Kerry Trautman was one of the first poets I met when I started making my way into Toledo's poetry community. She is a founding member of the Almeda Street Poetry Co-op, which was a small, intimate workshop hosted at our friend Lori's house. We'd bring our own drinks, and sometimes there was food, and there were always wonderful discussions and workshops. I liked Kerry's poems immediately, but I was nervous around her in the way young men are nervous around women who are both smart and beautiful, who have poise. As for me, I was unschooled, learning poetry by reading anthologies and writing all day, whereas Kerry and the rest of the group were mostly students, or former students, of writing, and had a certain conviction and confidence it took me a long time to develop.
A certain conviction is still a hallmark of a Kerry Trautman poem. Her words are carefully placed in well-wrought, deliberate poems, which nonetheless possess an air of ease, space, and delight. I'm often left shell-shocked after a reading of her poems, either with a sheaf of them in my hand, or at an open mic where she's performed, thanks to a combination of efficiency and passion which does exactly what Emily Dickinson tells us a real poem must do: blows the top of your head off. A good poem runs through you like lightning, burnishing your insides and scorching to dust the mean things in your soul. Kerry's poems do this by elevating 'things': daily bread, frisbees, bananas, winter's salted streets, out of the profane and into the sacred. Daily life, with its routines, hard and tender moments, sex, food, and the turning of the seasons, is in the architecture of her best poems.
Please enjoy this interview, and the poems that follow.
Are you from
Toledo? Where did you go to school?
I was born in Lima, OH, and my family moved to Toledo when I was
nine. I earned my BA from The University of Toledo in Interdisciplinary
Humanities in 1998. My husband works in Findlay, and after four years of
making him commute I finally gave in and moved away from Toledo in late 2002.
Despite the fact that my children will only ever remember our home here in
Findlay, I still think of Toledo as my hometown, and I miss it the way one
might miss a dear cousin with whom they’ve lost touch.
When did you
start writing poems?
When I was eight, in the third grade, a poet named Devon McNamara
came to visit our school for several weeks or months (I don’t quite recall).
She developed different poetry lessons with each class, and at the end of
the project we all brought home this fat, spiral-bound book on colored pages
with all of the students’ poems printed inside. I still have my copy.
I was hooked from the moment she picked-up her first piece of chalk,
fascinated that the words that appeared in all of the books I loved on my
shelves at home, that those words were made by actual people, by pretty ladies
like the one here in my very own classroom, that those words began with a human
hand on a pencil. And that hand could be mine. Most of her lessons
with my class were based on little writing prompts—one was a list poem based on
“Hello, Goodbye.” Like “Hello flowers./Good-bye snowballs. Hello
stars./Good-bye sunshine.” Things like that. And what’s funny is I distinctly
remember seeing through those prompts, recognizing the gimmick, feeling
constrained. Even though I had no idea what else poetry could be, I just
knew there was in fact more. I sensed that those tricks and teases were
only a shaft of light peeking through a door just waiting to be flung fully
open. Years later, I was discussing this story with Roger Ray, my advisor
in the UT Honors Department, and he smiled and said he was well aware of that
program, that it was funded by the Ohio Arts Council, that Devon McNamara was
an old family friend of his, and that she would love to hear how she’d
influenced me. Somehow that sort of legitimized my old childhood
feelings.
I was talking
to Jonie McIntire (another local poet, and a friend of mine and Kerry’s) about
your poems recently. She mentioned that you started college as a fiction writer
but eventually found yourself making poems instead. Is that true?
I
started college undeclared. I seriously considered majoring in fine arts,
having loved art classes in high school and taken as many as were offered.
UT’s Center for Visual Arts adjacent to the Toledo Museum of Art was
newly constructed at the time, and it was a lovely, exciting place to work.
