Category Archives: Media

“5 Questions 3 Facts” with the Press 53 Blog

 

We’re getting our week started with South Carolina poet laureate Marjory Heath Wentworth, author of the book The Endless Repetition of an Ordinary Miracle. Marjory talks to us about writing and her connection to the Salem witches, below.

P53: When did you first really feel like a poet?

MW: The first real poem I wrote was when I was in college. I say this because it was the kind of poem that wrote itself, which is rather frightening. It only happens, according to Phil Levine, when you’re writing a lot.  I started writing poems when I was about twelve, but the first one that really worked as a poem should, was about six years later.

P53: Tell us something about the secret lives of poets.

MW: If you read the work, all secrets are revealed!

P53: What’s the longest amount of time you’ve spent working on one poem?

MW: Decades. Some poems are never really done, or they just never quite work. Something about the poem stays with you, even when you’ve put it down for days or months or even years, then suddenly you discover a new way to approach the poem and then you try it.

P53: Where do you like to write? Where do you like to read?

MW: Wherever it’s quiet. I just moved my studio home, and it’s still in an office where I do a lot of other work because I haven’t had time to really get it reorganized. I often write at the kitchen table. It’s really a matter of when. I try to get up very early and read and write every day before work. If I don’t do that, then the writing does not get done and I’m pretty miserable. I’m too tired after work to write.

My husband and I always read in bed before we go to sleep. We have piles of books on the bedside tables.

P53: What’s the last poetry book you read? How about prose? Would you recommend them?

MW: Last poetry book: Campbell McGrath’s Florida Poems. I love his work. It always surprises me.

Robert Hass’s The Apple Trees at Olema, New and Selected. I think of him as a kindred spirit in terms of his sensibility. His poems are rooted in place and family and yet he’s very interested and learned in ancient haiku and the work of his friend Milosz and the framework that Milosz brings to his work….

I’m also rereading Natasha Tretheway’s book Native Guard. I love the way she uses forms in unexpected ways. Amazing book, especially given the subject matter.

I recommend all these books.

I’ve had a rough year, so I am reading spiritual books right now: Anne Lamott’s bookGrace Eventually and Thoughts on Faith. She is always funny and wise. What’s not to like. I just finished Thomas Merton’s book No Man is an Island. It’s one of the best books I have ever read. Writing has a spiritual connotation for me, and this book helps ground me as a writer.

Three Facts About Marjory:

1. My father’s ancestors are from Salem, MA. I am a descendant of Rebecca Nurse, who was hanged for witchcraft, as well as Ann Putnam, who was a primary accuser. Ironic to say the least.

2. I’m a closet jock. I won a student-athlete scholarship which paid about a third of my college tuition. A lot of people seem to think being a poet means you never get up from your desk. Not really!

3. In the SC State Legislative Manual, my photograph is between the State Bird and the State Rock.

 

 

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Interview with the Smoking Poet

Read my interview with the Smoking Poet.

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The Smoking Poet, poems and review of The Endless Repetition of an Ordinary Miracle

The Endless Repetition of an Ordinary Miracle, poems by Marjory Heath Wentworth

Book Review by Zinta Aistars

 

·         Paperback: 88 pagesCover

·         Publisher: Press 53 (April 1, 2010)

·         Price: $14.00

·         ISBN-10: 0982576064

·         ISBN-13: 978-0982576069

 

The title of this poetry collection by Marjory Heath Wentworth is as aptly chosen, as precisely picked, as delicately distilled, as every other word she has written in these 88 pages. The Endless Repetition of an Ordinary Miracle is a line that comes from Snow by Orhan Pamuk, a novel that is also miraculous in its ordinary, that is, every day beauty and truth, caught on paper. There is no other, and no more perfect, way to describe this collection. Like snowflakes, every poem is unique. Like snow, every poem has its ordinary repetition that we have seen again and again and again. Like snow, these poems are each a little miracle, nonetheless. We have seen snow. We have never seen snow just like this. We have witnessed an ordinary miracle, and we are snowed over.

Many of Wentworth’s poems are as if through the eyes of a wondering child, still capable of seeing the magic in the world, standing at its center with great eyes, open hands and heart, observing it all in remarkable detail and with that rare and exquisite ability to share it with the rest of us, so the blind, too, may see.

beyond clusters of dark birds        hovering

at the edge of sky       the wind bends yellow

tipped marsh grass rippling around a rim

of sand        uninterrupted waves spilling

one on top of the other           as everything

spins into salt        into sunlight

houses rise like castles       built on sand

each home       an alchemy of conquest

fire       hope       for there is more….

                      (from “Spring Island, South Carolina”)

 

Wentworth writes about her home, several homes, and her life and family, her history, streets she walks, and cemeteries she visits, of winter rain and the sea and cried tears and stopped clocks, of giving birth and growing up and growing old and senility and disease and death. Every day things that each and every time are miracles, and she has the artistry to preserve the quality of miracle.

