"Rivering" is from my sixth manuscript of the same name. I am grateful to the editors of South Dakota Review for making a home for it. The poem was inspired by the flooding of Native lands by the government-built Garrison Dam in North Dakota, for which in my professional capacity I was able to write a successful grant in environmental reparations. In publishing, "rivering" refers to a gap in typesetting that appears to run through the text. Kimberly L. Becker on "Rivering" |
|
|
A Conversation with Callie Siskel "Silence has many negative connotations, and in terms of working against it—that’s the challenge to keep writing, to override the impulse to stay silent. But silence is also a practice and an aesthetic that I utilize in my writing. There’s the silence that happens off the page, before the poem is written, and the silence that imbues the lines. The former comes from the idea that we are writing even when we are not writing." via MCSWEENEY'S |
|
|
What Sparks Poetry: M. W. Jaeggle on "Wrack Line" "To make an abstraction like ecological interdependence feel like lived experience—this is a power unique to poetry. Because it entails the realization that paying attention to wilderness is the same as paying attention to the self (and vice versa), this power is foundational. Like a branch from which an owl perches, poetry supports us as we survey our options, bide time, and go about securing the means for continued life." |
|
|
|
|
|
|