By Donavan Hufnagle (Guest Blogger)
I tend to discover new books through word of mouth by my students, colleagues, wife, or other writers. The books I appreciate the most are by those “unknown” authors. I am one of those “unknown” authors with mostly unknown books. With that stated, I find that authors like me, take more risks with their writing, challenging readers in a positive way.
Poetry, of course, is automatically going to present a challenge to readers. In most cases I would argue that poetry requires more participation from the reader than fiction, for example, so without even describing my books, I am already at a disadvantage. Reader don’t like to work that hard. However, poetry could win over more people if they just give it a chance. From a practical stance, most poetry is short, and we can live in the poem longer and move away from the poem with more without having to read 300 pages or whatever. I never can understand that in a culture where our attention spans are constantly being reduced, how 700-page books keep showing up. Why not read poetry? In most cases, you can read one or two poems, allow those poems to puncture your senses and thoughts, close the book, and come back later to different poems for a different experience.
In my poetry, I want to challenge readers while, also, stimulating them with more experiences in a shorter frame. More importantly, I want the reader to take away multiple experiences from the same poem. In this way, I try to have poems that speak on many different levels. For one instance, in the poem “The Spirit of Deep Ellum,” I may be referring to the blues musician Blind Lemon Jefferson, but that aspect of the poem is only an additional layer and those unfamiliar with Blind Lemon Jefferson will still move away from the poem understanding the narrative about a person struggling to make it in life—a coming of age story in a way, which everyone can relate to. In other words, I want my poems to relate to a larger audience while pleasing those looking for more depth. You can read my current book These Are Not My Words (I Just Wrote Them) and appreciate the intricate layering of identity being showcased and resonate with the many pop cultural references and their connection to our culture and ourselves….
But I want you to, overall, enjoy the basic human stories that are being told.
Blurb
Echoing Chuck Palahniuk’s statement. “Nothing of me is original. I am the combined effort of everyone I’ve ever known,” this collection explores identity. These poems drift down rivers of old, using histories private and public and visit people that I love and loathe. Through heroes and villains, music and cartoons, literature and comics, science and wonder, and shadow and light, each poem canals the various channels of self and invention. As in the poem, “Credentials,” “I am a collage of memories and unicorn stickers…[by] those that have witnessed and been witnessed.”
Excerpt
Grandma, If Only These Walls…
Do you sleep naked beneath
a popcorn sky riddled with residue
of the past and clues to asbestos?
I remember
when I clawed the ceiling,
the putty knife scraped away
the yellowing kernels and it snowed
for the rest of the day. For the rest
of my life.
They popped. And from the ceiling,
down, eventually,
yellow falls asleep on the bed.
I am a child in a snow globe,
making snow angels the same
yellowish tint as her nubs, her alley-cat
eyes, these walls.
I know little of her:
her modeling days—her costume
jewelry displays throughout
the house, but where did she wear this
ruby ring? When did this
emerald rest around her neck?
An albatross?
I imagine her strut
on the runway, such
power. They stare at her, wait
for her everything. A look. A twist.
A wink. Was she always on
display?
Did the flash of cameras blind her
marriage—rumors of others,
into another?
How the hell could she let
the next in? He stole her
money, molested her
children and grands. He smoldered her
like the tip of her cigarette,
And from the tip, down,
eventually, the ash snow fell
gray to yellow.
About the Author
Donovan Hufnagle is a husband, a father of three, and a professor of English and Humanities. He moved from Southern California to Prescott, Arizona to Fort Worth, Texas. He has five poetry collections: These Are Not My Words (I Just Wrote Them), Raw Flesh Flash: The Incomplete, Unfinished Documenting Of, The Sunshine Special, Shoebox, and 30 Days of 19. Other recent writings have appeared in Tempered Runes Press, Solum Literary Press, Poetry Box, Beyond Words, Wingless Dreamer, Subprimal Poetry Art, Americana Popular Culture Magazine, Shufpoetry, Kitty Litter Press, Carbon Culture, Amarillo Bay, Borderlands, Tattoo Highway, The New York Quarterly, Rougarou, and others.
Website: http://www.donovanhufnagle.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/donovanhufnagle
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/dhufnaglepoetry
Buy Link: https://www.amazon.com/These-Are-Not-My-Words/dp/B0DBMN46M4/ref=sr_1_1
One randomly chosen winner via rafflecopter will win a $25 Amazon/BN.com gift card.
9 comments:
We appreciate you featuring today's book and author - thank you.
Hello, Donavan. Welcome to Beyond Romance! I found your poems intriguing and moving. Thank you for sharing them with my readers.
I'm looking forward to reading this book. Thanks for hosting.
Thanks for sharing. Sounds really good.
Thank you Beyond Romance for featuring my book today! I enjoyed writing the blog post!
Interesting slice of life poem in your excerpt. The costume jewelry reference resonated with me, because my late mother had a lot of it. She was always a stylish dresser, because she'd grown up 8th of 10 kids during the Depression. She never had new clothes until she taught herself to sew--then dropped out of school after 8th grade to get a job. See how your poem insinuated itself into my memories? Good job!
Looks like a interesting book.
I enjoyed today's post.
I liked the excerpt.
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