Tag Archives: kings of the rock and roll hot shop

Kings of the Rock and Roll Hot Shop (Accents Publishing, 2014)

Poet Lynnell Edwards answers a few questions about Kings of the Rock and Roll Hot Shop (Accents Publishing, 2014)

Tell us the story of your Accents Publishing book.

I was teaching an ekphrastic community workshop for Louisville Literary Arts and we visited Flame Run studio where I had made a contact with the owner/artist Brook White. I wrote a short poem myself (below) during the workshop, and I was so taken by the process that I decided to ask him if I could install myself as a kind of poet-in-residence during that summer of 2010. I hoped to just watch and ask questions and write and see what happened. It was an exhilarating project that resulted in a chapbook-length manuscript which I kind of sat on for a while because I knew that my third full length book for Red Hen, Covet, was due out in the fall of 2011 and I didn’t want to crowd that publication release. There were a few of the poems published, so I had the sense that it was good work that would appeal to a wider audience even though the subject was a little bit technical and obscure (which is why there are some end notes explaining vocabulary). In fall 2013, I began the conversation with Accents about this manuscript and was delighted they were interested in the project! We had a really fun launch for the book at Flame Run after its release in June 2014 and the book got some nice coverage in the Courier-Journal.

 

Do you still like it? Why or why not?

I loooove this book. I love chapbooks generally, but I am really happy with the way I experimented in the book (there are a couple of shaped poems) and the liberating effect of having all kinds of new vocabulary from glass blowing at my disposal.

 

What is the highest praise you’ve received for it?

People have enjoyed this book and informally told me how intriguing and energy-filled it is. But perhaps the highest praise has come from Brook’s own endorsement of it and his sharing of the book among his friends, family, and the shop.

 

What didn’t make it in the book?

I think there were probably a couple of poems that I started but never really finished and I honestly can’t remember what they were. But there was one longer piece that I really worked on and wanted to make fit but didn’t which was about another glass blowing team that came in after hours to work – Brooke had invited them to use his studio. It was fascinating to watch them – in part because there was a whole different vibe – but strangely, I couldn’t make the poem quite cohere and it seemed out of step with the other poems. At that point, then, I realized that the poems I had been writing and the book they would become was as much about the spirit and work of a particular studio and its particular personalities as it was about glass blowing generally.

 

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

This is the first poem I wrote, after my initial visit to the studio, and it ended up as the final poem of the book:

 

“Heart of Glass”

Feel its pulse and flare still —
beat of primitive fire, memory
of the molten womb from which
you drew it glowing and gave it
shaping breath: never
cold, never still.

 

How did you arrive at the title?

“Kings of the Rock and Roll Hot Shop” came to me really early on and there were no other competing or working titles. Simply put, the glass blowing crew played loud rock music all the while they were working and there was such confidence and verve in what they were doing that it seemed obvious to me that this was a rock and roll hot shop.

 

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

I selected E.K. Mortenson’s The Fifteenth Station for the 2012 chapbook prize and I still think it’s a remarkable sequence imagining, with a nod toward the biblical, the “least of us” and the struggle in dark places we in the first world too often turn from. I also really like Sarah Freligh’s A Brief Natural History of an American Girl – an inventive and clear-eyed memoir in poems that startles and delights.

 

What would you like to see Accents do going forward?

Keep publishing awesome books, for one! The new projects – the journal, the workshop series – all of these things help to nurture writers and readers and I am excited to see them succeed. I’m interested in the ways in which fine art and writing mutually resonate and it would be interesting to see some manuscript collaborations among poets, printmakers, and other artists.

 

What are you working on now?

I have another chapbook length manuscript titled This Great Green Valley that will be published by Broadstone Books in the late spring of this year. It consists of poems I wrote during a sabbatical in 2018 and is based on my research at the Filson Historical Society into the pre-statehood history of Kentucky, along with a long poem about my own childhood on the Kentucky River. Red Hen has a full-length manuscript from me tentatively titled The Bearable Slant of Light that will likely be released in late 2021; it explores the explores the effects of mental illness on the family and is much more experimental in many ways. Very different from my last book with them, Covet.

 

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

This is the very last stanza from a very, very new poem titled: “Carpool, with boys”

“Remember where we were going and how
we couldn’t wait to get there: the impossibly
green fields, the bright lines of play, the whistle
to begin high and bright as birds lifting in flight.”

 

“Production Work” by Lynnell Edwards

what_breaks_cover_smPaperweights, ashtrays, holiday ornaments,
the commissioned array of commemorative
plaque, award, trophy bowl or obelisk.

We rent this space, too. Dinners,
demonstrations, make-your-own
bauble. These are the things

that fire the furnace, that buy the pipes,
that stock the hot shop with color:
cobalt, cadmium, verdigris, purple—
which gets more expensive by the week—
in bars or ground to powder fine
as sugar, pink sand on a Bermuda beach.

This is no cheap proposal: equipment
to grind and polish; furnace, oven, kiln—each
calibrated to degree of heat or cooling.
Never mind the mortgage, glass bills, lights.

