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An Interview with Nick Flynn
by Hilary Melton
Humorous is probably not a word one would immediately associate with Nick Flynn,
the author of such dark and luminous books as the poetry collection, Some Etherand the
memoir,Another Bullshit Night in Suck City; books that deal with his mothers suicide and his
fathers history of alcoholism and homelessness. But humor is very much a part of who Flynn
is. People should be warned in advance of a favorite recurring joke, one that consists of Flynn
making a completely absurd statement then drawing the story out as far as he can. When I
asked him during our interview, Do you have a favorite poet? Flynn paused for a moment,
and then answered sincerely, Buster Keaton. I really admire his shit. But a lot of it is silent, so
most people dont get it. He does great things with white space.
I first met Flynn in 1984. I was 22 and fresh out of four years in the Peace Corps. I had
spent months wandering around the East Coast, completely disorientated, trying to find a job.
When I applied for a position in the mens unit at Bostons largest shelter for people who are
homeless, the Pine Street Inn, Flynn was already a seasoned counselor. If you were a newbie
working at Pine Street, Flynn was the counselor you would hope would be in the crowded
Brown Lobby with you when a fight broke out, or at the front door when a guest showed up
covered in lice. He clearly respected and loved the people who stayed at Pine Street, and he
seemed to me to be fearless.
Flynn and I had our first one on one conversation late one night in the mens dormitory.
It must have been the tail end of the 3 to 11 shift because that was one of the few times
young women counselors were given dorm duty, before booze and drugs wore off for the
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hundreds of men lined up inches apart on army issued cots. I was sitting in the dimly lit alcove
across from the elevator when Flynn walked by on rounds. Chances are I was wearing a t-shirt,
worn 505 Levis and blue high top Converses and Flynn was in black jeans and some thrift store
retro shirt. It is also very likely that he was sporting some particularly absurd accessory he
lifted earlier from the donations in the clothing room: a neon yellow tie, a straw hat, platform
shoes
We began having one of those getting to know you conversations that are usually a
litany of safe questions: Where were you born? Whered you go to school? I must have been
the one who brought up parents. In that first conversation, we never got to fathers, because
when Flynn said his mother was dead and had committed suicide, I was convinced that he was
making it up. Determined to not be had, I dug my heels in, insisting he knock it off and tell me
where his mother lived.
Im not sure how long I perpetrated that embarrassment, but it was long enough for me
to still feel a twinge over 20 years later. In our recent interview, Flynn spoke about how, when
he wrote about his father in his poetry, readers assumed that Flynn was using metaphors
because they could not grasp the idea of father and homeless applying at the same time to
the same person. In a similar way, that night in the mens dormitory, dead mother and
suicide did not fit into my version of a conversation that included Whered you go to
college?
Flynn has since the 80s gone on to write the much acclaimed books, Some Etherand
Another Bullshit Night in Suck City that reflect upon his childhood, his mothers suicide, and
his experiences working at the Pine Street Inn during a period when his father was homeless.
Flynn is also the author of a second collection of poetry,Blind Huber, a series of poems based
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around the 17th
century French/Swiss beekeeper Francois Huber. Stanley Kunitz calledBlind
Huberan act of poetic imagination unlike any other. In addition to the two collections of
poetry and the memoir, Flynn is co-author with Shirley McPhillips ofA Note Slipped Under
the Door, a nonfiction book about teaching poetry that draws from his experiences as poet-in-
residence at the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project at Columbia University.
Flynn is the recipient of numerous awards including a Discovery/THE NATION Prize,
the PEN/Joyce Osterweil Award, and the Larry Levis Reading Prize from the Virginia
Commonwealth University. He has also been awarded fellowships from the Library of
Congress and the Guggenheim Foundation, and the Amy Lowell Traveling Poetry Fellowship,
which allowed him to spend two years in Italy, Ireland, and Tanzania.
Flynns best known books, Some EtherandAnother Bullshit Night in Suck City, are
decidedly autobiographical in nature and were written during an era of ongoing discussion
about the value of the personal in literature following the backlash against the strongly
personal poetry that characterized American poetry for much of the second half of the last
century. In a 1997 interview forPoets & Writers Magazine, Denise Levertov said, Im very
tired of the me, me, me kind of poem, the Sharon Olds Find the dirt and dig it up poem,
which has influenced people to find gruesome episodes in their life, whether they actually
happened or not... I know perfectly well that lots of people really have been abused, but its
unfortunate to use the fact as the passport to being a poet. Im certainly tired of that kind of
egotism.
This past July, Jean Valentine at a lecture at Vermont College entitled, The I in
Poetry, also touched on the criticism of confessional poetry. Valentine, in opposition to
Levertovs position, insisted that the subject matter of a poem should not at all be at issue. How
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the subject is dealt with, how the writer has or has not created art, regardless of content, is
what should be of concern. And while Valentine did not necessarily define her terms in this
lecture (for instance, what in fact qualifies as art?), she was clear about one point: whether
writing about incest or about the meaning of life, the writers first obligation is to the craft.
Is it merely craft and artistry that takes the ego out of Levertovs me, me, me? In
reference to Flynns very personal story and poetry, Tony Hoagland used the word allegory.
Allegory, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica, convey(s) truths or generalizations about
human conduct or experience. Hoagland wrote about Some Ether, the books gift is not the
sensationalism of the tale, but the delicate kiltered skill with which the poems collage anecdote
and metaphor into allegory (224)
How does one create allegory from subject matter that is not typical human experience:
a mothers suicide, a fathers homelessness, a 18th
century beekeepers life and the life of bees
and flowers? At the core of allegory is the presence of some essential human truth. While
Flynns artistry with words and imagery can mesmerize readers, it is his ability to express
truths which resonate with an audience that raise his work from the personal to the universal.
