Eleven “poets who were not afraid to let a little weirdness into their work, a little bit of the imagination”, as guest editor Paul Nelson puts it. Plus readings and interviews in audio.
When I was asked by Rattapallax editor Flavia Rocha to curate a selection of West Coast poets, there were several facets of this project that I considered a given. First, I wanted to limit the poets to the Northwest, a region with which I am more familiar than parts south. While Flavia mentioned a desire for recordings of the poets reading their own work, I knew that I would also want to conduct interviews with them, as I had missed participation in that art form, something I had extensive experience with during my 26 years in radio. I also knew that I would be interested in innovative poets. William Carlos Williams dictum “No poetry of distinction without formal invention” applies in the realm that most concerns me. Although the term “innovative” can be interpreted in several ways, I wanted to showcase poets who were not afraid to let a little weirdness into their work, a little bit of the imagination. Negative Capability might be a hackneyed phrase in some circles, but it remains quite accurate and is, I believe, a tremendously critical concept in our ever-present industry-generated-culture. I was given a limit of ten poets and, that’s what I have presented here. My own work was included at the suggestion of the magazine’s editors.
Often the problem with regional features like this is who to leave out. Certainly there are innovators in the region who are well-known, with careers amply documented Charles Potts, Sam Hamill, Judith Roche, David Abel and Nico Vassilakis are among them, not to mention many Canadian poets, who deserve their own feature, especially Lissa Wolsak, whose own long-awaited collection is about to be published by Station Hill. The Subtext Collective, of which Vassilakis was a major part, has been documented as well by Lou Rowan’s magnificent Golden Handcuffs Review and by a Floating Bridge Press feature. So the bulk of the poets presented here are, in the words of Downbeat Magazine, deserving of wider recognition. Some may argue about John Olson and Dan Raphael, but their work is so energetic and original, I included them because I feel they have not yet gotten their due, however that is interpreted.
And from the phantasmagorical flow of Raphael which sends out shoots and tendrils in any direction from which light emanates, to the extraordinary word play and invention of John Olson, to the surprise mind of Emily Kendal Frey, the remarkable dream life of Mary Sherwin (complete with Bush-era-style redactions for spots where recall falls short), and wild juxtapositions, stepping-razor humor and wicked cultural critique of Maged Zaher, you’ll find that there are a couple of basic strategies to allow the imagination into the work of the poets represented here. Collage is one method, as used strikingly by Erin Malone in her Sonnet Destroyed by Crows a poem I first heard read at Seattle Art Museum, and which she discusses in the interview we conducted. Collage is also a strategy employed by Roberta Olson, using a Melville text, among other sources.
Jack Spicer’s notion of the act of composition being a transmission from outer-space may not have resonated completely with other poets represented here, but the concept of the Practice of Outside as Spicer and his friend and colleague Robin Blaser does seem to ring true with many. The source may be Mars, the rich fields left here by previous generations, or even a certain rock’s “thrill with memories of stirring events connected with the lives of my people” as Chief Seattle once suggested. Dictation or reception has been a strategy in English poetry going back to its beginnings and seems to have proponents in every generation (see Charles Olson’s Projective Verse and Projective Verse II, Robert Duncan’s correspondence with Denise Levertov, her Notes on Organic Form and many of my essays collected in Organic Poetry: North American Field Poetics, among others). So the imagination, from these poets is enabled most often by variations of these two methods. Carletta Carrington Wilson goes as far as to say she’s tapping into someone else’s voice for her two poems featured here and in her interview, her reading of them did have a spooky and powerful otherworldliness to it. If you think Duende is an important attribute for poetry, you’ll find it in this work of hers, in abundance. Language poetry has had its influence as well, especially in the work of Sarah Mangold and the Olsons.
In articulating a West Coast poetics, there is not a lot of common ground aside from the two strategies outlined above, reception/transcription and collage. I feel that, as Kenneth Rexroth pointed out, as artists on the West Coast, we have more in common with Asia than Europe. While there is a Buddhist sensibility reflected in some of the work here, C.E. Putnam especially, perhaps the notion of the serial poem as practiced by Spicer, Robert Duncan, Michael McClure, Nathaniel Mackey and other legendary West Coast poets is somewhere under the surface, though the submissions by Putnam and Roberta Olson were part of longer pieces that have taken several years to create. The Hua-yen Buddhist notion of interdependent origination would apply to those writing serial poems and even more so to those poets employing a projective or organic method, which does seem to resonate to different degrees with many of the poets represented here. Raphael specifically mentions the Black Mountain School as an early influence and I have written extensively on the Organic.
