07.11.2019
Interview with 2019 Summer Poetry Prize Judge
ĢżAimee Nezhukumatathil
In honor of our inaugural 2019 Summer Prizes in Fiction & Poetry, Managing Editor Su Cho conducted a micro-interview with our Poetry Prize Judge, Aimee Nezhukumatathil. Read on to learn more about the insistence of joy, what makes a poem stand out, and the things Aimee Nezhukumatathil would tell her past and future self!
is the author of four books of poetry, most recentlyĢżOceanic.ĢżHer honors include a Pushcart Prize and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Her collection of nature essays is forthcoming from Milkweed Editions and sheĢżis professor of English in The University of Mississippiās MFA program.
Su ChoĢżis the Managing Editor ofĢżCream City ReviewĢżand a PhD student at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where she is an Advanced Opportunity Fellow. Her poems are forthcoming/can be found inĢżColorado Review, Cincinnati Review, Pleiades, The Journal, Crab Orchard Review,Ģżand elsewhere.
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1. Every time I read your poems, I canāt help but see the value of the joy of discovery, and that joy, in turn, creates community. During this tumultuous political time, maintaining and nurturing joy is not only important but also work. How does this feel for you? Do you think this relationship has changed for you over time? Or do you see it manifest in different ways as you keep writing?
Oh thank you so very much! Itās not exactly a conscious development *towards* joy and wonderment, but rather an insistence for it. And it is most definitely workāthough my pals would absolutely say Iām an optimist, my very closest pals know Iām a worrier and over-thinker, especially in light of the political and environmental concerns weāve been facing. But this is nothing new. As a woman of color, I have known for a very long time that the world operates very differently for me than say, my white husband. Add that to us raising two mixed boys who have some of the most kind and wondrous hearts I know and even though I have an overwhelming sense of dread and despair most days for the world they will live in when I am long goneāit becomes even more imperative for me to point out beauty and yes, joy on this planet for them. This doesnāt, however, mean that I ignore darkness and āscaryā topics in my writing. But I suppose I do try to lean toward light. I think for many people, itās more helpful to fight for things we love, rather than out of a reflex of fear. I meanāmany of our political leaders would rather women of color be in a constant state of fear and panic. So when I turn towards joy and beauty in my writing, it is most certainly work. But itās the most beautiful and important responsibility in work Iāve ever had.
2. Youāve written so many great collections of poetry. How would you describe your journey as a writer and teacher from Miracle Fruit (2003) until now? What has evolved? What has remained steadfast?
You are too kind, but talking about my work this way gives me the heebie-jeebiesāIād rather you or other readers make such conjectures/observations. But I will say I definitely feel more comfortable to push against my love/hate relationship with linebreaks and to make my lines and white space more expansive than the tight/neat blocks of my earlier poems. Over the course of four books, I thinkāI hopeāIāve expanded my gaze to larger concerns of the natural world. And thereās at least one constant for my poetry: that most of my poems can be read as love poems. Or at the very least, born of love.
3. What makes a poem stand out to you? Is there a poem or a book you canāt let go of right now?
When I get to a poem, I want to be surprisedāwith the poemās music, images, and/or the physical look of it on the page. I donāt ever want to be able to guess the next line or image, or knowĢżhowĢżthe poem will end, and I want to also feel like I donāt want the poem to end in the first place. I want to stay in that poemās world, like stepping into the landscape of one of those snow globesāI want to be shaken up and even after all the shaking settles down, I want to look down at my feet and know my world is not the same. Iāve recently loved Mira Jacobās Good Talk, and a new poetry collection out any day: Former Possessions of the Spanish Empire, by Michelle PeƱaloza, and just read the astonishing new one from Carmen Gimenez-Simth. Ooohāand Natalie Scenters-Zapicoās Lima :: Limón.
4. If you could travel to the past, what would you tell your past self? If you could go forward in time, what wouldnāt you want your future self to forget?
Iād tell my size-2 twenty-something self, that I wasnāt chunky in the flippinā-slightest, and to tell my twenty-something poet-self that the only advice ever worth taking in the literary world is: to floss, assume kindness in those you donāt know (unless proven otherwise), and give thanks by helping out others who come after. I was always going to writeāno one needed to remind me to write and read widely. But simply put: doing these very specific things would always keep me writing, and give me more opportunities to write and teach. And Iām a CapricornāI donāt forget things. š But Iād try to forget who told me if I wanted to be a successful writer, I needed to keep writing at the forefront of my life, no matter the cost (sleep, relationships, etc). Iād argue that Iād feel better about myself when writing ¾±²õ²Ōāt at the front of my lifeāthat Iām a more expansive writer and mentor because I have other interests and people with whom I love to share them with, not in spite of. And my folks are still alive, but they live far away in Florida, so Iād remind my former self to drive and visit as often as possible back when they lived just an hour away from me when I was in grad school in Ohio. Also Iād always want to remember our family vacations: both when I was a little girl, sleeping in the backseat of our blue Oldsmobile, and also now that my boys are still little(-ish) and begging for us to stop at any rock shop they see advertised on the road.
