poems by Linda Jeays, Andrew
Milne, Wayne K. Spear, Diana Brebner, Ruth Latta, Andrew Steeves, Leo Brent
Robillard, Kimberly J. McNeill, Paul Politis, Ross Taylor, Michael Abraham,
Cyril Dabydeen, LeeAnn Heringer, Alan Corrigan, Julian Millar and E. Russell
Smith. Reviews by Corey Coates, Tamara Fairchild, E. Russell Smith and Andrew
Steeves.
Volume two, issue two. Summer Solstice 1996. Managing
Editor: Victoria Martin. Poetry Editoris: G.T. Fougere, Stephen Martin,
Victoria Martin. Book Reviews Editor: Victoria Martin. Visual Art Coordinator:
Robin C. Fougere. Poems by Ken Norris, Allison O’Shaughnessy, Judith Anderson
Stuart, Karen Hussey, Louise Bak, Noah Leznoff and rob mclennan. An interview
with Ray Fraser by Andrew Steeves. Reviews by Andrew Milne, George Elliott
Clarke, Juliana Starkman and Tamara Fairchild.
Volume two, issue three. Autumn Equinox 1996. Managing
Editor: Victoria Martin. Poetry Editoris: G.T. Fougere, Stephen Martin,
Victoria Martin. Book Reviews Editor: Victoria Martin. Visual Art Coordinator:
Robin C. Fougere. Poems by Noah Leznoff, Jackie Moran, Marianne Bluger, Caitlin
Hewitt-White, p.j. flaming, Tamara Fairchild, Jennifer Footman, Neil Hennessy,
Mark Hamstra, LeeAnn Heringer, Ben Ohmart, Ruth Latta, Paul Politis, Janet
Somerville, T. Anders Carson, Jay Ames, James Spyker, j.a. LoveGrove and Ray Heinrich.
Interview with David Donnell by Neil Hennessy. Reviews by Corey Coates, Mark
Hamstra and Andrew Steeves.
Volume two, issue four. Lughnasa (Summer) 1997.
Managing Editor: Victoria Martin. Poetry Editoris: G.T. Fougere, Stephen
Martin, Victoria Martin. Book Reviews Editor: Victoria Martin. Visual Art
Coordinator: Robin C. Fougere. Poems by Susan McCaslin, Lorette C. Thiessen,
Virginia K. Marshall, R M Vaughan, Allison Grayhurst, Linda Jeays, Kimberly
Fahner, Mike Paterson, Christopher Finlay, David A. Groulx, R.D. Patrick,
Rhonda Mack and Kirsten Aidan. Reviews by L. Brent Robillard, E. Russell Smith
and G.T. Fougere.
Volume three, issue one. Winter (March) 1998.
Editor / Poetry and Book Reviews: Victoria Martin. Poetry Editor: G.T. Fougere.
Visual Art Coordinator: Robin C. Fougere. Poems by R.D. Patrick, Alex Boyd,
Ernest Magi, Aidan Baker, Linda Frank, Giovanni Malito, Amy Eggleton, Kevin
Sampsell, Rob Yedinak, Patrick Belmonte, Tricia Woods, Nicolas Mare Billon,
Mark Howell, Debra Anderson, Brian Burke, Coral Hull, William Jacklin and p.j.
flaming. Small Press Comix Feature by Leanne Franson. Reviews by Corey Coates and
E. Russell Smith. Cover Art by Rev. Hipolito Tschimanga.
I remember it well -- and still have a few issues on my bookshelf.
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