Hey! The Final Thursday Reading Series is one week early this month due to Halloween. Mark your calendar for Thursday, October 24 with featured reading Crystal Gibbins. Gibbins is the founding editor of Split Rock Review, author of the poetry collection Now/Here, and co-editor of the recent collection, Waters Deep: A Great Lakes Poetry Anthology. She also writes and illustrates Up North, a comic blog about her travels and life in the Northwoods. She last read at the Final Thursday Reading Series in October 2017.
What was the initial impetus that led to creating Waters Deep: A Great Lakes Poetry Anthology? I understand it is part of a new series?
In 2016, I moved from the North Shore to the South Shore of
Lake Superior near Bayfield, WI, a place of great beauty and severe weather,
but also a region that shows environmental degradation caused by humans and
invasive species. I began having conversations with the Split Rock Review
editorial team about creating and publishing an anthology. Since many of us
currently live in or are from the Great Lakes Basin, we wanted the anthology to
focus on the diversity, culture, history, ecology, and importance of preserving
this region.
Has the anthology received any notable responses so far? It
seems like it could help readers see and value the region they live in in new
ways.
I was so thrilled to learn that Waters Deep was nominated
for the 2018 Northeastern Minnesota Book Award for poetry and Raymond Byrnes’s
lovely poem “Personal Effects” was featured in The Writer’s Almanac this past
July. Having the book nominated and the poem reprinted on TWA certainly helped
create a larger readership for all the poets in the anthology.
What are you working on these days in your own
poetry or other writing? Will you be sharing your own poetry during your Final
Thursday reading? I hope so, as I found Now/Here one of the most beautiful
collections I’ve read recently, and especially enjoyed hearing it read aloud.
Thank you so much for your incredibly kind words about my
first full-length poetry collection! I’m thrilled that you also enjoyed my
previous reading in the fall of 2017. Thank you for saying that! I can be
extremely introverted at times, so knowing that I connected with the audience
really means a lot to me.
You also do a lot of editing. Are there any other projects are you involved with right now?
Yes, thank you so much for asking! I’m also editing a new
environmental poetry anthology titled Rewilding: Poems for the Environment,
which will be published by Flexible Press in 2020. The anthology will be
approximately 250 pages in length and feature poems that address the current
state of the environment in varied, thematic, and innovative ways. What’s really great about this project is that all proceeds
from the book will be donated to Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness, a nonprofit environmental organization based
in Minnesota. The anthology is coming together nicely. Ted Kooser, Joy Harjo,
Camille Dungy, Louise Glück, Sharon Olds, Karen Solie, Fleda Brown, and Ada
Limón are just some of the poets that will be included in Rewilding. We have
some real star power, but we are still accepting poetry submissions for
consideration until December 31st via Submittable.
We’re also seeking submissions for Issue 14 (Spring 2020) of
Split Rock Review and poetry chapbook manuscripts for the Split Rock Poetry
Chapbook Series (published under the imprint Split Rock Press) until November
30, so the SRR editorial team and I have been pretty busy reading submissions
and getting ready for the next installment of the journal, poetry chapbooks,
and the Rewilding anthology. It’s a real exciting time for us!
-- Interview conducted by Anne Myles
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