In Some Ether, the poem Other Meaningis a good example of what Hoagland means
by collaging anecdote and metaphor into allegory:
Coming home from the drive-in, asleep underblankets in the vast backseat,
my mother full of attention to the road& were all wrapped in darkness & steel. Somewhere
lost in the heart of the engine
small fires burn, pushing us away
from where weve been
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the 100-foot-high movie screen
& the airplane that passed through
Steve McQueens head. My feet stab
at my brothers, wandering his own walled cityof sleep, suspended in an endless present,
endless protections & slow hum of static.I remember a chair, a maroon & velvet throne,
I fell asleep in it onceas a party raged around me. Only later did I learn
the other meaning ofmaroon
of sailors, whole families, put out to sea
in inadequate lifeboats, left to drink their own piss
& pull gulls from the sky. I open one eye
but cannot identify the tops of passing trees.
How far to home? Once
she left me on the side of the road & drove offinto the rare green earth, her taillights
fading sparks. Once she cast me outonto the porch, naked in the snow, merely because
I said she wouldnt dare. (38)
From a pure narrative standpoint, this poem is about the author recounting a childhood
experience of coming home from a drive-in with his mother and brother. It is also about
Flynns memories of sitting in a chair while an adult party swirls around him, and of being
ejected from a car (and later from the house) by his mother. But the title, Other Meaning,
immediately asks the reader to think metaphorically about the content of the poem. Flynns
images are packed with metaphorical possibilities.
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The title, Other Meaning, is pulled from the body of the poem (line 17) in specific
reference to the word maroon. First there is the meaning of maroon as the color of the
chair the child Flynn is seated in, and then the other meaning of being stranded at sea in
lifeboats, and in Flynns case, precariously so. The second meaning exposes in metaphor
Flynns personal experience of a childhood inside inadequate lifeboats where the family is
adrift, in danger, and left to drink their own piss/&pull gulls from the sky for sustenance.
Besides the title referencing the specific word, maroon, there are of course other
meaning(s) possible for almost every word in the piece. For instance, the word home,
viewed in a metaphorical context has many meanings that could include self, safety, family, or
a feeling of comfort and familiarity. On a spiritual plane, home can mean heaven or God
or oneness or peace. The line, How far to home? hangs hauntingly in the air, while the
description of the son being sent from the house has decidedly biblical overtonesOnce she
cast me out.
While not every childhood is traumatic, Flynn expresses feelings that all children have
as they make their first efforts to confront the adult world, feelings about separateness,
dependence, and being at the mercy of an adult world that is at best confusing, at worst violent
or even lethal. As a child I was never left by the side of the road by my mother, nor kicked out
of the house naked in winter, but I identify with the feeling of being powerless to the decisions
and actions of someone who holds dominion over me, someone upon whom my survival
depends.
Some Etherwas Flynns first book, and my personal favorite. Mark Doty called it a
startling, moving debut. The judges for the 1999 Pen/Joyce Osterweil Award for Poetry said
in their official statement, If the poems stand close to tragedy, as Flynn puts it, they also
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embody the act of survival: syntax and line conspire to pull us past the event, beyond the
struggleAt once reckless and demure, outrageous and delicate, Some Etherpromises
nothing: it is a harrowing, beautiful book. (Some Etherbook jacket)
Flynn captures and collages childhood and adult experiences in Some Etherwith a
photographic clarity, intoxicating musicality, and the ever-present awareness of mortality. In
1967, Flynn writes about his mothers various boyfriends, She opens the car door & bends
into the overhead light but before his lips/can graze her cheek the door closes/& the light goes
out./They sit inside & fill it with smoke./It looks creamy in the winter night, like amber, or a
newfound galaxy./I know cigarettes can kill & wonder why she wants to die. (8) And from
Father Outside, It is night &/ its snowing & starlings fill the trees above us, so many it
seems/the leaves singI wait for his breath/to lift his blanket/so I know hes alive (48)
In our recent interview I told Flynn that I thought Some EtherandAnother Bullshit
Night in Suck City were like different sides of the same coin, and he agreed, saying they were
just different forms of addressing the same material. Part of what makes the memoir successful
is that it also holds true to the same formula mentioned earlier: anecdote and metaphor
transformed into allegory.
Like so many recent memoirs, Another Bullshit Night in Suck City depicts a journey of
the self through the examination of ones parentage and all the layered implications of those
relationships. Flynns experience is of course more traumatic than most, with a mother who
commits suicide and a father who is absent, alcoholic, and homeless. Unlike most popular
memoirs, Flynn does not employ a linear narrative to tell his story, instead he collages his
experiences together from short chapters comprised of memories, stories, language pieces, and
even a one-act play. Flynns prose incorporates his skill and experience as a poet. Note the
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alliteration in the following description taken fromAnother Bullshit Night in Suck City: Inside
the shelter the tension is inescapable the walls exude cigarette smoke and anxiety. The air is
thick, stale, dreamy, though barely masking the overpowering smell of stale sweat. (30) The
adroit use of repetition, pacing, tension and rhythm can be seen in the first paragraph of the
book:
Please, she whispers, how may I help you? The screen lights up with her
voice. A room you enter, numbers you finger, heated, sterile almost. The
phone beside her never rings, like a toy, like a prop. My father lifts thereceiver in the night, speaks into it, asks, Wheres the money? asks, Why
cant I sleep? asks, Who left me outside?(3)
These opening lines are another good example of Flynns skill with anecdote and
metaphor. We see Flynns homeless father hanging out late at night in an enclosed ATM
pretending to make a transactiona scene Flynn has witnessed as an outreach worker. It is a
striking image, a snapshot of one mans father at the bottom of the proverbial barrel. It is also a
poignant portrait of a destitute person set against a shiny emblem of technology.