I took a few drawing and design classes, which I thoroughly enjoyed and
miss now, but I wasn’t really talented enough to validate continuing through a
BFA, I don’t think. In high school I had thought about majoring in
interior design, but I didn’t realize until I enrolled that UT didn’t actually
offer it as a major. Though I had, of course, always loved writing, I
hadn’t considered it as a major, because I hadn’t really considered whether or
not I was any good at it. When I took my first creative writing workshop,
sophomore year, with an adjunct professor named John Metz, it became clear to
me that I did in fact have some degree of talent. He was very
encouraging, and I began to take my writing more seriously, from a craft
standpoint, began to admit it was more than a hobby—it was my first love. It
was like Harry & Sally realizing they were more than just friends all
along. From there I took a fiction workshop with Jane Bradley and poetry
workshops with Joel Lipman and Tim Geiger, and I never could choose which genre
to focus on. I remember Joel telling me, basically, “I know you write
fiction too, but really you’re a poet.” And Jane telling me something
like, “I know you like to write poetry, but I think you’re a storyteller at
heart.” I still do both to a degree. The stories come every few
years or so, and I recently completed a first draft of a novel. But
poetry is more where I dwell on a day-to-day basis, it’s how my mind translates
my world. I’m sure if I had endless hours of free time I would
write more fiction, but poetry is better suited to being created in the small
increments I can manage.
Your poems feel
so well made, very controlled, very precise, very focused. They are also
arousing, full of sensual pleasure and palpable domestic tension. I wonder how
many drafts each poem goes through? How much revising do you do? Are you the
kind of writer who doesn't do much editing?
I
edit a lot, really. I try to let myself get the first draft out
unrestrained, in one gulp. Then I go back through it for a half-hour
maybe, depending on the circumstances. But I tinker for days, weeks after
that. I still happen across older poems and can’t stop puttering,
changing up line breaks, or compressing shorter poems into prose-poem format,
just to see how it affects it, how it looks, how it feels in my mouth as I
read. Once a piece is published I leave it alone, but until then every
comma or stanza break is fair game. It’s like licking my thumb to rub
away a toothpaste smudge on my son’s cheek as he runs out for the bus. I
don’t think it’s so much that I’m after some sort of perfection, or that I’m
never satisfied, rather it’s that I’m curious about the possibilities for each
poem. I wouldn’t want to regret having decided a poem’s fate too hastily,
before giving it a change to explore itself.
What do you look
for in a poem? I mean, the poems that move you, or really speak to you, what's
going on there?
I assume you mean in other people’s work? I like to be surprised—to be lead into an experience or idea then suddenly tossed in a new direction that makes me gasp. A good final line gets me every time. I am drawn to conversational, plain language. It feels the most sincere to me, the most honest. There’s bravery in simplicity. In general I’m turned-off by poems that preach from a blatantly political or religious standpoint, or those that try to rely on obtuse, grandiose language for the sake of itself—those lines where I think, “Ok, that sounds fancy, but what the hell does it mean?” I want to read or hear about living, breathing, farting, crying, swallowing human beings and the lens through which they view the world and their lives. A good poem makes me feel like the writer had her hand on my upper arm as she composed it right on the skin of my face.
I'm glad you mentioned Joel Lipman. He's been a mentor to so
many of Toledo's poets and certainly an artistic influence on many of us as
well. I want to bring him up again because several years ago he warned me
against writing poems about 'family'. He said they were hard to do and I
gathered from our conversation that the challenge is to create poems that are
not too sentimental, so personal that a reader can't approach them, or so
revealing that you harm loved ones in the making of them. And when I write
poems about my family I find that Joel was right to caution me. You write poems
about your family, too. And I'm wondering if you find the family as subject
matter challenging? If no, why? And if so, why not? Do you have rules about
what's fair game? In general do you think there are off limits subject in poetry
that deals with family/loved ones?
