… I prefer the cookbook to the actual meal. Feeling bores me. That’s why I write poetry. In poetry you just give the instructions to the reader and say, “Reader, you go on from here.” And what I like about poetry is its readers, because those are giving people. I mean, those are people you can trust to get the job done. They pull their own weight. If I had to have someone at my back in a dark alley, I’d want it to be a poetry reader. They’re not like some people, who maybe do it right if you tell them, “Put this foot down, and now put that one in front of the other, button your coat, wipe your nose.”
So, really, I do it for the readers who work hard and, I feel, deserve something better than they’re used to getting. I do it for the working stiff. And I write for people, like myself, who are just tired of the trickle-down theory where somebody spends pages and pages on some fat book where everything including the draperies, which happen to be burnt orange, are described, and, further, are some metaphor for something. And this whole boggy waste trickles down to the reader in the form of a little burp of feeling. God, I hate prose. I think the average reader likes ideas.
“A sentence, unlike a line, is not a station of the cross.” I said this to the poet Mark Strand. I said, “I could not stand to write prose; I could not stand to have to write things like ‘the draperies were burnt orange and the carpet was brown.’” And he said, “You could do it if that’s all you did, if that was the beginning and the end of your novel.” So please, don’t ask me for a little trail of bread crumbs to get from the smile to the bedroom, and from the bedroom to the death at the end, although you can ask me a lot about death. That’s all I like, the very beginning and the very end. I haven’t got the stomach for the rest of it. …
I can’t say that I agree with that, but it made me laugh out loud. It’s the middle of the prose poem, The Politics of Narrative — Why I Am a Poet by Lynn Emanuel.
Read the whole thing; it’s funny (and not very long). [ link ]
For more Emanuel, see this previous post.
-Julie