In Another Bullshit Night in Suck City a life raft has a recurring role, echoing the
lifeboats appearance in Other Meaningfrom Some Ether. While the lifeboat in Other Meaning
is laden with fear and doubts of survival against the elements, the function of the life raft of
Another Bullshit Night in Suck City is to save people. The life raft is woven through the entire
book, first as an example of another one of Flynns fathers lies and exaggerations, then as a
symbol of hope. Flynns father claims in the beginning of the book that his father (Flynns
grandfather) invented the life raft. Near the end ofAnother Bullshit Night in Suck City, Flynn
discovers that a patent was indeed issued to his grandfather for the life raft. It is this discovery
of truth in all the murkiness of his fathers stories and life that is one of the most moving events
in Flynns memoir. While not making anything better, or bringing anything to any resolution,
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the truth of the life raft is sustaining, The problem was to keep the body above the waves. The
trick was to breathe only air. My grandfathers patent was used by seven countries during both
World Wars. Thousands of heads floating about the waves. Ill be damned. (328)
Some EtherandAnother Bullshit Night in Suck City are both, at their core, about being
adrift. Flynns childhood was precarious and without roots and lead to an adulthood that was
equally tumultuous and ungrounded. One does not get the sense with either book that Flynn
has come to any sort of magical or therapeutic closure about his childhood and parents. Prior to
our interview, Flynn spoke to me about how he did not find any sort of resolution from
writing the two books, that he did not have some big Aha! Anne Sexton echoes this
sentiment. In an interview with William Packard she said, You dont solve problems in
writing. They are still there. Ive heard psychiatrists say, See, youve forgiven your father in
your poem. But I havent forgiven my father; I just wrote that I did. (17-18) And Colette Inez
has this to say: Although I dont think of poetry as therapy, as a prescribed remedy for
sorrows, the act of writing can bring clarity to what seems blurred, and may sometimes rescue
us from the edge. (118)
The readerhoweverdoes attain a sense of resolution (and hope) from Some Etherand
Another Bullshit Night in Suck City, which I think also helps explain the books popularity. The
resolution and hope does not come from the content of the books, but from the very existence
of the books themselves and it is gratifying to see that they have received critical praise and
garnered awards. Despite the harrowing circumstances of his life, Flynn has become the
successful writer his father dreamt of becoming himself.
Flynns second collection of poetry,Blind Huber, is a different sort of collection
entirely. It is a book about bees and beekeeping in the 18th
century as told through many
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voices, both human and personified nature.Blind Huberis an act of creative obsession by
Flynns own admission and a break from the content of his own life, though Flynns personal
experiences still seep through this collection. In one poem, Wax Father, one cannot help but
see Flynns relationship with his own father:
The father had
collapsed, the boy
wasnt ready, so he built a replica of the old man
in order to save him. When
the legs gave out he fashioned legs,when the hands began to tremble
he fashioned hands,
& as the fever spread he made a head. (51)
And in Workers (lost), there is his mother: Nothing/to return to, the queen dead, I /pressed
against her until her eyes/hung empty. Afterwards,/the hive full of strangers,/none remained
precisely me, none/I would die for. (75-76)
In Flynns surreal world of bees, hives, flowers and 18th
century men speaking, one is
more quickly drawn into metaphor and allegory than in the other two books.Blind Huber
intertwines the perspectives of the blind scholar, his devoted assistant and different parts of
nature to explore concepts of power, dominion, relationships, life, survival, and death. Like
Some EtherandAnother Bullshit Night in Suck City,Blind Huberexposes life, raises questions
but does not attempt to provide answers.
I was surprised to findBlind Huberas violent as both Some EtherorAnother Bullshit
Night in Suck City. Because the bees, other animals, and nature are all personified, their
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violence is felt in human terms by the reader. In Workers (guards) a skunk attacks a hive and is
in turn bludgeoned by suicide bees who pump him full of venom in their death throes. In
Workers (attendants) Flynns bees freeze to death and their corpses lay against their living
brothers like a shawl. (10) InDrones, the bees speak of the actions of their queen, First she
will kill the other virgins, those/unborn, a spike/ to the head. (19) And in Statuary, bees
encase a living snail in wax and then a twitching winter-starved mouse.
Blind Huberalso exposes power dynamics in a stark, unflinching manner. Every
character in the bookis seen in a power dynamic with every other character. For example,
Huber exerts fierce control over his assistant Burnens. InBlind Huber (ii), Huber says,
Burnens hands, my words/make them move. I say,plunge them into the hive,/& his hands go
in. If I said,/put your head inside,/he would wear it. At the same time, the servant Burnens
welds power over his master. InBurnens (i) we are told that, My ruler/measures the gap, I
count each worker/& feed him the number. His words/move my hands, but I name/what is
seen. (p. 59) Perhaps part of Hubers violent tinged descriptions of ordering Burnens to do
things is the anger he feels at his own ultimate dependence on Burnens to see and to negotiate
everyday life.
The world of the bees is also fraught with power dynamics and dependency. The queen
rules the hive with a vengeance, killing virgins at the same time birthing the next generation of
bees. Yet the queens very existence is dependent on the other bees, as she states in Virgin
Queen, The nurses feed me from their own/mouths/& I am changed,/made essential. (17)
There is also a power dynamic between the queen and man. In Queen, the queen speaks
authoritatively to man, You take our honey/because we let you. We pollinate the
fields/because we are the fields. At the same time the queen acknowledges mans ability to
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seek me out with gloved fingers/and crush my head. (14). And everyone in the book is at
the mercy of powers greater then themselves: Huber to the scarlet fever that took his sight,
Burnens to the circumstance of his position, and the bees to weather, man, skunks, possums
and mites.
While people Ive spoken to about Flynns work, including Flynn himself, mostly
speak as ifBlind Huberis completely divergent from autobiographical material, I do not agree.
Emotionally,Blind Huberis clearly related to Flynns autobiographical work. To generalize
about the themes of Flynns three books: Some Ethertreats remembrance, angst, sadness, and
love;Another Bullshit Night is Suck City is concerned with analysis and storytelling, andBlind
Huberwith the dynamics of power, anger, and offers a cynical examination of faith. (Specific
examples of the question of faith can be found in Wax (Jesus),Xenophons Soldiers, Without,
and in the epigraph of an Islamic folktale at the beginning of the third section of the book.)
I also think Hubers 50 years of intense, devoted study and record-keeping of the world
of bees, is analogous with how Flynn speaks of how his own years of examining and writing
about his life felt. Tormented, isolated, obsessive and fiercely committed to putting down on
paper what he sees.
