Dr. Ann Keniston is a poet who moved from Boston to Reno three years ago. She teaches English and creative writing at the University of Nevada, Reno, and she just published her first book of poetry, The Caution of Human Gestures. Keniston took a few minutes at a coffeehouse to talk shop about writing poems.
Do you find it different writing poems in Reno than in Boston?
I donโt really write about landscape very much, or place, but I do tend to have a lot of open vistas, and Iโve shown some of the poems Iโve written in the last couple years to some friends in Boston, and theyโre like, โWow, your work has really changed.โ There are definitely mountains and clouds and things like that, even though theyโre sort of a background.
Some of your poems are about pretty personal subject matter. When youโre writing, are you more exploring your own thoughts or specifically wanting to tell something to an audience?
I think when I sit down to write, I do want to sort of explore something and come to some understanding. โฆ I definitely donโt write just for myself, but I donโt think thereโs a moment where I have to make this palatable for everybody. I had a wonderful teacher in grad school, named Gallway Kinnell, who said, โPoetry is telling everyone what you canโt tell anyone.โ โฆ. Itโs a very scary conception because it means that youโre revealing all your secrets to people, which I often feel that Iโm doing. โฆ It also is a way that he makes poetry the most important of all the arts because it is the place where youโre most, sort of, naked. I guess thereโs not really a split between writing for me and writing for everyone.
You often mention failures and errors and imperfection, but it doesnโt come across like youโre dwelling on them. Are you trying to somehow redefine ideas about failure?
I feel like part of growing older, for me, has been, first of all, realizing how much hasnโt gone wrong, you know, how much Iโve been spared from. And I think when I was younger, I actually felt like I had a really hard life, and I suffered in all these ways, and part of growing up is realizing, first of all, there are all these catastrophes that didnโt happen. I think something thatโs related to that is realizing that Iโm not a perfect person โฆ and Iโm just trying to accept the way that I am.
Thatโs the impression I get from your work. It doesnโt seem like youโre complaining.
I was giving a reading in Boston awhile ago and a good friend of mine, who Iโve shared work with for years, said I was just incredibly good at characterizing all different kinds of suffering. And I was kind of a little offended, I must say. I do think thatโs part of just growing up and feeling like an adult. Not that failures are all totally wonderful, but just sort of trying to find some balance, I guess.