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Submissions to our 2019 Summer Prizes in Fiction and Poetry are open until August 1st.ĢżClickĢżhereĢżfor full guidelines.
06.18.2019
Interview with 2019 Summer Prize JudgeĢż
Ramona Ausubel
In honor of our inaugural 2019 Summer Prizes in Fiction & Poetry, Fiction Editor Molly Gutman conducted a micro-interview with our Fiction Prize Judge, Ramona Ausubel. Read on to learn more about fabulist worlds, Ramona Ausubel’s newest short story collection Awayland, and what she’s looking for in a winning story!
Ramona Ausubel is the author of two novels and two story collections. Her most recent book, Awayland, was a New York Times Editorsā Choice selection, a Finalist for the California Book Award, Colorado Book Award and long-listed for the Story Prize. She is also the author of Sons and Daughters of Ease and Plenty, No One is Here Except All of Us and A Guide to Being Born. She is the recipient of the PEN/USA Fiction Award, the Cabell First Novelist Award and was a finalist for the New York Public Library Young Lions Award. She teaches in the low-residency MFA program at the Institute of American Indian Arts and joins the faculty at Colorado State University in the fall of 2019.
Molly Gutman is a fiction editor at Cream City Review and a PhD student in fiction at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Her stories appear or are forthcoming in Granta, Alaska Quarterly Review, Black Warrior Review, and elsewhere.
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1. Lots of your stories exist in fabulist worlds, where people grow extra arms to represent their love, or where a Cyclops might write a dating profile. But even your more realist stories still feel slipperyāweird, magicalāin the way they deal with memory and love and the human body. What does fantastical fiction offer us that other approaches to fiction might not?
I think the world is profoundly strange and surprisingāthe actual, real world. And human experience is an entire universe of strange and surprising, so to add a fantastical element sometimes seems like a way of holding a mirror up to regular life, regular experience and saying, āSee that? Isnāt that that incredible and weird?ā I always want to write toward experiences that feel true and sometimes a magical twist makes it easier to see the thing. Sometimes itās not needed and the worldās own wildness speaks for itself.
2. What about experimental and citational narrative forms? You have stories that are (or quote from) dating profiles, acknowledgements and museum placards, fictional books, letters, and more. How do you think through these approaches? Do choices in framing and presentation come early in your drafting process?
Some of these come from things Iāve seen or read that struck me as very odd. I was in the Egypt Museum in Cairo where there really is a room full of animal mummies and it really does have a plaque listing the people the animal mummies would like to thank. I saw that and thought, āOh, DO they?ā And that became a story. Same with the dating profile. I knew I needed the chatty voice of internet advice to off-set the Cyclopsā own story. Sometimes these documents feel like a map Iām laying down to give us somewhere to stand while a large or peculiar situation takes place. Itās grounding. Iām also always thinking of how to set different elements in opposition to one another. A mundane real-world document with an otherworldly character, etc.
3. Some of your newest collection, Awayland, taps into preexisting narratives like Greek Mythology. I love retellings (they’re probably my favorite genre!) and Iām hoping youāll talk a little about what in retellings excites you.
I love them too! Thereās something about those stories that so many of us carry around, a sort of collective narrative burden/delight. They are often meant to be teaching stories too, or alternative histories, or justifications for wars or political borders. Those stories do tremendous work in our human world and itās just really a joy to grab a thread and pull it into a new piece of fabric. It feels like invoking something big.
4. Who are you reading right now?
I am telling everyone I talk to about Helen Phillipsā new novel THE NEED. Itās creepy and gripping and profound. I have been reading Pam Houstonās beautiful memoir DEEP CREEK, Mira Jacobās graphic memoir GOOD TALK and re-reading Louise Erdrich.
5. When youāre reading storiesāor judging prizesāwhat blows your socks off? What are you looking for in a winning entry?
Iām always reading for ambition and bravery, even if itās a short story. Something reached for (even if it doesnāt come out perfectly)ābeautiful language, a big idea, some kind of what-if. Most importantly, I love it when I can feel how strongly a writer cared about getting this thing down. Whether the story is funny or sad or everything at once, I want to feel like it had to be here.
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Submissions to our 2019 Summer Prizes in Fiction and Poetry are open until August 1st. Click here for full guidelines.