How does a writer know if he or she has entered into a realm of universal truths through
autobiography? Part of that answer I think, can be found in the writers relationship with the
reader. When someone other than the author is moved by the piece and finds in it something of
himself/herself, then it is no longer me, me, meit is me and you. Before our interview, Flynn
spoke about the hundreds of encounters (in person, letters, email) he has had with readers of
his books and while there were some that reached out to complement and to marvel at the
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artistry of his work, the majority of people wanted to connect with him in order to tell him,
Thats my story too. Thats my pain too.
Of course there are all kinds of writing that have a large readership but do not reflect
the values attributed to literature/poetry. Flynn spoke despairingly to me about The Da Vinci
Code, bemoaning the general populations ability and desire to read bad writing. While The
Da Vinci Code is, as far as I know, in no way autobiographical material, it is worth noting that
the Dan Browns, Robert Ludlums, and Stephen Kings of the world do tap into some sort of
universal human experience, though the universality is probably more along the lines of a
shared appreciation for the thrill of a roller coaster ride then any grappling with love or death
or pain or the existence of God. Walter Benjamin would probably call it the universal desire for
distraction as he identifies in his essay, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical
Reproduction, the masses seek distraction whereas art demands concentration (Section
XV) Today, more than ever, we live in a culture that is for the most part on continuous fast
forward. We have become the fruition of early Marxist theorists predictions of ever increasing
class disparity and the powerful few exploiting and corrupting technology. As a culture, we are
hindered by the enormous gap between the haves and the have-nots; a substantial portion of the
populace spend most of their waking hours working underpaid and meaningless jobs, and we
live in constant unease thanks to threats of terrorism and global warming. Brainless distraction
has become a mainstay of Americans, perhaps as a means of survival. Although brainless
distraction may be a current human need, it is never about seeking the universal truths that can
be found in art.
When an author is able to write about personal experiences in a manner that attracts
readers not intent on checking out or taking a break from their lives, and those readers
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respond introspectively to the material (again, Benjamins concentration), then that writer
has expressed some truth that transcends the personal. Whether the writing achieves the
standards of craft and artistry that are expected of literature or poetry, or whether the writing
can withstand the test of time, is another matter. Flynn is an author who has been able to write
about personal experience in a manner that attracts a readership, touches people, makes people
think, andreceives the approval of critics, academics, and award distributors. That is a
combination that reminds me of a phrase often chanted by a 70 year old man named Victor
who lived on the streets in Boston when Flynn and I both worked at Pine Street: Thats the
ticket, thats the ticket!
Ive seen Flynn on and off over the past 20 years since Pine Street. We both lived in
New York during many of the same years; he studying for his MFA from NYU and me
continuing work with people experiencing homelessness. Before I interviewed Flynn, I had
only seen him once since the publication ofAnother Bullshit Night in Suck City and his
subsequent success.
Three years ago, with an advance fromAnother Bullshit Night in Suck City, Flynn
bought a dilapidated 1880s Victorian house in upstate New York and renovated it. I was glad
that Flynn was available to do an interview in person and that I opted to make the four hour
drive from my home in Vermont because it seemed important to me to see Flynns new home
while conducting the interview.
As Flynn showed me around the two story house that sits on a quiet tree-lined street,
there was scant evidence of the wreck he initially purchased. Instead there were bright open
rooms, soft colors, lovely woodwork, and minimal, tasteful furnishing. We bought an entire
sycamore tree Flynn said in the kitchen and pointed out the beautiful matching wood cabinets
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and counter tops. The sycamore shows up in other rooms too, as the dining room table top, and
the coffee table in the living room, creating a synergy and compatibility between rooms.
The downstairs bathroom could be right out of a home design magazine with its
freestanding claw foot bathtub, white pedestal sink, and gauzy curtains undulating in the
breeze. A wooden shelf runs the length of one wall and is adorned with a Buddha figure,
incense and candles, and found items precisely placed in what can only be described as a
collage piece: a birds nest on a forked stick, an animal skull, a smooth egg shaped grey and
white speckled stone, and three framed hand written notes on yellowed paper.
This bathroom was where the former house owner said he kept the retard that lived
with him. Look, said Flynn, you can still see where the bars we sawed off used to be in the
windows and where the panes in the door had been kicked out from the inside. In a way that is
all Flynn, the shadow of the retard in his barred cell trying to kick his way out has somehow
become part of the beauty of this new room.
The house in general and the downstairs bathroom in particular reminded me of other
living situations Flynn had been in: his 1939 Chris-Craft boat in Provincetown and Boston and
the loft space on LaGrange Street in Bostons Combat Zone. Both the boat and the loft space
were broken down shells of their former selves, barely usable and certainly not livable, when
they came into Flynns hands. Yet the boat, the loft space, and now the Victorian each had
some element of history and beauty that Flynn could see, or feel, underneath the broken planks,
shattered windows, layers and layers of filth, old paint, and debris.
Stanley Kunitz who was a mentor and friend of Flynns, had a similar sensibility about
being in the world beyond writing (which of course included writing). Kunitz dabbled in
sculpting, incorporating found items into collage pieces. Kunitz was also an avid gardener. In
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an interview with Francine Ringold, Kunitz spoke about being a gardener in a way that also
references his work as a writer (and could easily be about Flynns renovation works and his
own autobiographical writing):
One is always trying to penetrate the mysteries of existence, and thethings that grow are little allegoriesevery one! They speak of the
terrible will to survive and the struggle toward the light. And the
rewards are great: just the simple joy of bringing something to lifeand seeing it bloom in the midst of so much that is ugly in the world.
And then again, I think every garden represents something of a
personal triumph over ugliness and disorder, over nonexistence.Its like conquering a piece of yourself. (142)
In the corner of Flynns backyard there is a cracked plaster statue of some nondescript
male historical figure that could perhaps be George Washington or could be Christopher
Columbus. The torso of the statue is missing large chunks of plaster, giving a view of a hollow
interior and emitting an eerie feel that is part shell of something, part ghost. Flynn said the
statue was sitting on a pile of garbage in the street when he found it. I could see how anyone
else on the planet would have called it junk and not thought twice about throwing it out. Flynn
saw something though and brought it home. He says, Its Johnny Cash.