I
do not write too, too much about my family specifically. More often
some bit of an experience or emotion inspired by a family member might inspire
me to begin a poem that, either purposefully or organically, launches off on a
different trajectory altogether. Writing poems that appear to be very personal
has the potential to become a part of the general problem of people assuming
all of a writer's work is autobiographical. For me, that just isn't
the case. I do have a separate group of poems called
"Approximate Biography" that I began many years ago and that I add to
as needed. Any poem I write that does recount a specific memory or
defining moment or whatever gets filed away in that group. Even so,
the title includes the word "Approximate," because I have to allow
for gaps in my memory, my own subjective twists in perception, my unwillingness
to divulge too much. Still, those are the poems that are the closest
to being "true." Those are the ones about which I have
felt some trepidation when they have been published. The ones that
could, I suppose, get me in some trouble. I do not think it's fair
to spill my family members' dirt nor sensationalize every experience that they
face. And I don't think that hinders my work in any real
way. Honestly it's more enjoyable for me to imagine--scenarios,
emotional turmoil, love, loss, whatever--rather than to simply recount some
"interesting" problem so-and-so might be having. When I
write about my children, it's not psychoanalysis, not expounding on their diary
entries, it's more like "so-and-so did such-and-such today and it made me
think of -and-that," if that makes any sense. The poems are rarely
"about" the children themselves in any distinctly revealing, personal
way.
Still, your children are in
your poems. I feel a sense of great concern and care when your kids show
up in them. Do your kids read your poems, or any poetry? Are they interested in
making their own poems?
My
children do not read my poems. Nor do any of them write poetry,
though they do journal and enjoy reading and visual art. When I
write about my children I do keep in mind their potential feelings as they read
the poems in the future. The narcissist in me really uses them more
as an impetus for writing about myself, anyway. So any reservations
I have about "letting" them someday read my poems stems more from my
own vulnerability than from fear of them taking offense.
I met you at a small workshop called The Almeda St. Poetry
Co-op. It was a loose confederacy of poets, of varying skill levels and
interests, who I think met on Tuesday nights to talk poetry, and
share work and offer critiques, to encourage each other to write, and sometimes
we drank and ate too much. How did you get connected with this group?
I
first became aware of the Almeda St. group when I was in a poetry workshop at
UT with Joel Lipman. Adrian Lime was in the same class, and one day
he asked me, and Jonie McIntire, to come to an Almeda
gathering. Walking into that Almeda St. house, with those relative
strangers, was, first and foremost terrifying, as I am typically painfully shy
and reserved, but also it was exhilarating to be essentially walking into a new
identity. I remember feeling like I was stepping through the looking glass in a
way. It was the first group of writers that I had ever met, and the
first people to know me in the context of my being a writer. That
group, and the broader Toledo poetry "scene" that I became exposed to
absolutely shaped my writing life. Without them, I fear I would not
have maintained the confidence to continue writing, reading, and publishing
beyond college.
You and I went to the same University, though not at the same
time, and took classes with several of the same professors. Do you think the
workshop setting was good for your writing? I recently read an editorial that
posited workshops are killing creativity in poets, but
I found my workshops at school and with our Almeda St. peers to be
very constructive.
My
college writing workshops were wonderful. I know there has been
discussion, suspicion about how workshops operate and what kind of writer they
supposedly produce, but I doubt the workshop model will ever
disappear. After all, the "better" alternative would be, I
presume, one-on-one mentoring, which is not cost-effective for any student or
institution. From the first day of my first workshop I was able to
put my until-then solitary habit into perspective. I was able to
compare myself to others who did the same thing I did--compulsively scribbled
in notebooks, perhaps meekly showing a line or two to a friend who would
declare it "nice." I was able to--and I know this sounds
shitty--see that I was better than some people. I was able to
hear/read bad poems and then learn to articulate what it was that made then
bad, so that I could avoid those same pitfalls. And I could hear a
classmate read a lovely poem and tell her to her face precisely what I loved
about it. I suspect that if my education had been solely
lecture-based, if I had been presented only with the best published poems by
the best writers and had been told "write like this," I would have
felt instantly defeated. After college, I missed the
workshop setting and did have to adapt, re-learn to trust my own instincts without
regular feedback from peers. I was fortunate to have the Almeda St.
group and the other members of the Toledo poetry community to turn to for
advice when needed. You all sort of weaned me off of the workshops,
I suppose. The support of my fellow local writers continues to
inspire me.