So the wine bottles flattened
into novelty trays; souvenir pendants
with the city seal, the work continues:

a hundred forty paperweights
for the leadership club, all green.
Stoke and gather, turn and shape
and breathe. Embrace

the familiar company of heat,
roar and flare of the ordinary

photo by John Nation

“What Breaks” by Lynnell Edwards

(a lesson for children)

what_breaks_cover_smListen: you know I have told
you why we must not touch,
why we must not run
ragged through the gallery
in our socks, sliding across
the smooth floor, why we
must not stomp and flail
in anger or frustration so near
the glass.

Glass breaks.

Now look: here is the cup I took
from the annealer this morning. You watched
me blow its round bowl, shape
its thin stem, turn and turn and press
the base. But, see here?

It has a flaw. Take the safety glasses
and stand back.

These pieces are worthless now, can only
wound. Get the broom and do not
cry anymore. I will not show
you again how the created world
can slip from its orbit, godless
forever and shattered.

photo by John Nation

“Notes for Beginners” by Lynnell Edwards

What Breaks

I. Gather

Face the fire and pull
from its belly the molten core:
potash, silica, lime,
dust of creation forged
to pulse and glow, round
earth leveraged at the end
of a hollow axis.

II. Breathe

Embryo of breath sent
from maker to creation,
little errand of expansion,
into this amniotic whole
swell: globe, bowl, platter—
all manner of golem commanded
to work or serve, beautiful
thing, flawless and still.

III. Shape

To and fro goes
the knob of glass against
the marver, table
of marble or steel to take
the heat. Cradle the pipe
between fingertips, shoulders
bowed, elbows bent and light,
the silent song of shaping,
lilt of lullaby smooth.

-Lynnell Edwards,
Kings of the Rock and Roll
Hot Shop (or, What Breaks)
(Accents Publishing)

photo by John Nation

Free Poetry Events Week of October 20th

This week is busy as we have a reading this Saturday at Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville with our amazing poets Eric Scott Sutherland, Tom C. Hunley, and Lynnell Edwards.

This Thursday the Carnegie Center will host an International Eating and Reading Night where everyone is invited to share food and literature from their home country.

Plus, West Virginia poet and award-winning children’s author Marc Harshman will be touring the area, and Thomas More College is hosting an event this afternoon with Pauletta Hansel.

More details below.

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“Good Enough” by Lynnell Edwards

What BreaksThe food analogies come fast
enough: hot glass like taffy

pulled by hook and hand; the crucible’s
soup of cooked glass clinging like honey

at the end of a wand; crushed color
like sugar in piles. Glass blown

like gum or spun into cool confections,
sweet illusion of peppermint swirls,

frosted drops, molten core
like a butterscotch disk,

come closer and see what treat.
But mind your tongue

friend, this is nothing
you want between your teeth.

-Lynnell Edwards,
Kings of the Rock and Roll
Hot Shop (or, What Breaks)
Accents Publishing 2014

photo by John Nation

“Poetry with Heat”: Arts-Louisville reviews Lynell Edwards

Lynnell EdwardsJoanna Lin Want in Arts-Louisville.com reviewed Lynnell Edwards’ The Kings of the Rock and Roll Hot Shop (or What Breaks). 

“The craft of glassmaking takes center stage in these poems, but only because Edwards’ own poetic craft is so flawless as not to draw attention to itself.”

See the full review here.

what_breaks_cover_sm

More from Lynnell Edwards & Kings of the Rock and Roll Hot Shop:

Lynnell Edwards in the Courier Journal

Heart-of-Glass-Lynnell-Edwards-Joshua-KrugerThe Courier Journal interviewed Lynnell Edwards at Flame Run Glass Studio in Louisville, KY about Kings of the Rock and Roll Hot Shop (or, What Breaks).

In the accompanying video, Edwards says the title comes from “the fact that the whole time I’m there, they’re blasting the music and it’s great. The whole day is high energy and choreographed, and the title for the book came to me very early.”

 

Check out the article here, and be sure to check out Flame Run’s new website here.

“a miraculous process… fraught with the potential for hazard”:
Lynnell Edwards on Poetry, Glass Blowing, and Production

Lynnell EdwardsLynnell Edwards recently talked with Accents intern James Pfeiffer about her new book, Kings of the Rock and Roll Hot Shop (or, What Breaks?), as well as the relationship between "production arts" (like glass blowing) and writing.

How did you first become interested in glassblowing?

I was first exposed to glass blowing when Steve Powell started the program there at Centre in the mid-80s, but I didn't study it at the time. Many years later, I met Brook White, the founder of Flame Run when I did a series of creative writing workshops at galleries in Louisville. We did a session at Flame Run and Brook talked to us a little about the process. Brook is an incredibly informed and passionate guy when it comes to glass blowing and his energy and his vision for glass blowing as a way of thinking about life totally inspired me as to the potential for exploring glass blowing and life in the hot shop as a subject for poems. During that workshop I wrote a couple of very short poems that unlocked, for me, what I thought might be some of the potential for the subject. Shortly after that workshop I approached Brook about whether he'd be open to my sitting in, observing, and writing some poems; I shared the short work I had done at that point and he trusted me enough to invite me into his world.

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