sweatervestboy
sweatervestboy
Sweatervestboy
382 posts
David Wright teaches creative writing at Monmouth College (IL). His latest book is Local Talent. To purchase a signed copy, click on the book page below.
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sweatervestboy · 3 years ago
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sweatervestboy · 5 years ago
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Tupelo 3030 Challenge
For the month of January 2021, I'm going to be taking part in Tupelo Press' 30/30 Project. 
Essentially, it's a generative project that challenges a new group of poets each month to generate 30 poems in 30 days, all as a means of raising funds to support Tupelo Press, a a nonprofit 501(c)(3) literary press that publishes some of the best contemporary poetry around. I encourage you to check out their catalogue of books and roster of amazing writers.
For the project, each poet reaches out to folks we know and asks if you are willing to support the 30/30 challenge and Tupelo Press with a small donation. I'd be thrilled if any of you would be open to sponsoring my participation in the project. Visit the donation page for more details about this tax deductible gift.  
As an added incentive, if you donate to Tupelo Press and would like me to try and draft a poem for/about/in conversation with you, I'd love to try. Years ago I wrote postcard poems along these lines and they were some of my favorite experiences as a writer. Drop me a message by email or through my twitter DMs @sweatervestboy. 
The drafts posted are all works in progress that stay available for the month of the project, but then they are taken down and archived so the writers can have time to revise them and be able to submit them for publication. 
Again, I'm excited about finishing off my sabbatical writing with this project, to see what new work emerges. And I'm excited to be able to, along with other poets, support a great poetry press. Let me know if I can answer any questions. Thanks for considering a small (or large!) donation. if you're on twitter, you can also follow @tupelopress30/30.
Thanks, 
David
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sweatervestboy · 5 years ago
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My 2020 in Poems
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The first of a two part post. 
The first, a year end review of poems I wrote that have made their way into the world, a delayed miracle in some cases and a sudden surprise in others. 
The second, forthcoming, a list of poetry collections purchased (and some actually read) this past year. I’ll humble brag about more things later. 
Poems Published in 2020
“Proposed Amendments to the Definition of Mend.” Ruminate Magazine 57 (Fall 2020): 19.
“Christmas Plainsong, or Several Near Apologies to My Son.” Okay Donkey 21 Dec. 2021.
“Consolation 3: Owed to the Grackles.” Rathalla Review Fall 2020: 33. 
“Fiat Lux, in Advent.” The Curator Magazine 10 Dec. 2020. 
"Hey, Down There, I Am a Middle Aged Idiot with Questionable Eyesight" Hobart 1 July 2020. 
“Lines on Retirement, after Reading Lear.” Final Exam: Poems about Teachers and Their Students. J . Barry Koops, ed. Brooks Street Books, 2020. 160.
“Noblesse Oblige.” Local Culture 2.2 (Sept. 2020): 37-8.
“While I am Walking in Light Rain on Palm Sunday, a Mirror Appears on an Illinois Street.” The Ekphrastic Writer. Janée Baugher. McFarland, 2020. 180.
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sweatervestboy · 5 years ago
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“I Am Sorry to Report” felt funny, clever when it was written. Now it feels entirely too dark, but still appropriate for the beginning of final grading season. 
This is the third video reading I’ve posted from Local Talent. Other include:
Local Talent (title poem)
Phoenix
Also, check out this first installment of a conversation about the collection with my friend and colleage Mark Willhardt.
More poems to come in the days ahead.
For more about the book and to purchase a copy, visit the book page here on my tumblr. Or shop on indiebound or bookshop.
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sweatervestboy · 5 years ago
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Reading “Phoenix” from Local Talent
The second in a series of video readings of poems from Local Talent.
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This poem about scattering a father’s ashes was originally published by the good folks at Everyday Poems. 
For more about the book and to purchase a copy, visit the book page here on my tumblr. Or shop on indiebound or bookshop.
In case you missed it, here’s the title poem from Local Talent. More readings to come in the days ahead.
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sweatervestboy · 5 years ago
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Title poem from Local Talent
The first in a series of video readings from Local Talent, beginning with the title poem.
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A version of the poem was published at Books & Culture a few years back.
For more about the book and to purchase a copy, visit the book page here on my tumblr. Or shop on indiebound or bookshop.
Watch for a poem every other day this week, and a series of excerpts from a conversation about the book with with Mark Willhardt.
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sweatervestboy · 5 years ago
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A quick pastoral elegy for @c_perry after his tweets on contingency plans being requested for this COVID-19 teaching time. 