While sitting on the back deck with a cup of tea watching the sun lift the morning
shadow off the garden, a beam of sunlight struck Johnny in the corner of the yard where he is
installed. Framed by a weathered wooden slate fence, green vines curling up against his
cracked form, and the morning light illuminating his face, Johnny was breathtakingly beautiful.
How could anyone have thrown such a piece out and not seen what Flynn saw? The height of
the chair I was sitting in, the flavor of the tea, the arrangement of the plants in the yard, and the
sun-kissed face of JohnnyI was in a Flynn-made scene: caught in a moment where every
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element was in harmony with every other element, and the discarded broken past was
transformed into art.
The following is a transcript of my interview with Flynn the night of July 18th
, 2006:
Ive read that regardless of your creative nonfiction writing, you still consider yourself apoet.
I think I am primarily a poet.
What does that mean to you?
Oh, just my impulses in writing. I am much more drawn to certain compression and
distillation of language. Generally the stuff I write dwells more with what is unknown
than what is known. It doesnt start from a place of what I know and what I want to
present to you. It is more like grappling with ethereal mysterious, maybe even in
broader mysteries.
Is that different than how you feel about your prose?
No, I think prose is the same. I think it comes from the same impulse. I think that
memoir is just thinly veiled poetry. I think more people buy it if you dont call it poetry.
I thought Some EtherandAnother Bullshit Night in Suck City were like different sides to the
same coin.
Yes.Another Bullshit Nightwas a different way to tell it with more narrative
connective tissue. A longer narrative requires more connections, and that was part of
the challenge.
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Do you have a preference between one form and the other? Is it easier to write one or theother?
Yeah, I like hybrid pieces. Writing stuff in the middle is what Im interested in at the
moment; stuff that is somehow harder to classify. I was just working with Lydia Davis
and Claudia Rankine. We were teaching at NYU in June. Lydia Davis writes these
incredible short stories that are shorter than some of my poems. I was there as a
nonfiction writer and Claudia was there as a poet. Claudias last book was ostensibly
poetry, yet her poetry is actually dealing with nonfiction issues like stuff out of the
newspaper. All of us are crossing genres. I think the distinction is getting very blurry
now, and that is where interesting things are happening.
When did you realize you wanted to write poetry? Did you have an aha?
It was more like I realized I wasnt suited to write fiction. I was trying to write fiction. I
was at a workshop at Harvard Extension, the adult education thing. I was living in
Boston and I was working with the homeless then. The guy that was leading the
workshop, the first thing he said was, The first rule of fiction is that there are no rules
for fiction. Then I brought this piece into the workshop, and he said, Remember what
I said last week? Well, there actually are a couple of rules of fiction, and youve broken
them. These are things you really cant do. And I thought, Shit, this is what Im
interested in.
Basically I just had a poetic impulse. It was very self-conscious. I like things that show
their seams, that question the whole idea of writing. The workshop leader said you
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could do anything as long as you maintain a suspended disbelief that the writing is an
artifice.
I was really interested in questioning that, which you can do in poetry. I was also
interested in time and how poetry moves through time. You can move through eons in
one line of a poem. Rilke moves from minutiae to the universe in less than a line. I just
dont know many fiction writers that can do that because I dont think fiction moves as
quickly. The transitions in fiction are more meant to create a scene, where as poetry
evokes a scene.
Were you reading poetry at the time?
Yes, I was reading a lot of poetry.
Were you drawn early in your life to reading poetry?
No actually. I took a class at U-Mass when I was probably like 22. That was with James
Tate. He turned us on to a lot of contemporary poetry.
Was there a first poet you fell in love with?
There were a lot of poets. Before I even went to school, there was (like for everyone)
Bukowski. Bukowski was the first. If you are young and drinking, you read Bukowski.
Actually Ive gone back to Bukowski recently to teach, because now Im teaching
people who are young and drinking. You go back and realize this is what speaks to
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them. And it is interesting stuff. Theres a certain energy to it and voice that is strong. It
is worth teaching and is actually very difficult to imitate.
Then theres Ginsburg, early Ginsburg, and Beat stuff. I was reading a lot of fiction too
at the time. But in the University when I first started reading books of poetry, the first
book that was important to me was Carolyn ForchesA Country between Us. That book
really meant something to me.
In an interview you did with Jess Sauer (The Austin Chronicle), you said one of the benefits of
writing in a memoir format, was that readers dont go down the road of thinking something ismetaphor when it isnt, like your father being homeless for example. You said that it was
really important to you to point out that it was read as the truth?
Yes, just the central story to it. I mean there is a lot of metaphoric language around it
and that comes off of it. You have to have a solid central line of things that are true.
Thats the big problem with what James Fry did; he didnt even get the center of truth
right, he sort of made it all up. And thats a problem, a real problem. The central truth is
a contract with the reader. And then you can obviously go off onto any sort of tangents
you want to, as long as you return to the central truth.
If someone found out at this point that my father was actually a golf pro and not
homeless, it would be understandable if they were upset. It would be understandable
because the contract would have been deeply broken.
You said in the Sauer article that in Some Etherpeople werent buying it that your father hadactually been homeless?
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They couldnt wrap their minds around it. I think the mind can only contain so much.
And it seems that somehow there isnt enough space in the brain for the word father
and the word homeless. From what Ive encountered in general, those two things
dont exist in the same brain pan. One at a time. So if you put them together, it causes
some sort of strange little explosion.
Its the same now with torture. Im writing about torture and I find the same thing
happens. Take the phrase, America equals torture, people just have a hard time
keeping that in their heads even though it is on the front page of the newspaper
everyday. Legalized torture in America, Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, the president saying
we needto torture for information
How are you writing about it?
I dont know yet. Im trying to find the form.
Where did you get the idea forBlind Huberand can you tell me a little about it?
It just became an obsession. It just sparked one day. Sort of like this one, this torture
one, it just sort of sparked one day. Then youre fucked. Then youre stuck with it.
You worked onBlind Huberfor six years?
Yes, six years. Its just random really. The mind needed an obsession.
Why bees?
Thats the thing about obsessions. You dont choose them. A guy at a dinner party
sitting next to me was a beekeeper and he started speaking rhapsodically about bees. I
was fascinated by it.
