Tag Archives: andrew merton

Andrew Merton’s Poetry Collections

Poet Andrew Merton answers questions about his Accents Publishing collections. 

 

Tell us the story of your Accents Publishing books.

Early in 2011 Katerina published four of my poems in Bigger Than They Appear: Anthology of Very Short Poems. Emboldened, I sent her the manuscript of what would become my first book, Evidence that We Are Descended from Chairs.  We corresponded for several months, she saying she liked the manuscript but was not sure she was in a position to publish it.  Then, on May 12, my 67th birthday, she called and said it was a go.  That remains the best birthday present I have ever received.  Accents has since published my second and third books of poems: Lost and Found (2016) and Final Exam (2019).

 

Do you still like them? Why or why not?

Yes, I like them all.  The first one retains a special place in my heart because 1) My colleague and mentor Charles Simic generously wrote the foreword and 2) although previously I had published poems in journals, I did not fully identify as a poet until Chairs was out there in the world.

 

What is the highest praise you’ve received for your published books?

The New Hampshire Writers’ Project named it their outstanding book of poetry for the years 2012-2013.

 

What didn’t make it in the book?

Lots of really bad poems.

 

Is there a poem from the book you’d like to share with the readers of the Accents blog?

 

Why I Left The Poetry Reading Early

 

I wanted to applaud

after the very first poem,

in which the famous poet

 

revealed the secrets of the universe

and the human soul

with no more effort than a shrug.

 

The second poem put the first to shame.

I was forced to restrain myself

by gripping the edges of my chair

 

and sitting on my thumbs.

Soon it took all my resolve

to keep from shouting “Bravo”

 

after nearly every line.

Five more minutes of this

and nothing would have stopped me

 

from rising, unbidden,

and burbling superlatives.

So I left.

 

As I tiptoed down the hall

I thought I heard the famous poet say:

“Now we can really begin.”

 

How did you arrive at the title?

Many years ago—just as I was getting serious about writing poetry—Mark Strand, then at the peak of his fame as a poet, gave reading at UNH, where I taught, that blew me away.  The idea for the poem occurred to me as I listened to him read.

 

Do you have a favorite Accents Publishing book (other than yours) and if so, which one?

A Brief Natural History of an American Girl by Sarah Freligh.

 

What would you like to see Accents do going forward?

If Accents continues to evolve as it has over its first decade I’ll be very happy.

 

What are you working on now?

More poems. (Okay, my most recent book has a kind of elegiac title, Final Exam, but who knows, maybe I’ve got another one left in me.  Possible title: Post Doc.

 

Share a poem, or at least a sentence from your new writing.

This one appeared in the American Journal of Nursing, September, 2019.

 

Transcendence

 

It comes every month or so

while I am shaving

 

or peeling a potato

or watching a woodpecker

 

hammer away at an old dead pine:

shimmering blues, greens, yellows,

 

a rainbow effect

suffusing whatever is before me

 

with an otherworldly aura.

Doctors say these episodes

 

are manifestations of migraine.

The bird and I know better.

“The Day I Crossed over to the Dark Side” by Andrew Merton

click for more info

My friend Peter and I were six.
We wore cowboy hats, sheriff ’s badges,

and holsters with cap pistols in them.
We pretended we were at the top of a cliff

in the Badlands
(because they’re full of bad guys, Peter said)

waiting to ambush some train robbers.
We must be a thousand feet high, said Peter,

from here those people down there look like ants.
There were three possible responses to this:

—They sure do.
—Those are ants.

—(I said): None of my aunts looks like that.
Sensing a change in me, Peter made new friends.

-Andrew Merton,
Lost and Found
(Accents Publishing)

“A Young Mother” by Andrew Merton

click for more info

(1950)

To escape the tangle
she becomes her sewing needle

plunging through the fabric
of her sea blue blouse.

Again and again
she dives and surfaces,

a skipping stone,
a cormorant,

a marlin
at play in the frozen mists

of the North Atlantic.
Such is her joy

that for minutes, months,
whole seasons at a time,

she is able to forget
the line through her tale.

Andrew Merton,
Evidence that We Are Descended from Chairs
Accents Publishing

“Finding the Potato” by Andrew Merton

Inside of one potato
there are mountains and rivers.

