Photo: Courtesy of Milkweed Editions

Small, Profound Moments

English Professor Allison Adair spun years of late-night writing into award-winning poems.

When she started teaching at 涩里番下载 in 2012, English Professor Allison Adair wasn鈥檛 writing at all. 鈥淚鈥檇 just had my daughter, so I thought, Oh I couldn鈥檛 possibly, I don鈥檛 have any time鈥攖he typical excuses,鈥 Adair recalled. Luckily, 涩里番下载 Associate Professor Susan Roberts insisted that Adair join her poetry-writing workshop in 2014. Adair credits the group for setting her on a path to publishing her debut poetry collection, The Clearing. The work, which came out in June and was awarded the prestigious Max Ritvo Poetry Prize, features lyrical verses capturing everything from the agony of losing a child to miscarriage to the humor of raising a daughter in a bustling city. 鈥淚 had all these little images I collected over the years,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd all of those small, profound moments turned into this book.鈥 We asked Adair about The Clearing听and her writing process.

What is The Clearing听补产辞耻迟?
One of my favorite writers, Nick Ripatrazone, did a quick review, and he talked about how my book is about risk. That really resonated with me, this idea of women carrying things to safety for themselves and for other people in the face of risk. I only realized it in retrospect.

In your writing, you often draw parallels between nature and the human body. Why?
I grew up primarily in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, which was very, very rural. I was around a lot of farms and I would play outside, and there were deer in the backyard and animals everywhere. A symbiosis and connection between the human body and the Earth鈥攖hat鈥檚 just a foundational truth for me. I don鈥檛 think of natural imagery in my poems as something I turn to as much as something that's an original language I speak. It鈥檚 my home language.听

You also write a lot about your daughter. How does that relationship lend itself to poetry?听
A few years ago, a writer named Laura Kasischke came to read at 涩里番下载. She was one of the first writers I鈥檝e heard read in a very casual and offbeat鈥攜et serious and profound鈥攚ay about her relationship with her son. My daughter was a baby at the time and I asked Laura, 鈥淗ow do you talk about your child and still write serious poems? I don鈥檛 understand.鈥 She rejected the question and told me that kids are serious and beautiful and all the things moms are. Before that, I thought all of these stories about my life with my daughter don鈥檛 count as poems, but of course, they do. A lot of the poems about my daughter tend to be much more narrative and much simpler because she鈥檚 young and there鈥檚 often a little thing that happens. But I love them and I find them to be really true to my day-to-day experience. A lot of times, they have a metaphorical intensity to them.听

The Clearing

What was your favorite part of putting this collection together?听
The excitement of discovery.听Unlike a novel, where you鈥檙e beholden to one primary story, I didn鈥檛 think of this as a book when I was writing it. It was just individual poems. Each poem was a shot at the basket. Like, Let me see what I can capture here. And most of the time, I was writing very, very late at night when everyone was asleep. I never knew where the poem would land.

What was the most difficult part?听
Just finding time. I like to write when I feel like everything is settled, and I rarely get that chance until late at night. For years I would start writing at 12:30 a.m., write until 3:30 a.m., and then wake up with my daughter at 7:30. It was exhausting, but something about being busy made me write more, not less.听

How does teaching influence your writing?听
All day long I鈥檓 talking about various poems and works of literature and the creative process with my students. It鈥檚 on my mind when I鈥檓 up at night questioning and pushing myself on how to write. That鈥檚 a really joyful part of the process.听

What is the key to unlocking writing potential?
Write what is true and what is embarrassing and what is weird. It鈥檚 important to keep a spirit of discovery, rather than focusing on publication or an imagined audience. And practice! Some of the most naturally talented writers I know have not developed because they haven鈥檛 been practicing. Ira Glass said that a lot of young writers stop writing because their taste level is very high and their starting ability is relatively low, and they get frustrated by that discrepancy. But we would never think of basketball or some other skill like that. Keep using great writing as motivation rather than an intimidation factor. It really does matter if you practice.

Books in Brief

mapping humanity

Mapping Humanity: How Modern Genetics Is Changing听Criminal Justice, Personalized Medicine, and Our Identities // Joshua Z. Rappaport

In a new book that鈥檚 equal parts fascinating and frightening, Rappaport, 涩里番下载鈥檚 executive director of research infrastructure, untangles the social, ethical, and economic impacts of modern genetics in a world where tech companies have unprecedented access to personal data.

kooks cover

Kooks and Degenerates on Ice: Bobby Orr, the Big Bad Bruins, and the Stanley Cup Championship That Transformed Hockey //听Thomas Whalen MA鈥91, Ph.D.鈥98

In a worthy companion to books he鈥檚 written about the Red Sox and Celtics, the Massachusetts native Whalen here brings to life the Boston Bruins鈥 raucous, triumphant 1970 season.

whitey cover

Hunting Whitey: The Inside Story of the Capture & Killing of America鈥檚 Most Wanted Crime Boss // Casey Sherman and Dave Wedge 鈥93

While the misdeeds of the notorious FBI informant and mob boss Whitey Bulger are well known, this freshly reported expos茅 focuses on his sixteen years on the lam, eventual capture, and murder less than twenty-four hours after he landed in federal prison in 2018.

shore cover

A Week at the Shore // Barbara Delinsky MA鈥69

A meditation on memory, love, and relationships, this New York Times best-selling summer read from the prolific Delinsky finds three estranged sisters reunited at their family鈥檚 Rhode Island beach house, twenty years after a scandal upended their lives.


WHAT I'M READING

Kids These Days: Human Capital and the Making of Millennials听
By Malcolm Harris

鈥淕enerational identities are, fundamentally, fictions: the stitching together of Zeitgeist and collective memory by way of pop culture and flimsy trend reporting. In his smart, original book, Harris goes beyond the superficial clich茅s (Instagram influencers! avocado toast!) to get at big, structural factors of political economy that might explain why millennials turned out the way we did.鈥

鈥擬ichael Serazio, associate professor in the Department of Communication

michael serazio illustration

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