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Poetry Dynamo Lyn Lifshin
Author: Kay Day
Published on: March 10, 1999 in Suite
101.com
The most published poet in the world today,
Lifshin shows here with this book what many
literary magazine editors have known for decades:
she's a poet of substance, range and invention.
--Small Press Review
Any serious poet knows the name Lyn Lifshin. Lifshin the legend, Lifshin
the dynamo, Lifshin the poet whose work turns up, words pared like apples
cut into perfectly sized pieces. Robert Frost described her poetry as
having very good images, and advised, Bring me more
poems. The San Francisco Review casts her as
frighteningly
prolific and utterly intense. One of a kind.
That she is. This trim woman with the long blond hair and dark penetrating
eyes has written over 100 books and edited four anthologies of women writers.
She has published in virtually every poetry and literary magazine in the
nation; she has given more than 700 readings at places like Cornell, Dartmouth,
and The Shakespeare Library. Winner of the Jack Kerouac Award, finalist
with the likes of Maxine Kumin and Philip Levine for the Patterson Award,
Lifshin has made it in the world of poetry, the one she both picked and
created.
Lifshins focus on poetry began in elementary school. I had
a wonderful third grade teacher who had us reading Milton, Longfellow,
Blake. I copied a poem of Blakes out and showed it to my mother.
I said I wrote it. She ran into my teacher. Lifshin then had to
write a poem that was really her own. That is one way I started,
she says, adding, but I also loved poetry, read a lotand when
I left graduate school and took a job, though I was also painting, I began
writingpoems just seemed natural.
The natural aspect of her poetry follows Lifshin to this
day. I find her poetry like a silk dress, with threads so fine and light,
you almost dont even think of reading the lines requiring effort,
because they flow so smoothly. One of my very favorite poems by her is,
The Daughter I Dont Have(Cold Comfort). She speaks of
a daughter awakening in the middle of the night, describes emotions that
capture maternal essence with lines that are tight, yet thickly textured:
I part her
hair, braid her
to me as if to
keep what I cant
close, like hair
wreathes under
glass in New
England.
I count Lifshin among the must-reads, but I honestly dont even remember
how I discovered her. At times, she has seemed to be everywhere. Her efforts
to publish have inspired legions of tales. One of my fellow editors shared
a story with me. I remember getting submissions from Lyn Lifshin
years ago when I was co-editor for a now-defunct literary magazine. While
most poets sent three to five poems, she sent huge stacks of her work,
typed on onion skin. And while most sent us only one packet of submissions
for our annual magazine, Lyn sent two or more.
Ill admit, my colleague continued, I hated wading
through her reams of material, but the caliber of her work was so much
higher than most of what we received, it was well worth the effort. I
also remember being envious that she had so much material to submit in
the first place
Submitting can be a challenge to any poet, regardless of talent. Lifshin
says the part of the business she finds tough is the networking.
Some people are great at this, love it. she writes. Id
rather be writing. She has a new book, Before It's Light, coming
from Black Sparrow Press this fall, and confides, Ill work
at doing as much as I can to publicize it. But Lifshin, the consummate
writer, adds, The writing is always the high--
One of the first poems I discovered by Lifshin, Getting My Mother
Ice, from the collection, Cold Comfort explores the mother-daughter
relationship that draws words from so many female poets. The poem that
begins, Nothing lasts long/in this heat/except the dark/of waiting
probes feelings between a critically ill parent and her daughter-caretaker.
The reader receives a snapshot of the daughter getting a wash cloth for
her parent, and is caught up in the hopelessness of the situation. In
an article for Writers Digest, Lifshin called poetry a way
to hold, to keep a moment, like photographs
Asked about her interest in the mother-daughter bond, Lifshin replied,
I agree that the mother and daughter relationship is so intense,
interesting, and ambivalent that an incredible number of strong poems
on the subject exist. That was why I chose that relationship for the first
anthology I edited, Tangled Vines, and that has been kept in print almost
without a break.
Lifshin calls the present a comparatively quiet (catch up) time
for me before the publication of my next bookand all the work in
trying to arrange readings etc. around that
I still have about 100
handwritten notebooks of poems to catch up on. She says she has
thought about a novel, but she hasnt done it yet. As a Lifshin fan,
Ill be watching the shelves, because after experiencing what she
does with poetry, the novel should be a piece of cake.
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