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sweatervestboy · 5 years ago
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Robert Hayden Monet’s Water Lilies
Monet’s Water Lilies
Today as the news from Selma and Saigon
poisons the air like fallout,
I come again to see
the serene, great picture that I love.
Here space and time exist in light
the eye like the eye of faith believes.
The seen, the known
 dissolve in iridescence, become
illusive flesh of light
that was not, was, forever is.
O light beheld as through refracting tears.
Here is the aura of that world
each of us has lost.
Here is the shadow of its joy.
Robert Hayden
Collected Poems of Robert Hayden. Ed. Frederick Glaysher. New York: Liveright, 1985; rpt. 1996.
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sweatervestboy · 5 years ago
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Remembering John Knoepfle
As I was googling today to find a particular poem online, I was sad to discover that poet John Knoepfle died this past November. As you can read in any of the  27 books of poetry he published during a long life of writing and teaching, John was a wonderfully witty, deeply humble and unfailingly kind poet. I first discovered his work in an undergraduate course on Illinois poetry, finding his Poems from the Sangamon to be revelatory, a book that offered me a way to see the landscape of my own life through poetic eyes. 
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(photo from Illinois Times)
His elegant short lines deftly folded into them centuries of history, both natural and human, that shaped and haunted the Midwest. From him, I learned about the Tamaroa and Kickapoo peoples. Way before I discovered the work of Wendell Berry, John (and other Midwestern writers like Gwendolyn Brooks, Lucia Getsi, and on and on) helped me think and write my way more deeply into and out of the place I knew best. 
John also was a very generous and skilled poetry teacher. During the year I took off after my undergrad, I took two writing courses with him. I’ll never forget his reading one of my poems backwards during a workshop. “There you go,” he said, “Now the poem is full of all the surprises you’d taken out of it.”
We kept in touch for a number of years, and I still have on a bulletin board a post card of this little unpublished poem of his:
bowl
love is like a bowl so when you break it glue it together if it won't hold water fill it with apples
— John Knoepfle
You can read much more of John’s work at this website built for him a number of years back. And read a lovely tribute article written in spring 2019 about John and his wife Peg. 
Here’s a poem I wrote For John back some 20 years ago. I’m still learning the lesson the poem talks about trying to learn, which means John, who has become a part of this place, is still teaching me how. 
For John
mounds timbers points
green island savannas
a language of prairies
— John Knoepfle, “east in mclean county”
We talked over words,
inside them, about twisted
roots, articulate land,
but I could have better
listened—again—
to the lilted languages
and tindered skies
caught tight and taut
in your memory’s
frugal, generous eye.
Look—again—my foot
keeps time under my
chair, taking steps
in place, in place,
in places I go through
when—instead—like you
I should dance the dirt
down deep with measured
steps, and stay.
from David Wright. A Liturgy for Stones (Cascadia, 2003)
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sweatervestboy · 6 years ago
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ENG310: Mini Anthology One
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Each week in ENGL 310: Advanced Poetry Writing at Monmouth College,  writers choose a poems from different kinds of sources. For the first week, they chose one of a dozen or so recent issues of Poetry, contributing a single poem to the class anthology. The discussions of the poems and poets--their subjects, voices, craft--weave into and out of the students writers’ own work. I’m learning about new poets and and new poems already. Next week: individual poems from recently published collections.  
Week One: Mini Anthology from recent issues of Poetry Magazine
Miranda: Once I Had an Acceptance Speech by Anthony Anaxagorou
Teri: My Therapist Wants to Know about My Relationship to Work by Tiana Clark
Connor:  !katya! by Chrissy Williams
Gunnar: Bear by Reginald Gibbons
Morgan: Aubade Beginning in Handcuffs by torrin a. greathouse
Lexis: IInfinity Ghazal Beginning with Lice and Never Ending with Lies by Tarfiah Faizullah
Owen: Nostalgia by Chase Berggrun
Serena: Runaway by Jorie Graham
Shweta: Krishna by Meena Alexander
Nathan: Let’s Make the Water Turn Black by Sandra Simonds
Kenzie: Dictionary of Owl by Mary Meriam
Jacob: Black Notes on Genre for My Beloved by Rukmini Bhaya Nair
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sweatervestboy · 6 years ago
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Poetic Companions
This past Friday, I got my copy of poet Brett Foster’s posthumous collection Extravagant Rescuses, just a few days after copies of my own new collection arrived.
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Having them both on my desk made me feel connected again to the conversations that poured out of Brett and are laced through his poems—scholarly, tangential, earnestly doubting, earnestly believing, self-effacing. When I go on the road with my own book, I am going to carry Brett’s work along, including The Garbage Eater, his 2011 collection. Of course you can see here that there’s a significant absence between one book and the next.
