Interview With
Author Sydney Lea
- Sydney, what
inspired you to write A North
Country Life?
From my very young childhood, when I was introduced to it by my father and
uncle, I have haunted a certain part of Maine, which is still wild and
remote. But fifty years and more ago, and for some decades after, I knew
and loved a generation of men and women – all of whom would be at least
120 now if they still lived– who scratched out their livelihoods there
before the arrival of power tools, let alone electricity. Because they had
no means of outside entertainment, they provided their own, generally in
the shape of stories, and sometimes poems and songs. I just turned 70
myself, and as I approached that milestone, I recognized that mine would
be the last generation ever to have known such people. Because their sense
of the kinship between language and the natural landscape, and their
narrative impulses, have had a profounder effect on me than anyone or
anything – not only on my writing but also on the way I have tried to
conduct my life– I felt I owed them this tribute. They needed to be
remembered on the page.
- What do you
find so fascinating or important about the tales of woodsmen, waters, and
wildlife? I
guess I just answered that, at least in part. We live, increasingly, in a
“virtual” world, one in which our relations with the physical one are more
and more oblique; as an inveterate outdoorsman, I lament this, but also as
a mere human: I think we lose something vital as our lives become more and
more technologized. I am not being anti-technology, not at all; I am
arguing only that our unconsciousness of the degree to which we are
creatures of nature is a regrettable and even a dangerous thing. If you
have a close physical and spiritual relation to nature, for example, you
are more apt to treat your environment with reverence, care and concern.
In the cases of the old folks I’ve mentioned, the line between nature and
human nature was so vague as almost to be non-existent. I’ll never be one
of them, but I admired and still admire the state of mind and body they
personified.
- You write of
people long gone from another century. What are the challenges of bringing
their voice to life today?
Well, among many others, a huge challenge is to convey just how skillfully
they could weave a story, whether it was fictional or real (often it was
hard to be sure, and they kept it that way). Related to that –despite the
fact that many of them were at best sub literate – was how deftly and
effectively they used language. Now I am no Willa Cather or Mark Twain. It
takes genius like theirs to use dialect to capture the essence of a local
language. We lesser writers must try to capture the rhythms and the
cadences of that glorious speech without imitating it, because efforts at
imitation often ring so false, and when they do, they imply condescension,
assort of Uncle Remus gambit. And Lord knows, that’s the last impression I
want to leave. But that’s what A North Country Life tries to do.
- As the Poet
Laureate of Vermont, how can we encourage the growth of the art of poetry? I think poets need to get
out into their communities more, to take their work and others’ to venues
that aren’t –like so many in our time– academic ones. Mind you, I’m happy
enough to have those more specialized audiences, but they are not the ones
I have in mind as I write. Crazy as it sounds (and I concede it makes no
sense at all), I like to imagine those old- timers as my listeners. This
does not mean I have to write simplistic poetry; the men and women I have
in mind were simply educated, if educated at all in the formal sense of
the word, but they were a long way from stupid. I was an academic for over
four decades, so I don’t mean to foul my own nest; but too many academics
assume that all the smart people exist behind ivied walls. I have made it
my mission as poet laureate to visit Vermont’s community libraries, and
believe me, there are plenty of smart people, from all stations in life,
who show up when I do. I don’t just read. I try to correct the notion,
which I may be as guilty as anyone else of helping along, that poetry is
this arcane, encoded mode of discourse that you have to have special
training to understand. I tell my listeners that I think of poems as one
person saying something to another. If the one doing the saying is any
good, I believe, he or she does not start with a whole set of symbols and
metaphors; these arise from the context of what he or she is saying as he
or she says it. If some people find poetry obscure, it’s at least worth
asking whether the fault lies not with them but with the poets themselves.
I’m old enough that I am not embarrassed to say that there are reams of
contemporary poetry that leave me dumbfounded.
- What advice do
you have a struggling writer?
My advice is simple: in order to be a writer, you have to write. That
would seem self-evident. But it is astonishing how adolescent the views of
Hollywood and a whole lot of fancy scholars seem to be with respect to how
one becomes a poet: that somehow you are star-crossed, that you wake up
one day, get struck by inspiration, and boom! you’re William Blake. I like
to analogize to sports. Michael Jordan, say, wasn’t Michael Jordan until
he had put in all kinds of time practicing his shots and moves. There were
likely lots of young men with similar talents; it was the combination of
God-given talent and persistence that made him what he was. It’s much the
same with writing. Anything you do rigorously for ten years, let’s say, is
something that you’ll get better at. Will you be the literary Michael
Jordan? Who knows? But you certainly won’t come close by studying it,
thinking about it, planning it. What was that ad that Jordan was in? “Just
Do It.”
- As the founder
of the New England Review, where do you see media coverage of books
heading? It
is perfectly clear that we are going through changes that rival those
brought on by the Gutenberg Bible’s printing in moveable type. I don’t
really know much about technology, nor have I ever been much good at
predicting the world’s future; yet even I will be presenting a collection
of essays (along with my collaborator, the former Delaware laureate Fleda
Brown) as an e-book in April. I am clueless as to what this bodes, but I
can’t help it: I’m going to find out. In short, we are moving from a print
medium to a screen medium. Indeed, in many respects we are already there.
Magazines such as the one I founded will, I suspect (and sure it saddens
me; why wouldn’t it?) will cease to exist, and so will books of the sort I
have been publishing for more than thirty years. Or rather, they will morph
into an online/electronic format. A lot of the best have already done so.
So both publication and critical and public response to it will follow
suit, already have in many places.
Brian Feinblum’s views,
opinions, and ideas expressed in this blog are his alone and not that of his
employer, the nation’s largest book promoter. Please note, Sydney is a client
of Media Connect. You can follow him on Twitter @theprexpert and email him at brianfeinblum@gmail.com. He feels more important when discussed in the
third-person. This blog is copyrighted material by BookMarketingBuzzBlog 2013 ©
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