Poets in the Northwest have so much more access to wilderness than East Coast and Midwest poets. There are volcanoes, glaciers and ancient forests literally in our backyard here. Yet I feel the energy from that landscape has not yet been fully reflected in the work of innovative poets in this region as say, the painters of the Northwest School from half a century ago, Tobey, Rothko and Graves, specifically. That is an interesting aspect to this project and to my own investigation. I asked about this to a few of the poets and certainly the rain/gloominess is a factor. But with Zaher and Mangold especially, the work is not as connected to place as you might imagine. My feeling is that this remains an area where innovative poets, by and large, continue to lag behind the painters and other artists of the region. Examining the work of Salish visual artists such as Susan Point, Marvin Oliver, or Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, you see how a vibrant culture and sense of place benefits the artist working in the Northwest. Theirs is a remarkable artistic achievement. Alas, many of the poets in this series had a sense that the local literary culture is just beginning to mature, which may or may not be a bad thing. After all, the culture is here for poets and other artists to shape. The poets presented here are among those at the frontier of the most recent efforts.
1:57P – 8.13.10

by Michael Brophy | Gorge Forest I 1997 | Commission for Columbia Gorge Discovery Center, The Dalles, Oregon | oil on canvas | 7' x 14' | Photos Courtesy of the artist and Laura Russo Gallery
POETS
Emily Kendal Frey
Emily Kendal Frey is the author of AIRPORT (Blue Hour 2009), FRANCES (Poor Claudia 2010), and THE NEW PLANET (Mindmade Books 2010) as well as three chapbook collaborations. Her first full-length collection, THE GRIEF PERFORMANCE, will be published by Cleveland State University Poetry Center in 2011. She lives in Portland, Oregon.
Poems
Emily Kendal Frey reads poems
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Paul Nelson interviews Emily Kendal Frey:
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Erin Malone
Erin Malone’s poems have appeared in journals such as Field, Beloit Poetry Journal, Poetry Northwest, Pool and online at Verse Daily. Her chapbook, What Sound Does It Make, won the Concrete Wolf Award in 2007. The recipient of grants from Washington’s Artist Trust, 4Culture and the Colorado Council of the Arts, she has taught writing at the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs, Richard Hugo House in Seattle, and at the University of Washington Rome Center in Italy. Currently she’s teaching phonics to first graders in Seattle Public Schools.
Poems
Sonnet Destroyed By Crows
Classifications of Languages
The Universe Expanding
Wearing the Terrarium
Erin Malone reads poetry
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Paul Nelson interviews Erin Malone
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Sarah Mangold
Sarah Mangold is the author of Household Mechanics (New Issues), and the chapbooks Parlor (Dusie Kollektiv), Picture of the Basket (Dusie Kollektiv), Boxer Rebellion (g o n g), and Blood Substitutes (Potes & Poets). From 2000-2009 she edited Bird Dog, a journal of innovative writing and art. With Maryrose Larkin, she co-edits FLASH + CARD, a chapbook and ephemera press.
Poems
The Women Saints as Poets
Setting the Landscape in Motion
Lady Byron
And What is True of Landscape is True of Everything Else That can be Filmed
The Study of Individual Points
Sarah Mangold Reads Poems
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Paul Nelson interviews Sarah Mangold
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Paul Nelson
Father/Poet/Teacher Paul Nelson, is a Chicago native, founder of SPLAB (SPokenword LAB), author of a book of essays on poetics, Organic Poetry (Oct. ‘08, VDM Verlag, Germany) & of a serial poem re-enacting the history of Auburn, Washington, A Time Before Slaughter (Oct. ’09, Apprentice House) (Auburn was originally called Slaughter). For 26 years he worked in radio, interviewing Allen Ginsberg, Michael McClure, Anne Waldman, Sam Hamill, Robin Blaser, Wanda Coleman, Eileen Myles, Jerome Rothenberg, George Bowering & others. He earned his M.A. from Lesley University in Organic Poetry, a study of North American poets writing (to different degrees) spontaneously, writes one American Sentence every day & lives in Seattle’s Columbia City neighborhood with his wife Meredith. All the long poems published here are part of the manuscript Kozer Variations.