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I will have to listen for that signature voice in the lines of the poems themselves.
The new collection begins with a candid, generous introduction by Jeffrey Galbraith, poet, scholar, and Brett’s colleague and lifelong friend. You can read Jeff’s own poems in his collection Painstaker.
And Brett’s advice, presence, and voice (and my sense of grief for his loss) also find their way into Local Talent. Here’s a poem for him that comes near the end of the collection.
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sweatervestboy · 6 years ago
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Local Talent Now Available
Friends, my new poetry collection, Local Talent, is now available from the purple flag imprint of Virtual Artists Collective. A real pleasure to work with Steven Schroeder and all involved with this generous small press. Visit the book page here on my tumblr to see more about the collection, including a few sample poems.
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sweatervestboy · 6 years ago
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Rerun of a birthday poem
Birthday Poem
The last time it was Easter on my birthday I was also alive, and so far this Sunday, alive again. A body gets used to breathing, getting out of bed a bit of sunshine, and, Jesus, you could believe everyone gets tolerable skin to dwell in. All along I braced the brutal Illinois winter–glare ice, darkness, lonesome bed–with nothing better than the thought of raucous Handel in April, no idea that the real day would arrive with a squirrel carrying a pastry across the filthy alley towards me, look me in the eye, watch my son swing a stick like a Centurion’s sword, and, fearing nothing, sit at my feet devouring the sweet edged world.
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first published in Relief (Spring 2016)
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sweatervestboy · 6 years ago
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Lenten Failure I
A poem coming out in the latest issue of Windhover, first in a series of Lenten poems collected over the past few years. If you don’t know Windhover and it’s diligent, generous editor, Nate Hansen, I suggest you check them out by subscribing and/or visiting their table at this years #AWP19..
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​Lenten Failure I
My forehead appears clean
here in the bar where the beer
could not be cheaper and the 50 cent
rums & cokes double up and down
in the darkening room. Elton John
tells everybody this is my song
though he's wrong again. My song
is a lament I missed when I skipped
services tonight. My song is a vocative
cry, Kyrie, that always dwells behind
the cave walls of my teeth and weighs
down my rum-sweet tongue. My song
has almost never been Hosanna, Elton John,
(by now AC/DC). Look--in the mirror.
When I scrub my face, can you see
the shade, Christe eleison, there, dust,
the ghost of ash beneath the flesh?
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sweatervestboy · 6 years ago
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Terrance Hayes, American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin
An intense, good week of reading and discussing Terrance Hayes’ latest book with Contemporary American Poetry students here at Monmouth College.
Here’s one of the poems in the collection: 
American Sonnet for My Past and Future Assassin [“I lock you in an American sonnet that is part prison”] 
BY TERRANCE HAYES
I lock you in an American sonnet that is part prison, Part panic closet, a little room in a house set aflame. I lock you in a form that is part music box, part meat Grinder to separate the song of the bird from the bone. I lock your persona in a dream-inducing sleeper hold While your better selves watch from the bleachers. I make you both gym & crow here. As the crow You undergo a beautiful catharsis trapped one night In the shadows of the gym. As the gym, the feel of crow- Shit dropping to your floors is not unlike the stars Falling from the pep rally posters on your walls. I make you a box of darkness with a bird in its heart. Voltas of acoustics, instinct & metaphor. It is not enough To love you. It is not enough to want you destroyed.
And you can hear Hayes read this aloud and read more of these American sonnets at Poetry.
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sweatervestboy · 7 years ago
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How to Watch Tonight’s Blood Moon
This was a number of years back. Bless the wild and brilliant Dave Harrity for posting it on the late lamented ThisIsAntler.
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I followed all the expert advice: at the moon’s perigee
I rowed myself deep into the night and anchored even
deeper in the Pacific’s heart. Beneath the earth’s umbra,
I stopped believing in blood as a season of the moon,
trained the iphone lens on the western blue and waited
for moonset. I woke all but covered in worry and sea foam.
Small black and white birds called out a nonsense verse
in an island dialect. My boat listed, half-full of blooded water.
I had been lulled into dreams of Illinois autumn wher  hunters
and harvesters take the moon as a serious version of gospel,
where we stalk dinner through crackled fields of corn wide
as seascapes. I flailed for my phone, for oars and, finding nothing
in my hands, filled them with red ocean and swam into the sky.
Image credit: https://goo.gl/images/GUfSBs
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sweatervestboy · 7 years ago
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From a May visit to Kodai-Ji Zen Temple. Peaceful, yes? Unless you consider the chain saw decapitating a tree nearby, Makes mindfulness all the more necessary. 
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