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I didnt realize how big it was. There is a lot written about it, especially ancient stuff,
which is fascinating. So I got to do some research, and that was good after the first
book. I could ostensibly be exterior with the persona poems. Its nice to do persona
poems really, it allows for much more range of emotion.
Did you make a conscious choice to not do interior work?
Well, its all interior. The poems are all interior, but theyre done through a persona.
Theyre absurd in some ways: flowers talking, hives talking, everything is speaking you
know. Where would it end? It didnt seem to end anywhere.
I was sort of just following it. I was thinking about bees and I was at McDowell, and I
went and visited this guy who was a beekeeper in New Hampshire. I drove up to see
him and saw the hives. The poems werent coming really well, I was just sort of writing
about the bees. At then at the very end of my stay I was desperate and this one poem
came out in the voice of a bee. I was really embarrassed about it and thought, Oh
thats really fucked up. But it was the best thing Id written, the best poem after a
miserable several weeks of struggling with it.
I was really embarrassed and put it away. I was thinking, We wont go there. And the
next day another one came out, and then three came out. They started coming out in the
voices, and those were the strongest.
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You know, it was embarrassing and thats always a good sign. If you are ashamed of
what you are doing, it is a very good sign. You should always be ashamed of what you
are doing. If you feel good about what you are doing, it probably sucks.
Stanley Kunitz said some very nice things aboutBlind Huber.
Oh I dont know. He said, a work of the creative imagination unlike any other
What does that mean? It doesnt necessarily mean its good. Its not saying its good,
its just saying its unlike any other. It could mean it is like, bad.
Didnt you work with him in Provincetown?
I knew Stanley (I feel like I still know Stanley) for about 16 years.
Was he a big influence on you?
Stanley was a huge influence on me, one of the big ones. Stanley was many, many
things. Not just wise and incredibly insightful, though part of it was that. Anytime I met
with him, anytime I had a conversation with him something would come up that I
would spend the next year or two years wrestling with, trying to figure out what he
meant. Like he said, Tension is essential to all art. Ive actually been trying to figure
out what that means for like three yearsno, more than that. He said it a long time ago.
Ive actually actively been trying to teach it and figure out how you find tension in art.
And it is deep and beautiful.
There were always moments with him, sort of endless moments. Just his way of being
in the world was so profound. His connection to something was also like Rilke you
know; his connection to the garden was also to eternity.
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Did you ever talk about his fathers suicide? Was there a connection between you two because
of that?
We never spoke about it, but I think clearly that that was part of our connection. I dont
remember ever really going into it directly with him. I think we talked about that stuff
in our poems to each other. I said what I had to say in the poems to him. There wasnt
much more to say to him about it. Id probably say more to my therapist.
Did you show him your work?
At different times I would bring him stuff. Hed always asked for that too. Hed say,
Let me see what you are working on. Youd bring him a poem, or a couple poems.
He was a paradigm of generosity, and also committed to creating a tribe. You felt like
you were connected with him to this large history of poetry and the history of the whole
culture of poetry. Sustaining a community seems really important. Thats what I like
about teaching. It feels like a continuation of that poetry tribe thing.
Stanley was amazing. He started the Fine Arts Works Center in Provincetown, he
started the Poets House in New York. He was responsible for awhile for choosing the
Yale Series of Younger Poets. Look who he chose, it was incredible. Robert Hass,
Carolyn Forche, Olga Broumas He had this eye for something about female poets.
He cultivated a whole generation in a certain way. It was probably just that he was
attuned to the fact that women were leading the way in a certain manner in poetry. It
seems like sometimes now, a lot of the innovative stuff, stuff that is pushing the art
forward, is done by women.
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Who specifically would you say?
Anne Carson, C.D.Wright, Brenda Hillman, Marie Howe, Carolyn Forche, Harryette
Mullen.
Ive seen you referred to as post-confessional, what do you think about that?
Sure, Ill take it. That was Tony Hoaglands piece I think. Hes a sweet guy.
Its again about not assuming something. There is post-modern and then post-
confessional. Post-confessional would be taking some of the strategies of post-
modernism and applying them to confessionalism; which means that you have some
self-consciousness about what you are doing about the I, or the I of the construct.
You are trying to tell a story, but you have to question the story you are trying to tell.
You cant just take it for granted that this is the truth-- it is an artifice.
Do you have a book next to your bedside right now?
I just finished reading Coetzee again: Waiting for the Barbarians. Im all torture all the
time right now.
Are there any poets currently writing about torture?
No, no one is writing about torture. Well, Matthea Harvey has a new book coming out,
which is very interesting. I heard her read from it and there was some stuff about terror.
Odes to Terror-- or something. I thought they were great. Theres also Douglas A.
Powell, Claudia Rankine, Maggie Nelson.
Are there any kinds of poetry or other kinds of writing that you do not write?
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I dont like bad writing.
Define bad writing. What are the characteristics?
There was a writer at this workshop, his name is Tony Door. Hes a great writer. He did
this thing where he broke down the first page ofThe Da VinciCode to get a close
reading of it. It is such badwriting that the exercise was just fun. And it was interesting
because you can also be lulled by the writing and think, Its fine, its a page turner, it
goes quickly
Did you read it?
No, I wouldnt read that thing. Everyone says, Its bad writing, but its a page turner!
But you look at the first page and it issuch bad writing. It is mind blowing. It is
distressing that people eat it with a spoon. Its the same with James Fry. I mean with
James Fry, half the country will swear to you that it is the best book theyve every read,
yet I can only assume that means its the only book theyve ever read-- which by
definition would be the best book theyve ever read. I defy you to find a good sentence
in James Fry.
Is there any popular fiction that you do like?
Alice Munro. Shes fantastic. Shes popular, right? And Francine Prose. There are all
sorts of great writers out there. They just dont sell in the mega millions usually. Only
the really bad shit sells in the mega millions. It seems, anyway. I dont know why that
is.
Why is poetry not more well read, in America in particular?
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We are doing fine. Poetry is doing fine. More and more poets every year are getting
read.