—Shinkichi Takahashi (trans. Harold Wright)

Bigger Than They ApearBut how to find that one potato
among all the others?
Patience, my friend.
Put your ear to the ground.
Dig where you hear thunder.

Andrew Merton,
Bigger Than They Appear:
Anthology of Very Short Poems
(Accents Publishing)

 

Check out this piece about Andrew Merton from the Portland Press Herald.

2015—The Authors

Barbara Headshot 2Barbara Goldberg is the author of four prize-winning books of poetry, including The Royal Baker’s Daughter, winner of the Felix Pollak Poetry Award. She is the translator of Scorched by the Sun, poems by the Israeli poet Moshe Dor. The two selected and translated four anthologies of contemporary Israeli poetry. Goldberg received two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts as well as awards in translation, fiction and speechwriting. Her poems appear in Best American Poetry, Paris Review, Poetry and elsewhere, Goldberg is the series editor of the Word Works’ International Imprint.

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An Interview with Andrew Merton

lost and found by andrew mertonHow does Lost & Found build upon or depart from your last collection, Evidence that We are Descended from Chairs?

Although there are autobiographical poems scattered throughout Evidence, Lost and Found is more consciously autobiographical throughout. This is not to say that every poem in it is literally true, but, taken together, they amount to a Rorschach ink blot representing my intellectual/emotional/spiritual evolution over (so far) 71 years. The reader is free to interpret the blot as he or she wishes, relying, I hope, on intuition at least as much as logic.

I admire how delight and playfulness are a staple of your poetry, you seem to insist upon it, even in the midst of the reflective and somber. What attracts you to it when writing poetry?

I don’t insist on it. It’s just there, part of my DNA, I think. My father and his family were German Jews who fled to the U.S. in the late ‘30’s. My mother was an atheist/Jewish/Socialist intellectual from New York. Humor was a  key to their sanity. The darker the situation, the more important it was to find something to laugh about. A classic Jewish telegram sums up this perspective: WORRY NOW. DETAILS TO FOLLOW.

Many of these poems take place or look back on the past, given the title, what is the speaker trying to reclaim? And is there a loss in that reclamation?

I’d turn the question around. It’s impossible to reclaim what one has never owned or controlled. But in each loss there is something to be found. The title poem, about the Challenger explosion in 1986, is mostly about loss, but there is a nugget of discovery in it as well. A number of the poems are directly about  losses in my life—of my father (“Timing,” “In the Woods,” “Downpour”), my sister (“Perspective”, “A Fleeting Dream of My Sister”), my mother (“Shorts”); also the loss of my own innocence (“Shorts” again, “The Day I Crossed Over to the Dark Side,” “Across the Street from Graceland: a Professor’s Epiphany”). I found something while writing each of these. I also discovered a great deal while writing “Autopsy,” about the imagined aftermath of my own demise.

One of my favorite poems in the collection is “Of Moose and Seuss”. Will you talk about the process of writing that one?

In 1991, when Theodor Seuss Geisel—Dr. Seuss—died, I was writing a weekly column for the Boston Sunday Globe. The good doctor was a lifelong hero of mine. I wondered if I could write a tribute to him in Seussian style. I immersed myself in the old books. Once I had settled on Thidwick, The Big-Hearted Moose, the poem came easily. I should add that the adrenaline rush of a tight newspaper deadline helped a lot.

Do you have a favorite poem or section of the book?

That’s kind of like asking which of my children is my favorite. But I do tend to favor poems(as well as children) that bring me joy: “Yukon Go Home Again,” for example, and “The Interrogation” “Chemo,” and “This Music.”  I’m not saying these are among what critics might consider the most accomplished poems in the book; they’re favorites because they make me smile, even if, in at least two cases, I’m smiling through tears.

“Being Andrew Merton” by Andrew Merton

lost and found by andrew mertonOver a brandy my mother told me about the first boy,
stillborn two years before I came along:

how much she and my father had wanted that child.
How, for a month, they could not speak to each other,

even look at each other, without tears.
How it took them a year to try again,

and how, later, I was given his name.
She had not meant to tell me, ever—

It just slipped out, she said. I’m sorry.
She need not have apologized.

I would have taken the job
even had I known

I was not their first choice.