I'm curious about this because I wonder if you're a poet who is
still ‘inspired’ to write, or are you methodical about writing. Is there a muse
or do you do a daily exercise? And is there a difference between the two approaches?
Does a bolt of lightning strike from on high and fill you with verse, or you
know, do you write methodically, and precisely, out of long experience?
I
am not a methodical writer. I make time for writing nearly every
morning, but if the Muse is evasive, so be it. I do keep writing
materials on hand always, and I often jot ideas, lines of poetry, notes for
things to work on later.
Do you have any writing rituals or superstitions?
No,
nothing like that, really.
So I'm wondering, are you always ready to write a poem? I mean,
is there always a poem on the verge? I was listening to an interview with one
of Ruth Stone's daughters the other day, and she described her mother as
someone who was always ready to write a poem, and I felt that described my
perception of you as a writer of poems, full of them, and always at the
ready.
I
wouldn't say that I always feel full of poems just waiting to be written, but I
do always feel ready to write when I get the notion. I try
to live with heightened senses, remain perceptive, like a cat with his
ears and whiskers twitching, waiting for a signal. So when an idea occurs
to me, or I see something unusual or lovely, I'm sort of stretched and ready to
run. I always have a pen & paper nearby--you can't let things
slip away from you.
On a related note, do you ever feel like the poem you're
working on has to be written? As if you're being compelled by some
inner voice to make the poem, or that the poem demands your complete
focus? Or, on the other hand, are you confident enough that you don't feel
compelled or controlled at all? Maybe you know your craft so well, the way you
do it, that you don't feel that mad rush to finish, but glide into poems with
patience and confidence? I don't know, I've said it before you always seem so
poised and confident, I think that's why I'm asking you this question.
I
often feel compelled to write a poem, as though it has to be written--not
because it's so profound and the world just has to experience it--but
more that I have to get it out of my head. Like an itch I gotta
scratch. So I'll jump into it, crafting somewhat as I go, but revising
after that initial draft sort of bursts forth. That said, they're
not always created that way. Sometimes I have a concept, or a beginning or
ending line or something that sort of comes to me "boing," but
then piecing the rest together takes significant effort, revision,
crafting. Either way, I don't think of it as an issue of confidence,
really, but rather focusing and getting a feel for what the poem wants to
be--spotting shapes in the clouds.
I asked you early on what you looked for in a poem. Your answer
covered what you respond to when it comes to other poems, but now I want to
know what do you expect from your own poems? What do you want to find when you
go back through a poem, after you know you've finished it? What happens in a
Kerry Trautman poem that makes her say, Ah, yes, this one has done it?
A
Kerry Trautman poem. That's a tough one. While I do recognize that I have
a characteristic style, not all of my poems are the same. Some are lighter in
tone, more whimsical, I guess, which usually means a quicker rhythm, or even
bits of meter here and there, some slant rhyme maybe, shorter lines. I
expect those to sort of dance themselves forward, in one whirl, so the reader
is met with the poem's full performance at once. Some poems, though, are
more somber, dreary probably, with longer lines, maybe more stanza breaks for
breaths, for swallowing. I expect these to take a little more time to get
where they're going, meandering a bit with moments, images, that build together
to create the whole impression felt by the end.
Either way, I like surprising little bits of language. I'd like for
readers to think, "I never could have said it that way." And I like
when the poem can turn, often right at the end, to become something different
that it seemed, from the, outset, that it was likely to become. If that
makes sense. As if a reader might start reading, thinking, "ah, I
see what she's going to say here," but then deflect off into another
direction--even if we're just talking at the sentence level, or an image or
metaphor that seems obvious but goes someplace else instead. I don't always get
there, but I love that, both in what I read and what I write. I'm pleased when I read an old piece I
haven't see in years and I realize that I've forgotten lines, find little
surprises in there, images I don't remember, so I can have an experience closer
to what my readers might feel, discovering it. If I find a poem like
that, and still find myself nodding, smiling, not grabbing for a pen to edit, I
consider that a success.
Was there poetry in your home when you were young? Was
literature a part of your childhood, your upbringing?