Why do you think that is?
Why are people reading more poetry? More MFA programs. More people getting
exposed to it. Every year more people get exposed to it. Its geometric; its like how a
pyramid scheme multiplies, but in this case its a good thing.
Is a person a born poetry enthusiast, or can you teach an appreciation for poetry?
You can teach it. You have to get people excited about it; you have to lead them in. I
probably wouldnt give them Harryette Mullen first. But by the end of the semester, Id
give them Harryette Mullen. Theyd get it by then because by then theyd be ready for
it.
What book would you start with?
Richard Sikens book Crush. Thats a nice book to start with. Its a pretty great book.
Its accessible and gets people interested?
I wouldnt say it is accessible. It has a certain narrative energy to it that people are
familiar with. I wouldnt call that accessible necessarily. It is about gay S and M
relationships so I dont know how accessible that is, particularly since I teach in
Texas Im kidding. Siken is great. He came to Texas. Hes big in Texas. People
loved him at the program. I did a reading with him actually.
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I was always impressed, back in the Pine Street days, how you were so committed to yourwriting. You would have these blocks of time during the day you scheduled for writing, and
you were very dedicated to them. Remember? Do you still do that?
I write differently now. I do write everyday, just differently. Like today I jotted stuff
down in my notebook on the way to therapy in my car. You write when you can.
Things are coming together; theyre just coming together in a different sort of way now.
A lot of my process before was daily writing in notebooks and I was focused. I needed
to do that too and hopefully Ive internalized some of that.
Im gearing up to do my next thing; Im structuring the piece now. Im doing it a
completely different way. Rather than writing free and then trying to find the shape
afterwards, Im actually finding the shape and then Im going to fill it in.
I like to do each book differently. I figure Ill do this one differently as well.
Whats the shape, or are you still in the middle of thinking about it?
Yeah, Im still thinking about it. It might actually be loosely based on the form that Ive
seen in another book that attracts me: Claudia RankinesDont Let Me Be Lonely. I
think that for what Im doing, that seems like a nice container.
She writes in short prose sections. Its ostensible poetry, but includes prose passages. It
is also Rankines tone in fact it is almost the tone more than the form I like. Taking
these large political events and filtering them through an individual consciousness. Not
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like saying, This is the way it is and making large pronouncements, but, This is the
way it affects me. I like that. It seems like a good way to write political poetry.
Do other people read your work when you are in process? Who are your readers?
I dont know who they are now. They change with different projects. I dont know who
my readers will be for this project. A lot of times Ill start reading new stuff at readings,
little experimental things, and someone who is there that I know will come up and say,
Thats interesting and Ill send them a couple of pages. Maybe it is something like
that, but mostly I dont know what I do.
I know many people have commented on your ability to write about harrowing life situationswithout self-pity. You have responded in several different interviews regardingAnother
Bullshit Night in Suck City that there were previous drafts of that book that were filled with
anger and self-pity. It sounded to me that part of your writing process might be getting it all outon the page, then going back and cutting Is that true?
I might have just said that to those interviewers. I dont think I have a self pitying bone
in my body.
Seriously though, when you say my writing process, I dont know what my writing
process is. It changes with each book. The only thing I know for sure is that you should
not feel like you are doing the right thing. Thats the only thing that remains consistent.
So the thing with torture right now that Im doing, I think Im on the right track because
I feel like it is really the wrong thing to be doing. Everything else, besides that feeling,
is different with each piece. For everything else there is no blueprint. There is no
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questioning with this piece, Am I putting a lot of self-pity into this? No, because it
isnt a book ostensibly about myself. And I dont think it will get to a place of
angerof course there will probably be anger in it. But anger, its one of those
things I think there is a lot of anger inAnother Bullshit Night its just that its
veiled.
You want to write in such a way that the reader comes to whatever emotions they need
to come to. I like it when I hear that readers have come away either disorientated or
angry or weeping. And if you look at the page, you cant really point to the spot where
it happened, the emotion just suddenly starts to build in you. Thats what seems
important: how to get it on the page without seeing it. Thats the trick.
How do you achieve that?
There are all sorts of different ways of doing it. Find all that stuff people talk about.
You know, T.S. Eliot, Johnny Keats, negative capability, objective correlatives
An objective correlative is having an object that contains the emotion, like a fetish
object, which is what we do anyway with our lives. You put all your hopes and dreams
into a car or something, just because you dont know where else to put it. In your
writing you have moments of that, but you cant have the whole book be objective
correlatives.
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You sort of learn from all these people, you learn what you can from all these different
writers and takes what makes sense to you. So for me, from T.S. Eliot, its like that,
moments of that.
There is a piece in the book,Another Bullshit Night at the end ofPiss of God, where
it says, a la-z-y boy, my lord, maybe not again in this lifetime. I would just get
choked up reading that out loud, and I wouldnt even know why. I still dont know why
exactly. But it contains something; it contains a certain amount of energy that is
mysterious. I dont get choked up now reading it, but it still seems powerful to me in
the way that is pretty mysterious. I read it a lot actually, that piece, at readings, and it
does, it seems like a powerful ending, for some unspeakable way. If I had said at the
end, like I wonder if Ill ever see my father again it would be bullshit. It would be
absolute bullshit. But if you say, a la-z-y boy, my lord, maybe not again in this
lifetime... Even though I dont think that is what it is saying, its not saying I will
never see my father again, I dont what it is saying. I have no idea what it is saying. It
is just some weird statement that contains a lot of energy. And you have to find those
and they are really hard to find. How do you teach someone that? I dont know. You
teach them to write a lot and then find the ones that are mysterious that they dont
understand and then trust it. Thats all you can do.
You said in an interview you did with Robert Birnbaum that you write books of poems, not
individual poems. Can you talk a little bit more about this?
Now Im writing individual poems. Im writing a lot of poems now that dont seem to
be connected in anyway except through my psyche.
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But that was true ofSome EtherandBlind Huber, they were books of poems, but thats not
what you are doing now?
Yes, thats true. But I dont know what Im doing now. I dont think Ill do the same
thing Ive done before.