-Andrew Merton,
Lost and Found
(Accents Publishing)

andrew merton from lost and found store pageAndrew Merton is a journalist, essayist, and poet. Publications in which his nonfiction has appeared include Esquire, Ms. Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Boston Magazine, and The Boston Globe.His book Enemies of Choice: The Right-To-Life Movement and Its Threat to Abortion, was published by Beacon Press in 1980. His poetry has appeared inBellevue Literary Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, The Rialto (U.K.), Comstock Review, Louisville Review, Vine Leaves, the American Journal of Nursing,and elsewhere. His book of poetry, Evidence that We Are Descended from Chairs?, with a foreword by Charles Simic (Accents Publishing, 2012) was named Outstanding Book of Poetry for 2013–2014 by the New Hampshire Writers’ Project. He is a professor emeritus of English at the University of New Hampshire. His website is available here.

Lost and Found by Andrew Merton

lost and found by andrew mertonWe are proud to announce Lost and Found by Andrew Merton. It is currently available at the Accents store.

Merton’s first book, Evidence that We Are Descended from Chairs (Accents Publishing, was named Outstanding Book of Poetry for 2013-2014 by the New Hampshire Writers’ Project. Lost and Found continues the poignant, personable humor from this first work, but adds a confessional flavor that gives his new work a more nonfictional feel.

 

Praise for Andrew Merton’s poetry

Almost every one of his poems has a surprise waiting for the reader, either some astonishing figure of speech or a witty observation we are not likely to forget anytime soon.

Charles Simic

Andrew Merton has masterfully condensed his life into potent, brilliantly composed, minimalist snapshots. Chronologically arranged, delicately layered, and driven by savage honesty and subtle tenderness, Lost and Found is an intense injection of love, loss, loneliness, and above all, the unrelenting question of one’s existence. I’ll slot this on my shelf next to Raymond Carver.

—Jessica Bell

This poet pinpoints the extraordinary in the day to day; he makes the reader see things anew, and even when they appear tawdry and tough, they are rich and sweet. The calm and gentle voice of these poems is nevertheless fierce in its focus on life, aging,disappointment and death, and that makes for the tremendous tension that keeps each poem taut with drama, inviting from the very first line, and powerfully moving until its conclusion.

John Skoyles

This marvelous book—ruefully charming on one page, charmingly rueful on the next—goes cradle to grave in its coverage of a lifetime’s worth of erratic heartbeats. I love Merton’s poems for how they completely dissolve the thin line between bafflement and amazement. Their story is the story of a most companionable endurance, with no pun left unspoken. A deeply humane, entertaining, wise book.

David Rivard

 

Fifth Grade Air Raid Drill, 1955

I tell Mr. Carter there’s a crack in the ant farm,
but he has more important things to talk about today:

After the bomb, trees will wither, milk will glow.
You might live a year before the insects get you

but first you have to survive the blast.
Duck under your desks

and stick your heads between your knees.
I pretend to do as I’m told.

When he turns his back I crawl away
on six legs, triumphant.

Andrew Merton,
Lost and Found
(Accents Publishing)

“Intuition” by Andrew Merton

(featuring the late Burt Lancaster in a supporting role)

The six of them squeeze into a booth in a seedy diner just outside
.      Newark:

click for more infoa balding child dressed as a monk

a woman with eels for fingers

an ambulance driver munching a ladder

an alligator wrapped in a boa

the late Burt Lancaster

and a swarthy, mustachioed man
with ammunition belts crisscrossing his chest,
who gazes fearfully at his companions
before revealing himself
as the great-grandson of Pancho Villa
and muttering through clenched teeth:
One of you spent time as a violist.
I can just feel it.

“May 12, 1944” by Andrew Merton

Evidence that We Are Descended from ChairsI arrived a week early
with eleven toes

but the Allies broke through in Italy,
women got the vote in Bermuda,

and a man in Louisville, Kentucky,
was granted a patent

for waterproof cigarette paper
treated with aluminum,

so none of the newspapers
took note of my birth.

As for my family,
my brother was at school,

my father at war.
My mother was in a scopolamine trance.

There was no one to greet me
but the black cocker spaniel

who later taught me to crawl.

Andrew Merton,
Evidence that We Are Descended from Chairs
Accents Publishing

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