Forrest Gander photo by Gage Skidmore.
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Every
year the cultural mavens who hand
out Pulitzer Prizes reveal their
list of honorees in April. That gives me guaranteed fodder for a post on
the winner of the Poetry Prize. But I have an embarrassing admission to
make—most years the winners, no matter how celebrated in poetry circles, not
only take me by surprise but I have never even heard of them. Despite enjoying reading and writing verse, I
am not in the loop—outside of both academia and hipper poetry slam culture. I don’t subscribe to or read the little literary magazines or even venerated Poetry which would surely enlighten me.
I
stumble on most of the contemporary
poets I post about in this National Poetry Month series on the internet or am tipped off by folks much
more knowledgeable than me. You can
plainly see that I am something of a fraud
and blowhard.
This
year’s Pulitzer poet, Forrest Gander
was typically unknown to me. Ever useful
Wikipedia informs me that...
He was born
in the Mojave Desert in 1956 as James Forrest Cockerille III, Forrest
Gander grew up in Virginia where he
and his two sisters were raised by their single mother, an elementary school teacher. The four shared a two-room apartment in Annandale.
His estranged father ran The Mod Scene, a bar on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village. With his mother and sisters, Gander began to travel extensively on summer road trips
around the United States. The traveling, which never stopped, came to inform
his interest in landscapes, languages, and cultures.
Forrest and his two sisters, Karin
and Lisa, were adopted by Walter J. Gander soon after his marriage to their mother, the former Ruth Clare Cockerille.
Gander
earned college degrees in geology, a subject referenced
frequently in both his poems and essays,
and in English literature. His work
has been linked to Ecopoetics and ecology. A writer in multiple genres, Gander is noted
for his many collaborations with
other artists.
He
is a United States Artists Rockefeller
Fellow and the recipient of fellowships from the Library of Congress, the National
Endowment for the Arts, the John
Simon Guggenheim Foundation, The
Whiting Foundation, and the Howard
Foundation. In 2017, he was elected as a Chancellor to the Academy of
American Poets.
He
taught at Providence College and at Harvard University before becoming the Adele Kellenberg Seaver Professor of
Literary Arts and Comparative Literatures at Brown University in Rhode
Island.
Gander's late wife, the poet C.D. Wright/
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Gander
was married to the late poet C.D. Wright.
Together they raised a son, the artist-craftsman Brecht Wright Gander. He lives now in Petaluma, California
with ceramic artist Ashwini Bhat.
He
has written books of highly praised poetry including Be With, for which he was
honored with the Pulitzer. He has also
written two novels, numerous essays, been a translator if works in Spanish,
French, and Japanese, edited
anthologies, and collaborated on
special projects with fine artists and
crafts persons.
So
I’m impressed—he seems to be mix of a latter day roving Beat like Jack
Kerouac, and a modern Eco poet with
a dose of multi-cultural influences thrown
in.
Gander
is so hip that he co-authored a poem with Beyoncé about her daughter Blue Ivy
and God called Bey the Light.
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The Moment When Your Name is Pronounced
This high up, the face
eroding; the red cedar slopes
over. An accident chooses a stranger.
Each rain unplugs roots
which thin out like a hand.
Above the river, heat
lightning flicks silently
and the sound holds, coiled in air.
Some nights you are here
dangling a Valpolicella bottle,
staring down at the flat water
that slides by with its mouth full of starlight.
It is always quiet
when we finish the wine.
While you were a living man
how many pictures were done
of you. Serious as an angel,
lacing up your boots. Ice
blows into my fields.
eroding; the red cedar slopes
over. An accident chooses a stranger.
Each rain unplugs roots
which thin out like a hand.
Above the river, heat
lightning flicks silently
and the sound holds, coiled in air.
Some nights you are here
dangling a Valpolicella bottle,
staring down at the flat water
that slides by with its mouth full of starlight.
It is always quiet
when we finish the wine.
While you were a living man
how many pictures were done
of you. Serious as an angel,
lacing up your boots. Ice
blows into my fields.
—Forrest Gander
From Rush to the Lake, 1988
The Iteration
From the grooved highway at sixty-five,
a hum rises. Except intimacy
a hum rises. Except intimacy
there is nada. That
was a scissortail the woman says.
was a scissortail the woman says.
The boy in the back seat stops
blowing his Coke bottle
blowing his Coke bottle
as they pass
the mowing machines. Spiked
the mowing machines. Spiked
lobelia, crown vetch, trumpet vine
under the blades of the Ditch-witch tremble.
under the blades of the Ditch-witch tremble.
What is the true jelly of an animal?
asks the boy, tonguing his tooth
asks the boy, tonguing his tooth
on its last string. The woman
turns her face smiling.
turns her face smiling.
The skyline jumps over the moon.
The man drives with his finger
The man drives with his finger
inside her. Years
of together. The theories
of together. The theories
were unfit to live on.
Only dust was given duration.
Only dust was given duration.
They know that
they are naked.
they are naked.
—Forrest Gander
Gander's Pulitzer Prize winning collection Be With, W.W. Norton & Co., 2018
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The Sounding
What closes and then
luminous? What opens
and then dark? And into
what do you stumble
but this violet
extinction? With
froth on your lips.
8:16 a.m. The morning’s
sleepy face
luminous? What opens
and then dark? And into
what do you stumble
but this violet
extinction? With
froth on your lips.
8:16 a.m. The morning’s
sleepy face
rolls its million
eyes. Migrating flocks
of your likesame species
incandesce
into transparency.
A birdwatcher lifts
eyes. Migrating flocks
of your likesame species
incandesce
into transparency.
A birdwatcher lifts
her binoculars. The con-
tinuous with or without
your words
situates you here
(here (here)) even while
you knuckle your eyes
in disbelief. Those
tinuous with or without
your words
situates you here
(here (here)) even while
you knuckle your eyes
in disbelief. Those
voices you love (human
and not), can you
hear their echoes
hissing away like
fiery scale
from an ingot hammered
on some
blacksmith’s anvil?
And behind those
voices, what is that
blowing
the valves of your ears open
as black rain,
not in torrents, but
ceaselessly comes
unchecked out of everywhere
with nothing
to slacken it.
and not), can you
hear their echoes
hissing away like
fiery scale
from an ingot hammered
on some
blacksmith’s anvil?
And behind those
voices, what is that
blowing
the valves of your ears open
as black rain,
not in torrents, but
ceaselessly comes
unchecked out of everywhere
with nothing
to slacken it.
—Forrest Gander
From Be With, 2018
From Be With, 2018
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