Do you like working together with other people in collaboration? You recently just taught acourse, Collaboration with the Arts at the University of Houston?
I taught that twice now. Ill probably teach it again next spring.
Do you like it?
I love it. I think it is really great. Its wild, so wild. Its like a wild class. I do sort of
trust the process. You have to be both very rigorous and intuitive at the same time so I
like that tension. As a teacher you have to be rigorous and be like, What are we doing
here? but you have to allow for all this intuitive, spontaneous stuff to come into it.
Can you tell me a little about how it went? Who participated?
20 people sign up for the class, musicians, artists, writers, dancers. There are four
instructors, we divide them up. There is some sort of date where something is to be
done. My last group was based on Houston buses, so we met on the Houston buses. We
also had a studio. Wed go back to the studio and process what we did on the bus.
Do you love teaching?
Not all the time. Sometimes. It takes a lot of energy, but I generally like it. Its like that
whole Stanley thing, it just seems like it is part of the job. The ability or the chance to
access or be part of accessing peoples subconscious creativity is a great gift. And to
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see that is really inspiring. To see people push into something that they didnt know
they could push into and create something.
In this collaboration class, we created this whole other art form that really felt
collaborative. I was like, My god, what is this thing? It was something Id never seen
before. It was exciting.
Does teaching affect your writing in any way?
Yeah, I dont write. It takes too much energy. Its hard to write when you are teaching.
Its two different muscles it seems like. Its hard. People do it.
Have you learned things by teaching things?
Oh yeah. I always start with something that I dont really know too well and make it a
learning thing for myself.
Do certain issues of craft keep coming up with students? Are there some issues that always
float to the top?
You have to know how to write descriptive passages and how to craft an image. On
some level even if you never write using images, you should actually have that facility I
think. Usually I often start with that in classes. It is so shocking the level of pure
abstraction. And pure abstraction isnt bad if it is coming from a certain place. But
often a younger poets abstractions are like pure unfiltered emotion that just needs to be
grounded in something or else it is really unreadable.
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I see that in a poem, when things veer into abstraction. There are poets that deal purely
in abstraction. Even Wallace Stevenshis abstractions are based in image. InAnecdote
of a Jar,the jar is on a mountain in Tennessee, even though it is an abstraction it is also
both, it contains both (abstraction and image).
After image, what else rises to the surface?
Expository writing. Yeah, thats pretty bad. A lot of people get lost in that. People
know it too, because they cant even read their own expository writing. Its the stuff
when you write it that you dont even bother reading over again, because you know its
boring and its just giving people information. So you train people: if its a part where
you get to and your mind goes a little blank, just imagine what the poor fucking reader
is going through. If you cant even read your own fucking writing
Image, expository writing, what else?
Tension is another one that you have to look for, points of tension, transitions, whats
said, whats unsaid.
I noticed youre going to be teaching an entire workshop on tension, can you talk a little about
that?
Not really. I dont even know what Im going to teach now because Im sort of over
that (tension). Im going to call the workshop, Bewilderment. I sort of think
bewilderment might even be way above tension. Im making a whole chart now, this
whole representation of these things. I think bewilderment might be above tension, and
tension sort of a subset.
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What do you mean by bewilderment?
Bewilderment is where the point in the poem where you have to push into the
unknown. You have a place where its the threshold to the subconscious. You get down
what you know, and then you get to the point of what you dont know, what sort of
throws you. You know, what you havent been able to say. You try to find that point. A
lot of times you can find it where you revert to abstractions. Thats a point youve lost
your nerve. When you find it, then you write into it. Say what you havent said.
There are a lot of different things. I did a whole week on it, so there are all sorts of
things you can do. All sorts of different ways to do it.
What are some of the projects you are currently working on?
Theres the torture poems And theres this film I worked on,Darwins Nightmare.
An Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary, right? Did you go to the AcademyAwards show?
Yes. It wasnt very fun. It was one of the most lifeless rooms Ive ever been in. But it
was nice to be there with my buddy.
The director, Hubert Sauper?
Yes. Ive done a lot of screenings for it, question and answer type things. I go when
they cant get Hubert. Its not so easy to get him. I mean hes done so much for it too;
hes done tons of it. But Im willing to do some in his stead, if they want me.
Have you written about your experience shooting the movie in Tanzania?
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Yeah, Ive written a lot about it. I have to pull it all together into a book.
Where do you see yourself in five years?
Oh, I dont know. Its hard to say. It is all sort of vague for me. Im a one day at a time
kind of guy. I just want to figure out what Im doing. I want to see what happens, what
comes next.
Works Cited
allegory.Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc., 2006.
Answers.com 24 Aug. 2006.
Benjamin, Walter. The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. 1936.
17 Aug. 2006.
Flynn, Nick. Another Bullshit Night in Suck City. New York: Norton, 2004.
---. Blind Huber. Saint Paul: Graywolf, 2002.
---. Interview with Robert Birbaum.Identity Theory. 22 Mar. 2005. 3 Jul. 2006.
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< http://www.identitytheory.com/interviews/birnbaum158.php
---. Interview with Jess Sauer. The Austin Chronicle. 29 Oct. 2004. 6 Jul. 2006.
< http://www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase/Issue/story?oid=oid%3A235106>
---. Some Ether. Saint Paul: Graywolf, 2000.
Hoagland, Tony. Rev. ofSome EtherPoems by Nick Flynn.Ploughshares. Fall 2000: 224.
Inez, Colette. Family Talk: Confessional Poet? Not Me.After Confession: Poetry as
Autobiography. Eds. David Graham and Kate Sontag. Saint Paul: Graywolf, 2001.
Kunitz, Stanley. Interview with Francine Ringold.Interviews and Encounters with Stanley
Kunitz. Ed..Stanley Moss. New York: Sheep Meadow Press, 1993.
Levertov, Denise. Interview with Nicholas OConnell. A Poets Valediction.Poets &
Writers Magazine. May/June 1998. 6 Jul. 2006.
Sexton, Anne. Interview with William Packard. The Poets Craft: Interviews from The New
York Quarterly. Ed. William Packard. New York: toExcel Press, 2000.
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