Poems
Nine American Sentences
Pop Haibun
Guanabo Beach, 2005
Periphery
Paul Nelson reads poetry
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Greg Bem interviews Paul Nelson
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John Olson
John Olson’s the author of Backscatter: New And Selected Poems, from Black Widow Press, and two recent novels, The Nothing That Is, from Ravenna Press, and Souls Of Wind, from Quale Press. Larynx Galaxy, a new collection of prose poetry, essays, and fiction is forthcoming this fall from Black Widow Press. He is currently at work on a novel about French painter Georges Braque.
Poems
Spigot
Shoes
A Day in The Life
John Olson reads poetry
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Paul Nelson interviews John Olson and Roberta Olson
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Roberta Olson
Roberta Olson‘s work has appeared in numerous journals and magazines, including, most recently, New American Writing. She has also appeared in Talisman, Bird Dog, and Explosive Magazine. The ideas of Robert Rauschenberg are a strong influence on her work. “It is completely irrelevant that I am making them – today is their creator.” R.R.
Poems
Roberta Olson reads poetry
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Paul Nelson interviews Roberta Olson and John Olson
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C.E. Putnam
C.E. Putnam was born in Seattle and has lived in three world capitals (London, Washington DC, and Bangkok). A former co-curator of the Subtext Reading Series, he maintains P.I.S.O.R. (The Putnam Institute for Space Opera Research) & founded FiftyCentsOffPress. Monkey Puzzle, Bird Dog, Pom2, Ixnay, 6ix, Pavement Saw, Tin Fish, Skanky Possum and http://canwehaveourballback.com./6putnam.htm contain some of his writings. He currently lives in Seattle, but not for long.
POEMS
Listen to the following story about the Bunny and the Yak
After a few minutes of recounting the dream in that furnace, the Yak-tumblers entered & resumed
Night SongRemembering the storm after the stormWe will then have to drink the milk of your whales
Fear of Corpse Material Ghosts
If I must die, then bring me back to shore
C.E.Putnam Reads Poems
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C.E.Putnam Interview
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Dan Raphael
Dan Raphael‘s Impulse and Warp: The Selected 20th Century Poems will be out this September from Wordcraft of Oregon. He performs his work throughout the Northwest, including Bumbershoot, Wordstock, Portland Jazz Festival, Powell’s Books and Red Sky Poetry Theatre. Current poems appear in Otoliths. Peaches and Bats, Pemmican, Radioactive Moat and Heavy Bear.
Poems
Slammin Down (6/15/10)
Opposite Rain
Muse of Internal Weather
A Cold Walks into the Room
Swimming in the Streets
Dan Raphael reads poetry
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Paul Nelson interviews Dan Raphael
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Mary Paynter Sherwin
Mary Paynter Sherwin’s work is heavily influenced by her knowledge and love of science, religion, and art. Most recently, her work has appeared in The Midway Journal and in Drash: Northwest Mosaic. She currently lives in Seattle with her husband, David.
Poems
Cecilia
Nearby
Dream 16: You in Silk
Dream 38: We Are Scientists
Mary Paynter Sherwin reads poetry
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Paul Nelson interviews Mary Paynter Sherwin
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Carletta Carrington Wilson
Carletta Carrington Wilson’s poems have been published in The Seattle Review, Obsidian III, The Cimarron Review, Pilgrimage, Raven Chronicles, Beyond the Frontier: African American Poetry for the 21st Century, Uncommon Waters: Women Write About Fishing and Seattle Poets and Photographers: A Millennium Reflection, among others. She is currently completing her first poetry manuscript.
Poems
typeface of the erased & eye-been-spelled
Carletta Carrington Wilson reads poetry
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Maged Zaher
Maged Zaher’s first full length book of poetry, Portrait of the Poet As an Engineer, was published by Pressed Wafer in 2009. His collaborative work with the Australian poet Pam Brown, Farout Library Software, was published by Tinfish Press in 2007. His translations of contemporary Egyptian poetry have appeared in Jacket magazine and Banipal. He has performed his work at Subtext, Bumbershoot, the Kootenay School of Writing, St. Marks Project, Evergreen State College, and American University in Cairo, among other places.
Poems
From: Rimbaud Outsourced (or Thank you for the Window Office)
Maged Zahwer reads poetry
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Maged Zahwer Interview
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