What Sparks Poetry is a series of original essays that explores experiences and ideas that spark the writing of new poems. In Reading Prose, poets share with us how the experience of reading prose, fiction, non-fiction, theory, or poetics, has sparked the writing of poetry or affected how they read poetry. Each Monday's delivery brings you a poem and an excerpt from the essay.

The young composer, working that summer at an artist's colony, had watched her for a week. She was Japanese, a painter, almost sixty, and he thought he was in love with her. He loved her work, and her work was like the way she moved her body, used her hands, looked at him directly when she made amused and considered answers to his questions. One night, walking back from a concert, they came to her door and she turned to him and said, "I think you would like to have me. I would like that too, but I must tell you that I have had a double mastectomy," and when he didn't understand, "I've lost both my breasts." The radiance that he had carried around in his belly and chest cavity—like music—withered very quickly, and he made himself look at her when he said, "I'm sorry. I don't think I could." He walked back to his own cabin through the pines, and in the morning he found a small blue bowl on the porch outside his door. It looked to be full of rose petals, but he found when he picked it up that the rose petals were on top; the rest of the bowl—she must have swept them from the corners of her studio—was full of dead bees.

from the book HUMAN WISHES / Ecco Press
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What Sparks Poetry:
Dana Levin on Reading Prose
 

"I thought instantly of two books by philosophers who have offered me enduring lenses: The Poetics of Space by Gaston Bachelard and I and Thou by Martin Buber. Then I flashed on the bowl of dead bees at the end of Robert Hass’s famous poem."
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Headshot of Ed Ochester
"Ed Ochester, Influential Poet, Editor and Pitt Educator, Dies at 83"

"Ochester, for a half-century a key and beloved figure on the local scene as a poet, educator and editor, died Tuesday at age 83. As a poet, he was known for his plain-spoken, often humorous approach that lightly wore its references, whether to ancient Roman history or the chickens at the Armstrong County home he shared with his wife, the late Britt Horner. As longtime editor of the Pitt Poetry Series, he was known for publishing a wider range of poets than was common in the field when he took over, in 1978."

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