There
wasn't poetry in the house, growing up. Lots of books--encyclopedias,
travel books from places my parents had been, political stuff, history, but not
poetry. My Dad was always reading, but Sci-fi novels or Scientific
magazines. My mom read the newspaper cover-to-cover, but that's it.
But in general there was this respect of language, this sense that how
you speak defines you. My mom would pull a sharpie out of her purse to
correct grammatical errors on signs at our small-town grocery store. My dad loved
puns, told these little stories that seemed normal, hooked you in, but then
turned out to be jokes. He would inject bits of German here & there,
and my mom Latin, just as little asides, footnotes. I think what I
absorbed was that there is power and fun in the control and manipulation of
language. That it was something to be mastered.
And lastly, why did you start writing in the first place? Why
did you start writing poems, and why do you keep doing it?
I
don't know if I ever would have started dong public readings, discussing my
poetry, basically come out as a writer, if it hadn't been for the group I fell
into at Sam & Andy's. Really credit goes to Adrian Lime, I guess.
He approached me after a poetry class that we shared with his now-wife,
Jonie McIntire, taught by Joel Lipman. Adrian asked if I'd be interested
in coming to a workshop/discussion group. That's how I met the Almeda St.
poets. And that's who lead me to Sam & Andy's readings and how I came
to meet all of the fantastic local poets who have been so encouraging,
supportive, inspiring over the years.
I
suspect that without that series of events I never would have been a public
poet. It would have been this thing that I did in journals that never saw
the light of day. Of course there was the encouragement of my instructors
at The University of Toledo as well. The first was John Metz, who taught
the first creative writing class I dared to take. Joel, Jane Bradley, Tim
Geiger--each time I enrolled in another writing class, I did so with hesitation.
It seemed...frivolous I suppose. As though, I better be good at it,
or else it was a waste of college credits, of money. And each time I
learned more about the craft and felt like I belonged, like these were my
people, the discussions in which I wanted to be engaged.
I
keep writing as a sort of a compulsion, I suppose. It's sort of how I see
the world and how I situate myself within it. Through words.
A
selection of Kerry’s poems:
Be Fruitful
The old woman
hired four apricot trees planted in the back yard, near the property line,
assured by the nursery manager they would, indeed, bear fruit, though not
before a decade’s-worth of soggy April breezes and lonesome bees had whizzed
through, uneventfully. She told herself
she did not mind, enjoyed their virginal blossoms nonetheless, pure white as
new bedsheets. Someday, someone would thank her. Someone with baskets full and apron pockets
laden with honeyed fruits soft as love and succulent as sex, someone would
bite, tilt their face to the blueness of the sunlit sky, gasping within their
gut, and bless her unknown name.
Because, Brian
I liked you at
first, because your dad fixed a flat on my mom’s Pontiac in his robe, and
because of your black jelly bean eyes and big-toothed laugh, and because you almost
almost rubbed my thigh. But I bought
off-the-shoulder homecoming velvet for someone else, because of your seaweed
smell, because of the taste of our one kiss—wet with salts of sweat and Fritos,
because it was October and you were nothing, because we were sixteen.
Two Small Town Girls
[First appeared in Mock Turtle Zine, 2013]
They walked
along the storefronts—several boarded-shut, or emptied to dingy linoleum,
labeled “for sale,” since a two-years-ago flood. They peered in the antique
store and the bridal boutique with a single hopeful shopper fingering the
satins, and they wished to slip into those voluminous, shimmery gowns, or lie
on the lavender velvet sofa in the thrift store window, or lap the garlicky
sauce wafting its warmth from the door of the diner as a man shambled out,
full, unsmiling. They ticked their quick feet down the rigid sidewalk, a dry
unsettled wind whipping leafy debris against brick walls, sandstone,
cinderblock—the trash of the weeks twitching as it landed in cold corners, or
stuck between curbs and parked tires, or hurled upward toward the frayed canvas
awnings, toward upper apartment windows, toward the networks of suspended iron
stairs no one ever has used for escape.