Outside of home horizons, Wentworth takes on world matters, too, of slavery and genocide and war, bringing these immensities, too, into the small shapes that we, the readers, can hold and contemplate and absorb. “In Gaza’s Berry Fields” is such a poem, taking on the immense theme of a mother losing her seven sons in Israeli military fire. A mother’s love is a miracle, too, perhaps none greater, and we feel it fully, as we join the poet to watch this woman gathering the ripped apart limbs of her boys and holding them against her. It is horrific, so horrific, beyond imagination. Yet, Wentworth captures it fully. One moment, the boys are picking strawberries in the field with her, children playing in the sun. The next, “something hot passes overhead” and she is instead gathering a head, an arm, a leg, kissing each part, each piece, the blood seeping through her dress as she gathers the limbs. If for no other poem, I would buy the book just to have this one poem as a reminder of miracles. I won’t pull lines from it here, because it is so tightly woven, it won’t come apart at any corner.

In many of her poems, Wentworth writes with pauses, leaving spaces between words, as if she is conducting music, and the silence between the notes is needed for her precise rhythm. Or she will use the pauses to place random thoughts, as thoughts always are, wandering from tangent to tangent, picking up a thread here only to next slide over there. Wherever she goes, in whatever direction, Wentworth is a poet to note, and to read, and to stand alongside to see the world again, as if for the first time.

Wentworth is poet laureate of South Carolina. Her poems have appeared in countless books and magazines, nominated for Pushcart Prizes. This is her third collection, published by Press53, increasingly an independent press to watch closely for those who read only the best of the best in literary arts.

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The Water Calls

Fall 2012 “The Water Calls”

Our hearts break as we watch the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. For those of us in the Lowcountry of South Carolina, the images of destruction and the stories of loss are particularly heartbreaking. Our hearts go out to those still suffering in the Northeast and we are sending donations and trying to help in any way possible. A lot of our friends just got power back on yesterday. I’ve decided to post my poems about Hurricane Hugo. Sometimes reading a poem about what you’re going through can provide some solace. It reminds you that you are not alone and that others have been through it and survived. Losing your home and everything you own is like losing someone you love. It hurts that way, and you don’t get over it you just learn to live with the loss. It takes a long long time, and you must be patient, humble and accept all the help you can get. You will find the courage and strength you need to rebuild your life.  I include some of poems that articulate my experience. I also include an article about the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy which includes lines of poetry, “The Water Calls” By Bruce Smith.

 

CarolinaUmbra

(from Noticing Eden)

 

Boats fly out of theAtlantic

and moor themselves in my backyard

where tiny flowers,  forgotten

by the wind, toss their astral heads

from side to side.  Mouths ablaze, open,

and filling with rain.

 

After the hurricane, you can see

the snapped open drawbridge slide

beneath the waves on the evening news.

You go cold imagining

such enormous fingers of wind

that split a steel hinge until

its jaw opens toward heaven.

 

Above the twisted house,

above this island, where the torn

churches have no roofs, and houses

move themselves around the streets

as if they were made of paper;

tangled high in the oak branches,

my son’s crib quilt waves its pastel flag.

 

But the crib rail is rusted shut.

And you can’t see my children

huddled together on the one dry bed

of this home filling with  birds

that nest in corners of windowless rooms,

or insects breeding in the damp sand

smeared like paint over the swollen floors.

 

The storm will not roar in your sleep

tonight, as if the unconscious

articulations of an animal aware

of the end of its life were trapped

in the many cages of your brain.

 

You can’t see grief darken the wind

rising over the islands.  Tonight,

as the burning mountains of debris

illuminate the sky for hundreds of miles,

I see only the objects of my life

dissolving in a path of smoke.

 

All the lost and scattered hours

are falling completely out of time.

where endless rows of shredded trees wait

with the patience of unburied

skeletons, accumulating in the shadows.

 

Hurricane Season

(from Noticing Eden)

 

“My wound is my geography.”

Pat Conroy, The Prince of Tides

 

The blood moon thirsts.  All night,

listening to unspoken prayers,

she tugs the sea beyond itself

until redundant waves retreating

wash the yellowed marshes clean.

 

In the heat that follows too much rain,

people crowd the churches.

On this September Sunday morning

their hymns begin to rise

and slap the winds still raging.

 

This is the music of bones

entwined in mortal language -

 

words of those who know the wind

erases every footprint carved in earth

where water, tired as a dreamer,

circling beneath oblivious clouds

blurs the variations painted on each human face.

 

Into the open womb of the sea

descend the ashes of our sins.

 

What keeps us here?  Not gravity

or light, but rust on fences, holding

every house of swollen wood, an ache

a tooth, the day moon adrift

grinding tiny islands down to bone.

The danger increases, but still the water calls – Marj Syndicated in AP

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Marj interview with Art Magazine

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Article in Charleston Today

Check out this article on my work “Newlyweds” by Charleston Today’s Eliza Ingle.

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Post and Courier Interview

I sat down with Kristen Hankla for an interview with the Post and Courier.

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Connotation Press Interview

Check out my interview with Kaite Hillenbrand for Connotation Press.

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Charleston Magazine Article

Emily P Abedon has written an article on me for Charleston Magazine.

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