Sunday, Winter
Driving, the
city’s winter salt crunched
under my tires,
flung in steely storms
against my
underbody, my wheel-wells.
The church bells
tolled their ten metallic echoes,
like tuning
forks teasing the shatter of icy branches.
The last hunched
parishioners straggled in,
clenching wool
coats against their bellies,
mouthing the
woe-filled organ chords,
as those ahead
heaved open the oak doors,
and I, in my
crusted car, was overcome—
pitying them in
the parking lot’s bitter wind,
and myself
shivering in the steady blow of
electric heat,
wondering what those
stooped
followers know that I do not.
Banana Aubade
[First
appeared in Alimentum, 2007]
I awoke,
having slept on the couch, my cheek
no doubt
pocked with pillow texture.
And before I
registered even the time
as judged by
light’s blue between drape seams,
and before my
tongue had time to crave
coffee’s acids
on its buds,
I smelled the
bananas—
exquisitely
ripe.
My body
actually sought them out,
finding them
nestled in their blue glass bowl.
Their daintily
freckled skins,
like a child’s
summer cheeks,
blushed bronze
enough to enrichen the
gaudy yellow
of rawness.
They’d roused
me with their
buttered
orchid scent,
like sweet
liquor in the dark air,
like a
sunrise, those sirens
begging to be
split, whispering sweetly,
their skin to
mine, “today.”
Language Acquisition
As the poet
reads
I gasp at the
tickle of his words
in my skin like
the unexpected bridge
of a song I need
to rewind, need to
hear again and
now.
His are words
whose meanings
I have known for
decades,
or thought so,
until now,
when he spoke
them, breathed them forth like
clouded vapor
exhaled into winter air
that became
suddenly altostratus.
A stormy dialect
I want to hear again
and again until
I too can speak it
as if it were my
native tongue.
It is like my
baby aching with
her constant
wants but
lacking language
for them—
wanting milk or
a taste of whatever
her brother
spoonfuls to his mouth,
or wanting to
see the photo of her father
framed high on a
high shelf,
or to feel the
satin ribbon edging of
her blanket cool
between her fingertips,
or to be lifted
to the open window
where the
grassed wind stirs the curtains,
her eyelids
fluttering in breeze and bright,
to feel my arms’
wrapness contain her
within the
ever-widening world.
Food for the Dead (for John Swaile)
[First
appeared in Broadway Bards First,
2010]
Dressing in
black for you
and for those
you’ve left—
in no need of
color today—
I prepare to
cook some food you’ll never eat,
but just the
rest of us—
the taste on
our tongues, you on our brains.
I wonder what
to feed
those left
behind a dead man.
What flavors
should accompany
our recitation
of your poems,
our
remembrance of your laugh, your sweat,
your anxious
stroking of hair from your brow,
with voice
booming sweetly?
I remember the
last food you made for me:
a white brick
of cream cheese,
softened a bit
from the warm car ride,
plopped from
its silver wrapper
to an oval
yellow platter,
topped with a
jar’s-worth of jalapeno jelly—
wet green as
any summer.
“It isn’t
hot,” you assured me,
scraping a
glob with a butter knife
onto a golden
cracker.
“It’s sweet,”
you said, chewing
and your lips
wouldn’t lie, would they?
And someone
handed me
a glass of
wine I hadn’t asked for,
and someone
else read a poem,
and you held
up a finger which meant,
“wait for me
to swallow;
I have something
I must say.”
And you
scooped me a cracker—
glistening
green swirled with creamy white,
like jewels in
snow,
and I shoved
it, whole, into my mouth,
and damn if it
wasn’t sweet after all.
Really enjoyable interview - insightful and inspiring. Great to hear Kerry having a chance to be expansive on her art. And the good poems speaking for themselves. - Bob Phillips
ReplyDeleteI know you're a great lover of Kerry's words, Bob. I'm glad you read the interview. Thanks!
DeleteEnjoyed reading your interview of Kerry Trautman. I just heard her read a few of her unpublished poems at a recent Broadway Bards event. Roped me right in! - Lori Seubert
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading!
Delete